The Madison Suburban Conference is a former high school athletic conference in Wisconsin, founded in 1926 and ending competition in 1969. Its members were located in south central Wisconsin, predominantly around the Madison area.
Growth in the Madison area during the post-war years accompanied some substantial shifts with the athletic conferences in south central Wisconsin. Middleton exited the Madison Suburban Conference in 1952 to join the new Badger Conference[7], and Juneau joined the following year after the break-up of the 4-C Conference[8]. Verona left in 1954 to join the Tri-County League[9], and in 1955 the conference would add three schools that left the Badger Conference: Evansville, Lake Mills and Milton[10].
Final Expansion and Collapse (1963-1969)
In 1963, the high school athletic conferences in the Madison area went through some significant realignment[11]. Sun Prairie left the conference to join the Badger Conference that year[12], and their place was immediately taken by the new high school in McFarland[13]. The conference also absorbed the former Tri-County League, which had been reduced from ten to six schools[14] due to a series of consolidations and the defection of Sauk Prairie High School to the South Central Conference[15]. Former members Lodi and Verona rejoined the conference, and they were accompanied by Poynette, River Valley in Spring Green, Waunakee and Wisconsin Heights in Mazomanie[16]. In order to accommodate the new schools, the Madison Suburban Conference was subdivided into three sections of six schools each[17]:
In the long term, this level of growth proved to be unsustainable and in 1969, the Madison Suburban Conference split up into three separate conferences[19], predominantly along the final sectional alignment. All six schools in the Western Section (along with DeForest and Waterloo from the Central Section) formed the Capitol Conference[20], the six schools in the Eastern Section (along with Palmyra and Queen of Apostles in Madison) formed the Eastern Suburban Conference, and the four remaining schools in the Central Section (along with Beloit Turner and Clinton) formed the Central Suburban Conference[21].