Henry County football has opened its annual Lift-A-Thon fundraiser, giving players, parents and supporters an early chance to help the Patriots gear up for the 2026 season.
The fundraiser is already underway, and the program has made the purpose clear from the start: every dollar raised will go toward player equipment for the upcoming season.
The event also comes with an in-person gathering before the lifting begins. A brief parent meeting is set for Thursday, April 30, at 5:30 p.m. at the Henry County High School football fieldhouse, with the Lift-A-Thon scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. afterward.
That timing gives the fundraiser more weight than a simple offseason announcement. It places players and families together at the start of a key spring step, with parents getting direct information before the work begins on the floor.
The setup feels practical and community-driven, which is exactly how strong high school football programs usually like to handle early offseason support.
Henry County High School is based in Paris, Tennessee, and the football program plays on the school campus at Patriot Stadium, the home venue for the Big Red football team.
That makes the Lift-A-Thon more than a private team activity. It is another public-facing piece of a program that already sits in a visible place within the local school community.
Fundraisers like this matter because equipment needs never really stop. Pads, helmets, training gear, replacement items and everyday football costs can quietly build up long before opening night arrives.
A Lift-A-Thon gives a team a way to tie fundraising directly to effort. Players are not just asking for help from a distance.
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They are putting their own work in front of the community while raising money for what the program needs.
That is part of what makes this event easy to understand and easy to support. It connects offseason strength work with a direct football purpose.
Instead of a general campaign with a vague goal, Henry County football has attached this fundraiser to something concrete and immediate.
The money is going toward player equipment, and the timing puts it right in the middle of the teamโs spring preparation.
For parents, the evening also starts with a meeting before the lifting session begins, which gives the night a useful structure.
Families can gather, hear what they need to hear, and then move straight into the fundraiser itself. That kind of organization usually helps programs keep the message simple and the turnout steady.
Henry Countyโs football identity already carries weight locally. The school competes as the Patriots in Paris, and the program has maintained a visible place in the areaโs sports culture through its school and athletics presence.
The Lift-A-Thon fits naturally into that setting because it keeps the team connected to the people who follow it beyond game night.
There is also a bigger value in a fundraiser like this beyond the money itself. Events tied to weight-room work often create buy-in before the season ever starts.
They give families a reason to show up in spring, remind supporters that preparation starts months before the first kickoff, and put the focus on the players doing the work together.
For younger athletes coming through the program, that kind of atmosphere can matter just as much as the fundraising total.
Henry County football has kept the message direct. The Lift-A-Thon is on, the community is invited to support it, and the benefit goes straight back to the players.
With the parent meeting beginning at 5:30 p.m. and the lifting session following at 6:30 p.m. on April 30, the evening gives the Patriots a practical and public start to one part of their 2026 preparation.
For a high school football program, that is the kind of offseason work that often gets overlooked from the outside. Equipment is not flashy, but it matters.
Community support is not part of the scoreboard, but it shapes what a team can build before the season arrives. Henry Countyโs Lift-A-Thon brings both pieces together in one night and turns spring preparation into something the whole community can take part in.
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