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Adams_City_High_School Latitude and Longitude:

39°49′42″N 104°54′4″W / 39.82833°N 104.90111°W / 39.82833; -104.90111
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adams City High School
Address
7200 Quebec Parkway

,
Colorado
80022

United States
Coordinates 39°49′42″N 104°54′4″W / 39.82833°N 104.90111°W / 39.82833; -104.90111
Information
Type Public
Established1908
School district Adams County 14
CEEB code060000
Staff80.54 (on an FTE basis) [1]
Grades9–12
Enrollment1,721 (2019-20) [1]
Student to teacher ratio21.37 [1]
Color(s)Green and orange
  
MascotBubba the Eagle [2]
Website adamscityhigh.adams14.net

Adams City High School is a high school located in Commerce City, Colorado, United States. Commerce City was originally known as Adams City.

History

Adams City High School was first known as Union High School No. 1 when it was created in 1908. The directors of the Adams City, Derby, and Rose Hill school districts, along with Katherine M. Cook, the County Superintendent of Schools, established the school in Adams County. Other districts in Adams County, Cline (now known as Welby) and Irondale, declined to participate. [3]

When the Union High School was created, the school directors utilized a room in a school house built in 1907 at 69th Avenue and Cherry Street, which had previously been criticized for being too large for the needs of the community. Classes began in September 1908 with around 12 students in attendance. Ida Walker was the teacher that first year. [3]

In 1909, Fances Pratt Douglass became the teacher, and was instrumental in the students' and school's success until she retired in 1917. She encouraged her students, took them on field trips, and began the tradition of class news reports being written by the students and published in the Brighton Blade newspaper for the community to read. [3]

Students came from as far as three miles away on horseback, on bicycles, or on foot. A shed for the horses was provided.

The first graduation occurred in the spring of 1910.

In the 1910-1911 school year, students organized and created the athletics program. The first sport they played was basketball; they purchased a ball and basket, then built their own uprights out of felled cottonwoods and backboards out of an old boxcar door. Members of the community that owned cars volunteered to transport the players and supporters to games against other school teams. [3]

The class sizes grew as the community grew, and the first expansion building was built in 1916. [3]

In 1946, the surrounding districts were formed into Adams County School District No. 14 (ACSD14) and Union High School became Adams City High School. The school's colors, originally purple and gold, became green and gold. The eagle was chosen as the mascot. [3] The first official Adams City High School graduating class commenced in 1949. [4]

The football field was dedicated to Edward Krogh in 1948. [4]

The Adams City Field House, located at 4601 East 68th Avenue, was built in 1959-1960, and was shared by the students and the community. [5] In 1961, it was dedicated to Alfred Krogh, the Vice President of the ACSD14 Board of Education and son of Edward Krogh. [4]

In 2002 At the Pepsi Center during the Colorado Wrestling state championships Ronnie (RJ) Quintana won his state championship in his Junoir Year. And 3 years after that the current record holder for most Wrestling state championship with 3, Joey Deaguero from 2003-2005

In 2008, the original Adams City High School location at 4525 East 68th Avenue closed. Classes began in the new school on Quebec Parkway in the fall of 2009. [4]

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ a b c "ADAMS CITY HIGH SCHOOL". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved January 28, 2022.
  2. ^ "Adams City High School".
  3. ^ a b c d e f "School History". adamscityhighschool. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  4. ^ a b c d "Commerce City Timeline | Commercial City Historical Society". www.cchistoric.com. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
  5. ^ "Commerce City Historical Society". Commerce City Historical Society Facebook Page. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
  6. ^ "The Denver Post Online". extras.denverpost.com. Retrieved 2022-01-21.

External links