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The first school in Colorado Springs was organized by Mary Mellen "Queen" Palmer, wife of city founder William Jackson Palmer, in late 1871. Classes were first held in a home on the northeast corner of Cascade Avenue and Bijou Street, rented by Mrs. Palmer for the school. [2] School District 11 was established in August 1872.
Akron School District R-1: 411 Washington: Alamosa School District RE-11J: 2,188 Alamosa: Archuleta County School District 50 JT: 1,712 Archuleta: Arickaree School District R-2: 101 Washington: Arriba-Flagler Consolidated School District 20: 139 Kit Carson: Aspen School District 1: 1,652 Pitkin: Ault-Highland School District RE-9: 1,013 Weld ...
Falcon School District 49 Colorado Springs: El Paso: Rocky Mountain Deaf School P–12 1997 Jeffco Public Schools Golden: Jefferson: Roosevelt-Edison Charter School K–5 1996 Colorado Springs School District 11 Colorado Springs: El Paso: Ross Montessori School P–8 2005 Charter School Institute Carbondale: Garfield: SkyView Academy P–12 2010
Boulder Valley School District RE-2 serves the southern half of the county; Saint Vrain Valley School District RE-1J, the northern half. [8] One of Boulder Valley's oldest schools, Whittier International Elementary School, is the oldest continuously-operating school in Boulder County.
Colorado's Finest Alternative High School (CFAHS) - The school received its current name after a group of students asked that the school receive that name. On December 9, 1991 the school was named a Colorado School of Excellence. [4] Middle schools Englewood Middle School; Englewood Leadership Academy (ELA) - Alternate school for accelerated ...
Lafayette public schools are part of the Boulder Valley School District. The main public high school in Lafayette is Centaurus High School, which has approximately 1,600 students. Peak to Peak Charter School offers kindergarten through high school. The public middle school is Angevine Middle School, which feeds into Centaurus.
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Roy J. Wasson High School was established in 1959 and named after the superintendent of Colorado Springs School District 11.The school's 28.2 acre (11.4 hectare) campus opened with a three-wing building built at a cost of $3.1 million with a capacity of nearly 2,000 students.