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 Breaking News!
Academic Growth of Students
 
The school accountability report released from the Colorado State Department of Education in December lists Ames as a school receiving the highest ranking of academic growth: Significant Improvement. This is calculated by examining student growth on a pupil by pupil basis, measuring a student against his/her own previous year’s performance. This is unique from other formats of assessment reporting (such as CSAP) in that it truly underscores the importance of every child receiving a rigorous education and making progress.
 

As exciting as it is to rank high as a whole school with academic gains at each grade level (as with the CSAP reports measuring our proficiency status), the growth report tells the bigger story. We know each child as an individual learner, set goals for academic success for each child, and then design an educational plan to support the goal all the while monitoring progress of each child. This positive academic growth report supplies student results supporting our promise to parents: an excellent education for your child.


 AMES #1 IN THE DISTRICT IN GAINS ON 3-5 CSAP ASSESSMENT!


 
 Contact Us: Minimize
Principal Nancy Klinedinst
Lewis Ames Elementary School
7300 S. Clermont Drive
Centennial, Colorado 80122
Telephone: 303.347.4400
Attendance: 303.734.3000
School Hours:
8:31 a.m. – 3:13 p.m.
AM Kindergarten dismisses at 11:28 a.m.
Map to Ames Elementary School
 
 Welcome to Ames
Principal Nancy Klinedinst
Lewis Ames Elementary School
7300 South Clermont Drive
Centennial, Colorado 80122
Telephone: 303.347.4400
Attendance: 303.734.3000
School Hours: 8:31 a.m. - 3:13 p.m.
AM Kindergarten dismisses at 11:28 a.m.
Map to Ames Elementary School
 
  
 Lewis Ames Belief Statement
We at Lewis Ames Elementary believe ...
  • In providing a safe and secure environment for each child.
  • In providing students with a sound academic education complemented by physical education and the arts.
  • In setting high expectations, providing opportunities for success through appropriate instruction, and recognizing achievement.
  • In recognizing uniqueness in all children and encouraging them toward their full potential.
  • In encouraging self-discipline and respect for self and others.
  • In providing opportunities for students to develop skills, knowledge, and attitudes that promote responsible citizenship.
  • In encouraging students to feel responsibility and pride in their school.
 
  
 Who Was Lewis Ames Minimize

Lewis and Laura Ames

Lewis and Laura Ames were very early homesteaders in the Littleton area. After trying his luck at mining from 1860 to 1865 in Black Hawk, Lewis purchased a 120-acre farm just south of Richard Little's claim in Littleton and began farming.

Mr. and Mrs. Ames
Judge Lewis B. Ames and Mrs. (Laura) Ames, date unknown.

At the time a great question was debated all along the Colorado Front Range of whether this land would support farming. Lewis Ames proved that farming could be successful. He raised many fruit trees on his land, supplying the local residents with apples, pears and plums, while from other crops he grew grapes, raspberries, blackberries, strawberries, cherries, gooseberries and currants.

Lewis traveled to Illinois to marry Laura H. Larawa on January 31, 1865. They returned to Littleton immediately to begin their married life. The couple served as Littleton's first school teachers. Lewis taught at the first school for a salary of $40/month. John Bell built the one room log cabin school in 1865. A few years later, Laura taught at the first frame school on the east side of the Platte River at a salary of $50/month. She had three pupils. In between these two schools, the first frame schoolhouse was constructed on the west side of the Platte in 1868. For many years Lewis taught school in the winter and farmed in the summer.

When the Rio Grande Railroad extended its service southward, the railroad tracks divided the Ames farm in half. So the Ames simply donated land on one side of the tracks to the town as a cemetery. Littleton Cemetery is one of the oldest cemeteries in Colorado, and serves as the final resting place for most of Littleton's pioneers, including Laura and Lewis Ames.

Lewis was elected Justice of the Peace in 1868 and served in that position until 1882. He was known as "Judge Ames" in Littleton and was considered the town encyclopedia by many residents. If someone had a question about Littleton, Judge Ames could usually provide an answer.

Life was not always good for the Ames. Their first son died at the age of 15 in a drowning accident at the City Ditch in 1885. Their second son died of an illness, possibly diphtheria, at age three. But the couple carried on, helping others whenever called on, attending church every Sunday, raising crops, and being part of the community of Littleton. 

Laura passed away of a stroke in July, 1897, and was buried in Littleton Cemetery.

Judge Ames passed away at 87 in 1913. In 1963, a new elementary school was named in the Judge's honor, the Lewis B. Ames Elementary School, located at 7300 S. Clermont Drive.

Today, the Ames farm is in the vicinity of Heritage High School and the surrounding homes between Windermere and Gallup streets, Briarwood Ave. and W. Geddes Ave.

Bibliography

Littleton (Colo.) Independent. The Littleton Independent Publishers, 1888-.

McQuarie, Robert J. and C. W. Buchholtz. Littleton, Colorado, Settlement to Centennial. Littleton, Colorado: Littleton Historical Museum and Friends of the Littleton Library and Museum, 1990.

Portrait and Biographical Record of Denver and Vicinity. Chicago: Chapman, 1898.


Photographs courtesy of the Littleton Historical Museum, unless otherwise noted; to order copies contact the Museum at 303-795-3950.

Compiled by Rebecca Dorward
Edited by Phyllis Larison and Lorena Donohue

Updated January 2004