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Document
The Spreading Eagle was the student produced and edited newsletter of Eagle High School in Eagle, Colorado. The newsletter included sports scores, upcoming events, student achievements, and other updates concerning students and teachers.
This particular issue focuses on commencement and the end of the school year with details of the commencement banquet, highlights of the senior class, class will, sports updates, and a review of the senior play....
Format:
Document
The Spreading Eagle was the student produced and edited newsletter of Eagle High School in Eagle, Colorado. The newsletter included sports scores, upcoming events, student achievements, and other updates concerning students and teachers.
This issue was printed on bold red paper, most likely for Christmas. Students also included New Years resolutions in this edition. One page of the newsletter is dedicated to alumni who were currently fighting...
10. Lux Aquilae 1927
11. Lux Aquilae 1924
12. Lux Aquilae 1939
Format:
Book
Lux Aquilae was the official yearbook of Eagle High School in Eagle, Colorado. The literal translation from latin means “light eagle”. Each yearbook contains photographs of students, teachers, administrators, sports teams, clubs, activities, and the school and town itself.
In this yearbook, hard copy photographs were used and glued to each page of each copy of the yearbook. Many photographs were removed or had experienced severe wear and tear....
13. Lux Aquilae 1926
14. Lux Aquilae 1928
15. L. W. Green
Format:
Image
Studio photo of Mr. L. W. Green, superintendent of Eagle County High School. Photo was in the Pirates Log 1950 [yearbook] for the High School. Mr. Green graduated from Greeley State Teachers College, earning his bachelor of arts degree in education and his masters degree. He taught school at Eagle and later served for 17 years as superintendent of schools in Gypsum. In 1956 he moved to Rifle where he was superintendent for the RE-2 school district,...
Format:
Voice Recording
Gertrude Rader talks about the profession and lives of teachers, who were primarily women, in Western Colorado during the early Twentieth century. She discusses how, in small communities, women were expected to be much more than teachers including: Doctors’ assistants in a pinch, de facto members of the families that they boarded with in cases of illness or maternity, and moral pillars of the community. She includes many anecdotes from her own teaching...
Format:
Voice Recording
Antonio Clark talks about growing up in Denver, Colorado, and the important role of youth sports in his upbringing. He speaks about his career in high school sports and about being a walk-on as a football player at Colorado Mesa University in Grand Junction. He discusses racism that he experienced as an African-American on the CMU campus, but also his view that diversity on the campus has increased, and that some attitudes about race have changed.
He...