Welcome to AMMS

Mission Statement

We are the Admiral Moorer Middle School Family. This environment is a safe place for learning and high expectations. We are motivated and we stretch ourselves. Our destination is graduation. No excuses…just results!

AMMS Pictures

Half Day on December 12th

On Wednesday, December 12, 2012, students of Eufaula City Schools will be
dismissed at 11:30 a.m.  Breakfast and lunch will be served on December
12th, and buses will run the normal routes for this early dismissal.
Extended day and 21st century activities are cancelled.
 
All staff members will be involved in professional development training
for the duration of the day.
 
School will resume on Thursday, December 13th, as usual.  Students will be
dismissed on Thursday, December 20th, at regular time for Christmas
Holidays.
 
Thank you for your continued support of our staff as we work to
improve the quality of classroom instruction. The window of time for
this half day of Professional Development is small.  It would be a
tremendous benefit to our staff if students are picked up as soon as
possible after the 11:30 bell so staff can make full use of this
opportunity that has been approved by the State Department of Education.

AMMS Vision

video

Eufaula City Calendar

Equal Opportunity Employment

It is the official policy of Eufaula City Schools that no persons will, on the grounds of race, color, disability, sex, religion, national origin, age, or creed, be excluded from participation in, be denied benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program, activity or employment.

Faculty Directory

Staff Name

Parent Information

Principal's letters of attestation regrading
individual teachers' highly qualified status are available upon request.
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Admiral Thomas H. Moorer

Admiral Moorer was born in Mount Willing, Alabama, on February 9, 1912, son of the late Dr. R. R. Moorer and the late Mrs. Hulda Hill Hinson Moorer. After graduating from Cloverdale High School in Montgomery, he entered the U. S. Naval Academy with the Class of 1927.
 
As a midshipman, he played football for three years, and was commissioned an ensign in 1933. Following completion of flight training in July, 1936, he was designated a naval aviator. Admiral Moorer served in the South Pacific during the early part of World War II, where he was awarded the Silver Star, Purple Heart and Distinguished Flying Cross as a result of combat action with a Navy fighter squadron. During the Second World War, he also served as commander of a bombing squadron operating in Cuba and Africa, and served as gunnery and tactical officer on the staff of Commander Air Force, Atlantic.
Admiral Moorer rose quickly to prominence in naval circles after the war, as he served in a number of important assignments with the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations and other posts. He was promoted to Rear Admiral in 1957, and later commanded the Seventh Fleet. In 1964 he became Commander in Chief of the Pacific Fleet, and one year later was named commander of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet and NATO's Allied Command, Atlantic. In this latter capacity, he directed military operations during the Dominican Republic Crisis of 1965-66, and won his second Distinguished Service Medal for his outstanding performance of duties.
 
On June 3, 1967, Admiral Moorer was named by the President as Chief of Naval Operations. Admiral Moorer held a number of decorations, including the American Defense Medal with star; Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with two stars; European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal; National Defense Service Medal with bronze star; Vietnam Service Medal; and the Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal with device. In May 1964 he was awarded the Stephen Decatur Award for Operational Competence by the Navy League of the United States. Admiral Moorer was a frequent visitor to his native state throughout his life. He was awarded the Honorary Doctor of Laws Degree by Auburn University on June 3, 1968.
Admiral Moorer married the former Carrie Ellen Foy of Eufaula. They had four children, Thomas Randolph, Mary Ellen, Richard Foy, and Robert Hill Moorer.
Admiral Moorer passed away in February 2004.
Source:
Thomas H. Moorer. (2004).Retrieved October 22, 2006, from
http://www.archives.state.al.us/famous/academy/t_moorer.htm