The Denver Post

Woman put positive energy into working with children

- By Bruce Finley

Boulder residents on Sunday mourned a 25-yearold bibliophil­e mother who wore rainbow colors and big glasses and put positive energy in their lives — a woman who was murdered and whose body was partially dismembere­d and scattered around the country.

They gathered at the Boulder Public Library that Ashley Mead visited often and shared memories, about 50 friends, many saying tearfully they knew Mead only briefly yet absolutely could not forget her.

“I loved her instantly,” Nicole Vollmerhau­sen said.

Meeting at a farmer’s market, Mead and Anak Casas Ibarra discovered they both had young children. “And we immediatel­y started talking. … She accepted everyone. We talked about everything from her work at a farm milking goats to my immigratio­n story,” Ibarra said. “Thank you, Ashley. Thank you for accepting everyone in the community, no matter where they come from.”

Many were mothers and teachers who know each other from drop-offs and pickups at the Acorn School, a Head Start preschool, where Mead had been working as an intern. For example, fellow mother Sasha Strong, 24, found Mead “honest and funny” and admired how she treated kids as equals.

“I really enjoyed my brief 15 minutes with her every morning. We’re really grateful we got to know her,” Strong said, standing before the crowd with Blake, 4, her son — a student enthralled with “the silly Miss Ashley.” After Strong spoke, Blake whispered words in her ear.

“He loved Miss Ashley, too,” Strong added.

Mead came from a farm in Pennsylvan­ia. She went to Boulder so Winter Daisy, her 1-year-old daughter, could be with her father, Adam Densmore, 32, a man from Louisiana who had moved to Boulder to attend culinary school, said Owen Love, who helped lead the memorial gathering and whose wife, Gwendilyn, had responded to an online ad and worked for Mead taking care of Winter Daisy while Mead worked at Acorn.

Boulder police have announced they suspect Densmore in the murder.

A teacher in the classroom where Mead worked and didn’t show up had a feeling and telephoned police. Officials in multiple jurisdicti­ons began looking for Mead and, after Densmore was arrested Feb. 15 in Oklahoma with Winter Daisy, building a case.

Boulder police say Mead likely was murdered in Boulder then dismembere­d in Louisiana, and that some of Mead’s body parts were discarded in communitie­s they suspect Densmore drove through with Winter Daisy before being arrested. Police say they found body parts in a Walmart dumpster in Okmulgee, 40 miles south of Tulsa, near where they arrested Densmore and found Winter Daisy.

Love said Mead met Densmore in Louisiana and moved from Pennsylvan­ia to Boulder only so Winter Daisy could be near her father, not to restart their relationsh­ip.

Police now are appealing for help from the public in finding the rest of Mead’s remains, which may be in a purple suitcase.

Winter Daisy has been placed in the care of Oklahoma protective services officials.

Mead wrote on a job applicatio­n that she enjoyed “making found objects sculptures and performanc­e art.” She said she loved farming and “cooking foods which I cultivated.” Her motivation for working as a preschool teacher: “I want to take the lead role in my daughter’s schooling so I know I need to lay a solid foundation in myself to teach her properly,” Mead wrote.

And she had a dream: “I hope to one day run an outdoor-centered child care program on my family’s farm in Pennsylvan­ia.”

 ??  ?? Natalya Fearnley remembers her friend during a celebratio­n of life for Ashley Mead at the Boulder Public Library on Sunday. Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post
Natalya Fearnley remembers her friend during a celebratio­n of life for Ashley Mead at the Boulder Public Library on Sunday. Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States