PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Annual Report
Transcription
PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Annual Report
P ROMISES K EPT h N EW D IRECTIONS Annual Report July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Museum of the Shenandoah Valley 901 Amherst Street Winchester, Virginia 22601 Phone: 540-662-1473 Fax: 540-662-8756 www.ShenandoahMuseum.org Photographs Cover: A participant in the free MSV Garden Explorers program learning about the nineteenthcentury children’s game of hoop-and-stick. Photo: Rick Foster Page 1: Dancing during MSV Gardens at Night. Photo: Rick Foster Page 2: MSV Registrar Janie Carscallen catalogues objects from the Glen Burnie House for the upcoming exhibition Moveable Feasts: Entertaining at Glen Burnie. Photo: Ron Blunt Page 4: Young MSV Day visitors experience the Glen Burnie House miniature on the new touchscreen in the R. Lee Taylor Miniatures Gallery. Photo: Rick Foster Page 12: A relay race during Camp MSV. Photo: Rick Foster Page 20: Enjoying the music of the Soul Expressions Band at Gardens at Night. Photo: Rick Foster T he mission of the MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY is to preserve and enrich the cultural life and heritage of the Valley. F ROM T HE DIR EC TOR S imple phrases often is a simple statement with a profound meaning. have profound By affirming that the MSV is dedicated to meanings. Consider, preserving the culture of this great region and for example, “We kept enriching the lives of its people, we assert our our promise.” intent to be more relevant. As we move from Last year’s Annual Report made many promises for the future; this Annual Report for fiscal year 2011–12 outlines the ways our “founding” stage to the next important phase of this Museum’s development, I believe this is the most crucial commitment the MSV can make. we kept them. You shared in that achievement. In the months ahead we will unveil a strategic As a volunteer, you helped direct and present action plan that directs the MSV to appeal to a these programs. As a Member, your broader audience, with increased programming participation brought vitality to the Museum. for all ages, more community-focused events, And as a Donor, your financial support made it expanded access to the site, and exhibitions that all possible. I extend my gratitude to you all. appeal to a wider variety of interests. Here’s another simple phrase with a profound This report closes with a brief preview of some meaning: “We are moving in a new direction.” of these new directions. We hope the future it I’ve frequently considered this phrase over the past year, for it simply yet profoundly describes the planning process on which the MSV embarked in fiscal year 2011–12. This process to develop a new, five-year strategic plan began portrays will encourage you to continue in your participation as a Member and in your support as a Donor. In doing both, you help the MSV preserve and enrich this community and the Valley as a place to see and the place to be. in June 2011. Among its many steps were numerous sessions to hear people’s thoughts about the Museum’s programs and potential. On the preceding page you read the new Mission that evolved from this process. It, too, PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Dana Hand Evans Executive Director 3 PROM IS ES K EPT PROMISES KEPT: A REFRESHED STORY Renewing and Refocusing the Galleries To remain engaging and relevant museums must continually refresh the manner in which they present their stories. To this end, in fiscal year 2011–12 the MSV embarked on its first major evaluation of its galleries since opening in 2005. Exciting changes have occurred as a result. Docent Daisy Goodwin leads a guided art tour in the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Gallery. Photo: Rick Foster. An extensive renovation of the R. Lee Taylor Miniatures Gallery took place. A new video Glass Jr. Gallery does not display the Museum touchscreen was installed to provide year-round benefactor’s collection in the most engaging access to the Glen Burnie House Miniature, manner possible. At the same time, we which is on display in the seasonally-open determined that the MSV must increase its Visitor Center in the Glen Burnie Gardens. changing exhibition spaces in order to more Permanent steps were added to give visitors of effectively attract repeat visitation and increase all ages a closer look into the centerpiece Lee Membership. Hall, LED lighting in each miniature house was added, and additional educational content was added to the text rails. New, state-of-the-art LED lighting in the miniature room boxes was made possible thanks to a generous gift from Ruth Farley Massey. Always a visitor favorite, now this gallery literally shines with all these improvements. With these two needs in mind, an exciting solution emerged, and steps were taken this year to implement it. At the end of 2012 the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Gallery will close for renovation and reopen in 2013 as the new Changing Exhibition Gallery. This will allow the MSV to attract changing exhibitions of the size and scope being presented in many larger museums As the Miniatures Gallery was renovated, an around the country. At the same time, the evaluation of other MSV galleries took place. current Changing Exhibition Gallery will be This resulted in two major new conclusions. used to present a wide variety of exhibitions First, we acknowledged that the Julian Wood drawn from and inspired by the Julian Wood PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 5 Goya, Dali, Warhol: Masterpieces of World Art from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts was on view in the Changing Exhibition Gallery from July 29 through September 25, 2011. Photo: Julie Napear Photography Glass Jr. Collection, allowing these significant objects to be regularly presented in a fresh new way. This new strategy for changing exhibitions will effectively allow the MSV to present more changing exhibitions yearly than ever before and develop a significantly wider range of related supporting educational programming and events to attract Members and visitors into the Museum. In addition to completion of planning for these major gallery changes, this year the MSV also incorporated interesting small changes in the Museum galleries. Of particular note is the Using a smartphone application, visitors may scan this QR code in the Shenandoah Valley Gallery to see a video that demonstrates how linen was made from flax in the nineteenth century. application, visitors may access additional information and video related to many of the objects on view. addition of QR codes on panels. By scanning We also acknowledge the contribution of the these codes using a mobile smartphone MSV docent team in helping our visitors learn 6 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY the stories in the galleries. This year’s docent program witnessed a new training and development process based on the innovative model crafted by one of our many partners, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. This twiceannual program included seven training sessions, an update to the procedures handbook, and a new scheduling format. By the end of June 2012 some 60 volunteers had completed the new training process, with more than 25 additional volunteers scheduled to take the program later that summer. Finally, we note Art in the Halls, an MSV program designed to draw new audiences into the Museum while supporting the efforts of contemporary Valley artists. In fiscal year 2011–12 the works of nine Valley artists were Seen in the center of this photo, the newly acquired painted chest by Johannes Spitler was placed on view in the Shenandoah Valley Gallery in January of 2012. The chest is now undergoing conservation. Photo: Rick Foster displayed in the Museum’s Glaize and Lewis Halls, where they were accessible to the public free of charge. Participating artists included Jackie Bailey Labovitz, Dennis Wymer, John P. Lewis, Diane Artz Furlong, Jaqueline Bray and ca. 1798–1818), which was acquired in fiscal year 2010–11 with the assistance of Linda Quynn Ross, went on display in the Shenandoah Valley Gallery. Scott Straub, who joined forces to present an illustrated story, Wayne Anderson, Neena The MSV also added to its collection of Valley- Jhaveri, and Geraldine Kiefer. produced silver objects this year. Newly acquired Expanding and Conserving the Collection objects, all made by Winchester silversmiths, included: a pair of salt cellars, ca. 1786–1791, made by Philip Bush Jr. (1765–1807); a ladle A strong collection is critical to a museum’s dating to 1802–16 made by Hartman & Phillips ability to tell history’s stories. To that end, this (active 1802–1816); and sugar tongs, ca. 1799– year the MSV acquired a painted chest by 1805, by Thomas Purse (1776–1823). In Johannes Spitler (1774–1837), one of the addition, new acquisitions included tablespoon Shenandoah Valley’s most recognizable and teaspoon stakes, which show visitors how craftsmen of the late eighteenth and early silversmiths made spoons by hand. All were nineteenth centuries. The chest is now made possible by a generous gift from Shirley undergoing conservation. Also this year, the only and Hunter M. Gaunt Jr. and are now on known sideboard made by John Shearer (active display in a redesigned silver case. PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 7 around 1814–20 in Shepherdstown by Jacob Craft (1765–1825); the clock and the funds for its conservation were a gift from August Van Dessel in fiscal year 2010–11. The card tables and clock are now on view in the Shenandoah Valley Gallery. It is of note that the MSV Collection, which has been steadily growing since the MSV galleries opened in 2005, now is attracting the interest of others in the field. This year’s visiting scholars Made in Winchester, Virginia, between 1790 and 1805, this pair of card tables formerly on display in the Glen Burnie House was conserved and placed on view in the MSV. Photo: Ron Blunt Other notable acquisitions of the year included a group of 25 Mennonite quilts, all dating to the twentieth century and acquired from the Bausum Collection, and the painting View of the Canal at Harpers Ferry, which dates to around 1858 and was painted by Ferdinand Richardt (1819–1895). included participants in the 2012 MESDA Textile Seminar and the Antique Collector’s Guild of Virginia. Preserving and Redirecting the Glen Burnie House The three-year preservation effort of the Glen Burnie House formally kicked off on October 30, 2011, with an event featuring free site-wide admission. Despite an early snowfall, 425 people Conserving objects in the Collection is as visited the MSV that day to see the house before important as expanding it, and to that end the it closed for the extensive project. MSV made significant strides this year by identifying conservation needs of every object associated with the Glen Burnie House. Conservation, which will take place as funding allows, has already begun. This year, conserved objects from this collection included George Washington, ca. 1840s, by Rembrandt Peale (1778–1860); its conservation was made possible by the James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust. The painting The Work began on construction of more than 40 custom storm windows for the house, as did design of the HVAC, electrical, fire-protection, and security systems. With oversight by the Glen Burnie House Ad Hoc Committee and counsel from architect/engineer Michael Henry, discussions continued regarding increasing the house’s accessibility and its best future uses to meet community needs. Amethyst, Brazil, painted around 1863–65 by While this work and discussions were moving Martin Johnson Heade (1819–1904), also was forward, all objects in the house were moving conserved, thanks to funds provided by Grace out. In a Herculean effort on the part of the Ritzenberg. A pair of Winchester card tables was MSV staff and interns, everything in the house conserved, as well, as was a tall case clock made was catalogued, packed, and moved into the 8 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY This behind-the-scenes photograph illustrates how the MSV collections storage was redesigned to accommodate all the items from the Glen Burnie House. Photo: Ron Blunt Museum collections-storage space, which staff had redesigned to accommodate this influx of items. The latter project in this chain of activities was crucially important; eliminating the need for off-site collections storage resulted in considerable savings to the Museum. Preserving and Presenting Rose Hill The MSV includes an important historic site and Civil War battlefield called Rose Hill, and this year strides were realized in making this resource more accessible to the public. Access to the site was tripled over that of the previous As the objects of the Glen Burnie House were year: in fiscal year 2011–12 Rose Hill was open packed and moved, development of the first on the first and second Tuesdays and third exhibition that will be presented in the Saturdays from April through October. Special redesigned gallery space (the current Changing events also opened the site more fully to the Exhibition Gallery) was fully underway. Moveable Feasts: Entertaining at Glen Burnie will open in March of 2013 to tell the story of public, and included weekend activities to note the 150th anniversary of the First Battle of Kernstown. how MSV benefactor Julian Wood Glass Jr. and Along with increasing access by the general then partner R. Lee Taylor entertained at this public, the MSV hosted youth programs at Rose site in the mid-twentieth century. Hill in fiscal year 2011–12. These included, in PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 9 that the original log-cabin portion of the house at Rose Hill dates to 1793 and its west addition dates to the late 1820s. These confirmed dates will now guide the site’s future preservation, restoration, and relevant new uses as proposed in the New Directions portion of this report. PROMISE KEPT: NEW COLLABORATIONS Historians from the Constitution Fencibles presented demonstrations at Rose Hill during the sesquicentennial commemoration of the Civil War’s First Battle of Kernstown. Photo: Rick Foster Collaborating in the Community Working together with community groups and organizations is one of the most effective ways for a museum to be relevant, and in fiscal year April, three days of living-history presentations and battlefield tours for 300 middle-school 2011–12 the MSV fulfilled its promise to increase these partnerships. students from Admiral Byrd Middle School in Frederick County. We were especially pleased to partner for the first time with the Boys & Girls Club of The most significant accomplishment at Rose Hill during this fiscal year was achieved with an Northern Shenandoah Valley. This summer 80 to 110 children ages six to 13 participated each eye toward years to come. The site is slated for a major preservation project; important work in preparation for that, including completion of a historic structures report, took place this year. Archeology studies around the farmhouse were conducted, and analyses of the paint and plaster finishes on interior surfaces took place. The site’s Reconstruction-era barn was stabilized, additional portions of the battlefield were cleared, and restoration continued on the stone wall that featured prominently in the First Battle of Kernstown. Some of the most exciting findings at the site resulted from a dendrochronology study, a process to determine construction dates by examining wood samplings from the building’s framing timbers. Twenty-nine samples indicated 10 Glen Burnie Gardens Day visitors enjoy the Perennial Garden. Photo: Rick Foster MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY week in Camp MSV to enjoy physical and learning activities and healthy snacks. The program was developed in response to the needs of our community’s children and designed to meet the goals of the nationwide Let’s Move! Museums and Gardens Initiative. Camp MSV included a number of at-risk children. Partial funding for this program was provided by a gift from Peggy Denison. Fiscal year 2011–12 also saw the MSV collaborating for the first time with First Night Winchester. On New Year’s Eve the MSV offered free admission to all those wearing a First Night button. Family-oriented entertainment took place during the day, which attracted some 117 people. The MSV also sponsored the First Night coloring contest for all ages, and 150 people participated. The Honorable David M. Walker and Lord Fairfax Community College President Cheryl Thompson-Stacy at the 2011 MSV Business Forum Luncheon. Photo: Rick Foster Society (SVGS) to present Shenandoah Valley Heritage Day, a free event at the MSV which included information tables hosted by Valley genealogical and historical societies and research organizations. It also included presentations by Collaborating with community businesses, the Victor S. “Vic” Dunn, CG, professional MSV sponsored the highly popular Business genealogist and proprietor of Virginia Ancestry; Forum Luncheon in October. Sponsors included Barbara Vines-Little, CG, FNGS, FVGS, a BB&T; Sodexo Catering; Valley Health; the professional researcher, editor of Magazine of Willows at Meadow Branch; Yount, Hyde & Virginia Genealogy, and former National Barbour, P.C.; Shenandoah Valley Westminster Genealogical Society President; Connie Potter Canterbury; and Wells Fargo Bank/Wells Fargo and Katherine Vollen, archivist and archives Advisors. The event featured The Honorable specialist respectively of the National Archives David M. Walker, founder and chief executive in Washington, DC; and Chris Ferguson, officer of the Comeback America Initiative and researcher and Civil War collector. former comptroller general of the United States. Nearly 300 business leaders from throughout the region attended the sold-out event. This year the MSV also collaborated with Cedar Creek and Belle Grove National Historical Park to present Sesquicentennial-related programs at Other MSV partnerships during the year Rose Hill. These included the 150th anniversary advanced educational goals, many tied to the event of the First Battle of Kernstown on March year-long observation of the Civil War 23. The day’s highlight was a presentation and Sesquicentennial. In January the MSV partnered guided battlefield tour by Eric Campbell, Cedar with the Shenandoah Valley Genealogical Creek and Belle Grove National Historical Park PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 11 ranger. A total of 310 people attended the attended the free event. Another continuing weekend’s events. partnership took place in July, when the free- In May 2012 and to observe the 150th anniversary of the First Battle of Winchester, Jonathan Noyalas, assistant professor of history and director of the Center for Civil War History at Lord Fairfax Community College, led 50 people on a free walking tour that focused on the struggle for Bower’s Hill and explored a part of the MSV landscape that is not open to the public. Partnering with the Shenandoah Valley admission Glen Burnie Gardens Day featured an antique and modified car show coordinated by the Shenandoah Region of the Antique Automobile Club of America (SRAACA). And, in August and September, the MSV again collaborated with Winchester’s Magic Lantern Theater to present two films—Walt Disney’s Secretariat, a family-oriented movie, and The Misfits—to complement the exhibition Goya, Dali, Warhol. Battlefields Foundation, the MSV opened Rose Winchester-Frederick County’s Civil War Collaborating on Loans and Exhibitions Weekend. The event featured living-history In fiscal year 2011–12 presentation of An interpretation, nineteenth-century children’s American Turning Point: the Civil War in games, Civil War-era music, and battlefield tours. Virginia–Surviving War marked the MSV’s first Hill to the public on September 24 for MSV partnerships of 2011–12 included the continuation of valued, established collaborations. In March we again partnered with the Lord Fairfax Orchid Society to present its annual Orchid Show and Sale, which collaboration with the Virginia Historical Society. The exhibition also was made possible by Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission and the National Endowment for the Humanities. provided a repotting clinic, ask-the-expert Also in fiscal year 2011–12 we continued our opportunity, and class; more than 250 people partnership with the Shenandoah County Eric Campbell, Cedar Creek and Belle Grove National Historical Park ranger, leads a guided tour of the First Kernstown Battlefield at Rose Hill on the 150th anniversary of the famous Civil War battle. Photo: Rick Foster PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 13 Historical Society (SCHS). This partnership made possible As Good as Can Be: Shenandoah County through the Lens of Hugh Morrison Jr. That MSV-organized exhibition was displayed in the Shenandoah County Library from September 2011 through May 2012, and our partnership with SCHS helped launch As Good as Can Be as our first online exhibition, a milestone accomplishment that gave permanent record to the exhibition’s scholarship. Finally, our loan partners during this fiscal year included the Augusta County Historical Society, Technology helped tell Virginia’s Civil War story in An American Turning Point: The Civil War in Virginia–Surviving War, on view in the MSV in 2012. Photo: Julie Napear on display in the R. R. Smith Center for History PROMISE KEPT: MORE EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS and Art in Staunton, Virginia, and the True to its promise, in 2011–12 the MSV Woodstock Museum, where a carousel horse offered more educational programming than in from the MSV Collection went and remains on any previous year. We worked with 1,280 display. public, private, and home-schooled students where the MSV-organized exhibition Jed Hotchkiss: Shenandoah Valley Mapmaker was who visited the MSV and its Rose Hill site, and we served 1,677 adults and children, for a total of 2,957 people who experienced the MSV in educational programming or a school-group tour. Changing exhibitions played a major role in developing these programs, as their wide variety of topics provided a rich source for related learning opportunities. In this fiscal year, these changing exhibitions included: Goya, Dali, Warhol: Masterpieces of World Art from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (July 29– September 25, 2011); Daughters of the Stars: Shenandoah Valley Star Quilts and Their Makers (October 21, 2011–January 8, 2012); and An American Turning Point: the Civil War in Virginia–Surviving War (February 10– The June 2012 launch of the electronic version of As Good as Can Be marked the MSV’s first online exhibition. June 10, 2012). 14 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY Programs for School Groups Last year’s Annual Report announced that the MSV was working on a new after-school program for youth in Winchester’s elementary and middle schools. Mission accomplished: in January and February MSV education staff taught approximately nintey students in Winchester’s Daniel Morgan Middle School how to “think like a curator” to evaluate and document objects that are important in preserving and learning about our culture. three-day Printmaking I class, taught by Marion Mercer, associate professor of art, in the MSV gardens, galleries, and Garden Activity Center. Programming for Adults The Tuesday Garden Talk series continued this year and featured presentations on a diverse number of topics. Presenters included: Master Gardener Carolyn Wilson; Gerald Crowell, a forester with the Virginia Department of Forestry; Master Gardener and Certified Horticultural Therapist Helen Lake; Lord Fairfax Orchid Society members Kathleen Snyder and ZitaWinzer; and Billie Clifton, owner of Sunflower Cottage, a garden center in Middletown, Virginia. MSV staff also led garden talks and two sold-out workshops. Programming in conjunction with Goya, Dali, Warhol included a lecture, “Art and the Enlightenment: What Inquiring Minds Want to Know,” by Twyla Kitts, teacher–program Judy Greathouse, Garden Explorers program instructor, engages with preschoolers participating in the free MSV program. Photo: Rick Foster We also promised to provide free-admission passes to teachers and develop more ways to coordinator and collection educator for the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Also in conjunction with this exhibition, Art Duos, the first of a new format of MSV workshops, was work with them to develop programs for their students. That, too, was accomplished; in September 2011 the MSV developed a field-trip brochure and mailed it with a letter and complimentary passes to some 3,280 publicschool educators who teach history, art, and social studies to elementary, middle, and highschool students in Virginia and West Virginia. For older students, the MSV collaborated with Middletown’s Lord Fairfax Community College (LFCC) by hosting that community college’s PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS The Museum partnered with the VMFA to offer a day-long botanical watercolors workshop at the MSV in May. Photo: Rick Foster 15 Adult programming in this fiscal year also included a writing workshop, Pilates in the gardens, and a basket-making workshop. Programming for Youth It was in the area of youth programming that the MSV made the most significant increases in fiscal year 2011–12. Five new programs for children were offered, and one extremely popular program was continued. Among the new programming, Eco-Friends at the MSV taught youth ages nine through 12 about recycling, ecosystems, and techniques of This sold-out guided gallery tour was among the educational programs offered in conjunction with the MSV-organized exhibition Daughters of the Stars: Shenandoah Valley Star Quilts and Their Makers. Photo: Rick Foster professional gardeners. Art in the Gardens taught youth ages 11 through 15 about art, painting processes, and how to draw inspiration introduced. In this program teams composed of an adult and a child toured the exhibition and learned how to sculpt and paint real and abstract subjects. A number of programs were presented in from the gardens and galleries. In Teen Art Camp youth ages 14 to 18 spent a week exploring the gardens and galleries while working with regional artists to create paintings and sculptures and learn about careers in art. conjunction with the Daughters of the Stars exhibition. In November’s youth workshop, Connecting Threads, children toured the exhibition, discussed Valley quilters, learned how quilting combines visual art with geometry, and created their own “mini quilts.” For adults that month, Margie Mielke, a Shenandoah Valley quilter and member of the Top of Virginia Quilt Guild, taught a quilt-making workshop. Over the holidays 80 people packed the MSV holiday tea to learn that “Boring Quilters Don’t Make Headlines,” a lecture by author/appraiser Phyllis Twigg Hatcher of Annapolis, Maryland, and in January quilt appraiser Pam Pampe led a free, filled-to-capacity gallery tour of the exhibition. 16 Learning about plants in the MSV Garden Explorers program. Photo: Rick Foster MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY the year, beginning in April when the MSV admission policy was simplified overall and changed to allow youth ages 12 and under free of charge into the Museum, the gardens, and Gardens at Nights events. Also, the MSV continued in its policy of offering free admission to all on Wednesday mornings from 10 a.m. to noon. The MSV also offered a number of events A participant in the MSV’s new Teen Art Camp. Partial funding for this new MSV program was provided by the Marion Park Lewis Foundation. The program sold out, with participants and their parents asking for more programming for this age group. throughout the year to provide families with free access to the gardens and galleries. These opportunities included Glen Burnie Day in July 2011, which attracted 1,514 people, and MSV Day in February 2012, which 623 people attended. Opening the Glen Burnie House free of charge in October attracted 425 people, and As mentioned earlier in this report, Art Duos National Public Gardens Day in May attracted teamed adults and children in learning 446 people. experiences and Camp MSV provided children from the Boys & Girls Club of Northern Shenandoah Valley with a once-weekly, summerlong camp. Continuing this year was Garden Explorers, the popular, summer-long, free program that teaches youth in preschool through age eight to explore the Museum’s gardens in special, guided tours and participate in discussions and hands-on activities. The program sold out this year, with 300 children participating in the weekly sessions. A family enjoys the Shenandoah Valley Gallery during February’s MSV Day. Photo: Rick Foster PROMISE KEPT: MORE FOR FAMILIES In the summer of 2011 the Gardens at Night events were also influenced by an emphasis on families. Along with keeping the tradition of Fiscal year 2011–12 saw the MSV making offering fabulous music in the gardens, each significant strides to be more relevant by offering event included free children’s activities. Families affordable, family-friendly events. This emphasis responded to these changes, and a total of 3,299 on the family directed programming throughout people attended GAN events in this fiscal year. PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 17 Finally, this year the MSV planted a learning garden for the primary purpose of helping people of all ages learn about the art and science of gardening. Maintained by volunteers and staff, the garden also supplies the MSV Café with fresh fruits and vegetables. PROMISE KEPT: INCREASING SUPPORT Participants in the MSV Tomato & Garlic TasteFest tomato relay race. Photo: Rick Foster Last year the MSV stated its intention to explore ways to generate more revenue through donations Entertainment included bluegrass by The Fox and earned income, and the Annual Campaign of Hunt; Motown from The Moonlighters; 1970s fiscal 2011–12 certainly started on the right track. hits from the Robbie Limon Band; and rock, This annual appeal for donated support raised soul, and rhythm and blues from the Soul $264,410 in fiscal year 2011–12 and exceeded its Expressions Band. The MSV is grateful to Q102 goal by more than $50,000. for its sponsorship of this event. We express gratitude to all MSV Donors to the Through all these opportunities, the MSV Annual Campaign who made that provided free admission to the galleries and accomplishment possible and particularly to the gardens to 5,861 visitors in fiscal year 2011–12. leadership members of the Compass Society. In addition, the Museum also provided free These annual donations made possible all the admission to a number of community programs, educational and community-focused such as the popular Tomato & Garlic TasteFest programming about which you have just read. that provided 970 people with a fun day, for The MSV also thanks those Donors who free, at the MSV. The TasteFest included events stepped up to provide financial support of for children, such as a tomato relay race, a special projects or needs. We continue, as well, garlic hunt, and an arts-and-crafts area where in our deep gratitude for the ongoing support of they could decorate tomatoes. Also this year, the MSV combined its newsletter and calendar of events into MSV Now. This redesigned publications includes a “Just for Kids” section with information for youth and a coloring sheet. A new children’s menu was introduced in the Museum Café, too; it is provided on a coloring sheet to keep young minds occupied while awaiting child-friendly foods. Left: Charles Covey and Compass Society Member Jody ArmstrongJones. Right: Compass Society Members John and Maxine Willey. 18 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY Left to right: Matthew Gaglione, Irene S. Wischer Society for Planned Giving participant; Timber Frame Giving Circle Donors Massie and Bob Burns; MSV Board Member Blake Curtis and his wife, Marie, Shenandoah River Giving Circle Donors; and Peter Bullough, Chairman of the Glass–Glen Burnie Foundation and Compass Society Member. the Glass–Glen Burnie Foundation, which giving as the best way to financially support provides for a wide range of MSV financial them. To encourage more people to become needs associated with keeping the Museum Members, lower levels of Membership were facilities open to the public and providing for added, and upper levels that previously were their maintenance. classified as Memberships were redefined as Please see the following pages of this Annual Report for a complete listing of all these generous Donors and the projects they helped make possible. While acknowledging the success of our Annual Campaign and other donated support in fiscal year 2011–12, we have also realized that the percentage of the MSV budget raised through donations must catch up to the average for museums nationwide. This year the MSV began to address this by critically analyzing the Membership and Donor programs. The analysis determined that blurred lines of distinction between the two programs were likely compromising the MSV’s abilities to achieve increased revenues from both. Donor levels. Over time, as marketing messages communicate these distinctions, the MSV hopes more people will join as Members and support the Museum as Donors. Certainly all indications suggest that MSV Membership continues to have great appeal. In this fiscal year the Membership count surpassed 1,200 for the first time, with 217 new Members coming to the program unsolicited. This is almost certainly attributed to the fact that increased programming means increased Member benefits, which include free general admission, free admission to the holiday concert series, Gardens and Galleries at Night events, Annual Members’ Lecture, Tuesday Garden Talks, and the opportunity to preview exhibitions before they open to the public. In response, the MSV revised the Membership Members also appreciate discounts in the and Donor structure and refocused their Museum Store and Café, reduced admission to marketing approaches. The strategy sought to programs and workshops, and special Member better define Membership as the best way to trips, which, like May’s journey to Longwood participate in Museum programs and the act of Gardens, always sell out. PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 19 NEW DIR ECT IONS T he summary on the previous pages details this Museum’s many successes of fiscal year 2011–12 and illustrates its commitment to providing meaningful experiences as a cultural resource for all Shenandoah Valley residents. These accomplishments of the past beg a question regarding the future. What new direction will the MSV take next? In response, in the spring of 2013, the MSV will publish a Strategic Plan that will guide all areas of the Museum’s operations for 2013–2018. This plan will demonstrate that the MSV is committed to providing more: more programs MOVEABLE FEASTS Entertaining at Glen Burnie for all ages, more collaboration with community partners, more exhibitions with a broader The logo for the upcoming Moveable Feasts exhibition. audience appeal, more relevance, and more access. objects. These exhibitions will change yearly to provide fresh experiences of this significant NEW DIRECTIONS: COLLECTIONS AND EXHIBITIONS collection. As mentioned earlier in this report, the first Earlier in this report, we described the exhibition, Moveable Feasts: Entertaining at transformation about to take place in the MSV Glen Burnie, will transport visitors to Glen galleries. This major change is worth repeating Burnie as guests of Museum benefactor Julian here, for this shift in space usage will result in a Wood Glass Jr. and then partner R. Lee Taylor. dramatic change in the experiences we offer This exhibition will directly connect the gallery visitors. The changes will nearly double the experience to the house and gardens nearby. space of our regular changing exhibition gallery. Following Moveable Feasts, the next exhibition, And, we will now draw from the Julian Wood slated to open in 2014, will be guest-curated by Glass Jr. Collection to create a wide variety of one of the country’s leading experts in the field dynamic exhibitions that feature different of decorative arts; look for that exciting themes, collecting styles, time periods, and announcement in the months to come. PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 21 In addition to these new directions for changing exhibitions, the MSV is shifting its collecting focus in order to tell a more representative story of the Valley. This shift will see the Museum not only acquiring and interpreting fine objects made in the Valley for the affluent but also historical objects produced for and by people of a more average means. To supplement our Collection, we will place more emphasis on borrowing and displaying examples from the many public and private collections in the Valley Collector Greg Bott loaned this signature star quilt to the recent MSV exhibition Daughters of the Stars. Photo: Julie Napear and beyond. And, we will expand our collecting scope to include objects made by Valley artists The first exhibition scheduled for the “new” in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Changing Exhibition Galley, American Impressionism: The Lure of the Artist’s Colony, was organized by the Reading Public Museum and will present more than 80 oil paintings and 30 works on paper, the largest display of framed works of art ever presented in an MSV changing exhibition. The display will include landscapes, seascapes, portraits, and still-life paintings arranged according to the artists’ colonies that played a critical role in the development of American Impressionism. The MSV is now developing innovative and fun programming for all ages to complement these exhibitions. To more effectively tap the fundraising and public relations opportunities of these changing exhibitions, the MSV has now developed an exhibition schedule that extends into 2015. With this advance planning, the nation’s most highly sought speakers can be scheduled, our marketing department can fully tap the potential of MSV-organized exhibitions, and Donors who recruited and acknowledged. From the upcoming American Impressionism exhibition, A Study in White (no date), by Charles Webster Hawthorne (1872–1930), oil on canvas, Reading Public Museum. 22 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY are interested in supporting exhibitions can be NEW DIRECTIONS FOR THE HOUSE & GARDENS emerged regarding the best future uses of the Glen Burnie House, and this may well be one of the most exciting new directions of the future. The Glen Burnie House is now closed for major With a goal of changing its focus from a house renovation of all its mechanical systems. tour to a community-centered experience, ideas Planning for these renovations is completed, and currently being considered see the house used to construction work will begin in November of host special events, small changing exhibitions, 2012. Funding for these renovations is largely and displays of Valley artists’ works. All these provided by the National Endowment for the ideas will be evaluated over the next 18 months Humanities (NEH), with matching funds coming as renovations to the house’s systems are from the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley, the undertaken, the Strategic Plan for 2013–2018 is Hillsdale Fund, the Marietta McNeill Morgan finalized, and a Master Plan for expansion is and Samuel Tate Morgan Jr. Foundation, and developed. the Roller-Bottimore Foundation. Similarly, the MSV also is evaluating ways to With input from more than 200 people from make the site’s formal gardens and, especially, throughout the Valley, new thinking has the expanses of green space surrounding them, more accessible. A major step toward that goal will occur with the opening of a portion of the City of Winchester’s Green Circle for walking and biking on the property. This is just one action that will be outlined in a master plan for the 254-acre Glen Burnie property that will be presented to the Board of Directors. NEW DIRECTIONS FOR ROSE HILL FARM As the site of the First Battle of Kernstown, which factors highly in the history of the Civil War, the importance of Rose Hill has never been questioned. In fiscal year 2011–12 a historic structures report and archeology studies confirmed the degree to which the site’s house is also historically important. To make this resource more accessible and relevant, new directions here will see significant As this report goes to print, work on the Green Circle portion on the MSV property is nearing completion. Photo: Rick Foster PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS changes and improvements being made. A new 23 public entrance will be constructed, as will a provide for the programming that enriches this parking lot. Public restroom facilities will be community and region. added, as well. In addition, the exterior of the house and its environs will be restored to their nineteenth-century appearance. And, to open the site more fully to the public, conversations are now underway to establish a partnership with the Frederick County Parks and Recreation Department. Now your donations are more important than ever before. A group of leadership Donors has come forward to offer the MSV a major challenge grant. By matching every new or increased dollar given to the MSV in its Annual Fund for Fiscal Year 2012–13, this grant will provide the MSV up to a total of $78,500 in matching dollars. If you gave a financial contribution to the MSV last year and increase the amount of your donation this year, the amount of increase will be matched dollar for dollar. If you gave a financial contribution to the MSV more than a year ago and you give a gift this year, your gift The historic house at the MSV Rose Hill property. Photo: Ron Blunt now will be entirely matched. And, if you have never contributed to the MSV and make a gift NEW DIRECTIONS IN BUILDING SUPPORT this year, your gift will be entirely matched. For Museum Members, every new direction and Museum of the Shenandoah Valley is embarking program outlined in this report has an on new directions with more programs, broader associated Member benefit. The MSV has truly audience appeal, increased relevance, and become a place to see and the place to be, and greater access. there is no better way to do both than with your Membership. Please renew your Membership and also share the good news about the amazing benefits with your friends. Every person who joins the MSV helps build the excitement, for the more who join, the greater the fun. On the preceding pages you read that the Now we ask for the financial support that will allow the MSV to realize these new directions. In this report you will find a donation/pledge envelope, and we hope you will use it to return your financial gift or pledge (payable by June 30, 2013) to the MSV. In so doing you will help All of these programs have a price, and for that us achieve the challenge grant opportunity that reason we also encourage you to become an is within our grasp. Not only will you help us MSV Donor. For fiscal year 2012–13 the MSV qualify for the additional funding challenge, but, has set its Annual Campaign goal at $300,000, more important, you are investing in the cultural and these funds are necessary in order to vibrancy of the Valley and your community. 24 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY S PEC I AL R ECOGNIT IONS The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley is grateful to its Donors for making all MSV programming possible. From the child who brings us a few dollars to the Donor who contributes thousands, every gift provides MSV Board Member John Marlow and his wife, Joyce, owners of Marlow Motor Company. invaluable support to provide changing exhibitions, lectures, workshops, and other MSV programming that enriches the cultural life of our Valley. We appreciate them all. On the following pages you will find a list of all Donors who supported the Annual Campaign in fiscal 2011–12. Here, we pay tribute to those gifts that supported special program needs at the MSV. For providing the MSV with a badly needed new van, we are grateful to John K. Marlow and Marlow Motor Company. Meadow Branch; Yount, Hyde & Barbour, P.C.; Shenandoah Valley Westminster Canterbury; and Wells Fargo Bank/Wells Fargo Advisors. Peggy Denison provided support for Camp MSV, and the Marion Park Lewis Foundation supported Teen Art Camp. Investing in the skills of the MSV staff is another important need, and this year we are grateful to the Virginia Commission for the Arts In the galleries, for support to provide LED for funding a staff member’s participation in a lighting in the R. Lee Taylor Miniatures Gallery, grant-writing workshop. we thank Ruth Farley Massey. For conservation of important objects, we thank the James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust, Grace Ritzenberg, and August Van Dessel (see page 8). We also thank Shirley and Hunter M. Gaunt Jr. for their generous gift that helped us significantly add to our collection of Valley silver (see page 7). These Donors helped the MSV fulfill its pledge to preserve and present the culture of the Shenandoah Valley. Finally, the MSV also thanks those who contributed their time to make fiscal year 2011– 12 a success. This includes our docent team— who contributed more than 14,000 hours to the MSV this year—and, in addition, those who contributed hours beyond that by serving on the Museum Board and advisory committees. You’ll find a complete listing of these dedicated volunteers in the back of this report. We also extend our gratitude to the many other The MSV also thanks those who funded special volunteers who, in addition, also helped the programming this year. Sponsorship of the Museum, including those who worked in the Business Forum Luncheon came from BB&T; gardens and served in various educational Sodexo Catering; Valley Health; the Willows at programs. The MSV is indebted to you all. PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS 25 F I NANC IAL SU MMARY For the Years Ended June 30, 2012 and 2011 2012 2011 $3,853,626 $2,535,412 Contributions (individuals and estates) 249,697 201,645 Grants 212,960 5,160 87,601 88,905 Admissions (includes tours, public events, and programs) 154,934 156,645 Café and gift store revenues (gross) 286,636 266,598 Other revenue 106,792 84,289 REVENUE AND SUPPORT Contributions (foundations and corporations) Membership revenue Investment income (includes realized and unrealized income on restricted endowments) 426,138 2,157,968 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Total revenue and support 5,378,384 5,496,622 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN NET ASSETS Program services Fundraising 3,818,089 3,298,533 238,003 196,280 Management and general 548,808 647,353 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Total expenses 4,604,900 4,142,166 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Change in net assets 773,484 1,354,456 Net assets, beginning of fiscal year 28,174,771 26,820,315 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Net assets, end of fiscal year $28,948,255 $28,174,771 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley’s audited financial statements with an unqualified opinion and our Form 990 are available upon request by emailing tcooper@ShenandoahMuseum.org or by calling 540-662-1473, ext. 223. Revenues Contributions, Grants 80% Expenses Membership, admissions, retail sales, other 12% Realized and unrealized investment earnings 8% 26 Management and general 12% Fundraising 5% Program services 83% MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY M ANAGEMENT ’S R EPORT F iscal Year 2011–12 at the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley was characterized by a number of milestones. Among the most significant was the fact that more people experienced the MSV than ever before, with 32,657 visitors enjoying our gardens, galleries, and programs in the fiscal year. Thousands more people shopped in the store, dined in the café, or Museum Café revenue increased slightly this year. attended a rental event. Illustrative of our Photo: Rick Foster commitment to the Valley community, 6,100 of same time, the year’s increased donations from those people, adults and children alike, enjoyed other foundations, corporations, and individual free admission and free programming at the Donors resulted in the Museum’s ability to direct MSV during the fiscal year. more resources than ever before to collections Twenty-seven percent more people visited the MSV website this year, with 36,643 unique visits management, exhibitions, educational programming, and community events. recorded. Also in this fiscal year Museum The MSV is committed to fiscal responsibility, Membership surpassed 1,200 for the first time. with efforts to diversify our sources of revenue In an improvement over last year’s flat figures, in Fiscal Year 2011–12 revenues from the Museum Store and Museum Café increased. Earned income from site rentals increased, as well. Revenues from grants were also up, as was donated income, with the MSV exceeding its Annual Campaign goal by $50,000. being of particular interest. We also are increasing collaborations with other organizations to help manage costs and make an even greater impact in the community. Now, a challenge grant provides the additional possibility of significantly increasing donated income. We hope everyone reading this Annual Report will help us meet this challenge, allowing Many people made this success possible. The the MSV to pursue new directions in the coming important continuing support of the Glass–Glen year to preserve and enrich the cultural life of Burnie Foundation maintained the Museum the Valley. facilities and landscapes. In addition, this year the Glass–Glen Burnie Foundation also made substantial financial commitments to support the Glen Burnie House preservation project and improve the Museum’s Rose Hill property. At the PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Dana Hand Evans Executive Director 27 LETTER FROM THE TREASURER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CHAIRMAN OF THE FINANCE COMMITTEE The role of the Finance Committee is primarily of Directors. The Finance Committee is also to provide financial oversight for the charged with ensuring compliance and/or organization. Although the entire Board carries developing other policies that further serve to fiduciary responsibility for the organization, the protect the organization and manage its Finance Committee serves a leadership role in exposure to risk. These include oversight of the this area as it is a standing committee of the personnel policies and employee benefits Board of Directors of the Museum of the program; review of insurance requirements; Shenandoah Valley. The committee is comprised review of capital purchases, leases, and of regional volunteer members and management, contracts; and oversight of the earned income with chairmanship by the treasurer of the activities of the Corporation. Museum Board. The committee, which meets three to four times annually, is responsible to the Board for reviewing and reporting on all matters pertaining to the fiscal operations of the Corporation, including but not limited to: preparation and oversight of the annual budget; short- and long-term financial planning, including management of the organizations investments and endowments; maintenance of proper accounting and control procedures; As treasurer of the Board of Directors of the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley and chairman of the Finance Committee, I am pleased to report that the Finance Committee is committed to the principles of good stewardship and to building and preserving the Museum's financial resources in order to support the accomplishment of both the short and the long term goals of the Museum recruitment and selection of an independent auditor and final review of the draft audit and 990 as presented by the auditor, and presentation of the audit report to the full Board David L. Blount Treasurer Enjoying children’s activities and beautiful gardens during Gardens at Night at the MSV. Photos: Rick Foster 28 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY GIFTS , GRANT S & MEMBERSHI P Contributions above and beyond Membership dues provide annual support for the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley, including important programs that distinguish this site as a museum. We thank all those who contributed so generously to these important efforts. The Donor and Member names listed in this Annual Report reflect contributions made in the 2011–2012 fiscal year between July 1, 2011, and June 30, 2012. Please notify the development office at 540-662-1473, ext. 217, of any edits or additions to this list. The Col. James Wood Circle for Lifetime Membership Mr. James A. Arnold* Mr. Michael Gore* The Irene S. Wischer Society for Planned Giving The Estate of John E. Brown Dr. Peter G. Bullough Mr. David C. Fogelsanger Mr. Julian Wood Glass Jr.* Mr. J. Matthew Gaglione Mrs. Jane K. Krug* Ms. Ruth Farley Massey Ms. Madeline MacNeil Mr. Christopher A. and Mrs. Maria Molden The Estate of Bertha M. Muti Mr. Sidney L. and Mrs. Sara M. Stern Mrs. Kathryn Perry Werner Mrs. Irene S. Wischer* Compass Society Donors July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 MSV Circle Dr. Peter G. Bullough Mr. August Van Dessel and Ms. Angela McDonald Julian Wood Glass Jr. Circle Mrs. JoAnne Armstrong-Jones BB&T Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Benham, III Mr. and Mrs. David L. Blount James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust Beverly B. Shoemaker, Trustee Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Byrd Mr. David D. Denham Mr. and Mrs. Mazen Farouki Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur M. Feltner Dr. and Mrs. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Glaize, III Mr. and Mrs. James T. Holland Mr. and Mrs. John P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Molden Mr. and Mrs. Allan G. Paterson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Rupert W. Werner The Honorable and Mrs. Henry K. Willard, II Dr. and Mrs. John B. Willey Winchester Printers, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Hottle Wise Foundation Mr. Lewis B. Pollard and Mr. Lewis S. Wiley Giving Circle Donors July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Glen Burnie Circle Mr. John C. Allen, Jr. Mr. Eugene F. Dearing, Jr. and Ms. Virginia Guthridge Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Fawcett Mr. and Mrs. Andrew U. Ferrari Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Fetter Dr. Benjamin F. Lewis and Paula Bromley Mr. and Mrs. John K. Marlow Dr. and Mrs. John E. McAllister Dr. and Mrs. W. D. McWhorter Mr. and Mrs. David H. Roth Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Dr. and Mrs. H. G. White, Jr. Shenandoah River Circle Mr. and Mrs. John C. Allen, Sr. Mr. Joseph A. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Beaudoin Dr. D. Gregory Bott Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Byrd, III Mr. and Mrs. William H. Clement Mr. and Mrs. W. Blakely Curtis The Darrin-McHone Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Edwards Mr. David C. Fogelsanger Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hazel Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Hollis Mrs. Lorraine P. Hottel Mr. and Mrs. Gregory F. Hutchinson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kalbach Mr. Jerrald K. Knight Mr. and Mrs. David E. Labovitz Dr. and Mrs. James C. Laidlaw Ms. Judith A. Landes Mr. and Mrs. John G. Lathrop Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Long Ms. Angela R. McDonald and Mr. August Van Dessel Mrs. Terese S. Merrill and Mr. Mark H. Merrill Dr. and Mrs. W. Tyler Mistr Mr. and Mrs. James T. Riley Ms. Toni Ritzenberg Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Shockey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Slater, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney L. Stern Mrs. Nancy St. C. Talley (D) Mr. and Mrs. Edwin E. White Mr. and Mrs. F. Dixon Whitworth Mrs. Susan Williams and Dr. William Mularie Dr. and Mrs. Dennis W. Wise Timber Frame Circle Mr. and Mrs. Calvin H. Allen Mr. Joseph A. Allen Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Apostle Mr. and Mrs. William F. Brandt, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles L. Burns, Jr. The Honorable Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Comstock Mrs. George Denison Mr. and Mrs. Myron I. Dickerson Dr. and Mrs. William W. Ellis Mr. and Mrs. Bertram R. Firestone Ms. Virginia McGehee Friend Mr. J. Matthew Gaglione and Dr. Richard Certo Dr. and Mrs. W. Jackson Helm Mr. and Mrs. Don Hernley Mr. and Mrs. Anthony W. Hudimac Mrs. Peggy A. Jackson Rev. and Mrs. Donald D. Jones PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Kremer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David Lee Mrs. Regina V. Legge Mr. and Mrs. David P. Lewis Dr. and Mrs. David E. Magarik Mr. and Mrs. William E. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Mitchell, Jr. Mrs. Eleanor Monahan Dr. and Mrs. Stuart A. Monroe Mr. and Mrs. Carl S. Napps Mr. and Mrs. George L. Ohrstrom, II Mrs. Nicole H. Perry Dr. and Mrs. Charles S. Roberts Mrs. Mary P. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Rockwood Mr. and Mrs. George Schember Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Schulz Mr. and Mrs. C. Robert Solenberger Mr. Richard W. Stephenson Miss Eloise Strader Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Roger W. Vaughan Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Dr. and Mrs. James R. York Additional Unrestricted Compass Campaign Gifts July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 ExxonMobil Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lane (2) Ms. Virginia S. Morbeck (1) Glen Burnie Garden Club Lord Fairfax Orchid Society Murphy Beverage, Co. (2) Norfolk Southern Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. deButts The Estate of John E. Brown (2) The Junior Century Club of Winchester Wal-Mart Foundation - V.A.P. Program Mr. and Mrs. William Swartz (3) Mr. and Mrs. John C. Allen, Sr. Anonymous (10) Mrs. J. Victor Arthur, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Baker Mr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Begley Mr. Edward Bell Ms. Mary C. Blake Mr. and Mrs. James V. Boone Mr. and Mrs. James E. Boyd (3) Mrs. Magalen O. Bryant Ms. Anne S. Carr Mr. and Mrs. Deaver C. Carr Ms. Marybelle Clark Mrs. Ellen Cochrane Mr. and Mrs. John T. Conrad Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Cook Mr. and Mrs. Cary M. Craig, Jr. Ms. Frances W. Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Cunningham Mr. Eugene Dearing and Ms. Virginia Guthridge Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. deButts Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Devlin Ms. Amaryllis Dove Dr. Charles Drake and Ms. Bonnie Paulsen Ms. Elizabeth P. Duncan *Deceased 29 Mr. and Mrs. Robinson M. Duncan Mr. Richard A. Farland Mr. David C. Fogelsanger Mr. and Mrs. Michael Foreman Mr. and Mrs. Warren B. French, Jr. Ms. Pamela Friestad and Ms. Stephanie Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Funkhouser Mrs. Philip B. Glaize, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. John L. Goodloe, III Mr. Charles Greeb, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Grant H. Griswold Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grogg (2) Dr. and Mrs. Adel B. Guirguis Dr. H. Michael Hanna, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie S. Harp Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey P. Harris Dr. David K. Harry Mr. and Mrs. David W. Heglas Mr. and Mrs. John T. Helbert Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Henderson Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Hougham Ms. Susan B. Howard Dr. John Howe and Ms. Tyrrell Flawn Mrs. Phelps Hunter Mr. and Mrs. David F. Jaswa Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kalbach Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Keech Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. Kelble Mr. and Mrs. Tim Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Kincannon Mr. and Mrs. George Kirkpatrick Mr. Jerrald K. Knight Mr. Francis Kraemer Dr. and Mrs. James C. Laidlaw Ms. Aliene M. Laws Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Leigh, Jr. (2) Mr. and Mrs. David P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Rumsey S. Light Mr. and Mrs. Trowbridge Littleton Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lore Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lovan Ms. Mindy J. Loy Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Lyon Mr. and Mrs. R. Bruce MacDermott Mr. and Mrs. Alan Macpherson Ms. Pauline S. Manuel Ms. Hazel D. Mason (2) Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Giel Millner Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. Monahan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James Mueller Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Muller Mrs. Mary C. Mulvey Mr. John C. Murphy Ms. Elizabeth A. Murray Dr. and Mrs. John H. Neumann Mr. and Mrs. Keller C. Nichols Mr. and Mrs. George L. Ohrstrom, II Mr. Brad Omps and Ms. Susan Coffelt Mrs. William H. Pifer Mr. and Mrs. Ron Place Mrs. Louise C. Pulliam Mr and Mrs. Hal Raffa Ms. Mary Lou Raymond Dr. and Mrs. Frank H. Reuling (2) Ms. Evelyn S. Ricci Mr. Marshall M. Rich Mrs. Patricia A. J. Richardson Ms. Toni Ritzenberg Mr. and Mrs. John Romano Mr. and Mrs. David L. Schroeder (3) Mrs. Dorothy M. Shaull Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Shull Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Smith, Jr. Mrs. Joan Smith Dr. and Mrs. Norman J. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Smith Dr. and Mrs. Eli Snelgrove Mrs. James Stafford, Jr. Ms. Sandra L. Starr Mr. and Mrs. Sidney L. Stern 30 Mr. and Mrs. George C. Stierhoff Mr. I. Fred Stine Dr. Cheryl Thompson-Stacy Dr. Margaret E. Toxopeus and Mr. Alan G. Toxopeus Mr. and Mrs. John W. Truban Mr. Azmi Uthman and Ms. Susan Greenwalt Mr. and Mrs. Massie Valentine Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Mr. and Mrs. John W. Warren, Sr. Mr. William C. Westgard Mrs. Emily A. Whitehorne Mr. and Mrs. F. Dixon Whitworth Dr. and Mrs. Scott M. Wilhelm Mr. and Mrs. John C. Williams Mrs. Susan Williams and Dr. William Mularie The Winchester Group, Inc. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Wise Mr. and Mrs. Kent A. Womack, III Mr. and Mrs. Alan L. Wurtzel Dr. and Mrs. James R. York Ms. Patricia L. Zontine MEMBERSHIPS & GIFTS Small Business Level Memberships July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Aikens Group Annandale Millwork & Allied Systems Corp. Bank of Clarke County BB&T - Blue Ridge Community Bank Blue Ridge Hospice John P. Chesson, M.D. and Staff First Bank H.N. Funkhouser & Co Harman Construction Holtzman Corp. Hoxton Financial, Inc. Perry Engineering, Inc. Ressa Construction, Inc. Rugs Direct Shenandoah University Shenandoah Valley Westminster Canterbury Signet Screen Printing & Embroidery Sodexo Catering The National Sporting Library & Museum The Shockey Companies The Willows At Meadow Branch The Winchester Group, Inc. The Winchester Star Trex Company, LLC United Bank Valley Health Valley Proteins, Inc. Virginia National Bank VNB Trust The Honorable Jill H. Vogel and Mr. Alexander N. Vogel Wells Fargo Advisors Wells Fargo Bank Winchester Obstetrics & Gynecology, PLC Yount, Hyde & Barbour, P.C. Donor Level Memberships July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mr. and Mrs. Calvin H. Allen Mr. and Mrs. John C. Allen, Sr. Mr. John C. Allen, Jr. Mr. Joseph A. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Andreae Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Apostle Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. William T. Armstrong Mrs. JoAnne Armstrong-Jones Mrs. J. Victor Arthur, Jr. Ms. Hazel H. Ballard Mr. and Mrs. Dale M. Barley Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Barta Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Beaudoin Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Benham, III Mr. and Mrs. David L. Blount Dr. D. Gregory Bott Mrs. Robina R. Bouffault James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust Beverly B. Shoemaker, Trustee Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. Boxley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William F. Brandt, Jr. Mses. Cynthia and Jessica Brenneman Dr. Peter G. Bullough Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Burns, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Butler The Honorable Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Byrd, III Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Byrd Ms. Melissa Callahan and Mr. Adam Tipton Dr. and Mrs. Winston Cameron, Jr. Ms. Holly Carter and Mr. Vince Simmons Mr. Louis Cesa and Mrs. Gail Hermosilla Ms. Melinda P. Childress Mr. and Mrs. John R. Clawson Mr. and Mrs. William H. Clement Mr. and Mrs. Cary M. Craig, Jr. Mrs. Caroline Craig and Mr. Oscar Nolazco Mr. and Mrs. W. Blakely Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Cunningham The Darrin-McHone Charitable Foundation Dr. CeeAnn Davis and Col. William Hammack U.S.M.C. ret. Ms. Betsy Davison Mr. Eugene F. Dearing, Jr. and Ms. Virginia Guthridge Mr. and Mrs. Robert DeMott Mr. David D. Denham Mrs. George Denison Mr. and Mrs. Myron I. Dickerson Ms. Amaryllis Dove Dr. Charles Drake and Ms. Bonnie Paulsen Mr. Heyward Drummond and Mr. John Ellis Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Ward Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Eisenhard Dr. and Mrs. William W. Ellis Mr. and Mrs. Edvin V. Farinholt Mr. and Mrs. Mazen Farouki Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Fawcett Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur M. Feltner Mr. and Mrs. Andrew U. Ferrari Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Fetter Ms. Amy L. Fielder Mr. and Mrs. Bertram R. Firestone Mr. David C. Fogelsanger Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Fowler Ms. Virginia McGehee Friend Dr. and Mrs. Mark Galbraith Mr. J. Matthew Gaglione and Dr. Richard Certo Ms. Sara Garland and Mr. Kim Uhl Dr. and Mrs. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr. Mr. Thomas C. Gibbs and Mrs. Linda Q. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Glaize, III Mr. and Mrs. Hal Goodman Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grogg Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie S. Harp Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey P. Harris Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hazel Dr. and Mrs. W. Jackson Helm Mr. and Mrs. Don Hernley Mr. Boyd A. Hill Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Hinkle Mr. and Mrs. James T. Holland Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Hollis Mrs. Lorraine P. Hottel Ms. Susan B. Howard Mr. and Mrs. Anthony W. Hudimac Dr. John Howe and Ms. Tyrrell Flawn Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Huntsberry, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gregory F. Hutchinson Mrs. Peggy A. Jackson MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Jenkins Mr. and Mrs. Allen D. Johnson Mr. Calvin G. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur S. Johnston Rev. and Mrs. Donald A. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kalbach Dr. and Mrs. Vicken V. Kalbian Dr. and Mrs. Don G. Karolyi Mr. and Mrs. Tim Kelly Dr. and Mrs. George Kessler Ms. Angela Khatman and Mr. David Yankoviak Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Kirk Mr. Jerrald K. Knight Mr. and Mrs. Carroll E. Koller Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kowalczyk Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Kremer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James Kremer Mr. and Mrs. David E. Labovitz Dr. and Mrs. James C. Laidlaw Ms. Judith A. Landes Mr. and Mrs. John G. Lathrop Mr. and Mrs. Nick Lauderdale Ms. Aliene M. Laws Mrs. Evelyn Lederer Mr. and Mrs. David Lee Mrs. Regina V. Legge Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Leigh, Jr. Dr. Benjamin F. Lewis and Paula Bromley Mr. and Mrs. David P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. John P. Lewis Ms. Elizabeth Lind and Mr. Matthew Risley Dr. and Mrs. James R. Lizer Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Long Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Lyon Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Maccubbin Ms. Angela McDonald and Mr. August Van Dessel Dr. and Mrs. David E. Magarik Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Major Mr. and Mrs. John K. Marlow Dr. and Mrs. William H. Mason Ms. Ruth Farley Massey Ms. Judith H. McCormick Cohen Ms. Mollie McGarvey and Ms. Jill Butler Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. McKay Dr. and Mrs. W. D. McWhorter Mrs. Terese S. Merrill and Mr. Mark H. Merrill Drs. Lee Anna and Rolf H. Mielzarek Mr. and Mrs. William E. Miller Dr. and Mrs. W. Tyler Mistr Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Mitchell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael C. Mohn Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Molden Mrs. Eleanor Monahan Dr. and Mrs. Stuart A. Monroe Mr. and Mrs. James Mueller Dr. and Mrs. Eric J. Myer Mr. and Mrs. Carl S. Napps Mr. and Mrs. Patrick B. Nolan Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Norman Mr. and Mrs. George L. Ohrstrom, II Mr. and Mrs. John C. Palmer Mr. and Mrs. Allan G. Paterson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David A. Paukovich Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pell Ms. Nicole H. Perry Mr. and Mrs. William J. Petersen Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Pettit Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Poland The Honorable and Mrs. H. R. Potts, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. David W. Powers Ms. Daria Rainieri and Mr. Matt Smith Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Read Mr. and Mrs. John Reynolds Mrs. Patricia A. J. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. James T. Riley Ms. Toni Ritzenberg Dr. and Mrs. Charles S. Roberts Mrs. Mary P. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Mark Robson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Rockwood Mr. and Mrs. David H. Roth Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Sabatino Mr. and Mrs. George Schember Dr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Schiavone, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David L. Schroeder Mr. and Mrs. Eugene F. Schultz, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Schultz, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Schulz Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Schwarz Dr. and Mrs. Richard J. Sears Ms. Katie Settle and Mr. Scott Johnson Ms. Ashley Sevits Mrs. Dorothy M. Shaull Shenandoah Valley Orthodontic Specialists, P.C. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Shendow Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Shockey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Skala Mr. and Mrs. Jay Skidmore Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Skiles Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Slater, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kim T. Smith Lt. Gen. and Mrs. Norman Smith Mrs. Helen G. Sperry Mrs. James Stafford, Jr. Mr. Richard W. Stephenson Mr. and Mrs. Sidney L. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Stewart Mr. Donald R. Strosnider Ms. Joan S. Symmer Col. (Ret.) and Mrs. John Tagnesi Mr. and Mrs. Terry Tierney Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Troup Ms. Michele Trufant Mr. August Van Dessel and Ms. Angela McDonald Ms. Amber Vargo and Mr. Jason Miller Mr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Versley Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Wagniere Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Mr. and Mrs. John W. Warren, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Rupert W. Werner The Honorable and Mrs. John E. Wetsel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin E. White Dr. and Mrs. H. G. White, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. F. Dixon Whitworth The Honorable and Mrs. Henry K. Willard, II Mrs. Susan Williams and Dr. William Mularie Dr. and Mrs. John B. Willey Winchester Printers, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Hottle Mr. and Mrs. R. Oakley Winters Dr. and Mrs. Dennis W. Wise The Wise Foundation Mr. Lewis B. Pollard and Mr. Lewis S. Wiley Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Wise Drs. Mary Beth Wood and John L. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Alan L. Wurtzel Dr. and Mrs. Henry E. York Dr. and Mrs. James R. York Ms. Patricia L. Zontine Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Zuckerman Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Zuckerman Honorary Level Membership July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Cross Restricted Gifts July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 GlaxoSmithKline Foundation Mrs. Karen E. Brill and Mr. William J. Meyer Hillsdale Fund Ms. Megan Gallagher and Mrs. Margaret R. White Roller-Bottimore Foundation PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Marietta M. Morgan & Samuel Tate Morgan, Jr. Foundation Marion Park Lewis Foundation National Endowment for the Humanities Virginia Commission for the Arts Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Mrs. Karen Brill and Mr. William Meyer Mrs. George Denison Mr. William Eddy Dr. and Mrs. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr. Glass-Glen Burnie Foundation Mr. and Mrs. David W. Goff Mr. and Mrs. Hal Goodman Mrs. Marleen B. Hansen James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust Mrs. Beverley B. Shoemaker and Ms. Rachel E. Shoemaker, Trustees Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kowalczyk Ms. Ruth Farley Massey Mr. and Mrs. Michael C. Mohn Mrs. Grace Ritzenberg Mr. Douglas C. Saffell Mrs. Joan Smith Mrs. Mary Toth Mr. and Mrs. John E. Trueblood Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Gifts of Heritage July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Bausum Ms. Dawne Burke Dr. and Mrs. Matthew Mackay-Smith Mr. August Van Desse and Ms. Angela McDonald Gifts to the Living Legacy Program July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mrs. Kris Goff Mrs. Patricia B. Haislip Mrs. Louise Nelson Mrs. Patricia A. Richardson Ms. Lelah M. Robison Mrs. Rosemary Swope In Honor of July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Ms. Mary K. Blake in honor of J. Matthew Gaglione Mr. and Mrs. John T. Helbert in honor of Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake The Junior Century Club of Winchester in honor of Dana Hand Evans Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kalbach in honor of Mr. John P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Tim Kelly in honor of William D. Wiley Mr. and Mrs. Alan Macpherson in honor of the Babb Family Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. Monahan, Jr. in honor of Eleanor Monahan Mr. and Mrs. John K. Romano in honor of Kevin Romano In Memory of July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mr. and Mrs. John C. Allen, Sr., in memory of Ben Dutton Mr. and Mrs. John C. Allen, Sr., in memory of Dr. George L. Sheppard James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust, Mrs. Beverly B. Shoemaker and Ms. Rachel E. Shoemaker, Trustees in memory of James and Mary Jane Bowman 31 Mrs. Kris Goff, Mrs. Louise Nelson, Mrs. Pat Richardson, Mrs. Rosemary Swope in memory of Patricia Greeb Mr. Jerrald K. Knight in memory of his late wife, Janet Battaile Ms. Lelah M. Robison in memory of her late great aunt, Onnolee Carson Mrs. Virginia S. Saunders in memory of her late husband, Winston D. Saunders Mr. and Mrs. F. Dixon Whitworth in memory of Nancy St. Clair Talley Mr. and Mrs. John C. Williams in memory of Henry Stern Dr. and Mrs. James R. York in memory of Elizabeth L. Salyan Donated Services or Gifts In Kind July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Bluebells Flowers – Gifts – Home & Garden Accessories Corrugated Container Corp. of the Shenandoah Valley Mrs. Gail Long Marlow Motors, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Marlow Meadows Farms Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Dual/Family Level Memberships July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mr. and Mrs. Ed Acker Mr. and Mrs. W. Gary Adams Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Nate L. Adams, III Barbara and John Adamson Mrs. Kay Adrian and Ms. Sara Vondy Mr. and Mrs. Joe Alger Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Alger, Jr. Mrs. Jean W. Allen and Ms. Leslie Allen Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ammirati Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. James G. Anderson, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Argall Mr. and Mrs. Richard Todd Armel Mr. and Mrs. Mike Arnold Mr. and Mrs. Michael Aschenbrenner Mr. and Mr. Larry Atkinson Mr. and Mrs. James Baden Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Baker Ms. Rayner Balciunas and Mr. Chance Varner Mr. and Mrs. Scott Ball Mr. and Mrs. Kent Barley Mr. and Mrs. Allan Barmak Mr. and Mrs. James N. Barnard, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Bartosiewicz Ms. Beth Batdorf and Mr. John Bresland Ms. Mary Bathory Vidaver and Mr. Ken Poole The Rev. Dr. Ralph Bayfield and The Rev. Maeva Bayfield Mses. Sharon and Courtney Beach Ms. Michon Bechamps and Mr. Steve Pugliese Dr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Bechamps Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F. Beck Mr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Begley Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Bell Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Berlin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene D. Betit Mr. and Mrs. Philip E. Bettendorf Ms. Linda Beville and Mr. Jim Charest The Rev. and Mrs. David Bicking Mr. and Mrs. Eric Bidlack Mr. and Mrs. Ray W. Bierlein Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bittel Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Bjelland Mr. and Mrs. Keith J. Boi Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Boling 32 Mr. and Mrs. Murrell Bolliger Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boulter Mr. and Mrs. Rob Bovey Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bovey Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bowman Ms. Anita Bowman and Mr. Keith Pratt Mr. and Mrs. James E. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Eric Boyers Mr. and Mrs. Gary Braswell Mr. and Mrs. Stan Breidinger Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Brennan Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Bricker, II Mrs. Karen Brill and Mr. William Meyer Mr. and Mrs. William D. Britz Ms. Mary Braun Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Bromley Ms. Anita Brown and Mr. Jay Turner Mr. and Mrs. William Brumback Mr. and Mrs. Neil R. Bryant Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Buettner Ms. Julie Bulger and Mr. Nathan Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Hal Bullock Mr. and Mrs. Glen P. Burke Mr. and Mrs. David F. Burks Mr. and Mrs. S. David Burns Mr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Bush Mr. and Mrs. John K. Butler, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John Buursink Mr. Clarke and Lee Cagey Mr. and Mrs. George B. Caley Mr. and Mrs. Steve Callahan Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Cameron Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Shep Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Candell Mrs. Patricia G. Canody Mr. and Mrs. Rodney J. Carnill Ms. Katherine Carolla Mr. and Mrs. Deaver C. Carr Mr. and Mrs. Mark Catlett Ms. Linda Challinor and Mr. Ben Zamore Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Chandler Mr. and Mrs. Tim Chapman Mses. Martha Christian and Margaret Kingdon Mr. and Mrs. Basil Clark Mr. and Mrs. James H. Clay Mr. and Mrs. John H. Claybrook Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Claytor Mr. and Mrs. Mickey W. Coffman Mr. and Mrs. Michael Cole Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Combs, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Comstock Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Conner Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Copenhaver Mr. and Mrs. Michael Cordero Ms. Pam Cornell and Mr. Glenn Wanielista Mr. and Mrs. Philip Covell Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Cox Mr. and Mrs. Gary Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Gregory S. Crawford Dr. and Mrs. Richard G. Creasey Mr. and Mrs. Don Crigler Mr. and Mrs. Charles Culler Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cumberland Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Curley Mr. and Mrs. Russell O. Cutshall Mr. and Mrs. Brian Daly Dr. and Mrs. Joe Damron Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Daniel Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Daugherty Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Davenport, III Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Wayne E. Davis Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Davis Ms. Kathleen M. Dawson Miss Alisa Dayo Mr. and Mrs. Stan Daywalt Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. DeHaven Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dejong Mr. and Mrs. Paul Delmerico Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dennis Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Devlin Mr. and Mrs. Mark DeWitt Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Dick Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dodson Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dolsen Mr. and Mrs. John M. Doty Mr. and Mrs. Bruce E. Downing Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Drummond, Jr. Mrs. Amy DuBrueler and Mr. John McGrath Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Duke Mr. and Mrs. James L. Dunlap Mr. and Mrs. Bernard E. Dupuis Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin B. Dutton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Dyke Mr. and Mrs. Stephen S. Eisenhauer Mr. and Mrs. Jim Eisenman Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ekberg Mr. and Mrs. Tim Elliott Ms. Anna Elwood and Dr. Robert Schwander Mr. and Mrs. James Emmart Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Enochs Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Erney Dr. and Mrs. Yener S. Erozan Ms. Dixie Erwin and Mr. Kenneth Hockin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Esposito Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Evans Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. H. Ewald Ms. Joan Brett Farrell Ms. Mary Fehrenback and Mr. Jeff Bellis Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fine Mr. and Mrs. Henry Firey Ms. Roxanne Fischer and Mr. Donald Orlic Mr. and Mrs. John R. Fisher, III Dr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Flax Mr. Ronald Fletcher and Ms. Eleanor Shutt Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Floyd Ms. Karen Follett and Ms. Erica Helm Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Foreman Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel F. Forero Mr. and Mrs. John J. Fox, III Mr. Mark Frastak and Ms. Angela Meyer Ms. Pamela Friestad and Ms. Stephanie Anderson Mr. and Mrs. William E. Frye Mr. Terry Frye and Mr. David Look FAIA, FAPT Ms. Helen and Joan Funkhouser Mr. and Mrs. Carl M. Funkhouser Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gagner Ms. Janet Gahagan Mr. and Mrs. George H. Garber Mr. and Mrs. Juan Carols Garcia Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Gardner Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Garrett Dr. and Mrs. George A. Garrigan Mr. and Mrs. Ricky E. Gearhart Mr. Harry George and Mr. Randolph George Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Gersdorf Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gilmore Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Gilpin Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Glaize, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alan R. Gober Mr. and Mrs. David J. Gonzol Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Good Mr. and Mrs. Roy Graham Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Graham Ms. Andrea Greene Mr. and Mrs. David C. Greene Mr. and Mrs. K. S. Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Leon Griffith Mr. Grim and Family Mr. Roger Gurner Mr. Michael Gur Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Gyauch Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Haddox Mr. and Mrs. Phil Haines Mary and Ken Hall Ms. Kay Hallett and Ms. Mary Axelson Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Hardy Ms. Cathy Harman and Mr. Ralph West Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Harris Mr. and Mrs. John Harris Mr. and Mrs. Freddy Harrison MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY Ms. Michele Hartley and Mr. Steve Warrick Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Hassert Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Haun, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Hawkins Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hawkins Ms. Linda Wyman and Mr. William D. Hayes Mr. and Mrs. John T. Hazel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Head Mr. and Mrs. Joe L. Headley Mr. and Mrs. Michael Healy Mr. and Mrs. William Heidelberger Mr. and Mrs. William F. Helbig Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Helm Mr. and Mrs. Roger G. Henderberg Mr. and Mrs. Irvin C. Henschen Mr. and Mrs. James H. Herbert Mr. and Mrs. Steve Herholtz Mr. and Mrs. Dan Herney Mr. and Mrs. James Herr Mrs. Ann Herren and Ms. Jean McCullough Mr. and Mrs. Jay Herson Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Hess Mr. and Mrs. David J. Hickman Mr. and Mrs. Frazer Hilder Mrs. Maria Hileman Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hinebaugh Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hoak Mr. and Mrs. Anthony L. Hoffman Mr. and Mrs. Ray Holland Mr. and Mrs. David B. Holliday Ms. Chris Holloway and Mr. Brad Hodgson Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Hoopes Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Hoover Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hopkins Ms. Suzy Hough and Ms. Sara Hough Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Hougham Mr. and Mrs. George Hughes Mr. and Mrs. Todd W. Hulsey Mr. Alan Hummel and Ms. Cheryl Willingham The Honorable Dennis L. Hupp Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hutchinson Dr. and Mrs. P. H. Hylton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Inglis Mr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. John Jacobs Ms. Jill James and Mr. Bill Pease Mr. and Mrs. Martin A. Janowitz Mr. and Mrs. David F. Jaswa Mr. and Mrs. Michael Jeffries Mr. and Mrs. Broc B. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur S. Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jones Mr. William S. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jones Mr. Jim Jordan and Ms. June Jeffrey Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Joyner Mr. and Mrs. David A. Juergens Ms. Maral Kalbian and Mr. Branson McKay Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kearns Mr. and Mrs. Terry M. Keating Mr. and Mrs. William Keefe Dr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Keenan Mrs. Jane Ann Kelchner and Mr. P. Vincent Kelchner Ms. Christina Keller Mr. and Mrs. Rodney M. Keller, Sr. Ms. Patricia Kelley and Mr. David Daniel Ms. Susan C. Kemnitzer Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Kendall Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kercheval Mr. and Mrs. Jerry P. Kerr Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert R. Kesser Ms. Christine Kestner and Mr. Ron Edwards Dr. A. C. Kiczales Mr. and Mrs. George Kirkpatrick Dr. and Mrs. James V. Kiser Mr. and Mrs. Frank Klebieko Mr. and Mrs. James L. Klimm Mr. James S. Kniceley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Kofalt Dr. and Mrs. Bryan Kornreich Mr. and Mrs. Eric Kraske Dr. and Mrs. George J. Kriz Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Kruhm Mr. and Mrs. Valentin T. Kruza Mr. and Mrs. Marty Kushner Mr. and Mrs. John P. Kwolek Mr. and Mrs. Jim Laise Dr. Paul Lambert and Dr. Anita Minghini Mr. and Mrs. Roger Lamborne Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lanzer Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Larsen Mr. and Mrs. Larry Larsen, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ron Lauck Mr. and Mrs. Louis L. Lauve Mr. and Mrs. Gil LaVean Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Law Mr. and Mrs. William H. Lawrence, III Ms. Carol Lefevre and Ms. Linda Zawacki Mrs. Anne Legge and Ms. Adriana Pavlinovic Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Legge, III Mr. and Mrs. H. Harold Lehman Mr. Phillip E. Lewis and Ms. Betty Barr Mr. and Mrs. Rumsey S. Light Capt. USN (Ret.) and Mrs. John Lincoln Dr. and Mrs. John W. Lloyd, III Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Lloyd Mr. and Mrs. James L. Lockard Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. Lombardi Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Long Dr. and Mrs. Garrett I. Long Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lore Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Louque, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lovan Ms. Fenton Love Mr. Daniel Ludwin and Dr. Donald Vernon Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lukens Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Lumsden Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Lutz Mr. and Mrs. Mark P. Lynch Mr. and Mrs. Hiram W. Lyon Mr. and Mrs. R. Bruce MacDermott Mr. and Mrs. Monroe D. Macpherson Ms. Felicia Mair Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. Marchant Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Marks, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Marlatt Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Marlowe Mr. and Mrs. Larry R. Marsh Mr. and Mrs. Donn Marshall Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Gary F. Mason Mr. Hayden Mathews and Ms. Kay Robertson Ms. Diane Maza and Mr. Dale Maza Mr. and Mrs. John McBreen Mr. Michael McCann Mr. and Mrs. Timmy McCarthy Rev. and Mrs. Dan M. McCoig Mr. and Mrs. David McCormick Mrs. Darla McCrary Ms. Diane McDaniels and Mr. George Williams Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. McKay Dr. Russell B. McKelway and Dr. Laura Dabinett Mr. Michael McKenney and Mr. Kevin Craemer Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. McLoughlin Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. McQueen Mr. and Mrs. James Meehan Mr. William Melson and Mrs. Judith McCarthy Dr. and Mrs. Timothy F. Merkel Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Mey Mr. and Mrs. Brook Middleton Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Mikus Kristina Miles and Craig Gallagher Mr. and Mrs. James L. Miles Ms. Judy Miller and Mr. Stewart Brown Mr. and Mrs. Garland E. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Dwight B. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Giel Millner PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Molden Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L. Molden Mr. and Mrs. John W. Monroe, III Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Dino Morgoglione Mr. and Mrs. George H. Morris Mr. and Mrs. Norman D. Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Moyer Mr. and Mrs. James Mueller Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Muller Mr. and Mrs. Richard V. Myer Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Myer Ms. Barbara Nelson and Ms. Margaret Whitmore Mr. and Mrs. Erik Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Donald O. Nemec Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Nemitz Mr. Bill Neufeld and Ms. Kim Lowry Mr. and Mrs. Simon P. Newlin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Keller C. Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Alan M. Noble Ms. Diane L. Norris Mr. and Mrs. Ray O’Brien Mr. and Mrs. Calvin O’Neil Mr. and Mrs. David Orndorff Ms. Dawn Ortiz Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey J. Owen Mr. and Mrs. Jamie R. Owens, III Mr. and Mrs. James H. Painter Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Pampe Mr. and Mrs. Barney R. Pannell Ms. Clara Parham and Ms. Heidi Herd Ms. Kathryn Parker and Ms. Patricia Hoffmann Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Parrish Mr. and Mrs. John A. Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Lance Pearce Mr. and Mrs. John W. Pearman Mr. and Mrs. Bradley C. Pedersen Ms. Nancy L. Pell Ms. Tammie Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Brad Perry Mr. and Mrs. Ed Peters Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pheiffer Ms. Sabine Phillips and Mr. Scott Edmondson Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Phillips, Sr. Ms. Susan S. Phillips and Mr. Christopher Slonaker Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Pierce Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Pierce Mr. and Mrs. Al Pilong Mr. and Mrs. Bob Pinner Mr. and Mrs. John E. Pinto Mr. and Mrs. Syd Pitzer Mr. and Mrs. Ron Place Mr. and Mrs. Dwain R. Place Mr. and Mrs. Terry S. Plank Mr. Thomas Potts and Mr. Richard Seckinger Ms. Cheryl Quinones Mr. and Mrs. Hal Raffa Dr. and Mrs. Tayman Rafter Ms. Beth Reader and Mr. Chuck Swartz Mr. and Mrs. Waverly G. Reames Mr. and Mrs. Grayson Redford Mr. and Mrs. Craig Reed Mr. and Mrs. Tom Reed Mr. and Mrs. David Regamey Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Reid Mr. and Mrs. Russell A. Reid Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reiff Mr. and Mrs. Eric Reiley Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. Gene O. Rhodes Ms. Jennifer Rice and Mr. William K. Lamp Mr. and Mrs. James Rice Mr. and Mrs. William L. Rice Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Lee Richardson 33 Mr. and Mrs. Earl Riddick Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Rider Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Ringwood Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Rinker, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Carmen Rio Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Ritter Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ritter Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Roberts, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Rodgers Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rodgers Mr. and Mrs. John Romano Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rupert Mr. and Mrs. Gary D. Rutherford Ms. Karlena Sakas Mr. Kathleen and William Salyan Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sampogna Mr. and Mrs. Felix Sanders Lee and Steven Sanford Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sankovich Mr. and Mrs. N. Hartley Schearer Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Scherder Drs. Andrea and Joseph Schmitt Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Schutte Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Secrist Mr. and Mrs. Wayne W. Seipel Mr. and Mrs. Larry Selzer Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Seward Mr. and Mrs. Andy Seymour Ms. Ellen Shanholtzer Mr. and Mrs. Murray Shantz Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shaw Mrs. Naomi M. Sheaffer Mr. and Mrs. William T. Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Michael V. Sholl Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Shope Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Shull Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Shultz Mr. David Sicree and Ms. Lavinia Schoene Dr. and Mrs. Terry L. Sinclair Mr. and Mrs. Morgan J. Sincock Mr. and Mrs. William A. Sirbaugh Ms. Beth Skinner and Ms. Caren Werlinger Mr. and Mrs. Richard Slider Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Smith Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Smith Dr. and Mrs. Eli Snelgrove Mr. and Mrs. Henry Snider, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Snyder Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Solak Mr. and Mrs. C. Robert Solenberger Mr. and Mrs. Calvin L. Sonner Miss Sorenson and Family Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spangler Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Spencer Ms. Nicole Spicer Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stainback Mr. and Mrs. Todd Stehlin Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stein Mr. and Mrs. Bob Stephan Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Stern Mr. and Mrs. John V. Stevens Mr. and Mrs. James D. Stillwell Dr. and Mrs. Craig C. Stoner Mr. and Mrs. Wayne L. Storer Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Stovall Mr. and Mrs. John Strackhouse Mr. and Mrs. Bob Strati Drs. Karen Straus and Alan Donnenfeld Mr. and Mrs. Gary Strickler Ms. Shirley M. Strosnider Ms. Tricia Strother Mr. and Mrs. Owen E. Sumner Mr. and Mrs. William Swartz Mr. and Mrs. James F. Swartz Ms. Donna B. Sweeney and Mr. Steven Dailey Mr. and Mrs. Martin Tabaka Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Taliaferro Mr. and Mrs. Damron Talley Mr. and Mrs. David A. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. John A. Taylor 34 Mr. and Mrs. Doyne W. Teets Mr. and Mrs. David M. Thalman Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thomas Mr. Wayne Thomas and Ms. Barbara Kitler Dr. and Mrs. Edward G. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. George W. Thompson Ms. Jeanne Tommarello and Ms. Elizabeth Smith Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Tomsey Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm L. Trevor Mr. Ted Troxell and Ms. Karen Fitzpatrick-Troxell Mr. and Mrs. John E. Trueblood Mr. and Mrs. Charles Uphaus Mr. Thomas M. Urtz Mr. Azmi Uthman and Ms. Susan Greenwalt Mr. and Mrs. Gary Van Meter Dr. and Mrs. Ward P. Vaughan Mr. and Mrs. Jim Venuto Mr. and Mrs. John M. Volkhardt Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Vorpahl Dr. and Mrs. William N. Wade Mr. and Mrs. John P. Waller Mr. and Mrs. William R. Walls Mr. and Mrs. William A. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Walter Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wasko The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Raleigh H. Watson Dr. and Mrs. Blake H. Watts Mr. and Mrs. Michael K. Wheeler Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Whitacre Mr. and Mrs. Rick Whitacre Mr. and Mrs. C. Ridgely White Mr. Jerry White and Mrs. Roxanne Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Edwin E. White Mr. and Mrs. James Wigginton Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Wilder Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Wiley Mr. and Mrs. William D. Wiley Mr. and Mrs. Alan Williams Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Wilmot Mr. and Mrs. Troy Wilson Ms. Beth Anne Wilson and Mr. Marcello Estevao Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Wiltshire, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Winslow Mr. and Mrs. Kent A. Womack, III Mr. and Mrs. John Woynicz Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Wright Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Wright Mr. and Mrs. David Yereb Mr. and Mrs. Kyle W. Young Mr. and Mrs. Dave Zarefoss Col. and Mrs. Roger L. Zebarth Mr. and Mrs. William Ziedman Mr. and Mrs. Mark Zimmerman Mr. and Mrs. Denman Zirkle Dr. and Mrs. John Zoller, III Valley Neighbor Level Memberships July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Berridge Ms. Keleigh Sherrod and Mr. Ron Blunt Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Bohnet Mr. and Mrs. James Boone Ms. Diane L. Ferguson and Mr. Patrick Murphy The Honorable and Mrs. Daniel Hileman Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Moe Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Zuckerman Individual Level Memberships July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Ms. Sharon M. Adams Ms. Ann R. Aldrich Ms. Patricia L. Allemong Mrs. Judith R. Anderson Mr. Norman Andrews Ms. Marianne Argall Ms. Dorothy B. Arrick Ms. Evelyn J. Baer Ms. Mary Barley Ms. Reba M. Barley Mrs. Weldon Barry Ms. Linda Bartlett Mr. James D. Bauserman Mrs. Edith J. Bayly Ms. Ursula M. Bean Ms. Carolyn L. Bell Mr. Edward Bell Ms. Pamela A. Bell Ms. Hilkka-Liisa Bernheimer Ms. Shirley L. Birkhimer Ms. Joanne Bleavins Ms. Robin Bodishbaugh Ms. Ann Bogar Ms. Sue E. Bogle Ms. Sallie C. Booker Mrs. Sharon H. Boone Mrs. Peggy Booth Mrs. Noel Borden Ms. Pam Borgel Mrs. Sara Ann Bounds Ms. Rebecca A. Bowman Ms. Virginia T. Boyce Mr. Arthur Bragg Ms. Joan R. Bronson Ms. Glenene Brown Ms. Kathleen T. Brown Ms. A. Joan Brubaker Mrs. Cary Brubaker Mrs. Judy Bruce Ms. Marsha Burd Mrs. Mary K. Burke Ms. Carmen K. Burnette Ms. Cindy Butterfield Mrs. Jane Campbell Mrs. Loretta F. Carlisle Mrs. Carol L. Carnes Ms. Anne S. Carr Dr. Jennifer Carroll Ms. Donna Carroll Mrs. Ruth P. Carter Mr. Michael B. Chipley Mr. Peter J. Chu Ms. Marybelle Clark Mr. Denny L. Clevenger Mr. Donald S. Cline Mr. and Mrs. Steven Cluss Mrs. Ellen M. Cochrane Ms. Nancy Lee Comer Mrs. Earlene Cone Mrs. Joy H. Costello Ms. Beth D. Cristy Mr. Mike L. Crites Ms. Anne W. Crocker Ms. Margaret E. Cummings Mrs. Karen E. Dains Mrs. Sara G. Dale Ms. Jeannine Danielson Mr. Donovan Davidson Ms. Carol G. Delauter Mrs. Barbara W. Devers Ms. Moira Dewilde Ms. Lorraine Dezarn Mr. Mike Didawick Mr. Patrick Diehl Ms. Marie DiLorenzo Ms. Alfrieda Donaldson Ms. Johanna A. Dow Ms. Diane Downey Ms. Frances P. Downey Ms. Danna Doyle Ms. Elizabeth P. Duncan Ms. Eileen Eddis Ms. Janet L. Edgar Ms. Janice L. Elias Ms. Janet W. Eltinge Ms. Judith Enterline MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY Ms. Dee Ey Mr. Lawrence Fagg Ms. Muriel Fears Mrs. Suzanne Fleming Ms. Jacqueline J. Fleming Mr. Jonathan Ford Ms. Katrina Fristoe Mrs. Martha W. Gaines Ms. Megan Gallagher Mrs. Shelly Gardner Ms. Margery R. Gifford Ms. Janita G. Giles Mrs. M. T. Gilpin Mrs. Philip B. Glaize, Sr. Mrs. Sybil B. Glascock Ms. Susannah Godlove Dr. Daisy Goodwin Ms. Carla Gorman Ms. Betty Gossard Mr. Thomas M. W. Green Mr. Robert E. Gresham Mrs. Anne P. Grim Ms. Patricia B. Grimes Mrs. Audrey O. Grimes Dr. and Mrs. Adel B. Guirguis Ms. Christiana Hamilton Ms. Amy Hammond Mr. Bill Hanger Mrs. Metka H. Hansen Mr. James L. Hatcher, Jr. Ms. Helen M. Hatfield Mr. Tyrel W. Hayton Mrs. Veda L. Headley Ms. Eleanor L. Heishman Ms. Melanie Henry Mr. Thomas Hickman Mrs. Wanda G. High Ms. Janine Hody Mrs. Ann F. Hoffman Mr. Richard Hopper Ms. Carolyn R. Hott Ms. Susan B. Howard Ms. Bethina S. Huddleston Ms. Cheryl W. Humphries Dr. Cliff R. Hupp Ms. Marion E. Ibach Ms. Eileen Isola Dr. Bruce W. Jackson Mr. Matthew Jackson Ms. Amy M. Jackson Ms. Paulette Jennis Ms. Gail M. Johnson Mrs. Sandra A. Jones Ms. Carolyn Jones Mrs. Frances Kane Mr. John Kauten, Jr. Ms. Elizabeth E. Kaylor Ms. Evelyn J. Kealey Ms. Kay C. Keely Mr. P. D. Kelchner Mrs. Robert G. Kendall Mr. Scott T. Kenney Mrs. Nancy Keyton Mrs. Geraldine Kiefer Ms. Mary E. Kilgore Mr. Soon Kim Ms. Sylvia C. King Ms. Judith Kirby Ms. Lois A. Kirkwood Mr. Jerrald K. Knight Mr. Conrad E. Koneczny Ms. Sue S. Lam Ms. Maureen D. Lane-Maher Mrs. Jane Lee Ms. Susan C. Lee Ms. Karen Leeds Ms. Michele Lefevre Ms. Jacki Lewis Mrs. Barbara E. Lilly Ms. Elisabeth Lindon Ms. Deloris L. London Mrs. Shirley M. Louthan Mrs. Dorothy Lowe Col. (Ret.) David Loy Ms. Mindy J. Loy Mrs. Jane Lucas Mrs. Thelma Lundin Ms. Nancy E. Luttrell Ms. Madeline M. MacNeil Dr. Robert A. Magill Ms. Elizabeth Manning Ms. Pauline S. Manuel Ms. Maryann Marcin Ms. Melissa B. Martin Ms. Hazel D. Mason Ms. Jean K. Massie Mr. John T. Massie Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Matheson, III Ms. Margaret Matheson Ms. Patricia Mathias Mrs. Kendra L. McBride Mrs. Mariah D. McCarthy Mr. Kevin M. McCarthy Ms. Julia A. McCaul Ms. Judith H. McCormick Cohen Ms. Martha Mead Ms. Kelly Melester Ms. Millie Mennard Mr. Harold I. Merchant, Jr. Ms. Sally A. Meredith Ms. Antoinette Metivier Ms. Diane Miller Mrs. Christy Mistr Ms. Nancy E. Molloy Ms. Suzanne Montgomery Mr. Anthony Moore Ms. Virginia S. Morbeck Mrs. Maralyn D. Morency Mrs. Ellen C. Morgan Ms. Barbara S. Morrell Mr. Zack Morris Mrs. Mary C. Mulvey Ms. Roberta Munske Ms. Margaret Neiberger Mrs. Louise Nelson Ms. Mary R. Nelson Ms. Clowe C. Nicholson Ms. Judith W. Owen Mrs. Nancy B. Pakter Ms. Emily F. Palmer Mrs. Rebecca Parkin Mr. Wayne L. Patteson Ms. Karen C. Patton Ms. Bonnie L. Paul Mrs. William H. Pifer Ms. Vera M. Piper Ms. Betsy Pope Mr. Daniel L. Pratt Mr. Oley Racey Ms. Brenda Rawlings Mr. John Reiley Mr. Stevan A. Resan Mrs. Brit Reyes Ms. Mary Rhodes Ms. Evelyn S. Ricci Pat Rice Mr. James E. Rich Ms. Linda Riddle Dr. H. Bruce Rinker Ms. Ina Robertson Ms. Mardell Rogers Ms. Susan Rose Ms. Mary C. Ruos Mr. Douglas C. Saffell Mrs. Virginia S. Saunders Ms. Angela Schwarzkopf Ms. Rebekah M. Secrist Ms. Judith N. Seddon Mrs. Freda S. Sencindiver Mr. G. Joseph Sewell Ms. Donna L. Sheets Mrs. Ellen M. Shell Mrs. Pat Shiley Mr. George O. Siekkinen, Jr. Ms. Dolores Silman Ms. Sarah B. Simpson PROMISES KEPT h NEW DIRECTIONS Ms. Helen R. Sioris Mr. Demetrios Sioris Ms. Susan M. Smith Ms. Julie A. Smith Ms. Ruth Ann Snyder Ms. Carolyn Sober Ms. Marilyn Ann Solomon Ms. Nancy Specht Ms. Sandra L. Starr Mrs. Marilyn Stearns Mrs. Gloria A. Stickley Mr. I. F. Stine Ms. Diann Stout Miss Eloise Strader Ms. Elizabeth Stratton Mr. James E. Stromberg Ms. Gina Sullivan Mr. Thomas W. Sweeney Mr. F. D. Taylor Ms. Elizabeth A. Temple Mrs. Ann W. Thomas Ms. Barbara S. Thomas Dr. Cheryl Thompson-Stacy Ms. Genevieve J. Trandem Ms. Linda S. Tucker Ms. Jean Tucker Ms. Stephanie Vale Ms. Urshala Venskaske Ms. Isobella Waddell Ms. Donna Webber Mr. William C. Westgard Ms. Linda C. Wheeler Ms. Dana L. White Ms. Christiane Wiles Mr. Ian R. D. Williams Mrs. Olive G. Williams Mr. Alfred H. Wilson Mrs. Leslie C. Wilson Mr. Michael Wilson Ms. Sylvia Wilson Ms. Sarah Wolfberg Mr. Roger D. Wright Ms. Penelope Yungblut Ms. Mary Lou Zickefoose Teacher Level Memberships July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Ms. Nancy Albert Ms. Bethina S. Huddleston Mrs. Judy B. Whiting Mrs. Sheila Yeager Relaxing in the Water Garden. Photo: Rick Foster 35 DOCENT S JULY 1, 2011–JUNE 30, 2012 Jean W. Allen Cora Helen Anderson Helen Anderson Edwina Apostle Carolyn Argall June Babb Phyllis Baker Lucia Barbour Darla Barrett Edith Bayly Courtney Beach Robert and Paula Becker J.D. Berlin Babs Bodin Kim Brennen Karen Brill Stan Bridinger Virginia Brothers Joan Bronson Jean Burdett George and Joan Burgess Judy Burks Linda Caley Joan Cameron Beth Camery Donna Carroll Melinda Childress Marybelle Clark Margaret Cummings Bob and Peggie Cunningham Marie Curtis Rachel Daly Moira DeWilde Carolyn Dinsmore Jean Downs Lauren Earley Carol Ebert B.J.Fawcett Amy Fielder Terri Flynn-Smith Nora Garber Lynne Gardner Shelly Gardner Hunter Gaunt, Jr., M.D. Eileen Gilliland Hal Goodman Daisy Goodwin, PhD Tom Graham Donna Gray Judy Greathouse John Guiser Len and Sheryl Gunderson Carolyn Hadley Nina Hidelberger Bill and Janet Helbig Roger and Linda Henderberg Melanie Henry Irv and Marian Henschen Jean Herring Susan Howard Leslie and Christina Inglis Carol-Faye Janowitz Paulette Jennis Kay Jones Sandy Jones Joe Kalbach Jessie Kanurin Don Karolyi, M.D. Ron and Gail Kercheval Sylvia King Suellen Knowles Dan and Tina Lane Liz Lindon Mary Linger Gail Long Mark Lore James Louque Winston Lutz, M.D. Elsbeth Malik Lauren Mallory Robert and Joy Markley Benoit Mathieu Adrienne McKenna Martha Mead Ashley Miller Martha Mitchell Eleanor Monahan Sigrid Mueller William Mularie, PhD Michelle Muller Mary Lou Mulvey Sheila Murphy Margaret Neiberger Barbara Nelson Pat and Sally O’Neil Lacie Omps Betsy Orndorff Lance Pearce Art Perkins Richard Phalen Mary Lou Raymond Marshall Rich Carol Richardson Pat Richardson Susan Roberts Matthew Robertson Melissa Rock Linda Roseman Mary-Louise Roth Lee Ruddle Carolyn Sabatino Virginia Saunders Kristen Schoenberger Lisa Shaffer Lora Shepherd Walter Shropshire, PhD Audrey Shropshire Pat Skidmore Jan Smith Julie Smith Rhonda Smith Susan Smith Robert Strider Emma Sullivan Bill Swartz Ann W. Thomas Jerri Trandem Jocelyn Vena Sara Vondy William Westgard Micki White Jim and Robbie Wiggington Susan Williams Janet Woolverton Carol Yaniello Bob York, M.D., and Cummie York Ted York, PhD Annette Young MUSEUM C OM M I T T EES JULY 1, 2011–JUNE 30, 2012 Ad Hoc Business Advisory Committee Ad hoc Glen Burnie Upgrades Committee John C. Williams, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio B. Scott Arthur David L. Blount Thomas T. Byrd Elaine M. Cain Mickey W. Coffman W. Blakely Curtis Marie DiLorenzo Andrew U. Ferrari Betty L. Friant Thomas T. Gilpin Thomas M. “Wilke” Green Ronald L. Hottle Christopher A. “Kit” Molden The Honorable H. Russell Potts Sidney L. Stern Dianne H. Wake William D. Wiley Christopher A. “Kit” Molden, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio John C. Allen, Jr. H. K. “Bunny” Benham, III Cary Brubaker Joseph E. Kalbach John P. Lewis Donald J. Louque, Jr. Rupert W. Werner Edwin E. White Kay S. Whitworth Ad Hoc Capital Campaign Steering Committee Sidney L. Stern, Chairman Sharon M. Byrd J.P. Carr Cary M. Craig, Jr. W. Blakely Curtis Mary G. Fetter Thomas T. Gilpin James T. Holland Broc B. Johnson The Honorable H. Russell Potts Eugene F. Schultz Daniel J. Troup Dianne H. Wake Kay S. Whitworth William D. Wiley Dr. John B. Willey John C. Williams Ad hoc Rose Hill Restoration Committee William D. Wiley, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Calvin H. Allen David L. Blount David D. Denham Joseph E. Kalbach Development Committee Sidney L. Stern, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Cary M. Craig, Jr. W. Blakely Curtis Mary G. Fetter Joseph W. Hollis Christy T. Mistr Christopher A. “Kit” Molden Dianne H. Wake William D. Wiley John C. Williams Finance Committee H. K. “Bunny” Benham, III, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio David L. Blount Sharon M. Byrd James T. Holland John K. Marlow Christy T. Mistr Ellen A. Parsons Mary S. Riley Sidney L. Stern Collections Committee Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D., Chair John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Calvin H. Allen W. Blakely Curtis H.R. “Bob” Edwards Carolyn A. Farouki Mary G. Fetter Thomas M. “Wilke” Green Pembroke “Pem” D. Hutchinson John E. “Jack” McAllister, M.D. The Honorable Ronald L. Napier Dianne H. Wake Gardens and Grounds Committee Rupert W. Werner, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Peter G. Bullough, M.D. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D. Jean E. R. Gilpin Don G. Karolyi, M.D. Diane Kelly John P. Lewis Stephanie J. McWhorter William O. Minor Mary S. Riley Nancy St. C. Talley* The Honorable John E. “Jay” Wetsel, Jr. Mary Beth Wood Government Relations Committee John K. Marlow, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio The Honorable Katherine M. B. Berger Broc B. Johnson Kay S. Whitworth Nominating Committee Sharon M. Byrd, Chairwoman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D. Sidney L. Stern William D. Wiley Strategic Planning Committee John G. Lathrop, Chairman Calvin H. Allen H. K. “Bunny” Benham, III The Honorable Katherine M. B. Berger David L. Blount Peter G. Bullough, M.D. W. Blakely Curtis Carolyn A. Farouki Hunter Gaunt, Jr., M.D. Maral S. Kalbian David C. Lee John P. Lewis John K. Marlow Christine T. Mistr Christopher A. “Kit” Molden Sidney L. Stern Diane H. Wake William D. Wiley *Deceased 36 MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY MUS EUM BOARD OF DI R EC TORS JULY 1, 2011–JUNE 30, 2012 Officers Honorary Board Members Harry E. Byrd, Jr. Wilbur M. Feltner Directors Calvin H. Allen John C. Allen, Jr. Katherine M. B. Berger Sharon M. Byrd W. Blakely Curtis Carolyn A. Farouki Mary G. Fetter Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D. Pembroke D. Hutchinson John P. Lewis John K. Marlow Christine T. Mistr Mary S. Riley Sidney L. Stern Dianne H. Wake William D. Wiley John C. Williams President John G. Lathrop Vice President Rupert W. Werner Second Vice President Calvin H. Allen Secretary David L. Blount Treasurer H. K. “Bunny” Benham, III Glass–Glen Burnie Foundation Trustees Chairman Peter G. Bullough, M.D. David D. Denham James T. Holland Allan G. Paterson, Jr. David H. O. Roth MU SEUM S TAF F, CONSU LTANT S & I NTER NS JULY 1, 2011–JUNE 30, 2012 Dana Hand Evans Executive Director Charles Clare Security Specialist John Adams Head Security Specialist Sara Clark Museum Technician Julie Armel Director of Marketing and Public Relations Laurie Cocina Museum Technician Amelia Arnold Human Resources and Operations Manager Tom Arthur Security Liaison to Special Events Bonnie Barr Museum Store Manager Josefina Bautista Museum Technician Courtney Beach Collections Intern Rick Blume Facility Manager Catherine Bogaty Special Events Coordinator Helen Bricker Museum Technician Virginia Brothers Collections Intern Amanda Cansler Youth and Family Programs Coordinator Janie Carscallen Registrar/Collections Manager Sheri Cook Museum Technician Tamara Cooper Director of Finance and Administration Frances W. Crawford Director of Development Sara Durham Museum Technician William Eddy Day Manager Harry Ewald Day Manager Ed Farrace Building Maintenance Coordinator Corwyn Garman Exhibitions Manager Ann Goodman Gate House Assistant Kristen Goff Visitor Services Coordinator Ken Graves Maintenance Technician Autumn Gray Community Programs and Marketing Coordinator Alexandra Lew Museum Technician Madison Savarese Museum Technician Amberly Griffith Café Manager Joel Lowery Grounds and Grounds Technician Chelsie Shaff Museum Technician Bruce Groh Security Specialist Garland Meehan Maintenance Technician Bryan Shephard Assistant Gardens and Grounds Manager Ashley Hernandez Museum Technician Michael Mohn Day Manager Joan Smith Day Manager Charlotte Henning Assistant Comptroller and Grant Writer Carly Mullin Museum Technician Carolyn Spielman Museum Store Assistant Stephanie Orndorff Tea Room Manager Robert Staup Security Specialist Pam Pampe Lead Educator Mary Stickley Manager of Gardens and Grounds Deborah Hilty Curator of Education Rachel Hilty Museum Technician Janice Hoover Collections Manager Elizabeth Killian Collections Intern Donna Kowalczyk Day Manager Jack Lambert Gardens and Grounds Technician James Lambert Gardens and Grounds Technician Ric Lambert Gardens and Grounds Technician Marge Lee Marketing Consultant Lance Pearce Day Manager Morgan Pierce Acting Director of Collections Sue Ridley Development Assistant and Membership Coordinator Colleen Ritter Gate House Coordinator Melissa Rock Visitor Services Intern Matthew Robertson Visitor Services Intern Douglas Saffell Day Manager Kunal Subramanian Gardens and Grounds Technician Mary Toth Visitor Services Desk Manager John Trueblood Head Day Manager Jillian Tucker Adult and Gallery Programs Coordinator Kay Whitacre Museum Technician MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY Winchester, Virginia