2015 Annual Report - Gettysburg Foundation
Transcription
2015 Annual Report - Gettysburg Foundation
… 2015 Annual Report … The Gettysburg Foundation is a nonprofit educational organization working in partnership with the National Park Service to enhance preservation and understanding of the heritage and lasting significance of Gettysburg and its national parks. The Foundation raised funds for and now operates the Museum and Visitor Center at Gettysburg National Military Park, which opened in April 2008. In addition to operating the Museum and Visitor Center, the Foundation has a broad preservation mission that includes land, monument, and artifact preservation and battlefield rehabilitation— all in support of the National Park Service’s goals at Gettysburg. Cover: Photo of the Daniel Klingel property by Lynn Light Heller, Gettysburg Expressions CONTENTS … 2015 Annual Report … Letter from President Joanne M. Hanley and Chairman Robert A. Kinsley. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Letter from Superintendent Ed W. Clark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Preservation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Acquisition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Stewardship and Membership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 The Visitor Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Other Special Events and Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Financials. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Supporter Recognition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Directors and Councils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Back Cover 1 DEAR FRIENDS, Gettysburg is unequaled in its capacity to teach and inspire generations, and the Gettysburg Foundation has both the opportunity and the responsibility, for generations today and well into the future, to share that capacity. When we look at the accomplishments of the Gettysburg Foundation during this past year, we are moved by and grateful for the efforts and contributions of time, talent, and treasure that spurred us forward in bringing the Gettysburg story to more people than ever. Through our partnership with the National Park Service in support of the national parks at Gettysburg, we made substantial advancements this year in projects and programs related to preservation, acquisition, membership, education, and our visitors’ experiences. The “unfinished work” that President Lincoln exhorted us to carry on in his Gettysburg Address still stretches before us. Indeed, it is the very core of our mission. Gettysburg is a powerful place, and we are both proud and humbled to work with the National Park Service to help ensure that the meaning of Gettysburg remains just as relevant in the future as it was to those who fought and died here 152 years ago. We hope that as you read about our accomplishments for the year, you will imagine the seeds of a bold vision for the future and realize how much remains to be done. From Little Round Top, to Cemetery Ridge, to President Eisenhower’s home, to the George Spangler Farm and beyond, there are “great tasks remaining before us.” It is an exciting time to be a part of the journey to preserve and protect the national parks in Gettysburg, particularly as we celebrate the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service in 2016. We invite you to join us as we embark on the next 100 years! With sincere thanks, JOANNE M. HANLEY President Gettysburg Foundation ROBERT A. KINSLEY Chair Gettysburg Foundation Board of Directors 2 LOOKING BACK at everything this powerful partnership accomplished in 2015 makes me prouder than ever to be Superintendent of Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site. Across the National Park Service, this partnership stands out for the amazing breadth and depth of its accomplishments. Together in 2015, the Gettysburg Foundation and Gettysburg’s two national parks provided memorable and enjoyable visits for more than a million people. We created expanded volunteer programs, enhanced educational programs for students and teachers, and improved our stewardship of cannon carriages, monuments, artifacts, and more. One of many long-lasting legacies of 2015 is the Gettysburg Foundation’s donation of forty-five acres at Big Round Top. This land where cavalry skirmishes occurred during the battle is also home to critical wetlands and wildlife habitat related to Plum Run. The Foundation’s donation will ensure that the land is preserved unimpaired for future generations. As the National Park Service begins its Centennial in 2016, the Foundation’s support for Centennial programs is helping Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site engage with and create the next generation of park visitors, supporters, and advocates. These programs include Every Kid in a Park, Artists-in-Residence, arts programs at Eisenhower, the acquisition of museum collections, planning for improvements at Little Round Top, and preparation for the final phases of the rehab of Cemetery Ridge—just to name a few! Congratulations to the Gettysburg Foundation for an outstanding year! Sincerely, ED W. CLARK Superintendent Gettysburg National Military Park Eisenhower National Historic Site 3 PRESERVATION … the great task remaining before us … Preserving and protecting the historical resources of Gettysburg National Military Park (GETT) and Eisenhower National Historic Site (EISE) is one of the most important responsibilities of the Gettysburg Foundation. For visitors to experience and understand the meaning of these sites, there is no substitute for touching the actual place where history happened. SAVING A CROWN JEWEL: Monuments and artillery placements badly need preservation work, tour guides and visitors vie for viewing spots among throngs of people, and natural resources need to be protected against further degradation. Little Round Top Environmental Assessment Draft Completed Little Round Top is nearly synonymous with Gettysburg. When the colonel of a unit instrumental in the fight to keep it in Union hands first glimpsed this critical high ground, he said it looked like the “playground or battleground of giants.” Colonel Joshua Chamberlain’s words still ring true today as almost all of the one million annual visitors to the battlefield make the pilgrimage to this iconic landmark. To lay the groundwork for an unprecedented rehabilitation effort of Little Round Top by the National Park Service (NPS), the Gettysburg Foundation funded an environmental assessment that documents existing conditions and proposes several alternatives to alleviate overuse and overcrowding, enhance pedestrian and vehicular access and flow, and preserve the landscape. The NPS completed the assessment draft in 2015 and presented some of its findings to the public for comment. In 2016, the recommended rehabilitation strategy and final decision will be presented. This special place is suffering, however, from the impact of being “loved to death.” The site was designed for circulation in the late 1800s and periodically realigned through the 1950s; parking and traffic flow for today’s vehicles and volume have become insufficient, inefficient, and unsafe. 4 ONE STEP CLOSER: generation of visitors in its second century, provided $600,000 in federal funding, which the Gettysburg Foundation matched with a $700,000 grant to the NPS. Major Matching Grant Provided to Fund Next Phase of Cemetery Ridge Rehabilitation as a Centennial Legacy Project This Centennial Legacy Project will make it possible to give visitors a true sense of what this furiously contested ground looked like at the time of the battle. The size of the parking area at Ziegler’s Grove will be reduced, and historic features at the center of the Union Army’s battle line will be restored, including commemorative walkways, a portion of historic Hancock Avenue, and the original ornamental gates at Taneytown Road. Monuments which were moved to make way for the construction of the old cyclorama building will be returned to their original placement. With funding now secured, work will begin in 2016. The rehabilitation of Cemetery Ridge has been a long-term goal of Gettysburg National Military Park and the Gettysburg Foundation. Over the last several years, buildings and parking areas have been removed, fields and fence lines restored, and monuments relocated to their original locations. This past year, one of the last phases of rehabilitation was made possible through the securing of $1.3 million. The NPS Centennial Initiative, designed to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the NPS in 2016 and to prepare national parks to connect with and create the next Friends volunteers restored an historic fence line at Cemetery Ridge. Gettysburg Foundation President Joanne Hanley presents GETT and EISE Superintendent Ed Clark with a $700,000 grant check. 5 STORIES COME ALIVE THROUGH WOOD AND STONE: the Friends of Gettysburg—the membership arm of the Gettysburg Foundation—in honor of their twenty-fifth anniversary in 2014. The Spangler Farm Barn and Smokehouse Receive a New Life In 2015, all of the needed funds were raised to complete the restoration and rehabilitation of the smokehouse and barn at the George Spangler Farm, site of the 11th Corps Union Field Hospital, where both Union and Confederate wounded soldiers were treated. It is one of the most intact and well-preserved Civil War farms used as a corps field hospital still in existence. The Gettysburg Foundation owns the property and is in the process of restoring it to its 1863 appearance. Visitors to the farm in the summer can hear educational programs offered by GETT rangers and by Gettysburg Foundation volunteers specially trained and stationed at this field hospital site. The experiences in 1863 of surgeons, aides, and civilians tending 1,800 wounded soldiers in and around the barn provide distinct and compelling interpretive opportunities. The restoration of the historic barn that bore witness to the men, women and children whose lives were forever changed in July and August 1863 ensures their stories won’t be forgotten. The Spangler barn had fallen into severe disrepair and deterioration; so much so that it was feared it would collapse with every major wind and rainstorm. The exterior walls had to be “shrinkwrapped” with plywood for temporary emergency stabilization. Permanent work on the barn began in 2015 and will ultimately include structural repair of the timber frame and stone walls; roof replacement; exterior siding replacement; window, vent, and door repairs and replacement; and lightning-protection replacement. The fully restored Spangler barn—and the vibrant history it reflects— will be completed and open to visitors in June of 2016. The smokehouse will give visitors a look into the reality of Pennsylvania farm life in the 1800s. Used to cure and smoke meat, smokehouses were commonly found on farms until the early to mid-twentieth century, when refrigeration and electrification made them unnecessary. The work on the smokehouse was generously funded by The reconstruction work is complete on the smokehouse at the George Spangler Farm Civil War Field Hospital Site. Inset: The Smokehouse stood in poor condition. 6 “SERVE WELL THE GUNS:” Joanne Hanley, Foundation Board of Directors Vice Chair Barbara Finfrock, and GETT Superintendent Ed Clark began with remarks about the shop’s history and accomplishments associated with the repair work over the years. Park restoration experts gave guests a behind-the-scenes look at how the cannon carriages are cared for and restored and the very specialized treatments they receive after exposure to nature’s elements over time. Cannon Carriage Restoration Shop Opened at Gettysburg Armory Complex Cannons are the most visible artifacts of the battle. Along with their accompanying carriages and ammunition carts, they invite visitors to ponder firsthand the impact of their use. The placement of cannon on the battlefield is critical for visitors to understand where Union and Confederate lines were fighting, and how they moved in battle. GETT has over 400 cannon in various states of restoration and repair, both on the battlefield and in the repair shop. JUNCTION OF HISTORY: Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station Welcomes Visitors The Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station was a small-town station before the Battle of Gettysburg transformed it into a hospital and morgue for thousands. The station was where President Lincoln arrived and departed from when he visited Gettysburg to deliver dedication remarks at the new Soldiers’ National Cemetery. In 2015, a new cannon carriage restoration shop was opened behind the Gettysburg Armory in outbuildings repurposed from modern garage facilities. The Gettysburg Foundation acquired the Armory complex in 2014 and established an agreement with GETT to operate the shop on the property. Located in a downtown Gettysburg warehouse that the Foundation had rented since 1999, the former shop was becoming increasingly more inadequate and antiquated for current needs. The new facility contains more space than the previous shop and allows for increased storage of cannon carriages as they await restoration work and subsequent return to the battlefield. Superintendent Ed Clark; Vice Chair Barbara Finfrock; Head of GETT Monument Preservation Branch Lucas Flickinger; and Gettysburg Foundation President Joanne Hanley cut the ribbon. The Gettysburg Foundation purchased the railroad station from the Borough of Gettysburg in 2014. Legislation was passed by Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station. both houses of Congress in 2015 to expand the boundary of GETT to include this historic property. Throughout 2015, the Gettysburg Foundation worked toward donating the station to GETT, which involved negotiating and adjusting expectations with several different entities that hold easements on the property before the title can be passed to the federal government. The Foundation hosted a dedication and ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new facility at its First Corps member event in August. More than forty-five members of the First Corps and the general public were in attendance. Foundation President The Foundation opened the station in March of 2015 as a visitor contact site with exhibits, information, and a modest sales operation, and will hold the title until the process of donating it to GETT is complete. The Foundation also restored the second floor of the station and transformed it into a fully equipped meeting space with stateof-the art features, Wi-Fi, a projection screen, and conference seating for twenty. 7 ACQUISITION … the unfinished work … Securing the history of Gettysburg for future generations also means acquiring artifacts and sacred ground that help to bring stories to life, creating a connection of relevance and significance to new generations. ACQUISITION OF LAND through the act of Congress in 2015, the Foundation was finally able to donate the property to GETT. In November 2015, President Joanne Hanley officially passed the deed to Superintendent Ed Clark. The Hills were in attendance and spoke about why it was important to them to ensure the preservation of the property. Key Plum Run Property Donated to Gettysburg National Military Park Plum Run, located just south of the base of Big Round Top, is the site of hard-fought cavalry skirmishes during the battle and the home of critical wetlands and wildlife habitat. The Gettysburg Foundation has held and protected the property since 2008, when it was generously donated to the Foundation by local citizens Wayne and Susan Hill. Thanks to the boundary expansion of Gettysburg National Military Park 8 ACQUISITION OF ARTIFACTS The acquisition of artifacts is a critical component of the Foundation’s mission. These precious items humanize history and allow the National Park Service to further interpret the Battle of Gettysburg and the life of President Dwight D. and First Lady Mamie Eisenhower. Mamie Eisenhower’s Christmas China Added a Festive Touch to Holiday Display Civil War Collector and Gettysburg Foundation Board Member Donates an Extensive Collection of Artifacts to the Gettysburg Foundation Each December, the Eisenhower National Historic Site and the Gettysburg Foundation showcase the Eisenhower home in its Christmas holiday splendor. The Eisenhower nativity diorama, exhibited in the East Room of the White House during Dwight D. Eisenhower’s presidency, was on display in the lobby of the Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center in December of 2015. Nearby was a set of First Lady Mamie Eisenhower’s Christmas china, a recent donation to the park by the Eisenhower family. On December 29, 2015, Craig Bashein, a prominent Cleveland attorney, a member of the Board of Directors of the Gettysburg Foundation, and a Civil War collector, donated an incredible collection of Civil War artifacts to the Gettysburg Foundation. Some of the treasured items include: • the dress uniform, ornate leather boots, gold spurs, pistol, and Tiffany presentation sword of Brigadier General Hobart Ward, a brigade and division commander in the 3rd Corps at Gettysburg; • a Model 1851 Colt Navy Revolver presented to Alexander Webb by Colonel Samuel Colt; • the bullet-struck Model 1850 foot officer’s sword of Colonel Orlando Smith of the 73rd Ohio Infantry; The china was made in England for sale by Plummer Ltd., a New York City store that went out of business in 1962. A large set with service for twenty-four, it has an image of a decorated Christmas tree with presents underneath on all the pieces. Mrs. Eisenhower must have added to the set later, since the cake stand and three-tier server have different maker’s marks: Barrington Ironstone and Bertson House Ltd. • the hand-drawn map of Rappahannock River crossings made and signed by General John F. Reynolds in the early part of the Gettysburg campaign; • dozens of individual documents pertaining to the Gettysburg battle and campaign, written by soldiers and civilians on both sides; • a forty-three-page letter from E. J. Allen (the pen name of Allan J. Pinkerton, first head of the U.S. Secret Service), containing details about the fortification around Richmond; Mrs. Eisenhower later gave her set of Christmas china to her daughter-in-law, Barbara Eisenhower, likely in the 1970s. In a 1983 interview, Barbara said, “I love that Christmas china. … It’s that one that was made by Plummer’s in New York and it’s just a little Christmas tree … very old-fashioned.” • a large original oil painting by renowned modern Civil War artist Mort Künstler entitled The Grandest Charge Ever Seen by Mortal Man; • and several other one-of-a-kind items. Also included in the Eisenhower donation was an Afghani costume and jewelry set presented to the President’s daughter-in-law, Barbara. 9 Mr. Bashein noted, “This collection provides a unique and historically important window into the Civil War. I’ve been a longtime supporter of the Gettysburg Foundation and feel their mission is important to our nation. … My goal is to ensure that these historically important objects are preserved and well cared for in perpetuity for the American people.” Gettysburg Foundation Acquires and Donates Xanthus Russell Smith Oil Paintings The Foundation acquired two significant oil paintings by renowned nineteenth-century artist Xanthus Russell Smith and donated them to the Park’s fine art collection. Smith is best known for his paintings and illustrations of the American Civil War. Gettysburg Foundation Purchases and Donates Confederate Engineer Officer’s Dress Coat The Foundation purchased a Confederate engineer officer’s Pattern 1851 blue-gray wool dress coat originally worn by Lt. Col. Robert P. Rowley, and subsequently donated it to GETT. This rare coat not only reflects the career of a specific Confederate officer, but also serves as a touchstone to highlight the role of engineers in the Confederate army. The Gettysburg Foundation will also fund conservation work to repair minor damages. Robert P. Rowley’s dress coat. The first (above), entitled Col. Rush’s Cavalry, is a small study of a Union soldier in the 6th Pennsylvania Cavalry, which served at Gettysburg. The unit was known as “Rush’s Lancers” because it was the only cavalry regiment in the war initially armed with lances, an ineffective weapon abandoned by July 1863. The unit still depicted the distinctive weapons on its monument at South Cavalry Field in Gettysburg. 10 The second painting (below), entitled Opening of the Battle of Gettysburg and Death of General Reynolds, July 1, 1863, portrays an opening segment of the Battle of Gettysburg, at the moment when Maj. Gen. John F. Reynolds was shot, reeled from his horse, and died. The painting also captures the intensity and confusion of the battle, beginning with Union and Confederate forces rushing into the fray. President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Tractor Obtained at Auction and Donated to Eisenhower National Historic Site The Gettysburg Foundation acquired President Eisenhower’s Cockshutt Black Hawk Model 40 tractor, and then donated it to EISE. President Eisenhower received the tractor from the Farm Bureaus of Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana, complete with a cigarette lighter and radio with short- and long-wave aerial, on November 30, 1955. When accepting the tractor, Eisenhower said that he could scale down his agricultural ambitions and “settle now for being a tractor driver on a farm.” In 1963, the Black Hawk’s engine seized and the farm manager traded it for a Massey Ferguson 65. Several owner-collectors and fifty-two years later, the Gettysburg Foundation purchased the tractor and brought it back to its original home, the Eisenhower Farm. When the people at the auction in September 2015 learned that it was going back to its home, they stood and cheered! Gettysburg Foundation Acquires and Donates a Berdan Sharps New Model 1859 Rifle and Record Book The Gettysburg Foundation acquired and donated to GETT a unique Berdan Sharps New Model 1859 rifle issued to William J. Domag, Company F, 1st United States Sharpshooters. Domag enlisted on August 15, 1862, and was killed at the Battle of the Wilderness on May 5, 1864. The Foundation also acquired the record book which lists owner and rifle; this record book revealed previously unknown information. President Eisenhower’s Cockshutt Black Hawk Model 40 tractor. 11 STEWARDSHIP and MEMBERSHIP … we take increased devotion … e members and donors of the Gettysburg Foundation share a passion for and a commitment to Gettysburg and its national parks. ey take their duty seriously as caretakers of Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site by donating their time and talents to preservation work in a variety of ways. Donor Engagement Events Instituted to Increase Cultivation The Gettysburg Foundation launched an initiative in 2015 to bring Gettysburg and its mission to potential new Friends and supporters by encouraging involvement through on-site visits and events. Hosted by board members and Friends, these engagement events were held in Boston, Pittsburgh, and Philadelphia. They allowed Foundation and NPS leadership to acquaint new Friends and potential supporters with the numerous accomplishments already achieved at both Gettysburg and Eisenhower and to reveal a bold preservation and education vision for the future. Gettysburg Foundation board member Eric Schultz and Windover Construction sponsored the engagement event in Boston, where fellow Foundation board member and former Good Morning America host David Hartman was a featured speaker. In Pittsburgh, board members Mike Higgins and Sandy Mellon hosted the event at the Duquesne Club. The year’s final event was cohosted by M. Kelly Tillery, Partner, Pepper Hamilton LLP, at the Union League Club of Philadelphia. The Foundation has plans underway for 2016 events in Ohio, Northern Virginia, Washington D.C., Maryland, New Jersey, Georgia, Illinois, and Tennessee. transform it into hard cider. Zach Bolitho, Chief of Resource Management for GETT and EISE, who works with the Gettysburg Foundation on this initiative, stated, “The Recruit membership program provides opportunities for citizens to connect with our parks in meaningful ways that contribute to the long-term care and sustainability of park landscapes—like the orchards. Together we learn about the parks, practice a new skill like pruning, and we get to celebrate our newly discovered wisdom with friends and cider … the full package!" The Guardians’ Society Relaunched The Gettysburg Foundation relaunched its Guardians’ Society, a valued and dedicated group whose members pledge ongoing support for the Foundation and Gettysburg initiatives through planned giving. On September 27, Recruit members gathered at the Eisenhower Farm to kick off the new membership effort with an evening of cider, conversation, live music, food, and fun. The farm provided a beautiful and historic setting for the inaugural event. As part of their intimate involvement with each step of the cider-making process, Recruit members met at the Rose Orchard on the Gettysburg Battlefield to pick their first batch of apples. After two apple-picking events, Adam worked at his cidery to transform the apples into a delicious batch of cider, crafted with a blend of apples the Recruits picked, and enhanced by oak aging to produce faint vanilla and woody flavors. This debut batch of cider was appropriately titled “Rose Farm Orchard.” A portion of the proceeds from each bottle sold will go toward preserving the historic orchards on the battlefield. Chaired by longtime Friend and supporter Charles H. Diller, Jr. (above), the Guardians’ Society will hold its first annual event in spring 2016, with two goals: to honor those who make planned-giving commitments which provide significant resources to the parks in the future, and to encourage others to make similar gifts. New “Recruit” Membership Level Created for Millennials The Recruit membership level, tailored to ages eighteen to thirty-eight, gives the younger generation the opportunity to get involved in Friends projects, learn more about Gettysburg’s rich history, and understand the critical importance of philanthropy and service. A new batch of “Centennial Cider” will be introduced in 2016 in honor of the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service! The historic orchards on the battlefield tell a powerful part of the Gettysburg story. But it is difficult for GETT to keep up with the care and maintenance of the hundreds of trees. Recruit members partnered with GETT and Good Intent Cider to ensure the fruit from these historic orchards no longer goes to waste. The Recruits’ Seedling to Cider project takes fruit grown in battlefield orchards and works with cider master Adam Redding, owner of Good Intent Cider, to 13 The Recruits stop for a quick photo after picking apples in the Rose North orchard. trees. In a cold, driving rain, Recruit members nearly doubled their original fundraising goal as the event was live-streamed on Periscope and shared through the Foundation’s Facebook and Twitter pages. The Gettysburg Foundation Joins the #GivingTuesday Movement Photo Credit: Hanover Evening Sun On December 1, 2015, the Gettysburg Foundation participated in #GivingTuesday for the first time. #GivingTuesday is a global day of giving that harnesses the collective power of individuals, communities, and organizations to encourage philanthropy and celebrate generosity worldwide. In the United States, #GivingTuesday is held annually on the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, after the widely recognized shopping events Black Friday and Cyber Monday, to kick off the holiday giving season and inspire people to collaborate in improving their local communities. Overall, the Foundation’s financial #GivingTuesday goal of $5,000 was surpassed with a total of $5,271 raised in one day, which included a generous match gift from an inspired Friends member. Friends of Gettysburg Member Events Continue to Educate and Inspire The nearly twenty-five thousand Friends of Gettysburg members hail from all fifty states and eight foreign nations. They remain true to all aspects of the Gettysburg Foundation’s mission, and they travel to Gettysburg, often several times a year, where they take part in both classroom and field programs that broaden their understanding and appreciation of the Battle of Gettysburg and its role in the American Civil War. As part of this movement, Gettysburg Foundation Recruit members took part in a “Pruning Plunge,” similar to the concept behind the popular “polar bear plunge” events. They pruned apple trees on the battlefield in Recruit t-shirts and shorts to raise a modest Visitors were invited to share why amount of they feel preserving Gettysburg’s money for their story is important. Seedling to Cider project, NPS Biologist Charles Brown gives Recruit Members Bethany Yingling spread and Jen Kelley pruning tips during awareness the Pruning Plunge. about this burgeoning membership level, and share their Gettysburg stories. Park biologists showed Recruits proper techniques and tool use for pruning the Friends members tour the Gettysburg battlefield during Spring Muster. In 2015, members attended several sold-out annual favorite events, such as the Spring and Fall Musters, which offer several days of touring and educational seminars, as well as diverse offerings such as the 14 Heritage Trail Hike, Adams Seminars, Encounters with History events, Volunteer Work Day, and First Corps events. day-long efforts, volunteers enjoyed a program in the Soldiers’ National Cemetery led by NPS monument-preservation specialists. Gettysburg Foundation Volunteers Make a Lasting Difference In September 2015, seventeen Foundation volunteers worked with Park staff to paint the skeet and trap buildings and the fence posts at the Eisenhower Farm, as well as provide a much-needed facelift to fencing along the Millerstown Road on the battlefield. Gettysburg Foundation volunteers have heart, dedication, passion, enthusiasm, and tenacity to get the job done. This is illustrated in the numerous projects and programs that form the core of the Foundation’s work, including, but not limited to, painting and building fences at GETT and EISE; facilitating and caring for the historic Sherfy Garden; recruiting, servicing, and welcoming members at the Member Services Desk; greeting and assisting visitors at the Museum and Visitor Center, Rupp House History Center, David Wills House, and Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station; and assisting with various clerical and maintenance duties. Sherfy Farm Garden Project Helps Sustain Community This past summer, the Gettysburg Foundation, along with partners from the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College, planted and harvested a historic garden at the Sherfy Farm. Nondestructive techniques have been used over the last couple of years at Sherfy to develop a rich soil profile without actually digging into hallowed ground. After crops are grown from heirloom seeds, the produce is harvested and donated to communitybased programs such as local food banks, Meals on Wheels, and the Campus Kitchen. Over two thousand pounds of produce were harvested in 2015 alone. In 2015 alone, 613 volunteers donated 9,556 hours of service to the Foundation in support of our partnership with GETT and EISE, providing nearly $221,000 of value to the parks. Volunteers get their hands dirty during the Volunteer Work Day event. The annual Friends of Gettysburg Volunteer Work Day event in June 2015 alone brought nearly 300 Friends volunteers from nineteen states to help with projects. The work day projects included building 650 feet of fencing at the Biggs (Frey) farmhouse and more than 2,500 feet of fencing on Cemetery Hill in the old Visitor Center parking lot; cleaning and painting details on headstones in the Soldiers’ National Cemetery; clearing brush at the Bushman Farm; and painting historic barns and fences at the McPherson, Sherfy, and Slyder farms. After their Volunteers work hard to ensure the Sherfy Garden has a bountiful harvest. 15 EDUCATION … so nobly advanced … Gettysburg Foundation and its partners broadened existing educational programs and created new ones to help students realize their individual leadership skills and enjoy enriching experiences that will give them the opportunity to think, dream, achieve, and lead. WHY GETTYSBURG MATTERS: Education 150 Initiative – Youth Quest Camp Bolsters Leadership Skills In 2015, the Gettysburg Foundation, in partnership with GETT and Gettysburg College, completed its four-year Education 150 Initiative, developed to engage educators and students from underserved inner-city and rural areas in the meaning of Gettysburg and the Civil War in their lives today. In the first phase of the initiative, two educator conferences brought a total of ninety-one teachers from inner city and rural school districts from seven states. In the second phase, the educators, in turn, taught their students lessons from Gettysburg and brought nearly 6,000 students on field trips to Gettysburg for a hands-on learning experience. This number is in addition to the over 100,000 students who visit Gettysburg every year on traditional school field trips. Youth Quest students participate in team building activities that help them get comfortable with their new teammates and environment, as well as encourage them to start problem-solving and working together. The 2015 Youth Quest Leadership Camp, held in July, constituted the initiative’s third and final phase. Twenty-five ninth graders, nominated by teachers who had attended the educators’ conferences, took part in Youth Quest’s five-day, four-night experiential and immersive experience, complete with engaging activities led by Park rangers and Gettysburg College students and faculty. In the 2013 Youth Quest Leadership Camp, twenty-five additional students participated, also from underserved urban and rural environments. The camp was designed to help the students identify and develop foundational leadership skills through exploration of Gettysburg history and the relevancy to their lives today. Experiential learning exercises deepened the students’ self-awareness, built their confidence in team- and community-building, enhanced their communications skills, and helped them see their own potential for leadership. Students stayed on the college campus, working in teams called “Corps Groups” led by college students who were their counselors and leadership mentors. At the conclusion of Youth Quest, each student gave a presentation before an audience of family, friends, and staff about his or her most memorable moments of the experience. All of them mentioned the significance of learning their own leadership skills, the specific goals they set for themselves, and how they planned to use what they learned upon their return home. One student described her renewed motivation to continue building a local teen suicide-prevention program at her school. She stated, “Youth Quest helped me recognize my strengths and how to use them to accomplish my goals.” Another student said, “Youth Quest helped me realize my true self and how to break out of my shell and make a difference in my community.” In 2015, Youth Quest students came from six different states: PA, NY, NJ, MS, WV and VA. During specially designed programs on the battlefield, in the town, and in the Soldiers’ National Cemetery, students discovered how military leaders and President Lincoln made key decisions that affected not only the outcome of the battle but the course of American and world history. They also walked the paths of common soldiers, coming face to face with their personal courage and sacrifice. Youth Quest students learn determination and courage by walking in the footsteps of Civil War soldiers on Big Round Top with NPS Ranger Chris Gwinn. 17 battlefield as an outdoor classroom. The Gettysburg Foundation provided staff and administrative support to GETT for these programs, which included “traveling trunks” filled with educational materials, curriculum-based ranger field programs, and two new multi-day workshops. During their in-service training days, about twenty educators attended each program, which offered a behindthe-scenes look at historic resources, specific curriculum connections, and leadership lessons available to them through the Foundation, GETT, and EISE. Other Programs Designed for Local Educators and Students The Centennial Student Exchange program was developed to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service in 2016. The program connected advanced-placement students from Gettysburg Area School District to students from Appomattox County High School in Appomattox, Virginia. The high schools’ history teachers worked with respective NPS interpretive rangers to use distance learning technology and on-site visits to learn more deeply about the history of one another’s parks. Financial and operational support for this program was provided by the Gettysburg Foundation and the Appomattox 1865 Foundation, while historic lessons and guided tours were created and provided by NPS interpretive rangers from Gettysburg National Military Park and Appomattox Courthouse National Historical Park. Gettysburg Foundation Vice Chair of the Board Barbara Finfrock with Appomattox students before the Dedication Day Ceremony. The new Be Our Guest programs, one for local history teachers and another for school administrators, were offered to support the teaching of Civil War history with the Gettysburg 18 “LET US STRIVE ON”: In the Footsteps of Leaders Leadership Program Evolves “I shall do all I can,” President Lincoln wrote to a critic who had questioned his leadership during the war, pledging to use his abilities to the utmost to save the country. In 2015, the Gettysburg Foundation’s In the Footsteps of Leaders leadership program built on Lincoln’s aspirational words by expanding its reach to more types of organizations, and conducting more repeat programs. The leaders of these groups traveled to Gettysburg to participate in a comprehensive learning experience in one of the greatest outdoor classrooms on leadership in the world. Clients for the forty-two sessions offered during the year ranged from Fortune 500 companies to government and nonprofit agencies to private companies, and included, among many others, Carnegie Mellon University, Crowe Horwath LLC, Kimberly-Clark Corporation, the U.S. State Department, and Chick-fil-A. Leadership group at the Meade Equestrian Monument. The Gettysburg Foundation invited representatives from local businesses as well as media and travel organizations to help showcase the program’s offerings to a broader audience of individuals who might not otherwise have access to the program. The program was developed both for leaders with substantial workplace experience and for students in higher educational institutions striving to become the leaders of the future. It has earned considerable client loyalty—one client participated in its eighth straight program. Attendees called the program “thought-provoking, inspiring!” and one called it “a wonderful and humbling experience [offering] lessons in all kinds of leadership, communication, and teamwork.” A team of graduate students from Carnegie Mellon University’s H. John Heinz III College were invited to evaluate the program in early 2015 to give the Foundation’s management team a higher-level analysis of the leadership program from a fresh perspective. The students assessed the program’s structure, components, pricing, marketing materials, and major competitors. They also interviewed numerous clients and reviewed evaluations. Noting that the program enjoys a large percentage of return and referred clients, the Heinz College students concluded that the highly customizable, highly rated program remains among the most affordable and unique programs among competitors in the Gettysburg leadership field, providing exclusive access to important historic locations, including the Sherfy House and the George Spangler Farm, and behind-the-scenes educational opportunities at the Museum and Visitor Center. To continually assess and advance innovative methods to shape the program, In the Footsteps of Leaders retains special relationships with Lycoming College, Lebanon Valley College, the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business, and Gettysburg College. New in 2015 was the “Open Enrollment Leadership Program,” an effort to make In the Footsteps of Leaders available to individuals who might not have larger groups or organization with which to attend. 19 THE VISITOR EXPERIENCE … a new birth of freedom … Our Vision is for all audiences to feel welcomed, accepted, and inspired to connect to the lessons of the battlefield and that interpretive, exhibit, educational, and leadership offerings are relevant, fresh, engaging, and accessible to existing and new visitors. WINDOW TO GETTYSBURG: in the Gold LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certified building. They can tour the eleven engaging exhibit galleries; view the exclusive film A New Birth of Freedom, narrated by Academy Award–winning actor Morgan Freeman and sponsored by the History Channel; and witness the Gettysburg Cyclorama, the largest oil-on-canvas painting in North America, which combines art and sound to depict the culmination of Pickett’s Charge. The Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center The only privately owned and operated museum and visitor center in the national park system, the Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center continues to serve as a key portal to the visitor’s experience. Whether it’s their first visit or their tenth, visitors always find something new to learn about or become acquainted with 20 The Foundation’s staff in the Museum and Visitor Center have greeted more than eight million visitors since its doors opened in 2008—including one million visitors in 2015 alone. In addition, more than 100,000 students visit Gettysburg each year to tour the battlefield and explore the Museum and Visitor Center’s offerings. A NAME WORTH REMEMBERING: Social Media and Visitor Accessibility Enhanced For visitors today, social media, particularly Facebook, are their first stop in planning a first or a return visit—or simply a means of remaining connected to the national parks at Gettysburg. To better represent the organization and eliminate confusion between the Foundation and the Gettysburg National Military Park Facebook pages, the Foundation changed its Facebook page name from “Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center” to “Gettysburg Foundation” in 2015. To make the transition as seamless as possible, Foundation social media staff highlighted a different facet of the Foundation’s mission and work each week, with posts focusing on preservation projects, educational offerings, membership benefits, opportunities to donate, and more. The Gettysburg Foundation introduced other social media platforms as well in 2015. For the first time ever, Foundation social media staff livestreamed multiple programs straight from the battlefield using Periscope. The programs proved to be an immediate hit, with over 240 visitors watching twenty-one broadcasts in six months. The Foundation’s other social media accounts continued to thrive. The Foundation’s Instagram account grew by 167 percent in 2015, with over 3,400 total followers. Visitor photos were featured each week on Instagram, which has proven to be a large draw for new followers. The Foundation’s Twitter account, which had previously been auto-publishing posts from Facebook, became a separate entity with unique content in 2015. Twitter activity grew nearly 15 percent, with over 6,300 followers on the account. The Foundation’s YouTube channel had over 44,000 views, with visitors watching over 7,800 hours of Sacred Trust talks and other videos. In late October, the Foundation launched its first blog, which detailed progress of the restoration work at the George Spangler Farm. Although visitors can only visit the Spangler Farm from June through the middle of August each year, the Foundation provided behind-the-scenes weekly blog posts that highlighted the restoration work taking place. Over 1,500 visitors read the blog posts on related topics such as smokehouses, roof shingles, root cellars, hinges, and nails. 21 ABOVE AND BEYOND: Sacred Trust Talks and Book Signings Expand In July 2015, the Gettysburg Foundation and GETT added a new and very well-received dimension to the 11th Annual Sacred Trust Talks and Book Signings event. A large crowd gathered for a Friday night panel discussion by historians in the Museum and Visitor Center Theater on the theme “How the Veterans Told the Story of the War.” The traditional highly acclaimed Sacred Trust program followed over the next two days, with more than twenty authors signing their books and leading talks History came to life during Ford Family Day. battlefield guides and GETT rangers, listened to performances of Civil War music, ate free ice cream, and lined up for the chance to wear replicas of Civil War uniforms and dresses while parents snapped photographs to share with family and friends. DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER UNVEILED: A Presidential Paint and Wine Night A new program held at Eisenhower National Historic Site in October forged new community partnerships while giving participants a look at a seldomexplored aspect of the 34th President of the United States—Dwight D. Eisenhower as an artist. Chris Gwinn, Supervisory Ranger for Interpretation and Education at GETT leads a talk at the Sacred Trust Talks and Book Signings event. Sponsored by the Gettysburg Foundation, EISE, and the Adams County Arts Council, A Presidential Paint and Wine Night was developed in response to the National Park Service’s call for new arts-related events with local organizations. Attendees were given a behind-the-scenes Attendees used one of Eisenhower’s original tour of the Eisenhower home that focused on the president’s paintings as inspiration pieces of original art. Following while painting at the historic farm. the tour and refreshments, participants created their own work on canvas, duplicating one of Eisenhower’s paintings. The sold-out event shed light on Eisenhower’s diverse talents while offering local residents, most of whom had never visited the site, the chance to visit the only home Eisenhower ever owned. revolving around the theme of “1865 and the end of the American Civil War.” Attendees were treated to presentations by highly regarded authors, historians, and National Park Service interpretive rangers. FAMILY FIRST: Ford Family Day Focuses on Education Ford Family Day at the Museum and Visitor Center on August 8 was a Saturday full of fun and meaningful, educational activities for nearly 8,000 people of all ages. The Foundation and GETT sponsored this second annual event through a generous grant from the Ford Motor Company Fund. During the event, every visitor received a complimentary ticket to the Museum and Visitor Center. Visitors of all ages enjoyed story time readings by living historians in Civil War period dress, participated in educational programs with 22 A NATION REMEMBERS: 152nd Dedication Day Observed On November 19, the 152nd anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address was marked by a solemn ceremony sponsored by the Lincoln Fellowship of Pennsylvania, Gettysburg Foundation, Gettysburg National Military Park, and Gettysburg College. The keynote speaker was Garrison Keillor, the host and creator of A Prairie Home Companion, a weekly national program on more than 600 National Public Radio stations. Mr. Keillor’s remarks focused on the experiences of the common soldiers, as he read from their letters home, which reflected, as he said, “the recognition that the ordinary things of life had become precious to them.” Garrison Keillor used the power of soldiers’ letter to humanize the Battle of Gettysburg in his keynote address. In less than 15 minutes Gettysburg Foundation volunteers lit over 4,000 luminaries around the Soldiers’ National Cemetery. candle at each of the 3,512 Civil War soldiers’ graves in the Soldiers’ National Cemetery. Volunteers greeted guests, read the names of the fallen soldiers for the thousands of visitors who paid their respects, and served as the honor guard at the Soldiers’ National Monument. Inclement weather moved the program indoors to the Gettysburg College Union Ballroom. In addition to the customary recitation of the Gettysburg Address, the presentation of the colors, hymns, and period music, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services sponsored sixteen people who took the Oath of Citizenship to become naturalized citizens. Remarks were also made by Gettysburg Foundation President Joanne Hanley and Gettysburg National Military Park Superintendent Ed Clark. FRONT-ROW SEAT TO HISTORY: Evening at the Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station and the David Wills House The Gettysburg Foundation and GETT sponsored special free events at two landmark venues with close ties to the events in 1863. On November 18, the anniversary of the eve of President Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, visitors had the opportunity to visit the railroad station and the David Wills House in the early evening hours. The station served as a hospital after the battle, and was the site where Lincoln disembarked on his visit for the dedication of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery. Visitors were able to tour David Wills’ office, where he oversaw details of the creation of the cemetery and its dedication, as well as the room where Lincoln completed the Gettysburg Address the night before he delivered it. THE LAST FULL MEASURE: 13th Remembrance Day Illumination Honors Soldiers To honor the men of whom President Lincoln said, “The world … can never forget what they did here,” on November 21 the Gettysburg Foundation held the 13th Annual Remembrance Illumination. More than 230 Friends volunteers placed a luminary 23 Dr. Hamilton’s journal was featured in the Exhibit Spotlight. In October, the second exhibit, Firmness, Endurance, and Vigor: Brigadier General William Barksdale and Dr. Alfred Hamilton at Gettysburg, was unveiled. Barksdale was one of the battle’s most noted Confederate commanders, and Hamilton was the Pennsylvania physician who tried to save the wounded general’s life. In a horrific second-day clash with Union forces, Barksdale’s Mississippians lost half their strength and Barksdale fell mortally wounded. Artifacts such as the .58 caliber bullet removed from Barksdale and Dr. Hamilton’s journal bring to life one of the battle’s most moving stories about how the paths of two men with two very different ideologies crossed. This exhibit was made possible through the generosity and collections of W. Craig Bashein, Captain Steven W. Knott, the American Civil War Museum, and the collection of the National Park Service. PORTRAITS IN POSTERITY: New Exhibit Debuts The Gettysburg Foundation introduced a new free exhibit display area, called Exhibit Spotlight, that connects soldiers, civilians, and generals from the Battle of Gettysburg with artifacts and the Gettysburg battlefield. Through their Gettysburg experience, visitors have the opportunity to follow the journey of the people featured in the exhibit, watching the story unfold as they explore the connections found both in the Museum exhibit and on the battlefield. The Exhibit Spotlight will display a new theme every six months. A PLACE FOR EVERYTHING: Museum and Visitor Center Rentals and Events Expand In March 2015, the first exhibit (left), A Faithful and Efficient General: The Military Service of General Albion Howe, debuted, featuring previously unseen artifacts from the general’s career. A division commander in the Union Army’s 6th Corps at the Battle of Gettysburg, Howe served as a member of the military tribunal that convicted President Lincoln’s conspirators, and he participated in the honor guard that watched over Lincoln’s body after his death—particularly meaningful for visitors during the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s assassination in 2015. The general’s presentation sword and a framed photograph of the tribunal, among other artifacts, were highlighted. This exhibit was made possible through the generosity of a private collection. More individuals and groups than ever chose the Museum and Visitor Center and other Gettysburg Foundation venues, such as the Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station, as a perfect backdrop to rent for their private events, parties, weddings, and receptions. At the Museum and Visitor Center, up to five hundred guests can be entertained at beautiful and elegant affairs. In 2015, thirtyfour events were held, with more than four The Visitor Center is thousand guests attending. During the decorated for an event. year, the Foundation also saw a growing interest in inquiries for wedding space, a direct result of website-based marketing for events and bridal showcases. 24 CENTENNIAL OF SERVICE: Other Special Events and Programs Licensed Battlefield Guides Celebrate 100th Anniversary BETTER TOGETHER: Foundation and GETT Host National Park Friends Alliance Conference The Licensed Battlefield Guides are a long-standing partner in tours and interpretive programs at GETT. They celebrated a century of service at a Centennial banquet in the Museum and Visitor Center held on October 17, 2015—100 years to the day after the first licensed guided tour was given at GETT. The National Park Friends Alliance was formed over twenty years ago by leaders of Friends groups to share information on how to make their partnerships with national parks more effective. The organization has grown significantly over the years to meet the increasing emphasis on public-private partnerships in the NPS. The Alliance meets twice a year to share information, learn about NPS policies, advance partnership and philanthropic ideas, and discuss models for problem-solving between Friends groups and the NPS. In October 2015, the Gettysburg Foundation and GETT hosted the conference, which was attended by 104 participants who traveled to Gettysburg from parks across the country to learn the most current partnership practices, success stories, and challenges. A highlight of the program was the compelling presentation given by Foundation President Joanne Hanley and GETT Superintendent Ed Clark on “Gettysburg: Partnership in Action,” which showcased the highly successful public-private partnership between the Foundation and GETT, and the amazing work that has been accomplished in nearly 27 years. The dinner and program was held at the Museum and Visitor Center. Co-sponsored by the Gettysburg Foundation and GETT, the event commemorated the contributions of this special professional organization of guides licensed by GETT. More than 200 guides and their guests attended. Certificates of commendation issued by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania General Assembly were read, and reminiscences and a special slide show capturing images of guides at work on the hallowed ground at Gettysburg capped this emotional and moving event. In December, a plaque was mounted in the Museum and Visitor Center honoring the guides’ exceptional interpretive service. Participants had the opportunity to tour successful Foundation and GETT partnership projects such as the George Spangler Farm, the Gettysburg Lincoln Railroad Station, Cemetery Ridge, the Armory, and the Cannon Carriage Restoration Shop. Our business partners—Gettysburg Tours, Event Network, and Aramark—were sponsors of the conference, and representatives from each gave remarks on the value and impact of having such successful business partners. The National Park Friends Alliance Group. 25 FINANCIALS … summary statement of activities … YEAR-ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2015 Unrestricted REVENUE AND OTHER SUPPORT Contributions Museum admissions Battlefield tours Bookstore and refreshments Membership dues income Event and other income Net assets released from restrictions Total Revenue and Other Support EXPENSES Program Services Museum and Visitor Center operations Gettysburg National Military Park Programs Total Program Services Management and general Fundraising Total Expenses Excess (Deficiency) of Revenue and Support Over Expenses GAINS AND LOSSES AND LOSS ON RATE SWAP CHANGES IN NET ASSETS $ 934,800 5,299,407 3,363,032 2,366,357 759,869 641,884 1,061,920 $14,427,269 $ 10,171,394 3,142,517 664,941 $13,978,852 747,740 1,669,941 $16,396,533 Restricted Total $ 1,087,695 $ 2,022,495 5,299,407 3,363,032 2,366,357 759,869 641,884 – $14,453,044 (1,061,920) $ 25,775 $ – $ – 10,171,394 3,142,517 664,941 $ 13,978,852 747,740 1,669,941 $ 16,396,533 (1,969,264) 25,775 (1,943,489) (561,750) (20,241) (581,991) 5,534 $(2,525,480) $ (2,531,014) 26 $ $ … summary of financial position … YEAR-ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2015 ASSETS Cash Investments held in trust Investments Promises to give, net Property and equipment, net $ 4,063,314 5,618,731 2,518,747 703,289 79,951,023 Other assets Total Assets 868,870 $93,723,974 LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS Liabilities Accounts payable and accrued expenses Notes payable Deferred service contract revenues Bonds payable Value of interest rate swap agreement Other liabilities Total Liabilities $ 2,067,494 635,577 1,557,292 12,055,000 2,676,678 461,738 $ 19,453,779 Net Assets Unrestricted Temporarily restricted Permanently restricted Total Net Assets 61,515,380 2,810,810 9,944,005 $ 74,270,195 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS $93,723,974 27 … 2015 revenues … Membership Dues Income Event and Other Income 5% Contributions 14% 5% Bookstore and Refreshments 16% Museum Admissions Battlefield Tours 37% 23% … 2015 expenses … Fundraising Management and General 10% 5% Programs 4% Museum and Visitor Center Operations Gettysburg National Military Park 62% 19% 28 SUPPORTER RECOGNITION … thank you for your generous support … 1863 SOCIETY GETTYSBURG SOCIETY $1,863 to $4,999 $5,000 and above Dr. William E. Aldrich Ms. Ann Griffith Ash Mr. & Mrs. Jack R. Beighley Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Bringman Mr. & Mrs. Clifford H. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Bozzone Mr. Richard Canty & Ms. Hope Woodhouse Mr. Edward W. Clark, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David R. Cooper Ms. Linda DePascale Mr. & Mrs. John M. DiSanto, Sr. Mr. Jeffrey C. Hall Mr. Walt Harlow Ms. Cynthia D. Hill Mr. & Mrs. Warren J. Kennedy Mr. James Francis Lavelle Mr. & Mrs. David R. Lincoln Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Morin Mr. Brien M. O’Brien & Ms. Mary Hastens Mr. Glenn Plummer Mr. & Mrs. William H. Simpson Mr. & Mrs. Jed Smith Mr. & Mrs. Bob Sneed Mr. & Mrs. Cyrus W. Spurlino Mr. Theodore J. Stimach Mr. & Mrs. James R. Tilling Mr. Shanon R. Toal, Jr. Mr. Barry L. Tobias Mr. Michael J. Travis & Ms. Renee Kwok Mr. & Mrs. Wesley W. von Schack Dr. & Mrs. Edmond C. Watters Dr. & Mrs. Robert C. Wilburn Mr. & Mrs. Timothy K. Woofter Anonymous Mr. Louis J. Appell, Jr. Mr. John W. Bassett Mrs. Lisa Berman Dr. David L. Black & Congresswoman Diane Black Mr. & Mrs. Carl W. Borntraeger Mr. & Mrs. Anthony P. Campisi Mr. & Mrs. Michael Conrad Mr. & Mrs. William H. Crabbin Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Diller, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Beverly M. DuBose, III Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey A. Frazier Mr. Robert Geneczko Mr. & Mrs. Matthew W. Hanley Mr. James R. Hanni Mr. & Mrs. David D. Hartman Mr. Richard L. Hauschild, Jr. Mr. Michael S. Higgins Mr. A. J. Kazimi Mr. & Mrs. H. F. Lenfest Ms. Jacqueline B. Mars Capt. Henry E. Marx Mrs. Margaret McDermott Dr. & Mrs. James M. McPherson Mr. & Mrs. Seward Prosser Mellon Ms. Marcia A. Musial* Mr. Thomas A. Petrie Mr. Paul “Mickey” Pohl Ms. Barbara Sardella & Mr. Stephen Dengler Ms. Shirley M. Sontheimer Mr. & Mrs. Wayne H. Valis *Denotes Deceased 29 LINCOLN’S CABINET M&T Bank Corporation Mark B. and Jean G. Higgins Foundation Mars Foundation National Park Foundation National Park Service R. K. Mellon Family Foundation Robert H. Smith Family Foundation Sumner T. McKnight Foundation Tawani Foundation The Donald B. and Dorothy L. Stabler Foundation The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation The Sontheimer Foundation, Inc. $10,000 and above annually for 5 years Anonymous (3) Mr. & Mrs. W. Craig Bashein Miss Evelyn L. Booth Ms. Linda M. Boxx Mr. James R. Craigie Ms. Barbara J. Finfrock Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Kinsley Mr. H. Turney McKnight Mr.* & Mrs. Thomas E. Metz Mr. & Mrs. William H. Parker Mr. & Mrs. David F. Remington Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey R. Rodek Mr. & Mrs. Eric B. Schultz Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Wilson GUARDIANS’ SOCIETY Those who have chosen to remember the Gettysburg Foundation in their estate plans Dr. William E. Aldrich Mr. Scott Biggar Dr. & Mrs. Ted Chamberlain Mr. & Mrs. Michael Conrad Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Diller, Jr., Chair Mr. & Mrs. James Dougherty Drs. Sandra Ehnen & Stephen Dreyfuss Ms. Barbara J. Finfrock Ms. Patricia E. Fowler & Mr. Stephen J. Borys Capt. Joan R. Hankey, USN (Ret) Drs. William & Natalie Hoffman Mr. Art Hoffner Ms. Barbara Hyland Ms. Sharon Jackson Mr. & Mrs. Larry S. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Kunzen Mr. & Mrs. Gregory Luginski Mr. Joseph L. Oreszko Mr. Douglas M. Peck Ms. Veronica J. Pinto Mr. John Reynolds Mr. Bill Steger Mr. John D. Talbot Ms. Carol Truesdale Mr. & Mrs. Jon R. Winkler IN HONOR $1,863 and above Princeton University Class of 1972, in honor of Dr. James M. McPherson FOUNDATIONS, CORPORATIONS, AND ORGANIZATIONS $5,000 and above Aramark Brobyn Charitable Trust Courtney Babcock Borntraeger Foundation Craig & Deborah Cogut Foundation, Inc. Event Network F. M. Kirby Foundation, Inc. Ford Motor Company Fund Gettysburg College Gettysburg Tours Glatfelter Insurance Group Glencairn Foundation Katherine Mabis McKenna Foundation Kazimi Advised Funds of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee Kinsley Foundation 30 DIRECTORS and COUNCILS … thank you for your leadership … BOARD OF DIRECTORS Officers Robert A. Kinsley, Chair Chairman and CEO Kinsley Construction, Inc. York, PA Joanne M. Hanley, President Gettysburg Foundation Gettysburg, PA James R. Craigie Non-Executive Chairman Church and Dwight Co., Inc. Ewing, NJ H. Turney McKnight President, Sumner T. McKnight Foundation Havre de Grace, MD Susan Eisenhower President The Eisenhower Institute Washington, DC Dr. James M. McPherson Professor Emeritus, Department of History Princeton University Princeton, NJ Barbara J. Finfrock, Vice Chair Gettysburg Foundation Gettysburg, PA John H. Estey Executive Vice-President for Administration Hershey Trust Company Hershey, PA Barbara Sardella, Secretary to the Board General Counsel Kinsley Construction, Inc. York, PA Jeffrey A. Frazier EVP and Chief Human Strategy Officer The Medicines Company Parsippany, NJ Shanon R. Toal, Jr., Treasurer Vice President Branch Bank and Trust Hanover, PA Brig. Gen. David L. Grange, USA (Ret) President, Osprey Global Solutions Wilmington, NC Directors W. Craig Bashein President Bashein and Bashein Co., LPA Cleveland, OH Kent Masterson Brown Attorney-at-Law Law Offices of Kent Masterson Brown Lexington, KY Linda McKenna Boxx Chairman Katherine Mabis McKenna Foundation Latrobe, PA Dr. Peter Carmichael Fluhrer Professor of Civil War Studies and Director, Civil War Institute Gettysburg College Gettysburg, PA James R. Hanni Executive Vice President, Public Affairs AAA Allied Group, Inc. Topeka, KS David D. Hartman President, Wickford Junction Durham, NC Michael S. Higgins Wild Wing Farm Wexford, PA Ervin L. Jordan, Jr. Associate Professor and Research Archivist University of Virginia, Small Special Collections Library Charlottesville, VA Sandra S. Mellon Ligonier, PA Dr. Carol Reardon George Winfree Professor of American History Penn State Laureate 2015 – 2016 Pennsylvania State University State College, PA Dr. Janet Morgan Riggs President, Gettysburg College Gettysburg, PA Eric B. Schultz Executive Chairman, Hubcast, Inc. Venture Partner, Ascent Venture Program Boxford, MA George F. Will FOX Television News Analyst Washington, DC Directors Emeriti Dr. Gabor S. Boritt Director Emeritus, Civil War Institute Gettysburg College Gettysburg, PA LTG (Ret) Daniel W. Christman Senior Counsel to the President United States Chamber of Commerce Washington, DC Beverly (Bo) DuBose, III Atlanta, GA *Denotes Deceased 31 Kay O’Rourke* Odessa, FL David F. Remington Cape Neddick, ME Mr. Adam Goodheart Director, C. V. Starr Center of the Study of the American Experience Washington College The Honorable Dick Thornburgh Of Counsel, Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Preston Gates Ellis, LLP Washington, DC Dr. Lesley Gordon Professor of History Editor, Civil War History University of Akron Wesley W. von Schack Carmel, CA Mr. Scott Hartwig Retired Supervisory Historian Gettysburg National Military Park Dr. Robert C. Wilburn President Emeritus, Gettysburg Foundation Principal, The Wilburn Group Miami Beach, FL Mr. Harold Holzer Director, Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute Hunter College HISTORIANS’ COUNCIL Dr. Gordon Jones Director, Exhibits and Collections Atlanta History Center Dr. William A. Blair Professor of American History; Director, George and Ann Richards Civil War Era Center Penn State University Prof. Ervin L. Jordan, Jr. Associate Professor and Research Archivist University of Virginia, Small Special Collections Library Dr. Gabor S. Boritt Director Emeritus, Civil War Institute Gettysburg College Mr. Lewis Lehrman Co-founder Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History Mr. Kent Masterson Brown Author Lexington, KY Dr. Michael Burlingame Chancellor Naomi B. Lynn Distinguished Chair in Lincoln Studies University of Illinois Springfield Mr. Ken Burns Director and Producer Florentine Films Dr. Peter Carmichael Fluhrer Professor of Civil War Studies and Director, Civil War Institute Gettysburg College Dr. Drew Gilpin Faust President Harvard University Dr. Gary W. Gallagher John L. Nau, III, Professor in the History of the American Civil War University of Virginia Dr. Thavolia Glymph Associate Professor, African and African American Studies and History Duke University Dr. Louis P. Masur Professor of American Studies and History Rutgers University Dr. James M. McPherson Professor Emeritus, Department of History Princeton University Mr. Wayne E. Motts Chief Executive Officer National Civil War Museum Dr. Matthew Pinsker Associate Professor of History and Pohanka Chair in American Civil War History Dickinson College Ms. Elizabeth Brown Pryor* Author Richmond, VA Dr. Carol A. Reardon George Winfree Professor of American History in the College of Liberal Arts and 2015–2016 Penn State University Laureate Penn State University Dr. Aaron Sheehan-Dean Eberly Professor of Civil War Studies West Virginia University Dr. Nina Silber Professor of History Boston University Dr. Brooks Simpson Foundation Professor, Arizona State University Associate Director, Center for the Study of Race and Democracy Dr. Robert Sutton Chief Historian National Park Service Mr. James L. Swanson Senior Legal Scholar The Heritage Foundation Dr. Susannah J. Ural Associate Professor University of Southern Mississippi Dr. Joan Waugh Associate Professor of History University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Hon. Frank J. Williams Chief Justice (Ret.) Rhode Island Supreme Court NATIONAL COUNCIL Mr. & Mrs. J. Gordon Beittenmiller Mr. & Mrs. William S. Carter Mr. Art Crivella Mr. John F. Donahue Mr. James Duratz Mr.* & Mrs. Derek C. Hathaway Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Just Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. McPherson Mr.* & Mrs. Thomas E. Metz Mr. Douglas N. Morton & Ms. Marilyn Brown Mr. & Mrs. John L. Nau, III Mr. & Mrs. William H. Parker Dean Kurt L. Schmoke Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Simmons Mr. David Bruce Smith Mr. & Mrs. James A. Thomas Ms. Sandra E. Ulsh Mr. Sam Waterston Mr. Eric Weider Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Wilson Mr. Richard B. Worley & Ms. Leslie A. Miller *Denotes Deceased 32 IN MEMORIAM James A. Getty For more than four decades, Illinois native, teacher, and veteran James A. Getty made the portrayal of President Abraham Lincoln his life’s work. Mr. Getty studied the sixteenth president and infused his knowledge into more than 500 presentations each year for visitors to Gettysburg and at organizations throughout the United States, including the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. His annual recitation of the Gettysburg Address during Dedication Day in the Soldiers’ National Cemetery made him an icon. Gettysburg and generations of Lincoln students and admirers lost an inspirational force when Mr. Getty passed away on September 26, 2015, but the echoes of his devotion to the study of the American Civil War and Abraham Lincoln will long resonate. Photo courtesy of Tami A. Heilemann, Department of the Interior 1195 Baltimore Pike, Gettysburg, PA 17325 | 717.338.1243 | www.gettysburgfoundation.org