Hebron Magazine Fall 2019

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Science Takes Center Stage report of giving

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reunion/homecoming october 18-19


fall 2019 PHOTOGRAPHY Devin Harrington Erin Ash Sullivan John McKeith Ben Wheeler Chris Schroeder WRITERS Emily Carton Jim Hill ‘90 Max Jennings Pat Layman Bill Skelton ‘86 Dave Stonebraker Daniella Swenton ADVANCEMENT OFFICE Jen Gronros Pat Layman James LeBlanc ‘02 Judy Roy Beverly Roy COMMUNICATIONS Devin Harrington Andrea Savignano

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DESIGN Dianne Lewis Design

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HEBRON is published by the Hebron Academy Communications and Advancement Offices. Letters and corrections are welcome. Please send your feedback to Beverly Roy, at broy@hebronacademy.org

3 kaneb center opens new opportunities

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10 catching up with paul kaneb

Hebron Academy affirms its longstanding policy of nondiscriminatory admission of students on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, age, ancestry, national origin, physical or mental disability, or sexual orientation. We do not discriminate in the administration of our educational policies, admissions practices, scholarship programs and athletic or other school-administered programs. Hebron Academy is an equal opportunity employer.

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at the academy report of giving classnotes obituaries

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john mckeith

© Copyright 2019 by Hebron Academy www.hebronacademy.org

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Hebron Academy inspires and guides students to reach their highest potential in mind, body and spirit.


FROM THE HEAD OF SCHOOL

simply can’t wait to greet our students, old and new, as they arrive for the year and for the campus to fill with the vibrant energy of our community. This will be an important year for the Academy, and I take pleasure in reporting out in briefest notes much news. Yet, at this moment as I write to the Hebron community in the dog days of August, what is foremost on my mind are the students, the school, our shared mission and the renewal of our community and our calling for the year ahead. I often find myself thinking about the Hebron community and the experiences that bind us. This summer from the choices for our ‘All-School Read,’ I read Amy Bass’s, One Goal, a study of Lewiston High School’s championship soccer team, and Fredrik Backman’s, Beartown, a story of the influence of hockey upon the culture of a small Swedish town. While these particular stories focus on the culture of small towns and their sports teams, the parallels to a school community are important and intense. I look forward to the conversations that will come when we take up all of the ‘All-School Read’ books in discussion groups early in the fall. I have also read again James Kerr’s study of New Zealand’s championship Rugby Fifteen, the All Blacks, and the culture and tradition that the team inspires for a nation. Kerr suggests that a group’s culture, combined with its traditions and shared beliefs, define its character. I find myself thinking that way about Hebron, and the opportunity we have every year and every day to live our mission and our culture. I see it readily in the energy and service ethic of our faculty, in their sustaining drive to offer the most creative and innovative approaches to their subjects. This year, the E.D.I.E. program of new offerings in the arts, science, robotics and engineering will bring interdisciplinary learning to bear on problem solving. As we continue our signature programs of RoundSquare and the Words Program, we are preparing students to address the future with confidence, with global insight and with the analytic and speaking skills to be independent voices for the future.

john mckeith

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In a different context, I am always moved when I listen to our alumni and hear their personal expressions of our school’s culture. Paul Kaneb and John McGonagle, hockey teammates in 1960, have talked with me about the ‘way things were,’ about being taken in hand by inspirational adults and moved on their way to college and the future. Our students this fall, will have no less inspirational adult mentors, but they will also be served by the spectacular facilities of the Kaneb Center for Science and Engineering. This winter, parents and visitors will welcome the McGonagle Pavilion, a ‘first for Hebron’ heated viewing area in the Robinson Arena. The school is now enjoying a graceful leadership transition for the Board of Trustees. We feted Paul Goodof ’67 and said good-bye in the spring, as Matthew Lyness ’76 became Chair of the Board. Annual Fund goals were exceeded yet again, and at present, we have fully realized our enrollment goals.

We have launched a new website and completed a marketing video for the new year, and in the winter, we will engage key stakeholders in strategic planning for the future. In short, we begin the 215th year of the Academy in an enviable position, a place of stability and strength from which to focus our energies on the special community and culture that is Hebron. We are challenged by our mission ‘to inspire and guide’ each student each and every day, and we will strive to reaffirm again each day the culture and traditions of this unique school. Please accept my personal invitation. Come to campus. See what we are about. Come at Homecoming and renew friendships and share your Hebron stories. Do come; I would love to meet you and to share in your stories. Sincerely,

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FROM THE GUEST EDITOR

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recently returned from a trip in the Rhone River Valley of France, a cycling adventure traveling in Provence from Avignon to the Mediterranean Sea. Each day’s ride took us to historic landmarks - castles, medieval cities, and Roman ruins, and always the landscape of hillside, orchard and vineyard brought to mind paintings of VanGogh and Cezanne as we pedaled country lanes amid Lombardy pines and vinyards. It was a very special time with friends, yet it seemed as if there was too much history to take in. I was awash in European history, much as my son Austin and I had been in America’s history when we rode bicycles together from coast to coast in 1995, a son and father sharing the road and America together. Hebron math teacher Ross Fidler and his dad shared a similar excursion this summer as they traveled a cyclist’s ‘Northern Tier’ route across America. July 4th found them in the heart of the heart of the country, Napoleon, North Dakota, and Ross blogged, “Being halfway across the country on bikes seemed

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like the perfect way to celebrate the birth of our nation. While the pundits tell us of the great divide between red and blue states, the people we met in the west have been awesomely friendly and helpful. It’s a good country with good people. This trip has made me feel proud to be an American.” There is something constant in that, the shared experience of the road and the feeling of seeing the country and sampling its history whole and complete. History will surround us at Hebron in the year ahead. Our school year will coincide with the bicentennial celebration of Maine’s statehood. The charter of Hebron Academy predates Maine’s statehood by sixteen years. As we tell the founding story again - of how Revolutionary War veterans were sent north ‘to the territories’ with payment of land instead of wages - we may imagine the appearance of that first schoolhouse in the wilderness, so different from the complete campus we enjoy today. Yet not so different, perhaps, in the sense of vision and culture of that school, dedicated by its mission of fitting students for college and life. This fall, portraits of two Hebron couples will hang in the Hamlin Reading Room. Benjamin and Phoebe Sturtevant’s portraits were painted in the 19th century, after Benjamin had agreed to be a patron of what would become, in 1891, Sturtevant Hall. After her husband’s death, Phoebe continued the couple’s patronage to realize the school’s first residence hall, Sturtevant Home in 1900. As the Sturtevants were for Mr. Sargent, so John and Hannah Halford supported Claude Allen, their gifts underpinning a period of growth in the 1960’s. Today, these portraits from the past may remain present in our daily lives, images of those whose dedication underlies the school we enjoy today. Also this fall, students will work together on science and engineering studies in an impressive new facility, the Kaneb Center, which offers spectacular yet highly functional spaces for design centered exploration of the sciences. These facilities may seem a far cry from Mr. Dwyer’s natural science room in Sargent or Mr. Twitchell’s physics lab in Treat, but the commitment to the sciences

continues strongly today. During a recent visit with Paul Kaneb, it was uncanny to hear how experiences at Hebron reinforced his sense of the importance of the sciences and of speaking and writing well, studies Hebron has insisted upon from its founding to the present. Paul was a hockey player and teammate of John McGonagle’s, for whom the new viewing pavilion in Robinson Arena will be dedicated at Homecoming when John receives the Jay L. Woolsey Distinguished Service Award. John and Paul share a Colgate connection, as well, with John Leyden, who was selected as Hebron’s new Headmaster by a search committee chaired by Paul. John’s youth and energy in 1977 transformed the school for a decade as he brought to Hebron a group of dedicated young faculty who would become the familiar faces of later years. Today, Dan Marchetti leads a similar transition as he positions Hebron for continued educational leadership among independent schools. In the days before the students arrive, we are together as adults, planning and shaping ourselves to the tasks ahead. The energy will carry into the fall as we recreate the Hebron community once more, beginning with excitement and promise for the year ahead. It is a pattern present for more than two centuries, of students growing and changing in this special place. At a time when our country and world may seem more complex and fragmented than ever, there will be a certain quiet, stable familiarity when our community gathers in the Chapel to begin the new school year. History and tradition will surround us, and the words of the Academy Hymn will sound again as they have since 1891. Yet in the rush to greet friends, make acquaintances and hustle off to first classes, it will all seem very fresh once again. Yet it will also seem very familiar. To an archivist who has chronicled the life of the school for more than forty years, it will feel very much the same and yet wholly unique. For what matters, after all, is the beginning of this school year for these students and the growth and change anticipated in the months ahead. Plus ça change; plus la même chose. . . Dave Stonebraker, guest editor


Opens New Opportunities

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y design, the space is open, lofty, welcoming, light, clean, uncluttered, bright. “It is a space for student interaction, for group study, for collaboration, for just being in the moment,” Daniella Swenton, Chair of Sciences explains. “We had the entire footprint of the building to work with,” she continues, “and Max (Jennings, physics teacher) and I had the opportunity to work together to conceptualize how each space could support teaching and augment Hebron’s program. It is intentionally minimalistic because everything here is about the learning, about using the tools and methods of

research and design without the distractions of clutter.” We stand in the foyer of the newly completed Kaneb Center for Science and Engineering on a fine June morning, Daniella and Max ready to conduct a tour of Kaneb’s facilities, describing what went into the design of the building and how its spaces will support Hebron’s program for science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM in the current acronym. This print and photo version of a virtual tour explores the new laboratory and work spaces that will greet Hebron students in the fall. hebronacademy.org • 3


The ample foyer captures themes of the building as the two-story space with atria windows and exposed structural components above gives an open feeling of a working industrial space where construction design and technological components are on display, not covered by layers of finish. Here are hooks for a coat and cubbies for a pack, and more - soft chairs for nesting and flat surfaces for collaborating - while above, large word panels set the themes of “Explore,” “Discovery” and “Joy” for the work to be done here. “The ceiling is high enough to fly a drone,” Max explains, “or sufficient for modeling trajectory arcs,” the functional aspect of what might be, to a casual observer, simply an aesthetically lovely light open space with engaging wall hangings. Max moves to the east side of the Kaneb Center, the Engineering Lab. It is a huge space, by far the largest teaching area at Hebron, for exploring a variety of projectbased applications of physical science. “I wanted this space to be well-equipped but not cluttered,” Max continues, “a space to meet curricular needs and allow for working on complex projects in engineering and design. It 4 •

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is a space specifically for the physical sciences where physics, mechanics and dynamics can be applied to solve real structural problems.” Throughout the room, large, sturdy wheeled tables may be positioned singly or in groups as projects take shape. Above, an open framework of metal tubing provides the means to suspend larger models or to hang necessary apparatus. The perimeter of the room seems more familiar, as long benches provide work surfaces and ample cupboards store necessary and delicate equipment away until needed. Adjoining this space for design and engineering is Design Studio 2, a smaller climate controlled and ultra-clean room devoted solely to the complex machinery of modeling preliminary designs - laser cutters and shapers, 3-dimensional printers for smaller or larger projects, as well as other cutters and printers for specialized applications. Daniella continues the tour on the west, or natural sciences side of Kaneb. At the front of the building is the Molecular Lab, Dr. Swenton’s familiar space. “I wanted this space to be bright and welcoming,” she begins, “but it also needed to be very uncluttered, clean and functional, to support a research-based

program, not cookie-cutter labs. It is modeled on the Conoco-Phillips laboratory space at the University of Alaska, an incredible facility where I had the opportunity to conduct research. We have everything in place here to support important and original study,” an observation readily visible in the central laboratory benches configured to encourage collaborative as well as individual work and in the adjoining Support and Prep Room, where a monitored and ultra-clean environment allows Dr. Swenton to prepare specialized specimens for student study. “When a student enters, I want the focus to be on inquiry based discovery. What is needed for student projects is here; coats, bookbags and phones are elsewhere.” The overall effect of the room is spare and spacious, yet one senses the specialized equipment stored at the ready. “We have been so fortunate to have had Trustee Clem Dwyer’s ’66 support through the years to purchase much of the specialized moveable equipment that we enjoy today. This is really an extraordinary facility for a school in Maine.” The innovation and flexibility of the Kaneb Center may touch a theme present in Hebron’s science facilities over the decades. When Sturtevant Hall was built in 1890, John Calvin Stevens’s design included dedicated space for both natural and physical sciences. When Treat Science Building was designed and built in 1960, then Chair of the Science Department, Gerald Twitchell had great input to the design of ample, functional spaces for the major sciences of the time - Earth Science, Biology, Chemistry and Physics, but he also included designated space in the building for a Projects Lab and a Machine Shop. While the Projects Lab has been repurposed as additional technology space, the Machine Shop of Mr. Twitchell’s design has come full circle to be remodeled as the ‘FAB-Lab,’ acronym for Fabrication Laboratory, a current space for students to work on larger, ‘hands-on’ projects, putting new skills into practice to design, build and test structures such as trusses and bridge models but also to follow the engineering/design process for more creative and personal projects such as lawn chairs, speaker enclosures or surfboards! What is important seems to be that science facilities at Hebron throughout the school’s history have been state of the art for their times, conceived to support the creative and innovative instruction of Hebron’s science teachers and representative of a Maine ethic of self-reliance in a state economy dependent upon natural resources. Instruction and


What is important seems to be that science facilities at Hebron throughout the school’s history have been state of the art for their times, conceived to support the creative and innovative instruction of Hebron’s science teachers and representative of a Maine ethic of self-reliance in a state economy dependent upon natural resources.

exploration today seeks to train yet another new generation of Hebron scientists who will take up the challenges of sustaining our world and its resources in times to come. As our virtual tour of the Kaneb Center continues, we enter Dr. Swenton’s other domain, the Ecology Lab with its large windows to the woods behind Kaneb. “It’s a bit like bringing the out of doors in,” she comments, “especially since the oversize doors allow us to lug all our equipment and whatever we have collected right in, no matter

how big it is!” This flexibility is enhanced by more moveable benches, wet drains in the cement floor and moveable electrical supply overhead as well as benches and cupboards along the walls. “I wanted this space to be infinitely adaptable to whatever the work is at hand.” Ecology and collecting samples lead naturally to a final design-specific space, the Critter Room, where Daniella’s students may house their living samples as well as propagate specimens in a temperature and lightcontrolled environment.

The tour has come full circle, and we return to the airy foyer for final thoughts. While the term ‘state of the art’ is often the descriptor for the newest fad or gadget, the integral program development underlying the design of the Kaneb Center is certainly advanced for a school. “We will not be using ‘class rooms,’per se,” Daniella states. “All of our science instruction is evolving toward inquiry based/project based experiences through which students model scientific and engineering methodology on the way to their understanding of principles and problem solving. Quite simply, all student experiences will be ‘lab’ based, and we now have, through these magnificent spaces in Kaneb, as well as the remodeling and repurposing of the core spaces in Treat, a comprehensive inventory of specialized laboratories that supports the creativity and innovation of our teachers.” What has become apparent this brilliant June morning is a refreshing take on the old saw that “form follows function.” As Hebron’s science department reimagines its instruction and courses to increasingly emphasize the technical basis for coursework in the sciences, the spaces created for those experiences have become increasingly diverse to provide the most appropriate experiences for students engaged in their inquiry and discovery of the myriad systems of the natural and physical worlds. Resourcefulness and flexibility are keys to creating Hebron’s program of today, but equally important is to imagine how these current spaces may, by design, evolve as they continue to support a comprehensive science and technology program in years to come. n hebronacademy.org • 5


A Space for That

Laboratories for inquiry-based learning Functionality in Kaneb Center for Engineering & Technology

• Design Studio 2 complementing the Fab Lab with specialized machinery for cutting, shaping & modeling; • Engineering Lab a place for project based inquiry emphasizing the engineering cycle;

• Molecular Lab & Prep Room experimental space for the natural sciences; • Ecology Lab flexible space to bring the out of doors indoors for study; • Critter Room a controlled environment for sustaining life & propagating it.

Repurposing Treat Academic Center

• Design Studio 1 an open space for early projects and constructions; • Human Health Sciences Lab in support of Health Sciences & Wellness courses; • Chemistry Lab & prep room updated for current practices;

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• Physics Lab & prep room with new demonstration framework & equipment; • Treat Computer Lab available to all for writing & inquiry, especially CAD programs; • Fab Lab fabrication space for larger projects, a place for hands on tool experiences.


Hebron Academy’s E.D.I.E. Pathway by max jennings & daniella swenton

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s a land-rich, rural institution, Hebron Academy has the location, resources, and ethos to educate the next generation of leaders and informed citizens, who will face an ever-growing number of challenges to solve as our world becomes increasingly expanded and connected. In order to equip our students to be innovators and leaders in this unprecedented age of global change, we offer the E.D.I.E. (Engineering, Design, Innovation,

E.D.I.E. (Engineering, Design, Innovation, Entrepreneurship) Pathway

Entrepreneurship) Pathway to our students. In this unique and holistically interdisciplinary curriculum we immerse students in our local area’s landscape, heritage, and experiences to provide tangible opportunities to solve problems, for example, related to technology, community-building, ecology, food systems, and health and wellness. Students are empowered to engineer a change in our local community and take the skills they have attained with them as they move on to college, careers, and lives as global citizens. The curriculum’s purposeful focus on values inherent to sustainability on our beautiful campus allows students to connect with nature and be more aware of their roles as stewards of the Earth and its natural resources. The E.D.I.E. Pathway is a multi-year curriculum that begins with E1 classes, which provide a foundational experience in collaboration, the design cycle, critical thinking, and independent problem-solving. Students progress to E2: Engineering and Design, in which students learn the engineering cycle through the lens of disciplines such as mechanical engineering in addition to a number of technical skills related to, for example, circuitry, CAD programs, drafting, reporting, robotics, and programming. In the E3 year, students may choose a path based upon interest in refined technological engineering or else social innovation, in which the principles of engineering and design are applied to solve social and environmental issues. In addition, students shadow professionals engaged in engineering solutions the students approximate in the school lab. In the capstone E4 year, students pursue internships with local industrial partners or else engineer solutions to problems within our own community. Hebron students are supported in their pursuit of learning engineering and design by a talented and passionate faculty with diverse experiences in the arts, sciences, and industry as well as state of the art facilities including Design Studios I and II, the Fabrication Lab, and the Engineering Lab in the Kaneb Center for Science and Engineering and Treat Academic Building. n hebronacademy.org • 7


from the archives Space for Exploration Laboritories in Time

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rom the language of the charter, “for the education of youth in . . . the liberal arts and sciences,” preparation in the sciences has been a vital part of instruction throughout Hebron’s history. One may wonder what the earliest spaces for science instruction may have looked like, but it is possible to speculate from early drawings of Hebron’s main buildings what areas of scientific inquiry were important to the planners. The comparative images collected here suggest Hebron’s commitment to scientific exploration and discovery through laboratories equipped with the most appropriate equipment of the time.

Sturtevant Hall, 1890 John Calvin Stevens’s initial drawings for the School Building included a vented ‘Chemical Room’ with adjoining spaces for chemical and apparatus storage in the space now occupied by the Studies and College Counseling Offices. The eastern half of the third floor of Sturtevant was planned for instruction in Physical Sciences, in a space depicted here as including a lecture and demonstration area, storage facilities and benches for experimentation. A 1914 Circular for the Academy boasted, “Laboratory work is greatly facilitated by the enlargement of the laboratory space and the addition of new laboratory tables, lockers and supply room. The laboratory is supplied with water, electricity, alternating and direct current, and has an efficient equipment of standard apparatus.” Physical sciences, 3rd floor east

Sargent Memorial Gymnasium, 1929 Curiously, and perhaps as a nod to Charles Dwyer, long-tenured coach and science teacher, the original drawings for Sargent Gymnasium included an upstairs ‘Classroom,’ a space where Dwyer led classes in natural science, biology and anatomy until 1943 More recent Hebronites remember the room variously as a dance studio, a wrestling room, a yoga and fitness room, a drama room and a theater storage area.

Sargent Gymnasium included an upstairs classroom

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from the archives Chemistry Laboratory, circa 1930 Perhaps because of safety concerns, the Chemistry Lab was moved from Sturtevant Hall to a separate small building behind. As shown in the image here, students worked in an amply equipped space devoted solely to the lab work required of their Chemistry courses.

Treat Science Hall, 1960 The first major construction project of a decade of growth and development for the Academy from 1954 – 1963, Treat Science Hall became a signature project for the school, its first new academic facility since the Second World War. Instrumental in its design and outfitting, Science Chairman Gerald Twitchell sought to create a facility for science and math instruction that would be ideal for boys preparing for college and for life. In addition to expected spaces for Biology, Chemistry, Physics and Earth Science, the building also contained a photography lab, a radio room, an observatory, as well as two spaces labled on early plans as Project Lab and Machine Shop. Those spaces remain today as a technology room and as a newly renovated “FAB Lab,” aka Fabrication Lab, a space intended to augment spaces in the Kaneb Center for students to create larger (and dustier!) projects to test ideas developed in project-based lab work.

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Catching up with Paul Kaneb

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by D ave S tonebraker

Paul Kaneb ’60 ushered us to a sunroom in his Cape Cod home recently on a sultry summer morning promising mid-day heat and afternoon showers. Paul’s connections to New England schools and Hebron in particular are long and deep. “My three children and nine grandchildren have all been in schools,” he recounts, “and my daughter is currently Head of School for a girls’ school in Boston. It has all been good; I have met many good people as my children and grandchildren have gone through school and on to college.” One might wonder about the roots of Paul’s continued interest in schools. Family is certainly one reason, but for Paul, the connections begin with a Boston boy, an avid hockey player, who began his schooling locally but came north to Hebron for his junior and senior years of high school. Paul’s stories of Hebron in 1960 have a familiar ring, and yet each alumni story from Claude Allen’s era may have its main theme and variations. “I came to play hockey, loved it. I think that was all I wanted to do, but my dad thought differently. He wanted more. I might have gone elsewhere and had several choices,” Paul remembers, “but Hebron allowed me to stay on grade level and be a junior; I wanted that.” Looking back now, from a perspective of nearly six decades, Paul remembers clearly the essentials of his Hebron experience: the headmaster, the teachers and

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dorm-life, the sports; and in his telling, again comes the story of a young man changed by the experience of being away, prepared soundly for the college and shaped to approach learning and living with confidence. Paul remembers a first counseling session with Claude Allen this way: “When I met Mr. Allen to talk about classes, he looked at my record and then took a pencil and reached over and drew a line on the wall next to his desk. He paused and then drew another line above it. He looked back at me and then pointed to the first line. ‘Right now you are here,’ he said. ‘Not bad, but you really ought to be here,’ and he pointed at the second line. I was impressed. Here was a guy who was drawing on the walls. . . but I got the message.” It is clear that Paul Kaneb looks back on his Hebron experience with affection; the stories ring true in the telling. He considered himself as ordinary, not a powerhouse student by any measure, and he reflects that more than anything, it was the teachers he had who instilled a work ethic, who shaped a foundation on which Paul would build a college career and a very successful life in business. “It was a good school for me; I liked the academics. The teaching was the key for me, ‘truing me up for the future.’ I had Willard for English, Switzer for math, Twitchell for science . . . they were good teachers, all of


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them. But Ned Willard was something special. He taught me to write, and speak, persuasively and compellingly, and it was important. Writing well and speaking well have helped me all my life. If you can’t speak and write, persuasively and well, then you’re going nowhere.” That assessment of Ned Willard has been echoed by many, many of his students over the years. And present in Paul’s stories, as in the recollections of others, is the idea that it was the habits of work, analysis and critical thinking taught in the context of basic college-prep courses that became the backbone of successful professional lives. Paul also fondly remembers his hockey experience, especially the influence of Bruce Gardner, his French teacher and coach. Stories of games played in city rinks across New England, games played in Lewiston and Berlin amid cheers and chants from a French-speaking crowd, tough games at Exeter or St. Mark’s when Mr. Allen would be at the gate when the team came off the ice to congratulate them. But most of all, Paul remembers Coach. “Gardner was a great person, great coach,” he begins, “tough but fair. He would slap us with a stick if we weren’t moving in practice. He taught hustle, always hustle. He wanted stickwork always but also hustle and speed over checking, working the corners, quick feet and hands for a flick to the top corner. He wanted teamwork always, the good pass to the open man. It was all about teamwork. No big slapshots for him because you don’t know where they’re going.” The words are Paul’s during a morning chat on Cape Cod nearly sixty years after the fact, but the sentiments

could be repeated again and again over the decades for countless players about their hockey experiences with their coaches - MacMillan or Gardner or Harris or Webber or Pratt or Gagnon or Plante, coaches who were coaching life as much as a game. If Paul Kaneb’s student experience coincided with strong years of Mr. Allen’s tenure, Paul’s affection for Hebron comes through as he recounts another period of service, when he was called by Sylvester Pratt as a young alumnus to serve on Hebron’s Board of Trustees. The year was 1972, and the young businessman brought his business acumen to the board during David Rice’s years as Headmaster. The times were troubled as the turmoil and rebelliousness of the late ‘60’s washed into the new decade. “We had to focus on business and good management,” Paul recalls, “as it was a difficult time for us, for all schools.” In 1976, Paul was asked to chair a search committee for Mr. Rice’s successor, the first time that Hebron had launched a national search for a new headmaster. That task became important for Paul, a shaping experience. “We were looking at good people, but very different sorts, and the board was divided about direction. I wanted someone with business sense who would manage the operation well.” When one considers that Hebron’s previous two headmasters had been teachers with academic backgrounds at elite schools, Paul’s arguing for management skills was a departure from the norm. “I liked John and Bev Leyden greatly. He was coming from running the Good Hope School in St. Croix and then a stint at Cushing. I liked his

“Hebron was always a good school for me. It empowered me . . . the people, the place. I liked being in Maine; there were so many good people, and it felt safe.” 12 •

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energy and business sense.” Many can recall ‘the Leyden years’ as a time of promise and well-being for Hebron, and reflecting on Leyden’s tenure, Paul concluded, “John Leyden was very much the right man at the right time for Hebron. I was always sorry that I needed to leave the Board and return to business, and then it was such a tragedy that we lost him. . . far too young.” There are equal measures of pride and affection as Paul talked of John Leyden and his time on Hebron’s Board, of chairing a search and advocating for youth, energy and business sense as much as academic leadership. It is equally true that he has continued to observe and follow the school through the intervening decades, keeping tabs on classmates, and through his children and grandchildren observing the world of Hebron and independent schooling from afar. And in recent years, connecting more strongly with his alma mater, Paul has begun an endowed scholarship and offered a transformational gift to create the Kaneb Center for Science and Engineering, a laboratory facility designed to support creative and innovative instruction for decades to come. When asked what motivated these gifts, Paul demurred. “Hebron was always a good school for me. It empowered me . . . the people, the place. I liked being in Maine; there were so many good people, and it felt safe.” In Paul’s senior year, he watched as the Treat Science Building rose from its foundation, a center for science and math that would serve the school so well for decades. “It always impressed me that the buildings we had were so good, and Treat was impressive at its time, going up. . . . My father was a doctor and always stressed that science and math were the foundation; you had to have them to succeed.” Paul’s current support for the Kaneb Center for Science and Engineering, a gift which is so timely for sustaining the school and initiating new programs in science and technology, underscores his enduring affection for the right school at the right time for him, a school which he served as trustee at a critical time and for which he has had sustained interest for all time. As it opens for student work this fall, the Kaneb Center promises to be a transforming space for creative design and inquiry based instruction, a vital facility for ‘truing up’ future generations of Hebron students. It is a pleasure to connect the building with the man and to share with the Hebron community these notes of Paul Kaneb’s sustaining affection for the school that was the right fit at the right time. n


AT THE ACADEMY

Spring College Fair by Emily Carton, College Counselor

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ate in May, Hebron hosted representatives of nearly 60 colleges and universities for an on-campus college fair. While the class of 2019 was off enjoying Senior Week activities, juniors, sophomores, and freshmen had the opportunity to hear from and ask questions of representatives from a wide range of schools, including four NESCAC colleges, two art schools, one “Great Books” school, two women’s colleges, two military institutions, one undergraduate business school, one maritime academy, and many top-notch liberal arts colleges and research universities. Representatives travelled from far and wide to attend; in addition to dozens of

schools from the Northeast, colleges from Georgia, Virginia, California, Florida, New Mexico, Maryland, South Carolina, Ohio, D.C., Missouri, Indiana, and Quebec were also in attendance. For freshmen and sophomores, the fair was a fun, low-stakes opportunity to start thinking about life after Hebron. They received instruction in advance of the fair about what happens at a college fair, the wide variety of schools they might consider, and how to present themselves well to admissions representatives. For the juniors, the fair provided a more concrete opportunity to learn about the schools that they may be

applying to next year, and to make a good impression on the actual admissions representatives who will be reading their applications. Student reviews of the fair were overwhelmingly positive, with many indicating that they had discovered exciting schools they never would have considered before. Reports from our college visitors were even more glowing. Several representatives wrote to let us know that they were “very impressed” by the Hebron students they met, as the students were “well prepared,” “engaged,” “authentic,” and “very friendly.” The College Counseling Office plans to continue this event and anticipates an even greater turnout next year. n

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AT THE ACADEMY

Commencement 2019

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hile Commencement each year marks the symbolic completion of studies for the current Hebron Senior Class and passage from the formative years of school into the experiences of college and life, it is also a time when, amid the awards, diplomas and accolades, the class speakers in their traditional Commencement speeches, often suggest what these young graduates are thinking at one moment in time. This year was no exception, as on a glorious May morning Morgan Prentice, Dan Maloy and Emma Skelton gave the Salutation, the Address to the Class and the Valedictory for the Commencement Exercises celebrating the Class of 2019. Morgan began the celebration with welcome, but turned her attention to a thought that originated with her experience as an ambassador from Hebron to the RoundSquare International conference. It is not enough to anticipate a future and work toward it; one must be also grounded in the present. In part, Morgan said, “This moment today affords us the opportunity to reflect and celebrate our final time at Hebron together as students, but it also allows us to thank all of

you for your years of support, . . .those who have inspired us most, thank you for guiding us to become who we are right now, . . . not the people of tomorrow, but our best selves today.” President of the Class of 2019, Dan Maloy evoked the memory of the past as inspiration for the future when he cited President John Kennedy’s Address to the United Nations in 1963 as a challenge renewed for the present generation to work toward solutions to global problems: “President John F. Kennedy proclaimed at a similar time of generational change and strife ‘We have the power to make this generation of mankind the best in history of the world . . . or to make it the last.’ While much has changed since President Kennedy’s time - while the Soviet Union has dissolved, while the Civil Rights Act has become law, while the fear of communism that once gripped our country has all but ceased, this does not mean that we do not enter a world free of strife and division. Whether it be climate change, terrorism, racial and religious divide, there is a clear urgency for a new generation of compassionate, knowledgeable,

Salutation – Morgan Prentice

Address to the class - Daniel Maloy ‘19

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We have the power to make this generation of mankind the best in history of the world . . . or to make it the last.

and thoughtful people to combat these issues and leave the world a better place. And while some might not think of yourselves as the agents of change . . . , I do believe our time at Hebron Academy has made us all more conscious and aware of the importance of such values.” As she closed the ceremony, Hebron Cup winner, Emma Skelton also spoke of the lessons of history and the inspiration of national figures for the future and she reflected on how the lessons of failure provide the foundation of future success. “One of my idols was rejected by, not 10, not 20, but 41 different jobs after graduating law school at the top of her class; over fifty years later Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg resides on the Supreme Court, proving each of those skeptics wrong. . . . What I’m most thankful for about Hebron is that this community has given each of us the opportunity to fail in an environment that helps us stand up again. . . . I’m eternally grateful to Hebron for giving us the opportunity to fail in a community that will help lift us up again, before we enter the adult world. I hope that each member of the senior class can reflect with gratitude on their own memories of failure and therefore learning here. In the words of the great RBG, ‘So often in life, things that you regard as an impediment turn out to be great, good fortune.’ No matter what it was during our time here at Hebron that we may have thought was an obstacle, it’s clear now that we have all overcome them because of the fortune we have had to be able to risk, fail, and recover in this community.” And with these closing words, Commencement Piper Christopher Pinchbeck ’86 struck the tune to lead the Hebron Class of 2019 out into the morning of their lives. n


AT THE ACADEMY

Commencement Awards The Hebron Academy Cup Emma B. Skelton

The Risman Award Eliza S. Quiñones

The Phemister Award Morgan A. Prentice

The Milton G. Wheeler Good Fellowship Award Anthony J. Meo

The Charles & Amy Dwyer Memorial Award Franceska M. Halloran

The Ernest Sherman Award Peyton E. Spurr

Leyden award recipient Keith Mank ’19

The Edward Tate Green Key Award Sophia T. List

Senior Awards

The Leyden Award Keith C. Mank

Academic Excellence Awards Art Haomeng Hu Drama Morgan A. Prentice English Sophia T. List French Emma B. Skelton History Emma B. Skelton Math Haomeng Hu Music Brandon T. LaBombard Science s Eliza S. Quiñones Spanish Sophia T. List

Bill Skelton ’86 with Hebron Cup recipient Emma Skelton ’19

Athletic Awards

Dwyer Award Franceska M. Halloran Athletic Prize Liam P. Harke Bessie Fenn Iman Z. Shepard Reed Award Joshua J. Petrocelli Emelia Solveig

Senior Scholarship Prize Emma B. Skelton Lepage Prize Leah L. Bonis Richard Tyler Scholarship Morgan A. Prentice Bernat Award Lilia M. Irish Lorimer Prize Haomeng Hu Outdoor Leadership Prize Enrico B. Madlangasakay Social Justice Prize Hanh Minh Dang and Aarti Pooran Singh Yearbook Prize Jordan T. Mecervier

hebronacademy.org • 15


AT THE ACADEMY

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Hebron Athletes Recognized Nationally

Konstantin Hellge

lasting image photography, jill piper

competition and certainly had the farthest to travel for the tournament. The Lumberjacks reached the championship match with a 3-2 win over Watkinson School of Hartford, CT. Each of the Lumberjack singles players, Tounarouze El Yazidi ‘19, Emily Bonis ’19 and Paula Ten Gutierrez ‘20 won their

opening matches to secure the semi-final victory. In the afternoon, Christian Heritage School earned the championship with victories at #2 and #3 singles and secured the team win with victories in both doubles matches. Hebron’s lone win of the match came at #1 singles when Tounarouze El Yazidi ‘19 finished her career with her 38th straight victory. In three years leading Hebron’s lineup, El Yazidi had lost just once – in her first match of the 2017 season. n

lasting image photography, jill piper

Emilia Malinen

wo Hebron athletes were honored by the National Association of Strength & Conditioning Coaches for their commitment as multi-sport athletes to a sport-specific training regimen. Seniors Konstantin Hellge and Emilia Malinen were nominated for the national award by their in-season trainers from Central Maine Conditioning Clinic, a sports training group that works in conjunction with Hebron Athletics to provide conditioning and weight training for Hebron’s teams. Most teams have regularly scheduled sessions with their CMCC trainers to develop individually designed and sport-specific strength & fitness programs for Lumberjack athletes in season and during the summer. After two years of partnership with CMCC, results are evident for dedicated athletes in terms of individual performance but also for reduced incidence of injury for all athletes. And for Emilia and Konstantin, their commitment to the program has earned each a place on a short list of only twenty secondary school athletes so honored nationwide. While Emilia will return to her native Sweden for university study and hockey, Konstantin will matriculate in the fall at the University of New Hampshire as a recruited athlete for the D-1 Wildcat Football program. n

Tennis Reaches Finals

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or a second year, Hebron Girls’ Tennis was selected for the New England Prep School Athletic Conference (NEPSAC) Class D Tournament. Coach Colin Grigg’s team, certainly a dark horse among the Connecticut schools selected, certainly had the most challenging weather for a spring season of 16 •

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AT THE ACADEMY

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duane baker

Positive Spin - Life Lessons from FlatTrack Roller Derby

ollowing the formal Cum Laude Induction ceremony, the Hebron Chapter gathers with members and faculty for a celebratory dinner to welcome new members. The meal is planned and hosted each year by the senior class members, and each year there is an after-dinner speaker on scholarship or research by a student or faculty member. This year’s speaker, LaDolce Beatah #207, aka Fine and Performing Arts Chair Sarah Coleman, spoke on “Taking Up Space,” talking about her experiences as a flat-track roller derby skater. Sarah began, “First we need to go back. I have never been good at sitting still. Evenings in my childhood usually involved a dance party with my sister. We’d pick our favorite tape and take turns dancing. Summers were spent climbing mountains and running through the woods in Baxter State Park. I played field hockey and took dance classes. I danced four days a week throughout college. I also climbed ladders and crawled across catwalks for my job in the theatre department. I can remember one late night, struggling through a paper, I took a break and went out into a dark parking lot and I danced a piece of choreography. It woke me up, it made me present, and it reset my mind. For twenty-two years I had lived in my body, acutely aware of how it moved daily, but the ability to be in my body became harder and harder. I spent most of my days sitting at a desk or sitting through meetings that seemed too long. I found myself restless. This is when I came across roller derby. I signed up to be a DC Rollergirl, velcroed myself into all the protective gear, and laced up a pair of skates.

I tentatively took to the track. I was hooked. I loved the game, its evolving strategy and rules. I loved the people, a group of women and genderqueer identifying folks who wanted to play the sport and be in community with each other. I loved the power and agency it returned to my body and to me.” “Here’s a little Roller Derby 101. There are ten skaters on the track, for each twominute jam. The game is played for two 30 minute halves. Two skaters, one from each team, are the Jammers. They wear a star cover on their helmet so they are easily identifiable. Four skaters from each team are blockers. Their job is to help their jammer get through the pack and keep the other team’s jammer from getting through. The jammer scores points by passing the hips of opposing players, only after her first initial pass through the pack. All of this play must take place within an oval shaped 13’ - 15’ wide track.” What became more interesting for Sarah was how the game encouraged individuality without defined norms. Each player adopted a persona and a style of play which embodied effectively using the capabilities of one’s body: “Roller derby is a fast and aggressive sport. Skaters need to be low, in a squat position. Bent knees and engaged thighs help with balance, speed and power. It is a full contact sport; there is no ball or stick. The body is all that matters. None of the movement conducive to play is in line with traditional representations of the physical definition of female. Low, bent, quick, powerful, jerky, sudden. Bodies slam into each other again and again. There is a physical intimacy that is second nature to the skaters. It is not sexualized; it is normalized. In the case of roller derby, the hyper feminine and sexualized hips, butt, and legs are defined and displayed as the most useful and most powerful body parts. Yes! This directly stems from roller derby as a sport whose strategies of play have evolved organically out of the movement and bodies of primarily female skaters. Through the aggressive, physical nature of the sport, roller derby skaters are able to align themselves with a physicality that actively creates a space for them to redefine what femininity might look like . . . There is no ideal body type for roller derby, there is not one portrayal of gender within the sport. This is important because the only thing to look at during a roller derby bout are bodies colliding into each other.”

Sarah continued, “Roller derby taught me to unapologetically take up the space my body deserves in the ways I want to present myself. Academia didn’t teach me that. Professional theatre didn’t teach me that. In fact, they tried to convince me there wasn’t space for my body if it didn’t meet certain aesthetic standards in regards to size, dress, language, and demeanor appropriate to my perceived gender. Aesthetic standards hold a disciplinary role in society. They maintain oppressive norms around race, gender, sexuality, and beyond. Roller derby pushes against these aesthetic standards in public spaces, slowly chipping away at oppressive binaries of gender and sexuality we are socialized to think bodies must fall into. We communicate through them colloquially and intentionally. We make meaning, constructing and making sense of life, relationships and self, from interactions with and observations of others’ bodies. And in turn we use our own bodies to learn, understand and be in the world around us. It is therefore essential that we feel that we belong in our bodies, in the way that feels authentic and whole . . . The objective of the sport of roller derby is to take up space on the track – either to take it up to prevent other skaters from getting by you or to move around as quickly as possible to avoid getting blocked. Learning how to take up space was and is important not only for my own well-being but for my roles as an educator, artist, mother, and citizen.” Taking up space and giving space became metaphors for Sarah’s teaching, helping and empowering students to become more self-aware of their bodies and their surroundings, learning and discovering the power of their bodies to form identity and community. Sarah concluded, “Almost all of it [my teaching] is intentional and purposeful. I know that the body is an integral part of learning, because learning is being. I know that most high schoolers, and adults, aren’t always sure how to be in their body, how to take up space, or how to give space. I also know that our bodies physical engagement is essential for authentic, relevant learning. I research it, and I live it in my classroom. I can share my purposeful and intentional movements in these spaces with authenticity because of roller derby. Playwright Arthur Miller says, ‘Everything we are is at every moment alive in us.’ Come join me. I’ll teach you how to play.” n hebronacademy.org • 17


AT THE ACADEMY

Welcome Jane Harris Ash

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he Board of Trustees is happy to welcome Jane Harris Ash, Class of 1979, to the Board. Serving on the Board is the logical next step in Jane’s lifelong relationship with Hebron. She and her siblings, Judy ’83 and Nat ’81, grew up on campus as faculty kids. Parents Nat and Gillian Harris called Hebron Academy home for 20 years and served in various roles on campus during those years. After Hebron, Jane graduated from Wellesley College and has had a long career in non-profit fundraising. Jane served on the Hebron Advisory Council as vice chair and then chair, and was also co-chair of the Bicentennial Planning Committee. She was named Volunteer of the Year in 2005. In her hometown of Dartmouth, Massachusetts, Jane has served on the board of the local land trust, Dartmouth Natural Resources Trust, where she continues to volunteer. She also volunteers at the Rotch Jones Duff House Museum in New Bedford, MA. Jane and her husband, Gary, run a consulting business, Castle Brook Corporation. They like to travel, spend time with family, and collect Studebakers.

Hebron Board of Trustees William G. Becker ‘87 Falmouth, ME Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Mill Valley, CA Felica W. Coney P’18 Waxhaw, NC Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Co-Treasurer Portsmouth, NH Jamie Fey ’02 Portland, ME Wende Fox-Lawson P’15 Chicago, IL Dr. Robert C. Greaves ‘82 Charleston, SC Jane Harris Ash ’79 Dartmouth, MA Wallace E. Higgins Secretary Newton, MA Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Pittsburgh, PA J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Chair Bedford Corners, NY Barrett S. Mitchell ‘02 Boston, MA David S. Prout ‘83 Co-Treasurer Cockeysville, MD Robert J. Ryan ‘77 Houston, TX Robert E. Waite ‘68 Vice Chair Rockcliffe, ON

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report of giving

john mckeith

July 1, 2018 to June 30, 2019

hebron academy report of giving 2016-2017

hebronacademy.org • 19


message from the board I

t gives me great pleasure to present the Annual Report of Giving for the Academy’s fiscal year ending June 30th, 2019. I find it particularly impressive to see how many incredibly loyal donors contribute every year – some for over 55 years! Annual Fund support continues to remain strong bringing in over $950,000. Although leadership gifts account for over 87% of funds raised, each and every gift matters greatly and all are sincerely appreciated. This coming year, in addition to enhancing the endowment, we will be focusing on project-based fundraising. The generosity of so many alumni, parents, grandparents, and friends is heartwarming. Please know that the students, faculty, staff, and trustees of the Academy thank you for assuring Hebron’s sustainability in its third century and for many years to come. Sincerely, Robert J. Ryan ‘77 Chair of the Advancement Committee

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hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


summary of giving Ongoing support of Hebron Academy, in the form of gifts to operating, facility and endowment funds, is a proud tradition in the Hebron community. Each year, alumni, parents, faculty, parents of alumni and friends of the Academy contribute generously to the ongoing support and growth of the institution. The Trustees of Hebron Academy wish to thank most sincerely the 887 donors who made gifts during the 2018- 2019 fiscal year, which ran from July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2019. total support for hebron academy for the fiscal year

july 1, 2018-june 30th 2019

$1,393,797

restricted endowment campaign hebron

$89,914 $349,944 $439,858 57 $792,076 816 $161,863 14 $953,939

total commitments

annual fund unrestricted annual fund restricted total annual fund

887 donors

sources of support alumni/honorary members $969,723 current parents $38,607 past parents $50,004 grandparents $1,300 current faculty/staff $8,581 friends $104,741 foundations $83,550 others $137,291 gift designations for the hebron anuual fund the arts $5,875 athletics $3,385 faculty support $12,135 financial aid $36,260 student programs/services $600 technology & library $2,900

message from the director of advancement and external relations Thank you to the 887 alumni, parents, grandparents and friends who, through their support, enhanced programs and facilities as well as faculty enrichment and financial aid at Hebron Academy during the fiscal year 2018-2019. Your generosity is needed and is greatly appreciated. Every gift, regardless of size, makes a tremendous difference. I look forward to seeing many of you when you next visit campus either for Homecoming/Reunion, Commencement or simply a stroll while passing through Maine. You are always welcome. If you are hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

unable to physically visit campus, please be sure to look at our website and/or our social media pages to keep current on all things Hebron. With gratitude,

Pat Layman director of advancement and external relations hebronacademy.org • 21


consecutive year donors Hebron Academy is delighted to recognize the following donors who symbolize the cornerstone of the school’s

philanthropic base with their steadfast generosity to the Academy’s people and programs. They serve as a model and inspiration for others in their continuing dedication to Hebron’s mission of inspiring and guiding students to reach their highest potential in mind, body and spirit, and represent a vital part of our heritage in sustaining the values Hebron has espoused for more than 200 years. 55 or more years

Mr. and Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Dr. Arthur W. Cooper ‘49 Mr. and Mrs. Peter O. Crisp ‘51 Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gillies III ‘55 Mr. Norbert Lachmann ‘51 Mr. John T. Larabee ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Lunder ‘52 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Mann ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Snedeker ‘61 Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Stavis ‘51 Dr. and Mrs. Houghton M. White ‘54

Mr. John W. Lawry ‘43 Mrs. Beverly Leyden Ms. Susan E. Loyd-Turner ‘77 CAPT Carlton A. K. McDonald USN ‘43 Mr. F. Corbin Moister, Jr. ‘68 Mrs. Laura Douglas Peterson ‘81 and Mr. Bart Peterson Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross ‘54 Mr. Andrew Smith ‘80 and Ms. Lavea Brachman Mr. and Mrs. Scott E. Wilson ‘71

50 to 54 years

Marilyn and Wes Ackley Mr. G. William Allen ‘62 Mr. Jon M. Brooks ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. John C. Buschmann ‘66 Ms. Deborah P. Clark LTC William H. Collier USA(Ret.) ‘40 Mr. and Mrs. John W. Curtis Mr. and Mrs. William W. Davenport ‘55 Dr. and Mrs. Edward F. Driscoll ‘62 Dr. Norman O. Farrar ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Found Ms. Susan J. Garner ‘62H Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. and Mrs. David B. Gould ‘71 Ms. Susan W. Hadlock ‘75 Mr. Cyrus Y. Hagge ‘71 Ms. Kathleen Hartley Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Hedrick, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard L. Helm ‘59 Mrs. Martha F. Horner Kimball L. Kenway, Esq. ‘70 and Mrs. Alison Kenway Ms. Sharon Lake-Post ‘83 and Family Mr. and Mrs. Jack Leyden Mr. and Mrs. John F. McIlwain ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. John J. Meehan, Jr. ‘64 Mrs. Zella L. Mervis Maj. and Mrs. Dwight L. Parsons II ‘65 Mr. Robert J. Raymond ‘55 Ms. Cynthia Reedy and Mr. Brad Cummings Mr. and Mrs. Kent B. Savel ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Seefried, Jr. Mr. David W. Stonebraker Dr. and Mrs. Jou S. Tchao Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson ‘79 and Mr. Rolfe Thompson Molly and Lew Turlish Mr. and Mrs. Stephen K. West Ms. Susan R. Witter

Mr. and Mrs. David Barbour III ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Bates ‘62 Dr. Alan Booth ‘52 and Dr. Margaret Booth Mr. Allan Brown ‘55 and Ms. Linda Saltford Mr. and Mrs. Carleton H. Endemann, Jr. ‘64 Mr. and Mrs. Blaine E. Eynon, Jr. ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. John R. Giger ‘64 Mr. Ralph A. Gould, Jr. ‘41 Mr. and Mrs. A. William Kany, Jr. ‘50 Mr. Albert R. Lepage ‘65 Mr. Leonard A. Mintz ‘53 Jerrold A. Olanoff, Esq. ‘54 Mr. C. Thomas Van Alen ‘56

45 to 49 years

Mr. and Mrs. M. Ray Bradford ‘64 Mr. J. Craig Clark ‘70 and Ms. Judy UngerClark Mr. G. Cyrus Cook ‘73 and Ms. Megan P. Shea Mr. and Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Mrs. Susan A. Galvin ‘62H Mr. Frank R. Goodwin ‘56 Mr. Thomas F. Murphy, Jr. ‘56 Mr. and Mrs. Rupert B. White ‘51

40 to 44 years

Dr. Erik C. Bateman ‘75 Henry H. Booth, Esq. ‘53 Mr. and Mrs. David R. Burnett ‘77 Mr. and Mrs. James C. Cram ‘68 Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Evans ‘62 Mr. Rudolf M.C. Eyerer ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Forte ‘62 Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman ‘55 Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Jarvis ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Regis F. Lepage ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Lipman ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Madsen ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. C. Michael Malm ‘60 Dr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Mandiberg ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan G. Moll ‘69 Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Ruegg ‘51 Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Simonds* ‘52 Dr. William A. Weary ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. R. Russell Williamson II ‘56

35 to 39 years

Mr. and Mrs. David M. Anderson ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. David C. Birtwistle ‘71 Mr. Peter N. Burbank ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Burden III ‘64 Ms. Trudy P. Crane Mr. and Mrs. Alexander E. Dean ‘63 Mr. Douglas Gordon ‘71 and Ms. Kim Weller Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Hagge, Jr. ‘66 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. Hibbard ‘61 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79

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30 to 34 years

25 to 29 years

Miss Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Mr. and Mrs. John G. Blake ‘48 Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Boody ‘69 Mr. Wade T. Breed ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. J. Reeve Bright ‘66 Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Brown ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Nicholas Carter ‘73 Mr. C. Reed Chapman ‘76 Mr. Kenneth P. Childs ‘72 Mr. Brian O. Cloherty ‘79 Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Craig Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Curtis, Jr. ‘54 Ms. Deborah L. Danforth ‘53H Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Draper Mr. and Mrs. Robert Egleston ‘62 Mr. Peter G. Fallon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. G. Jason Found ‘87 Mr. and Mrs. Wayne G. French ‘55 Dr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Godard ‘60 Mr. Thomas L. Goodman ‘43 Ms. Leslie A. Guenther Mr. and Mrs. William J. Guidera ‘88

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Haartz Hon. and Mrs. James C. Harberson, Jr. ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Harding ‘70 Ms. Jane Harris Ash ‘79 and Dr. Gary Ash Ms. Lea A. Heidman ‘82 Mr. Richard J. Levinson ‘49 and Ms. Susan Newman Ms. Kathleen Loveland ‘66H Mr. and Mrs. Marc F. Lunder ‘82 Mr. and Mrs. John E. Meserve ‘67 Mr. and Mrs. Gary C. Miller ‘68 Mr. and Mrs. James A. Morrill ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Ness Mr. and Mrs. John H. Redmond ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Rich, Jr. ‘49 Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Rigazio ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Rines ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Robbins ‘52 Robert J. Ryan, Esq. ‘77 Mr. and Mrs. Jay K. Sadlon ‘64 Mr. T. Bragdon Shields ‘79 and Ms. Janet Lange Dr. Thomas F. Shields and Mrs. Bethel Shields Mr. and Mrs. Phillips Smith ‘49 Mr. and Mrs. William T. Sprole III ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Kelso F. Sutton ‘57 Hon. Charles B. Swartwood III ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Ken C. Sweezey ‘63 Dr. and Mrs. C. Jeffrey Tannebring ‘69 Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Varney ‘62 Mrs. Mary C. Webb ‘48H Mr. Charles D. Whittier II ‘53

20 to 24 years

Ms. Carolyn Adams ‘77 and Mr. Dan Fuller Mr. George Arison Areshidze ‘76 Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Barrett ‘52 Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Bell ‘70 Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Berg Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Boyle ‘52 Mr. Conrad B. Conant ‘59 Mr. Galen Crane ‘87 and Ms. Cali Brooks Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67 Mr. Richard M. Cutter ‘56 Mr. and Mrs. John Geismar Mr. and Mrs. Alex J. Godomsky Mr. David A. Goodof ‘65 Dr. Robert ‘82 and Mrs. Ronda Greaves Mr. and Mrs. John W. Hales ‘56 Ambassador and Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Mr. and Mrs. James R. Kelley ‘52 Mrs. Sara Keef Kendall ‘95 Mr. Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr. ‘68 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Lyman ‘69 Dr. Patrick S. L. Maidman ‘80 Mr. and Mrs. Mitchel A. Maidman ‘82 Mr. Carl Mikkelsen ‘71 and Ms. Barbara Posnick Mr. John M. Noyes ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. Mitchel G. Overbye Dr. Bradford Parsons ‘72 and Dr. Nancy Harris Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. S. Quarles ‘81 Mr. and Mrs. Marc J. Roy ‘78 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas S. Sandner ‘89 Dr. and Mrs. Peter Schramm ‘52 Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Seefried III ‘89 Dr. and Mrs. Michael E. Silverman ‘85 Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 and Mr. Alex Stephens Mr. and Mrs. Dana A. Stewart Dr. and Mrs. William W. Stocker II ‘62 Mrs. Louise S. Thompson ‘55H Dr. Tycho T. von Rosenvinge ‘59

Ms. Daphne Whitman ‘54H Mr. and Mrs. Byron V. Whitney ‘63 Mr. William P. Witter ‘82

15 to 19 years

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald N. Adams ‘65 Dr. and Mrs. Morris S. Albert ‘52 Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Arel ‘76 Mrs. Venessa Arsenault Mr. and Mrs. Bernard M. Babcock ‘61 Mr. and Mrs. John E. Baker ‘67 Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey G. Baker ‘71 Mrs. Sara Marquis Barker ‘03 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Bellavance III ‘58 Mr. Andrew B. Berry ‘58 Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bisesti Dr. and Mrs. Lincoln C. Blake ‘50 Ms. Debra B. Bloomingdale ‘83 Alan W. Boone MD ‘54 and Mrs. Gayle Boone Dr. and Mrs. William F. Boucher, Jr. ‘64 Mr. John L. Burnham ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. Gregory M. Burns ‘73 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy M. Caddo ‘85 Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Canaday ‘56 Mrs. Mary Jo Cassidy ‘60H Mrs. Deborah Schiavi Cote ‘84 and Dr. Paul Cote Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 and Mr. Bob Crowley Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Dahlquist ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘85 Mr. and Mrs. Porter S. Dickinson ‘48 Mr. and Mrs. David M. Driscoll ‘59 Mr. Robert B. Eames ‘76 Mr. and Mrs. David J. Fensore Mr. Edward V. V. Finn ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Giesemann ‘57 Ms. Eileen T. Gillespie-Fahey ‘81 and Mr. Timothy Fahey Mr. John H. Halford III ‘60 Mr. William C. Harding, Jr. ‘63 Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel L. Harris, Jr. David Hartgen Ph.D, P.E ‘62 and Ms. Linda M. Simpson Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Hedrick ‘91 Ms. Leah E. Hedstrom ‘02 Mr. Stuart G. Hedstrom ‘01 Mr. Robert M. Hernon ‘77 Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Mr. William Hine and Ms. Cathy Hazelton Dr. Karen A. Holler ‘79 Mr. Henry M. Holste ‘64 Rev. and Mrs. David C. Houston ‘53 Mr. R. Bruce Hunter ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Mr. Mark Jorgensen ‘74 and Ms. Dee Dee Morse Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Keller ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. John J. King Mr. Paul J. Leger ‘76 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Lenoue Mrs, Katherine Albin Lindberg ‘88 and Mr. E. Thomas Lindberg Mr. James K. Locke ‘68 Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Longley ‘52 Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Looney, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David H. Lowell ‘61 Dr. and Mrs. Bruce A. MacDougal ‘59 Ms. Dagny C. Maidman ‘85 and Ms. Molly Hollis Wood Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Maley ‘48 Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr. ‘58 Mr. John D. McGonagle ‘61

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


Mr. Roger C. McNeill ‘63 Mr. and Mrs. John W. Merz ‘54 Mr. Steve P. Middleton and Mrs. Julie Poland-Middleton Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer ‘56 and Ms. Kay S. Nagle Mr. Gerald B. Myrick and Ms. Paula LyonsMyrick Mr. Melvin W. Nadeau ‘76 and Ms. Denise E. Wandler Mr. Kirby N. Nadeau ‘77 and Ms. Verna R. Maurice Mr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Nash ‘71 Dr. and Mrs. Scott R. Nelson ‘91 Ms. Kirsten L. Ness ‘98 Mr. Eric W. Nicolai ‘79 Mrs. Jessie Maher Parker ‘95 and Mr. Challen Parker Mr. Richard J. Parker ‘55 Ms. Kathleen E. Perkins ‘81 Mr. Frederick Perry ‘59 and Ms. Sarah Smith Dr. Robert J. Pettit ‘69 Mrs. Norma Porras Mrs. Marian H. Prescott Mr. David S. Prout ‘83 Mr. and Mrs. James C. Rea III ‘62 Mrs. Marguarite Roy Mr. and Mrs. James L. Ryland ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. John P. Sherden III ‘56 Sarah Hughes Sigel ‘76 and Richard Sigel Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Siragusa Mr. and Mrs. A. Michael Slosberg ‘63 Mr. and Mrs. David B. Snow, Jr. ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Bruce J. Spaulding ‘54 Mr. and Mrs. William J. Stites ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. John H. Suitor III ‘84 Mr. and Mrs. Ian J. Swanbeck ‘85 Dr. John Thibodeau ‘64 and Dr. Noreen Keenan Ms. Hannah B. Turlish ‘87 and Mr. Harry Green Mr. Bradford J. Turner ‘47* Ms. Sarah Twichell CDR and Mrs. Stephen P. Wagner ‘73 Mr. Robert Waite ‘68 and Ms. Karen Shigeishi-Waite Mr. Peter G. Welsh ‘70 Capt. and Mrs. Richard T. Wheatley Mrs. Kathleen B. White ‘51H Mr. and Mrs. Rupert B. White, Jr. ‘75 Mr. and Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. Lew Williams Mr. Robert E. Willis ‘69 and Ms. Nancy Winslow Dr. and Mrs. John F. Wilson Chip and Jean Wood Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Zelman ‘77

10 to 14 years

Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. Appelbaum ‘76 Mrs. Caroline Atherton Mr. and Mrs. David H. Ayres ‘63 Mr. James Balano ‘71 and Ms. Kate Spillane Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E. Balboni ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. John P. Barrett ‘61 Lt. Gen. and Mrs. Edward P. Barry, Jr. ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Bartoccini ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Bastow ‘53 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bennett Mr. Timothy W. Braddock ‘70 Ms. Sarah Bryan Mr. William V. S. Carhart ‘51 MAJ and Mrs. Bruce B. Cary USA(Ret.) ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey E. Chase ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A. Churchill Mr. and Mrs. Roger T. Clark ‘74 Mrs. Helen K. Cleaves ‘50H Col. and Mrs. George R. Collins ‘51 Mrs. Carolyn S. Cook ‘50H Mrs. Lydia T. Currie ‘96 Maj. and Mrs. Timothy B. Curtis ‘03

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Curtze ‘65 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Mr. Nils T. Devine ‘98 and Ms. Cybil Solyn Ms. Grace Drown Mr. and Mrs. George M. Dycio ‘78 Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Edmonstone ‘68 Ms. Jessica G. Feeley ‘75 Mr. and Mrs. James E. Fenlason ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe W. Fitts, Jr. ‘54 Mrs. Elizabeth Beach Fitzpatrick ‘76 and Mr. Douglas Fitzpatrick Ms. Debra Garvin ‘73H Mr. and Mrs. Bryan M. Gaudreau ‘97 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Geraci, Jr. ‘90 Mr. and Mrs. Gregory S. Getschow ‘82 Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin L. Grant ‘90 Ms. Elizabeth Siekman Graves ‘80 Mr. and Mrs. Phillip J. Hinman ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Hodgkins II ‘63 Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hoeller Mr. Mark L. Jacobs ‘61 Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Kaneb ‘60 Mr. Allen Kennedy ‘65 and Ms. Patricia Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Laughlin ‘65 Ms. Patricia Layman Ms. Joyce M. Lee ‘47H Mr. and Mrs. Jake Leyden ‘99 Mr. and Mrs. David G. Lougee ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Maher ‘54 Ms. Patricia Massenburg Mrs. Nancy McKelvy CTRCS and Mrs. Robert R. McNamara USN(Ret.) ‘63 Mr. and Mrs. Kingsley N. Meyer, Jr. ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. Mark Mosher Dr. Lawrence Murch Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Myrick ‘03 Mr. Paul A. Nemetz-Carlson Mr. and Mrs. Johann D. Nottebohm ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. O’Brien Mr. John Rasmussen and Ms. Margaret O’Donnell Mr. Gunnar W. Olson ‘90 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher I. Page ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. George F. Parker III ‘61 Mr. and Mrs. Zigmund A. Peret ‘62 Mrs. Jean M. Porath ‘49 Mr. and Mrs. George E. Powers, Jr. ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. S. Mason Pratt ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Purcell ‘73 Dr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Rausch ‘94 Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Richmond ‘71 Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley ‘99 and Mr. Corey Ridley Dr. and Mrs. Michael Rifkin Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Rifkin ‘96 Mr. David M. Rines ‘69 Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Rockwell ‘66 Ms. Louise M. Roy ‘05 Mr. Christopher Roy ‘07 and Ms. Jill Piekut Mrs. Karen Stoloff Sacherman ‘84 and Mr. Jim Sacherman Mr. and Mrs. Ray F. Sadler III ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. James E. Salisbury Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Sarr, Jr. John P. Scamman MD’70 Rev. and Mrs. Jefferson M. Scott ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Sedgeley Dr. and Mrs. Ronald S. Sklar ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. John W. Slattery ‘04 Mr. and Mrs. Ian M. Smith ‘82 Mr. Stephen L. Smith Mr. and Mrs. David C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Terence R. Sparrow ‘56 Ms. Margaret Speranza Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess Mr. and Mrs. David P. Stromeyer ‘64 Mr. and Mrs. Alan A. Switzer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Tate II ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Taylor Ms. Helen L. Unger-Clark ‘04 and Mr. Iñaki

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

Lozares Carpintero Mrs. Jessica Garneau Violette ‘97 and Mr. Spencer Violette Mr. and Mrs. Kent Walker ‘63 Mr. and Mrs. John B. Walthausen ‘64

5 to 9 years

Ms. Donna M. Almy ‘80 Mr. and Mrs. James P. Austin III ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Eric Bailey Peter E. Bancroft, Esq. ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Bartlett ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. William A. Bearse III ‘59 Mr. and Mrs. William G. Becker III ‘87 Michael V. W. Bergamini Ph.D. ‘63 and Ms. Harli Dollinger Miss Molly M. Bloomingdale ‘13 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Bonis Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Bouchard Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bourgoin Mr. and Mrs. William L. Burke III ‘69 Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Byrne Ms. Linda Card Ms. Kayla A. Chadwick ‘08 Mr. Keith Clark ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. James R. Clements Mr. Gordon R. Close, Jr. ‘64 Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Coney Mr. Nathaniel S. Corwin ‘73 Mr. Wesley Covey Mr. Jonathan E. Crane ‘86 Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Cutler ‘57 Ms. Carolyn G. d’Agincourt ‘77 Dr. and Mrs. Ivan R. Delgado ‘76 Ms. Mary E. Deschenes and Mr. David E. Talbott Mr. Mark L. Desgrosseilliers ‘89 Mr. and Mrs. Mike Donatelli Mr. and Mrs. T. Scott Downs ‘86 Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Enyedy Capt. and Mrs. Peter G. Fallon III ‘86 Mr. Steven M. Fitzgerald ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Forsdick ‘66 Mr. Charles S. Foss ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Martin H. Fowler ‘57 Mr. Matthew Fox ‘67 Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson and Mr. Jim Lawson Mr. Cortlandt L. Freeman’60* Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fremont-Smith, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Carmine Frumiento Mr. and Mrs. Aaron S. Fultz Mr. Rickey Gilbert Mr. and Mrs. Bradford W. Gilbreth Mr. Michel Gilmour and Ms. Marie-France L’Heureux Mrs. Jessica Takach Gilpatrick ‘01 and Brendan S. Gilpatrick ‘02 Mr. and Mrs. James E. Good II ‘51 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Graney ‘56 Dr. and Mrs. Donald R. Grayson ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Colin Griggs Mrs. Joy Dubin Grossman ‘82 and Mr. Jim Grossman Mr. Alexander F. Haartz ‘77 Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin L. Haartz ‘83 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas F. Haartz ‘76 CWO and Mrs. Charles G. Hall USCG ‘80 Mr. Matthew P. Hampton ‘86 Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Hanks ‘62 Ms. Susan B. Harlor and William F. Ray, III Ms. Andrea J. Hart ‘08 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Haskell ‘90 Mr. Thomas H. Hays III ‘77 Mr. and Mrs. Stuart E. Hill ‘79 Mr. and Mrs. Bradford H. Hinman ‘71 Dr. William C. Hiss and Colleen J. Quint, Esq. Fred and Nancy Holler Ms. Patricia A Hutter & Mr. Frank Sinapi Mr. and Mrs. Everett P. Ingalls III ‘65 Ms. Alyssa Doherty Jahn ‘95 Mr. and Mrs. Demas W. Jasper ‘54

Mr. Rodric C. Johnson ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Kant ‘57 Dr. and Mrs. Richard Kappelmann Dr. and Mrs. Philip R. Kimball ‘55 Ms. Janet Mittell Kinasewich Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Kinasewich ‘86 Mr. and Mrs. James S. LeBlanc ‘02 Mr. Scott B. LaBombard Mr. and Mrs. J. Nicholas Leyden ‘01 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Lie-Nielsen ‘73 Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Lownes ‘84 Mrs. Rosamond A. Lownes Mr. and Mrs. John S. Lunt Capt. and Mrs. Forbes O. MacVane ‘78 Mr. Evan E. Mahaney ‘65 Mr. Barton C. Marcy ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan H. Marvel ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. A. Bruce McFarland ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Mentuck ‘57 Mrs. Emily Geismar Murphy and Mr. Phillip Murphy Timothy G. Murnane, Esq. ‘86 Mr. and Mrs. Roger S. Myers ‘82 Mr. Jonathan W. Myles ‘08 Mr. and Mrs. William F. Patterson ‘56 Mr. and Mrs. Trevor Paul Ms. Kathleen Phillips Mrs. Heather Griffin Piper ‘86 and Mr. O. Mitchell Piper Mr. Joseph F. Poges, Jr. ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. A. Richard Pschirrer ‘86 Mr. Gerard Puopolo and Ms. Lucy Eversley Mr. James Quinn ‘56 Mr. Rick Reder ‘62 and John Nieman Thomas G. Reeves, Esq. ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. David Rice Ms. Judy M. Roy Mr. Nicholas J. Roy ‘10 Dr. Michael E. Samers ‘84 Mr. John A. Schaff ‘61 Mr. Peter J. Schiot ‘57 Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Scholnick ‘58 Ms. Dana Shields ‘78 and Mr. Robert Hubbell Mr. and Mrs. David F. Simmons Mr. Charles G. Sprague, Jr. ‘55 Mrs. Sarah Kutzen Strait ‘96 and Mr. Hawley Strait Mr. and Mrs. John H. Suitor, Jr. ‘62 Dr. Daniella Swenton and Mr. Travis Brennan Ms. Liza Tarr Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tedesco Mr. and Mrs. Michael Telfer Ms. Ander M. Thebaud ‘83 Mr. Gordon I. Trevett ‘63 Ms. Robin Trombino Mrs. Heidi Cornwell Trout ‘83 Mr. Timothy W. Valenti ‘02 and Ms. Courtney Odriscoll Dr. and Mrs. Reynold Villedrouin Ms. Karin A. Wagner ‘85 Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Waite III ‘65 Ms. Jennifer Walker ‘90 and Mr. Gaurav Shah Mr. Garvin L. Warner and Ms. Margaret Wheeler Mr. Richard S. Waxman ‘64 Mr. Lambert E. Webber ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. James D. Whitney ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Wolf ‘82 Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Wysor ‘66 Anonymous (4)

hebronacademy.org • 23


leadership gifts Hebron Academy takes this opportunity to express its gratitude

to the 180 leadership donors listed below, whose collective gifts and pledges amounted to $1,214,422 or 87% of the total philanthropic support of the Academy during the 2017–2018 fiscal year. the eleanor d. and claude l. allen society

$50,000 or more

Mr. and Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Davis Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Evans ‘62 Mr. Albert R. Lepage ‘65 The Lunder Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Lunder ‘52 Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr. ‘58 John D. McGonagle ‘61 Mr. and Mrs. Gary C. Miller ‘68 Dr. Lawrence Murch NET Sports Group The Kelso F. and Joanna L. Sutton Charitable Gift Fund of Vanguard Mr. and Mrs. Kelso F. Sutton ‘57 The David and Stephanie Williams Family Fund of the Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund Mr. and Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60

hupper and treat society $25,000 to $49,999

Mr. Gary G. Bahre ‘81 Crane Fund for Widows & Children Fidelity Charitable Ms. Susan J. Garner ‘62H Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. Ralph A. Gould, Jr. ‘41 Estate of Dr. Edgar A. Hultgren* ‘39 Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Mr. and Mrs. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Mr. David S. Prout ‘83 Mr. William P. Witter ‘82

1804 society

$10,000 to $24,999 Mr. G. William Allen ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Edmund A. Buschmann The Crowley Family Charitable Fund of UBS Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 and Mr. Bob Crowley Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson and Mr. Jim Lawson Mrs. Susan A. Galvin ‘62H Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman Fund of Fidelity Charitable Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Y. Hagge ‘71 Hebron Academy Parents’ Association Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79 The Paul and Jill Kaneb Family Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Kaneb ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. Regis F. Lepage ‘72 Regis and Carolyn Lepage Fund of UBS Mr. H. Lynwood Martin* ‘37 Mr. John M. Noyes ‘60 Johnson O’Hare Co., Inc Mr. Robert J. Raymond ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Rines ‘65 Robert J. Ryan, Esq. ‘77

24 •

hebron • FALL 2019

Mr. Robert Waite ‘68 and Ms. Karen Shigeishi-Waite Rupert and Ruth White Charitable Fund of UBS Mr. and Mrs. Rupert B. White ‘51 Mr. Hong Wu and Ms. Xinhua Chen Mr. Liguo Xu and Ms. Lifang Miao

sturtevant circle $5,000 to $9,999

Anonymous Lt. Gen. and Mrs. Edward P. Barry, Jr. ‘57 Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Mr. J. Craig Clark ‘70 & Ms. Judy UngerClark J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Giesemann ‘57 Dr. Robert Greaves ‘82 and Mrs. Ronda Greaves Ms. Jane Harris Ash ‘79 and Dr. Gary Ash Mr. Ira Hershkowitz Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Ambassador and Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Mr. Jianzhou Jiang and Ms. Xiaomeng Yu John F. and Jean C. McIlwain Fund of New York Community Trust Mr. and Mrs. John F. McIlwain ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Gabe Miller Mr. and Mrs. James C. Rea III ‘62 Simmons Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. David B. Snow, Jr. ‘72 Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 and Mr. Alex Stephens Stephens Family Charitable Gift Fund of Fidelity Charitable Mr. Arthur E. Strout ‘53 and Ms. Carol Lundquist Mr. Garvin L. Warner and Ms. Margaret Wheeler Dr. William A. Weary ‘60

charter club $1,000 to $4,999

Ms. Carolyn Adams ‘77 and Mr. Dan Fuller Anonymous (5) Bancroft Initiatives Fund of Vanguard Charitable Peter E. Bancroft, Esq. ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Bartoccini ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Bates ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. William G. Becker III ‘87 Mr. and Mrs. John S. Beliveau ‘85 Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Bell ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Bellavance III ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bennett Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bisesti Henry H. Booth, Esq. ‘53 Mr. and Mrs. J. Reeve Bright ‘66 Mr. Peter N. Burbank ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. William L. Burke III ‘69 Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Nicholas Carter ‘73 Mr. Brian O. Cloherty ‘79 Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Coney Dr. Arthur W. Cooper ‘49 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony O. Cox ‘86 Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67 The Crisp Family Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Peter O. Crisp ‘51 Mr. and Mrs. William W. Davenport ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘85 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Peter and Ellen Fallon Fund of ‘The Boston Foundation Mr. Peter G. Fallon, Jr. Dr. Norman O. Farrar ‘58 Estate of Jose W. Fenderson, Esq.* ‘33 Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Forte ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Martin H. Fowler ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fremont-Smith, Jr. Dr. Fredric C. Friedman ‘62 Dr. and Mrs. Carmine Frumiento Rudi Gassner Educational Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation Ms. Brook Wallace Gassner ‘82 Mr. Stephen R. Gates ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Geraci, Jr. ‘90 Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. and Mrs. Gregory S. Getschow ‘82 Gould Family Fund of The Maine Community Foundation Mr. and Mrs. David B. Gould ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin L. Grant ‘90 Ms. Leslie A. Guenther Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Hagge, Jr. ‘66 Mr. and Mrs. John W. Hales ‘56 Ms. Maike Hellge Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hoeller Mr. Henry M. Holste ‘64 Mr. Mark L. Jacobs ‘61 Mr. Mark Jorgensen ‘74 and Ms. Dee Dee Morse United Way of Androscoggin County Dr. and Mrs. Richard Kappelmann Mr. James J. Kelley IV ‘95 Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Klein, Jr. ‘50 Mr. Scott B. LaBombard The Larabee Family Fund Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan H. Larabee ‘88 Mr. John T. Larabee ‘55 Mr. Paul J. Leger ‘76 Mr. Bertrand Lemont and Ms. Melinda Grimes Mrs. Kate Albin Lindberg ‘88 and Mr. Tom Lindberg Finger Lakes Area Community Endowment Mr. Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr. ‘68 Mrs. Rosamond A. Lownes Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Lownes ‘84 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Lyman ‘69 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Madsen ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Mitchel A. Maidman ‘82 Malm Family Charitable Fund of Fidelity Charitable Mr. and Mrs. C. Michael Malm ‘60 Dr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Mandiberg ‘65 Mr. and Mrs. Dan Marchetti Mr. and Mrs. Edward Meo Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan G. Moll ‘69 Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer ‘56 and Ms. Kay S. Nagle Mr. and Mrs. Johann D. Nottebohm ‘57 The Page Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Christopher I. Page ‘59 Mr. Richard J. Parker ‘55 Dr. Bradford Parsons ‘72 and Dr. Nancy Harris

Bottling Group LLC Mr. Frederick Perry ‘59 and Ms. Sarah Smith Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Peterson ‘61 Ms. Kathleen Phillips Mrs. Heather Griffin Piper ‘86 and Mr. Mitchell Piper Mr. Jamey Pittman and Ms. Melissa Toussaint Dr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Rausch ‘94 Mr. and Mrs. John H. Redmond ‘59 Renaissance Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Rich, Jr. ‘49 Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Rigazio ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Ruegg ‘51 Mrs. Karen Stoloff Sacherman ‘84 and Mr. Jim Sacherman Ms. Anne F. Sage ‘88 and Mr. Jesse D. Sgro Mr. and Mrs. Douglas S. Sandner ‘89 Mrs. Margaret Black Scott ‘48H Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Sedgeley Mr. William R. Sepe ‘53 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Severance ‘86 Mr. Matthew J. Shapiro ‘03 Mr. and Mrs. John P. Sherden III ‘56 Mr. Jacob B. Silber ‘92 Silicon Valley Community Foundation Silverman Family Fund of Fidelity Charitable Dr. and Mrs. Michael E. Silverman ‘85 Mrs. Lois E. Silverman Mr. Stephen L. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Bruce J. Spaulding ‘54 Mr. Jonathan E. Spindler ‘02 R. & F. Stavis Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Stavis ‘51 Mr. David Stonebraker and Ms. Leslie Guenther Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess Mr. and Mrs. Ian J. Swanbeck ‘85 Hon. Charles B. Swartwood III ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Ken C. Sweezey ‘63 Jou and Mabel Tchao Charitable Gift Fund of Fidelity Charitable Dr. and Mrs. Jou S. Tchao Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Thompson ‘87 Mr. C. Thomas Van Alen ‘56 Ms. Jane Walter The Walter H. and Hannah H. Webb Family Foundation Mrs. Mary C. Webb ‘48H Mr. Peter G. Welsh ‘70 Dr. Houghton White and Mary Hanks White Fund of Fidelity Charitable Dr. and Mrs. Houghton M. White ‘54 Ms. Daphne Whitman ‘54H LTC and Mrs. David G. Wildes ‘68 MPX Mr. Robert E. Willis ‘69 and Ms. Nancy Winslow Mr. and Mrs. Scott E. Wilson ‘71 Mr. Rufus A. Winsor William D. Witter Foundation Ms. Susan R. Witter Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Wolf ‘82 Chip and Jean Wood Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton H. Wood, Jr. ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Woodruff ‘86 Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Wright ‘65

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


gifts in memory and in honor

The gifts listed below were made in memory or in honor of members of the greater Hebron community

eleanor allen

L. Rush Crane ‘67

Peter w. beacham

Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67

benjamin m. blais ‘10

Coleman’s Collision J.A.R.B. LLC D/B/A Link’s Variety Fraternal Order of Eagles, #4131 McCann Fabrication Woodman Associates Inc. Mechanics Savings Bank Zachan Construction Anonymous Ms. Margaret D. Bird Mr. Rick Bowen Ms. Jeanie M. Cote Ms. Elizabeth Eckels Mr. and Mrs. Harry Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nadeau Ms. Julie Poulin Mr. Alexander Vito and Ms. Sherry White Dr. H. Gilbert Welch & Ms. Linda Doss

ven. robert a. bryan ‘50 Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67

philip d. brown ‘56

Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Brown ‘60

william c.h. boyle ‘50 Dr. Lawrence A. Boyle

jennifer e. buschmann ‘87

Mrs. Louise Buschmann and Mr. Edmund Buschmann Mr. Jon Buschmann ‘91 and Mrs. Tiana Buschmann Kealia Buschmann Maile Buschmann

jim de costa

richard j. simonds ‘52

ned willard

jack dunleavy

jason j. spindler ‘96

s. barnitz williams

Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91

t. kelly fitzpatrick

Alonzo ‘Joe’ Garcelon, Esq. ‘69 Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67

susan d. galos-eason ‘79

Mrs. Laurel WilleyThompson, ‘79

douglas c. garvin ‘73 Mrs. Debra Garvin, ‘73H

nancy leigh galos-safford ‘81 Mrs. Laural Willey Thompson, ‘79

tracy mcleod harlor ‘85

Ms. Susan B. Harlor and Mr. William F. Ray, III

chandler y. keller

Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Keller, ‘71

gerry lapierre ‘79

Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson ‘79

bill f. lee ‘47

Ms. Joyce Macklin Lee ‘47H

peter b. loveland ‘66

Ms. Kathleen Loveland ‘66H

donald n. lukens ‘42 Dana Lukens, Esq.

payson s. perkins ‘53

L. Rush Crane ‘67

Re/Max By The Bay D. Kilton Andrew Jr. Miss Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Ms. Hope P. Bramhall Mr. Frederick H. Burnham ‘79 Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Found Mr. and Mrs. William E. Gilpatric Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. and Mrs. David F. Ham Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. Leonard A. Mintz ‘53 Mr. and Mrs. Norman C. Nicholson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Noyes III ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53 Ms. Carolyn D. Thornton Mr. and Mrs. Dana E. Twombly

kennedy crane III ‘58

sherwood w. prout ‘53

Robert e. cleaves III ‘50

Mrs. Helen K. Cleaves ‘50H

peter f. cook ‘50

Ms. Carolyn S. Cook ‘50H

kennedy crane, sr. 1904 and mittie hanscom crane 1907

L. Rush Crane ‘67

margaret crane L. Rush Crane ‘67

robert crane ‘37 L. Rush Crane ‘67

david b. danforth ‘53

Ms. Deborah Danforth, ‘53H

Ms. Roberta L. Simonds ‘52H

Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67

Mr. Donald Bourgoin Mr. Matthew Caggiano Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. Brendan S. Gilpatrick ‘02 and Mrs. Jessica Takach Gilpatrick ‘01 Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Laurie Anne Huntress MD ‘90 Ms. Erica J. Litchfield ‘94 Mrs. Sarah Kutzen Strait ‘96 Mr. Matthew B. Wilder Jr. ‘92 Mr. T. Scott Downs ‘86 Dr. Alexandra C. Gillies ‘96 Mrs. Jessie Maher Parker ‘95 Mr. Benjamin J. Rifkin ‘96 Ms. Kirsten L. Ness ‘98 Mr. Adam C. Ross ‘96 Miss Cora Younk ‘21 Mr. Thomas Bergeron Mr. Robert DeMarco ‘96 Mrs. Tara Langelier Ujkaj ‘96 Mr. Irakly George Arison Areshidze ‘96 Ms. Lauren Maddin Grand ‘96 Mr. Matthew E. Katz ‘96 Mrs. Jacinda-Beth Kelly Chaisson ‘96

Mr. and Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67

elizabeth g. woodward Simmons Foundation

in honor of john g. blake ‘48

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Clayton

david w. stonebraker Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67

gift-in kind NET Sports Group Mr. and Mrs. William G. Becker III ‘87 Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Bell’70 Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bisesti Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bourgoin Mr. Timothy W. Braddock ‘70 Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Caggiano Mr. and Mrs. Anthony O. Cox ‘86 Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Cue Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Ms. Shelley Dunn Mr. and Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Ms. Lee Gaw Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Ms. Jennette Hall Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79 Mr. Joseph Kavanaugh Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. and Mrs. Jason Miles Mr. and Mrs. Gabe Miller Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey R. Parsons Mr. and Mrs. Manuel I. Plavin ‘43 Mr. John Stanley Mr. David Stonebraker and Ms. Leslie Guenther Mr. Rufus A. Winsor

charlotte rea stonebraker L. Rush Crane ‘67

george ugarte ‘62

Mrs. Rosi Elba Ugarte ‘62H

dr. maynard p. white ‘51 Ms. Kathleen P. White ‘51H

rebecca s. webber ‘76

Mr. Melvin W. Nadeau ‘76 and Ms. Denise E. Wandler

Mr. and Mrs. David S. Prout, ‘83

robert k. rockwell ‘38

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Rockwell ‘66

chris schroeder

gifts in memory

ltjg. jeb b. shields, USN ‘83

Ms. Dana Shields Hubbell ‘78 and Robert Hubbell Dr. Thomas F. Shields and Mrs. Bethel Shields Mr. T. Bragdon Shields ‘79 and Ms. Janet E. Lange

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

Jason J. Spindler

hebronacademy.org • 25


gifts in honor of paul s . goodof ‘67

I

n the spring of 2006 I met Paul Goodof ‘67. We immediately connected based on our knowledge of the construction industry and our love for Hebron and what it had done for us as young men, albeit a generation apart. Soon after that first meeting, and with Paul’s help, I was fortunate to join him on Hebron’s Board of Trustees. I was a natural fit for the Buildings and Grounds Committee, but with little nonprofit board experience. Paul provided support, knowledge, and guidance about how the board works in general. He worked with me specifically on how I could focus my knowledge and experience and turn that into focused leadership for Hebron. In turn, this allowed Paul to do more with his time, ultimately benefiting the board as a whole, and Hebron Academy. As Chair of the Board, Paul’s ability to be both tactical and strategic in his approach to the opportunities and challenges that arise each year was calming. His ability to put Hebron Academy students first, at all times, is a credit to his personality and persistent desire to make Hebron best in class. Paul was committed to making sure Hebron did more with less, always balancing difficult business decisions with what was best for the Hebron community. The Williams Center of today would not have been possible without Paul’s oversight and commitment. He kept the team focused and determined and ultimately provided Hebron a building that it could afford to build and maintain, including many features that were questioned at times – the squash courts and running track to name two. It was a pleasure to work with Paul during my years on the Board and I am grateful to him for all he has done to help support and educate me personally and professionally. Above all I will remember Paul’s love of all things Hebron. Jim Hill ‘90

P

aul embodies what Hebron students and faculty should always strive to be – sharp, inquisitive, kind, compassionate, and loyal. He represents the best of Hebron to our family, to the school community and to the community at large. During his years on the board he has been consistently present throughout campus, be it on the sidelines of home games, at community meetings in the Chapel, and in the halls of Hebron. He truly and genuinely cares about every aspect of Hebron – its students and faculty, its facility, its mission, its history, its future, and the overall character of Hebron. As an alumnus, he reminds me of the best of Hebron during my time there: caring adults who develop meaningful intellectual and personal relationships with students. By fostering these relationships, Paul has helped to develop an engaged and caring group of rising Hebronians who go forth and excel. This elevates the reputation of the school as nothing else can. I am grateful for his time and attention to all of Hebron’s students and will miss his dedicated presence. Bill Skelton ‘86, P ‘19 ‘21 ‘21

Johnson O’Hare Co., Inc Mr. Bill G. Becker III ‘87 TT Mr. Richard Bennett TT Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 TT Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 TT Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Caggiano Mrs. Felicia Coney TT Mr. Jonathan A. Curtis and Ms. Deanna Kilbreth Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Dilworth, III

26 •

hebron • FALL 2019

Mr. Clem S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 TT Ms. Jamie Fey ‘02 TT Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson TT Mr. and Mrs. Aaron S. Fultz Dr. Bob Greaves ‘82 TT Ms. Jane Harris Ash ‘79 and Dr. Gary Ash Mr. Wallace E. Higgins TT Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Ms. Patricia A Hutter & Mr. Frank Sinapi Mr. Matt Johnson ‘93 TT

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Kinasewich ‘86 Ms. Patricia Layman Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. Eric W. List and Ms. Christine J. Trefethen Mr. Matthew Lyness ‘76 TT Ms. Laurel MacDonald Mr. Brett S. Mitchell ‘02 TT Mr. David S. Prout ‘83 TT Ms. Louise M. Roy ‘05

Ms. Judy M. Roy Mr. Nicholas J. Roy ‘10 Mr. Christopher Roy ‘07 and Ms. Jill Piekut Mr. and Mrs. Marc J. Roy ‘78 Bob Ryan Esq. ‘77 TT Mr. and Mrs. William K. Skelton ‘86 Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 TT Ms. Meredith N. Strang-Burgess TT Mr. Bob Waite ‘68 TT

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


class giving The ties of memory are maintained through reunions and functions, yet the bonds of classes are also reinforced

through the great willingness of Hebron’s alumni to support the vision and success of the Academy. Listed here are all gifts made by alumni and honorary class members—to operations, capital projects and endowment. As always, we are deeply grateful to the many alumni who have joined together in support of their alma mater. class of 1913 Mr. Karl N. Murch

class of 1933

Estate of Jose W. Fenderson, Esq.*

class of 1937

Mr. H. Lynwood Martin*

class of 1939

Estate of Dr. Edgar A. Hultgren*

class of 1940

LTC William H. Collier USA(Ret.)

class of 1952

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $156,307 Dr. Morris S. Albert Charles W. Barrett Dr. Alan R. Booth Rev. Kenneth A. Boyle Mr. James R. Kelley Mr. Charles S. Longley Mr. Peter H. Lunder Mr. Richard N. Robbins Dr. Peter Schramm Mr. Richard J. Simonds*

class of 1953

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $750 Mr. Thomas L. Goodman Mr. John W. Lawry CAPT Carlton A. K. McDonald USN Mr. Manuel I. Plavin Mrs. Barbara Rowell

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $9,550 Mr. Richard F. Bastow Henry H. Booth, Esq. Ms. Deborah L. Danforth Mr. William E. Griess, Jr. Rev. David C. Houston Mr. Leonard A. Mintz Mr. Dean E. Ridlon Mr. William R. Sepe Mr. Nicholas S. Sewall Arthur E. Strout, Esq. Mr. Charles D. Whittier II

class of 1947

class of 1954

class of 1941

Mr. Ralph A. Gould, Jr.

class of 1943

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $200 Ms. Joyce M. Lee Mr. Bradford J. Turner* All 2018-2019 Gifts: $2,750 Mr. John G. Blake Mr. Porter S. Dickinson Mr. Robert J. Maley Mr. Richard W. Pratt Mrs. Margaret B. Scott Mrs. Mary C. Webb Mr. John S. Webber

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $8,875 Alan W. Boone MD Mr. Henry J. Curtis, Jr. Mr. Roscoe W. Fitts, Jr. Mr. Demas W. Jasper Mr. Robert J. Kenler Mr. Michael Maher Mr. John W. Merz Jerrold A. Olanoff, Esq. Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross Mr. Bruce J. Spaulding Dr. Houghton M. White Ms. Daphne Whitman

class of 1949

class of 1955

class of 1948

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $5,847 Dr. Arthur W. Cooper Mr. Richard J. Levinson Mrs. Jean M. Porath Dr. Joseph W. Quinn Mr. Robert P. Rich, Jr. Mr. Phillips Smith

class of 1950

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $1,975 Dr. Lincoln C. Blake Mrs. Helen K. Cleaves Mrs. Carolyn S. Cook Mr. A. William Kany, Jr. Mr. Frederick H. Klein, Jr.

class of 1951

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $95,700 Mr. William V. S. Carhart Mr. Saul B. Cohen Col. George R. Collins Mr. Peter O. Crisp Mr. James E. Good II Mr. Norbert Lachmann Mr. Edward L. Ruegg Mr. Frederick Stavis Mr. Rupert B. White Mrs. Kathleen B. White

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $45,475 Mr. Maurice E. Balboni Mr. Allan B. Brown Mr. William W. Davenport Mr. James E. Fenlason Mr. Wayne G. French Mr. James A. Gillies III Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman Dr. Donald R. Grayson Mr. Rodric C. Johnson Dr. Philip R. Kimball Mr. John T. Larabee Mr. John H. Long Mr. Richard J. Parker Mr. Robert J. Raymond Mr. Kent B. Savel Mr. Charles G. Sprague, Jr. Mrs. Louise S. Thompson

class of 1956

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $6,812 Mr. Richard P. Canaday Mr. Richard M. Cutter Mr. Frank R. Goodwin Mr. Michael Graney Mr. John W. Hales Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer Mr. Thomas F. Murphy, Jr.

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

Mr. William F. Patterson Mr. James Quinn Mr. John P. Sherden III Mr. Terence R. Sparrow Mr. C. Thomas Van Alen Mr. R. Russell Williamson II

class of 1957

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $146,000 Hon. David L. Babson, Jr. Mr. Robert H. Bannard Lt. Gen. Edward P. Barry, Jr. Mr. Peter F. Cutler Mrs. Barbara T. Durgin Mr. Martin H. Fowler Mr. Peter C. Giesemann Mr. Alexander C. Kant Mr. Barton C. Marcy Mr. A. Bruce McFarland Mr. John F. McIlwain Mr. Michael A. Mentuck Mr. Johann D. Nottebohm Mr. S. Mason Pratt Mr. Peter J. Schiot Mr. Kelso F. Sutton Hon. Charles B. Swartwood III Mr. Edward H. Tate II Mr. Lambert E. Webber Mr. Dawson D. Zaug

class of 1958

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $95,119 Mr. Ross C. Babcock Mr. Joseph A. Bellavance III Mr. Andrew B. Berry Mr. Wade T. Breed Mr. Keith Clark Mr. Robert M. Davis Dr. Norman O. Farrar Mr. Robert F. Jarvis Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr. Mr. Edward D. Noyes III Mr. Otis E. Perry Dr. Robert J. Scholnick Mr. William T. Williams

class of 1959

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $5,586 Mr. William A. Bearse III Mr. John L. Burnham Mr. Edward M. Caplan Mr. Conrad B. Conant Mr. Paul A. Dahlquist Mr. David M. Driscoll Hon. James C. Harberson, Jr. Mr. Bernard L. Helm Mr. David D. Horn Mr. David G. Lougee Dr. Bruce A. MacDougal Mr. Thomas A. Mann Mr. Christopher I. Page Mr. Frederick S. Perry, Jr. Mr. John H. Redmond Dr. Tycho T. von Rosenvinge

class of 1960

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $699,140 Mr. David M. Anderson Mr. David Barbour III Mr. Robert H. Brown Mrs. Mary Jo Cassidy

Mr. Cortlandt L. Freeman* Dr. Joseph E. Godard Mr. Bruce E. Gunther Mr. John H. Halford III Mr. Paul D. Kaneb Mr. Allan H. Lamport Mr. C. Michael Malm Mr. John J. Moeling, Jr. Mr. John M. Noyes Dr. William A. Weary Mr. David J. Williams

class of 1961

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $4,614 Mr. Bernard M. Babcock Mr. John P. Barrett Mr. Stephen T. Hibbard Mr. Mark L. Jacobs Mr. David H. Lowell Mr. John D. McGonagle Mr. George F. Parker III Mr. Frederick E. Peterson Mr. John A. Schaff* Mr. Thomas S. Snedeker Mr. Roger F. Stacey

class of 1962

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $428,093 Mr. G. William Allen Mr. James P. Austin III Mr. Donald E. Bates Mr. Jon M. Brooks MAJ Bruce B. Cary USA(Ret.) Dr. Edward F. Driscoll Mr. Robert Egleston Mr. Robert S. Evans Mr. Richard S. Forte Mr. Charles S. Foss Dr. Fredric C. Friedman Mrs. Susan A. Galvin Ms. Susan J. Garner Gordon M. Gillies, Esq. Mr. Robert J. Hanks David T. Hartgen Ph.D, P.E Dr. Stephen A. Hartgen Mr. Greg B. Karlowski Nat Kennedy Mr. Zigmund A. Peret Mr. James C. Rea III Mr. Rick Reder Mr. William T. Sprole III Dr. William W. Stocker II Mr. John H. Suitor, Jr. Robert C. Varney, Esq. Mr. Hamilton H. Wood, Jr.

class of 1963

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $3,765 Mr. Craig B. Adelman Mr. David H. Ayres Michael V. W. Bergamini Ph.D. Mr. Alexander E. Dean Mr. William C. Harding, Jr. Mr. Joseph B. Hodgkins II CTRCS Robert R. McNamara USN(Ret.) Mr. Roger C. McNeill Mr. Michael C. Nickerson Mr. Michael Slosberg Mr. Ken C. Sweezey Mr. Gordon I. Trevett Mr. Kent Walker Mr. Byron V. Whitney

hebronacademy.org • 27


cl a ss giving

Cum Laude Society, 2019

class of 1964

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $9,040 Dr. William F. Boucher, Jr. M. Ray Bradford, Jr. Mr. Walter H. Burden III Mr. Gordon R. Close, Jr. Mr. Carleton H. Endemann, Jr. Mr. John R. Giger Ms. Marlene J. Hellman Mr. Henry M. Holste Ambassador Thomas N. Hull III Mr. Richard Magnuson Mr. John J. Meehan, Jr. Mr. Jay K. Sadlon Mr. David P. Stromeyer Dr. John R. Thibodeau Mr. Henry J. Ullman Mr. John B. Walthausen Mr. Richard S. Waxman

class of 1965

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $620,830 Mr. Ronald N. Adams Mr. Richard A. Bartoccini Mr. Gregory P. B. Boardman Mr. Jeffrey E. Chase Mr. Arthur J. Curtze Mr. Blaine E. Eynon, Jr. Mr. Edward V. V. Finn Cory E. Friedman, Esq. Mr. Jeffrey A. Gardner Mr. David A. Goodof Mr. Phillip J. Hinman Mr. Everett P. Ingalls III Mr. Allen C. Kennedy Mr. Jeffrey S. Laughlin Mr. Albert R. Lepage Mr. Peter Madsen Mr. Evan E. Mahaney Dr. Joseph J. Mandiberg Mr. Jonathan H. Marvel Mr. George R. McPhee Mr. James A. Morrill Maj. Dwight L. Parsons II Thomas G. Reeves, Esq. 28 •

hebron • FALL 2019

Mr. Henry M. Rines Mr. Edward J. Waite III Mr. Michael J. Wright

class of 1966

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $299,292 J. Reeve Bright, Esq. Mr. John C. Buschmann Mr. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. Mr. Arthur R. Forsdick Mr. Robert S. Hagge, Jr. Mr. Peter A. Larsen Ms. Kathleen Loveland Mr. Paul M. Manning Mr. Douglas B. McCoy Mr. Jeffrey M. Rockwell Mr. Philip C. Wysor

class of 1967

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $36,337 Mr. John E. Baker Mr. L. Rush Crane Mr. Matthew Fox Mr. Paul S. Goodof Mr. David M. James Mr. John E. Meserve Mr. C. Kirk Pfrangle Mr. Peter C. Redmayne Mr. Thomas D. Walsh

class of 1968

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $125,488 Mr. Daniel E. Bradford Dr. Jeffry R. Cook Mr. James C. Cram Dr. Robert L. Edmonstone Mr. Morton D. Furber, Jr. Mr. Thomas M. Johnson Mr. James K. Locke Mr. Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr. Mr. Gary C. Miller Mr. Michael C. Mishou Mr. F. Corbin Moister, Jr. Mr. Frederick B. Seufert Mr. Samuel P. Stafford II

Mr. Gerald A. Thompson Mr. Robert E. Waite Mr. Nathaniel Warren-White LTC David G. Wildes

class of 1971

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $8,820 Mr. Peter B. Boody Mr. James R. Brown Mr. William L. Burke III Mr. Richard Drukker III Alonzo Garcelon, Esq. Daniel Lyman Mr. Jonathan G. Moll Mr. Carl M. Peterson Dr. Robert J. Pettit Mr. David M. Rines Dr. C. Jeffrey Tannebring Mr. Robert E. Willis

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $19,841 Mr. Jeffrey G. Baker Mr. James K. Balano Mr. David C. Birtwistle Mr. Douglas H. Gordon Mr. David B. Gould Mr. Cyrus Y. Hagge Mr. Bradford H. Hinman Mr. Peter C. Hoople Mr. Peter W. Keller Mr. Harvey A. Lipman Mr. Carl M. Mikkelsen Mr. Bruce M. Nash Mr. Richard H. Richmond Mr. Richard J. Rigazio Mr. William J. Stites Mr. James D. Whitney Mr. Scott E. Wilson

class of 1970

class of 1972

class of 1969

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $12,678 Peter E. Bancroft, Esq. Mr. Paul L. Bartlett Mr. Edward P. Bell Mr. Thomas J. R. Bolger Mr. Timothy W. Braddock Mr. Peter N. Burbank Mr. Craig Clark Mr. Rudolf M.C. Eyerer Mr. Henry A. Harding Kimball L. Kenway, Esq. Mr. Kingsley N. Meyer, Jr. Mr. Joseph F. Poges, Jr. Mr. George E. Powers, Jr. Mr. Joseph L. Pyle III Mr. James L. Ryland Mr. Ray F. Sadler III John P. Scamman MD Dr. Ronald S. Sklar Mr. Peter G. Welsh Mr. Dean P. Wolfahrt

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $26,372 Mr. Kenneth P. Childs Mr. Steven M. Fitzgerald Mr. Richard C. Garvin Mr. Stephen R. Gates Mr. R. Bruce Hunter Mr. Regis F. Lepage Mr. Edward N. Lewis Mr. Steven A. Mervis Dr. Bradford D. Parsons Mr. Mark J. Savran Rev. Jefferson M. Scott Mr. David B. Snow, Jr.

class of 1973

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $3,275 Mr. Harold W. Atkinson, Jr. Mr. Francis M. Blodget III Mr. Gregory M. Burns Mr. G. M. Nicholas Carter Mr. G. Cyrus Cook Mr. Nathaniel S. Corwin Ms. Debra Garvin Mr. Thomas M. Lie-Nielsen

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


Mr. James R. Moulton Mr. Mark S. Purcell CDR Stephen P. Wagner

class of 1974

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $1,405 Mr. Roger T. Clark Mr. Leo M. Hill Mr. Mark Jorgensen CAPT William S. Linnell

class of 1975

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $500 Miss Ellen L. Augusta Dr. Erik C. Bateman Ms. Jessica G. Feeley Ms. Susan W. Hadlock Mr. Rupert B. White, Jr.

class of 1976

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $36,025 Mr. Gary M. Appelbaum Mr. Michael R. Arel Mr. C. Reed Chapman Dr. Ivan R. Delgado Mr. Robert B. Eames Mrs. Elizabeth Beach Fitzpatrick Mr. Douglas F. Haartz Mr. Paul J. Leger Mr. J. Matthew Lyness Mrs. Stacy Berney Miles Mr. Melvin W. Nadeau Sarah Hughes Sigel Mr. Jon P. Svendsen Mr. Robert S. Thomas Mr. Timothy W. West

class of 1977

class of 1978

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $19,294 Mr. George M. Dycio Capt. Forbes O. MacVane Mr. Jonathan E. Porath Mr. Marc Roy Ms. Dana A. Shields

class of 1979

Mr. Frederick H. Burnham Mr. Brian O. Cloherty Ms. Jane Harris Ash Mr. Stuart E. Hill Dr. Karen A. Holler Mr. Stephen B. Jeffries Mr. Eric W. Nicolai Mr. Timothy F. Roche Mr. T. Bragdon Shields Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson

class of 1980

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $1,040 Ms. Donna M. Almy Ms. Elizabeth Siekman Graves CWO Charles G. Hall USCG Mr. Troy Kavanaugh Dr. Patrick S. L. Maidman Mr. Andrew O. Smith

class of 1981

class of 1984

class of 1982

class of 1985

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $25,850 Mr. Gary G. Bahre Mr. Michael V. Finucan Ms. Eileen Gillespie-Fahey Ms. Kathleen E. Perkins Mrs. Laura Douglas Peterson Mr. Robert E. S. Quarles All 2018-2019 Gifts: $35,677 Mr. Tucker Cutler Ms. Brook Wallace Gassner Mr. Gregory S. Getschow Dr. Robert C. Greaves Mrs. Joy E. Grossman Ms. Lea A. Heidman Ms. Jeanne Kannegieser Mr. Marc F. Lunder Mr. Mitchel A. Maidman Mr. Roger S. Myers Mr. Ian M. Smith Mr. Darrell K. Williams Mr. William P. Witter Mr. Michael R. Wolf CPA

class of 1983

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $43,950 Anonymous Mr. Ethan W. Alcorn Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale Mr. Benjamin L. Haartz Ms. Sharon Lake-Post and Family Mr. Charles T. Pratt Mr. David S. Prout Ms. Ander M. Thebaud Mrs. Heidi Cornwell Trout

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $3,975 Mrs. Deborah Schiavi Cote Mr. John H. Leamon II Mr. Charles H. Lownes Mrs. Karen Stoloff Sacherman Dr. Michael E. Samers Mr. John H. Suitor III All 2018-2019 Gifts: $6,604 Dr. Lina A. Anthony Mr. John S. Beliveau Mr. Timothy M. Caddo Mr. Robert M. Davis Ms. Dagny C. Maidman Mr. John T. McIntyre Ms. Karin A. Schott Dr. Michael E. Silverman Mr. Ian J. Swanbeck Ms. Karin A. Wagner Ms. Sarah M. Wood

class of 1986

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $8,424 Mrs. Ann Sullivan Cohen Mr. Anthony O. Cox Mr. Jonathan E. Crane Mr. T. Scott Downs Capt. Peter G. Fallon III Mr. Matthew P. Hampton Mr. Robert E. Kinasewich Timothy G. Murnane, Esq. Mrs. Heather Griffin Piper Mr. Richard Pschirrer Mr. Thomas D. Severance Mr. William K. Skelton Mrs. Harper Ingram Wong Mr. Alexander C. Woodruff

john mckeith

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $21,112 Anonymous Ms. Carolyn E. Adams

Mr. David R. Burnett Ms. Carolyn G. d’Agincourt Mr. Alexander F. Haartz Mr. Thomas H. Hays III Mr. Robert M. Hernon Mr. Dana P. Hodges Mr. Adam D. Lee Ms. Susan Shaver Loyd-Turner Mr. Kirby N. Nadeau Robert J. Ryan, Esq. Mr. Andrew Zelman

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

hebronacademy.org • 29


cl a ss giving

class of 1987

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $16,983 Mr. William G. Becker III Mr. Christopher J. Bilodeau Mr. Galen G. Crane Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley Mr. Nathan H. Draper Mr. Jason Found Mr. James W. Keenan Ms. Mary A. Leonard Mr. Christopher L. Magendantz Mr. Robert W. Thompson Ms. Hannah B. Turlish

class of 1988

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $8,842 Mrs. Jennifer Willey Algieri Mr. William Guidera Mr. Jonathan H. Larabee Mrs. Katherine Albin Lindberg Mrs. Ann Snyder Mooradian Ms. Anne F. Sage Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens

class of 1989

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $2,677 Ms. Amy E. Clark Mr. Mark L. Desgrosseilliers Mr. Douglas S. Sandner Mr. Carl G. Seefried III

class of 1990

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $12,740 Dr. Timothy Deschaines Mr. Anthony S. Geraci, Jr. Mr. Benjamin L. Grant Mr. Andrew M. Haskell Mr. James B. Hill II Laurie Anne Huntress MD Mr. Brett I. Martel Mr. Gunnar W. Olson Ms. Jennifer L. Walker

class of 1991

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $2,250 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa Mr. Charles C. Hedrick Dr. Scott R. Nelson

class of 1992

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $1,125 Mr. J. Marshall Aikman Mr. Jacob B. Silber Mr. Matthew B. Wilder Jr.

Matthew E. Katz Mr. Benjamin J. Rifkin Mr. Adam C. Ross Mrs. Sarah Kutzen Strait

class of 2003

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $1,150 Anonymous Mr. Bryan M. Gaudreau Mrs. Jessica Garneau Violette

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $2,093 Mrs. Sara Marquis Barker Maj. Timothy B. Curtis Mr. Patrick J. Cusick Ms. Meghan K. Gillis Mr. Michael A. Myrick Mr. Corey M. O’Neill Mr. Matthew J. Shapiro Ms. Rachel L. Sukeforth

class of 1998

class of 2004

class of 1997

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $225 Mr. Nils T. Devine Ms. Kirsten L. Ness

class of 1999

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $391 Dr. Ben DaeSoon Acker D.O. Mr. Ryan W. Curley Mr. Ira W. Gooch Mr. Jake T. Leyden Mr. Joseph J. Patry Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley

class of 2000

Mrs. Corinna Hartman-Frey Burnham

class of 2001

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $705 Mrs. Jessica Takach Gilpatrick Mr. Stuart G. Hedstrom Mr. Nicholas Leyden Mr. Kevin S. Osborne Mr. Nicholas J. Planson Mr. Daniel M. Siekman Ms. Anais A. Wheeler

class of 2002

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $2,200 Ms. Jamie M. Fey Mr. Brendan S. Gilpatrick Mr. Daniel J. Hazan Ms. Leah E. Hedstrom Mr. Scott W. Holmes Mr. James S. LeBlanc Mr. Barrett S. Mitchell Mrs. Emily Geismar Murphy Mr. Jonathan E. Spindler Mr. Timothy W. Valenti

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $700 Mr. Brandon D. Bates Mr. Liam D. Gray Mr. John W. Slattery Ms. Helen L. Unger-Clark

class of 2005

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $560 Ms. Louise M. Roy Mr. Mathew J. Tedesco

class of 2006 Ms. Molly G. Curtis

class of 2007

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $85 Ms. Jillian R. Campbell Mr. Noah S. T. Love Mr. Christopher Roy

class of 2008

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $380 Ms. Kayla A. Chadwick Mr. Jason B. Goodman Ms. Andrea J. Hart Mr. Jonathan W. Myles Mr. Peter L. Plumeri Miss Rosa P. Van Wie

class of 2009

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $75 Mr. Brett A. Bisesti Mr. Joshua M. Mosher

class of 2010

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $75 Mr. Jeremy R. Kleven Mr. Nicholas J. Roy

class of 2011

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $275 Mr. Michael J. Bouchard II Mr. Andrew M. Crawford Mr. Eugene G. Wentworth

class of 2012

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $160 Mr. Andrew M. Hastings Mr. Cole J. Isgur Miss Mariah H. Mosher Miss Allyson J. Strachan

class of 2013

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $240 Miss Molly M. Bloomingdale Mr. Matthew F. Bouchard Mr. Kale J. Johnstone Mr. Michael P. Kelly Mr. Samuel R. Kinasewich Mr. Patrick F. Shelley Ms. Taylor A. Teixeira Mr. Daniel D. Warner

class of 2014

Ms. Michaela M. Clark

class of 2015

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $203 Miss Shannon Bailey Mr. Alan Donatelli Miss Taylor R. Fowler Mr. Myles E. Horn Mr. Sean Munzing Mr. Elliott D. Ross

class of 2016

Miss Elizabeth L. Everett

class of 2017

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $50 Mr. Zachary T. Barnes Mr. Matthew P. Meikle

class of 2018

All 2018-2019 Gifts: Mr. Ryan W. Kappelmann Mr. Shamus J. Sullivan

class of 1993

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $25,908 Mr. James G. Coletti Mr. Matthew W. Johnson

class of 1994

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $1,175 Ms. Erica J. Litchfield Dr. Daniel C. Rausch

class of 1995

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $1,325 Ms. Alyssa Doherty Jahn Mr. James J. Kelley IV Mrs. Sara Keef Kendall Mrs. Jessie Maher Parker

class of 1996

All 2018-2019 Gifts: $10,046 Mr. Irakly George Arison Areshidze Ms. Devon M. Biondi Jacinda-Beth Kelly Chaisson Mrs. Lydia Pottle Currie Mr. Robert DeMarco Dr. Alexandra C. Gillies Ms. Lauren Maddin Grand 30 •

hebron • FALL 2019

Students relaxing on one of two hand crafted benches given by the Buschmann Family in memory of Jennifer E. Buschmann ‘87. hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


CLASS PARTICIPATION AND HEBRON ANNUAL FUND AWARDS Participation percentages, amount raised and awards are based on gifts to the Hebron Annual Fund only. heritage decades class

amt. raised

1913 $60,000 1933 $4,689 1937 $5,000 1939 $5,000 1940 $40 1941 $5,000 1943 $750 1947 $200 1948 $1,750 1949 $5,847 1950 $1,975 1951 $18,500 1952 $1,615 1953 $8,550 1954 $8,875 1955 $9,475 1956 $6,312 1957 $146,000 1958 $6,980 1959 $5,586 1960 $10,175 1961 $4,614 1962 $75,203 1963 $3,765 1964 $5,940 1965 $59,585 1966 $10,292 1967 $23,985

participation

6% 6% 21% 22% 15% 29% 22% 29% 28% 36% 28% 38% 33% 39% 29% 20% 38% 31% 31% 39% 22% 15%

fourth and fifth decades

second and third decades

class

participation

class

27% 22% 27% 24% 24% 22% 8% 9% 25% 18% 8% 16% 8% 7% 17% 9% 9% 12% 16% 12%

1988 $7,842 1989 $2,677 1990 $12,715 1991 $2,250 1992 $1,025 1993 $25,908 1994 $1,125 1995 $1,225 1996 $3,013 1997 $1,150 1998 $200 1999 $376 2000 $100 2001 $605 2002 $2,075 2003 $1,600 2004 $675 2005 $60 2006 $50

amt. raised

1968 $20,488 1969 $8,820 1970 $11,678 1971 $9,143 1972 $11,679 1973 $3,275 1974 $1,405 1975 $500 1976 $7,925 1977 $10,512 1978 $580 1979 $12,714 1980 $1,040 1981 $25,850 1982 $9,500 1983 $8,250 1984 $3,975 1985 $6,504 1986 $6,738 1987 $11,983

amt. raised

participation 6% 4% 10% 5% 3% 4% 4% 7% 6% 4% 2% 9% 2% 10% 15% 13% 7% 2% 2%

first decade class

amt. raised

2007 $75 2008 $380 2009 $75 2010 $75 2011 $275 2012 $160 2013 $240 2014 $25 2015 $203 2016 $50 2017 $50 2018 $35

participation 3% 9% 4% 4% 4% 6% 13% 1% 7% 2% 1% 3%

Awards william barrows award

1804 award

decade awards

in 2018–2019, awarded to:

Given to that class with over twenty living members who have achieved the highest percentage of participation in the Annual Fund.

Class of 1957

in 2018–2019, awarded to:

in 2018–2019, awarded to:

Given to honor that class which has achieved the highest overall total in support to the Hebron Annual Fund.

Tie - Class of 1959 & 1965

Given annually to the class within each decade category which has achieved the highest total support for that year’s Annual Fund. Heritage Decades Class of 1957 Fourth and Fifth Decades Class of 1981 Second and Third Decades Class of 1993 First Decade Class of 2008

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

hebronacademy.org • 31


parents, faculty and friends We are most grateful for the support we receive from

parents of current students, parents of alumni, faculty, former faculty and friends. This support shows a continued commitment to the work of the school and to the future of Hebron’s students.

parents of current students

Mr. and Mrs. George Allen Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bergeron Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Bonis Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bourgoin Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Caggiano Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Cue Mr. Jonathan A. Curtis and Ms. Deanna Kilbreth Mr. and Mrs. John V. DeWitt Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Dilworth, III Mr. William Flynn and Ms. Janet Littlefield Dr. and Mrs. Carmine Frumiento Mr. and Mrs. Aaron S. Fultz Mr. James Ganley and Mr. Stephen Green Mr. and Mrs. Alex J. Godomsky Dr. Art Gregory and Dr. Lynn McAfee Ms. Tessa Hatch Mr. and Mrs. Jammie Hatfield Ms. Maike Hellge Ms. Carmen L. Hermida Mr. Jianzhou Jiang and Ms. Xiaomeng Yu Mr. Todd Jubinville and Ms. Elke WiedeJubinville Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Kinasewich ‘86 Mr. Kevin A. Kline and Ms. Sarah M. Wood ‘85 Mr. Scott B. LaBombard Mr. and Mrs. Joey Legassie Mr. Bertrand Lemont and Ms. Melinda Grimes Mr. Eric W. List and Ms. Christine J. Trefethen Ms. Laurel MacDonald Mr. and Mrs. William T. McHugh Mr. and Mrs. Edward Meo Mr. and Mrs. Jason Miles Mr. and Mrs. Edward Newell Ms. Kathleen Phillips Mr. Jamey Pittman and Ms. Melissa Toussaint Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Prentice Mr. and Mrs. Brian Proctor Ms. Anita K. Randall Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ray Mr. and Mrs. William K. Skelton ‘86 Ms. Jennifer Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Michael Walsh Mr. Hong Wu and Ms. Xinhua Chen Ms. Amy Wuori Mr. Liguo Xu and Ms. Lifang Miao Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Younk

parents of alumni/ae

Anonymous (1) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Agnew Mrs. Venessa Arsenault Mrs. Caroline Atherton Mr. and Mrs. James P. Austin III ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Eric Bailey Dr. Tamar F. Barlam Mr. Royce W. Beane Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bennett Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Berg Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bisesti Ms. Debra B. Bloomingdale ‘83 Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Bouchard Mr. and Mrs. Edmund A. Buschmann Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Byrne Ms. Linda Card Mr. Peter V. Carls Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A. Churchill Ms. Deborah P. Clark

32 •

hebron • FALL 2019

Mr. J. Craig Clark ‘70 & Ms. Judy UngerClark Mr. and Mrs. Roger T. Clark ‘74 Mr. Keith Clark ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Coney Rev. Michael Corrigan Ms. Trudy P. Crane Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Cue Mr. Jonathan A. Curtis and Ms. Deanna Kilbreth Mr. and Mrs. John W. Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Dr. and Mrs. Ivan R. Delgado ‘76 Ms. Mary E. Deschenes and Mr. David E. Talbott Mr. and Mrs. Mike Donatelli Mr. Stephen M. Dorsey Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Draper Dr. and Mrs. Edward F. Driscoll ‘62 Ms. Grace Drown Mr. and Mrs. George M. Dycio ‘78 Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Enyedy Mr. and Mrs. Blaine E. Eynon, Jr. ‘65 Mr. Peter G. Fallon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David J. Fensore Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Found Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson and Mr. Jim Lawson Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fremont-Smith, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Herbert M. Gardner Mr. Robert H. Gardner Mr. and Mrs. John Geismar Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Giesemann ‘57 Mr. and Mrs. Bradford W. Gilbreth Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gillies III ‘55 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon M. Gillies ‘62 Mr. Michel Gilmour and Ms. Marie-France L’Heureux Mr. Ralph A. Gould, Jr. ‘41 Dr. Art Gregory and Dr. Lynn McAfee Mr. and Mrs. Steven Gronlund Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Haartz Mr. Patrick Hanafee and Ms. Eva Areces Ms. Susan B. Harlor and William F. Ray, III Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel L. Harris, Jr. Ms. Kathleen Hartley Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Hedrick, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard L. Helm ‘59 Mr. William Hine and Ms. Cathy Hazelton Dr. William C. Hiss and Colleen J. Quint, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin R. Hodsdon Fred and Nancy Holler Mrs. Martha F. Horner Dr. and Mrs. Richard Kappelmann Ms. Deanna Kilbreth Ms. Janet Mittell Kinasewich Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Kinasewich ‘86 Mr. Richard P. Lane and Ms. Denise M. Keough-Lane Mr. Scott LaBombard Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Larsen ‘66 Ms. Patricia Layman Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Lenoue Mr. and Mrs. Jack Leyden Mr. Eric W. List and Ms. Christine J. Trefethen Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Longley ‘52 Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Looney, Jr. Ms. Laurel MacDonald Dr. Patrick S. L. Maidman ‘80

Ms. Alice Mainville Ms. Donna McFarland Mrs. Zella L. Mervis Mr. Steve P. Middleton and Mrs. Julie Poland-Middleton Mr. and Mrs. Wylie L. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. Mark Mosher Mr. Thomas F. Murphy, Jr. ‘56 Mr. Gerald B. Myrick and Ms. Paula LyonsMyrick Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Ness Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Noyes III ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. O’Brien Mr. John Rasmussen and Ms. Margaret O’Donnell Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey W. Ohler Ms. Catherine Paiton Ms. Kathleen Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Manuel I. Plavin ‘43 Mrs. Jean M. Porath ‘49H Mrs. Norma Porras Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Prentice Mrs. Marian H. Prescott Mr. Gerard Puopolo and Ms. Lucy Eversley Dr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Quinn ‘49 Mr. and Mrs. James C. Rea III ‘62 Ms. Cynthia Reedy and Mr. Brad Cummings Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Reinhardt Mr. and Mrs. David Rice Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Rich, Jr. ‘49 Dr. and Mrs. Michael Rifkin Dr. Robert H. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Marc J. Roy ‘78 Mrs. Marguarite Roy Mr. and Mrs. James E. Salisbury Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G. Sampson Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Sarr, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Savas Mr. Mark J. Savran ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy S. Scammon Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Seefried, Jr. Ms. Sheila B. Shelley Dr. Thomas F. Shields and Mrs. Bethel Shields Mrs. Lois E. Silverman Mr. and Mrs. David F. Simmons Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Siragusa Mr. Stephen L. Smith Ms. Margaret Speranza Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Stavis ‘51 Mr. and Mrs. Dana A. Stewart Mr. David Stonebraker and Ms. Leslie Guenther Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess Mr. and Mrs. Gary J. Stuer Mr. and Mrs. John H. Suitor, Jr. ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Taylor Dr. and Mrs. Jou S. Tchao Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tedesco Mr. and Mrs. Michael Telfer Ms. Lorraine M. Thompson Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson ‘79 and Mr. Rolfe Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tobin Ms. Robin Trombino Molly and Lew Turlish Dr. and Mrs. Reynold Villedrouin Mr. Garvin L. Warner and Ms. Margaret Wheeler Mr. and Mrs. Stephen K. West Capt. and Mrs. Richard T. Wheatley Mr. and Mrs. Rupert B. White ‘51

Mr. and Mrs. James D. Whitney ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. Lew Williams Dr. and Mrs. John F. Wilson Ms. Susan R. Witter Chip and Jean Wood Mr. Joseph Zornik and Ms. Pamela Smant

grandparents

Ms. Janet Mittell Kinasewich Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mrs. Nancy McKelvy Mrs. Marguarite Roy Dr. Thomas F. Shields and Mrs. Bethel Shields Ms. Jane Walter

faculty and staff

Mrs. Charlene Allen Mr. Royce W. Beane Mr. James L. Bisesti Mr. Timothy Bonis Mrs. Emily Bonis Mr. Paul S. Brouwer Ms. Molly Brown Ms. Sarah Bryan Ms. Emily Carton Mr. Matt Christie Ms. Sarah Coleman Mr. Wesley Covey Mr. Andrew Crofton Mr. Brad Cummings Mr. Max Davis Mr. Dwight Delano Ms. Grace Drown Mr. Ross Fidler Mr. William Flynn Ms. Carter Ford Mrs. Katie T. Ftorek Mr. Casey Ftorek Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. Rickey Gilbert Mr. Alex J. Godomsky Mrs. Jennifer J. Godomsky Mr. Colin Griggs Mrs. Sarah Griggs Ms. Leslie A. Guenther CWO Charles G. Hall USCG ‘80 Mrs. Celine Hall Mr. Robert N. Hanby Mrs. Meredith Robinson Hanby ‘95 Ms. Tessa Hatch Mr. Joseph M. Hemmings Mr. Peter Horne Ms. Patricia A. Hutter Mr. Max Jennings Mrs. Katya Killian Ms. Patricia Layman Mr. James S. LeBlanc ‘02 Mrs. Ashley LeBlanc Mr. Eric Lundblade Mr. Dan Marchetti Mrs. Courtney Marchetti Ms. Li-ping Miao Mr. Steve P. Middleton Mr. James A. Miller ‘11 Mrs. Amanda Miller Mr. Gabe Miller Mrs. Heidi L. Mosher Mrs. Miriah Nadeau Mrs. Susan Newell Mr. Edwin Nunez Ramirez Ms. Hillary Oakes Mr. Trevor Paul Mrs. Molly E. Paul

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


Mrs. Julie M. Poland-Middleton Mr. Brian Proctor Mr. Tom Radulski Ms. Cynthia C. Reedy Ms. Michelle Riddle Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley ‘99 Ms. Judy M. Roy Mrs. Beverly J. Roy Mr. Austin Sanchez-Moran Mr. Timothy S. Scammon Mr. David W. Stonebraker Mr. Michael Svensson Dr. Daniella Swenton Mr. Michael Tholen Mr. Jeffrey P. Thorpe Mr. Kevin Vining Mr. Travis Vradenburgh Mrs. Kelly Vradenburgh Mrs. Barbara Waterman Ms. Rebekkah Willey Mr. Joshua Witham Ms. Amy Wuori

former faculty and staff

Marilyn M. Ackley Ms. Elizabeth Alden Mrs. Venessa Arsenault Miss Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Mr. John P. Barrett ‘61 Mr. William G. Becker III ‘87 Mrs. Elizabeth G. Becker Mr. William V. S. Carhart ‘51 Mrs. Karen A. Chapman Mr. G. Cyrus Cook ‘73 Mr. John W. Curtis Capt. Peter G. Fallon III ‘86 Ms. Jamie M. Fey ‘02 Mrs. Betsy P. Found Mr. Bruce W. Found Mr. Anthony S. Geraci, Jr. ‘90 Gordon M. Gillies, Esq. ‘62 Mrs. Mary Gillies Ms. Meghan K. Gillis ‘03 Mr. Matthew P. Hampton ‘86 Mrs. Gillian Harris and Mr. Nathaniel Harris, Jr. Mr. Eric Harrison Mr. Andrew M. Haskell ‘90 Dr. William C. Hiss Mr. John J. King Mrs. Marcia King

Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. John T. Leyden, Jr. Mr. Jake T. Leyden ‘99 Mrs. Julie Leyden Mrs. Elizabeth Leyden Ms. Janet Littlefield Mr. Noah S. T. Love ‘07 Mr. John S. Lunt Ms. Hannah Milan Mr. Paul A. Nemetz-Carlson Ms. Margaret A. O’Donnell Mr. Mitchel G. Overbye Mr. John H. Redmond ‘59 Mr. David Rice Mrs. Dorothy Rice Mr. Corey Ridley Mrs. Laura K. Rifkin Mr. Marc Roy ‘78 Ms. Louise M. Roy ‘05 Mr. John W. Slattery ‘04 Mr. John H. Suitor, Jr. ‘62 Mrs. Betsy Switzer and Mr. Alan A. Switzer, Jr. Ms. Liza Tarr Ms. Sarah Twichell Mrs. Jessica Garneau Violette ‘97 Mrs. Jane Williams Mr. Lew Williams Mr. Rufus A. Winsor

current students

Miss Paige G. Bourgoin ‘21 Miss Olivia M. Caggiano ‘22 Mr. Ryan M. Caggiano ‘19 Mr. Jasper A. Curtis ‘22 Miss Jade A. DeWitt ‘24 Miss Thekla C. W. Jubinville ‘20 Miss Morgan A. Prentice ‘19 Miss Sara E. Younk ‘19 Miss Cora Younk ‘21

friends

Anonymous Hebron Academy Parents’ Association MPX Coleman’s Collision J.A.R.B. LLC D/B/A Link’s Variety Fraternal Order of Eagles, #4131 McCann Fabrication Woodman Associates Inc.

PK Holdings Inc. Mechanics Savings Bank Re/Max By The Bay Baird Foundation, Inc. Maple Way Dental Care Zachan Construction LLC V John Hancock (U.S.A.) Settlement LWW Inc. Johnson O’Hare Co., Inc D. Kilton Andrew Jr. Ms. Margaret D. Bird Mr. Rick Bowen Mr. Lawrence A. Boyle Ms. Hope P. Bramhall Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Clayton Mr. and Mrs. James R. Clements Ms. Jeanie M. Cote Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Craig Ms. Shelley Dunn Ms. Elizabeth Eckels Ms. Lee Gaw Mr. and Mrs. William E. Gilpatric Ms. Jennette Hall Mr. and Mrs. David F. Ham Mr. Ira Hershkowitz Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hoeller Mr. Joseph Kavanaugh Mr. Andrew Meehan Mr. Sean Meehan Mr. and Mrs. Harry Meyer Dr. Lawrence Murch Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nadeau Alicia J. Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Norman C. Nicholson Jr. Mr. R. Phillip Peck Ms. Julie Poulin James A. Rosmond Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Sedgeley Mr. and Mrs. David C. Smith Mr. John Stanley Dr. and Mrs. Michael R Stonebraker Ms. Carolyn D. Thornton Mr. and Mrs. Dana E. Twombly Mr. Alexander Vito and Ms. Sherry White

foundations

Foundations Adams Giving Fund of Fidelity Charitable Anonymous (3) Bancroft Initiatives Fund of Vanguard Charitable

The Crisp Family Foundation The Crowley Family Charitable Fund of UBS Davis Family Foundation Crane Fund for Widows & Children Peter and Ellen Fallon Fund of The Boston Foundation Fidelity Charitable J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Rudi Gassner Educational Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation Gillespie/Fahey Family Gift Fund of Fidelity Charitable Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman Fund of Fidelity Charitable Gould Family Fund of The Maine Community Foundation Henry A. and Mary P. Harding Charitable Fund of Fidelity Charitable The Paul and Jill Kaneb Family Charitable Foundation United Way of Androscoggin County The Larabee Family Fund Regis and Carolyn Lepage Fund of UBS Finger Lakes Area Community Endowment Sanchez/Lukens Charitable Giving of Fidelity Charitable The Lunder Foundation MB Fund of Fidelity Charitable Malm Family Charitable Fund of Fidelity Charitable John F. and Jean C. McIlwain Fund of New York Community Trust The Page Foundation Peterson Charitable Fund of Fidelity Charitable The Delaney Bay Fund Renaissance Charitable Foundation Silicon Valley Community Foundation Silverman Family Fund of Fidelity Charitable Simmons Foundation, Inc. R. & F. Stavis Family Foundation Stephens Family Charitable Gift Fund of Fidelity Charitable David and Sarah Stromeyer Charitable Fund of Fidelity Charitable The Kelso F. and Joanna L. Sutton Charitable Gift Fund of Vanguard Tedesco Family Charitable Fund Jou and Mabel Tchao Charitable Gift Fund of Fidelity Charitable Heidi Cornwell Trout Giving Fund of Fidelity Charitable The Captain’s Fund of Schwab Charitable The Walter H. and Hannah H. Webb Family Foundation Dr. Houghton White and Mary Hanks White Fund of Fidelity Charitable Rupert and Ruth White Charitable Fund of UBS The David and Stephanie Williams Family Fund of the Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund William D. Witter Foundation Stephenson Wysor Giving Fund of Fidelity Charitable

matching gift companies

Anonymous Cleveland H. Dodge Foundation, Inc. Fidelity Foundation Bank of America, Matching Gifts Program Northwestern Mutual Foundation YourCause, LLC Pearson Education Matching Gift Program Lincoln Financial Foundation Guggenheim Partners Bottling Group LLC Delta Air Lines Foundation Apple Inc. UBS Financial Services NET Sports Group The Fluor Foundation

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

hebronacademy.org • 33


restricted gifts The following restricted gifts support specific programs and projects of the school.

They document the dedication and commitment of the donors who have made these gifts in consultation with the Academy’s advancement office. Restricted gifts support specific programs and are essential to sustaining the Academy’s margin of excellence. the arts

arena

Ms. Susan J. Garner ‘62H

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Davis Family Foundation Estate of Dr. Edgar A. Hultgren* ‘39 Mr. Jianzhou Jiang and Ms. Xiaomeng Yu Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Kaneb ‘60 Dana Lukens, Esq. Mr. H. Lynwood Martin* ‘37 Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Rines ‘65 Mr. Hong Wu and Ms. Xinhua Chen Mr. Liguo Xu and Ms. Lifang Miao

karl n. murch, 1913 annual scholarship

stonebraker community scholarship

Johnson O’Hare Co., Inc Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr. ‘58 Mr. John D. McGonagle ‘61

Albert Lepage Foundation, Inc. Mr. Albert R. Lepage ‘65

bouldering wall

Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Evans ‘62

Mr. Irakly Geroge Arison Areshidze ‘96 Devon Biondi ‘96 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bergeron Mrs. Jacinda-Beth Kelly Chaisson ‘96 Mr. Robert DeMarco ‘96 Mr. and Mrs. T. Scott Downs ‘86 Dr. Alexandra C. Gillies ‘96 Mr. Brendan Gilpatrick ‘02 and Mrs. Jessica Takach Gilpatrick ‘01 Ms. Lauren Maddin Grand ‘96 Laurie A. Huntress MD ‘90 and Mr. Josh Hounsell Mr. Matthew E. Katz ‘96 Ms. Erica Jean Litchfield ‘94 Courtney and Dan Marchetti Mrs. Jessica Maher Parker ‘95 and Mr. Challen Parker Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Rifkin ‘96 Mr. Adam C. Ross ‘96 Mrs. Sarah Kutzen Strait ‘96 and Mr. Hawley Strait Mrs. Tara Langelier Ujkaj ‘96 Mr. Matthew B. Wilder Jr. ‘92 Miss Cora Younk ‘21

campus master plan

Mr. and Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr., ‘66 Mr. Albert R. Lepage ‘65

crane fund for widows & children garner-mccormack family af scholarship

Dr. Lawrence Murch

cohen concert series

Mr. and Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51

other restricted operations

Bottling Group LLC Mr. G. William Allen ‘62 Mr. and Mrs. Edmund A. Buschmann Mr. and Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hoeller Mr. Leonard A. Mintz ‘53 Mr. David S. Prout ‘83 Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Y. Hagge ‘71 Mr. and Mrs. Regis F. Lepage ‘72 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bennett Mr. Wallace E. Higgins

kaneb center for science and engineering (stem)

Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 and Mr. Bob Crowley

Hearthstone Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. George Allen Mr. Royce W. Beane Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Bonis Ms. Sarah Bryan Mr. Wesley Covey Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67 Mr. Dwight Delano Ms. Grace Drown Mr. Ross Fidler Mr. William Flynn and Ms. Janet Littlefield Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. Rickey Gilbert Mr. and Mrs. Alex J. Godomsky Mr. and Mrs. Colin Griggs CWO and Mrs. Charles G. Hall USCG ‘80 Ms. Tessa Hatch Mr. Peter Horne Ms. Patricia Hutter and Mr. Frank Sinapi Mr. and Mrs. Nick Killian Mr. and Mrs. John J. King

Ms. Patricia Layman Mr. and Mrs. James S. LeBlanc ‘02 Mr. Steve P. Middleton and Ms. Julie Poland-Middleton Ms. Hannah Milan Mr. and Mrs. Edward Newell Mr. and Mrs. Trevor Paul Mr. and Mrs. Brian Proctor Ms. Cynthia Reedy and Mr. Brad Cummings Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley ‘99 and Mr. Corey Ridley Mr. David W. Stonebraker and Ms. Lesli Guenther Dr. and Mrs. Michael R Stonebraker Dr. Daniella Swenton and Mr. Travis Brennan Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey P. Thorpe Mrs. Kelly Vradenburgh Mr. and Mrs. Travis Vradenburgh Mr. and Mrs. John Waterman Ms. Amy Wuori

turf field

Mr. and Mrs. Gary C. Miller ‘68

james c. yovic ‘76 speaker series Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hoeller

the shirley a. found memorial fund Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Found Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67

gifts to endowment Income from Hebron’s endowment provides essential support for annual operations, scholarship programs

and other priority areas. Gifts to the endowment are permanently held, professionally managed and invested for growth and income. We are most grateful to those who have generously given to Hebron’s growing endowment fund. arsenault family endowment Mrs. Venessa Arsenault

benjamin blais endowed memorial ccholarship

Zachan Construction Mechanics Savings Bank Anonymous Ms. Margaret D. Bird Mr. Rick Bowen Ms. Jeanie M. Cote Ms. Elizabeth Eckels Mr. and Mrs. Harry Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nadeau Mr. Alexander Vito and Ms. Sherry White Dr. H. Gilbert Welch & Ms. Linda Doss

claude l. allen scholarship fund Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr. ‘58

endowment campaign initiative Albert Lepage Foundation, Inc. Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Evans ‘62 Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson and Mr. Jim Lawson

34 •

hebron • FALL 2019

Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman ‘55 Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Ambassador and Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Mr. and Mrs. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer ‘56 and Ms. Kay S. Nagle Mr. David S. Prout ‘83 Mr. and Mrs. James C. Rea III ‘62 Robert J. Ryan, Esq. ‘77 Mr. Robert Waite ‘68 and Ms. Karen Shigeishi-Waite Dr. William A. Weary ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. and Mrs. Scott E. Wilson ‘71

gould scholarship endowment Mr. Ralph A. Gould, Jr. ‘41

jill and paul kaneb endowed scholarship Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Kaneb ‘60

leyden chair endowment

Ms. Sharon Lake-Post ‘83 and Family Mrs. Beverly Leyden

Mr. David Stonebraker and Ms. Leslie Guenther

lunder scholarship endowment

other endowment income

Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79

The Lunder Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Marc Lunder ‘82 Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Lunder ‘52

robert andrew mccormack scholarship fund

margery and ladd macmillan scholarship endowment

smith scholarship endowment

Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Forte ‘62

Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr. ‘58 Mr. William R. Sepe ‘53

stonebraker library endowment Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67 Mr. and Mrs. James C. Rea III ‘62

noyes family scholarship endowment

witter family scholarship endowment

Mr. John M. Noyes ‘60

hebron parents association scholarship

Mr. William P. Witter ‘82

Hebron Academy Parents’ Association

perkins scholarship endowment Mrs. Louise S. Thompson ‘55H

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy M. Caddo ‘85

If your name has been listed incorrectly, please contact Beverly Roy at 207-966-5266 or email broy@hebronacademy.org.

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019


franklin society Established in 1994, the Franklin Society honors those individuals who have included Hebron in their estate plans, either by naming the Academy as a beneficiary in a will or in another planned gift.

Mr. G. William Allen ‘62 Mr. John C. Andrews, Jr.* ‘48 Mr. David L. Babson* Mr. Donald E. Bates ‘62 Mr. Herbert A. Black II ‘49 Mr. Albert R. Blacky ‘39* Mr. Peter B. Boody ‘69 Henry H. Booth, Esq. ‘53 J. Reeve Bright, Esq. ‘66 Mr. Philip H. Chadbourne* ‘20 Estate of David Christison* ‘38 The Hon. F. Davis Clark* ‘34 Mr. Keith Clark ‘58 Mr. Ralph A. Corbett* ‘25 Mr. Kennedy Crane III* ‘58 Ms. Trudy P. Crane Mrs. Henrietta P. Crane, Estate* Mrs. Anne Davis ‘28 Mr. Wilfred S. Davis* ‘28 Mrs. Maida S. Demos Dr. Theodore Neil Divine* ‘55 Mr. Blaine E. Eynon, Jr. ‘65 Mr. Peter G. Fallon, Jr. Estate of Jose W. Fenderson, Esq.* ‘33 Estate of Lester Forbes* ‘38 and Mrs. Marjorie Forbes* ‘38H Mrs. Alice W. Forester* Mr. Richard S. Forte ‘62 Mrs. Elizabeth Friend* Estate of James H. Galli* ‘38 Mr. John R. Giger ‘64

Gordon M. Gillies, Esq. ‘62 Mr. James A. Gillies III ‘55 Mr. Robert I. Glass* ‘50 Mr. Richard W. Goode* ‘35 Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mrs. Elinor Goodwin* Mr. Ralph A. Gould, Jr. ‘41 Dr. Robert C. Greaves ‘82 Mr. John Hankins* ‘21 and Mrs. Nellie E. Hankins ‘21H Mr. Stephen E. Hawkes* ‘57 Mr. Willis Hay* ‘32 Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Dr. William C. Hiss Mr. Joseph B. Hodgkins II ‘63 Mrs. Susan Y. Hoeller Mr. Joseph F. Holman, Trust* ‘43 Estate of George S. Hosmer, Jr.* ‘39 Ms. Kimberly C. Housman ‘89 Estate of Dr. Edgar A. Hultgren* ‘39 Mr. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79 Mr. David E. Jessich ‘71 Mr. Edward A. Johnson* ‘49 Mr. Stephen W. Lane ‘62 Mrs. Rosamond A. Lownes Mrs. Margery L. MacMillan* Mr. C. Michael Malm’60 Mr. C. Arthur Mayo* ‘32 Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr. ‘58 CAPT Carlton A. K. McDonald USN ‘43 Mr. John D. McGonagle ‘61

Mr. Robert W. Messer II* 1905 Estate of Donald F. Miller* ‘51 Mr. Leonard A. Mintz ‘53 Mr. Jonathan G. Moll ‘69 Mr. John O. Monks ‘48 Mr. Philip H. Montgomery* ‘52 Helen Morton Estate* Estate of Richard E. Nickerson* ‘41 Dr. Philip B. Norton Mr. Karl-Heinz Nottebohm* Mr. Edward D. Noyes III ‘58 Mr. Payson S. Perkins* ‘53 Mr. Frederick E. Peterson ‘61 Estate of John W. Powell* ‘35 and Marjorie P. Powell* ‘35H Robert F. Preti ‘42 Mr. Walter M. Ray II* Mr. Robert J. Raymond ‘55 Mrs. Mary Rea* Mr. Robert P. Rich, Jr. ‘49 Mr. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53

Mrs. Barbara Rowell ‘43 Mr. James E. Salisbury Mr. Mark J. Savran ‘72 Mr. John A. Schaff ‘61 Mrs. Myrtle M. Sherman* Mrs. Vera Simmons* Mr. Stephen L. Smith Mr. Andrew O. Smith ‘80 Mr. Richard H. Sprince* ‘43 Mr. Roger F. Stacey ‘61 Mr. Warren W. Stearns* ‘28 Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 Mr. Kelso F. Sutton ‘57 Mr. Ken C. Sweezey ‘63 Mr. Thomas W. Thompson ‘66 Dr. Molly B. Turlish Mr. Edmond Vachon* Mr. Eugene L. Vail * 26 and Mrs. Ruth Vail* ‘26H Mr. C. Thomas Van Alen ‘56 Mr. Paul M. Wagner, Estate, Jr.* ‘39 Mr. Robert E. Waite ‘68 Mr. Richard S. Waxman ‘64 Mr. Jeffrey Weber Mr. Ralph H. Wells* ‘50 Mr. Neal L. Whitman* ‘39 Mr. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. William P. Witter ‘82 Mr. Jay L. Woolsey, Estate* Mr. Kenneth P. Wright * ‘26 and Mrs. Welthy B. Wright* ‘26H

volunteers for hebron We are pleased and proud to acknowledge the volunteer efforts of alumni, parents and friends who give freely of their time and talents in support of the Academy’s people and programs.

board of trustees

Mr. William G. Becker III ‘87 Mr. Richard Bennett Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 Mrs. Felica W. Coney Mr. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Ms. Jamie M. Fey ‘02 Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Dr. Robert C. Greaves ‘82 Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Mr. Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Mr. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Mr. Barrett S. Mitchell ‘02 Mr. David S. Prout ‘83 Robert J. Ryan, Esq. ‘77 Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess Robert E. Waite ‘68

event hosts

Mr. and Mrs. William G. Becker III Mr. Paul S. Goodof Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries Mr. and Mrs. J. Matthew Lyness

class agents

Mr. Robert P. Rich, Jr. ‘49 Mr. Edward L. Ruegg ‘51 Rev. Kenneth A. Boyle ‘52 Mr. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53 Mr. Michael Maher ‘54 Mr. Richard J. Parker ‘55 Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer ‘56 Mr. Michael A. Mentuck ‘57 Hon. Charles B. Swartwood III ‘57 Mr. Bernard L. Helm ‘59 Mr. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. G. William Allen ‘62 Mr. William C. Harding, Jr. ‘63 Mr. John R. Giger ‘64 Mr. Evan E. Mahaney ‘65 Mr. Harvey L. Lowd ‘66 Mr. Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr. ‘68 Mr. Jonathan G. Moll ‘69 Mr. Craig Clark ‘70 Mr. Harvey A. Lipman ‘71 Mr. Stephen R. Gates ‘72 Mr. James R. Moulton ‘73 Mr. Roger T. Clark ‘74 Miss Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Mr. C. Reed Chapman ‘76

hebron academy report of giving 2018-2019

Mr. Robert M. Hernon ‘77 Mr. George M. Dycio ‘78 Mr. Brian O. Cloherty ‘79 Ms. Elizabeth Siekman Graves ‘80 Mrs. Jane Hepburn Fiore ‘81 Mr. Tucker Cutler ‘82 Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 Mrs. Deborah Schiavi Cote ‘84 Mr. T. Scott Downs ‘86 Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 Mrs. Ann Snyder Mooradian ‘88 Mr. M. Hayes McCarthy ‘89 Mr. Andrew M. Haskell ‘90 Dr. Scott R. Nelson ‘91 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Dr. Marko I. Radosavljevic ‘93 Ms. Erica J. Litchfield ‘94 Mrs. Jessie Maher Parker ‘95 Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Ms. Kirsten L. Ness ‘98 Mr. Joseph J. Patry ‘99 Mr. Erik P. Yingling ‘00 Mrs. Sara Marquis Barker ‘03 Ms. Bettina Voigt Herrick ‘05 Miss Allison M. Coombs ‘06 Miss Jennifer A. Duguay ‘08

Ms. Andrea J. Hart ‘08 Miss Ye Chen ‘09 Ms. Claire E. Cummings ‘09 Ms. Emma L. Leavitt ‘10 Miss Sophia M. Bartolomeo ‘11 Mr. Maxwell A. Middleton ‘12 Miss Kathryn M. Couture ‘13 Miss Donita G. Sharkey ‘14 Miss Rachel H. Jurek ‘15 Miss Summer Surgent-Gough ‘17

hebron academy parent association board

Officers Mr. Jeff Prentice P ’15, ’16, ‘19, president Ms. Alissa Gumprecht P ’20, ‘24, vicepresident Mr. Paul Jacques P ‘20, treasurer Ms. Wendy Younk P ’19, ‘21, secretary Members at Large Ms. Wendie Bourgoin P ‘21 Ms. Alyssa Caggiano P ’19, ‘22 Ms. Heidi Dock P ‘21 Dr. Lynn McAfee P ’18, ‘22 Mr. Steve Pelletier P ‘23 Ms. Deborah Richmond P ’12, ’16, ’18, ‘20

hebronacademy.org • 35


classnotes ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

1943

John W. Lawry hopes to renew his license this fall at age 95. He still plays Bridge four times a week. He has given up tennis for good and is now on a cane.

1949 Joseph Quinn’s wife, Colleen, writes that Joe is in his 17th year of Alzheimers, but he is happy and good natured. I take care of him at home with the help of loving children and caretakers.

1950 Emerson D. Colby MS, DVM writes I did a post-graduate year with the class of 1950. Not necessarily for the usual academics but for the maturity it would provide. As it worked out I received a big dose of both disciplines: academics and maturity. There were several significant highlights for me, and this letter is prompted by what the Williams family has recently done for Hebron as an Institution. I took his, “Barney’s” (as students called him – behind his back) English class, and in spite of his newness to the Institution he had already developed a reputation for the written word. It was a 500+ word paragraph every Friday, to be returned on Wednesday, at the latest, and always decorated with a very prominent letter grade showing on the top right hand corner. He dressed most frequently with the penchant for Black, as a color. As he walked by my desk the week we headed home for Christmas We love hearing from you! Please send news or contact updates to your class agent or to broy@ hebronacademy.org. 36 •

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break, he smiled and said; “Congratulations Colby, you did it.” It was a passing grade. A Christmas present; maybe! I usually had good grades in high school, and yet he had spent the fall season in 1949 taking me down a few pegs. His stature, his presentation and his wit, dry as I always thought it was, always pervaded his classroom and the students who sat there. He knew us all by name, and that personal touch always seemed to be part of his overtly true and deep-down fatherly nature. I have used that story many times over the last 60 years or so. He made a lasting impression. In addition to the English taught by “Black Barney” in his English class there was a chance to do other things at Hebron; like take math and learn that the chemical engineering I thought I desired as a vocation was not to be. The chemistry was fun, and math was the interloper that was to prevent it from happening unless there was great sacrifice on my part. Good lesson learned the hard way. So a life of medicine filled in the niche for the chemistry. For exercise there was skiing. I was coached on the fine art of downhill racing (after the walk up) and ultimately reminded that it is a two-race sport. So, I learned to jump. That always seemed to provide entertainment for all as well as initiating cerebral moments to overcome a somewhat limited fear of heights. The other really bright spot, in addition to English and skiing, was German. I’d tried Latin in high school and had not made it. A year of French in Sanford high school was secondary to the French I learned from friends while working during the summer, as Sanford at that time had another high school by the name of Saint Ignatius. All French!

At Hebron, I took German as a language and did extremely well. It took me about thirty years to realize why; and there in lies the story. At Hebron I was “struggling” to learn English, 500 words at a time, and acing the foreign language; while in high school it had been the other way around. In the basement of Sturtevant home there was a big boiler room, kept clean, very warm and functioning by an elderly man of Finnish descent. He spoke very little English, but lots of German. I would get up at 4:00 AM and go alone to the boiler room where he introduced me to his coffee, that could stand by itself in a corner, and he too taught me German. Between the gentle elderly man, and the Hebron German language professor (weekly tests all A’s- in sharp contrast of my early –on attempts at English), I learned some German that has withstood the test of time. How I got in contact with the Finnish gentleman I do not remember, but I do remember all of those mornings, after learning to drink stand-alone columns of the dark brew he seemed to live on, we spoke German together. He also helped me with the vocabulary, the pronunciation and how to use it: real time. Hebron was good for me. I grew physically and mentally as well as academically; most of it due to the efforts, love and determination of three people, S Barnitz Williams, a German language educator and Hebron faculty member and a Finnish gentleman with a great big heart; all of them seemed to want me to succeed. I can still see Mr. Williams as he walked by my desk and threw down that written paragraph with the “C” so very prominently marked on the top of the paper, While saying, out of the corner of his mouth;

“Congratulations Colby you finally made it.” Have I said that already? I can still feel the pride at the incident. The German language faculty member not only presided over the language class but my place in the dining hall: when I wasn’t taking my turn waiting on table, of course. Then there was a ski coach, who presided successfully over ski jumping fears so that even years later I was once again taken briefly to the air, valiantly waving my arms to keep ‘flying’. He had always said I was not the ‘bird’ I seem to think I was. But the ground always seemed to be so far away. The memory of Mr. S. Barnitz Williams is now appropriately displayed for all to see, but the truly lucky ones were once his students. To be a successful teacher, in my mind, is a lot like being a very successful parent; and S. Barney Williams was such an individual. He surely had a ‘big family;’ at least in the Hebron class of 1950; according to me of course.

1951 Edward L. Ruegg writes: Had a fall and a hairline fracture of my femur was the result. All is ok now after much PT and walking. Can’t believe we have been out 65 years-anybody planning to be at reunion next fall? Think about it.

1954 Demas W. Jasper is still writing on Hubpages.com, Senior companion to five men, five children, 17 grandkids; wife Manolie and I have a farm and orchard, active in LDS Church, own our health store. We are both 83. She does well-being coaching. All children degreed professionals.


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

1957 Are you on the class of 1957 email list? If you didn’t get this picture of Dave Babson doing his chores (see below) then you are missing out! Send your email address to Mike Mentuck at mikem@salvor.com or Beverly Roy at broy@hebronacademy.org. You won’t regret it.

1959 James C. Harberson writes: I hope all my classmates are doing well! Tycho T. von Rosenvinge says he hopes to make it to reunion in October.

1960 Bruce E. Gunther left Hebron in 1959 and went to Hackary School in Tarrytown, NY. Graduated from there and entered Middlebury College and graduated from there. Career with Exxon Mobil. David Barbour says all is well. I just got back from three months in Jupiter, FL.

1963 William C. Harding is still playing! He shared the following: Our Bluegrass band, Pasture Prime, has released an album titled “Live at the Heartwood Soundstage” -copies soonJoseph B. Hodgkins noted - Still Alive and Well!

Michael V. Bergamini is currently Chief Scientific Advisor to Nicox S.A and Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology and Neuroscience at University of North Texas Health Science Center. Harli and I toured Sicily for ten days after dropping our daughter Nicole off at The National Research Center in Palermo for her spring trimester at Union College. ...”life goes on, oh,la,la,la, life goes on.”

1964 Condolences to David Loker on the passing of his brother Robert ‘59.

1966 Paul Manning It’s always a great sadness to me to hear of people passing away at Hebron. What wonderful memories they left behind.

1969 Condolences to Wesley Loker on the passing of his brother Robert ‘59.

1970 Joseph Pyle retired recently from Commercial and Industrial Mechanical Construction based in Philadelphia. Timothy Braddock loves being back in Maine. Friends, music, job and oh yea - The Ocean!

1971 Condolences to Stephen Pollard on the passing of his father David. Peter Hoople responded to the most recent letter from his Class Agent - Harvey’s latest epistle (the “Ewe Lamb”) reminds us how instrumental former English instructor Wilton Beauchamp has been to all of our successes. There is no greater gift than a rigorous and thoughtful liberal arts education.

1972 Steve Gates writes: Our daughter Zoe graduated from Brown in December and is now in Boulder, CO, as an Assistant Editor for Backpacker Magazine. She is thrilled to be able to mash up her love of the outdoors with her non-fiction writing degree (and rock climbing every chance she gets). Our son Nick found his way into the Commercial Real Estate, financing business at Citizens Bank in Boston, after graduating from Lafayette two years ago. As retirement nears, we are building a house on Kezar Lake in Lovell, ME, to enjoy for many lazy summer days to come! Mark Savran had a rough 2018. He shared the following: Lost my right foot 60%. Able to skate, walk, etc. Lots of great care. Dating my former Medford coach’s daughter. She’s an athlete, LOL. Now more grandkids. Ed Lewis wrote while on the road this afternoon, I was thinking about my Hebron days where my main interest was (and is to this day) the Outing Club. Many, many weekends, both during and after the school term were spent hiking in the White Mountains of Maine and New Hampshire. It was at that time a couple of ‘bucket list’ items formulated: one to go to Argentina and the other to hike in Cordillera de los Andes (not necessarily in Argentina, but anywhere). We have returned from the latest of several trips to South America, this time to Parque Nacional Torres del Paine in Chile. Yes, I did spend some time thinking about Hebron and the Outing Club as I hiked up to

Mike Mentuck ’57 and John McIlwain ‘57 catch up on Mike’s boat Valle Frances; that has to be one of the most spectacular places on the planet. Interestingly the vegetation transforms from deciduous woodland to alpine - same as in New Hampshire - except the vegetation is all various species of nothofagus (false beech, endemic to the South). There are no spruce fir forests or true beech forests in the Far South. The vegetation transition in Ecuador is different, but equally as interesting. There, a few years ago I was treated to a snowstorm, fog and rain in the treeless alpine region on the equator line – just like in New England. Ironically, just earlier today, we are starting to plan our next trip South - to see the total eclipse of the sun on December 14, 2020 which crosses the Southern Cone, one week before the summer solstice. We are hoping to meet up with a few of our old time friends. If anyone is heading that way, let us know! Incidentally, we did make our trip to Argentina - a spectacular locale high in the Andes near Aconcagua, the highest point in the Americas!

1975 Erik C. Bateman is enjoying the next phase of life with two young granddaughters as well as his own 14 and 11 year olds. He writes that southern California is still home but he spend lots of time developing property in Dallas-Ft. Worth.

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1976

1989

Condolences to Elizabeth Carrier on the passing of her father John “Jack” Carrier.

Condolences to Chase Damon on the passing of her dad W. Cotton Damon.

Condolences to Robert Thomas on the loss of his wife Barbara. Condolences to Mark Nason on the passing of his father Wendell Nason. Mel Nadeau shared his thoughts about classmate Becky Webber. I was sad to hear the news about Becky; she had a great smile. I usually release my first salmon in mom’s memory. This year it will be in Becky’s.

1978 Condolences to Peter Webber on the passing of his sister Rebecca Webber ‘76.

1979 Condolences to Geraldine Canning on the passing of her father Charles Canning. Jane Harris Ash shared that Irene Veayo Pike died in May, 2018, in Wasilla, AK.

1990 Gunnar Olson has returned to New England to become the Director of College Advising at Kimball Union Academy.

1991 Scott Nelson is thoroughly enjoying life on the Main Line. Hoping for a Hebron event in Philly in 2019-20.

1993 Condolences to Faith Sykes on the passing of her dad W. Cotton Damon.

1996 Congratulations to George (Irakly) Arison on his wedding to Dr. Robert Luo.

2000

Condolences to Elizabeth Graves on the passing of her stepmother Margot Butterfield Siekman.

Noah Burns earned tenure as a professor of chemistry at Stanford University. His research involves synthesizing organic molecules. He earned his BA from Columbia University in NYC, his PhD from The Scripps Research Institute and was an NIH Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard University.

1982

2001

1980 Condolences to John Webber on the passing of his sister Rebecca Webber ‘76.

Condolences to Samuel W. Pollard on the passing of his father, David Pollard.

1985 Condolences to John H. Suitor, III on the passing of his mother, Carol Place.

1988 Condolences to Samuel Goodman on the passing of his father, the Honorable James A. Goodman ‘55. 38 •

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Condolences to Daniel Siekman on the passing of his mother Margot Butterfield Siekman.

Summer at Kennebago: L to R: Emily Rea Hunt ‘91, Dave Stonebraker, Leslie Guenther, Daphne Rea White ‘88 and Windi Bowditch ‘89

2002

2010

James and Ashley LeBlanc welcomed Gordon James LeBlanc in March. He weighed 8 lbs. and 6 ounces and was 21 inches long.

Ben Clegg is a territory manager at Lone Pine Brewery.

2003

Lucas Schandelmeier is working at Boston Benefit Partners and loves living on Beacon Hill.

Timothy B. Curtis was promoted to the rank of Major in October, 2018.

Past Faculty and Staff

2004

David Rice retired in Bradenton, Florida. Still teaching! Adult Memoir Groups Poetry.

Abby Burns is graduating from the OB-GYN residency at Harvard University. She earned her BA at Stanford University, her MD from UCSF and an MSW from UC Berkeley. She has accepted a job in a practice affiliated with The Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and will be an attending physician there. She is married to Brett Thornton. Their daughter, Violet Burns-Thornton, was born in August 2018.

Colin and Sarah Griggs have welcomed Henry Gorer Griggs into the world in August, weighing a healthy 8 lbs., 14 oz and “standing” 21.5” tall. They are over the moon excited for him, and Raleigh thinks he is very happy to be a big brother.

2006 Condolences to Deane Napoli on the loss of his grandfather Deane Lawrence Hutchins ’43. Kelley Hilton is finishing up a physicians assistant program at Castleton University.

2008 Condolences to Emma Janeczko on the passing of her dad, Paul Janeczko. Paul was a frequent visitor to Hebron classrooms over the years, and we will miss him. Jonathan Myles recently received his MPH in Global Health Management from Boston University. Mike Simms and Nick Roy ’10 are working at Vetro FiberMap in Portland. Former physics teacher, Chris Chudsiki, joined them there in July.

Welcome back to Cecil Wheeler who stopped by campus for a visit this summer. Cecil was the comptroller from 1964-72.


obituaries

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1939

Richard “Dick” Field, beloved dad, granddad, and friend to many, age 97, passed at home on April 17, 2018. He was born in Hebron, Maine, and moved to Miami in 1950. After serving in WWII, he married his wife Jean, and became a teacher. Richard was always quick to help those in need and lend a hand whenever asked. He will be missed by those who knew him for his wit, compassion, love of nature, and for being just a phone call away.

1942 Kenneth W. Hendy, 95, of Rockport, passed away July 2, 2019. He was the beloved husband of the late Ruth M. (Davis) Hendy. Born in Gloucester, son of the late Frederick C. and Alice Jane M. (Waters) Hendy, Kenneth was raised and educated in Gloucester and was a graduate of Gloucester High School with the class of 1941 and Hebron Academy. He attended the Citadel before WWII and Carlton College post war. As an honorably discharged veteran, he served his country during World War II as a member of the 19th Bombardment Squad in the Pacific and as a member of the 93rd Bombardment Squad in Europe for the United State Air Force. Mr. Hendy had been employed as a postal worker for the United States Postal Service for many years. He enjoyed playing the trumpet from his high school days in the ROTC marching band and throughout his long retirement in various New England Shriner bands.

1943 Lester Ezra Bradford passed away peacefully at his home on March 3, 2019. Lester was born

on January 20, 1926, in Greenwood, Maine. When Lester was 11, his family moved to Hebron, Maine, where they farmed a small plot of land. Everett, his father, was the night watchman for the nearby Hebron Academy, where Lester attended high school. Upon graduation he studied for a year at the University of Maine, Orono, planning to become a pilot. Knowing that WWII would be over well before he completed his training, he switched to the much shorter training program for tail gunners. His discharge papers say he was a tail gunner and a librarian. Lester then attended Yale University where he met and fell in love with a young doctor named Winifred Ruth Smith, who was studying Chinese and hoping to become a medical missionary to China. With no missionaries being sent to China after the communist takeover, Winifred was sent to Red Bird Mission in Kentucky, and later to Sierra Leone in West Africa. In Sierra Leone, Winnie ran a birth and pediatric center and Lester an agricultural test farm. There the couple was joined by five children: Dorcas, Julie, Joel, Ethan, and Melinda. In 1968, the family moved to Bogalusa, Louisiana, where Lester worked for the Louisiana State University extension service, and soon they moved to Baton Rouge, where Lester earned his Doctorate of Education. The newly minted “Dr. Bradford #2” received a job offer from Washington State University as county agent in charge of 4-H programs, education and forestry for Skagit and Island Counties. In 1979, Lester accepted a job with Development Alternatives Incorporated, a contractor with the U.S. State Department’s Agency for International Development. He and Winnie returned to Africa, this time to Sudan, to help restore extension education there

after a recent civil war. When that contract was done, Lester became D.A.I.’s Head of Mission for Sudan. His next destination was Peshawar, Pakistan, working, indirectly, for the state department. After he “retired,” Lester traveled overseas for many volunteer jobs which took him to Zimbabwe, Bolivia, Brazil, the Ukraine, Indonesia, and Haiti. Back home in Mount Vernon, he was an active member of the community, volunteering for the First United Methodist Church, Neighbors in Need, Northwest Trails Association, and Habitat for Humanity. He was an avid hiker and a sought after hiking companion, partly due to his encyclopedic knowledge of local plants and birds. He was a polyglot: in high school he learned French, Spanish, Latin, and German. In Sierra Leone, he learned Kono, Mende, and Krio. After retirement, he studied Russian. He befriended his Russian teacher and her two young daughters, taking them on hikes and introducing them to his friends. Lester was invited to join a group of American teachers going to Russia to meet with their counterparts, later returning to Russia to teach a high school class.

1947 William (Bim) H. Clifford Jr., a long-term Lewiston, ME, resident, died peacefully in his home on July 4, 2019, knowing he was deeply loved by his children, grandchildren, family, and friends. Bim was born in Lewiston on Oct. 20, 1929, the son of Attorney William H. Clifford, Sr. and Alice Sughrue Clifford. He attended Lewiston Public Schools and Hebron Academy. In 1951, he graduated from Bowdoin College, where his primary focus was on cribbage and football. Following graduation, he served in the Unit-

ed States Army. He then attended Boston University Law School, and soon after passing the bar, he began practicing law, as well as serving as an Assistant County Attorney for Androscoggin County. In 1966 he was elected County Attorney, where he served two terms. Bim was also elected to the Maine State Senate and served in the 105th legislature. He was passionate about his community and incredibly civic-minded. He loved working, and his final years were spent in counsel with the firm of Skelton, Taintor, and Abbott. Bim was an excellent golfer and a member of Martindale Country Club. He served in many leadership positions there. He shot at least one hole-in-one, and at age 69 played a round of golf where he scored a 69. Bim’s true passion was furniture making. He took great pride in learning, planning, making, and eventually gifting his Shaker and Windsor style furniture to family and friends. Bim was also incredibly proud of the friendships and community he developed in the nearly 30 years he spent as part of Alcoholics Anonymous. He was a sponsor to many who suffered various addictions and helped guide himself, and many others, to sobriety. In 1965 he married Cynthia Searles Clifford, the one love of his life, who predeceased him.

1948 William “Bill” Watson Jr. of Alton (NH), passed away peacefully at home on Saturday, June 29th. Bill was born on November 15th, 1928, in Milton (MA) and grew up in Auburn (ME). He attended Hebron Academy where he was a proud member of the ski team. Bill obtained his pilot’s license when he was 15 and was an avid flyer throughout his life. In his Piper Cub airplane, his curiosity led him across the country. For hebronacademy.org • 39


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE many years, he traveled to the Sun ‘n Fun Fly-in expo in Lakeland, Florida where he loved interacting with other pilots. He spent much of his career working for Doall Boston Company and his father’s company TechCraft. Bill moved his family to Alton Bay in 1969 and never left. He began volunteering at the ice runway and exploring Lake Winnipesaukee from the water and sky. He insisted on meticulously keeping his yard landscaped, keeping his late wife happy and his family entertained. Bill will be sorely missed by his family and friends.

1950 Howard A. Burns, died peacefully in his sleep on Thursday, March 7, 2019 in Holyoke, MA. He was born November 26, 1930, to the late Winfred and Eva (Dame) Burns of Greenfield. He was a graduate of the University of Massachusetts where he earned a B.A. in Physical Education and Mathematics. In college he was drafted into the U.S Army during the Korean War, where he was deployed on the peninsula as a cryptographer. He received his M.S. in Kinesiology from the University of Illinois. In 1956, he married Barbara (Rugani), whom he met at UMass, and they have lived in Westfield since 1962. He taught and coached baseball, basketball and soccer at Springfield Technical High School, and basketball at Central High School, winning Div 1 State Championships in all three sports. He coached baseball for East Springfield Post #420, Westfield State College, and the Westfield Platers of the Tri-County League. He loved his students and players from all backgrounds, remaining in contact with many over the years, helping them in any way he could. Howard was a parishioner of Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament Church. Alfred William “Bill” Kany Jr., of Ferry Road, passed away Aug. 4, 2019 at the Southern Maine Health Care in Biddeford with his family by his side. Bill was born in New York City, May 5, 1931, the son of Dr. Alfred W. Kany Sr. and Dorothy Hurd Sawyer. He attended local schools, Hebron 40 •

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Academy and then enrolled in the Saco Lowell Training and Management program and graduated in 1955. In 1954, Bill married Anne J. Baker. Bill was in manufacturing for years including working at Saco Lowell/ Maremont as a manager, later as plant superintendent for W. H. Nichols Co. and finally as president of Lund Manufacturing. Bill then became president of Saco and Biddeford Savings and ended his working career as chairman of the board for Saco and Biddeford Savings. Bill’s community involvement was significant. He was a member and former Deacon of First Parish Congregational Church of Saco UCC, president of the Biddeford Saco Chamber of Commerce, president of the Saco Business Association, member of the Biddeford SacoRotary Club and Saco Masonic Lodge, where he was a 50-year member. He founded Saco Spirit. Bill chaired capital campaigns for Sweetser Services and Thornton Academy and spearheaded the creation and funding of York County Community College. He helped fundraise for Mary’s Walk for many years. For his service in the development of York County Community College, he received an honorary degree in 2002 and had the endowment fund named after him in 2009. Mr. Kany enjoyed skiing, golf, boating and travel with family and friends. He was happiest at the cottage at Mt. Abram.

1952 It is with great sadness that the family of Kermit L. Kenler, M.D. (Skip) announces his passing on March 23, 2019. He is survived by his wife, Ruth (Horvitz) Kenler, to whom he was married for almost 62 years, and his children, Elizabeth Kenler Bucky (Louis Bucky, M.D.) Andrew S. Kenler, M.D. (Kelly Kenler) and Deborah Kenler Krevalin (Stephen Krevalin) and (former daughter-in-law Sally Rubens Kenler). Skip was the proud grandfather of seven grandchildren. Skip was born and raised in New Bedford, Massachusetts, the son of Maurice D.

Kenler, M.D. and Rose Horowitz Kenler. He graduated from Hebron Academy, received a B.A. from Washington and Jefferson University, and his M.D. degree from Tufts University School of Medicine. Skip served his country at Otis Airforce Base, on Cape Cod. He completed his residency in OB/GYN at the Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, where he was Chief Resident. In 1967, he joined Ob/GYN Associates of Springfield and practiced medicine for 47 years. He was a Clinical Professor at Tufts Medical School and past President of the Wesson Women’s Hospital. He was a member of the Executive Committee at Baystate Medical Center and the Boston Obstetrical Society. He was also on staff at Bay Path College and taught Women’s Health. Skip was an excellent athlete. He played varsity football at Hebron and later in life became an avid tennis player and golfer. His most cherished times were spent with family on Cape Cod. He will be remembered as a loving husband, father, grandfather, and great grandfather as well as a respected physician and loyal friend. Family was the driving purpose in his life and what defined his character. Richard J. Simonds died June 15, 2019 in Chelan, WA. Robert C Skeele “Just Bob” 85, of Citrus Hills, Florida, passed April 24, 2019, following a brief illness. He was born on August 7, 1933, in Syracuse, New York, the son of Carl and Beulah Skeele. He graduated from Hebron Academy in Maine and then attended Ohio Wesleyan University. A lifelong athlete and adventurer, he lived many years in the rocky mountains of Colorado and Green Mountains of Vermont where he was an avid mountaineer, cyclist and alpine skier.

1954 Charles Spicer Huestis, formerly of West Falmouth, died July 16 at the age of 84. Mr. Huestis, who had a long battle with Parkinson’s disease, had moved to Woodbridge, Connecticut, last year. He was the husband of Adele

C. Huestis for 50 years. He was born in Portland, Maine, the son of Doris Rideout Huestis and Charles Stanley Huestis. He graduated from Norwich Free Academy and Hebron Academy, where he excelled in football, basketball and tennis. Mr. Huestis received a bachelor of arts degree in history from the University of Bridgeport, where he was captain of the men’s tennis team and a member of Theta Sigma fraternity. He was a veteran of the US Army, serving during the Korean War. Mr. Huestis had a long career as a sales executive for Westvaco and Mead paper companies. He traveled extensively throughout the world on business and with his family. His trips included visits to Europe, Asia, Australia and Africa. During the latter part of his career, he oversaw the Asian division for Mead and spent several years living with his wife in Tokyo. He played golf and tennis into his 80’s and enjoyed croquet tournaments with his children and grandchildren.

1956 Mr. Philip D. Brown, Phil passed away March 4, 2019. Edward Corley Langley died peacefully on March 6, 2019. He was born in Burlington, Vermont on September 23,1936, the only child of Rena Elizabeth Corley and Paul Menard Langley. He was named after his Grandfather Edward B. Corley, the City Clerk of Burlington during the 1930’s. He graduated from Brunswick High School and Hebron Academy before attending Norwich University and graduating in 1960, which, in turn, would shape much of his life. Upon entering the Army as a 2/LT, he served throughout the United States, Korea and Vietnam reaching the rank of Major and receiving many commodations and awards. He returned to Norwich for his last assignment to serve as an Assistant Commandant. After his time at Norwich, he became the Director of Vermont Historic Sites. He went on to become an auditor with the Auditors of Accounts for the State of Vermont. He later transferred to the De-


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE partment of Transportation from which he retired. Ed was heavily involved with all things Norwich. Being an avid swimmer, he coached at the University as well as the youth swim team in Northfield. He would spend many years officiating for the collegiate swim events. He was instrumental in developing the present standards for collegiate rules of officiating swim meets in New England. He took tickets at the football and hockey games, volunteered as a driving service for over 650 students who had doctor appointments out of town, and was a constant supporter for student athletes. He was often seen walking his beloved dog around the campus or driving around town with his identifying license plate “NU60”. Ed delivered Meals on Wheels, served in several capacities at St. John’s Catholic Church, helped with the Northfield Saving Bank Labor Day Races, and the Corporate Cup Challenge. He served as a judge for the Labor Day Parade for many years. He, along with his wife and their good friends, Pat and Ted Nelson, were honored by being elected Grand Marshals of the parade several years ago. Ed was a voracious reader and an avid gardener. His love for his community, Norwich and his family can only be matched by his love of the Norwich Women’s Rugby Team. He served as their #1 fan, traveling with them and supporting them for many years. Ed will be missed for his incredible sense of humor, enthusiastic story telling, his impeccable service to our country, his family and Norwich University.

1959 Robert P. Loker, Jr. (Rob) passed into eternity on Saturday, June 15, 2019, quietly at home, in the arms of his beloved wife, Susan. Born on March 23, 1940, in Needham, MA, Rob attended Hebron Academy and Babson College, prior to joining the Army in 1962. Stationed in Germany, he was with the Counter Intelligence Corps for four years. He was a proud and patriotic veteran. He married

Susan (Sawyer) and for more than 52 years their life together was a joyous journey, holding each other in trust and love wherever they built their home. Early in his career, Rob worked as a Branch Manager for Kinnear Corporation. His passion for building and being outdoors led him to form his own company, Robco. He installed complex playground systems throughout New England while also developing Sundance Christmas Tree Farm, Farmington, NH. Both vocations involved physical but joyful work. Rob shared his time and talents as a Red Cross Disaster Assessment volunteer, deployed to support the victims of floods and hurricanes. Early in 2000 he began volunteering for Southeast New Hampshire Habitat for Humanity, an organization he has continued to strongly support. Rob will live on in the hearts of his wife Susan, sister Martha Eberly and her husband Glen, brother David and his wife Cynthia, brother Wesley and his wife Karen, nieces, nephews, extended family and friends and with Jada-Joy, his loyal Australian Shepherd. Mr. Robert E. Duffy (better known as Bob or Duf), died on Saturday, June 2, 2018. Duf was born in Glens Falls, New York, on Sept. 11, 1940. He was a graduate of Hebron Academy, attended Brown University and graduated from the University of Connecticut. He married his childhood sweetheart, Kate Birdsall, and they enjoyed 54 wonderful years of marriage. He worked first for the Hartford Insurance Group and moved to Barre as its Vermont special agent in 1969. Several years later, Duf became a partner in the Berg, Carmolli and Kent Insurance Agency. Duf led a quiet life in his latter years. However, his interest in the pursuit of knowledge never waned. He loved his family dearly and enjoyed driving across the country to visit. He is survived by his wife, Kate Birdsall, and his children Avery Scheib (Dervis), of Eden Prairie, Minnesota, and Charles Duffy (Jamie Mosher), of Whitefish, Montana. His wonderful grandchildren are Will and Sam Scheib, Rye and Luca Duffy

and Ayla Mosher. At home, one cannot forget his beloved cats. In his younger days, Duf enjoyed boating, water and snow skiing, golfing and snowmobiling. His motorcycle was dubbed, “my shrink” and he spent many hours and miles on his prized BMW. He was an active participant in the Barre Jaycees, SnoBees Snowmobile Club, Barre Masons and Mount Sinai Shriners.

1960 Cortlandt L. Freeman, of Butte, MT, passed away peacefully at his home. Cort was born in Denver on January 28, 1941. He was the youngest of five children to Frank and Katherine (Maroney) Freeman. He attended Hebron Academy and Fairfield University, before returning to Colorado to work as a reporter for the Rocky Mountain News and the Aspen Illustrated News. In the 1970s, he moved to Bozeman to pursue a career as a freelance writer, publishing a book on backcountry skiing for Sports Illustrated and numerous articles on fishing, hunting, and skiing. He married Mellda Clauss, a teacher from Buffalo, NY in Bozeman in 1980. In 1983, Cort and Mellda moved to Butte, where he began a 20-year career with the Montana Power Company, eventually retiring as Vice President of Corporate Communications.

1961 John A. Schaff died suddenly in Asheville, North Carolina. He was the son of Lester Schaff and Anne Schaff. John was an attorney working in New Jersey for 40 years. He lived in Saranac Inn for ten years and Black Mountain, NC, for five years. He is survived by his partner Jane Gennaro of NJ, his sister Martha Helmreich of PA, his children Elizabeth Schaff of MA and Joshua Schaff of NY, four grandchildren and many nephews and nieces. John enjoyed hiking, paddling, woodworking and seeing family - a man of great spirit and kind soul. He traveled extensively in the U.S. West and California as well as British Columbia, New-

foundland, Labrador, Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama, Peru, Belize, Germany, Italy, France, Russia, Norway, Spain, Scotland, England, Ireland, Holland, China, Croatia, Czech Republic, Belgium and Switzerland.

1976 Rebecca Webber died peacefully on March 30, 2019, after a sudden and brief illness. She was surrounded by family and friends. Rebecca was born on Nov. 15, 1958, the oldest child of Curtis and Judy Webber. Rebecca is survived by her parents; her brother, John Webber ’80 of Marblehead, Mass., and brother Peter Webber ‘78 of Scarborough. Rebecca also leaves behind her beloved daughters, Lucy Knowlton, Alana Mallar, and Olivia Mallar, and her son, Harrison Knowlton, all of whom she was endlessly proud. Rebecca’s passing leaves a bereaved family of clients, colleagues, and coworkers at the law firm, Skelton Taintor & Abbott, where Rebecca established herself as one of the preeminent employment lawyers in the State of Maine. As a graduate of Williams College and an alumna of Boston College Law School, Rebecca climbed to the top of her field over her decades-long career in employment law and civil litigation. She was a determined litigator who worked tirelessly and faithfully for her clients. She forged many long-lasting friendships with her clients and colleagues through the years, and she will be deeply missed by all she worked with. Rebecca’s passing leaves a hole in the many organizations in which she volunteered her time, including: the Maine Women’s Network in Androscoggin County; the Auburn-Lewiston YMCA; the Androscoggin County Chamber of Commerce; the Maine State and Androscoggin County Bar Associations; the Maine Trial Lawyers’ Association; the National Employment Lawyers Association; the Society of Human Resource Management; and the Central Maine Human Resources Association. She worked every day to advocate for hebronacademy.org • 41


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE those who faced discrimination or inequality, and her professional legacy reaches across the political, social, and economic spectrum. Many of her clients considered her as much of a friend or a mentor as their legal counsel. Rebecca was well known for her dedication to athletics in her community, a commitment that was exemplified in many ways. At Williams College, she helped to start the women’s ice hockey program and in recent years has organized the Leavitt Father’s Day 5K to support student athletes. She also took great joy in serving as coach of the Tripp Middle School cross country team and her role as a booster for both the cross country and Nordic ski teams. She was an active member of local running groups, where she has been a volunteer, coach, running partner, and mentor. Rebecca was still a competitive runner, taking part in everything from masters track races to half-marathons, while finding time to train on her own in addition to her work as a lawyer and coach. She could often be seen with her distinctive, colorful running tights out on runs, cheering for her children, or encouraging her athletes. Rebecca had an immeasurable impact on those who knew her, and her generosity, loyalty, and laughter will be missed. Her selflessness and tenacity were matched by her sense of humor, boundless enthusiasm, and her ever-ready smile. She not only sought to love and support close friends and family, but also to create a more understanding, just, and kind world around her.

1988 Mr. Rolf B. Beutel passed away suddenly in New Brunswick, New Jersey on June 17, 2019. He was 50 years old. Born in Boston, he was the beloved son of Karen Beutel (Guem) and her companion Pat Feeley and Alfred “Rudy” Beutel. He was a 1987 graduate of Winthrop High School where he excelled at hockey. After his graduation from Hebron Academy, he went on to play hockey

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hebron • FALL 2019

at the University of Denver. After his graduation from college he went on to play professionally in Germany and recreationally in other countries around the world. He was recently named the General Manager of Paramount Transportation Systems prior to his passing.

Past Faculty Margot Butterfield Siekman passed away peacefully at her home on April 16, 2019. Born in 1941 in Middletown, Conn. to Victor and Kay Butterfield, Margot grew up on the campus of Wesleyan University, where her father served as President from 1943 to 1967. After graduating from Radcliffe College in 1962, Margot served in the Peace Corps in Nigeria from 1963 to 1966. Margot wed Robert “Bob” Siekman in 1968. After living in Pittsburgh, where Bob was on the chemistry department faculty at Carnegie Mellon University, the couple moved in 1973 to Hebron Academy where she taught math, and he taught chemistry. They eventually settled in Buckfield, where Margot took great joy in caring for flower gardens and harvesting highbush blueberries. She served for a time as treasurer of the Maine Congress of Lake Associations (COLA) and as a member of the Buckfield town planning board, where she helped to update the Comprehensive Town Plan. Mr. William Cotton Damon II “Cot”, as he was known, attended the Rectory and Gunnery schools in Connecticut, and went on to Dean College. He served in the Army and was stationed in the Philippines. He started his career at State Street Bank in Boston, but his greatest desire was to move to Maine and be a lobsterman, which he did in 1970. In 1971 he married Edie Chase (divorced 1996). After the birth of their first daughter, they decided to move to the west coast. There he began a career in private schools, first working

at the Thacher School in Ojai, CA. After the birth of their second daughter, the east coast pulled them back and in 1977 they returned to Maine where he went to work as the Business Manager at Hebron Academy in Hebron, ME, where he worked for over 20 years. He finished his career at the Brookwood School in Manchester, MA. He is survived by his two daughters, Chase Fairburn Damon ‘89 and Faith Damon Sykes ‘93, as well as son-in-law Michael C. Sykes, Jr., grandchildren Phoebe Chase Sykes and Hewitt Cotton Sykes, siblings Alison Zeigler (Joe), Faith Frasca and Niven Damon (Jacque). Cotton would attend every school concert, talent show, award ceremony, and sporting event for both his children and grandchildren, and he dedicated many weekend days on playing fields and in cold ice hockey rinks. He also treasured the summers and time spent on Heron Island, off the coast of Christmas Cove, ME, with his extended family and lifelong friends. Cotton loved music of all kinds. His many activities included decades of barbershop and chorus singing, and in 2006 he was named Barbershopper of the Year for the Northeast District. He performed in two musicals, and in his retirement in the Damariscotta region was a member of the Nor’easter Barbershop Chorus, Coastal Chorale, Hearts Ever Young and the church choir. He was able to combine his love of travel with his interest in barbershop music and became a national barbershop contest judge and later a contest administrator. He held leadership positions in many community and educational organizations, including Youth Soccer in Ojai, CA; Community Concepts, Kiwanis, Rightstart and the Weary Club in the Oxford Hills; the South Bristol Historical Society, and the Heron Island Village Improvement Society. Cotton passed away peacefully on November 30, 2018, after a long battle with dementia.

Bruce David Gardner passed away peacefully at his home in North Grafton, MA, on February 25th, 2019. He was 94. Bruce was born in Cambridge, MA to David Gardner and Phillis Burke, and was raised in Melrose, MA. He served in the U.S. Navy as a signalman in World War ll. Bruce then attended Colgate University, where he earned his undergraduate and Master’s degrees in Education. He also was the starting center for the varsity hockey team for three seasons. He also earned varsity letters in baseball. Bruce was inducted into Colgate’s Athletic Hall of Honor in 1979. He would later attend La Salle in Paris, France. A 1948 U.S. Olympian (on the AAU team, which did not play due to controversy surrounding a rival AHA Olympic lineup), Bruce was later a member of the US National team that took home silver (behind Canada) at the 1950 World Games in London. He also played for the Blackstone Valley Baseball team for the Draper Cooperation in Hopedale, MA. He later played for a time in the American Hockey League (AHL). Bruce began his teaching career at Maine’s Hebron Academy, where he taught French and coached ice hockey from 1957-1973. He “brought Hebron athletics to new heights,” according to remarks made when he was inducted into the Hebron Athletic Hall of Fame. Bruce Gardner would do the same thing at St. Mark’s school in Southborough, MA. He taught French, served as St. Mark’s College Counselor, and from 1975 to 1986 he was head coach of boys’ varsity ice hockey. Bruce would also teach in Greenwich, CT. After retirement Bruce and his wife Audrey ran an antique shop in Contoocook, NH for many years. Bruce was predeceased by his wife, Audrey.

Please send edits or corrections to broy@hebronacademy.org. We apologize for any misinformation.


Jumping into Summer Final Night at Singepole

F

inal Night comes as a welcome break at the end of the spring exam week and is a time for all the community to share a moment in the out-of-doors and to say goodbye to each other and a Hebron year of growth and change. After early supper and a ‘game plan’ introduction by Dan Marchetti, the young and old boarded vans for the short shuttle to the trailhead for Singepole Mountain at Hall Pond. Groups formed with friends, advisors and faculty families for the short jaunt in the early evening to the ledges above the pond where vistas open to the Shawnee Peak and the Presidential Range to the west and nearer at hand the lakes country of Oxford County. Beyond the ledges, amid expanses of blueberries in blossom for the season ahead, groups gravitated to the water-filled quarry atop Singepole and the annual jump spontaneously began. By ones and twos and groups along the rising arc of the quarry, friends launched to the water below or hung back in waiting. “Do you want to do it? . . . Do you? Let’s go

together; I dare you!” And friends jumped together while exhibitionists flipped or cannon-balled into the chilly waters and then turned to urge those above to join the frolic, jumping together into summer. Even the campus canines joined the fun, launching after balls or dashing along the edge to welcome lick the jumpers back to shore. And when the quarry jumping had run its course and the last of the jumpers turned to return to campus, all stopped on the ledges again for selfies and bro-shots of the moment, friends at the close of a year, together, smiling for the camera with the familiar landscape of Maine behind. To close the moment, we sang the Hebron Hymn, the words of ‘sow ye beside all waters’ perhaps a bit clearer when overlooking a landscape including Norway and Thompson Lakes and Marshall and Hall Ponds while the experience of the year captured in Kathy Gerrits-Leyden’s Baccalaureate Message on ‘Wisdom, Truth and Right’ rang true in the words sung clear at the close of day and a year. n hebronacademy.org • 43


Hebron Academy

PO Box 309 • Hebron ME 04238

Come Home to Hebron

JOIN US!

October 18-19 Members of the class of 1968 celebrate their 50th reunion. L to R Fred Seufert, Bob Edmonstone, Eric Morse, Morton Furber, Sam Stafford, Bob Lowenthal, Mike Mishou, David Wildes , Dan Steinway, Jim Cram, Bob Waite

Visit hebronacademy.org/homecoming or call 207-966-5266 for more information

reunionhomecoming weekend

2019


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