Hebron Magazine Winter 2023

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WINTER 2023

Table of Contents

WINTER 2023

ADVANCEMENT

Jen Gronrons

Steve Middleton

Beverly Roy

Seth Williams

COMMUNICATIONS

Claire Cummings

Rachel McKinley

WRITERS

Josh Kangas

Steve Middleton

Hillory Oaks

Dave Stonebraker

DESIGN

Dianne Lewis Design

PHOTOGRAPHY

Brewster Burns

Steve Middleton

Ian Tovell

HEBRON is published by the Hebron Academy Office of Advancement and External Relations. Letters and corrections are welcome. Please send your feedback to Beverly Roy at broy@hebronacademy.org.

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.

© Copyright 2023 by Hebron Academy www.hebronacademy.org

02 From the Head of School 03 From the Board of Trustees 05 We Welcome New Trustees 06 Meet Patrick Phillips 08 Commencement 10 100 Years of Hockey 15 Alumni Authors 17 Events 19 Horizon Hydrogen Grand Prix 20 Homecoming 2022 27 Class Notes 35 Obituaries 37 Report of Giving 55 From the Archives

Dear Hebron Community,

Since arriving at Hebron Academy last July, I have spent time exploring the campus, speaking with a range of community members, and learning the school’s traditions. I have enjoyed getting to know our students, watching our faculty in action, and inviting parents back to campus. Over the past six months, I have also met one-on-one with nearly every employee to get to know them and to hear what they value most about our school. I quickly noticed a recurring theme in these conversations: Hebron Academy is a small community that feels bigger than it is, where people are caring, welcoming, and down-to-earth.

Our close-knit community provides an inclusive space for our students to grow. We meet students where they are and support them as they find their path in the world. At Hebron, we offer a vibrant curriculum that offers a structure for academic growth while also providing opportunity for exploration. The campus is full of life, energy, and activity.

Not only do we want our students to be the best version of themselves, but we also want Hebron Academy to be the best version of itself. For several months, a task force has been working on our Strategic Plan, laying the groundwork to define Hebron’s purpose and to build a roadmap that guides our future. Workgroups will continue to convene throughout the spring and summer to finalize an actionable plan that we will introduce next fall, positioning Hebron for sustained success in a constantly evolving world.

In the meantime, we will continue to support our students as they compete on the athletic fields, participate in the spring play, and decide where they will attend college. We will enjoy varied musical performances, celebrate academic successes, and live and learn together in our connected community. We will honor our seniors as they move on, and welcome the upcoming leaders among us as younger students become upperclassmen themselves. As the 2022-23 school year begins to draw to a close, we look forward to continuing to build on the achievements of this year as well as the traditions of Hebron’s 219year history.

Thank you for joining us on this journey,

hebron magazine 2 from the head of school

Dear Friends of Hebron,

Since the start of the academic year, the Board of Trustees has enjoyed the opportunity to return to Hebron twice. Being together in person has allowed us to engage with the campus community in a meaningful way— an experience we have greatly missed over the last few years. There is a tangible sense of opportunity and optimism at Hebron these days. We are thrilled to have the Phillips family in Allen House, who have quickly embraced and strengthened Hebron through their care and warmth. We are all directly benefitting from Patrick’s thoughtful and pragmatic leadership.

We are very excited to announce Noah Love ’07 and Doug Haartz ’76 as new trustees. Noah and Doug bring diverse professional backgrounds and expertise to their board service. You will find their bios in this magazine.

At this point, we have emerged from a period of transition and we are ready to build on a foundation of strength. I am again impressed by the generosity of the Hebron community, who contributed over $1.5 million in gifts and pledges during fiscal year 2022. It is this significant commitment to and belief in Hebron that sustains our students and faculty. The Board of Trustees is immersed in the process to help define the comprehensive plan for growth that will serve Hebron in both the short and long-term. We look forward to continuing with this important, challenging work over the coming months. Thank you for the many ways that you support and contribute to Hebron Academy. We hope to see you soon.

With gratitude,

“We are thrilled to have the Phillips family in the Allen House, who have quickly embraced and strengthened Hebron Academy through their care and warmth.

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from the chair

Over the years, Hebron Academy has been fortunate in attracting extraordinary individuals to act as Trustees on behalf of the school. These are individuals with a genuine passion for Hebron who generously give their time, treasure, and knowledge to help successfully guide the school we love into the future.

On behalf of the Board, it is my distinct pleasure to thank several individuals who have recently stepped down for their exemplary service, including during the recent and challenging period of the pandemic. Indeed, several agreed to stay on beyond their normal term to help us meet that particular challenge.

Those stepping down include:

Wende Fox Lawson - Hailing from Chicago and a past Hebron parent, Wende joined the Board in 2014. She brought an important and insightful outside perspective to every task, including chairing the Admissions and Faculty Well-Being Committees.

Matthew W. Johnson ’93 - Based in Pittsburgh, Matthew’s service began in 2010. He brought his considerable professional skills to matters relating to the school’s infrastructure, including Chairing the Building and Grounds Committee.

board of trustees

Dr. Robert Greaves ’82 - Dr. Greaves, who is an Emergency Medicine Physician in Charleston, SC, joined the Board in 2017. He served on the Faculty/Staff Well-Being Committee and Buildings and Grounds.

Wallace E. Higgins - Although technically from Newton, MA, Wally is in a sense a Hebron local – his family owns the building known as “Old Brick” on the campus. A treasured Board member since 2006, Wally has served in numerous capacities, most recently as Assistant Secretary.

Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ’66 - It is not entirely clear just how many years Clem spent as a Trustee. He began his latest round in 2010 and by my reckoning the total must be in excess of 20 years. Clem combined his head for numbers with a heart that was always in the right place. Add to that a dollop of wry Maine humor, and you have the essence Clem-ness. He was, in many ways, our steadfast guide and conscience.

Thank you for your service, one and all.

Bob Waite, Vice-Chair; Chair, Committee on Trustees

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

J. Matthew Lyness ’76, Chair

South Salem, NY

Robert E. Waite ’68, Vice Chair

Rockcliffe, ON

David S. Prout ’83, Treasurer

Beaufort, SC

Robert J. Ryan ’77, Esq. Secretary

Houston, TX

Felica W. Coney P’18, Assistant Secretary

Atlanta, GA

Carolyn E. Adams ’77

Hilton Head Island, SC

William G. Becker ’87

Bonita Springs, FL

Debra B. Bloomingdale ’83, P’11 ’13

South Portland, ME

Jamie M. Fey ’02

Portland, ME

Doug Haartz ’76

Sudbury, MA

Noah Love ’07

New York, NY

Jane Harris Ash ’79

Dartmouth, MA

Barrett S. Mitchell ’02

Wolfeboro, NH

William R. Percival ’76

Naples, FL

Garvin L. Warner P’13

Windham, NH

Scott E. Wilson ’71

Dover, MA

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Scott Wilson ’71, Carolyn Adams ’76 and former Board Chair Paul Goodof ’67

DOUG HAARTZ ’76

Doug Haartz retired from the business world in August 2021 after a 38-year career at The Haartz Corporation. He managed the company’s international sales team as well as additional responsibilities in warehousing, logistics and customer service. The principal business is original equipment automobile components, with strong secondary replacement ties to all vehicle manufacturers worldwide. His responsibilities generated opportunities to travel and collaborate on projects in China, Japan, Europe, and North America.

Doug grew up in Sudbury, MA, and attended Hebron from 1973 to 1976. While at Hebron, Doug participated in water polo, swimming, lacrosse, and ice hockey. After Hebron, Doug received his degree in Business Administration with a minor in economics from the Massachusetts State College at North Adams.

NOAH LOVE ’07

New board member Noah Love ’07 arrived on the Hebron campus as a sixth grader in 2000. He loves the sense of community that Hebron offers and treasures his seven-year educational experience.

Noah is a Senior Director for People at Wonder and serves as an advisor for early start-up businesses, including Bandit and Hive Brands. Before Wonder, Noah worked for Jet, which was acquired by Walmart Inc., and he helped lead a change in management practice for eCommerce mergers and acquisitions.

Noah received his undergraduate degree from Eckerd College and his MBA from Norwich University. After graduation he returned to Hebron and worked in the Admissions Office, leading international student recruitment.

Noah’s favorite memories of Hebron are the winter musicals—as an 8th grader, he was in the ’02 performance of Working, selling lemonade and in ’07, he played the Wizard in The Wiz—thanks Mrs. Middleton!

Noah lives in New York City with his husband Jonathan and their two dogs.

Doug has been married to his wife Judy for 40 years. They have three daughters, each of them married with families of their own. Doug and Judy just welcomed their 8th grandchild to the family. In his open time now, Doug enjoys boating and visiting with friends and family.

“My time at Hebron was formative in my life. While I was reluctant at first to attend, I quickly made lifelong friends, many who I still regularly communicate with. Hebron taught me how to focus on my studies, broadened my horizons and was instrumental in guiding me to be successful in life. The opportunity to serve Hebron as a Trustee completes a full circle. I look forward to sharing my insights and ideas with the Hebron trustees and community in the years to come.”

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welcome new trustees
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A firm believer in the power of community, Patrick “55” Phillips and his family are now home at Hebron
BY HILLORY OAKES

He’s had one office overlooking a dormant volcano and another tucked inside an Italian villa. Now he’s at home among 1,500 acres of trails and green space, working in a school building whose clock tower has an unbeatable view of the White Mountains. Patrick Phillips has followed his curiosity about people and ideas around the world, with leadership roles in schools in Switzerland, England, and Hawaii—and now Hebron, where he became the 55th Head of School this past July.

When he moved into Allen House with wife Ainslie and their four children during the summer of 2022, Phillips looked around with deep respect for the traditions and history that the Hebron community holds dear. “One of the things that I always remind myself is that the school existed before I arrived and will exist well after I’m gone,” he noted. “You have to take time to breathe and to understand what has happened, not just in the one year before you got there, but, in Hebron’s case, the 200 years before. So I strive to make sure that I’m stepping in with the flow of the school, not trying to divert the flow.”

A firm believer in the power of community and its positive impact on learning, Phillips finds it crucial to connect with students “wherever they are,” whether skiing with them at Mountain Day, listening to them recite Shakespeare at Sonnet Café, or grilling after a football game. He sees the Hebron community as most vibrant when everyone–students, faculty, and staff–feels accepted among “a group of real people who

love to be together.” Phillips mused: “When you can share your whole self with others who are doing the same, you’re going to find you’re interested in new things that you’re learning from the people around you. Then this something new starts to tickle your brain, and you have to scratch that itch a little bit. And that’s how you grow.”

As he works with stakeholders to chart Hebron’s best path forward, Phillips, an avid reader, has been intrigued by Jane McGonigal’s book Imaginable. McGonigal writes of “urgent optimism,” a belief that we must tackle problems immediately while feeling confident of our chances for success–a mindset which resonates with Phillips: “You think about the possible futures out there,” he says, and then make deliberate plans to “move toward those futures in a way that feels good but that is never just making progress for progress’s sake. You’re always making progress towards something concrete and important.”

He recognizes that moving toward a strong future for Hebron requires cherishing, and strengthening, connections to Hebron’s past. Phillips has been energized by his conversations with alumni; it’s vital to open our doors wide for alums, he says, and to offer opportunities of all sorts to connect with the school community and discover how that same spirit alumni encountered at Hebron thrives among our students today.

The community-building attitude runs in the Phillips family. Ainslie has taken the lead in fostering collegiality among faculty and

staff, leading game nights and snowshoe adventures, for instance, while also teaching middle-school math and hosting the Hebron Historical Society at Allen House. And while children Grayson and Taylor are already high school graduates, the alumni network Phillips values will one day include their two youngest: Cooper (Class of 2024) and Riley (Class of 2027).

At his installation ceremony this past fall, Phillips spoke directly to current students, but with words that speak just as powerfully to all who have a connection to Hebron: “My hope for you is that here at Hebron you will find who you are, that you will discover and strengthen your own principles, and that by remaining true to yourself you can move through your life with honor, with curiosity, with kindness, and with pride in both yourself and your school.”

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hebron magazine 8
n The class of 2022 gathers together for one last time, preparing to march down the senior path to their Commencement ceremony n Nick DeMarco, winner of the English Prize, welcomes everyone to the 2022 Commencement Ceremony. n Calvin Grover, winner of the Senior Scholarhip Award, Science Prize, and the Risman Award; Frederic Essiembre, winner of the Phemister Award. n Winner of the 2022 Hebron Cup, Julia Gregory ’22 with her mother Lynn, father Art and her sister Tess Gregory ’18.

ALL SCHOOL AWARDS

Hebron Cup: Julia Marie Gregory

Riseman Award: Calvin Kenjiro Grover

Phemister Award: Frederic Essiembre

Wheeler Award: Lili-Marie Schmidt

Sherman Award: Emma Elizabeth Newell

Leyden Award: Jackson Dakota O’Brien

Tate Award: Frankie Nicholas Majkowski

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE AWARDS

Music: Carlos Tadeo Lopez Garcia

Spanish: Megan Jane Seipp

Art: Galia Braun Frydman

Mathematics: Sean Daniel Gleason

English: Nicholas Vito DeMarco

History/Soc Science: Lili-Marie Schmidt

Sciences: Julia Marie Gregory (Life Sciences)

Calvin Kenjiro Grover (Physical Sciences)

ATHLETIC AWARD

Dwyer Award: Daniel Kral

Athletic Prize: Nicholas Robert Cantalupo

Bessie Fenn: Julia Marie Gregory

Reed Award: Luke Ryan Festa

Reed Award: Linn Luisa Haefele

SPECIAL SENIOR AWARDS

Senior Scholarship Prize: Calvin Kenjiro Grover

Lepage Scholarship: Jack Michael Madden

Tyler/Grandmaison MELMAC Scholarship: Jasper Alley Curtis

Bernat Award: Sean Daniel Gleason

Lorimer Prize: Lillybeth Kaley Randall

Social Justice: Carlos Tadeo Lopez Garcia

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commencement 2022
n Mimy Benarroch gathers classmates for a selfie before the class heads outside. n Members of the class of 2022 continue the tradition of ringing the Victory Bell after they receive their Hebron diplomas.
1926 team

Hebron Hockey Begins

The 2022-2023 hockey season marks a century of Hebron hockey. It is a wonder that a century of hockey started with an anonymous group of boys shoveling snow off Andrew’s Field in the early 1920s to create enough ice to skate and shoot. Boys that would have arrived from points south by train arrived at a longforgotten station in Minot. Their hockey gear tossed into the back of a horse drawn carriage, or maybe a Model T, to make the three-mile trek down Station Road to campus.

Did those boys have any idea of the bright hockey future they were starting? A future that would see thousands of athletes come to Hebron in the ensuing decades to play. Over the years, Hebron players have won championships, played at the collegiate level, garnered All-American honors, coached high school, college, and even Olympic teams. A handful have even been inducted into the US National Hockey Hall of Fame.

Hebron’s first hockey team, led by Coach Percy Graves, won games against Coburn Classical Institute and the Lewiston High School Independents. The outdoor rink was a challenge to keep clear of snow and to have consistent ice—a Herculean effort was needed by students and faculty to keep the space playable.

The Stanley Ice Arena was Freelan Stanley’s first major gift to Hebron Academy. As president of the Board of Trustees, he contributed substantially from his own estate to ensure the rink would be completed for the 1925-1926 season. Stanley Arena was the first covered high school hockey rink in the United States and it stood where Hupper Library stands today.

With the attraction of having the finest hockey facility in New England, Hebron hockey would quickly rise to an elite level. Eddie Jeremiah ’26 enrolled at Hebron from Somerville, MA, and would lead

“Hebron Hockey taught me work ethic and creating goals and achieving them as a team. It also gave me best friends for life.

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”Austin Goldstein ’14
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Hebron in white in the Stanley Arena, 1928

“Hebron hockey means more and more to me as I get older. The family, the brotherhood, the memories of the cold rink in the morning and the night games at home are some I’ll never forget!

Alumni Hockey

The earliest mention of an alumni game dates to 1929. What a game it must have been! The coach of the team was a young Danny MacFayden ’26. His former teammate and friend, Eddie Jeremiah ’26, was in his senior year at Dartmouth. The two organized an alumni game for the season finale for the 1929 season. The alums opened up an early lead and it appeared the game would be a runaway, but the varsity team battled back to tie the game 4-4 at the end of regulation. The competitive nature of the young alums and the varsity team

was apparent when the game ended in a 7-7 draw after three overtime periods!

The tradition of alumni hockey as we know it, started in 1953. To dedicate the new Stanley II Arena, the season opened with an alumni game. The alumni won 7-6!

Two years later, the 1955 alumni team boasted two U.S. National Hockey Hall of Famers. Eddie Jeremiah is standing second

from the right (age 51) and to his left is legendary Hebron and Dartmouth player, Bill Riley ’41. The reunion game has changed over the years and now alumni play against each other for the love of the game and no longer compete against the current varsity teams. This past March, the first ever alumnae Hockey game was played! May the tradition continue for another 69 years.

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Malik Garvin ’11 and James Leblanc ’02

“My first year at Hebron was one of my first full years playing with a girls team and the experience was memorable, not only because of the team, but because of the love felt by the school and community. I felt valued and that was special.

Here Come the Girls

In the front row of the 1985 team picture above, third from the left, kneels Tracy Harlor ’85, the first female to lace up skates and compete for Hebron Academy. Tracy would go on to captain the women’s team at Skidmore College and help organize and coach the early girls programs at Portsmouth Abbey and St. George’s School.

During the 1993-94 season, freshman Wanda Mason ’97 would play on the varsity boys hockey team and win a New England Championship! With no girls hockey team at Hebron, Wanda transferred to the Hotchkiss School and went on to be a starting defensive player at Princeton.

In 1998, five girls competed on the boys’ JV team: Jill Brooker ’99, Jenny Agnew ’99, Allison Sanchez ’98, Enid Patten ’99,

and Valerie Buteau ’00. In the 1998-1999 season, Hebron had its first all girls’ hockey team. Led by coach Paul Nemitz-Carlson, the team finished the season with a 14-3-1 record. They closed their inaugural season by winning their final nine games with a combined score of 71-8. Talk about a debut!

In their second year, the Hebron girls’ went on to win the Division II New England

Championship. After a 1-2 start, the team won 18 straight games to finish the season. In the New England playoffs, they won three one goal games: defeating Newton Country Day, Brooks, and finally, Holderness in overtime to win the championship. From this team, Jana Budgeon ’02 would go on to be a standout goalie at Providence College and Sara Simard ’00 would help lead St. Lawrence University to two Frozen Fours.

hebron magazine 14 100 years of hockey
”Sara (Simard) Reichenback ’00

IPSWICH ON MY MIND BOB WAITE ’68

While Ipswich On My Mind is superficially a series of vignettes about the author’s hometown, in the words of Carleton College President Emeritus Steve Poskanzer, “They are also really about the verities of life and change, and the enduring relationships with people and places that matter so much to us all.” Bob strikes these chords with resonant power. Unlike Hardy’s fictional Wessex, Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha, or (more recently and popularly) Turow’s Kindle County, the Ipswich of Bob Waite’s youth and the Ipswich of 2022 are very much real and present. But it is the gift of a trenchant observer and great writer to extrapolate from the particular features, characters and lessons of one place to the timeless and universal.”

Waite, a three-time winner of the New England Newspaper and Press Association’s Best Column Award in the early 70’s, returned to column writing for his local paper at the behest of his 92-year-old former publisher. As this collection attests, the result is a magical concoction of observational humor, soaring imagination, and thoughtful reflection.

From Amazon book reviews

IN SLOCUM’S WAKE NAT WARREN-WHITE ’68

Back in the 60’s during my four years at Hebron, I was blessed to have RJS (Dick Stratton) as an English teacher for three of my four years and then Ned Willard for my final year. They were both wonderful teachers. Dick, particularly, pushed me to really understand what it meant to be a good writer, to think for myself, and to always reach toward the highest standards which he modeled in his own comments on our papers. Those comments sometimes ran more than a page in length and were always penned in his finest hand…truly memorable, easy to read, and beautifully written. Dick was proud to be a Luddite, never a typewriter or word processor within reach. I owe him a lot in the writing as well as the theater worlds. Theater became a magical career for me, and I have always enjoyed writing. Now I have a book published which I think/ hope Dick would’ve enjoyed. Without his powerful caring influence, I would never have been able to follow either path. My recently published book, In Slocum’s Wake (Outskirts Press, 2022) chronicling our nearly five-year circumnavigation aboard a 43’ cutter called Bahati could not/would not have been written as well or as joyfully as it was without Dick’s voice speaking to me from beginning to end. I am sorry that Dick is not around now to read it. I am sure that he would have had some helpful editorial suggestions to offer which I would have treasured.

Writing In Slocum’s Wake was a labor of love. It took nearly ten years to complete after returning from our voyage. I was lucky to have kept a detailed blog as well as a daily ship’s log which I used extensively for reference during the writing process. The blog would not have existed without the creative and technological savvy of my son, Josh, who sailed with us for a year and a half, through the Caribbean and across the Pacific. I owe him and my wife, Betsy, who was the ultimate organizer and perfectionist when it came to the ship’s stores and voyaging safety realm, a huge debt of gratitude. They both contributed to the book as well, eloquently sharing their own perspectives on the experience.

In Slocum’s Wake has received a number of wonderful reviews from sailors and non-sailor alike. Many of them can be read on Amazon and Goodreads. The one I appreciate the most was written by Alex Agnew, the original publisher of Ocean Navigator magazine.

https://oceannavigator.com/article/in-slocumswake/

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I would add that I credit Hebron for whipping my writing into shape, especially English teacher Richard Stratton.
Bob Waite ’68

I MADE HOUSE CALLS MAL DAVIS ’58

Four years following the founding of my company, I received a call from Hebron asking me to meet with the trustees in Portsmouth to discuss our interest in managing the school’s endowment fund. The year was 1982 and the trustees were interviewing several firms, in this regard. Certainly, I was interested in making this presentation, so I traveled to Portsmouth with Bill Allen ’62, who had subsequently joined my company. Bill and I spoke to the trustees about our services for about 45 minutes and then headed back to Portland. Several days later, we were pleased to learn that we had been selected as the manager of Hebron’s endowment fund. Bear in mind that Bill and I had 10 and 14 years of money management experience respectively, prior to 1982, so we were not exactly “rookies.” Flash forward to 2022, forty years later, and Hebron’s endowment fund is still managed by R. M. Davis, Inc. One of the primary managers is now my son, Bob Davis ’85 , and assisting Bob with administration details is Greg Cox ’05. Today the firm also shares the responsibility with a couple of other management firms brought on-board to provide some diversity of thinking and investment approach, a sound idea. What a great long-term relationship which speaks volumes about the R.M. Davis/Hebron connection.”

Mal Davis ’58

From the review on Amazon

During my 56-year career, I gained a tremendous amount of knowledge about investing and about people who interact with and within the broad investment services market. The first 38 years of my life were all about positioning for the next 42 years. The foundational principles of my company were developed over my career through actual experience. I write this book to share some lessons learned along the entire route, some investment philosophy, and some experiences that one may find interesting, educational, or simply outrageous. I provide some observations and share some knowledge. During my years at R. M. Davis, Inc., I was both nurtured and guided by numerous principles and personal beliefs that I used to help shape the growth and culture of the firm, and to govern my personal conduct. You will become familiar with many of these, as they are reinforced in this book. I believe that most of these principles and beliefs are vital to the success of any organization.

Robert M. Davis is a successful wealth manager who established the first independently owned and operated Registered Investment Advisory firm in Maine. In the subsequent 42 years, R. M. Davis, Inc. has grown to be the largest such firm in Northern New England. Specializing in personalized services to its clients who are predominantly high net worth individuals and their families, investment vehicles include trusts, retirement plans, and basic portfolios. Its services are offered on a “fee only” basis, with no commissions or product sales whatsoever.

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ALUMNI HOCKEY

In March of 2022, the decades old tradition of the Alumni Hockey game was renewed with over 30 alums attending the event, bringing with them friends and family that filled the McGonagle Pavillion in Robinson Arena.

ALUMNI INDUCTION

Last April, the second annual Alumni Induction Dinner was held for the Class of ’22! Sixty-four new members join the illustrious Hebron Academy Alumni ranks!

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DJ Steed ’14, Luke Trembley ’14, Nico Manganiello ’14, Austin Goldstein ’14 Peyton Spurr ’19, Lisa Simard ’02 Kenny Mills ’19, Carter Richmond ’19 Sara Simard Reichenbach ’00, Callie Walker ’19, Mia Reichenbach, Jasmine Webber ’07 Nick Cantalupo ’22, Jackson O’Brien ’22, Jackson Susser ’22, Colby MacCheyne ’22 Cecilia Padilla ’22, Daniela Amiga ’22, Rica Wong ’22 Ross LeBlond ’17 - guest speaker

NYC

In April 2022, Hebron had its first event outside the state of Maine since 2019. The event was held at the Sohmer Piano Building in the Flatiron District of NYC. The party was hosted by Kathy and J. Matthew Lyness ’76 and Megan Brooks Carolla ’89. Over 75 alumni attended the event and were able to meet Head of School, Patrick Phillips

PORTLAND SEA DOGS

Forty Hebron Alums and friends of Hebron met at the Gifford Pavillion and watched the Sea Dogs put a 9-0 beatdown on the Hartford Yard Goats. The amazing game plus the “all you can eat” barbecue led to the consensus to host a Sea Dogs alumni event again next year!

CAREER CONNECTIONS

We welcomed nine alumni back to campus to share their post-Hebron stories and career choices, for the 10th annual Robert J. Ryan ’77 Career Connections for the Class of ’22 in May.

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events
Richard Potvin ’73 Avery Goyette, Michael Potvin ’20, Beth Potvin ’04 Rebekah Jett ’12 and Edward Finn ’65 Head of School Patrick Phillips and Tom Severance ’86 Myles Horn ’15 Keynote Speaker, Noah Love ’07 Emily Powers ’10

Horizon Hydrogen Grand Prix as a novel approach to STEM and clean energy popularization

Imagine being a student with the opportunity to build your own hydrogenpowered remote-control car with your friends, while learning and engaging with the future of sustainable automobile technology. This is the Horizon Grand Prix, a comprehensive science and engineering program sponsored by industry leaders such as Toyota and Hyundai.

It empowers students to work in a team as they become the problem solvers of tomorrow. Horizon achieves this by connecting students with the global automotive industry as they learn to apply the concepts of environmental sustainability, renewable energy, and alternative fuels by building and racing a hydrogen fuel cell RCl car. Students from 13

countries compete in the Horizon Hydrogen Grand Prix—including students right here at Hebron!

Design. Build. Race!

In the Horizon Grand Prix program, students are introduced to the fundamentals of renewable energy through a variety of hands-on experiments. Experience gained during these experiments is then applied in the second phase of the program - building and developing a hybrid car powered by hydrogen fuel cells. Even more exciting, this remote-control car will be designed with competition in mind. Students will need to consider not only the proper assembly of the vehicle, but also optimize transmission ratio, weight distribution, engine electronics, and more in order to be prepared for

the final phase of the program-the races. Students will test their design/build in an endurance race for a chance to participate in subsequent competitions at the national and world championships.

Hebron Prepares Students for an Evolving and Increasingly Global World. The students at Hebron participating in the Horizon Grand Prix are supported by the Kaneb Center for Science and Engineering. The Kaneb Center was carefully designed to provide a flexible transformative space for student creative design and collaboration. This space is dedicated to the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) disciplines and gives students access and opportunity to work with today’s most up-to-date industry technologies such as a laser cutter, CNC mill, 3D-printers, and much more, all of which students will access during the design and build phases of their car. Hebron students have always had the opportunity to explore and learn from hands-on work while growing to be responsible global citizens. The Horizon Grand Prix program with its sustainability focus is an exciting addition to our curriculum that is in keeping with our values.

Finally, and most exciting of all, up until this past school year, the U.S. Horizon Grand Prix had been hosted exclusively in the State of California. However, a group of students enrolled in the EDIE pathway (Engineering, Design, Innovation, Entrepreneurship) here at Hebron have blazed new trails to bring the the program outside of California for the first time and last year worked on building a hydrogen race car. Through their excitement and commitment, along with the unprecedented support of Horizon Educational, and an incredible and generous donor, we are happy to announce that Hebron will be able to acquire an official Grand prix race track and scoring system, becoming the first racing hub for the Horizon Grand Prix in the U.S. outside of California. This has inspired other schools here on the East Coast to begin adopting the Horizon Grand Prix and Hebron will be the East Coast Regional Race host for the foreseeable future and will have opportunities to host the United States National Race in years to come as the program develops here on the East coast. This is a tremendous opportunity for Hebron and its students.

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Mitch Nazareth ’23, Calvin Grover ’22, Kyrin Barretta ’23

Homecoming 2022

Friday Night at the Canopy Hotel

More than 200 Alumni, family and friends gathered to celebrate Hebron. It was the Academy’s first Homecoming since 2019 and the first for many current students and new members of the faculty. The passion for Hebron among the alumni body was remarkable and important for all to see.

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Head of School, Patrick Phillips, Marcia King, former Head of School, John King Rebecca Harmon, Matt Harmon ’96, Scott Nelson ’91, Lydia Currie ’96, Giselle Pomerleau ’02, James Tolerico, Jeff Glenn ’76 Front row: Doug Haartz ’76, Kiki Bilodeau ’89, Rich Pschirrer ’86, J. Matthew Lyness ’76, Jane Harris Ash ’79, Rob Kinesawich ’86, Scott Wilson ’71. Back row: Megan Brooks Carolla ’89, Jeff Callahan, Scott Downs ’86, Tim Cassidy ’89, Tony Cox ’86 Mason and Mary Pratt ’57 Dan Halloran ’18, Shamus Sullivan ’18, Davis Cronin ’17 Michael Wolf ’82, Suzette Wolf, Tucker Cutler ’82, Paul Downey ’81

Alumni Convocation

winter 2023 21

For many of you, Leslie Guenther was a constant of your Hebron years. She was your math teacher, your field hockey, lacrosse or ski coach, but today, we celebrate Leslie as Athletic Director for 23 years, but one part of her many contributions to Hebron.

Mitzi was tapped in 1997 to become Hebron’s Athletic Director, and she quickly became a person who was ’always there’ for you and your teams. She fostered equity and inclusion to our athletic programs. With her leadership Hebron achieved Title-IX parity through the addition of girl’s teams, but more, she worked with coaches to insure that all had good access to training facilities, field spaces, courts and ice time, a particular challenge in the days before the creation of the Allen Field and Williams Center.

Networking, Communication and Cooperation are words that capture some of Mitzi’s talent for bringing people together. She became the long-serving president of our Maine Athletic Association, the MAISAD League, and later served for a decade on the Executive Board of the New England Prep School Athletic Conference, or NEPSAC. Through those associations she was able to enhance Hebron’s schedules and exposure. And as our competitiveness increased, so too did opportunities for expanded schedules. We met all of the Lakes Region schools of New Hampshire was well as perennial rivals Holderness, Brewster and Tilton. We regularly ventured further afield to compete with Dexter, Exeter, Governor’s, Milton, Middlesex, Pingree and others.

As we competed successfully on a larger stage, our championship bids increased. During Ms. G’s time, nearly all of our teams reached the NEPSAC Tournaments: Cross Country, Field Hockey, Football, and men’s and women’s Soccer in the fall; Basketball, both Hockey teams and Alpine Skiing in the winter; Lacrosse, men’s and women’s Tennis and Track in the spring - 15 teams in all, and of those teams, Football, Men’s Soccer, Men’s and Women’s Hockey, Men’s and Women’s Alpine Skiing, Lacrosse and Women’s Track all brought home NEPSAC Championship trophies. Mitzi also showcased our facilities and teams by hosting and being meet director for multiple NEPSAC Championships in Cross Country and Alpine Skiing.

While our Varsity teams experienced great success, Ms. G. also sought to create a positive and competitive experience at all levels of our program. Stories abound of the impressive runs by JV and Thirds Soccer, B-team Hockey, and JV Tennis. When the MAISAD group created the “MOXIE Award” to honor the member school with the most success at all levels during a year, Hebron proved a perennial winner. As well, our teams achieved a level of fair play as voted by our opposing coaches that kept a MAISAD Sportsmanship banner on display here year in and year out.

Between 2006 and 2008, Ms. G. had the distinct honor of joining the architectural committee charged to design the Williams Family Athletic Center. Working with the lead architects, Mitzi turned her experience managing all of Hebron’s program to create spaces for a wide variety of activities. From the beginning, she advocated for a community-based facility rather than a gymnasium. She was proud of the adaptable multi-season court spaces, the glasswalled weight room, the multi-purpose room and the climbing wall. But she was especially proud of pushing relentlessly for the inclusion of the suspended track, that signature feature that provides walking, jogging and exercise space for everyone in the community, a space where teams gather and exercise during the shoulder seasons,

and the space where we all go to “Pack the Track” and cheer our Lumberjacks.

In many ways, Leslie Gunther has been a constant for many, many Hebron athletes. She was ever-present to do what needed to be done—whether running the chains for football, timing innumerable field hockey, soccer, basketball and lacrosse games, or having the needs of your team always in hand: uniforms, referees, travel plans, and meal arrangements, the details that helped you and your coaches be your best.

If you will indulge a metaphor, Leslie Guenther has been for Hebron Athletics like the reflecting mirror behind the lantern of a lighthouse, a constant presence which amplified and enriched your experiences, which helped you all to shine and achieve great success and to create a culture of excellence, cooperation and fair play in Hebron Athletics.

For these reasons, it is thoroughly appropriate that we should celebrate Leslie Guenther’s 23 years as Hebron’s longestserving Athletic Director with induction to our Athletic Hall of Fame, joining her name with icons Charles Dwyer, George Helwig, Addison Augusta, and Nat Harris— exemplars all of excellence and service to Hebron. Join us in celebrating Ms. G.!

hebron magazine 22 homecoming 2022
Excerpted from Dave Stonebraker’s speech for his wife Leslie “Mitzi” Guenther’s induction into the Athletic Hall of Fame portland press herald Leslie Guenther chipping on her way to winning the 2011 Maine Amateur Golf Championship

Jay L. Woolsey Distinquished Service Award

Volunteer of the Year

Paul Goodof ’67

-Established in 1984, the Distinguished Service Award is the Academy’s highest award, given out each year to honor a person whose contributions to the Academy and/or society in general are felt to be exemplary. In 2006, the award was renamed to honor Jay L. Woolsey.

Athletic Hall of Fame

Jose Gumbs ’07 was a three-year standout in football, basketball, and baseball. At Hebron, he was the 2007 Athletic Award Winner. Jose helped lead the Hebron football team to two New England Bowl Games, and he was awarded Prep School All-New England in 2007. Jose went on to be a defensive standout at Monmouth University and was the starting safety for the NFL’s Washington Redskins (Commanders) in 2013.

Bill Allen ’62

-The Volunteer of the Year Award is bestowed in recognition of outstanding contribution and significant service on an annual basis from an alumnus/a. Past recipients have demonstrated outstanding volunteer service through participation in and leadership of Hebron Academy programs and events.

John Waldman ’80 captained the swim team and was All-American and New England Prep School Champion in the 100 meter Breaststroke. At Indiana University, he was the Big Ten Conference Champion in the 100 and 200 Meter Breaststroke and the 200 Meter Medley in 1984 and 1985. As a Master Swimmer in 1987, he set the world record in the 100 Meter Breaststroke - a record that stood for 17 years.

winter 2023 23 homecoming 2022

Evergreen Luncheon

hebron magazine 24 homecoming 2022
Scott Wilson ’71, Julie Rigazio, Rick Rigazio ’71, Chris Buschman ’66, Harvey Lipman ’71 Henry Harding ’70, Rick Hendrick ’70, Deborah Bauman, Lorraine Brown, James Brown ’69 Bob Hanks ’62, Gordon Gillies ’62, Bill Allen ’62, Fred Friedman ’62, Don Bates ’62, Shell Evans ’62 Bill Patterson ’56, Jay Baker ’67, David Babson ’57, Bernard Helm ’59

Alumni Lacrosse

Maine Craft Beer Tasting

winter 2023 25 homecoming 2022
Fans cheering on the Alumni Lacrosse game. Kneeling - Conrad Grimmer ’17, Caddy Brooks (Athletic Director), Josh Lapointe ’77, Standing - Davis Cronin ’17, Shamus Sullivan ’18, Owen Richmond ’16, Brice Richmond ’12, David Burnett ’77. Missing from the picture: Brennan Pike ’22, Devdan Young ’22, Billy McNamara (former coach). Amanda Milochik ’96, Andy Stevenson ’96, Lydia Currie ’96, Rob Demarco ’96, Matt Harmon ’96, and Jamie Pitcher-Acord ’96. Hadwin Belcher ’18 and Megan Donahue ’17.

Class Notes

1956

RICHARD CUTTER I have not been on campus for years but hope to get there next spring. Otherwise, all is well.

1959

TYCHO VON ROSENVINGE writes that he is doing fine. No COVID yet, but not traveling either. Wintering in Florida, which is good. Still making jewelry.

1961

GEORGE GRAY reports that he and his family survived COVID in good shape. Three grandkids have moved on to 5th and 6th grades. His daughter Claudia ’92 is going back to work in international development.

1971

JOHN KIPPAX sent along a picture taken in Larchmont, NY. He writes “You will notice that I am wearing my Hebron 50th Reunion hat, which definitely brought good luck to the day. The striped bass weighed in at just under 50 lbs. I released the fish and sent her East toward York, Maine so that HENRY HARDING ’70 could catch her again.”

1972

Condolences to JAMES MCKUSICK on the death of his mother.

REYNOLD NIPPE couldn’t make it back for reunion, he wrote the following: “While genuinely treasuring my two years at Hebron, looking respectfully back at my times with Claude Allen, Headmaster, Messiers Twitchell, Drayer, Burt, Gould, Woolsey, and a host of others, and being able to recall almost every individual day at Hebron, I have vowed to never, repeat never, venture North of the Florida border with GA! Ron Nippe and the frozen or semi-thawed Tundra do not mix! A big Hi to all my friends from ’71, ’72, ’73 from the sunny southwestern Florida beach. Come hell or climate change-driven high water, I shall not waiver on my stand!”

1973

NATHANIEL CORWIN is retiring after 44 years of teaching high school and middle school and will be moving to North Carolina.

1974

JON LEROYER “I haven’t been back to Hebron for quite a few years even though I live nearby. I do hope to attend next year’s events with my partner. My years at Hebron were some of the best of my life. Have a great day and I hope it is a wonderful Fall crisp day for Hebron Homecoming events.”

1976

TIMOTHY WEST is retired from land surveying but working on the farm at Homestead in Pittsfield, Mass. 1810 to now, nine generations of the West family.

1977

1978

Condolences to GEORGE DYCIO on the death of his mother.

winter 2023 27 class notes
JOSH LAPOINTE , greeted Moose Curtis on the sideline at a boy’s lax game last year. n Moose Curtis stood on the familiar sideline last spring watching the boy’s lax game, an official said, “Hey Moose.” It was Josh LaPointe ’77 - an early Moose Chemistry scholar!

1985

TODD KOBRIN came to campus with his wife and son. He recalled Dave Stonebraker as the best teacher. Todd is currently a real estate lawyer in Orlando.

1987

The Maine Crafts Association proudly announced AYUMI HORIE as its 2022 recipient of the MCA Maine Craft Artist Award.

The award recognizes Horie’s dual accomplishments in both her personal practice as a full time studio potter and her dedicated leadership in work creating positive impact and action toward a more diverse, equitable, inclusive field of craft.

The MCA acknowledges Horie’s leadership and dedication to implement social change in craft centered projects. Her work has impacted Maine craft and craft at the national and international level.

Ayumi Horie is known for her functional pottery with drawings of animals and typography. Colorful, playful, and explorative, Horie’s work is admired and sought after for its bold imagery with subtle characteristics. She has displayed a high proficiency in materials through exploration and ingenuity, becoming well known for her “dry throwing” technique and storytelling skills that have carried her beyond her foundation in clay into a broader variety of media and community action initiatives. From the Maine Craft Association Press Release

class notes

1989

MEGAN BROOKS CAROLLA with Scott Pelley (60 Minutes) and daughter Charlotte on a trip to Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique. Megan works with Greg Carr who has dedicated years to saving Gorongosa National Park and helping the people of Mozambique after devastation from years of Civil War. Check out the 60 Minutes episode about Greg Carr and the Park which aired on December 4th - Restoring Gorongosa National Park.

1995

BETHANNE ROBINSON GRAUSTEIN and ALYSSA DOHERTY met up at a lacrosse tournament this summer in Maryland where Bethanne’s daughter was competing.

1998

AUDRA SHERMAN is currently the head coach of the Ontario Ridgebacks women’s soccer program. Holding a Canada Soccer National A License, coupled with her background as a certified teacher, she is committed to student-athletes success on the field, in the classroom and in the community. Prior to arriving at Ontario Tech, Sherman spent six years with Ottawa Fury FC. She was the manager of community engagement and program development, while also holding the position of manager and head coach of the girls and womens high performance program. Sherman currently serves as a Canada Soccer learning facilitator, assessor and mentor coach. Before coaching, Sherman was a member of Canada Soccer’s national program followed by time with Clemson University.

hebron magazine 28
n Megan Brooks Carolla ’89 with Scott Pelley (60 Minutes) and daughter Charlotte. n Bethanne Robinson Graustein ’95 and Alyssa Doherty ’95.

2004

Congratulations to SHAUNA NEARY, the recipient of the 2022 Hal Lewis Award recognizing the Nova Scotia official of the year. An experienced NHP-level referee and U Sports official, Shauna has always been willing and eager to give back to the program in any way that she can.

Shauna is a former assistant coach with both the Hockey Nova Scotia High Performance Program and the Dalhousie University women’s hockey team, she has on-ice experience at some of the highest levels of the game. At the grassroots level, she is a role model and leader who has given up her time as the referee-in-chief for the Metro West Force Female Hockey Association.

Shauna was chosen to officiate at the 2021 IIHF Women’s World Championship in Calgary, as well as during the Rivalry Series between the Canadian and American national women’s teams. During the U Sports Women’s Hockey Championship Shauna was selected as a referee during the gold medal final.

class notes

2009

CRAIG RYAN works at a clinic with aspiring hockey goalies in CT. He recommended Hebron to LUKE FESTA ’22 . Luke was a great student both academically and athletically. Thank you Craig!!

TERRY MCLELLAN ’09 was named Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach with the Atlanta Hawks.

2000

MICHAEL BREEN-MCKAY recently completed his Ph.D. in Mathematics from North Carolina State University and came in 9th at the 2022 PDGA Masters Disc Golf World Championships. Way to go Michael!

2007

KAINANI STEVENS finished her time as a broadcaster with FOX61 and is now working for Locked On Podcast Network - Host for the digital platform of Locked on Podcasts. Recapping the latest in the NBA, NFL, NHL, MLB and college sports daily.

2008

MALLORY BERMAN MCDONALD was recently married. Congratulations Mallory!

winter 2023 29
n Terry McLellan ’09 n Dan Kim ’10 traveled to the West Coast and then the East Coast to visit Dillon Lyons ’11 and Mike Bouchard ’10. n Helping celebrate Mallory and Nick - Heather Ferrenbach, Laura Meyers ’03, Nick, Mallory, Katie Curtis ’02 and Brittany Crush ’04. n Kainani Stevens ’07

class notes

2010

AARON PAITON is an underwriter for MEMIC and was recently married, congratulations Aaron!

2011

KAITLYN PAITON KELLEY had a baby girl, she is working as an Enrollment Counselor with Elsmere Education.

TAYLOR THERIAULT works for Bechtel Frank Erickson Architects. He is a member of the American Institute of Architects and a certificate holder from the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards. Taylor focuses on how architecture can shape its surrounding context, and how it can affect the lives of those who interact with it.

2012

BRYCE RICHMOND was recently named the head lacrosse coach at Brewster Academy

ALEX MILLS married Meghan Debono. Congratulations Alex!

CJ ISGUR works at Yale University in Athletic Equipment Operations and was part of the Bulldogs Ivy League Championship team.

hebron magazine 30
n Jordan Wade ’10 is the Elite Skills Trainer for AAU Basketball for the state of Texas. He is also the Head Coach for the 12-14 year old age group. He also coaches at Fallbrook Academy in North Houston n Tom Cummings ’11 married Claire Pursely on Nov. 5th. Left to right Brad Cummings, Cindy Reedy, Mike Bouchard ’11, Claire Pursley, Tom Cummings, Matt Bouchard ’13, Geno Wentworth ’11, Claire Cummings ’09, and Samir Poundja-Bertrand ’11. n Alex Mills ’12 and Meghan Debono n CJ Isgur ’12 TOM CUMMINGS married Claire Pursley in Little Rock, AR with classmates in attendance.

2013

KATIE COUTURE graduated cum laude from New England Law | Boston, finishing in the top 10% of her class. She writes: “These three years were not easy, it was extremely challenging. Between school and two jobs I also was balancing my role as an Associate on the New England Law Review and a Student Bar Association 3L Class Representative.” Congratulations Katie!

2014

EVAN KALISH visited campus in June with his friend Lin. He is currently working for the Infor Group, coaching youth lacrosse, and telling Florida families about Hebron!

SAMUEL WHEELER is working at WGME where he is responsible for scheduling the broadcasts.

CHARLOTTE MIDDLETON Started her MFA in Ceramics at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln in September ’22.

BRITTANY MYRICK and Miles Horn ’15 were married in Bath. ME.

class notes

2015

Congratulations MYLES HORN on your wedding to BRITTANY MYRICK ’14!

ELIOT LIST was awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship position in Colombia in 2021. He spent his first year at Fundación Universitaria Compensar in Bogotá, Colombia. He had such a wonderful experience that he decided to apply to stay a second year as an English Teaching Assistant. He is now teaching at Universidad Nacional de Colombia in Bogotá. He began this position in August 2022 and will be there until May.

Last year Eliot started a small exchange company to offer international volunteer teaching experiences in Italy. The company is currently prepping for year two and is in the process of launching a scholarship fund to offer financial need and diversity based scholarship awards.

JOSIAH BRAMBLE is the Senior Program Director for Harlem Lacrosse in Boston and coaches at Joseph Lee Middle School. He helped to place KENDALL TUCKER ’23, ALAN FUENTES ’23 and COREY GARVIN ’23 at Hebron this year!

winter 2023 31
n Photo left to right: Michael Myrick ’03, Austin Goldstein ’14, Gabe Zornick ’16, Brett Harkins ’14, Myles, Brittany, Charlotte Middleton ’14, Nico Manganiello ’14, Monique Bertin ’15 Luke Tremblay ’14, DJ Steed ’14, and Rob Kinasewich ’86. n Eliot List with sister Sophie ’19 n Charlotte Middleton ’14

class notes

2016

GABE ZORNIK “I saw that there was an alumni hockey game and I’m super bummed I couldn’t make it. I am back in sunny Florida. I got my masters in Sport Management from Endicott. I’m currently working with special needs kids, and loving it, at a high school where I coach boys lacrosse and girls golf. I worked a lacrosse camp with Caddy Brooks before he started at Hebron. Small World!”

MAOZE WANG and his friend Ella Lin were on campus while on break from USC. They traveled from California to Maine to see his old stomping grounds! He graduated this past spring with a degree in Data Science.

ELIZA BEAUDIN was named to the 2021-22 Academic All-America® Division III Women’s At-Large Second Team, after earning First Team All-District honors.

A four-year forward on the nationally-ranked Elmira women’s ice hockey team, Beaudin graduated summa cum laude with a GPA of 3.94 in psychology. The Lewiston, ME native and Hebron Academy graduate is a two-year captain and was a part of three UCHC Tournament Championships, while also helping Elmira to its first NEHC regular season and Tournament Championships. Individually, Beaudin ranks 7th in program

history in goals (58) and finished with 119 total points. Her four short-handed goals rank second in program history.

Academically, Beaudin earned Dean’s List honors in each of her semesters at Elmira, while earning numerous UCHC, Empire 8, ACHA, and NEHC academic honors. The New England Hockey Conference Player of the Year in 2022 also served as the Vice President of Omicron Delta Kappa at Elmira College - the National Leadership Honor’s Society, the President of PSI CHI - Psi Chi, the International Honor Society in Psychology, as well as the Treasurer of the Active Minds Club along with Phi Eta Sigma.

MITCHELL SPURR is working for American Mutual Insurance as a Property Adjuster and living in Highlands Ranch, CO.

2017

ROSS LEBLOND is working at the South Kent School as a Humanities Teaching Fellow

2018

SEAN KIMURA transferred from Sierra Nevada Univ. and is now at Castleton University in VT studying hospitality administration. He is happy to have made the switch and will play lax at CU.

LUKE GRAINGER Playing at Western Michigan scored the winning OT goal against Northeastern in the Frozen Four.

hebron magazine 32
n Eliza ’18 is teaching and coaching soccer at the Canterbury School. She went up against her old coach Colin Griggs now at the Ethel Walker School. n Josiah Bramble ’15 n Luke Grainger ’18 n Maoze Wang ’16

SHAMUS SULLIVAN, DAVIS CRONIN ’17 and CONRAD GRIMMER ’17 went to cheer on Davis Cronin during his final regular season lacrosse game at Denison University. Davis was second in the nation in Face-Off winning percentage in Division III.

MADDY NEW came for a campus tour and lunch in July with Peyton Spur ’19. They volunteered to be their class agents! It is amazing what a lobster roll will do!

2019

TUCKER MENDOCA skated with his former teachers Trevor Paul and Billy McNamara at the annual Bissell Brothers Hockey Tournament in Portland. Tucker is an RN working at Maine Medical Center in Portland, ME.

2020

LOGAN ARSENEAU is at Johnson and Wales played against TEA MILES ’21 who is at Salem State University.

2021

MOLLY SKELTON and GRACE SKELTON traveled to Sweden to celebrate STINA GUNNARSON ’20 graduating. JAKOB LUNDSTROM ’21 and FELIX STENBERG ’20 didn’t have to travel far to join the celebration!

class notes

winter 2023 33
n Logan Arseneau ’20 and Tea Miles ’21 n Molly Skelton ’21, Grace Skelton ’21, Jakob Lundstrom ’21, Stina Gunnarson ’21, and Felix Stenberg ’20 n Peyton Spurr ’19 and Maddy New ’18 n Shamus Sullivan ’18, Davis Cronin ’17, and Conrad Grimmer ’17

class notes

hebron magazine 34
n Harrison Slattery - Heather and John Slattery ’03 n Adele Parent - Simon Parent ’06 and Genevieve Cyr n Nathaniel Goodman - Jason Goodman ’08 and Allyson Angel n Wyatt Woods - Katie - Leyden Woods ’08 and David Woods ’08 n Roman Camelo Rawls - Ray Rawls ’13 and Kaitlin Day n Riley Jeffrey Harrison - former faculty Eric Harrison and Julia Jacobs n Jionni Whelan - Alexandra and John Whelan ’09 n Eleanore Cummings - Kaylyn and Charlie Cummings ’07 n Logan Martel - Yannick Martel ’14 and Alexandra Lapierre

In Memoriam

TRUSTEE EMERITUS

Peter G. Fallon 11/15/2022

Nancy McKusick 7/6/2022

Jean Hathorne 10/21/2022

Edward L. Ruegg ’55 6/8/2022

FORMER HEAD OF SCHOOL

David R. Buran 5/24/2022

FORMER FACULTY OR STAFF

Hope Allen 8/4/2022

John C. Osgood 6/15/2022

Robert L. Gunn 6/30/2022

Harry Rothschild 12/10/2021

1939

James E. Gifford 6/22/2022

1948

Spencer Drake 3/30/2022

Edward H. Kirschbaum 1/18/2022

Amory M. Houghton 6/14/2022

1950

Frank P. Durkee 1/1/2022

1951

James E. Good 6/11/2022

Courtney E. Peterson 12/26/2021

1952

Richard N. Robbins 7/28/2022

Robert B. Cross 2/13/2022

1953

Lewis A. Barlow 2/14/2022

Henry H. Booth 9/25/2022

1954

David L. Wilson 7/26/2022

1955

H. William Klimm 10/27/2022

Barry E. Schwartz 2/10/2022

John T. Larabee 3/2/2022

1957

David R. Millonig 2/10/2022

Peter S. Rosenberg 5/12/2022

1958

Andrew B. Berry 7/29/2022

1960

Joseph E. Godard 9/2/2022

1961

John D. McGonagle 11/14/2022

1962

Stephen A. Hartgen 12/31/2021

1966

Edward K. White 7/3/2022

Philip C. Wysor 1/19/2022

1972

Mary Gallant Bley 1/17/2022

Mark J. Savran 11/21/2022

1975

Thora K. Johnston 10/15/2022

1979

Todd F. Eadie 5/8/2022

2007

Michael R. Colleran 7/13/2022

2016

Molly M. Pearson 11/6/2021

To read full obituaries visit:

winter 2023 35 obituaries

A TRIBUTE TO ROBERT “BOB” GUNN

to us, Bob described the activities he and Sharron enjoyed in Hendersonville N.C. after their move there. He related, “We do climb and swing from trees, swim in frigid mountain streams, hang glide and all that stuff. And in our waking hours we shop, eat out, play cards, sing, and visit hospitals and sometimes even stay overnight.” Perhaps this is related to one of his favorite movies: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty? After the Gunns moved, Bob and I would have long telephone conversations which I enjoyed tremendously. Bob was saddened to retire from Hebron. I think he felt a bit like Tevye leaving Anatevka in Fiddler on the Roof. He loved Hebron and It kind of broke his heart to leave.

My wife, Patricia and I came to the Academy in 1979. It did not take long for us to connect with some unique, interesting, and welcoming people. We partook in thousands of meals and activities with Bob and Sharron Gunn and often had to be “reminded” that the dining hall was closed because we would continue to talk and joke. Bob and I shared many things in common. We spent many hours together talking philosophy, science, science fiction (Star Trek, Star Wars, Asimov), politics, occasionally watch late night talk shows (Carson and Letterman), Comedy TV shows (Cheers) and for better or worse for our students and friends, we exercised a penchant for puns. We both had what has been described as a “dry” sense of humor and were both “night owls.” Patricia and Sharron were friends and they kept in contact through the years as well. Bob had a great sense of humor. I loved the coy grin and twinkle in his eyes. We watched as their wonderful children, Heather ’90 and Ryan ’87 matured into adults. In a letter

For those that didn’t know Bob Gunn or need to be reminded, Bob was a Hebron faculty member from 1975 to 2005. During his career at Hebron among many other accomplishments he taught every math course at all levels, including Advanced Placement Calculus, Physics, and Computer Program-

ming. He coached the debate and math teams and was a member of the Hebron orchestra. Bob sang in the Hebron chorus, directed the school’s acapella group - the Hebeegeebees, was a director of the Hillsman Chorus in the Norway-South Paris area for 18 years, and was an original member of the Hebron Experience Barbershop Quartet. He and Sharron were Halford Dorm parents for years. Bob helped time and/or score with most Track & Field meets (for which I was most grateful). The title and the following were taken from one of the yearly Christmas letters from Bob and his family. It is from a barbershop song that he liked:

“May the worst of your tomorrows be better than the best of your yesterdays”

“So now it is time to head off to bed, slowly (or I just don’t go) and to all a good night”

Good Night Bob.

Full obituary can be found at: Robert Lyle Gunn – Shuler Funeral Home

hebron magazine 36 obituaries
“IF I HAVE TO HURRY, I JUST DON’T GO” HE DID NOT HURRY

Report of Giving

JULY 1, 2021 TO JUNE 30, 2022

Dear Hebron Community,

I am thrilled to join the advancement team and I want to acknowledge the great work of Beverly Roy, Steve Middleton, and Jen Gronros over the last two years. They have skillfully led Hebron’s advancement efforts though a period of transition.

As a new member of the Hebron community, I am struck by your generosity—this year and over so many prior years. Your passion for Hebron and your commitment to giving back is inspiring. You have established a tradition of philanthropy that provides a critical foundation as we look to the future.

Though I have visited Maine regularly over the years to see family and friends, I moved to Maine full-time in 2018. I spent over a decade working in higher education at Harvard University, the University of Colorado Boulder, and Bowdoin College. My roles have spanned alumni engagement, admissions/recruitment, and major gift fundraising. Most recently, I worked for CCS Fundraising, a consulting firm where I conducted campaign planning and feasibility studies for nonprofit organizations.

I am very excited about this next chapter for Hebron and I am grateful to be part of such a strong and vibrant community. I look forward to meeting you over the coming months as we work collaboratively to strengthen the Academy for our current and future students.

Thank you for your continued support and partnership.

hebron magazine 38
Installation Ceremony for Head of School Patrick Phillips

Leadership Gift Societies

Hebron Academy’s 1804 Leadership Society honors the members of the Hebron community who show a special commitment to support the operations of the school. Alumni, family and friends who contribute $1,000 or more to the Academy in a single fiscal year are considered members of the 1804 Leadership Society. The Academy relies on these donors to strengthen the school, and we thank them for their visionary support.

Hebron Annual Fund

$1,537,963

HEBRON ACADEMY’S 1804 LEADERSHIP SOCIETY GIVING LEVELS ARE AS FOLLOWS:

The Eleanor D. & Claude L. Allen Society

$50,000 or more

Hupper & Treat Society

$25,000-$49,999

The Dwyer Society

$10,000-$24,999

Sturtevant Circle

$5,000-$9,999

1804 Circle

$1804- $4,999

Charter Circle (for graduates of most recent 15 years)

$1,000-$1,803

$164,405

Restricted Gifts

$478,228 Gifts to Endlowment

$895,330 Unrestricted Gifts

winter 2023 39 leadership gift societies
Unrestricted gifts $895,330 Restricted gifts $164,405 Total Annual Fund $1,059,735 654 Donors Gifts to Endowment $478,228 17 Donors Total Commitments for Hebron Academy for fiscal year 2022
671
Donors

Consecutive Year Donors

The following donors exemplify the steadfast spirit of the Hebron community by their dedication to continuous giving. Their inspiring commitment and generosity from year to year sustain the work of the people and programs in guiding our students to reach their highest potential in mind, body, and spirit—our heritage for more than two centuries.

ANONYMOUS (3)

60+ CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Saul Cohen ’51 and Naomi Cohen

Art Cooper ’49 and Ellen Cooper

Peter Crisp ’51 and Missy Crisp

Jim Gillies ’55 and Susan Gillies

Peter Lunder ’52 and Paula Lunder

Dean Ridlon ’53

Fred Stavis ’51 and Ruth Stavis

Hodie White ’54 and Mary White

55 TO 59 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Dave Barbour ’60 and Margaret Barbour

Don Bates ’62 and Marjorie Bates

Allan Brown ’55 and Linda Saltford

John Giger ’64 and Judy Giger

Bert Lachmann ’51

Tom Mann ’59 and Ana Maria Mann

Len Mintz ’53

Jerrold Olanoff ’54

Tom Snedeker ’61 and Nancy Snedeker

50 TO 54 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Alan Booth ’52 and Margaret Booth

Ray Bradford ’64 and Marlo Bradford

Craig Clark ’70 and Judy Unger-Clark

Cy Cook ’73 and Megan Shea

Carleton Endemann ’64 and Deborah Endemann

Rudi Eyerer ’70 and Margrette Fenderson

Sandy Eynon ’65 and Karin Eynon

Susan Galvin ’62 H

Albert Lepage ’65

45 TO 49 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Erik Bateman ’75

Hank Booth ’53

David Burnett ’77 and Anne Burnett

Susan Crane ’58 H

Clem Dwyer ’66 and Martha Dwyer

Shell Evans ’62 and Susan Evans

Dick Forte ’62 and Mariele Forte

Goody Gilman ’55

Paul Goodof ’67

Peter Madsen ’65 and Diana Madsen

Mike Malm ’60 and Cynthia Malm

Jonathan Moll ’69 and Robin Moll

Bill Weary ’60

Rupert White ’51 and Ruth White

40 TO 44 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Peter Burbank ’70

Jim Cram ’68 and Anne Cram

Mal Davis ’58 and Michele Davis

Alec Dean ’63

Doug Gordon ’71 and Kim Weller

Rob Hagge ’66 and Elka Hagge

Steve Hibbard ’61 and Virginia Hibbard

Robert Jarvis ’58 and Martha Jarvis

Regis Lepage ’72 and Carolyn Lepage

Susan Shaver Loyd-Turner ’77

Joe Mandiberg ’65 and Linda Mandiberg

Corb Moister ’68

Ted Noyes ’58 and Ann Noyes

Laura Douglas Peterson ’81 and Bart Peterson

Andrew Smith ’80 and Lavea Brachman

Scott Wilson ’71 and Sarah Wilson

35 TO 39 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Marilyn Ackley

Bill Allen ’62

Dave Anderson ’60 and Karen Anderson

David Birtwistle ’71 and Debbie Birtwistle

Jon Brooks ’62 and Paula Jacobs-Brooks

Walter Burden ’64 and Jean Burden

Chris Buschmann ’66 and Lois Buschmann

Debbie Clark

Trudy Crane

Moose and Trish Curtis

Bill Davenport ’55 and Tildy Davenport

Ed Driscoll ’62 and Diane Driscoll

Norm Farrar ’58

Bruce Found and Betsy Found

David Gould ’71 and Anne Gould

Sue Hadlock ’75

Martha Horner

Stephen B. Jeffries ’79 and Kimberlea Jeffries

Sharon Lake-Post ’83 and Benjamin Post

Bev Leyden

Angus McDonald ’43 and Mavis McDonald

John McIlwain ’57 and Jean McIlwain

John Meehan ’64 and Pamela Meehan

David Stonebraker and Leslie Guenther

Molly and Lew Turlish

Susan Witter

30 TO 34 CONSECUTIVE

YEARS

John Blake ’48 and Peggy Blake

Peter Boody ’69 and Barbara Boody

Bob Brown ’60 and Judy Brown

Reed Chapman ’76

Kip Childs ’72 and Chris Kosydar

Robert Craig

Jason Found ’87 and Crystal Found

Susan Garner ’62 H

Bill Guidera ’88 and Aimee Guidera

Cyrus Hagge ’71

Jane Harris Ash ’79 and Gary Ash

Bernard Helm ’59 and Carla Helm

Dick Levinson ’49 and Susan Newman

John Meserve ’67 and Kathy Meserve

Jim Morrill ’65 and Penny Morrill

Steve and Melanie Ness

Dwight Parsons ’65 and Mary Parsons

Cynthia Reedy and Brad Cummings

Henry Rines ’65 and Jan Rines

Richard Robbins ’52 and Beverley Robbins

Bob Ryan ’77

Kent Savel ’55 and Paula Savel

Carl and Renee Seefried

Bragdon Shields ’79 and Janet Lange

Kelso Sutton ’57 and Joanna Sutton

Charles Swartwood ’57

Jeff Tannebring ’69 and Janet Tannebring

Laurel Willey Thompson ’79 and Rolfe Thompson

Bob Varney ’62 and Maria Varney

25 TO 29 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Carolyn Adams ’77 and Dan Fuller

George Arison ’96 and Robert Luo

Ellen Augusta ’75

Bill Barrett ’52 and Jane Barrett

Reeve Bright ’66 and Anne Bright

Nick Carter ’73 and Susan Carter

Conrad Conant ’59

Galen Crane ’87 and Cali Brooks

Henry Curtis ’54 and Judith Curtis

Bob Egleston ’62 and Elizabeth Egleston

Wayne French ’55 and Joan French

Bob Greaves ’82 and Ronda Greaves

Ted and Alicia Haartz

Henry Harding ’70 and Mary Harding

Tom Hull ’64 and Jill Hull

Sara Keef Kendall ’95 and Matthew Kendall

Kathleen Loveland ’66 H

Dan Lyman ’69 and Martha Lyman

Carl Mikkelsen ’71 and Barbara Posnick

Gary Miller ’68 and Arlene Miller

Brad Parsons ’72 and Nancy Harris

hebron magazine 40

Bob Quarles ’81 and Linda Quarles

John Redmond ’59 and Ann Redmond

Rick Rigazio ’71 and Julie Rigazio

Marc Roy ’78 and Beverly Roy

Jay Sadlon ’64 and Karen Sadlon

Peter Schramm ’52 and Musetta Schramm

Thomas and Bethel Shields

Michael Silverman ’85 and Jenifer Silverman

Phil Smith ’49 and Holly Smith

Bill Sprole ’62 and Susan Sprole

Dana and Peggy Stewart

Bill Stocker ’62 and Anne Terry Stocker

Ken Sweezey ’63 and Joyce Sweezey

Louise Thompson ’55 H

Tycho von Rosenvinge ’59

Daphne Whitman ’54 H

Bill Witter ’82

20 TO 24 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

Venessa Arsenault

Bert Babcock ’61 and Valerie Babcock

John Baker ’67 and Lynn Baker

Eddie Bell ’70

Joe Bellavance ’58 and Mary Bellavance

Charles and Judith Berg

Kenneth Boyle ’52 and Dale Boyle

Timothy Caddo ’85 and Candace Caddo

Dick Canaday ’56 and Jeanette Canaday

Lawrence Crane ’67

Kate Thoman Crowley ’87 and Bob Crowley

Dick Cutter ’56

Paul Dahlquist ’59 and Charlene Dahlquist

Porter Dickinson ’48 and Sally Dickinson

Van Finn ’65

Susan and John Geismar

Dave Goodof ’65

Leah Hedstrom ’02

Stu Hedstrom ’01

Wally Higgins

Jim Hill ’90 and Lisa Hill

Hank Holste ’64

Dave Houston ’53 and Ann Houston

Bruce Hunter ’72

Mark Jorgensen ’74 and Dee Dee Jorgensen

John and Marcia King

Kate Albin Lindberg ’88 and Tom Lindberg

Charles Longley ’52 and Susan Longley

Dennis and Marie Looney

Bob Lowenthal ’68

Mitch Maidman ’82 and Arlene Maidman

Bob McCoy ’58 and Elaine McCoy

Roger McNeill ’63

John Merz ’54 and Carole Merz

Steve Middleton and Julie Poland-Middleton

Mel Nadeau ’76 and Denise Wandler

Bruce Nash ’71 and Susan Nash

Kirsten Ness ’98

Mitch and Kathy Overbye

Fred Perry ’59 and Sarah Smith

Norma Porras

consecutive year donors

David Prout ’83

Marguerite Roy

Charlie Seefried ’89 and Kim Seefried

Sarah Hughes Sigel ’76 and Richard Sigel

Richard and Theodora Siragusa

Heather Stephens ’88 and Alex Stephens

Bill Stites ’71 and Sara Stites

John Suitor ’84 and Gail Suitor

Byron Whitney ’63 and Betsy Baker-Whitney

Chip and Jean Wood

15 TO 19 CONSECUTIVE

YEARS

Ronald Adams ’65 and Karen Adams

Gary Appelbaum ’76 and Gail Appelbaum

Jeff Baker ’71 and Peggie Lee Baker

Jim Balano ’71 and Kate Spillane

Sara Marquis Barker ’03

John Barrett ’61 and Susan Barrett

Lincoln Blake ’50 and Barbara Blake

Debbie Bloomingdale ’83 and Peter Hall

Alan Boone ’54 and Gayle Boone

Tim Braddock ’70

Nick Brook ’97

Greg Burns ’73 and Digna Burns

William Carhart ’51

Mary Jo Cassidy ’60 H

Tim and Donna Churchill

Roger Clark ’74 and Marcia Clark

Helen Cleaves ’50 H

Deborah Schiavi Cote ’84 and Paul Cote

Art Curtze ’65 and Jennifer Loveland-Curtze

Bob Davis ’85 and Julie Davis

Jim Fenlason ’55 and Linda Fenlason

Greg Getschow ’82 and Kimberly Getschow

Peter Giesemann ’57 and Carol Giesemann

Lee Grant ’90 and Sarah Grant

John Halford ’60

Will Harding ’63

Bob Hernon ’77

Bill and Cathy Hine

Joe Hodgkins ’63 and Ann Hodgkins

Susie and Ted Hoeller

Karen Holler ’79

Matt Johnson ’93 and Anne Johnson

Paul Kaneb ’60 and Jill Kaneb

Paul Leger ’76

Jake Leyden ’99 and Elizabeth Leyden

Dave Lougee ’59 and Carolyn Lougee

David Lowell ’61 and Elaina Lowell

Matthew Lyness ’76 and Kathy Lyness

Paula Lyons-Myrick

Bruce MacDougal ’59 and Margaret MacDougal

Dagny Maidman ’85 and Molly Hollis Wood

John McGonagle ’61

Robert McNamara ’63 and Jean McNamara

Paul and Desley Monaco

Ken Mortimer ’56 and Kay Nagle

Jerry Myrick

Mike Myrick ’03 and Amanda Myrick

Kirby Nadeau ’77 and Verna Maurice

Scott Nelson ’91 and Josephine Nelson

Eric Nicolai ’79

Dieter Nottebohm ’57 and Mary Nottebohm

Gunnar Olson ’90 and Anna Sievers

Jessie Maher Parker ’95

Ziggy Peret ’62 and Cindy Peret

Kate Perkins ’81

Bob Pettit ’69

Mason Pratt ’57

Peter Burbank ’70

Cary and Nancy Rea

Louise Roy ’05

Jamie Ryland ’70 and Margaret Ryland

Karen Stoloff Sacherman ’84 and Jim Sacherman

Jeff Scott ’72 and Hilda Scott

Ron Sklar ’70 and Marydee Sklar

Michael Slosberg ’63 and Karen Slosberg

Steve Smith

Dave Snow ’72 and Lynette Snow

Sue Spaulding ’54 H

Meredith Strang Burgess

Ian Swanbeck ’85 and Christie Swanbeck

John Thibodeau ’64 and Noreen Keenan

Charlie and Pat Tranfield

Hannah Turlish ’87 and Harry Green

Sarah Twichell

Stephen Wagner ’73 and Carol Wagner

winter 2023 41
Austin Stonebraker ’97, son Carter and daughter Charlotte

Bob Waite ’68 and Karen Shigeishi-Waite

John Walthausen ’64 and Katherine Walthausen

Peter Welsh ’70

Rupert White ’75 and Lori White

Dave Williams ’60 and Stephanie Williams

Bob Willis ’69 and Nancy Winslow

Nancy Woolford ’56 H

10 TO 14 CONSECUTIVE YEARS

David Ayres ’63 and Jean Ayres

David and Theresa Banash

Peter Bancroft ’70

Ed Barry ’57 and Teresa Barry

Rich Bartoccini ’65 and Judi Bartoccini

Bill Becker ’87 and Elizabeth Becker

Tim and Emily Bonis

Robert and Dale Byrne

Jeff Chase ’65 and Charleen Chase

Jim and Beverly Clements

Heidi Collins

Felica and Kelvin Coney

Mark Cuneo ’67 and Sharon Cuneo

Lydia Pottle Currie ’96

Tim Curtis ’03 and Chrystal Curtis

Nils Devine ’98

Grace Drown

Mark and Nancy Enyedy

Peter Fallon ’86 and Sarah Fallon

Jessica Feeley ’75

Wende Fox Lawson and Jim Lawson

Debra Garvin ’73 H

Bryan Gaudreau ’97 and Dawn Allen

Anthony Geraci ’90 and Kellie Geraci

Jessica Takach Gilpatrick ’01 and Brendan Gilpatrick ’02

Mike Graney ’56 and Patricia Graney

Zandy Gray ’61 and Lila Gray

Alex Haartz ’77

Doug Haartz ’76 and Judith Haartz

Matt Hampton ’86

Bob Hanks ’62 and Katharine Hanks

Susan Buckley Harlor and William Ray

Brad Hinman ’71 and Martha Hinman

Lynne Holler ’80 and Craig Piper

Fred and Nancy Holler

Al Kennedy ’65 and Patricia Taylor

Jeffrey Laughlin ’65

James LeBlanc ’02 and Ashley LeBlanc

Joyce Lee ’47 H

Nick Leyden ’01 and Ana Leyden

Rosamond Lownes

Evan Mahaney ’65

Patricia Massenburg

Bruce McFarland ’57 and Sonja McFarland

King Meyer ’70 and Pat Meyer

Bill Miller ’53

Timothy Murnane ’86

Margaret O’Donnell and John Rasmussen

consecutive year donors

Terry Parker ’61

Bill Patterson ’56 and Irene Patterson

George Powers ’70 and Marguerite Herman

Gerry and Lucy Puopolo

James Quinn ’56

Rick Reder ’62 and John Nieman

Tom Reeves ’65

Laura and Michael Rifkin

Ben Rifkin ’96 and Jamie Rifkin

Dave Rines ’69

Chris Roy ’07 and Jill Piekut

Nick Roy ’10

James and Linda Salisbury

Mike Samers ’84

John Scamman ’70

Peter Schiot ’57

Robert Scholnick ’58 and Sylvia Scholnick

Dana Shields ’78 and Robert Hubbell

Jane and David Smith

Terry Sparrow ’56 and Ann Sparrow

Meg Speranza Anderson

Cheryl and Raymond Tardif

Liza Tarr

Kent Walker ’63 and Patricia Walker

Rick Waxman ’64

Jeff Weber

Jim Whitney ’71 and Peggy Whitney

5 TO 9 CONSECUTIVE

YEARS

Jennifer Willey Algieri ’88 and Frank Algieri

Lina Andalkar Anthony ’85 and Paul Anthony

Ross Babcock ’58 and Jo Anne Babcock

Dave Babson ’57

Robert Bannard ’57

Paul Bartlett ’70 and Gail Bartlett

Ben Becker ’02 and Jordan Becker

Michael Bergamini ’63 and Harli Dollinger

Ed Birk ’76 and Cecilia Birk

Lawrence Boyle

Jim Brown ’69 and Lorraine Brown

Bill Burke ’69 and Patricia Burke

Kayla Chadwick ’08

Keith Clark ’58

Ann Sullivan Cohen ’86 and Barry Cohen

Katherine Cole ’07

Nat Corwin ’73 and Sarah Miller

Jon Crane ’86

Peter Cutler ’57 and Sally Cutler

Mark Desgrosseilliers ’89

Scott Downs ’86 and Kristen Downs

Michael Finucan ’81 and Laurel Finucan

Steven Fitzgerald ’72

Matthew Fox ’67

Cory Friedman ’65

Carmine and Laurie Frumiento

Sandy Furber ’68 and Colleen Furber

Herbert and Margot Gardner

Brad and Linda Gilbreth

Gordon Gillies ’62 and Mary Gillies

Carolyn Gouges d’Agincourt ’77

Stuart Hill ’79 and Tara Hill

Dana Hodges ’77 and Dominique Hodges

Terry Ingalls ’65 and Susan Ingalls

Tom Johnson ’68 and Jeannie Johnson

Richard and Barbara Kappelmann

Katya Killian and Nicholas Trautz

Rob Kinasewich ’86 and Patricia Kinasewich

Sam Kinasewich ’13

Andrew Kluge ’15

Allan Lamport ’60 and Mariele Lamport

Rick Lane and Denise Keough-Lane

Wolf Larsen ’66 and Nadia Larsen

Becky Leamon ’81

David Loker ’64 and Cynthia Loker

Noah Love ’07 and Jonathan Rivera

Chris Magendantz ’87 and Kristin Magendantz

Jonathan Marvel ’65 and Stefanie Marvel

Douglas McCoy ’66 and Regina McCoy

Donna McFarland

Brett Mitchell ’02 and Sarah Mountcastle

Wylie and Barbara Mitchell

John Moeling ’60 and Barbara Moeling

Emily Geismar Murphy ’02 and Phillip Murphy

Susan and Edward Newell

Otis Perry ’58 and Amy Perry

Carl Peterson ’69

Tim and Denise Scammon

Bill Sepe ’53

David and Ellen Simmons

Bill Skelton ’86 and Sarah Skelton

Jonathan Spindler ’02 and Katie Spindler

Sam Stafford ’68 and Harriet Stafford

Michael and Beth Stonebraker

Arthur Strout ’53 and Carol Lundquist

Rachel Sukeforth ’03

Jerome and Mary-Catherine Sullivan

Daniella Swenton and Travis Brennan

Ander Thebaud ’83

Rob Thomas ’76

Gerry Thompson ’68 and Barrett Thompson

Lorraine Thompson

Heidi Cornwell Trout ’83

Ned Waite ’65 and Anne Waite

Jen Walker ’90 and Gaurav Shah

Garvin Warner and Margaret Wheeler

Nat Warren-White ’68 and Elizabeth Warren-White

Barbara and John Waterman

Tim West ’76

David Wildes ’68 and Kitty Wildes

Mike Wolf ’82 and Suzette Wolf

Lani Wolterstorff ’79 and Robert Wolterstorff

Tony Wood ’62 and Ann Wood

Mike Wright ’65 and Candace Wright

hebron magazine 42

Leadership Gifts

Hebron’s 1804 Leadership Society honors those alumni, family, and friends who have contributed $1000 or more to the Academy within a single fiscal year to bolster the operations of the school. Hebron relies on the generous gifts of these donors, and we are deeply grateful for their vision and faith in the mission of the Academy.

The 1804 Leadership Society is composed of five donor recognition categories and a sixth one intended for young alumni. Hebron Academy takes this opportunity to express its gratitude to the 198 leadership donors listed below, whose collective gifts and pledges amounted to $1,502,338 or 94% of the total philanthropic support of the Academy during the 2021-2022 fiscal year.

THE ELEANOR D. & CLAUDE L. ALLEN SOCIETY

$50,000 or more

Anonymous

Albert Lepage Foundation, Inc.

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund

Albert Lepage ’65

Kelso Sutton ’57 and Joanna Sutton

Vanguard Charitable

Dave Williams ’60 and Stephanie Williams

HUPPER & TREAT SOCIETY

$25,000 to $49,000

Anonymous

Susan Garner ’62 H

Paul Kaneb ’60 and Jill Kaneb

Brad Parsons ’72 and Nancy Harris

David Prout ’83

Schwab Charitable Fund

The Paul and Jill Kaneb Family Charitable Foundation

The Treat Charitable Foundation

Garvin Warner and Margaret Wheeler

Bill Witter ’82

THE DWYER SOCIETY

$10,000 to $24,999

Carolyn Adams ’77 and Dan Fuller

Bill Allen ’62

David Beck

Craig Clark ’70 and Judy Unger-Clark

Kate Thoman Crowley ’87 and Bob Crowley

Mal Davis ’58 and Michele Davis

Eugene Kinasewich Fund

Jose Fenderson ’33

Susan Galvin ’62 H

Jane Harris Ash ’79 and Gary Ash

Matt Johnson ’93 and Anne Johnson

Rob Kinasewich ’86 and Patricia Kinasewich

Noah Love ’07 and Jonathan Rivera

Gary Miller ’68 and Arlene Miller

Mark Noonan

Bill Percival ’76 and Allison Percival

Rupert and Ruth White Charitable Fund

Jamie Ryland ’70 and Margaret Ryland

Dave Snow ’72 and Lynette Snow

Arthur Strout ’53 and Carol Lundquist

Rupert White ’51 and Ruth White

David Wildes ’68 and Kitty Wildes

STURTEVANT CIRCLE

$5,000 to $$9,999

Anonymous (2)

David and Theresa Banash

Ed Barry ’57 and Teresa Barry

Debbie Bloomingdale ’83 and Peter Hall

Nick Carter ’73 and Susan Carter

Saul Cohen ’51 and Naomi Cohen

Felica and Kelvin Coney

Art Cooper ’49 and Ellen Cooper

Clem Dwyer ’66 and Martha Dwyer

Shell Evans ’62 and Susan Evans

Wende Fox Lawson and Jim Lawson

Peter Giesemann ’57 and Carol Giesemann

Goody Gilman ’55

Doug Gordon ’71 and Kim Weller

David Gould ’71 and Anne Gould

Terry Ingalls ’65 and Susan Ingalls

Jason J. Spindler Foundation

Steve Jeffries ’79 and Kimberlea Jeffries

Paul Kesaris ’70 and Carol Kesaris

Matthew Lyness ’76 and Kathy Lyness

John McGonagle ’61

John McIlwain ’57 and Jean McIlwain

winter 2023 43
Head of School Patrick Phillips, Alan Lipman ’67, Tim Braddock ’70, Kim Kenway ’70

Rick Rigazio ’71 and Julie Rigazio

Bob Ryan ’77

Simmons Foundation, Inc.

Bill Skelton ’86 and Sarah Skelton

Jonathan Spindler ’02 and Katie Spindler

The Maine Community Foundation

The New York Community Trust

Bob Waite ’68 and Karen Shigeishi-Waite

Scott Wilson ’71 and Sarah Wilson

Susan and Carl Young

1804 SOCIETY

$1,804 to $4,999

Anonymous (4)

Lina Andalkar Anthony ’85 and Paul Anthony

Bill Becker ’87 and Elizabeth Becker

Joe Bellavance ’58 and Mary Bellavance

Hank Booth ’53

Reeve Bright ’66 and Anne Bright

Chris Buschmann ’66 and Lois Buschmann

CIGNA Foundation

Keith Clark ’58

Rob Davis ’90

Bob Davis ’85 and Julie Davis

Mark Desgrosseilliers ’89

Norm Farrar ’58

Jamie Fey ’02 and Ian Crouch

Greg Getschow ’82 and Kimberly Getschow

Paul S. Goodof ’67

Bob Greaves ’82 and Ronda Greaves

Bill Guidera ’88 and Aimee Guidera

Alex Haartz ’77

Ben Haartz ’83 and Carol Haartz

Doug Haartz ’76 and Judith Haartz

Ted and Alicia Haartz

Cyrus Hagge ’71

Rob Hagge ’66 and Elka Hagge

Wally Higgins

Hank Holste ’64

Jacob Irving Foundation

leadership gifts

Mark Jorgensen ’74 and Dee Dee Jorgensen

John Kippax ’70 and Helen Kippax

Regis Lepage ’72 and Carolyn Lepage

Dick Levinson ’49 and Susan Newman

Bob Lowenthal ’68

Charlie Lownes ’84 and Kathryn Lownes

Rosamond Lownes

Peter Madsen ’65 and Diana Madsen

Mitch Maidman ’82 and Arlene Maidman

Mike Malm ’60 and Cynthia Malm

David Martinez and Marta Manso

Angus McDonald ’43 and Mavis McDonald

Corb Moister ’68

Jonathan Moll ’69 and Robin Moll

Emily Geismar Murphy ’02 and Phillip Murphy

Dieter Nottebohm ’57 and Mary Nottebohm

Oak Grove School Foundation

Martin and Pavla Prochazka

Renaissance Charitable Foundation

Henry Rines ’65 and Jan Rines

Marc Roy ’78 and Beverly Roy

Karen Stoloff Sacherman ’84 and Jim Sacherman

John Sherden ’56 and Annette Sherden

Michael Silverman ’85 and Jenifer Silverman

Heather Stephens ’88 and Alex Stephens

Ian Swanbeck ’85 and Christie Swanbeck

Walmart Foundation

Peter Welsh ’70

Daphne Whitman ’54 H

Tony Wood ’62 and Ann Wood

CHARTER CIRCLE

$1,000 to $1,803

Anonymous (4)

Ronald Adams ’65 and Karen Adams

Rich Bartoccini ’65 and Judi Bartoccini

Don Bates ’62 and Marjorie Bates

Ed Bell ’70

Ed Birk ’76 and Cecilia Birk

Lincoln Blake ’50 and Barbara Blake

Peter Burbank ’70 and Sheila Burbank

Walter Burden ’64 and Jean Burden

Bill Burke ’69 and Patricia Burke

Susan Crane ’58 H

Peter Crisp ’51 and Missy Crisp

Bill Davenport ’55 and Tildy Davenport

Dr. Houghton White and Mary Hanks White Fund

Carleton Endemann ’64 and Deborah Endemann

Sandy Eynon ’65 and Karin Eynon

Elizabeth Beach Fitzpatrick ’76 and Douglas Fitzpatrick

Dick Forte ’62 and Mariele Forte

Carmine and Laurie Frumiento

Ed Gottlieb ’64 and Mathilda Gottlieb

Lee Grant ’90 and Sarah Grant

Tom Hull ’64 and Jill Hull

Jim Kelley ’95

Hugh Kirkpatrick ’53 and Mary Kirkpatrick

Paul Leger ’76

Jesse Lewis ’72

Judd Lowe ’72 and Debbie Lowe

Peter Lunder ’52 and Paula Lunder

Joe Mandiberg ’65 and Linda Mandiberg

Jonathan Marvel ’65 and Stefanie Marvel

Brett Mitchell ’02 and Sarah Mountcastle

Ken Mortimer ’56 and Kay Nagle

Ziggy Peret ’62 and Cindy Peret

Fred Perry ’59 and Sarah Smith

Jamey Pittman and Melissa Toussaint

Steve Pollard ’71 and Darlene Pollard

Rhode Island Foundation

Dave Rines ’69

Anne Sage ’88 and Jesse Sgro

Aaron Senechal

Bill Sepe ’53

Ron Sklar ’70 and Marydee Sklar

Sue Spaulding ’54 H

Sam Stafford ’68 and Harriet Stafford

Fred Stavis ’51 and Ruth Stavis

Brownie Swartwood ’57

Ken Sweezey ’63 and Joyce Sweezey

The Crisp Family Fund

The Lunder Foundation

The Walter H. and Hannah H. Webb Family Foundation

Jane Lyness Wall

Mary Warner

Bill Weary ’60

Doug Webb ’76 and Sandra Webb

Hodie White ’54 and Mary White

William D. Witter Foundation

Bob Willis ’69 and Nancy Winslow

Susan Witter

Mike Wolf ’82 and Suzette Wolf

Chip and Jean Wood

Mike Wright ’65 and Candace Wright

Nancy and David Young

YourCause, LLC

hebron magazine 44

Class Giving

Hebron alumni are immensely generous in supporting the success of their alma mater to ensure that future students at the Academy have a Hebron experience that will forge for them, too, a lifelong commitment to the school. The following gifts made by alumni and honorary class members that provide for all aspects of the school, from yearly operations to capital projects to long-term endowment. We are immensely appreciative of the alumni who join together, across class years, for this generous effort.

CLASS OF 1933

Estate of Jose Fenderson

CLASS OF 1943

Angus McDonald

CLASS OF 1947

Joyce Lee H

CLASS OF 1948

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $200

John Blake

Porter Dickinson

CLASS OF 1949

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $10,085

Art Cooper

Dick Levinson

Phil Smith

CLASS OF 1950

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $1,150

Lincoln Blake

Helen Cleaves H

CLASS OF 1951

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $18,200

William Carhart

Saul Cohen

Peter Crisp

Bert Lachmann

Fred Stavis

Rupert White

CLASS OF 1952

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $2,060

Bill Barrett

Alan Booth

Kenneth Boyle

Jim Kelley

Charles Longley

Peter Lunder

Richard Robbins

Peter Schramm

CLASS OF 1953

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $20,500

Hank Booth

Dave Houston

Hugh Kirkpatrick

Bill Miller

Len Mintz

Dean Ridlon

Bill Sepe

Arthur Strout

CLASS OF 1954

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $5,250

Alan Boone

Henry Curtis

Roscoe Fitts

John Merz

Jerrold Olanoff

Sue Spaulding H

Hodie White

Daphne Whitman H

CLASS OF 1955

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $7,851

Bob Bird

Allan Brown

Bill Davenport

Jim Fenlason

Wayne French

Jim Gillies

Goody Gilman

Fernando Pruna

Kent Savel

Louise Thompson

CLASS OF 1956

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $5,581

Dick Canaday

Dick Cutter

Mike Graney

Ken Mortimer

Bill Patterson

James Quinn

John Sherden

Terry Sparrow

Nancy Woolford H

CLASS OF 1957

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $145,575

Dave Babson

Robert Bannard

Ed Barry

Peter Cutler

Peter Giesemann

Bruce McFarland

John McIlwain

Dieter Nottebohm

Mason Pratt

Peter Schiot

Kelso Sutton

Charles Swartwood

CLASS OF 1958

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $28,060

Ross Babcock

Joe Bellavance

Keith Clark

Susan Crane H

Mal Davis

Norm Farrar

Robert Jarvis

Bob McCoy

Ted Noyes

Otis Perry

Robert Scholnick

CLASS OF 1959

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $2,697

Conrad Conant

Paul Dahlquist

Bernard Helm

Dave Lougee

Bruce MacDougal

Tom Mann

Fred Perry

John Redmond

Tycho von Rosenvinge

CLASS OF 1960

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $334,640

Dave Anderson

Dave Barbour

Bob Brown

Mary Jo Cassidy H

John Halford

Paul Kaneb

Allan Lamport

Mike Malm

John Moeling

Bill Weary

Dave Williams

Jack Yoffa

CLASS OF 1961

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $6,728

Bert Babcock

John Barrett

Zandy Gray

Steve Hibbard

David Lowell

John McGonagle

Terry Parker

Tom Snedeker

CLASS OF 1962

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $83,346

Bill Allen

Jim Austin

Don Bates

winter 2023 45

class giving

Jon Brooks

Ed Driscoll

Bob Egleston

Shell Evans

Dick Forte

Fredric Friedman

Susan Galvin H

Susan Garner H

Gordon Gillies

Bob Hanks

Greg Karlowski

Ziggy Peret

Rick Reder

Bill Sprole

Bill Stocker

Bill Tedrow

Bob Varney

Tony Wood

CLASS OF 1963

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $3,720

David Ayres

Michael Bergamini

Alec Dean

Chester Fairlie

Will Harding

Joe Hodgkins

Robert McNamara

Roger McNeill

Nicholas Noyes

George Rand

Michael Slosberg

Ken Sweezey

Kent Walker

Byron Whitney

CLASS OF 1964

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $8,800

Ray Bradford

Walter Burden

Carleton Endemann

John Giger

Ed Gottlieb

Hank Holste

Tom Hull

David Loker

John Meehan

Joel Powers

Jay Sadlon

John Thibodeau

John Walthausen

Rick Waxman

CLASS OF 1965

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $369,646

Ronald Adams

Rich Bartoccini

Jeff Chase

Tad Clark

Art Curtze

Sandy Eynon

Van Finn

Cory Friedman

Dave Goodof

Terry Ingalls

Al Kennedy

Jeffrey Laughlin

Albert Lepage

Peter Madsen

Evan Mahaney

Joe Mandiberg

Jonathan Marvel

Jim Morrill

Dwight Parsons

Tom Reeves

Henry Rines

Ned Waite

Mike Wright

CLASS OF 1966

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $16,516

Reeve Bright

Chris Buschmann

Clem Dwyer

Rob Hagge

Wolf Larsen

Kathleen Loveland H

Douglas McCoy

Bob Whitney

CLASS OF 1967

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $48,389

Anonymous

John Baker

Thomas Bucken

Lawrence Crane

Mark Cuneo

Paul Goodof

John Meserve

CLASS OF 1968

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $43,770

Daniel Bradford

Jeff Cook

Jim Cram

Sandy Furber

Tom Johnson

Bob Lowenthal

Gary Miller

Michael Mishou

Corb Moister

Sam Stafford

Gerry Thompson

Bob Waite

Nat Warren-White

David Wildes

CLASS OF 1969

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $8,119

Peter Boody

Jim Brown

Bill Burke

Ted Field

Joe Garcelon

Lee Geier

Dan Lyman

Jonathan Moll

Carl Peterson

Bob Pettit

Dave Rines

Taz Tally

Jeff Tannebring

Bob Willis

CLASS OF 1970

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $36,408

Peter Bancroft

Paul Bartlett

Eddie Bell

Tim Braddock

Peter Burbank

Craig Clark

Rudi Eyerer

Henry Harding

Paul Kesaris

John Kippax

King Meyer

George Powers

Randy Pyle

Jamie Ryland

John Scamman

Scott Seaman

Ron Sklar

Peter Welsh

CLASS OF 1971

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $25,912

Jeff Baker

Jim Balano

David Birtwistle

Doug Gordon

David Gould

Cyrus Hagge

Jim Harris

Brad Hinman

Peter Hoople

Carl Mikkelsen

Bruce Nash

Stephen Pollard

Rick Rigazio

Bill Stites

Jim Whitney

Scott Wilson

CLASS OF 1972

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $45,421

Kip Childs

Steven Fitzgerald

Bruce Hunter

Regis Lepage

Edward Lewis

Jesse Lewis

Judd Lowe

hebron magazine 46

class giving

Steve Mervis

Brad Parsons

Jeff Scott

Dave Snow

CLASS OF 1973

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $6,030

Francis M. Blodget

Greg Burns

Nick Carter

Cy Cook

Nat Corwin

Debra Garvin H

David Mogill

Stephen Wagner

CLASS OF 1974

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $2,214

Roger Clark

Mark Jorgensen

Bill Linnell

David Snider

CLASS OF 1975

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $1,373

Anonymous

Ellen Augusta

Erik Bateman

Marjorie Bobbitt

Jessica Feeley

Sue Hadlock

Patrick Lyness

Rupert White

CLASS OF 1976

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $26,078

Gary Appelbaum

Michael Arel

Ed Birk

Reed Chapman

Liz Beach Fitzpatrick

Doug Haartz

Paul Leger

Matthew Lyness

Stacy Berney Miles

Mel Nadeau

Bill Percival

Sarah Hughes Sigel

Rob Thomas

Doug Webb

Tim West

CLASS OF 1977

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $22,844

Carolyn Adams

David Burnett

Tony Dunn

Carolyn Gouges d’Agincourt

Alex Haartz

Bob Hernon

Dana Hodges

Wallace Johnston

Susan Shaver Loyd-Turner

Kirby Nadeau

Bob Ryan

CLASS OF 1978

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $2,097

Albert Morrison

Marc Roy

Dana Shields

CLASS OF 1979

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $18,482

Fred Burnham

Jane Harris Ash

Stuart Hill

Karen Holler

Steve Jeffries

Eric Nicolai

Tim Roche

Bragdon Shields

Laurel Willey Thompson

Lani Jones Wolterstorff

CLASS OF 1980

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $700

Lynne Holler

Andrew Smith

CLASS OF 1981

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $51,775

Anonymous

Peter Bryant

William Couch

Michael Finucan

Nat Harris

Becky Leamon

Kate Perkins

Laura Douglas Peterson

Bob Quarles

Gary Savignano

CLASS OF 1982

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $32,708

Tucker Cutler

Greg Getschow

Bob Greaves

Joy Dubin Grossman

Todd Harmon

Lea Anne Heidman

Jeanne Kannegieser

Marc Lunder

Mitch Maidman

Rachel Stephenson-Tribuzio

Bill Witter

Mike Wolf

CLASS OF 1983

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $41,825

Annie Ader

Debbie Beacham Bloomingdale

Ben Haartz

Sharon Lake-Post

Tracey Snow Levine

David Prout

Ander Thebaud

Heidi Cornwell Trout

CLASS OF 1984

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $5,423

Deb Schiavi Cote

John Leamon

Charlie Lownes

Karen Stoloff Sacherman

Mike Samers

Larry Sparks

John Suitor

CLASS OF 1985

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $14,207

Lina Andalkar Anthony

Timothy Caddo

Julie Chase Bailey

Bob Davis

Dagny Maidman

John McIntyre

Michael Silverman

Ian Swanbeck

CLASS OF 1986

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $22,995

Ann Sullivan Cohen

Jon Crane

Scott Downs

Peter Fallon

Matt Hampton

Harper Ingram Ingram

Rob Kinasewich

Timothy Murnane

Rich Pschirrer

Bill Skelton

Cora Turlish

CLASS OF 1987

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $13,440

Bill Becker

Garrett Cobb-Safchik

Galen Crane

Kate Thoman Crowley

Nathan Draper

Jason Found

Kate Littlefield

Chris Magendantz

Jim Martinez

Matt Spence

Tracy Jenkins Spizzuoco

Hannah Turlish

CLASS OF 1988

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $6,863

Anonymous

Jennifer Willey Algieri

Bill Guidera

Kate Albin Lindberg

Anne Sage

Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens

winter 2023 47

CLASS OF 1989

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $3,653

Steve Collins

Mark Desgrosseilliers

Duke Lovetere

Charlie Seefried

CLASS OF 1990

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $4,581

Rob Davis

Anthony Geraci

Lee Grant

Jim Hill

Gunnar Olson

Jen Walker

CLASS OF 1991

Scott Nelson

CLASS OF 1992

Marshall Aikman

CLASS OF 1993

Matt Johnson

CLASS OF 1994

Anna Labykina

CLASS OF 1995

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $1,183

Anonymous

Meredith Robinson Hanby

Jim Kelley

Sara Keef Kendall

Jessie Maher Parker

CLASS OF 1996

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $1,213

George Arison

Lydia Pottle Currie

Matt Harmon

Delia Lamore

Brian Record

Ben Rifkin

Jason Vachon

CLASS OF 1997

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $3,203

Anonymous

Jamie Bean

Bryan Gaudreau

Austin Stonebraker

CLASS OF 1998

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $251

Nils Devine

Kirsten Ness

CLASS OF 1999

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $564

Ben Acker

Jake Leyden

CLASS OF 2000

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $1,026

Anonymous

Brendan Densmore

Ben Stonebraker

CLASS OF 2001

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $101

Jessica Takach Gilpatrick

Stu Hedstrom

Nick Leyden

CLASS OF 2002

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $11,421

Ben Becker

Katie Curtis

Jamie Fey

Brendan Gilpatrick

Leah Hedstrom

James LeBlanc

Brett Mitchell

Emily Geismar Murphy

Jonathan Spindler

Tim Valenti

CLASS OF 2003

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $751

Sara Marquis Barker

Tim Curtis

Mike Myrick

Rachel Sukeforth

CLASS OF 2004

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $353

Anonymous

Brandon Bates

Carrie Curtis

Damariscotta Helm

John Slattery

CLASS OF 2005

Louise Roy

CLASS OF 2006

Sam Whitney

CLASS OF 2007

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $11,642

Meredith Montgomery Barber

Katherine Cole

Cameron Lao-Gosney

Noah Love

Allison Maidman

Dima Naida

Chris Roy

Josh Taylor

Jazz Webber

CLASS OF 2008

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $279

Kayla Chadwick

Nikki Dube

Julien Guerard

Mae Maxsimic

Dan Sommer

CLASS OF 2009

James Geismar

CLASS OF 2010

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $340

Andy Churchill

Zac Creps

Nick Roy

Lucas Schandelmeier

CLASS OF 2012

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $198

Anonymous

Nat Blackford

Chels Boucher

JoJo Haunold

Max Middleton

CLASS OF 2013

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $200

Mike Kelly

Sam Kinasewich

Taylor Teixeira

CLASS OF 2014

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $870

Nico Manganiello

Charlotte Middleton

Brittany Myrick

Austin Wildes

CLASS OF 2015

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $202

Ash Conrad Myles Horn

Andrew Kluge

Mack Telfer

CLASS OF 2017

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $100

Breac Baker

Ross LeBlond

CLASS OF 2018

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $126

Tess Gregory

Shamus Sullivan

CLASS OF 2020

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $24

Pete Porrino

Alek Vukadinov

CLASS OF 2021

All 2021-2022 Gifts: $20

Anonymous

Vinny Fugere

Olivia Newell

hebron magazine 48
class
giving

Gifts in Memory and in Honor

IN MEMORY OF:

In memory of Robert C. Beck, ’71

Mr. David J. Beck

In memory of William C. H. Boyle, ’50

Dr. Lawrence A. Boyle

In memory of Sanford P. Brass

Alonzo Garcelon, Esq. ’69

In memory of Wayne R. Caron ’69

Alonzo Garcelon, Esq. ’69

In memory of W. Marshal Clunie

Alonzo Garcelon, Esq. ’69

In memory of Sidney Clinton Crane, Jr. ’24

Mr. and Mrs. George Spragins

In memory of T. Kelly Fitzpatrick

Alonzo Garcelon, Esq. ’69

In memory of Jeff Gardner, ’65

Mr. Frank Sinapi and Mrs. Pat Hutter Sinapi

In memory of Douglas C. Garvin, ’73

Ms. Debra Garvin ’73

In memory of Tracy McLeod Harlor, ’85

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

In memory of Edward C. Johnson, III

Mr. Paul S. Goodof ’67

In memory of David A. “Del” Lewis ’69

Alonzo Garcelon, Esq. ’69

In memory of Susan Ridlon

Mr. Leonard A. Mintz ’53

Ms. Jane Harris Ash and Dr. Gary Ash ’79

In memory of William H. Rines

Alonzo Garcelon, Esq. ’69

In memory of LT. (j.g.) James B. Shields USN, ’83

Mr. T. Bragdon Shields and Ms. Janet Lange ’79

Ms. Dana Shields and Mr. Robert Hubbell ’78

Dr. Thomas F. Shields and Mrs. Bethel Shields

In memory of Dick Stratton

Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. Mervis ’72

In memory of Fred Tome

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Kenney

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kenney

In memory of Elizabeth G. Woodward Simmons Foundation, Inc.

In memory of Philip C. Wysor ’66

Mr. Paul S. Goodof ’67

IN HONOR OF:

In honor of Carolyn Adams ’77

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Johnson

In honor of Charlie Lownes

Mrs. Rosamond A. Lownes

In honor of Julie and Steve Middleton

Mr. Noah S. T. Love ’07

In honor of David Ruiz

Mr. Michael Chellman

In honor of David Stonebraker and Leslie Guenther

Dr. and Mrs. Michael R. Stonebraker

In honor of Benjamin ’00 and Kelly Stonebraker

Dr. and Mrs. Michael R. Stonebraker

In honor of Austin ’97 and Jennifer Stonebraker

Dr. and Mrs. Michael R. Stonebraker

In honor of Mary Warner

Mr. Paul S. Goodof ’67

In honor of Susan R. Witter

Mr. William P. Witter ’82

winter 2023 49

Parents, Faculty and Friends

Parents of current students and of alumni, as well as faculty, former faculty, and other friends of Hebron constantly show immense commitment to the Academy. We thank them for their support for the ongoing work of the school and for the future of the school and its students.

PARENTS OF CURRENT STUDENTS

Anonymous (3)

Lina Andalkar Anthony ’85 and Paul Anthony

Anthony and Maria DeMarco

Carmine and Laurie Frumiento

Bob and Susan Gleason

Alana Greene

Jen and Teke Gronros

Carlo Gualtieri and Anita Gualtieri

Peter and Shannon Kenney

Sergey and Natalija Levin

David Martinez and Marta Manso

Ryan Miller and Denise Lynne Wadsworth

Susan and Edward Newell

Karl Gustaf and Caroline Ohrn

Martin and Pavla Prochazka

James and Mia Pross

Thomas Walter and Jennifer Hartshorn

Jerry White and Rachael Brown

Susan and Carl Young

PARENTS OF ALUMNI

Anonymous (4)

Venessa Arsenault

Jim Austin ’62 and Tudor Austin

David and Theresa Banash

Tamar Barlam

Charles and Judith Berg

Daniel and Zoe Bigley

Debbie Bloomingdale ’83 and Peter Hall

Tim and Emily Bonis

Skip Brennan and Darryn Brennan

Bobbi Bumps and Dwane Bumps

Robert and Dale Byrne

Justiniano Calvo Ortega and Cristina Rondan Alvarez

Bill Chase

Tim and Donna Churchill

Craig Clark ’70 and Judy Unger-Clark

Debbie Clark

Roger Clark ’74 and Marcia Clark

Keith Clark ’58

Saul Cohen ’51 and Naomi Cohen

Heidi Collins

Felica and Kelvin Coney

Mike Corrigan

David Cosculluela and Susanna Visauta

Susan Crane ’58 H

Trudy P. Crane

Sandra Crawford-Zanger and David Zanger

Brad Cummings and Cynthia Reedy

Moose and Trish Curtis

Mal Davis ’58 and Michele Davis

Stephen Dorsey

Ed Driscoll ’62 and Diane Driscoll

Grace Drown

Mark and Nancy Enyedy

Sandy Eynon ’65 and Karin Eynon

Bruce Found and Betsy Found

Wende Fox Lawson and Jim Lawson

Carmine and Laurie Frumiento

Herbert and Margot Gardner

Susan and John Geismar

Peter Giesemann ’57 and Carol Giesemann

Brad and Linda Gilbreth

Jim Gillies ’55 and Susan Gillies

Gordon Gillies ’62 and Mary Gillies

Ed Gottlieb ’64 and Mathilda Gottlieb

Zandy Gray ’61 and Lila Gray

Ted and Alicia Haartz

Susan Buckley Harlor and William Ray

Bernard Helm ’59 and Carla Helm

Laura Gibbons Hiestand

Bill and Cathy Hine

Fred and Nancy Holler

Martha Horner

Richard and Barbara Kappelmann

Rob Kinasewich ’86 and Patricia Kinasewich

Jan Kinasewich

Hugh Kirkpatrick ’53 and Mary Kirkpatrick

Rick Lane and Denise Keough-Lane

Wolf Larsen ’66 and Nadia Larsen

Charles Longley ’52 and Susan Longley

Dennis and Marie Looney

Rosamond Lownes

Peter Lunder ’52 and Paula Lunder

Paula Lyons-Myrick

Patricia Massenburg

Donna McFarland

Steve Middleton and Julie Poland-Middleton

Wylie and Barbara Mitchell

Jerry Myrick

Steve and Melanie Ness

Susan and Edward Newell

Ted Noyes ’58 and Ann Noyes

Margaret O’Donnell and John Rasmussen

Steve O’Meara

Fred and Helen Paganucci

Jamey Pittman and Melissa Toussaint

Norma Porras

Marian Prescott

Gerry and Lucy Puopolo

Cary and Nancy Rea

Laura and Michael Rifkin

Savvas Rigas and Ioanna Kastelorizios

Fredel Romano

Marc Roy ’78 and Beverly Roy

Marguerite Roy

James and Linda Salisbury

Raymond and Sonya Sampson

Gary Savignano ’81 and Patricia Savignano

Carl and Renee Seefried

Thomas and Bethel Shields

David and Ellen Simmons

Richard and Theodora Siragusa

Bill Skelton ’86 and Sarah Skelton

Steve Smith

Meg Speranza Anderson

Jonathan Spindler ’02 and Katie Spindler

Fred Stavis ’51 and Ruth Stavis

Dana and Peggy Stewart

David Stonebraker and Leslie Guenther

Meredith Strang Burgess

Jerome and Mary-Catherine Sullivan

Cheryl and Raymond Tardif

Rob Tatge and Rachel Avery

Mike and Helen Telfer

Lorraine Thompson

Laurel Willey Thompson ’79 and Rolfe

Thompson

Ernest and Oneka Trott

Molly and Lew Turlish

Jane Lyness Wall

Garvin Warner and Margaret Wheeler

Rupe White ’51 and Ruth White

Jim Whitney ’71 and Peggy Whitney

Deanna and John Wilson

Susan Witter

Chip and Jean Wood

GRANDPARENTS

Jan Kinasewich

Hugh Kirkpatrick ’53 and Mary Kirkpatrick

Bev Leyden

Marguerite Roy

Thomas and Bethel Shields

FACULTY STAFF

Anonymous (3)

Sarah Alt

Emily Bonis

Tim Bonis

Will Bridgeo

Caddy Brooks

Emily Carton

Heidi Collins

Patrick Colonna

Susan Cooke

Pedro Davisson

Grace Drown

Nikki Dube ’08

Jen Gronros

Katya Killian

Rene Lemieux

hebron magazine 50

Amy Look

Eric Lundblade

Steve Middleton

Susan Newell

Edwin Nunez Ramirez

Bev Roy

David Ruiz

Duane Simonds

Shelley Stokes

Daniella Swenton

Cheryl Tardif

Ian Tovell

Deb Traub

Nick Trautz

Mary Warner

Barbara Waterman

Amo Weld

Susan Young

FORMER FACULTY STAFF

Marilyn Ackley

Elizabeth Alden

Venessa Arsenault

Ellen Augusta ’75

John Barrett ’61

Bill Becker ’87

Bobbi Bumps

William Carhart ’51

Bill Chase

Cy Cook ’73

Brad Cummings

Moose Curtis

Peter Fallon ’86

Jamie Fey ’02

Bruce Found

Elizabeth Found

Kevin Fox

Anthony Geraci ’90

Gordon Gillies ’62

Leslie Guenther

Matt Hampton ’86

Bob Hanby

Meredith Robinson Hanby ’95

Robert Kaufman

Benedicte Kaufman

Jay Keough

Jessica Keeley Keough

Marcia King

John King

James LeBlanc ’02

Ashley LeBlanc

Liz Leyden

Bev Leyden

Jake Leyden ’99

Noah Love ’07

Max Middleton ’12

Margaret O’Donnell

Mitch Overbye

Julie Poland-Middleton

John Redmond ’59

parents , faculty and friends

Cynthia Reedy

Laura Rifkin

Marc Roy ’78

Louise Roy ’05

Pat Sinapi

John Slattery ’04

Austin Stonebraker ’97

David Stonebraker

Jen Stonebraker

Liza Tarr

Charlie Tranfield

Sarah Twichell

Jeff Weber

FRIENDS

Anonymous (2)

Susan MacMillan Arensberg and Walter Arensberg

Kathleen Augusta

David Beck

Lawrence Boyle

Janet Chabot Sullivan

Michael Chellman

Jim and Beverly Clements

Robert Craig

Charles Dimeglio

Beth Eckels

Wally Higgins

Susie and Ted Hoeller

Kenneth and Jean Johnson

Daniel and Nancy Kenney

Wendy Marble Bradley-Terwilliger

Mrk and Marlene Middleton

Mark Noonan

Richard Russell

Aaron Senechal

Jane and David Smith

Gigi and George Spragins

Michael and Beth Stonebraker

Nancy and David Young

FOUNDATIONS AND DONOR ADVISED FUNDS

Anonymous (3)

Albert Lepage Foundation, Inc.

Bright Funds

Eugene Kinasewich Fund

Jacob Irving Foundation

Jason J. Spindler Foundation

Marilyn and Mike Grossman Foundation

Oak Grove School Foundation

Renaissance Charitable Foundation

Rhode Island Foundation

Rupert and Ruth White Charitable Fund

Simmons Foundation, Inc.

The Boston Foundation

The Lunder Foundation

The Paul and Jill Kaneb Family Charitable Foundation

The Treat Charitable Foundation

The Walter H. and Hannah H. Webb Family Foundation

William D. Witter Foundation

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund

Corbs Giving Account

Dr. Houghton White and Mary Hanks

White Fund

EPG Charity Fund

Fitzpatrick Family Fund

Goodwin O. Gilman Fund

Heidi Cornwell Trout Giving Fund

Henry A. and Mary P. Harding

Charitable Fund

Lougee Family Giving Fund

Magendantz Giving Fund

Malm Family Charitable Fund

MB Fund

Peterson Charitable Fund

R.C. McNeill Charitable Giving Fund

Silverman Family Fund

The Quest Foundation

Williams Family Fund

Wood Charity

New York Community Trust

John F. and Jean C. McIlwain Fund

Schwab Charitable

The Captain’s Fund

The Greater Cincinnati Foundation

The Peter and Sally Cutler Fund

Vanguard Charitable Bancroft Initiatives Fund

The Crisp Family Fund

The Kelso F. and Joanna L. Sutton

Charitable Gift Fund

MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS

Anonymous

Amazon Smile

CIGNA Foundation

Comcast Corporation

Dell, Inc.

John Hancock

Netflix

Northwestern Mutual Foundation

Raytheon Technologies

Stonebraker Family Trust

The Bank of New York/The Mellon Trust of Delaware

The Fluor Foundation

The New York Times Company Foundation

UBS

United Way of Androscoggin County

Unum Foundation

Walmart Foundation

YourCause, LLC

winter 2023 51

Restricted Gifts

These gifts, made in this fiscal year, manifest the dedication and commitment of donors who support specific programs and projects at the Academy. Made in consultation with the advancement office, restricted gifts are critical to maintaining Hebron’s distinctive programs at a level of excellence.

RESTRICTED GIFTS

Bell Lipman Archives

Ed Bell ’70

Campaign for Hebron

Garvin Warner and Margaret Wheeler

Class of 1970 Barrows Cottage

Paul Bartlett ’70 and Gail Bartlett

Paul Kesaris ’70 and Carol Kesaris

Class of 1971 50th Reunion Gift

David Beck

Doug Gordon ’71 and Kim Weller

Stephen Pollard ’71 and Darlene Pollard

Rick Rigazio ’71 and Julie Rigazio

Class of 1972 Reunion Gift

Brad Parsons ’72 and Nancy Harris

Cohen Concert Series

Saul Cohen ’51 and Naomi Cohen

Cohen Room Technology

Jane Harris Ash ’79 and Gary Ash

Community Scholarship

Lawrence Crane ’67

Moose and Trish Curtis

Mitch and Kathy Overbye

Schwab Charitable Fund

Austin Stonebraker ’97 and Jennifer Stonebraker

Ben Stonebraker ’00 and Kelly Stonebraker

Dave Stonebraker and Leslie Guenther

Michael and Beth Stonebraker

Jeff Weber

Faculty Appreciation

Carolyn Adams ’77 and Dan Fuller

Jane Harris Ash ’79 and Gary Ash

Debbie Bloomingdale ’83 and Peter Hall

Clem Dwyer, Jr. ’66 and Martha Dwyer

Jamie Fey ’02 and Ian Crouch

Wende Fox Lawson and Jim Lawson

Bob Greaves ’82 and Ronda Greaves

Wally Higgins

Matt Johnson ’93 and Anne Johnson

Matthew Lyness ’76 and Kathy Lyness

Brett Mitchell ’02 and Sarah Mountcastle

Bill Percival ’76 and Allison Percival

David S. Prout ’83

Bob Ryan, Esq. ’77

Bob Waite ’68 and Karen Shigeishi-Waite

Garvin Warner and Margaret Wheeler

The Shirley A. Found Memorial Fund

Betsy Found and Bruce Found

Garner-McCormack Scholarship

Susan Garner ’62 H

Hebron Academy Fishing Club

Daniel and Nancy Kenney

Peter and Shannon Kenney

Hydrogen Car

Anonymous

The Kaneb Center

Kate Thoman Crowley ’87 and Bob Crowley

LePage Center for Arts and Diversity

Albert Lepage ’65

Albert Lepage Foundation, Inc.

Karl N. Murch, 1913 Scholarship

Lawrence Crane ’67

Outdoor Education and Experiential Learning

Oak Grove School Foundation

Bill Percival ’76 and Allison Percival

Robinson Arena Sound System

Bill Allen ’62

Ski Hill

Jason J. Spindler Foundation

Jonathan Spindler ’02 and Katie Spindler

Turf Field

Gary Miller ’68 and Arlene Miller

Williams Center Technology

Paul Goodof ’67

Witter Family Scholarship

Schwab Charitable Fund

Bill Witter ’82

hebron magazine 52

Gifts to Endowment

Income from the endowment reinforces annual operations, scholarships, and other priorities of the Academy. Hebron’s robust endowment is growing because of these gifts to the fund, which is permanently held and professionally managed and invested. We are immensely grateful to the generosity of those who keep the endowment flourishing for the future.

100 Years of Hockey

Craig Clark ’70 and Judy Unger-Clark

Bob Davis ’85 and Julie Davis

Ed Gottlieb ’64 and Mathilda Gottlieb

Mike Kelly ’13

Eugene Kinasewich Fund

Rob Kinasewich ’86 and Patricia Kinasewich

Sam Kinasewich ’13

Bev Leyden

Peter Madsen ’65 and Diana Madsen

Mark Noonan

Arsenault Family Scholarship

Venessa Arsenault

Benjamin Blais Scholarship

Beth Eckels

Endowment for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

Albert Lepage ’65

Albert Lepage Foundation, Inc.

Endowment Campaign

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund

Dave Williams ’60 and Stephanie Williams

Jill and Paul Kaneb Scholarship

Paul Kaneb ’60 and Jill Kaneb

The Paul and Jill Kaneb Family Charitable Foundation

Leyden Chair

Sharon Lake-Post ’83 and Benjamin Post

Bev Leyden

Lunder Scholarship

Joe Garcelon ’69

Marc Lunder ’82 and Jamie Lunder

Peter Lunder ’52 and Paula Lunder

The Lunder Foundation

Margery and Ladd MacMillan Scholarship

Susan MacMillan Arensberg and Walter Arensberg

Bill Sepe ’53

Additional Endowment

Mal Davis ’58 and Michele Davis

Steve Jeffries ’79 and Kimberlea Jeffries

Jamie Ryland ’70 and Margaret Ryland

Robert Andrew McCormack Scholarship

Dick Forte ’62 and Mariele Forte

Scott Smith ’87 Scholarship

Harper Ingram ’86 and Elbert Ingram

Witter Family Scholarship

Bill Witter ’82

Schwab Charitable Fund

Woolsey Scholarship

Bill Guidera ’88 and Aimee Guidera

Jeff Weber

Gifts in Kind

Ellen Augusta ’75

winter 2023 53

Franklin Society

Since 1994, the Franklin Society has honored those who have included Hebron in their estate plans by naming the Academy as a beneficiary in their will or through another planned gift.

G.W. Allen ’62

John C. Andrews, Jr. ’48*

David L. Babson*

Robert H. Bannard ’57

Donald E. Bates ’62

Herbert A. Black II ’49*

Albert R. Blacky ’39*

Peter B. Boody ’69

Henry H. Booth, Esq. ’53

J. Reeve Bright, Esq. ’66

Philip H. Chadbourne ’20*

David Christison ’38*

The Hon. F. Davis Clark ’34*

Keith Clark ’58

Ralph A. Corbett ’25*

Jonathan E. Crane ’86

Kennedy Crane III ’58*

Trudy P. Crane

Henrietta P. Crane*

Wilfred S. Davis ’28*

Anne Davis ’28 H

Maida S. Demos

Theodore Neil Divine ’55*

Blaine E. Eynon, Jr. ’65

Peter G. Fallon, Jr.

Jose W. Fenderson, Esq. ’33*

Lester E. Forbes ’38*

Alice W. Forester*

Richard S. Forte ’62

Elizabeth Friend*

James H. Galli*

John R. Giger ’64

James A. Gillies III ’55

Gordon M. Gillies, Esq. ’62

Robert I. Glass ’50*

Richard W. Goode ’35*

Paul S. Goodof ’67

Elinor Goodwin*

Ralph A. Gould, Jr. ’41*

Robert C. Greaves ’82

Nellie E. Hankins ’21*

John Hankins ’21*

Stephen E. Hawkes ’57*

Willis Hay ’32*

James B. Hill II ’90

William C. Hiss

Joseph B. Hodgkins II ’63

Susan Y. Hoeller

Joseph F. Holman, Trust ’43*

George S. Hosmer, Jr. ’39*

Edgar A. Hultgren ’39*

Stephen B. Jeffries ’79

David E. Jessich ’71

Edward A. Johnson ’49*

Stephen W. Lane ’62

Rosamond A. Lownes

Margery L. MacMillan*

C. Michael Malm ’60

Thomas A. Mann ’59

C. Arthur Mayo ’32*

Robert W. McCoy, Jr. ’58

Carlton McDonald ’43

John D. McGonagle ’61

Stephen Hugh Meeter, Esq. ’70

Robert W. Messer II ’05*

Donald F. Miller ’51*

Leonard A. Mintz ’53

Jonathan G. Moll ’69

John O. Monks ’48

Philip H. Montgomery ’52*

Helen Morton*

Richard E. Nickerson ’41*

Philip B. Norton

Karl-Heinz Nottebohm*

Edward D. Noyes III ’58

Payson S. Perkins ’53*

Frederick E. Peterson ’61

John W. Powell ’35*

Marjorie P. Powell ’35* H

Robert F. Preti ’42

Walter M. Ray II*

Robert J. Raymond ’55*

Mary Rea*

Robert P. Rich, Jr. ’49

Dean E. Ridlon ’53

Barbara Rowell ’43 H

James E. Salisbury

Mark J. Savran ’72

John A. Schaff ’61*

Kimberly Housman Seastrom ’89

Myrtle M. Sherman*

Vera Simmons*

Stephen L. Smith

Andrew O. Smith ’80

Richard H. Sprince ’43*

Roger F. Stacey ’61

Warren W. Stearns ’28*

Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ’88

Kelso F. Sutton ’57

Ken C. Sweezey ’63

Thomas W. Thompson ’66

Heidi Cornwell Trout ’83

Molly B. Turlish

Edmond Vachon*

Ruth P. Vail ’26*

Eugene L. Vail ’26*

C. Thomas Van Alen ’56*

Paul M. Wagner, Jr. ’39*

Robert E. Waite ’68

Richard S. Waxman ’64

Jeffrey Weber

Ralph H. Wells ’50*

Neal L. Whitman ’39*

David J. Williams ’60

William P. Witter ’82

Jay L. Woolsey*

Kenneth P. Wright ’26*

Welthy B. Wright ’26*

* Denotes Deceased

hebron magazine 54

Eddie Jeremiah

Hockey legend Eddie Jeremiah attended Hebron from 1924-1926, and he is among Hebron’s most notable Alumni. When his grand niece, Barbara Tomasian, arrived on campus in 2011 bearing “The Prophets” 85 year old scrapbook and other keepsakes to donate to the Bell-LIpman Archives, it was an incredible moment. The scrapbook is filled with newspaper clippings of championship seasons, camaraderie, and daily life at the Academy. Among the storied pages of undefeated seasons and New England Championships, there is a series of articles explaining Jeremiah’s and his teammates’ refusal to play due to unfair punishment for their behavior at a local theater. Head of School Ralph Hunt appears to have capitulated and the season continued!

In 2016 this author discovered Eddie Jeremiah’s 1926 New Championship medallion in an Ebay auction. Upon winning the medallion, he promptly did a victory dance in his living room. Located now in the “treasure” case of the Bell-LipmanArchives, Jeremiah’s name and captaincy of the team are clearly seen across the .75 inch gold medal.

The team photo is from Eddie Jeremiah’s first season at Hebron, he is seated, third from the left. He helped lead the team to an 8-0 record, practicing on outdoor ice on the newly named Andrew’s Field and also Marshall Pond.

Also pictured is Eddie Jeremiah’s varsity letter signed by Head of School Ralph Hunt and Coach Chase.

from

the archives
Hebron Academy 339 Paris Road PO Box 309 Hebron ME 04238 Save the Date Homecoming/Reunion for classes ending in 3 and 8! September 29 & 30 Contact Steve Middleton at smiddleton@hebronacademy.org for more information
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