HEBRON Fall 2015

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SPRING 2015

FALL 2015

The Sciences: Tradition & Transition

It’s in our DNA...

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JOIN US FOR REUNION-HOMECOMING OCTOBER 23-24


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SPRING 2015

EDITOR Lissa Gumprecht

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ASSOCIATE EDITOR Dave Stonebraker

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Lissa Gumprecht Dave Stonebraker Daniella Swenton Jim Maldonis PHOTOGRAPHY Lissa Gumprecht Dennis & Dianne Griggs, Tannery Hill Studios McKeith Photography and friends

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DESIGN Lissa Gumprecht

ADVANCEMENT OFFICE Patricia Layman, Director of Advancement Beverly Roy, Hebron Annual Fund Director Ben Lord, Leadership Gifts Officer Colin Griggs, Events Coordinator Patricia Hutter, Advancement Assistant Judy Roy, Database Manager

COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE Lissa Gumprecht, Marketing Communications Manager Colleen Chassie, Digital Marketing Specialist

Please send address and email changes to Pat Layman at playman@hebronacademy.org

Please send class notes to Beverly Roy at broy@hebronacademy.org

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26 1 from the head of school 2 spring athletic highlights

4 feature

the sciences: Transition & Tradition

15 spotlight bio

a formula for success: Moose Curtis: A 40-year career teaching chemistry HEBRON is published by the Hebron Academy Communications and Advancement Offices. Letters and corrections are welcome from alumni, parents and friends of the Academy. Please send your feedback to Pat Layman at playman@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 2015 by Hebron Academy www.hebronacademy.org

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21 report of giving fy2014 - 2015 38 commencement 2015

pictures, speeches & more

40 hebron academy middle school (hams) 25 years of innovation & opportunity 41 class notes

51 obituaries 53 hidden gems


AT THE ACADEMY

From the Head of School

JOHN KING AT COMMENCEMENT 2015 (PHOTO BY LISSA GUMPRECHT)

HEBRON, the magazine, this fall features the Sciences

at Hebron Academy, both the longstanding Tradition of excellence, hands-on lab and field experiences with iconic master teachers, and the Transition and innovation of discovery and teaching approach that we see today. Even as we plan and campaign for a spectacular new science and math teaching facility and laboratories to support exceptional teachers and advancing students, we celebrate Tradition and the exciting Transitions in leadership that are moving Hebron Academy and our student and teaching community to our greater future. A good friend and colleague recently told me that I was a catalyst for so many good things at Hebron during the last fifteen years. I wanted to be humble at the obvious compliment, but I also wanted to think about the word. I went to find the AP Chemistry textbook Chemistry: AP Edition, by Zumdahl and Zumdahl, in Moose Curtis’, now Bill Wallace’s, chem lab. “A catalyst is a substance that speeds up a chemical reaction without being consumed itself.” I like that…and I like even more what I read about enzymes, biological catalysts that by “allow[ing] otherwise slow reactions to occur at reasonable rates… give living organisms tremendous control over which reactions occur and when they occur.” (Chemistry A Molecular Approach, N.J. Tro)

The ethos of small independent schools like Hebron is a tendency to stick with tradition, but today’s Hebron has an appetite for change, mixed with some apprehension at transition. Alumni and long-serving faculty may hold to tradition, but today’s and tomorrow’s students and parents want innovation and currency for facilities and programs. In the education climate, not changing is going backward. Hebron has the energy and the ambition for change. You will read about the advances in science and technology, including the 1-to-1 iPad program. You know about our innovations in public speaking, study skills and support, and excellence in the arts.

The Position Profile for the search for Hebron’s next Head does not contain the words catalyst or enzyme, but it clearly sets the expectation for creative and innovative talents to take fresh looks at programs and opportunities and togenerate new ideas from faculty, staff, and students. I am excited by what Hebron is today and by its future. I am proud and humbled to be called a catalyst – and I think that every head of school is, and must be one. The Chemistry of Change is the life of our schools. We need to keep asking the questions. We need to pose the possibilities. “Could we … ?” • Emphasize music and the arts with the continued evolution of the Lepage Center for the Arts, Musical Mondays, prominent concerts and gallery shows • Build an indoor athletic recreation space that will have an impact on academic results and enrollment • Get seniors to embrace giving Last Word speeches in front of the entire school; get all students excited about a program that starts with First Words in 9th grade • Bring back sit-down dinners and generate L.I.F.E. program residential learning experiences • Grow enrollment to encompass 25 countries and create a true global education experience • Fund and build a state-of-the-art science lab and math teaching facility to house the remarkable STEM advances we are inspiring and aspiring to We have asked the questions. Hebron Academy has answered many and will always strive to answer more. One further thought: Hebron Academy is, itself, a catalyst, an actual enzyme, that continually spurs change; that inspires and guides that change in each of its students. But, counter to definition, not without undergoing its own change, ever for the better!

John J. King Head of School WWW.hebronacademy.org • 1


AT THE ACADEMY

LUMBERJACK ATHLETIC HIGHLIGHTS Spring 2015

OVERALL RECORD

TEAM

MVP

COACH’S AWARD

BASEBALL: Varsity

3:6

Brendan Sullivan ‘15

Colin McKay ‘15 & Sean Munzing ‘15

JV

9:1

Ryan Kappelman ‘15

Dan Halloran ‘18 & Ryan Boucher ‘16

Varsity

4:6

Shannon Bailey ‘15

McCaela Prentice ‘16 & Ashley Conrad ‘15

JV

0:3

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Alexandra Loh ‘15, Olivia Berger ‘16 & Riley Hemmings ‘16

Boys’ Varsity

10 : 8

Myles Horn ‘15

Mitchell Spurr ‘ 15 & Danny Hutchinson ‘15

Boys’ JV

9:1

Max Danis ‘16 & Collin Capstick ‘15

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Girls’ Varsity

10 : 2

Taylor Fowler ‘15

Ashley McLaughlin ‘16

Boys’ Varsity

6:3

Justin Lee ‘15

Eli Ross ‘15

Boys’ JV

5:2

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Guangyuan Xue ‘15, Che Liu ‘15 & Te Xu ‘15

Girls’ Varsity

5:2

Tilila El Yazidi ‘16

Monique Bertin ‘15

Girls’ JV

4:2

Ye Tao ‘15

Jenna Cole ‘15

Keniesha Pinder ‘17 & Elijah Burns ‘15

Nick Legare ‘15, David Enyedy ‘15 & LilyBeth Maiers-Nesbitt ‘16

SOFTBALL:

LACROSSE:

TENNIS:

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AT THE ACADEMY

MAISAD CHAMPIONS

2015 GIRLS’ VARSITY LACROSSE (2nd year in a row) GIRLS’ VARSITY TENNIS (4th year in a row) GIRLS’ TENNIS DOUBLES (Sophie Gibson ‘15 & Gaby Navarro ‘17) BOYS’ TRACK & FIELD (2nd year in a row) BOYS’ JV LACROSSE (2nd year in a row)

NOTES & ACCOLADES BOYS’ LACROSSE: • Myles Horn ‘15 – Northern New England Player of the Year • Kyle Sperzel ‘15 & Gabe Zornick ‘16 – All New England recognition • Danny Hutchinson ‘15 & Damarlee Smith ‘15 – Honorable Mention All New England recognition

VARSITY BASEBALL & SOFTBALL:

Both teams won the Gold Ball Game in the annual match-up against Kents Hill School

TRACK & FIELD:

Keniesha Pinder’17 placed 1st in the 400 meter dash in the New England Track & Field Championship

CHEER ON THE LUMBERJACKS FROM ANYWHERE!

Watch your email and Hebron Academy social media for links to our LIVE STREAMING with full live commentary! For the most up-to-date schedule and game times, please visit www.hebronacademy.org/sportscalendar. SEE YOU ON THE SIDELINES!

http://thecube.com/cube/hebron-communications

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The Sciences:

Tradition & Transition ...it’s in our DNA by Lissa Gumprecht

Hebron’s history abounds with tradition – in the classroom, on the playing fields and across the community; however, nothing outweighs the tradition of strong education provided on our campus. Throughout the life of the school, one finds reference to innovative and dynamic teachers, and to the impact they have had on students in their classrooms. Nowhere is this more readily apparent than in the sciences. From the charge set forth in the original charter of the Academy that students receive instruction in “liberal arts and sciences,” science has been integral to the Hebron experience. Many gifted teachers have led the way into new areas of studies. And the places where science has been taught have been equally innovative and creative. We will take you on a pictorial tour of these “interesting” classrooms and labs later in the magazine, but here we would like to illuminate the idea that no matter where we teach at Hebron, our history and tradition mandate a flourishing academic environment.

tra· di· tion \trə-ˈdi-shən\ noun, cultural continuity in social attitudes, customs and institutions

Call it evolutionary if you will, yet the growth and change of science at Hebron have produced a leading program that offers special opportunities for challenges and innovation. Our students have the opportunity to take more hands-on lab courses than in many other schools – starting in the Middle School and continuing on through graduation from the Upper School. This is an integral and important facet of a Hebron education – and it has led many 4 •

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teachers and students to reach beyond the curriculum, inspiring each other to take what is available to them and research, experiment and analyze in innovative ways. Hebron’s science teachers have long had access to the best of laboratories – the natural world itself. Access to forests, vernal pools, and streams right outside our classrooms has been a huge advantage in teaching environmental studies and biology. Students get the opportunity to demonstrate how what they are learning applies to their world here in Maine. This “place-based” philosophy is something Hebron science teachers were employing long before it became a mainstream teaching method. Our current faculty stand poised to expand on that philosophy with more hands-on lab work, more independent studies and to enhance their own professional development sideby-side with students. Science at Hebron – a cornerstone of the educational experience. Our school was founded on the idea of providing New England students with a quality education that would send them off into the world as thought leaders and innovators. We have now expanded that reach to an international audience of students who come to us with not only alternative languages and cultures but varied ways of thinking, learning and collaborating as well. Today’s Hebron students are hungry to learn in ways our founders could not imagine. While our traditions of teaching and learning run deep, our current student body and those who will enroll here in years to come have the potential to chart new discoveries and innovate for the future.

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tran· si· tion \tran(t)-ˈsi-shən\

noun, passage from one state, stage, subject, or place to another: change, progress

The Recent Graduate:

Transition to College & a Career ELIOTT ROSS’15

It is no secret that teenagers like to stay up late at night. However, there are not many who stay up late in the biology lab to monitor the nocturnal foraging habits of the Signal Crayfish. Unless, of course, that teenager is Eli Ross, a budding research scientist who graduated this past spring with the Class of 2015. Eli grew up on the northern shores of Massachusetts where he realized early on that he wanted to learn more about the nature of marine life. He came to Hebron with that pre-existing passion and found a community that embraced him and helped him to further develop it, providing guidance and structure to his chosen learning path. No one was more influential in that regard than his biology teacher, Dr. Daniella Swenton. “From the first year with Dr. Swenton, she taught us like a college class, with open discussion and interesting, open-ended learning methods. It was definitely not the typical formulaic high school process out of a textbook,” said Ross. “She treated me as an adult and scientist, and I really grew as a result.” Dr. Swenton encouraged Ross to do the independent study of the crayfish and helped him gather the materials he needed. He spent the fall conducting research to focus his ideas and then in January he began his late night observations. Ross then entered his study into the Maine State Science Fair. He traveled to Bangor in March along with 150 other students from both public and private schools across the state. All the planning and research, together with the confidence bolstered by Dr. Swenton’s guidance paid off – Ross won second place in the Animal Sciences. To further underscore the passion he put into his research, he also received the fair’s Reach Award, given to that participant who goes above and beyond the basic scope of their project to bring new data and ideas forward. Ross had added a temperature component to his research to see if that variable affected the crayfish. Of course, winning the awards was a huge affirmation of his efforts, but Ross is quick to point out that his overall experience with science at Hebron led him to that point. “All the research and observation I conducted over time while in class and during my independent study truly prepared me to become a research scientist. All along the way and at the science fair, I was constantly given affirmation of my first steps toward my goal.” Ross is now studying biology at Johns Hopkins University. We imagine him in the lab there, bringing his unique and gifted approach to innovative research to the next level, and hopefully, occasionally reminiscing of his late nights in Treat under the red lights with his crayfish. 6 •

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The Interplanetary Alum: Transition from Earth to the Stars SUZANNE SMREKAR ‘80 When taking science courses at Hebron, students are able to explore the natural world around them. Woodlands and meadows, streams and ponds abound. But there are some students who end up wanting to explore the natural world beyond Hebron, and even beyond the planet Earth. One such student is NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientist, Dr. Suzanne Smrekar. Suzanne grew up just down the road from Hebron in Poland, Maine. While at Hebron, she participated in a wide variety of activities – from drama to alpine skiing to the Cum Laude society and even the kayak team (yes, Hebron had a kayak team back then; they practiced in the pool). At first glance one would think of her as a talented, yet typical Hebron student. But there was something there – perhaps some passing encounter with the telescope during astronomy, or a lab project in physics planted the seed for Suzanne to go on to become a NASA awarded geophysicist and member of the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) project team that recently announced the discovery of water on Mars. After graduating from Hebron, Smrekar headed to Brown University. There she earned her first degree in Geophysics and Math in 1984. That summer she headed to Houston, Texas to intern at the Lunar and Planetary Institute, where she then became a Research Assistant, further clarifying her passion for researching the geography of other planets. Other appointments eventually led her to Southern Methodist University where she entered the doctoral program and earned her Ph.D. in Geophysics in 1990. Not long after that she entered her career at NASA and began her professional studies of the planets, including Mars. Since joining NASA, Smrekar has been a member or leader of a number of projects, including the MRO project. Her most recent is the InSight (Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport) project – a mission that will place a geophysical lander on Mars to study its deep interior. The goal of Smrekar and her team is to gain an understanding of the processes that shaped all of the rocky planets of the inner solar system (including Earth) more than four billion years ago. All very exciting and amazing things for someone who grew up just down the road. We look forward to hearing of Smrekar’s further discoveries. Perhaps she will spark something in a current or future Hebron student who will take us even further into the universe. And we can all say we knew them when they were just budding scientists.

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The Perennial Teacher:

Transitions in the Classroom BILL WALLACE,

“Science is hard. Science teaches process, discipline, creativity and resourcefulness. We partner with students in the process of learning and show them that we are learning right along with them. Every week I learn something new about the natural world, and I strive for ways to convey this excitement for learning to my students.” Bill Wallace has returned to Hebron. Again. He will be the first one to tell you how much has changed since he first arrived here in 1981, and how much has remained the same. What draws Wallace back to the halls of Treat and the pathways across the Bowl is the academic diversity and the chance to learn in exciting ways, right beside his students. He is the first to say “older teachers aren’t in the same classrooms they were before.” With the integration of technology into every facet of teaching and learning, he pushes himself to stay ahead of students in research methods and data collection. But do not consider Wallace behind the times. His passion for science and scientific research is still as strong today as it was his senior year at Providence Country Day in Rhode Island. It was then that Wallace made a presentation on his study of the fish in the Narrow River in Narraganset, RI at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute and that experience “sealed the deal” for him as a scientist. He went on to earn a degree in Wildlife Management and Fisheries Biology.

Wallace’s drive to learn has continued throughout his career. He has attended workshops, conducted field studies, applied for and received enrichment grants and partnered with colleagues to continually enhance his teaching methods and to bring an innovative and thoughtful approach to student-teacher collaborations. He, along with Betsy and Bruce Found, Moose Curtis and others established the method of place-based learning – taking students out into the natural world around Hebron to apply what they were learning in the classroom. This methodology is still at the core of scientific teaching here and is one that Wallace is eager to once again embrace. When asked about the possibility of a new and improved science center, Wallace perks up. “New buildings and upgraded learning facilities have a way of generating excitement that exceeds expectations. The improvements will allow much more space--for our traditional classes and electives--and perhaps encourage even more student-teacher collaboration in independent research. Hebron has such a wide variety of science offerings right now--new lab and teaching facilites would allow us to do better what we already do well.” Today’s biology and chemistry students will benefit from the wisdom and sage advice of an older teacher in Wallace. But they will also benefit from a teacher who continues to be excited about learning and is just as eager as his students to try something new, every day.

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The S T E M Curriculum at Hebron

To understand the future of the Sciences at Hebron, we thought it best to speak with those directly effecting that future - the teachers and students who are realizing their potential today.

SCIENCE Maldonis & Swenton, True Scientists Mr. Jim Maldonis, Science Department Chair, and Dr. Daniella Swenton, offer their perspectives on what teaching the Sciences at Hebron means to them and how facilities available affect today’s Hebron students - and those of tomorrow. WHAT DO YOU FEEL MAKES HEBRON’S APPROACH TO THE SCIENCES UNIQUE? JM: Not being tied to a state-mandated curriculum has allowed incredible freedom in designing our science sequence. Instead we can focus on sciencerelated skills (lab work, presentations, research, self-designed experimentation, writing) and use these activities as the basis to explore topics in greater depth. Students today can always find information about a particular topic using the enormous amount of technology available, but practical skills are what last longer and will be useful in college. DS: The academic freedom and incredible natural resources of the campus allow for a limitless classroom for scientific investigation. IN THIS SAME REGARD, HOW IS HEBRON NOT UNIQUE? JM: Hebron still remains fairly traditional in its basic science course offerings. We also work in an aging science facility that is not wellequipped to serve students learning modern scientific practices. Our plans to expand lab experiences are hindered by what we can accomplish in a limited setting. DS: Modern and well-equipped labs are so important to scientific investigation and expanding the possibilities and opportunities for students at Hebron.

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HOW DO YOU INNOVATE AND INSPIRE WITH THE EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS CURRENTLY AVAILABLE TO YOU? JM: I am constantly looking at new ways to improve the experience for my students. We now offer an exciting new 9th grade course called Conceptual Physics as well as upper level electives in Animal Behavior, Kinesiology, and Molecular Biology - courses we could not have offered five years ago. Our department has also embraced a more projectand inquiry-based approach to many of the courses, which allows students to come to the “answer” in their own way as opposed to being lectured on textbook-oriented material. DS: I get students outside when I think it will be helpful. I also created a physically autonomous classroom in which students may learn in the best, non-distracting environment for them. I try very hard to keep investigations budget-friendly although this is difficult when moving outside of naturalist investigation to that of experimental science. But at the end of the day, supplies and facilities are necessary.

YOU HAVE SEEN THE ARCHITECTURAL RENDERINGS FOR THE PROPOSED UPGRADES FOR TREAT. WHAT EXCITES YOU MOST ABOUT THESE CHANGES? JM: New lab spaces, by far! To have a modern lab space for each of our different subjects is incredibly exciting. It not only makes me want to expand our curriculum further, but it will also serve as a focal point in our efforts to draw more science-oriented students to Hebron in the future. It will also create more opportunities for students to do their own projects within class or as independent studies. As a school moving towards a sustainable and confident future, this building will be crucial in the growth of Hebron and the success of its graduates. DS: Where do I begin! I love the idea of a wet lab/ behavior lab and animal room. In this space I can really bring true academic research to Hebron’s students. At this point we do not have the facilities nor the equipment to safely conduct research. I

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would also hope we could bring the greenhouse and garden and food-to-table initiatives to fruition. WHAT WILL YOU BE ABLE TO DO IN THE NEW SPACE THAT YOU HAVE NOT BEEN ABLE TO DO PREVIOUSLY? JM: The number and diversity of labs we will be able to do will be enormous. In order to make our science curriculum competitive with other similar schools, having the space for both students and faculty to work cannot be overstated. I am personally looking forward to having a true molecular biology lab on campus where I can share my college training in DNA and protein science with Hebron students -- an experience that I didn’t have until well into college. DS: I could conduct behavior research, do long-term studies, have results worthy of publication, and truly train students in the care and discipline that goes into professional research. I could also see the program expanding in other ways: summer research institutes, more participation in the science fair realm, and greater rigor to the i4T (Innovate for Tomorrow) program. WHAT WILL BE THE GREATEST IMPACT ON YOUR ABILITY TO TEACH? JM: My students sticking with me through all the mistakes I make in trying out new projects or lab techniques - I try to be very honest with them that I do not know everything and that I will need their help to pick me up some days just as it’s my job to help them either grow into the next great science researcher or just get through Chemistry. DS: It will become even more experiential and experimental! It will truly be learning via doing rather than what we can offer now. WHAT WILL BE THE GREATEST IMPACT ON THE OVERALL OFFERINGS FOR THE SCIENCES AT HEBRON? JM: An experienced and motivated faculty willing to embrace change as well as an administration open to new ideas - luckily, we have both! DS: Agreed.

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TECHNOLOGY THE 1-to1 iPAD PROGRAM The students and teachers of Hebron have had access to computer technology for quite some time now. The devices available include laptops, state-of-the-art computer labs, campuswide connectivity and more. Most recently, Hebron made the decision to further connect and convert the technology on campus by launching a 1:1 iPad Program for students in the Upper School. As a member of the Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI), Hebron joins an emerging group of schools that are offering an integrated technology program that includes not only the mobile devices, but also a wide variety of educational apps, comprehensive onsite technical support, device management, MLTI training and professional development for the faculty. It is a complete solution that allows our teachers to teach across a universal technology platform where everyone has the same equipment available to them, at hand in the classroom. Beyond the nuts and bolts of devices and applications, the iPad Program also allows our students to learn technology skills on a familiar tool they already use in every aspect of their lives. iPads allow for a state-of-theart technology integration into all aspects of campus life that is fully supported with on-going training from experts right here at Hebron. This conversion has been a multiyear, planned process that grew from committee discussions, surveys and staff training. The IT Department spent the better part of the 2015 summer months upgrading our wireless network and oncampus bandwidth to handle the increased number of devices going online. They have also spent numerous hours in their own professional development for both direct technical support and training certifications. This iPad program is another example of how Hebron continues to innovate and accelerate the options for learning offered to students. 12 •

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ENGINEERING The Engineering Club of Hebron Engineering is not a common subject at the high school level. Often it is integrated into other science courses, and this exposure to the subject sparks interest in some students to pursue it further. So what is a student at Hebron to do if he or she is really excited about Engineering? Form a club, of course. Nate Bennett ’16 saw a need for an outlet for his creative engineering ideas. He knew his friends did too. So he worked with faculty advisor Dr. Chris Shubert to obtain classroom space and general faculty support and developed a plan. Then, at last year’s student-run Club Fair, Nate set up a table and launched the Hebron Academy Engineering Club. “I am really interested in building things, because I want to go into computer science and robotics,” explained Bennett. He and his fellow engineers met once a week in the evenings and decided on projects they wanted to pursue. Their endeavors included the design and production of a trebuchet – with the idea of entering a competition with it. Unfortunately, due to the size of the trebuchet, it had to be built outside and with the onset of winter in Maine, the project could not be finished. The club then moved on to constructing a quadcopter. They pooled their resources, found all the parts they needed online and started building. They almost got it working by the spring, but one faulty motor postponed its ultimate launch. Bennett plans to reignite the Engineering Club this year with the hope that both projects can be finished. He also hopes that the club will continue after he graduates in the spring, so it can serve as a creative outlet for other budding engineers who are inspired by innovation during their education here at Hebron. For more information on the Engineering Club, you can find them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/engineeringhebron/ timeline.

Max Pang ‘15, Nate Bennett ‘16, Valentine Smith ‘15 and Maoze Wang ‘16

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MATH Teaching Outside the Books The history of mathematics at Hebron runs along the same lines as that of the sciences. It has always been an integral part of the curriculum and a standard by which our “classic” educational guidelines were assessed. Much like science, the way that math has been taught has changed over time to accommodate additional courses, the advent of technology in the classroom and, of course, the innovative input of Hebron’s math faculty. One such innovator is Emily Bonis. When asked how she began her teaching career, it is interesting to learn that it happened “purely by chance” but has since become a true passion. What drives her to continue in the classroom is the opportunity to keep learning herself and to continually pass that along to her students. “I measure my success as a teacher by the relationships I build with my students and by the tools that I give them to learn as part of that relationship,” said Bonis. When she started teaching, the protocol was still largely in the “classically structured” method of delivering the content to students from the front of the room with very little active participation aside from nightly homework. The introduction of technology in the classroom has vastly changed that delivery method. “I now have a variety of ways to deliver that same content to my students, which in turn allows for more personal interaction. I’ve become more a facilitator of the content and can tailor my effort in ways that work best for the individual student.” This year, Hebron’s Honors Algebra II is using a self-paced method where the students move themselves through the curriculum in whatever way works best for them. Each day, the first ten minutes of the class are used for reflection on the previous night’s homework, with each student making an entry in a digital journal on their iPad. They plan their strategy for work to be done in class that day, then shared it with the class, fostering peer-to-peer collaboration. The final minutes of class are also focused on reflection, this time on the day’s progress and assignment of their own homework – an innovative approach to be sure and one that elicited incredulity from the students at first, but has settled into exactly what Bonis was hoping for – an effective self-paced learning experience. This unique approach to teaching, together with many other classroom innovations at Hebron, is empowering our students to learn not only their subject matter but also what kind of student they are right now, in their formative high school years, something that many students do not have the chance to realize until they are well into college. The investment in that kind of learning for our students now will pay off significantly in the future. 14 •

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A Formula for Success: The 40-year Chemistry Teaching Career of John “Moose” Curtis What should one say about a ‘life lived large?’ The size is literal, of course, for John Curtis is a large man, admitting to 6’7” and a shoe size of 12, but stature alone does little to capture his presence and influence upon the Hebron campus for the past 40 years. Recently Moose took time from preparations for his annual stint as director of Maine’s Junior Maine Guide Testing Camp to sit on the deck of his camp overlooking Keewaydin Lake and reflect on teaching, learning, coaching and a life-long commitment to young people. “I always had the influence of good mentors,” Moose begins. “I first became fascinated with Chemistry at Baylor School, (Chattanooga TN) where my best friend and I had the privilege of doing independent lab work with a great teacher. We got to explore a whole bunch of things, and it made an impression.” Another influence was closer to Maine. “My brother and I came to Camp Winona for years, starting as campers and then counselors, and we got to go everywhere on the lakes and in the mountains.” Winona and its longtime director, Alan Ordway, would influence Moose further when, after beginning his teaching career at Kingswood-Oxford School in Connecticut, he began to think of being in Maine for more than just the summers. “I was driving back to Hartford from my parents’ home one Christmas vacation. We had been together for the holidays, for skiing and snowshoeing and such. It was one of those bluebird days in January after a fresh snow when everything was just crystal clear. I found myself asking, ‘Why am I going back to the city?’” The question lingered on through the winter, and by spring, Moose had contacted ‘Uncle Al’ at Winona to ask his recommendations about schools in Maine. One of Ordway’s recommendations was Hebron, which as it happened, was seeking a Chemistry teacher. Headmaster David Rice invited the young teacher for an interview. “When I met Gerry (Gerald Twitchell, long-tenured Science Chairman) for the first

“You believed in everyone. Thank you for that!” - Tara Van Buskirk ‘91

Moose in a lively debate with Holly Willis ‘80 & Irene Veayo ‘79

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MOOSE TRIVIA Mr. Moose has been known for his flamboyant collection of ties. He says that the collection started with “Papa Curtis hand-me-downs,” ties so fancy, loud and outrageous that after my father’s one use, I then began to wear them. I gave many away, but I could not part with my “All-Stars.” Trish says that she will make a quilt of them someday. Question #1: Approximately how many ties are in the entire Moose Collection? A) 50 B) 100 C) 150 D) 200 Mr. Moose occasionally donned a bright red beard on National Chemistry Day to create the persona of “Mr. Wizard, the Master of Mixology.” Question #2: What is the origin of the beard?

Question #3: What is the origin of the name “Moose”? A) A middle school class election B) the Junior Division counselors at Camp Winona C) the young faculty at Hebron, circa 1975 D) the Hebron Football team of 1976

The Holiday Chemistree

as Tiny the Elf, with Maya Baarsvik ‘98

with Martin Minondo ‘78

#3) A - “I was running for President of the 6th grade, and my brother Andy thought that I needed a gimmick. It stuck.” #2) “I originally picked up the beard at a costume shop in Lewiston for when I was ‘Tiny, the World’s Largest Elf.’ I also used the beard occasionally in the lab.” ANSWERS: #1) C, “When I was emptying out the closet, I counted 144 . . . not including the Christmas collection, a few more.” 16 •

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“A dedicated educator, an inspirational coach and a wonderful man. I am very thankful that Moose was there for me in my formative teen years.” Jeb Fisher ’95

time, I thought I was sunk. He wanted experience and someone to focus only on Chemistry. I wanted to coach football and be active in the dorm and outdoors. Mr. Rice had other ideas, and I got the job.” Being at Hebron allowed Moose to combine his summer passions with the full program at Hebron, but always at the heart of it were Chemistry and Football. “I had three sections of Chemistry and began AP Chemistry my first year. Honors Chemistry and Chemistry in the Community came later. I had been an assistant football coach at Kingswood, so it was natural to begin here with Carl Nielsen in football and Gary Ambrose in skiing.” Jay Woolsey would also become an influential mentor for Moose as they traveled together with Hebron’s Outing Club. “Every Sunday, fall and spring, I would go out with Jay to hike or paddle. The kids were excited about it and we always had takers, no matter where we were going.” And go they did—Baldpate, Speckled, Caribou, Chocorua, Old Speck, even Katahdin. The Webb and Sandy, Swift, Upper Saco, Lower Sheepscot, Carrabassett. The names of the peaks and streams are magic, and the students who went on the trips spread the word. “It was really special to be out doing something together that wasn’t routine. And they were experiencing things in a different way, having to get along and look out for each other, learning skills that were very new to most of them. Jay was so good with teaching kids in the outdoors. And one of the neat things was that both Katie and Carrie (Moose’s daughters) grew up with Jay and went on all the trips.” Moose has witnessed and been a part of change in the sciences at Hebron and remembers Betsy and Bruce Found as his long-standing department heads and mentors. Initially at Hebron, the science instruction of the day was process-oriented— students learned theory from lecture and text and then replicated procedures in the lab, striving to minimize error by following directions exactly. “Running labs was more like following a recipe than analyzing outcomes,” Moose remembers. “But things changed. There had always been analysis in Chemistry, but it became a much greater part of what we did. Science became more ‘hands on,’ and the department began to have the same goals for all courses. With the environmental movement of the ‘80’s, we became more aware of the way our subjects and training worked together. Betsy and Bruce were great leaders, but we also had Bill Wallace, Cindy Reedy and Gino Valeriani. We learned from each other and we found the many ways our courses related to each other. Betsy’s

In the lab with Delia Lamore ‘96 WWW.hebronacademy.org • 17


love and commitment to ‘all things ocean’ linked to what I was doing in Chemistry. Bill was always making connections to the way different natural and physical systems interact in real life. There was integration among our subjects, increasing awareness of the outdoors and the world, more development of topics relating to energy and the conservation of resources. Our students became much more aware of their surroundings.” “My work in Advanced Placement drove much of the evolution of Hebron’s Chemistry program. I had brought a unit on ‘qualitative analysis’ with me from Kingswood, and it was a way to engage students more in the process of designing labs, running them and doing analysis. I would also attend a summer program at Bates which introduced new AP topics and lab techniques. That is where my interest in ‘micro-Chemistry’ developed. It became a way to put more emphasis on lab work. Instead of large quantities which amplified error, the micro approach made it much easier for students to replicate procedures, to focus closely on the lab process and to increase their concentration on what they were doing. As the AP program changed, it brought more emphasis to problem solving for students. The ‘cookbook’ labs were gone. What is being taught today parallels what is happening in the lab; a student’s experience expands through lab work. We always analyzed outcomes, but now Thanks for being analysis is a much greater part of what we do.”

such a great influence during 4 great years of my life Coach C!

Computers in the classroom has also changed the approach to Chemistry. Gone are the days of constructing molecular models from wooden sticks and balls to illustrate chemical bonding. AP students routinely generate computer design models to illustrate molecular geometry with 3-dimensional images. Moose notes that “students have instant access to much more knowledge. We can pause immediately in class to research or to model something. In addition, - Hayes McCarthy ‘89 the standards for lab reporting now include routine documentation of safety considerations for the materials under investigation. Students must research and document the MSDS (Material Safety Data Sheet) for everything involved in a lab study.” But some elements of Chemistry have long remained the same: to make the study live, to learn by discovery and doing rather than by memorization and recall. And some things are just plain fun. National Chemistry Day has been a time for students to generate discovery labs, to work outside the regular curriculum and share their work with classmates. Doing such demonstration labs, especially those involving gas theory, sometimes has resulted in what Moose laughingly refers to as ‘things that go bang in the night.’ For decades at Hebron, the “Beral Pipette Launch” has become an annual event scheduled around the Hebron’s Winter Weekend as a way to drive out the winter blues through a mixture of pure fun and gamesmanship, teamwork and a finelycalibrated understanding of gas laws. The challenge involves a plastic pipette shortened to 2 – 3 cm and filled with water. Produce and collect O2 and H2 from the water in a 2 to 1 ratio, i.e. H2O. Bring the gas mixture collected to a wire ‘launch pad,’ ignite with a Tesla coil, and then measure the explosive effect by the distance the pipette is launched across the lab. Years of class marks have been recorded in the Chem Lab, and yet, in one final re-staging of the challenge, this year’s AP Chemistry students combined knowledge, skill and particularly finely tuned mechanics to launch an epic pipette which exceeded the class record by a full foot - not so bad for a final moment with Mr. Moose, the Master of Mixology! As in the world of the classroom, Moose has watched the evolution of sport and coaching. “All sports 18 •

hebron • FALL 2015


have gotten so much more technical,” he says. “We know so A wonderful man much more about coaching, about technique and tactics.” Football offers a bewildering array of formations and options. who made such a The evolution of ski equipment has transformed alpine racing, huge impact on my life and the composite materials of the crosse and the evolution of the substitution rule has transformed the speed and tactics of through Science lacrosse. Yet Moose also notes what has remained the same. Equipment, rules and tactics may evolve as well as the language and Football. of the games, but teaching fundamentals and communicating One of a kind! remain at the heart. “Coaches have gotten smarter, and kids learn more about the games earlier,” he says, “but however - Jim Skiff ‘81 much the language of coaching may change, one still has to be able to communicate—to be able to tell and show a young athlete how to perform. You have to be able to coach at the level your athletes are, to use language that they can process and understand. Some coaches may have incredible knowledge of the game yet want to go beyond what their players can do. There has to be a reality check.” And at the heart of any coaching situation are core values that have remained unchanged. Athletes should learn to work together, should make friends, should gain confidence and physical skill, should learn leadership and the value of a group, should set goals and have the enjoyment of attaining them - individually and as a team. And always, Moose would say, to feel good about themselves. “I never wanted a player to leave the field feeling bad about himself,” he says. “I would sometimes go up in the dorm at night just to make sure that things were OK. There will always be another day, another opportunity to learn, to compete. You never want to kill that spark.”

And now, for Moose and Trish, there will be the well-deserved excursions, planning adventures in the woods and on the water, companionship and pleasure, the commitments to lab and now fulfilled. There is a pilgrimage south on the schedule to visit and to attend a University of North Carolina football game in as the lure of an open ticket for two on the Canadian National inspired gift from the school). And there will be the quiet lure of Turtle Island, the lakefront spot in Stoneham which will finally become ‘home’ base. “I have promised myself that I will take time to sit down and work on a new edition of the handbook for the Junior Maine Guide Program, The Art of Outdoor Living,” Moose offers in passing. “It is something that I have wanted to do for a long time, but there were always other things.” The other things may have been years of teaching, coaching, counseling, guiding, child-rearing, serving and loving—all the things of a full life, the unique formula of a life well lived—but it is fine indeed that Moose Curtis shared all those things with the Hebron community.

days of taking for their own practice field with old friends the fall as well Railroad (an

Thank you from all of us.

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 19


Hebron Academy Wear

Blazers from Blaze-In Sportswear Finest worsted wool • Hand-stitched detailing • Custom embroidering on inside pockets of Hebron seal & Lumberjack axes • Gold buttons embossed with the Hebron seal

y l n o

$

199

All orders must be placed by November 15th for early February 2016 delivery. (10% of each purchase will come back to Hebron to support student programs)

TO ORDER GO TO:

http://bitly.com/HAwear-blazers Choose your size and fill in all necessary info. Your blazer will be delivered directly to you, or to the school if you would like to pick it up there.

Contact Blaze-In Sportswear at any time for help at info@blaze-insportswear.com or 203-594-9666 20 •

hebron • FALL 2015


report of giving

July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015 WWW.hebronacademy.org • 21


2014-2015 board of trustees Hebron Academy’s governing body is comprised of 20-25 alumni, parents and friends who

serve up to two consecutive four-year terms. In special cases, terms may be extended in one-year increments.

PAUL. S. GOODOF ’67 Chair

JUDAH P. SOMMER P’08 Vice Chair

DEVON BIONDI ’96

WALLACE E. HIGGINS

ROBERT J. RYAN ’77

JAMES R. CLEMENTS

JAMES B. HILL ’90

HEATHER FREMONT-SMITH STEPHENS ’88

FELICA W. CONEY P ’18

THOMAS N. HULL III ’64

MEREDITH STRANG BURGESS P ’11

MATTHEW W. JOHNSON ’93

J. MATTHEW LYNESS ’76

CLEMENT S. DWYER, JR. ’66

KIMBALL L. KENWAY ’70

ROBERT E. WAITE ’68

WENDE FOX-LAWSON P ’15

DAVID S. PROUT ’83

DAVID J. WILLIAMS ’60

DEBRA BEACHAM BLOOMINGDALE ’83, P ’11, ’13 Secretary ROBERT A. DONAHUE ’83

SCOTT E. WILSON ’71 Treasurer

RICHARD A. BENNETT P ’14, ’16

message from the director of advancement and external relations

Thank you to the 795 alumni, parents, grandparents and friends who, through their support, enhanced programs and facilities as well as faculty enrichment and financial aid at Hebron Academy during the fiscal year 2014-2015. Your generosity is needed and is greatly appreciated. Every gift, regardless of size, makes a tremendous difference. I look forward to seeing you when you next visit campus either for Homecoming/Reunion, Commencement or simply a stroll while passing through Maine. You are always welcome! If you are unable

22 •

hebron • FALL 2015

to travel to the Pine Tree State, please be sure to visit our website and/or our Facebook page to keep current on all things Hebron. With gratitude,

Pat Layman Director of Advancement and External Relations


summary of giving Ongoing support of Hebron Academy, in the form of gifts to operating, facility and endowment funds, is a proud tradition in the Hebron community. Each year, alumni, parents, faculty, parents of alumni and friends of the Academy contribute generously to the ongoing support and growth of the institution. The Trustees of Hebron Academy wish to thank most sincerely the 795 donors who made gifts during the 2014 - 2015 fiscal year, which ran from July 1, 2014 through June 30, 2015. HEBRON ANNUAL FUND

UNRESTRICTED GIFTS $772,346 RESTRICTED GIFTS $134,568 TOTAL ANNUAL FUND $906,914

741 12 753 DONORS

ENDOWMENT GIFTS

THIRD CENTURY FUND RESTRICTED ENDOWMENT TOTAL COMMITMENTS

$2,136,880 $93,008

24 18

$2,229,888

42 DONORS

SOURCES OF SUPPORT ALUMNI/HONORARY MEMBERS $2,680,896 CURRENT PARENTS $162,926 PAST PARENTS $182,302 CURRENT & PAST FACULTY/FRIENDS $76,112 GRANDPARENTS $2,134 FOUNDATIONS $32,050 OTHER ORGANIZATIONS $382 TOTAL SUPPORT FOR HEBRON ACADEMY FOR THE FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2014-JUNE 30, 2015 $3,136,802

795 DONORS

GIFT DESIGNATIONS THE ARTS $7,975 ATHLETICS $3,230 FACULTY SUPPORT $29,490 FINANCIAL AID $109,736 STUDENT PROGRAMS/SERVICES $3,248 TECHNOLOGY & LIBRARY $3,715 FRIENDS OF HEBRON HOCKEY $6,774

Class officers Chris Thanopulos ‘15 (L) and Rachel Jurek ‘15 (R) follow bag piper Christopher Pinchbeck ’87, leading the 2015 Commencement procession.

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 23


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

philanthropic base with their steadfast generosity to the Academy’s people and programs. They serve as a model and inspiration for others in their continuing dedication to Hebron’s mission of inspiring and guiding students to reach their highest potential in mind, body and spirit, and represent a vital part of our heritage in sustaining the values Hebron has espoused for more than 200 years. 50 or more years Mr. Allan Brown & Ms. Linda Saltford ‘55 Ven. Robert A. Bryan ‘50 Mr. & Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Dr. & Mrs. Arthur W. Cooper ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Peter O. Crisp ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. William B. Dockser ‘55 Mr. Richard A. Field ‘39 Mr. & Mrs. James A. Gillies, III ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. A. William Kany, Jr. ‘50 Mr. Norbert Lachmann ‘51 Mr. John T. Larabee ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Peter H. Lunder ‘52 Mr. Richard H. Maidman ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Mann ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Leonard A. Mintz ‘53 Jerrold A. Olanoff Esq. ‘54 Mr. & Mrs. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Stavis ‘51 Mr. C. Thomas Van Alen ‘56 Dr. & Mrs. Houghton M. White ‘54

45 to 49 years Mr. & Mrs. John R. Giger ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. David Barbour III ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. Donald E. Bates ‘62 Dr. Alan Booth ‘52 & Dr. Margaret Booth Mr. J. Craig Clark ‘70 & Ms. Judy Unger-Clark Mr. G. Cyrus Cook ‘73 & Ms. Megan P. Shea Mr. & Mrs. Blaine E. Eynon Jr. ‘65 Mrs. Susan A. Galvin H‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph A. Gould, Jr. ‘41 Mr. Albert R. Lepage ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Murphy Jr. ‘56 Mr. & Mrs. Payson S. Perkins ‘53

40 to 44 years Mr. & Mrs. M. Ray Bradford, Jr. ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Kennedy Crane, III ‘58 Mrs. Dorothy J. D’Ewart H‘43 Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Mr. Rudolf M.C. Eyerer ‘70 Mr. & Mrs. Noyes M. Fisk Jr. ‘53 Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. Frank R. Goodwin ‘56 Mr. & Mrs. Rupert B. White ‘51

35 to 39 years Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Forte ‘62 Henry H. Booth Esq. ‘53 Mr. Peter N. Burbank ‘70 Mr. & Mrs. David R. Burnett ‘77 Mr. & Mrs. James C. Cram ‘68 Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Mr. & Mrs. Alexander E. Dean ‘63 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Evans ‘62 Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Jarvis ‘58 Mr. & Mrs. Regis F. Lepage ‘72 Mr. Harvey A. Lipman ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. Peter Madsen ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. C. Michael Malm ‘60 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Mandiberg ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan G. Moll ‘69 Mr. & Mrs. Bart Peterson ‘81 Mr. & Mrs. John K. Pierce ‘49 Mr. Christopher D. Righter ‘56 & Ms. Judy Thomson Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross ‘54 Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Ruegg ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Simonds ‘52 Mr. Eugene J. Smith ‘43

24 •

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Mr. Andrew Smith ‘80 & Ms. Lavea Brachman Dr. William A. Weary ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. R. Russell Williamson II ‘56

30 to 34 years Mr. & Mrs. G. William Allen ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. David M. Anderson ‘60 Mr. John C. Andrews, Jr. ‘48 Anonymous ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. Walter H. Burden III ‘64 Ms. Trudy P. Crane Mr. & Mrs. John W. Curtis Dr. Norman O. Farrar ‘58 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Hagge Jr. ‘66 Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. Douglas Gordon ‘71 & Ms. Kim Weller Mr. & Mrs. John F. Hartley Mr. & Mrs. Stephen T. Hibbard ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79 Kimball L. Kenway Esq ‘70 & Mrs. Alison Kenway Mr. John W. Lawry ‘43 Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. & Mrs. Jack Leyden Ms. Susan E. Loyd-Turner ‘77 CAPT Carlton A. K. McDonald USN ‘43 Mr. F. Corbin Moister, Jr. ‘68 Mr. Ralph A. Parmigiane ‘43 Mr. David W. Stonebraker Molly & Lew Turlish Mr. & Mrs. Stephen K. West Mr. & Mrs. Scott E. Wilson ‘71

25 to 29 years Dr. & Mrs. Lester E. Bradford ‘43 Mr. Jon M. Brooks ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Dwane Bumps Mr. & Mrs. John C. Buschmann ‘66 Mr. C. Reed Chapman ‘76 Mr. William B. Chase Ms. Deborah P. Clark Mr. & Mrs. Loring Coes, III ‘67 LTC William H. Collier USA ‘40 Mr. & Mrs. William W. Davenport ‘55 Dr. & Mrs. Edward F. Driscoll ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Winslow S. Durgin, Jr. ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Ernest A. Eynon II Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Fallon, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Bruce W. Found Ms. Susan J. Garner H‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Goodman ‘43 Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Gottlieb ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. David B. Gould ‘71 Ms. Susan W. Hadlock ‘75 Mr. & Mrs. Cyrus Y. Hagge ‘71 Ms. Jane Harris Ash ‘79 & Dr. Gary S. Ash Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Hedrick, Jr. Ms. Lea A. Heidman ‘82 & Mr. Brian Heidman Mr. & Mrs. Bernard L. Helm ‘59 Mrs. Martha F. Horner Mr. & Mrs. Amory M. Houghton, III ‘48 Ms. Sharon Lake-Post ‘83 & Family Mr. & Mrs. John F. McIlwain ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Meehan Jr. ‘64 Mrs. Zella L. Mervis Mr. & Mrs. Lincoln A. Mitchell ‘54 Mr. & Mrs. Philip H. Montgomery ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. James A. Morrill ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen G. Ness Mr. Richard E. Nickerson ‘41 Maj & Mrs. Dwight L. Parsons II ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Preti ‘42

Mr. Robert J. Raymond ‘55 Ms. Cynthia Reedy & Mr. Brad Cummings Mr. & Mrs. Richard N. Robbins ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. James A. Sanborn ‘69 Mr. & Mrs. Kent B. Savel ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Carl G. Seefried, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William Stutt Dr. & Mrs. Jou S. Tchao Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson ‘79 & Mr. Rolfe Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Ralph W. Turner Jr. ‘41 Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Webber Ms. Susan R. Witter

20 to 24 years Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Brown ‘60 Ms. Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Barrett ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Beacham Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Beal, Jr. ‘47 Mr. & Mrs. John G. Blake ‘48 Mr. & Mrs. Peter B. Boody ‘69 Mr. Wade T. Breed ‘58 Ms. Juliet Chase Bailey ‘85 & Mr. Will Bailey Mr. Kenneth P. Childs ‘72 Mr. Brian O. Cloherty ‘79 Mr. & Mrs. Norman A. Cole ‘42 Mr. Conrad B. Conant ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Craig Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. Curtis, Jr. ‘54 Ms. Deborah L. Danforth ‘53 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur F. Draper Mr. & Mrs. Robert Egleston ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. G. Jason Found ‘87 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Godard ‘60 Ms. Leslie A. Guenther Mr. & Mrs. William J. Guidera ‘88 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Haartz Hon & Mrs. James C. Harberson Jr. ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Harding ‘70 Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Kendall ‘95 Mr. Richard H. Lancaster ‘50 Mr. Richard J. Levinson ‘49 & Ms. Susan Newman Mr. & Mrs. Peter B. Loveland ‘66 Mr. & Mrs. Marc F. Lunder ‘82 Dr. Terrence Mace ‘64 & Ms. Anne Wood Mr. & Mrs. Donald N. Maia ‘53 Attorney & Mrs. Robert M. Martin Mr. & Mrs. John E. Meserve ‘67 Mr. & Mrs. Gary C. Miller ‘68 Mr. Robert R. Mott Mr. Roger B. Percival Mr. & Mrs. John H. Redmond ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Rich, Jr. ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Rigazio ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. Henry M. Rines ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Marc J. Roy ‘78 Robert J. Ryan, Esq. ‘77 Mr. & Mrs. Jay K. Sadlon ‘64 Ms. Janice Salvesen Mr. T. Bragdon Shields ‘79 & Ms. Janet Lange Dr. Thomas F. Shields & Mrs. Bethel Shields Dr. & Mrs. Michael E. Silverman ‘85 Mr. & Mrs. Phillips Smith ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. William T. Sprole III ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Kelso F. Sutton ‘57 Hon. Charles B. Swartwood ‘57 & Ms. Heidi Baracsi Mr. & Mrs. Ken C. Sweezey ‘63 Dr. & Mrs. C. Jeffrey Tannebring ‘69 Mr. Stuart F. Terrill ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. William B. Thompson ‘55

Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Varney ‘62 Mrs. Mary C. Webb ‘48 Mrs. Daphne Whitman H‘54 Mr. Charles D. Whittier, II ‘53

15 to 19 years Ms. Carolyn Adams ‘77 & Mr. Dan Fuller Addison & Elisabeth Augusta Mr. & Mrs. John E. Baker ‘67 Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Beacham, Jr. ‘85 Dr. & Mrs. Charles A. Berg Rev & Mrs. Kenneth A. Boyle ‘52 Mr. Paul S. Brouwer & Ms. Sara Wilmot Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67 Mr. Galen Crane ‘87 & Ms. Cali Brooks Mr. & Mrs. David Christison ‘38 Mr. Richard M. Cutter ‘56 Mr. Robert A. Donahue ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. Bertram B. Fisher ‘50 Mr. & Mrs. John Geismar Mr. & Mrs. Alex Godomsky Dr. & Mrs. Peter A. Goodhue ‘50 Mr. David A. Goodof ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. John W. Hales ‘56 Ms. Leah E. Hedstrom ‘02 Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Mr. Henry M. Holste ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Houghton, II ‘71 Ambassador & Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Mr. R. Bruce Hunter ‘72 Mr. & Mrs. James R. Kelley ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. John J. King Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr. ‘68 Mr. & Mrs. Daniel F. Lyman ‘69 Patrick S. L. Maidman MD ‘80 Mr. & Mrs. Mitchel A. Maidman ‘82 Mr. Carl Mikkelsen ‘71 & Ms. Barbara Posnick Mr. & Mrs. Roger C. McNeill ‘63 Ms. Kirsten L. Ness ‘98 Mr. John M. Noyes ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. Mitchel G. Overbye Dr. Bradford Parsons ‘72 & Dr. Nancy Harris Mr. & Mrs. Salvador F. Porras Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. S. Quarles ‘81 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Quinn ‘49 Dr. & Mrs. G. P. Raynald Roy Mr. & Mrs. Douglas S. Sandner ‘89 Dr. & Mrs. Peter Schramm ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. Carl G. Seefried III ‘89 Mr. & Mrs. John P. Sherden, III ‘56 Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Siragusa Mr. & Mrs. Alex Stephens ‘88 Dr. & Mrs. William W. Stocker II ‘62 Dr. & Mrs. Tycho T. von Rosenvinge ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas P. Webb Jr. ‘76 Mr. & Mrs. Byron V. Whitney ‘63 Mr. William P. Witter ‘82 Chip & Jean Wood Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Zelman ‘77

10 to 14 years Anonymous (2) Anonymous ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. Ronald N. Adams ‘65 Dr. & Mrs. Morris S. Albert ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Arel ‘76 Mr. & Mrs. Herbert M. Atherton Mr. & Mrs. Bernard M. Babcock ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey G. Baker ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. Maurice E. Balboni ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Bastow ‘53 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Bellavance, III ‘58


Mr. Andrew B. Berry ‘58 Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Giesemann ‘57 Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Mr. & Mrs. James L. Bisesti Dr. & Mrs. Lincoln C. Blake ‘50 Mr. Andrew B. Boomingdale ‘82 & Mrs. Debra Bloomingdale ‘83 Alan W. Boone MD ‘54 & Mrs. Gayle Boone ‘54 Dr. & Mrs. William F. Boucher, Jr. ‘64 Mr. Carl B. Brewer Mr. & Mrs. Kyle Buelow ‘88 Mr. & Mrs. John L. Burnham ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Gregory M. Burns ‘73 Mr. & Mrs. Timothy M. Caddo ‘85 Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Canaday ‘56 Mr. & Mrs. James P. Cassidy Jr. ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. Peter Chapman Ms. Nicole L. Chase ‘91 Mr. & Mrs. Timothy A. Churchill Mrs. Helen K. Cleaves ‘50 Dr. & Mrs. Paul Cote ‘84 Mr. Stephen G. Crabtree ‘65 Ms. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 & Mr. Bob Crowley Miss Katherine E. Curtis ‘02 Miss Carolyn A. Curtis ‘04 Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Dahlquist ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘85 Mr. & Mrs. John R. Deal, Jr. ‘61 Mr. Samuel A. Dibbins Jr. ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Porter S. Dickinson ‘48 Mr. John K. Dineen Mr. & Mrs. David M. Driscoll ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Duncan ‘55 Mr. Robert B. Eames ‘76 Ms. Jeanine S. Eschenbach & Mr. Brian Jurek Attorney & Mrs. Chester W. Fairlie, III ‘63 Mr. & Mrs. James E. Fenlason ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. David J. Fensore Edward Van Varick Finn ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Fitzpatrick ‘76 Ms. Eileen T. Gillespie-Fahey ‘81 & Mr. Timothy Fahey Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin L. Grant ‘90 Mr. John H. Halford III ‘60 Mr. William C. Harding, Jr. ‘63 Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel L. Harris, Jr. David Hartgen Ph.D, P.E & Ms. Linda M. Simpson ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. Hedrick ‘91 Mr. Stuart G. Hedstrom ‘01 Mr. George L. Helwig Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Hemmings Mr. Robert M. Hernon ‘77 Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Mr. William Hine & Ms. Cathy Hazelton Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Hodgkins, II ‘63 Dr. Karen A. Holler ‘79 Rev & Mrs. David C. Houston ‘53 Mr. & Mrs. Warren O. Hulser Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin E. Jeffries ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Ms. Alberta Jones Mr. Mark Jorgensen ‘74 & Ms. Dee Dee Morse Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Keller ‘71 Mr. John J. King, Jr. Ms. Patricia Layman Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Leger ‘76 Mr. & Mrs. John G. Leness Mr. & Mrs. Raymond D. Lenoue Mr. & Mrs. Jake Leyden ‘99 Mr. & Mrs. E. Thomas Lindberg ‘88 Mr. James K. Locke ‘68 Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Longley ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. Dennis J. Looney, Jr. David & Elaina Lowell ‘61 Dr. & Mrs. Bruce A. MacDougal ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Maher ‘54

Ms. Jessie D. Maher Parker ‘95 & Mr. Challen Parker Ms. Dagny C. Maidman ‘85 & Ms. Molly Hollis Wood Mr. & Mrs. David A. Maidman ‘54 Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Maley ‘48 Mr. & Mrs. Jay Marshall ‘78 Mr. & Mrs. David E. Martin ‘56 Mr. Robert W. McCoy Jr. ‘58 Mr. John D. McGonagle ‘61 Mr. Scott A. Meiklejohn Mr. & Mrs. John W. Merz ‘54 Mr. & Mrs. Steve P. Middleton Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer ‘56 & Ms. Kay S. Nagle Mr. Gerald B. Myrick & Ms. Paula Lyons-Myrick Mr. Michael A. Myrick ‘03 Mr. Kirby N. Nadeau ‘77 & Ms. Verna R. Maurice Mr. & Mrs. Bruce M. Nash ‘71 Dr. & Mrs. Scott R. Nelson ‘91 Mr. Eric W. Nicolai ‘79 Mr. Gunnar W. Olson ‘90 Mr. Richard J. Parker ‘55 Ms. Kathleen E. Perkins ‘81 Mr. Frederick Perry ‘59 & Ms. Sarah Smith Dr. Robert J. Pettit ‘69 Mr. & Mrs. James E. Porath ‘49 Mrs. Marian H. Prescott Dr. & Mrs. Albert M. Price Mr. & Mrs. David S. Prout ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. James C. Rea III ‘62 Miss Louise M. Roy ‘05 Mr. & Mrs. James L. Ryland ‘70 Dr. & Mrs. Lee O. Sanborn ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas S. Sewall ‘53 Ms. Meredith M. Shore Sarah & Richard Sigel ‘76 Dr. & Mrs. Ronald S. Sklar ‘70 Mr. & Mrs. A. Michael Slosberg ‘63 Mr. Gordon P. Smith ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Smith Mr. & Mrs. Ian M. Smith ‘82 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Snedeker ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. David B. Snow, Jr. ‘72 Mr. & Mrs. Judah C. Sommer Mr. & Mrs. Bruce J. Spaulding ‘54 Mr. Charles G. Sprague, Jr. ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Mark Stearns Mr. & Mrs. William J. Stites ‘71 Dr. & Mrs. Walter E. Stone Jr. ‘41 Mr. & Mrs. Ian J. Swanbeck ‘85 Dr. John Thibodeau ‘64 & Dr. Noreen Keenan Mr. J. Christian Thompson ‘85 Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Tranfield Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Turk Ms. Cora Turlish ‘86 & Mr. Matthew Shifman Ms. Hannah B. Turlish ‘87 & Mr. Harry Green Mr. Bradford J. Turner ‘47 Ms. Sarah Twichell Ms. Helen L. Unger-Clark ‘04 & Mr. Iñaki Lozares Carpintero CDr. & Mrs. Stephen P. Wagner ‘73 Mr. Robert Waite ‘68 & Ms. Karen Shigeishi-Waite ‘68 Mr. & Mrs. John B. Walthausen ‘64 Ms. Rebecca S. Webber ‘76 Mr. Peter G. Welsh ‘70 Mrs. Kathleen B. White ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Rupert B. White, Jr. ‘75 Mr. & Mrs. Lew Williams Mr. & Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. Robert E. Willis ‘69 & Ms. Nancy Winslow Dr. & Mrs. John F. Wilson

5 to 9 or more years Mr. & Mrs. Gary M. Appelbaum ‘76 Mr. Donald B. Abbott ‘89 Mr. Willmott Abbuhl ‘53 Anonymous ‘97 Anonymous ‘52 Anonymous ‘69 Anonymous ‘71 Ms. Kathleen Augusta Mr. & Mrs. David H. Ayres ‘63 Mr. James Balano ‘71 & Ms. Kate Spillane Mr. & Mrs. David M. Banash Mr. & Mrs. John P. Barrett ‘61 Lt. Gen & Mrs. Edward P. Barry, Jr. ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Bartoccini ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. William A. Bearse III ‘59 Dr. & Mrs. Steven Beaudette Mr. & Mrs. Jeoffrey R. Begin ‘97 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Bennett Mr. Andrew B. Bloomingdale, Jr. ‘11 Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Bouchard Mr. Timothy W. Braddock ‘70 Ms. Leslie Breton Mr. & Mrs. Stephen S. Brown, Jr. ‘49 Mr. Andrew C. Burgess ‘11 Ms. Catherine A. Byrne ‘11 Mr. William V. S. Carhart ‘51 MAJ & Mrs. Bruce B. Cary USA ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey E. Chase ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Chipman Ms. Amy E. Clark ‘89 Col & Mrs. George R. Collins ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Mark L. Cuneo ‘67 Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth A. Cuneo ‘66 Mrs. Lydia T. Currie ‘96 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Curtze ‘65 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Ms. Grace Drown Mr. & Mrs. George M. Dycio ‘78 Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Edmonstone ‘68 Capt & Mrs. Peter G. Fallon III ‘86 Ms. Jessica Feeley ‘75 & Mr. Stephen F. O’Shaughnessy Mr. & Mrs. Roscoe W. Fitts Jr. ‘54 Ms. Debra Garvin H‘73 Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Geraci ‘90 Mr. & Mrs. Gregory S. Getschow ‘82 Mr. & Mrs. James A. Gillies IV ‘86 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Goldman ‘71 Ms. Elizabeth Siekman Graves ‘80 Mr. & Mrs. G. Alexander Gray ‘61 Mr. Colin Griggs Mr. Robert S. Grossman ‘66 Mr. Alexander F. Haartz ‘77 Ms. Susan B. Harlor & William F. Ray, III Mr. & Mrs. Todd D. Harmon ‘82 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Harris ‘71 Mr. Nathaniel L. Harris ‘81 Mr. & Mrs. Andrew M. Haskell ‘90 Mr. Thomas H. Hays III ‘77 Mr. & Mrs. Mark E. Hews Mr. & Mrs. Ted Hoeller Mr. Mark L. Jacobs ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Jones ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Paul D. Kaneb ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. Timothy T. Kavanaugh ‘80 Ms. Deborah Keefe & Mr. John E. Sedgewick Mr. & Mrs. Jason Keough Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey S. Laughlin ‘65 Mr. Richard Leavitt & Ms. Anne Gass Mr. & Mrs. James S. LeBlanc ‘02 Ms. Joyce M. Lee ‘47 Mr. & Mrs. David G. Lougee ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. MacLellan Mr. & Mrs. Robert MacLellan Mr. Robert A. F. MacLellan ‘11 Capt & Mrs. Forbes O. MacVane ‘78 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Markey

HEBRON ACADEMY REPORT OF GIV ING 2014-2015

Ms. Patricia Massenburg Mrs. Nancy McKelvy CTRCS & Mrs. Robert R. McNamara USN ‘63

Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. McTaggart ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Kingsley N. Meyer Jr. ‘70 Mr. & Mrs. Mark Mosher Dr. Lawrence Murch Mr. Paul A. Nemetz-Carlson Mr. & Mrs. David S. Nolan ‘67 Mr. & Mrs. Johann D. Nottebohm ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. O’Brien Mr. Cory J. O’Brien ‘10 Mr. & Mrs. Brendan F. O’Day Mr. Thomas Ossman Mr. & Mrs. Christopher I. Page ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. William F. Patterson ‘56 Mr. & Mrs. Zigmund A. Peret ‘62 Mr. Mark L. Peterson Mr. & Mrs. Norman Phelps Mr. & Mrs. W. Barry Piekos ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Plante Mr. & Mrs. George E. Powers Jr. ‘70 Mr. & Mrs. S. Mason Pratt ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Mark S. Purcell ‘73 Mr. John Rasmussen & Ms. Margaret O’Donnell Dr. & Mrs. Daniel C. Rausch ‘94 Ms. Jenny Agnew Ridley ‘99 & Mr. Corey Ridley Dr. & Mrs. Michael Rifkin Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin J. Rifkin ‘96 Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey M. Rockwell ‘66 Mr. Christopher Roy ‘07 Ms. Judy M. Roy Mr. & Peter J. Rubin ‘63 Mrs. Karen Sacherman ‘84 & Mr. Jim Sacherman Dr. Michael E. Samers ‘84 Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Sarr, Jr. John P. Scamman MD ‘70 Dr. & Mrs. Robert J. Scholnick ‘58 Rev & Mrs. Jefferson M. Scott ‘72 Mr. & Mrs. Carlton Sedgeley Ms. Dana Shields Hubbell ‘78 & Mr. Robert Hubbell Mr. John W. Slattery ‘04 Mr. Stephen L. Smith Mr. & Mrs. David C. Smith Mr. Daniel P. Sommer ‘08 Mr. & Mrs. Terence R. Sparrow ‘56 Ms. Margaret Speranza Dr. & Mrs. Austin C. Stonebraker ‘97 Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess & Mr. Douglas Stewart Mr. & Mrs. David P. Stromeyer ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Alan A. Switzer, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Raymond Tardif Ms. Meredith Tarr & Mr. Rob Woiccak ‘88 Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Tate II ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Thompson ‘66 Mr. Patrick A. Tracey ‘57 Mr. Gordon I. Trevett ‘63 Mr. & Mrs. Spencer Violette ‘97 Mr. & Mrs. Kent Walker ‘63 Mr. & Mrs. Yoshio Watanabe Mr. Jeffrey Weber Mr. & Mrs. Peter S. Wells ‘75 Mr. & Mrs. Hamilton H. Wood Jr. ‘62 Ms. Nancy C. Woolford ‘56 Ms. Carole L. Wright ‘50

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leadership gifts Hebron Academy takes this opportunity to express its gratitude

to the 158 leadership donors listed below, whose collective gifts and pledges amounted to $3,057,470 or 97% of the total philanthropic support of the Academy during the 2014-2015 fiscal year. THE ELEANOR D. & CLAUDE L. ALLEN SOCIETY $50,000 or more

Mr. & Mrs. David Christison ‘38 Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Evans ‘62 Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson & Mr. Jim Lawson Ms. Margery Hamlen Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Kimball L. Kenway Esq. ‘70 & Mrs. Alison Kenway Mr. Albert R. Lepage,‘65 Albert Lepage Foundation, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Regis F. Lepage ‘72 Mr. & Mrs. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Mr. Robert W. McCoy Jr.,‘58 Robert J. Ryan, Esq. ‘77 Ms. Heather Freemont-Smith Stephens ‘88 & Mr. Alex Stephens Mr. & Mrs. Kelso F. Sutton ‘57 Vanguard Charitable Foundation Mr. Robert Waite ‘68 & Ms. Karen Shigeishi-Waite Mr. & Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60 Dr. & Mrs. John F. Wilson

HUPPER & TREAT SOCIETY $25,000 to $49,999

Crane Fund For Widows & Children Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Mrs. Connie Eastburn R.S. Evans Foundation, Inc. Ms. Susan J. Garner H‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Dr. Lawrence Murch Mr. & Mrs. Scott E. Wilson ‘71

1804 SOCIETY $10,000 to $24,999

Anonymous(3) Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Mr. Andrew B. Bloomingdale ‘82 & Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Ms. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 & Mr. Robert Crowley Mr. & Mrs. Mike Donatelli Mr. & Mrs. Scott Everett Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Gottlieb ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Cyrus Y. Hagge ‘71 Hebron Academy Parents’ Association Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Ambassador & Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79 Mr. John D. McGonagle ‘61 Mr. John M. Noyes ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. David S. Prout ‘83 Mr. Christopher D. Righter ‘56 & Ms. Judy Thomson Mr. & Mrs. David B. Snow, Jr. ‘72 Mr. & Mrs. Judah C. Sommer Mr. William P. Witter ‘82

STURTEVANT CIRCLE $5,000 to $9,999

Mr. & Mrs. John Alex Mr. & Mrs. G. William Allen ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Curtze ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. William B. Dockser ‘55

26 •

hebron • FALL 2015

Mr. Robert A. Donahue ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Giesemann ‘57 Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Hagge Jr. ‘66 Jacob Irving Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Paul D. Kaneb ‘60 The Paul & Jill Kaneb Family Charitable Foundation Mr. Richard J. Levinson ‘49 & Ms. Susan Newman Mr. & Mrs. John F. McIlwain ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Gary C. Miller ‘68 The New York Community Trust Mr. Richard E. Nickerson ‘41 Mr. & Mrs. Henry M. Rines ‘65 Simmons Foundation, Inc. Mr. Garvin L. Warner & Ms. Margaret Wheeler Dr. William A. Weary ‘60

CHARTER CLUB $1,000 to $4,999

Dr. & Mrs. David N. Abisalih Ms. Carolyn Adams ‘77 & Mr. Dan Fuller Mr. John C. Andrews Jr. ‘48 Anonymous(2) Mr. & Mrs. David M. Banash The Bank of New York Mellon Community Partnership Mr. Frank Bao Mr. & Mrs. David Barbour III ‘60 Lt. Gen. & Mrs. Edward P. Barry Jr. ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Donald E. Bates ‘62 Dr. & Mrs. Steven Beaudette Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Bellavance III ‘58 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Bennett Mr. & Mrs. James L. Bisesti Henry H. Booth Esq. ‘53 The Boston Foundation Mr. Jon M. Brooks ‘62 Mr. Peter N. Burbank ‘70 Mr. J. Craig Clark ‘70 & Ms. Judy Unger-Clark Mr. & Mrs. James R. Clements Mr. & Mrs. Kelvin Coney Dr. & Mrs. Arthur W. Cooper ‘49 Mr. Stephen G. Crabtree ‘65 Crane Co. Matching Gifts Program Mr. & Mrs. Peter O. Crisp ‘51 The Crisp Family Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Dahlquist ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. William W. Davenport ‘55 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Mr. & Mrs. John R. Deal Jr. ‘61 Mrs. Dorothy J. D’Ewart ‘43H The E. Stanley & Alice M. Wright Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Mark J. Enyedy Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Fallon Jr. Fallon Family Fund Dr. Norman O. Farrar ‘58 Estate of Jose W. Fenderson Esq. ‘33 Mr. & Mrs. Bertram B. Fisher ‘50 Douglas & Elizabeth Beach Fitzpatrick ‘76 Mr. & Mrs. Brian Fons Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Forte ‘62 Mrs. Susan A. Galvin ‘62H Mr. & Mrs. John Geismar Ms. Kellie Geraci & Mr. Anthony Geraci ‘90 Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. & Mrs. Gregory S. Getschow ‘82 Mr. & Mrs. Stuart W. Goodwin Mr. & Mrs. David B. Gould ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin L. Grant ‘90

Mr. William C. Harding Jr. ‘63 Ms. Jane Harris Ash ‘79 & Dr. Gary S. Ash Mr. & Mrs. Ted Hoeller Mr. Henry M. Holste ‘64 Mr. Mark L. Jacobs ‘61 Jewish Communal Fund Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Keller ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. John J. King Mr. John T. Larabee ‘55 The Larabee Family Fund Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Leger ‘76 Mr. & Mrs. John G. Leness Thomas & Katherine Albin Lindberg ‘88 Mr. Billy Logan Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Lowenthal Jr. ‘68 Mrs. Rosamond A. Lownes Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Lownes ‘84 The Lunder Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Peter H. Lunder ‘52 Mrs. Margery L. MacMillan Mr. & Mrs. Peter Madsen ‘65 Ms. Dagny C. Maidman ‘85 & Ms. Molly Hollis Wood Patrick S. L. Maidman MD ‘80 Mr. & Mrs. David A. Maidman ‘54 Mr. Richard H. Maidman ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Mitchel A. Maidman ‘82 Miss Allison Maidman ‘07 The Maine Community Foundation Mr. & Mrs. C. Michael Malm ‘60 Mrs. Nancy McKelvy Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan G. Moll ‘69 Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer ‘56 & Ms. Kay S. Nagle MPX Dr. & Mrs. Scott R. Nelson ‘91 Mr. & Mrs. Johann D. Nottebohm ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Christopher I. Page ‘59 The Page Foundation Mr. Richard J. Parker ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Payson S. Perkins ‘53 Mr. Frederick Perry ‘59 & Ms. Sarah Smith Mr. Gerard Puopolo & Ms. Lucy Eversley R. M. Davis Inc. Mr. Robert J. Raymond ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Rich Jr. ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53

Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Rigazio ‘71 Rockwell Automation Charitable Corp. Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Rubin ‘63 Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Ruegg ‘51 Jim & Karen Stoloff Sacherman ‘84 The Saul & Naomi Cohen Foundation Ms. Katherine Schiavi Melioris ‘85 Mr. & Mrs. Carlton Sedgeley Mr. & Mrs. John P. Sherden III ‘56 Silicon Valley Community Foundation Dr. & Mrs. Michael E. Silverman ‘85 Silverman Family Foundation Inc. Mr. Stephen L. Smith Mr. Eugene J. Smith ‘43 Mr. & Mrs. Bruce J. Spaulding ‘54 Schiavi Family Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Stavis ‘51 Ruth & Frederick Stavis Family Foundation Inc. Mr. David Stonebraker & Ms. Leslie Guenther Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess & Mr. Douglas Stewart Mr. John H. Suitor Jr. ‘62 Hon. Charles B. Swartwood ‘57 & Ms. Heidi Baracsi Dr. & Mrs. Jou S. Tchao Molly & Lew Turlish Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Varney ‘62 The Walter H. & Hannah H. Webb Family Foundation Mrs. Mary C. Webb H‘48 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas P. Webb Jr. ‘76 Mr. Jeffrey Weber Mr. Peter G. Welsh ‘70 Mr. & Mrs. Rupert B. White ‘51 Dr. & Mrs. Houghton M. White ‘54 Dr. Houghton White & Mary Hanks White Fund Mrs. Daphne Whitman H‘54 Mr. Robert E. Willis ‘69 & Ms. Nancy Winslow Ms. Susan R. Witter William D. Witter Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Hamilton H. Wood Jr. ‘62 Chip & Jean Wood Ms. Carole L. Wright H‘50

Arianna Pinkham ‘15 (left) recipient of the Regis A.Lepage Scholarship award at commencement with Katie Schools ‘15, recipient of the Lorimar Scholarship and the Drama Award.


Zachary Abisalih, the 2015 Hebron Cup recipient, with his parents at Commencement in May.

gifts in memory and in honor

The gifts listed below were made in memory or in honor of members of the greater Hebron community GIFTS IN MEMORY ELEANOR D. & CLAUDE L. ALLEN Ms. Connie Allen Eastburn

ANDREW B. BLOOMINGDALE ‘82

Mrs. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 Miss Molly M. Bloomingdale ‘13 Mr. AJ Bloomingdale ‘11 Granite Savings Bank Mr. & Mrs. David Arnold Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Beacham Ms. Barbara B. Brackett Mr. Philip E. Chalmers & Ms. Susan King Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. ‘66 Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Mr. James B. Hill II & Family Mr. Michael Lapierre Mr. Billy Logan Mr. & Mrs. Leonard A. Mintz ‘53 Ms. Christine M. Moore Mr. & Mrs. Guy D. Rizza Ms. Doreen A. Sala Mr. & Mrs. Gregory G. Towle

CLARENCE BROWN 1870

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Taylor

LEWIS T. BROWN 1910

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Taylor

REAR ADMIRAL CHARLES A. CURTZE & LOUISE VICARY CURTZE Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Curtze ‘65

WILLIAM DAVIS ‘74

Capt. William S. Linnell ‘74 & Ms. Joyce Gauthier

JOHN D. FRECHETTE ‘61

Mr. & Mrs. John ‘Pete’ Deal, Jr. ‘61 Mr. John D. McGonagle ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Meehan, Jr. ‘64 Mr. John R. Perry Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James F. White Jr.

GERRY LAPIERRE ’79

LOUISE L. TARDIF

Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson ’79

Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67

TRACY MCLEOD HARLOR ‘85

MAYNARD P. WHITE JR. ‘51

Ms. Susan B. Harlor & William F. Ray III

Mrs. Kathleen B. White H ‘51

JOHN E. HELLMAN ‘64

ELIZABETH G. WOODWARD

Mr. & Mrs. David S. Prout ’83

CHANDLER Y. KELLER

Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Keller ‘71

GIFTS IN HONOR

DONALD N. LUKENS ‘42

JOHN ‘MOOSE’ CURTIS, FACULTY

Ms. Helen M. Mozzoni Elizabeth & Timothy Rutherford

ROBERT E. CLEAVES III. ‘50

MARGERY L. & LADD MACMILLAN

DOUGLAS C. GARVIN ’73

MICHAEL P. POIRIER ‘85

PETER F. COOK ‘50

SHERWOOD W. PROUT ‘53

DAVID B. DANFORTH ‘53

ROBERT K. ROCKWELL ‘38

SUSAN D. GALOS-EASON ‘79

ANDRA SALVESEN ‘79

NANCY LEIGH GALOS SAFFORD ‘81

LTJG. JAMES B. SHIELDS, USN ‘83

Mrs. Helen K. Cleaves H‘50 Mrs. Debra Garvin H’73 Carolyn S. Cook ‘50H

Ms. Deborah Danforth ‘53H Ms. Bettsanne N. Holmes H’47

Mr. & Mrs. Robert E.S. Quarles ‘81 Mrs. Laural Willey Thompson ‘79

Simmons Foundation

Mr. Robert W. McCoy, Jr., ‘58 Suzanne & Terrence Murray

Mr. & Mrs. David S. Prout, ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. David B. Allen ’81 Ms. Janice Salvesen, Parent

Mr. & Mrs. Stuart W. Goodwin

SUMNER B. GOLDMAN, ‘43 Ms. Elaine H. Goldman

STEPHEN B. JEFFRIES ‘79 & KIMBERLEA TRACEY Ms. Jane Harris Ash ‘79

J. MATTHEW LYNESS ‘76

Mr. & Mrs. Dana P. Hodges ‘77

FIELD L. PETERSON ‘15 Mr. Mark L. Peterson

DAVID RICE

Mr. William M. Cloherty

Ms. Dana Shields Hubbell ’78 & Robert Hubbell Mr. T. Bragdon Shields ‘79 & Ms. Janet Lange Dr. Thomas F. Shields & Mrs. Bethel Shields

HEBRON ACADEMY REPORT OF GIV ING 2014-2015

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

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

CLASS OF 1933

Estate of Jose W. Fenderson, Esq.

CLASS OF 1938

Mr. David Christison

CLASS OF 1939

Mr. Richard A. Field

CLASS OF 1940

LTC William H. Collier USA (Ret.)

CLASS OF 1941

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $6,799

Mr. Robert P. Rich, Jr. Mr. Joseph L. Robinson Mr. Phillips Smith

CLASS OF 1950

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $4,300 Dr. Lincoln C. Blake Ven. Robert A. Bryan Mrs. Helen K. Cleaves Mr. Bertram B. Fisher Dr. Peter A. Goodhue Mr. A. William Kany, Jr. Mr. Richard H. Lancaster Ms. Carole L. Wright

CLASS OF 1951

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $25,260

Mr. Norman A. Cole Robert F. Preti

Mr. William V. S. Carhart Mr. Saul B. Cohen Col. George R. Collins Mr. Peter O. Crisp Mr. James E. Good II Mr. Norbert Lachmann Mr. Richard Maidman Mr. Edward L. Ruegg Mr. Frederick Stavis Mr. Rupert B. White Mrs. Kathleen B. White

CLASS OF 1943

CLASS OF 1952

Dr. Lester E. Bradford Mrs. Dorothy J. D’Ewart Mr. Thomas L. Goodman Mr. John W. Lawry Capt. Carlton A. K. McDonald USN Mr. Ralph A. Parmigiane Mr. Eugene J. Smith

Anonymous(2) Dr. Morris S. Albert Charles W. Barrett Dr. Alan R. Booth Rev. Kenneth A. Boyle Mr. James R. Kelley Mr. Charles S. Longley Mr. Peter H. Lunder Mr. Philip H. Montgomery Mr. Richard N. Robbins Dr. Peter Schramm Mr. Richard J. Simonds Mr. Stuart F. Terrill

Mr. Ralph A. Gould, Jr. Mr. Edward C. Hall Mr. Richard E. Nickerson Dr. Walter E. Stone Jr. Mr. Ralph W. Turner Jr.

CLASS OF 1942

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $150

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $2,995

CLASS OF 1944

Mr. Richard Reininger

CLASS OF 1947

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $350 Mr. Thomas P. Beal, Jr. Ms. Joyce M. Lee Mr. Bradford J. Turner

CLASS OF 1948

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $3,350 Mr. John C. Andrews, Jr. Mr. John G. Blake Mr. Porter S. Dickinson Mr. Amory M. Houghton, III Mr. Robert J. Maley Mrs. Mary C. Webb

CLASS OF 1949

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $13,300 Mr. Stephen S. Brown, Jr. Dr. Arthur W. Cooper Mr. Benjamin E. Jeffries Mr. Richard J. Levinson Mr. Robert B. McTaggart Mr. John K. Pierce Mr. James E. Porath Dr. Joseph W. Quinn

28 •

hebron • FALL 2015

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $4,250

Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross Mr. Bruce J. Spaulding Dr. Houghton M. White Mrs. Daphne Whitman

CLASS OF 1955

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $16,935 Mr. Maurice E. Balboni Mr. Allan B. Brown Mr. William W. Davenport Mr. Samuel A. Dibbins Jr. Mr. William B. Dockser Mr. Peter R. Duncan Mr. James E. Fenlason Mr. Wayne G. French Mr. James A. Gillies, III Mr. Goodwin O. Gilman Dr. Donald R. Grayson Dr. Philip R. Kimball Mr. John T. Larabee Mr. Richard J. Parker Mr. Robert J. Raymond Mr. Kent B. Savel Mr. Charles G. Sprague, Jr. Mr. William B. Thompson

Mr. William A. Bearse III Mr. John L. Burnham Mr. Conrad B. Conant Mr. Paul A. Dahlquist Mr. David M. Driscoll Hon. James C. Harberson Jr. Mr. Bernard L. Helm Mr. David G. Lougee Dr. Bruce A. MacDougal Mr. Thomas A. Mann Mr. Christopher I. Page Mr. Frederick S. Perry Jr. Mr. John H. Redmond Dr. Tycho T. von Rosenvinge

Mr. Richard P. Canaday Mr. Richard M. Cutter Mr. Frank R. Goodwin Mr. Michael Graney Mr. John W. Hales Mr. David E. Martin Mr. Bruce A. Maxwell Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer Mr. Thomas F. Murphy Jr. Mr. William F. Patterson Mr. Christopher D. Righter Mr. John P. Sherden, III Mr. Terence R. Sparrow Mr. C. Thomas Van Alen Mr. R. Russell Williamson II Ms. Nancy C. Woolford

Mr. David M. Anderson Mr. David Barbour III Mr. Robert H. Brown Mr. James P. Cassidy Jr. Mr. Cortlandt L. Freeman Dr. Joseph E. Godard Mr. John H. Halford III Mr. Paul D. Kaneb Mr. C. Michael Malm Mr. John M. Noyes Dr. William A. Weary Mr. David J. Williams

CLASS OF 1957

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $103,258

Mr. Richard F. Bastow Henry H. Booth Esq. Ms. Deborah L. Danforth Mr. Noyes M. Fisk, Jr. Mr. William E. Griess Jr. Rev. David C. Houston Mr. Donald N. Maia Mr. Leonard A. Mintz Mr. Payson S. Perkins Mr. Dean E. Ridlon Mr. Nicholas S. Sewall Mr. Charles D. Whittier, II

Anonymous (1) Lt. Gen. Edward P. Barry, Jr. Col. John D. Dewar (RET) Mr. Winslow S. Durgin, Jr. Mr. Peter C. Giesemann Mr. Alexander C. Kant Mr. A. Bruce McFarland Mr. John F. McIlwain Mr. Johann D. Nottebohm Mr. S. Mason Pratt Mr. Peter J. Schiot Mr. Gordon P. Smith Mr. Kelso F. Sutton Hon. Charles B. Swartwood III Mr. Edward H. Tate II Mr. Patrick A. Tracey Mr. Dawson D. Zaug

Alan W. Boone MD Mr. Henry J. Curtis, Jr. Mr. Roscoe W. Fitts Jr. Mr. Demas W. Jasper Mr. Michael Maher Mr. David A. Maidman Mr. John W. Merz Mr. Lincoln A. Mitchell Jerrold A. Olanoff Esq.

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $5,075

CLASS OF 1960

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $25,596

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $6,200

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $11,405

CLASS OF 1959

CLASS OF 1956

CLASS OF 1953

CLASS OF 1954

Mr. Robert M. Davis Dr. Norman O. Farrar Mr. Robert F. Jarvis Dr. Paul A. Levi, Jr. Mr. Robert W. McCoy Jr. Mr. John E. Peterson Jr. Dr. Robert J. Scholnick

CLASS OF 1958

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $92,270 Mr. Joseph A. Bellavance, III Mr. Andrew B. Berry Mr. Wade T. Breed Mr. Kennedy Crane, III

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $1,039,402

CLASS OF 1961

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $20,103 Anonymous (1) Mr. Bernard M. Babcock Mr. John P. Barrett Mr. Thomas M. Curley Mr. Pete R Deal Mr. G. Alexander Gray Mr. Stephen T. Hibbard Mr. Mark L. Jacobs Mr. David H. Lowell Mr. John D. McGonagle Mr. John A. Schaff Mr. Thomas S. Snedeker

CLASS OF 1962

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $88,536 Mr. Donald E. Bates Mr. Jon M. Brooks MAJ Bruce B. Cary USA(Ret.) Dr. Edward F. Driscoll Mr. Robert Egleston Mr. Robert S. Evans Mr. Richard S. Forte Mr. Charles S. Foss Mrs. Susan A. Galvin


class giving Ms. Susan J. Garner Mr. Robert J. Hanks David T. Hartgen Ph.D, P.E Mr. Michael R. Jones Mr. Zigmund A. Peret Mr. James C. Rea III Mr. William T. Sprole III Dr. William W. Stocker II Mr. John H. Suitor Jr. Mr. George Ugarte Robert C. Varney, Esq. Mr. Hamilton H. Wood Jr.

CLASS OF 1963

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $7,100 Mr. David H. Ayres Mr. Alexander E. Dean Attorney Chester W. Fairlie, III Mr. William C. Harding, Jr. Mr. Joseph B. Hodgkins, II Mr. Albert D. Howlett CTRCS Robert R. McNamara USN(Ret.) Mr. Roger C. McNeill Mr. Nicholas Noyes Peter J. Rubin, Esq. Mr. Michael Slosberg Mr. Ken C. Sweezey Mr. Gordon I. Trevett Mr. Kent Walker Mr. Byron V. Whitney

CLASS OF 1964

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $35,764 Dr. William F. Boucher, Jr. M. Ray Bradford, Jr. Mr. Walter H. Burden III Mr. Gordon R. Close Jr. Mr. James H. DeRevere Jr. Mr. John R. Giger Edward A. Gottlieb, Esq. Mr. Michael A. Green Ms. Marlene J. Hellman Mr. Henry M. Holste Ambassador Thomas N. Hull III Mr. David W. Loker Dr. Terrence R. Mace Mr. John J. Meehan Jr. Mr. Jay K. Sadlon Mr. Edson T. Smith Mr. David P. Stromeyer Dr. John R. Thibodeau Mr. John B. Walthausen Mr. Richard S. Waxman

CLASS OF 1965

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $318,215 Mr. Ronald N. Adams Mr. Richard A. Bartoccini Mr. Jeffrey E. Chase Mr. Stephen G. Crabtree Mr. Arthur J. Curtze Mr. Blaine E. Eynon Jr. Edward Van Varick Finn Mr. David A. Goodof Mr. Jeffrey S. Laughlin Mr. Albert R. Lepage Mr. Peter Madsen Mr. Evan E. Mahaney Dr. Joseph J. Mandiberg Mr. Jonathan H. Marvel Mr. James A. Morrill Maj. Dwight L. Parsons II Thomas G. Reeves Esq. Mr. Henry M. Rines Dr. Lee O. Sanborn

CLASS OF 1966

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $408,865 Anonymous (1) Mr. John C. Buschmann Kenneth A. Cuneo, Esq. Mr. Clement S. Dwyer, Jr. Mr. Arthur R. Forsdick Mr. Robert S. Grossman Mr. Robert S. Hagge Jr. Mr. Peter B. Loveland Mr. Jeffrey M. Rockwell Mr. Thomas W. Thompson

CLASS OF 1967

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $19,848 Mr. John E. Baker Mr. Loring Coes, III Mr. L. Rush Crane Mr. Mark L. Cuneo Mr. Paul S. Goodof Mr. John E. Meserve Mr. David S. Nolan

CLASS OF 1968

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $106,844 Mr. James C. Cram Dr. Robert L. Edmonstone James Hibel Ph.D. Mr. James K. Locke Mr. Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr. Mr. Gary C. Miller Mr. F. Corbin Moister, Jr. Mr. Bob Waite

CLASS OF 1969

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $5,753 Anonymous (1) Mr. Peter B. Boody Mr. Edward W. Gagnon Daniel Lyman Dr. Geoff Michaelson Mr. Jonathan G. Moll Dr. Robert J. Pettit Mr. James A. Sanborn Dr. C. Jeffrey Tannebring Mr. Robert E. Willis

CLASS OF 1970

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $56,775 Peter E. Bancroft, Esq. Mr. Timothy W. Braddock Mr. Peter N. Burbank Mr. Craig Clark Mr. Rudolf M.C. Eyerer Mr. Henry A. Harding Kimball L. Kenway Esq. Mr. Kingsley N. Meyer Jr. Mr. George E. Powers Jr. Mr. Joseph L. Pyle III Mr. James L. Ryland John P. Scamman MD Dr. Ronald S. Sklar Mr. Peter G. Welsh

CLASS OF 1971

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $49,496 Anonymous (1) Mr. Jeffrey G. Baker Mr. James K. Balano Mr. Joseph H. Goldman Mr. Douglas H. Gordon Mr. David B. Gould Mr. Cyrus Y. Hagge Mr. Arthur J. Harris Mr. Bradford H. Hinman Mr. Robert S. Houghton, II Mr. Peter W. Keller

Mr. Harvey A. Lipman Mr. Carl M. Mikkelsen Mr. Bruce M. Nash Mr. A. James Nelson Mr. W. Barry Piekos Mr. Stephen E. Pollard Mr. Richard J. Rigazio Mr. William J. Stites Mr. James D. Whitney Mr. Scott E. Wilson

CLASS OF 1978

CLASS OF 1972

Mr. Brian O. Cloherty Ms. Jane Harris Ash Dr. Karen A. Holler Mr. Stephen B. Jeffries Mr. Eric W. Nicolai Mr. T. Bragdon Shields Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson Mrs. Mari Jones Wolterstorff

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $98,800 Mr. Kenneth P. Childs Mr. R. Bruce Hunter Mr. Regis F. Lepage Mr. Justus F. Lowe, III Dr. Bradford D. Parsons Rev. Jefferson M. Scott Mr. David B. Snow, Jr.

CLASS OF 1973

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $1,125 Mr. Gregory M. Burns Mr. G. Cyrus Cook Mr. Nathaniel S. Corwin Ms. Debra Garvin Mr. Mark S. Purcell CDR Stephen P. Wagner

CLASS OF 1974

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $430 Mr. Roger T. Clark Mr. Mark Jorgensen Rev. Skyler K. Kershner CAPT William S. Linnell Ms. Helen Jones Stewart

CLASS OF 1975

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $750 Miss Ellen L. Augusta Ms. Jessica G. Feeley Ms. Susan W. Hadlock Mr. Peter S. Wells Mr. Rupert B. White, Jr.

CLASS OF 1976

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $117,650 Mr. Gary M. Appelbaum Mr. Michael R. Arel Mr. C. Reed Chapman Dr. Ivan R. Delgado Mr. Robert B. Eames Mrs. Elizabeth Beach Fitzpatrick Mr. Douglas F. Haartz Mr. Paul J. Leger Mr. J. Matthew Lyness Mr. Melvin W. Nadeau Sarah Hughes Sigel Mr. Jon P. Svendsen Mr. Douglas P. Webb Jr. Ms. Rebecca Webber

CLASS OF 1977

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $64,100 Ms. Carolyn E. Adams Mr. David R. Burnett Mr. Alexander F. Haartz Mr. Thomas H. Hays III Mr. Robert M. Hernon Mr. Dana P. Hodges Ms. Susan Shaver Loyd-Turner Mr. Kirby N. Nadeau Robert J. Ryan, Esq. Mr. Andrew Zelman

HEBRON ACADEMY REPORT OF GIV ING 2014-2015

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $955 Mr. George M. Dycio Capt. Forbes O. MacVane Mrs. Nancy Briggs Marshall Mr. Marc Roy Ms. Dana A. Shields Hubbell

CLASS OF 1979

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $14,641

CLASS OF 1980

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $4,375 Ms. Donna M. Almy Mr. L. Reed Altemus, III Elizabeth Siekman Graves CWO Charles G. Hall USCG Mr. Troy Kavanaugh Patrick S. L. Maidman MD Mr. Andrew O. Smith

CLASS OF 1981

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $890 Mr. Paul H. Downey Ms. Eileen Gillespie-Fahey Mr. Nathaniel L. Harris Ms. Ann C. Kirkpatrick Ms. Kathleen E. Perkins Mrs. Laura Douglas Peterson Mr. Robert E. S. Quarles

CLASS OF 1982

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $47,057 Mr. Andrew B. Bloomingdale Mr. Gregory S. Getschow Mr. Todd D. Harmon Ms. Lea A. Heidman Mr. Marc F. Lunder Mr. Mitchel A. Maidman Mr. Roger S. Myers Mr. Ian M. Smith Mr. William P. Witter

CLASS OF 1983

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $43,850 Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale Mr. Robert A. Donahue Ms. Sharon Lake-Post Mr. C. Jessen Pedersen Mr. David S. Prout Ms. Ander M. Thebaud Mrs. Heidi C. Trout

CLASS OF 1984

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $4,035 Mrs. Deborah Schiavi Cote Mr. Joshua Freed Mr. John H. Leamon II Mr. Charles H. Lownes Mrs. Karen Stoloff Sacherman Dr. Michael E. Samers Mr. John H. Suitor, III Mr. Christopher T. Woolson

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 29


class giving CLASS OF 1985

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $8,975 Dr. Marcus Baumann Mr. Peter W. Beacham, Jr. Mr. Timothy M. Caddo Ms. Juliet Chase Bailey Mr. Robert M. Davis Ms. Dagny C. Maidman Ms. Katherine Schiavi Melioris Dr. Michael E. Silverman Mr. Ian J. Swanbeck Mr. Christian Thompson

CLASS OF 1986

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $1,050 Mr. Peter G. Burke Capt. Peter G. Fallon III Mr. James A. Gillies IV Timothy G. Murnane Esq. Mrs. Heather Griffin Piper Ms. Cora M. Turlish Mrs. Harper Ingram Wong

CLASS OF 1987

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $13,190 Mr. William G. Becker, III Mr. Galen G. Crane Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley Mr. Jason Found Ms. Hannah B. Turlish

CLASS OF 1988

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $62,625 Mrs. Bonnie Gregory Buelow Mr. William Guidera Mrs. Katherine Albin Lindberg Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens Ms. Meredith Tarr

CLASS OF 1989

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $1,275 Mr. Donald B. Abbott Mr. Timothy J. Cassidy Ms. Amy E. Clark Mr. Mark L. Desgrosseilliers Mr. Robert A. Hood Jr. Mr. M. Hayes McCarthy Mr. Douglas S. Sandner Mr. Carl G. Seefried III

CLASS OF 1990

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $15,487

Mr. Benjamin L. Grant Mr. Andrew M. Haskell Mr. James B. Hill II Mr. Gunnar W. Olson Ms. Jennifer L. Walker

CLASS OF 1991

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $3,846 Ms. Nicole L. Chase Mr. Marcus A. De Costa Mr. Charles C. Hedrick Dr. Scott R. Nelson

CLASS OF 1992 Dr. Todd D. Ray

CLASS OF 1993 Mr. Matthew W. Johnson

CLASS OF 1994

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $700 Mr. Marc P. Dansereau Mr. Keith L. Hovey Dr. Daniel C. Rausch

CLASS OF 1995

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $503 Anonymous (2) Mrs. Meredith L. Hanby Ms. Alyssa Doherty Jahn Mrs. Sara Keef Kendall Mr. Jean R. Labbe Ms. Jessie D. Maher Parker

CLASS OF 1996

Total 2013-2014 Gifts: $18,400 Ms. Devon M. Biondi Mrs. Lydia Pottle Currie Mr. Benjamin J. Rifkin Mrs. Sarah Kutzen Strait

CLASS OF 1997

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $15,730 Anonymous Mr. Jeoffrey R. Begin Mr. Darren J. Roche Dr. Austin C. Stonebraker Mrs. Jessica Garneau Violette

CLASS OF 1998 Ms. Kirsten L. Ness

CLASS OF 1999

CLASS OF 2011

Mr. Jake T. Leyden Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley Mr. Corey R. Sampson

Mr. Andrew B. Bloomingdale, Jr. Mr. Andrew C. Burgess Miss Catherine A. Byrne Mr. Robert A. F. MacLellan Miss Kaitlyn P. Paiton

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $170

CLASS OF 2001

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $55 Mr. Stuart G. Hedstrom Mr. Nicholas Leyden

CLASS OF 2002

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $1,180 Mr. Benjamin L. Becker Miss Katherine E. Curtis Miss Leah E. Hedstrom Mr. James S. LeBlanc Mr. Jonathan E. Spindler Mr. Timothy W. Valenti

CLASS OF 2003

Mr. Michael A. Myrick

CLASS OF 2004

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $540 Miss Carolyn A. Curtis Mr. John W. Slattery Ms. Helen L. Unger-Clark SN Alexander B. Warrick, III

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $220

CLASS OF 2012

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $100 Mr. Shane Hearn Mr. Lawrence A. Taylor, IV

CLASS OF 2013

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $100 Miss Molly M. Bloomingdale Miss Hannah M. Hearn

CLASS OF 2014

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $470 Mr. Coltan R. Downey Mr. Evan P. Kalish Miss Charlotte L. Middleton Mr. Makoto Watanabe

CLASS OF 2015 Andrew Kluge

CLASS OF 2005

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $125 Mr. Simon Parent Miss Louise M. Roy

CLASS OF 2007

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $3,655 Miss Katherine W. Cole Miss Allison Maidman Mr. Christopher Roy Mr. James H. Tyler

CLASS OF 2008

Mr. Daniel P. Sommer

CLASS OF 2010

Total 2014-2015 Gifts: $75 Mr. Zachary R. Creps Mr. Cory J. O’Brien Mr. Nicholas J. Roy

Dr. Timothy Deschaines Mr. Anthony S. Geraci, Jr.

At the Senior Dinner last May. L-R: Paul Rivera ‘15, Abraham Rodriguez ‘15, Mr. Tresor Kayumba, Ajogwu Adegbe ‘15, and Jorge Welsh-Martinez ‘15.

30 •

hebron • FALL 2015


Class Participation and Hebron Annual Fund Awards Participation percentages, amount raised and awards are based on gifts to the Hebron Annual Fund only. HERITAGE DECADES CLASS AMT. RAISED 1913 $36,000 1938 $5,000 1939 $100 1940 $50 1941 $6,799 1942 $150 1943 $1,995 1944 $100 1947 $350 1948 $3,350 1949 $13,300 1950 $4,300 1951 $11,510 1952 $3,250 1953 $6,200 1954 $11,405 1955 $11,935 1956 $25,596 1957 $103,258 1958 $5,270 1959 $5,075 1960 $18,125 1961 $18,170 1962 $93,565 1963 $5,100 1964 $10,264

PARTICIPATION

FOURTH & FIFTH DECADES

SECOND & THIRD DECADES

CLASS

PARTICIPATION

CLASS

24% 18% 14% 13% 21% 20% 30% 15% 13% 10% 7% 21% 14% 9% 13% 9% 9% 11% 8% 10%

1985 $8,825 1986 $925 1987 $8,190 1988 $7,625 1989 $1,275 1990 $6,770 1991 $1,246 1992 $100 1993 $6,000 1994 $700 1995 $503 1996 $5,200 1997 $5,370 1998 $25 1999 $170 2001 $55 2002 $1,180 2003 $50

AMT. RAISED

1965 $57,215 1966 $12,365 1967 $9,629 1968 $9,344 1969 $5,753 1970 $9,275 1971 $14,496 1972 $23,800 1973 $1,125 1974 $430 1975 $600 1976 $6,650 1977 $7,850 1978 $955 1979 $4,400 1980 $4,375 1981 $890 1982 $31,007 1983 $22,825 1984 $4,035

8% 7% 10% 26% 13% 18% 25% 20% 19% 33% 22% 30% 30% 32% 31% 38% 32% 31% 25% 35% 23% 24% 33% 33% 40%

AMT. RAISED

PARTICIPATION 11% 9% 6% 5% 7% 10% 8% 2% 5% 9% 13% 5% 8% 2% 6% 3% 12% 2%

FIRST DECADE CLASS

AMT. RAISED

2004 $540 2005 $125 2007 $3,655 2008 $50 2010 $75 2011 $220 2012 $100 2013 $120 2014 $470

PARTICIPATION 9% 3% 6% 1% 3% 5% 2% 3% 5%

AWARDS WILLIAM BARROWS AWARD

1804 AWARD

DECADE AWARDS

in 2014–2015, awarded to:

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

Class of 1957

in 2014–2015, awarded to:

in 2014–2015, awarded to:

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

Class of 1964

Given annually to the class within each decade category which has achieved the highest total support for that year’s Annual Fund. Heritage Decades Class of 1957 Fourth & Fifth Decades Class of 1965 Second & Third Decades Class of 1985 First Decade Class of 2007

HEBRON ACADEMY REPORT OF GIV ING 2014-2015

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 31


parents , facult y & friends We are most grateful for the support we receive from

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

PARENTS OF CURRENT STUDENTS

Dr. & Mrs. David N. Abisalih Mr. & Mrs. John Alex Mr. & Mrs. Eric Bailey Mr. Frank Bao Mr. & Mrs. Michael Barry Mr. & Mrs. Richard Bennett Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Bonis Mr. Paul S. Brouwer & Ms. Sara Wilmot Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Chipman Mr. Alberto Cuartero & Ms. Inmaculada Aured Ms. Emily M. Darby Mr. & Mrs. Mike Donatelli Mr. & Mrs. Aaron G. Dunn Mr. & Mrs. George M. Dycio ‘78 Mr. & Mrs. Mark J. Enyedy Mr. & Mrs. Scott Everett Mr. & Mrs. Brian Fons Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson & Mr. Jim Lawson Mr. & Mrs. Alex J. Godomsky Ms. Alissa Gumprecht & Mr. Daniel Coyne Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Hemmings Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Horn Mr. Brian Jurek & Ms. Jeanine Eschenbach Dr. & Mrs. Richard Kappelmann Ms. Alice Mainville Mr. & Mrs. Kevin McKinnon Dr. & Mrs. Wayne Moody Mr. & Mrs. Tom Morton Mr. John Rasmussen & Ms. Margaret O’Donnell Mr. Mark L. Peterson Ms. Kathleen Phillips Mr. & Mrs. Kurt Swanbeck Mrs. Laurel Willey Thompson ‘79 & Mr. Rolfe Thompson Ms. Robin Trombino Mr. & Mrs. S. Oliver Vieten Dr. & Mrs. John F. Wilson Mr. Yiming Yuan & Ms. Weiwei Lu

PARENTS OF ALUMNI/AE

Anonymous (1) Mrs. Venessa Arsenault Mr. & Mrs. Herbert M. Atherton Addison & Elisabeth Augusta Mr. & Mrs. James P. Austin, III ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. David M. Banash Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Beacham Dr. & Mrs. Steven Beaudette Mr. & Mrs. Richard Bennett Dr. & Mrs. Charles A. Berg Mr. & Mrs. James L. Bisesti Mr. Andrew Bloomingdale ‘82 & Mrs. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Bouchard Ms. Virginia H. Bousum Mr. & Mrs. Gregory Braley Mr. & Mrs. Dwane Bumps Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Byrne Mr. & Mrs. James P. Cassidy Jr. ‘60 Mr. William B. Chase Mr. & Mrs. Timothy A. Churchill Ms. Deborah P. Clark Mr. J. Craig Clark ‘70 & Ms. Judy Unger-Clark Mr. & Mrs. Roger T. Clark ‘74 Mr. William M. Cloherty Mr. & Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. John Coletti Mr. & Mrs. Kelvin Coney

32 •

hebron • FALL 2015

Mr. & Mrs. John Connell Ms. Trudy P. Crane Mr. & Mrs. Kennedy Crane III ‘58 Mr. & Mrs. John W. Curtis Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Dr. & Mrs. Ivan R. Delgado ‘76 Ms. Mary E. Deschenes & Mr. David E. Talbott Mr. & Mrs. William B. Dockser ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Paul H. Downey ‘81 Mr. Paul A. Downey Mr. & Mrs. Arthur F. Draper Dr. & Mrs. Edward F. Driscoll ‘62 Ms. Grace Drown Mr. & Mrs. Winslow S. Durgin Jr. ‘57 Dr. Mary Dycio Mr. & Mrs. Ernest A. Eynon II Mr. & Mrs. Blaine E. Eynon Jr. ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Fallon Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David J. Fensore Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Found Mr. & Mrs. John Geismar Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Giesemann ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. Bradford W. Gilbreth Mr. & Mrs. James A. Gillies III ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. David Goldstein Dr. & Mrs. Peter A. Goodhue ‘50 Mr. & Mrs. Stuart W. Goodwin Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Gottlieb ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph A. Gould Jr. ‘41 Mr. & Mrs. G. Alexander Gray ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Haartz Ms. Susan B. Harlor & William F. Ray III Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel L. Harris Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John F. Hartley Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Hedrick Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Bernard L. Helm ‘59 Mr. & Mrs. Mark E. Hews Mr. William Hine & Ms. Cathy Hazelton Dr. William C. Hiss & Colleen J. Quint Esq. Mrs. Martha F. Horner Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin E. Jeffries ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Keith J. Kalish Ms. Deborah Keefe & Mr. John E. Sedgewick Mr. John T. Larabee ‘55 Ms. Patricia Layman Mr. Richard Leavitt & Ms. Anne Gass Mr. & Mrs. Raymond D. Lenoue Mr. & Mrs. Jack Leyden Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Longley ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. Dennis J. Looney Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. MacLellan Patrick S. L. Maidman MD ‘80 Mr. Richard H. Maidman ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Markey Ms. Patricia Massenburg Mr. & Mrs. Bruce A. Maxwell ‘56 Mrs. Nancy McKusick Mrs. Zella L. Mervis Mr. Steve P. Middleton & Mrs. Julie Poland-Middleton Ms. Silver Moore-Leamon Mr. & Mrs. Mark Mosher Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Murphy Jr. ‘56 Mr. Gerald B. Myrick & Ms. Paula Lyons-Myrick Mr. & Mrs. A. James Nelson ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen G. Ness Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. O’Brien Mr. John Rasmussen & Ms. Margaret O’Donnell

Ms. Catherine Paiton Mr. Roger B. Percival Mr. & Mrs. Payson S. Perkins ‘53 Ms. Kathleen Phillips Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Pickett Mr. & Mrs. John K. Pierce ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. James E. Porath ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Salvador F. Porras Mrs. Marian H. Prescott Dr. & Mrs. Albert M. Price Mr. Gerard Puopolo & Ms. Lucy Eversley Dr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Quinn ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. James C. Rea III ‘62 Ms. Cynthia Reedy & Mr. Brad Cummings Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Rich Jr. ‘49 Dr. & Mrs. Michael Rifkin Dr. & Mrs. G. P. Raynald Roy Mr. & Mrs. Marc J. Roy ‘78 Ms. Janice Salvesen Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Sarr Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Carl G. Seefried Jr. Dr. Thomas F. Shields & Mrs. Bethel Shields Ms. Meredith M. Shore Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Siragusa Mr. Stephen L. Smith Mr. Eugene J. Smith ‘43 Mr. & Mrs. Judah C. Sommer Ms. Margaret Speranza Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Stavis ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Mark Stearns Mr. & Mrs. Dana A. Stewart Dr. & Mrs. Walter E. Stone Jr. ‘41 Mr. David Stonebraker & Ms. Leslie Guenther Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess & Mr. Douglas Stewart Mr. & Mrs. William Stutt Mr. John H. Suitor Jr. ‘62 Dr. & Mrs. Raymond Tardif Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Taylor Dr. & Mrs. Jou S. Tchao Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Turk Molly & Lew Turlish Mr. & Mrs. Gino P. Valeriani Mr. Garvin L. Warner & Ms. Margaret Wheeler Mr. & Mrs. Yoshio Watanabe Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Webber Mr. & Mrs. Stephen K. West Capt. & Mrs. Richard T. Wheatley Mr. & Mrs. Rupert B. White ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. James D. Whitney ‘71 Mr. & Mrs. Lew Williams Dr. & Mrs. John F. Wilson Ms. Susan R. Witter Chip & Jean Wood

GRANDPARENTS

Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Beacham Mr. Paul A. Downey Mr. & Mrs. Winslow S. Durgin Jr. ‘57 Mr. & Mrs. John G. Leness Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. Richard H. Maidman ‘51 Mrs. Nancy McKelvy Mr. & Mrs. Norman Phelps Dr. & Mrs. G. P. Raynald Roy Dr. Thomas F. Shields & Mrs. Bethel Shields

FACULTY & STAFF

Mr. Chase Baker Mr. James L. Bisesti Mr. Timothy Bonis Mrs. Emily Bonis Mr. Paul S. Brouwer Ms. Mira Carey-Hatch Mr. Wesley Covey Mr. Brad Cummings Mr. John W. Curtis Ms. Emily M. Darby Ms. Grace Drown Ms. Jeanine S Eschenbach Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. Rickey Gilbert Mrs. Jennifer J. Godomsky Mr. Alex J. Godomsky Mr. Colin Griggs Ms. Leslie A. Guenther Ms. Alissa Gumprecht CWO Charles G. Hall USCG ‘80 Mrs. Celine Hall Mr. Joseph M. Hemmings Mrs. Christine Hemmings Ms. Cynthia Johnston Mr. Maxwell R. Jones Mr. Brian Jurek Mr. Tresor Kayumba Mrs. Marcia King Mr. John J. King Ms. Patricia Layman Mr. James S. LeBlanc ‘02 Mrs. Ashley LeBlanc Mr. Robert S. MacLellan Mrs. Kathie MacLellan Ms. Hannah Mangham Mr. Steve P. Middleton Mrs. Heidi L. Mosher Mrs. Molly E. Paul Mr. Trevor Paul Mrs. Julie M. Poland-Middleton Ms. Cynthia C. Reedy Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley ‘99 Mrs. Beverly J. Roy Ms. Judy M. Roy Ms. Meredith M. Shore Mr. Christopher Shubert Mr. John W. Slattery ‘04 Mrs. Carole A. Smith Mrs. Jennifer Stonebraker Mr. David W. Stonebraker Mr. Charles Strauss Mr. Kurt Swanbeck Mrs. Cheryl Tardif Mr. Robert J. Tribou Mrs. Jessica Garneau Violette ‘97 Ms. Sara Wilmot

FORMER FACULTY & STAFF

Mrs. Venessa Arsenault Addison & Elisabeth Augusta Ms. Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Mr. & Mrs. John P. Barrett ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. William G. Becker III ‘87 Mr. & Mrs. Gregory Braley Ms. Leslie Breton Mr. Carl B. Brewer Mr. & Mrs. Stephen S. Brown Jr. ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. Dwane Bumps Mr. William V. S. Carhart ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Peter Chapman Mr. William B. Chase


Mr. & Mrs. John Connell Mr. G. Cyrus Cook ‘73 & Ms. Megan P. Shea Capt. & Mrs. Peter G. Fallon III ‘86 Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Found Anthony ‘90 & Kellie Geraci Mrs. Meredith Robinson Hanby ‘95 & Mr. Robert N. Hanby Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel L. Harris Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Andrew M. Haskell ‘90 Mr. George L. Helwig Dr. William C. Hiss & Colleen J. Quint Esq. Mr. & Mrs. Warren O. Hulser Ms. Alberta Jones Mr. & Mrs. Jason Keough Mr. & Mrs. Jake Leyden ‘99 Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. & Mrs. Jack Leyden Mr. & Mrs. John S. Lunt Mrs. Margery L. MacMillan Mrs. Nancy Briggs Marshall ‘78 & Mr. Jay Marshall Attorney & Mrs. Robert M. Martin Mr. Scott A. Meiklejohn Mr. & Mrs. Philip H. Montgomery ‘52 Ms. Silver Moore-Leamon Mr. Robert R. Mott Mr. Paul A. Nemetz-Carlson Mr. & Mrs. Brendan F. O’Day Mr. John Rasmussen & Ms. Margaret O’Donnell Mr. Thomas Ossman Mr. & Mrs. Mitchel G. Overbye

Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Plante Mr. & Mrs. John H. Redmond ‘59 Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley ‘99 & Mr. Corey Ridley Dr. & Mrs. Michael Rifkin Mr. & Mrs. Darren J. Roche ‘97 Mr. Marc J. Roy ‘78 Miss Louise M. Roy ‘05 Mr. Denis Shubleka Mr. John H. Suitor Jr. ‘62 Mr. & Mrs. Alan A. Switzer Jr. Ms. Liza Tarr Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Tranfield Ms. Sarah Twichell Mr. & Mrs. Gino P. Valeriani Mr. Jeffrey Weber Mr. & Mrs. Lew Williams

FOUNDATIONS

Anonymous (1) The E. Stanley & Alice M. Wright Foundation Crane Fund Widows & Children Malm Family Charitable Fund The Delaney Bay Fund The Larabee Family Fund The Lunder Foundation The Captain’s Fund The Carwill Foundation David & Sarah Stromeyer Charitable Fund Schiavi Family Foundation The Kelso F. & Joanna L. Sutton Charitable Gift Fund

The Paul & Jill Kaneb Family Charitable Foundation Robert Donahue Fund Simmons Foundation, Inc. Dockser Family Foundation The Boston Foundation The Crisp Family Foundation The Fallon Family Fund Ruth & Frederick Stavis Family Foundation, Inc. Dr. Houghton White & Mary Hanks White Fund The New York Community Trust Silverman Family Foundation, Inc. William D. Witter Foundation Marilyn & Mike Grossman Foundation R.S. Evans Foundation, Inc. The Walter H. & Hannah H. Webb Family Foundation The Brook Family Foundation The Saul & Naomi Cohen Foundation Albert Lepage Foundation Inc. Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Vanguard Charitable Silicon Valley Community Foundation Jacob Irving Foundation The Larabee Family Fund The Page Foundation The Rotary Foundation Spinnaker Trust Murray Family Charitable Foundation United Way of Delaware United Way of Greater Philadelphia & So. New Jersey

MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES

Anonymous (1) Cleveland H. Dodge Foundation, Inc. The Bank of New York Mellon Community Partnership Microsoft Matching Gifts Program YourCause, LLC Pearson Education Matching Gift Program Crane Co. Matching Gifts Program KeyBank Foundation Intel UPM-Kymmene Rockwell Automation Charitable Corp. Dell

OTHER ORGANIZATIONS Bernstein Shur LWW, Inc. Manulife Financial Target TechLite

Members of the Class of 2015 attend the annual Career Connections Seminar, last April. L-R: Ian Pundja-Bertram , Sean Munzing, Paul Rivera, Nick Legare, Justin Lee and Elijah Burns

HEBRON ACADEMY REPORT OF GIV ING 2014-2015

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 33


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

They document the dedication and commitment of the donors who have made these gifts in consultation with the Academy’s advancement office. Restricted gifts support specific programs and are essential to sustaining the Academy’s margin of excellence. ANNUAL FUND SCHOLARSHIPS THE CRANE FUND FOR WIDOWS & CHILDREN R.S. Evans ‘62

GARNER-MCCORMACK FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP Ms. Susan J. Garner

KARL N. MURCH ‘13 ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIP Dr. Lawrence Murch

SIMMONS FOUNDATION CHARLOTTE REA STONEBRAKER COMMUNITY SCHOLARSHIP

Mr. & Mrs. James L. Bisesti Hebron Middle School Hebron Academy Arts Department Mr. Chase Baker Mr. & Mrs. James L. Bisesti Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Bonis Mr. Paul S. Brouwer & Ms. Sara Wilmot Mr. & Mrs. Dwane Bumps Ms. Mira Carey-Hatch Mr. William B. Chase Mr. Wesley Covey Mr. & Mrs. John W. Curtis Ms. Emily M. Darby Ms. Grace Drown Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Found Ms. Kathy Gerrits-Leyden Mr. Rickey Gilbert Mr. & Mrs. Alex J. Godomsky Mr. Colin Griggs CWO & Mrs. Charles G. Hall USCG ‘80 Ms. Cynthia Johnston Mr. Maxwell R. Jones Ms. Jeanine Eschenbach & Mr. Brian Jurek Mr. Tresor Kayumba & Ms. Hannah Onchak Mr. & Mrs. Jason Keough Mr. & Mrs. John J. King Mr. Andrew Kluge ‘15 Ms. Patricia Layman Mr. & Mrs. James S. LeBlanc ‘02 Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. & Mrs. Jack Leyden Ms. Hannah Mangham Mrs. Nancy Briggs Marshall ‘78 & Mr. Jay Marshall Mr. Steve P. Middleton & Ms. Julie Poland-Middleton Ms. Silver Moore-Leamon Mr. & Mrs. Mark Mosher Mr. Paul A. Nemetz-Carlson Mr. & Mrs. Brendan F. O’Day Mr. & Mrs. Trevor Paul Ms. Cynthia Reedy & Mr. Brad Cummings Mrs. Jennifer Agnew Ridley ‘99 & Mr. Corey Ridley Ms. Judy M. Roy Ms. Meredith M. Shore Mr. Christopher Shubert Mr. David Stonebraker & Ms. Leslie Guenther Mr. Charles Strauss Mr. & Mrs. Kurt Swanbeck Dr. & Mrs. Raymond Tardif Ms. Meredith Tarr ‘88 & Mr. Rob Woiccak Ms. Liza Tarr Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Tribou

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hebron • FALL 2015

Ms. Sarah Twichell Mr. & Mrs. Gino P. Valeriani Mrs. Jessica Garneau Violette ‘97 & Mr. Spencer Violette Mr. Jeffrey Webber

WITTER FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP Susan Witter William Witter ‘82

OPERATIONS ART CONSERVATION FUND

Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer Jr. ‘66 Mr. David Stonebraker & Ms. Leslie Guenther Mr. & Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60

BELL LIPMAN ARCHIVES FUND

Dr. & Mrs. Lester E. Bradford ‘43 Mr. & Mrs. Fred Carey Mr. & Mrs. John W. Curtis Mr. George L. Helwig Ambassador & Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Capt. & Mrs. Forbes O. MacVane ‘78 Mr. John Marriner Thomas G. Reeves Esq. Ms. Cynthia Thayer

Mr. & Mrs. Edmond M. Theriault Ms. Barbara Tomasian Mr. Richard Waldron

OTHER RESTRICTED GIFTS

Hebron Academy Parents’ Association Mr. & Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer Jr. ‘66 Mr. & Mrs. Brian Fons Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Hemmings Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Mr. & Mrs. Ted Hoeller

PROGRAMS

Cohen Concert Series Mr. & Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ’51 Concert Sponsor (Suzy Bogguss) Mr. & Mrs. Brian Fons Robert J. Ryan ’77 Career Connection Seminars Robert J. Ryan Esq. ‘77 James C. Yovik ‘76 Speaker Series Mr. & Mrs. Ted Hoeller

GIFTS IN KIND

Dr. Marcus Baumann ‘85 Mr. & Mrs. Fred Carey Mr. & Mrs. John W. Curtis Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Doran Mr. & Mrs. Brian Fons Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. George L. Helwig Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Hemmings Mr. Robert A. Hood Jr. Ambassador & Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Capt. & Mrs. Forbes O. MacVane ‘78 Mr. Bill Manning Mr. John Marriner Mr. & Mrs. Kevin McKinnon Mr. Richard J. Parker Thomas G. Reeves Esq. Mr. David Stonebraker & Ms. Leslie Guenther Ms. Cynthia Thayer Ms. Barbara Tomasian Mr. Richard Waldron Mr. Jeffrey Weber Mr. & Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60

Class President and 2015 recipient of the Phemister Award, Rachel Jurek, at Commencement with her parents Brian Jurek (Associate Head of School) and Jeanine Eschanbach (Chair of the Arts Department).


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

and other priority areas. Gifts to the endowment are permanently held, professionally managed and invested for growth and income. We are most grateful to those who have generously given to Hebron’s growing endowment fund. ARSENAULT FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP Mrs. Venessa Arsenault Addison & Elisabeth Augusta Ms. Kathleen Augusta Miss Ellen L. Augusta ‘75

BOARD DESIGNATED ENDOWMENT FUND

Mr. William M. Cloherty

JOHN T. LEYDEN CHAIR

Ms. Sharon Lake-Post ‘83 & Family Mrs. Beverly Leyden Mr. & Mrs. Jack Leyden Mr. David Stonebraker & Ms. Leslie Guenther

LUNDER FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP The Lunder Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Marc F. Lunder ‘82 Mr. & Mrs. Peter H. Lunder ‘52

MACMILLAN SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWMENT FUND Ms. Margery Hamlen Mrs. Margery L. MacMillan Mr. Robert W. McCoy Jr. ‘58

NOYES FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP Mr. John M. Noyes ‘60

PARENTS ASSOCIATION SCHOLARSHIP

Hebron Academy Parents’ Association (HAPA)

ROBERT ANDREW MCCORMACK ‘62 SCHOLARSHIP Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Forte ‘62

SCOTT E. SMITH ’87 SCHOLARSHIP Mr. Eugene J. Smith ‘43 Mrs Harper Ingram Wong ‘86 & Mr. Elbert Wong

L. EDWARD WILLARD CHAIR Mr. L. Rush Crane ‘67 Mr. David Stonebraker & Ms. Leslie Guenther

Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Davis ‘58 Mr. & Mrs. John R. Deal Jr. ‘61 Mr. & Mrs. William B. Dockser ‘55 Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer Jr. ‘66 Mrs. Connie Eastburn Mr. & Mrs. Scott Everett Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson & Mr. Jim Lawson Mr. & Mrs. John Geismar Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Gottlieb ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Hagge Jr. ‘66 Mr. & Mrs. Cyrus Y. Hagge ‘71 Mr. Wallace E. Higgins FR Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Ambassador & Mrs. Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79 Mr. & Mrs. Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Kimball L. Kenway Esq. ‘70 & Mrs. Alison Kenway Ms. Sally Kimball Mr. & Mrs. John J. King Mr. & Mrs. Regis F. Lepage ‘72 Mr. Albert R. Lepage ‘65 Mr. & Mrs. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Mr. Robert W. McCoy Jr. ‘58 Mr. Steve P. Middleton & Mrs. Julie Poland-Middleton Dr. & Mrs. Scott R. Nelson ‘91 Mr. & Mrs. David S. Prout ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. Henry M. Rines ‘65 Mr. & Peter J. Rubin ‘63 Robert J. Ryan Esq. ‘77 Mr. & Mrs. Judah C. Sommer Ms. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 & Mr. Alex Stephens Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess & Mr. Douglas Stewart Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Thompson ‘66 Mr. Robert Waite ‘68 & Ms. Karen Shigeishi-Waite Dr. William A. Weary ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. Scott E. Wilson ‘71 Dr. & Mrs. John F. Wilson Dr. William A. Weary ’60 Mr. & Mrs. David J. Williams ’60 Mr. & Mrs. Scott E. Wilson ’71

JAY L. WOOLSEY SCHOLARSHIP Addison & Elisabeth Augusta Miss Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Mr. Jeffrey Weber

THIRD CENTURY FUND

TOP: Art teacher Jennifer Stonebraker guides Sarah Brouwer ‘15 in The Lepage Center for the Arts senior art studio. BOTTOM: Olivia Grimmer ‘15, practicing as a member of the Hebron Upper School Orchestra.

Anonymous (3) Dockser Family Foundation Albert Lepage Foundation Inc. Mr. & Mrs. David Barbour III ‘60 Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Mr. & Mrs. James L. Bisesti Mr. Andrew B. Bloomingdale ‘82 & Ms. Debra B. Bloomingdale ‘83 Mr. & Mrs. David Christison ‘38 Mr. & Mrs. James R. Clements Mr. & Mrs. Saul B. Cohen ‘51 Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 & Mr. Robert Crowley Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth A. Cuneo ‘66 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Curtze ‘65

If your name has been listed incorrectly, please contact Pat Layman at 207-966-5236 or email playman@hebronacademy.org.

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 35


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

Anonymous ‘50* Mr. Bill Allen ‘62 Mr. John C. Andrews Jr. ‘48 Mr. David L. Babson* Mr. Donald E. Bates ‘62 Mr. Albert R. Blacky ‘39* Mr. Peter B. Boody ‘69 Henry H. Booth Esq. ‘53 J. Reeve Bright Esq. ‘66 Mr. Philip H. Chadbourne ‘20* Mr. David Christison ‘38 The Hon. F. Davis Clark ‘34* Mr. Keith Clark ‘58 Mr. Ralph A. Corbett ‘25* Mr. Kennedy Crane III ‘58 Ms. Trudy P. Crane Mrs. Henrietta P. Crane* Mrs. Anne Davis H‘28 Mr. Wilfred S. Davis ‘28* Mrs. Maida S. Demos Dr. Theodore Neil Divine ‘55* Mr. Blaine E. Eynon Jr. ‘65 Mr. Peter G. Fallon Jr. Jose W. Fenderson Esq. ‘33* Mr. Lester E. Forbes ‘38* Mrs. Alice W. Forester* Mr. Richard S. Forte ‘62 Mrs. Elizabeth Friend* Mr. James H. Galli ‘38* Mr. John R. Giger ‘64 Mr. James A. Gillies III ‘55 Gordon M. Gillies Esq. ‘62

Mr. Richard W. Goode ‘35* Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mrs. Elinor Goodwin* Mr. Ralph A. Gould Jr. ‘41 Mr. John Hankins ‘21* Mrs. Nellie E. Hankins H‘21* Mr. William L. Hathorne ‘77 Mr. Stephen E. Hawkes ‘57* Mr. Willis Hay ‘32* Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Dr. William C. Hiss Mrs. Susan Y. Hoeller Mr. Joseph F. Holman ‘43* George S. Hosmer Jr. ‘39* Ms. Kimberly C. Housman ‘89 Dr. Edgar A. Hultgren ‘39* Mr. Stephen B. Jeffries ‘79 Mr. David E. Jessich ‘71 Mr. Edward A. Johnson ‘49* Mrs. Rosamond A. Lownes Mrs. Margery L. MacMillan* Mr. C. Michael Malm ‘60 Mr. C. Arthur Mayo ‘32* Mr. Robert W. McCoy Jr. ‘58 CAPT Carlton A. K. McDonald USN ‘43 Mr. John D. McGonagle ‘61 Mr. Robert W. Messer II 1905* Mr. Donald F. Miller ‘51 * Mr. Leonard A. Mintz ‘53 Mr. John O. Monks ‘48 Mr. Philip H. Montgomery ‘52 Helen Morton*

Mr. Richard E. Nickerson ‘41 Dr. Philip B. Norton Mr. Karl-Heinz Nottebohm* Mr. Edward D. Noyes III ‘58 Mr. Payson S. Perkins ‘53 Mr. Frederick E. Peterson ‘61 Mr. John W. Powell ‘35* Marjorie P. Powell H‘35 Robert F. Preti ‘42 Mr. Walter M. Ray II Mr. Robert J. Raymond ‘55 Mrs. Mary Rea Mr. Robert P. Rich Jr. ‘49 Mr. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53 Mr. James E. Salisbury Mr. Mark J. Savran ‘72 Mr. John A. Schaff ‘61 Mrs. Myrtle M. Sherman* Mrs. Vera Simmons* Mr. Stephen L. Smith Mr. Andrew O. Smith ‘80 Mr. Richard H. Sprince ‘43*

Mr. Roger F. Stacey ‘61 Mr. Warren W. Stearns ‘28* Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 Mr. Kelso F. Sutton ‘57 Mr. Ken C. Sweezey ‘63 Mr. Thomas W. Thompson ‘66 Mr. Edmond Vachon* Mrs. Ruth P. Vail H‘26* Mr. Eugene L. Vail ‘26* Mr. Paul M. Wagner ‘39* Mr. Bob Waite ‘68 Mr. Jeffrey Weber Mr. Ralph H. Wells ‘50 Mr. Neal L. Whitman ‘39* Mr. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. William P. Witter ‘82 Mr. Jay L. Woolsey* Mr. Kenneth P. Wright ‘26* Mrs. Welthy B. Wright H‘26* *Deceased

For more information on membership to the Franklin Society, please contact Pat Layman at 207-966-5236 or email playman@hebronacademy.org.

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

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Mr. Richard Bennett Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 Mr. James R. Clements Mrs. Felica W. Coney Mr. Robert A. Donahue ‘83 Mr. Clement S. Dwyer Jr. ‘66 Ms. Wende Fox-Lawson Mr. Paul S. Goodof ‘67 Mr. Wallace E. Higgins Mr. James B. Hill II ‘90 Ambassador Thomas N. Hull III ‘64 Mr. Matthew W. Johnson ‘93 Kimball L. Kenway Esq. ‘70 Mr. J. Matthew Lyness ‘76 Mr. David S. Prout ‘83 Robert J. Ryan Esq. ‘77 Mr. Judah C. Sommer Mrs. Heather Fremont-Smith Stephens ‘88 Ms. Meredith N. Strang Burgess Mr. Bob Waite ‘68 Mr. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. Scott E. Wilson ‘71

CLASS AGENTS

Mr. Norman A. Cole ‘42 Mr. Eugene J. Smith ‘43 Mr. Robert P. Rich Jr. ‘49 Mr. Edward L. Ruegg ‘51 Rev. Kenneth A. Boyle ‘52 Mr. Dean E. Ridlon ‘53 Mr. Michael Maher ‘54 Mr. Richard J. Parker ‘55 Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer ‘56 Mr. Michael A. Mentuck ‘57 Hon. Charles B. Swartwood III ‘57 Mr. Bernard L. Helm ‘59 Mr. David J. Williams ‘60 Mr. Richard S. Forte ‘62 Mr. William C. Harding Jr. ‘63 Mr. John R. Giger ‘64 Mr. Allen C. Kennedy ‘65 Mr. Harvey L. Lowd ‘66 Mr. Loring Coes III ‘67 Mr. Robert L. Lowenthal Jr. ‘68 Mr. Jonathan G. Moll ‘69 Mr. Craig Clark ‘70 Mr. Harvey A. Lipman ‘71 Mr. Stephen R. Gates ‘72

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hebron • FALL 2015

Mr. Roger T. Clark ‘74 Miss Ellen L. Augusta ‘75 Mr. C. Reed Chapman ‘76 Mr. Robert M. Hernon ‘77 Mr. George M. Dycio ‘78 Mr. Brian O. Cloherty ‘79 Elizabeth Siekman Graves ‘80 Mrs. Jane Hepburn Fiore ‘81 Mr. Tucker Cutler ‘82 Ms. Debra Beacham Bloomingdale ‘83 Mrs. Deborah Schiavi Cote ‘84 Mr. John E. Donahue Sr. ‘84 Mr. T. Scott Downs ‘86 Mrs. Kate Thoman Crowley ‘87 Mrs. Ann Snyder Mooradian ‘88 Mr. M. Hayes McCarthy ‘89 Mr. Andrew M. Haskell ‘90 Dr. Scott R. Nelson ‘91 Mr. Marcus A. De Costa ‘91 Dr. Marko I. Radosavljevic ‘93 Ms. Jessie D. Maher Parker ‘95 Ms. Devon M. Biondi ‘96 Miss Kirsten L. Ness ‘98 Mr. Joseph J. Patry ‘99 Mr. Erik P. Yingling ‘00 Mr. Galen C. Wall ‘01 Mrs. Jessica Takach Gilpatrick ‘01 Miss Katherine E. Curtis ‘02 Mrs. Sara Marquis Barker ‘03

Mr. John W. Slattery ‘04 Miss Bettina T. Voigt ‘05 Miss Allison M. Coombs ‘06 Miss Jennifer A. Duguay ‘08 Mr. Jason B. Goodman ‘08 Miss Andrea J. Hart ‘08 Miss Ye Chen ‘09 Miss Claire E. Cummings ‘09 Miss Emma L. Leavitt ‘10 Miss Emily R. Powers ‘10 Miss Sophia M. Bartolomeo ‘11 Mr. Maxwell A. Middleton ‘12 Miss Kathryn M. Couture ‘13

PARENTS ASSOCIATION OFFICERS (HAPA) Mr. Tom Morton P’17, 19, President
 Mr. Jeff Prentice P’15, Vice President
 Mr. Randall Smith P’15, Treasurer
 Mrs. Katy Sperl P’18, Secretary

EVENT HOSTS

Mr. Marcus De Costa ‘91 Ms. Brook Gassner ‘82 Mr. Stephen B. Jefferies ‘79 Mr. Michael Silverman ‘85


Susie Yovic Hoeller

My husband Ted and I currently support Hebron Academy not just because my late brother James C. Yovic graduated from Hebron in 1976. Hebron will receive the largest charitable gift in our estate plans even though we also support our own alma maters and other organizations. We put Hebron Academy first because Hebron teaches young people the timeless values of integrity and service. Hebron’s positive influence extends well beyond Maine – the Academy’s alumni, faculty, staff, families, and friends have a global reach.

Land O’Lakes, FL

Including Hebron Academy in your charitable estate planning is one of the most personal ways to express your philanthropy. We honor those who remember the Academy in this way by recognizing them as members of The Franklin Society. The society celebrates Dr. Benjamin Franklin’s estimable qualities of foresight, prudent financial management and intellectual achievement. Dr. Franklin serves as a symbol of building up the past for the benefit of the future. For more information about how you can become a member, contact: Pat Layman Director of Advancement & External Affairs 207-966-5236 • playman@hebronacademy.org

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 37


COMMENCEMENT 2015

Graduation really is Commencement, a brand new beginning of a wonderful new chapter. I look forward to it, because I know, no matter what the future holds for us, no matter what we will become, deep down, we will always be a part of Hebron. We are now and will always be Hebron, Class of 2015.

- Ye Tao ‘15

The SENIOR SCHOLARSHIP PRIZE

The ERNEST SHERMAN AWARD

The REED AWARDS

The CHARLES & AMY DWYER MEMORIAL AWARD

Jon Phillips Sakihara Tuttle

McCaela Nicole Prentice & Colin Nathaniel McKay

The BESSIE FENN AWARD Taylor Rae Fowler

The ATHLETIC AWARD

Myles Edward Horn

The LEYDEN AWARD

Jennifer Grace O’Connell

The EDWARD TATE II GREEN KEY AWARD

Alana Chipman & Field Loomis Peterson 38 •

hebron • FALL 2015

Taylor Rae Fowler

David Joseph Enyedy

The MILTON G. WHEELER GOOD FELLOWSHIP AWARD Sarah Katherine Brouwer

The PHEMISTER AWARD Rachel Hadley Jurek

The RISMAN HONOR AWARD

Christopher J. Thanopoulos

The HEBRON ACADEMY CUP Zachary David Abisalih


AWARDS FOR ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE ART.................................Rachel Hadley Jurek ENGLISH.........................Sarah Katherine Brouwer FRENCH ........................Colin Nathaniel McKay HISTORY.........................Jon Phillips Sakihara Tuttle MUSIC............................Jon Phillips Sakihara Tuttle RELIGION & ETHICS.......Tianren Qin SCIENCES.......................Elliott Deem Ross SPANISH.........................Jon Phillips Sakihara Tuttle

…It’s not the moment when you actually ring the bell, but that moment of excitement when you realize that together, you all get to run to the rope.

- Rachel Jurek ‘15 Class President

John King and Zachary Abisalih, winner of the Hebron Cup for 2015

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 39


1991 - 2015

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classnotes ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

1939

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

1951

Class Agent: Edward L. Ruegg rueggnh@gmail.com

1952 1940

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

1941

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

Alan S. Foster enjoys playing golf with Patrick Tracey

1942 Class Agent: Norman A. Cole ncolseba@aol.com Robert F. Preti writes, “I now have five (5) great-grand-children!!”

1943 Class Agent: Eugene J. Smith zachplum@aol.com John W. Lawry writes, “Took my daughter Jane on the Queen Mary 2 last October on my 90th birthday! I have elected to be only a substitute at Tennis this year.”

1949 Class Agent: Robert P. Rich, Jr. rprich@erlanger-inc.com

1950

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

Class Agent: Rev. Kenneth A. Boyle revken60@aol.com

Philip H. Montgomery writes,

“My wife, Allison and I enjoy our continued retirement. We spend our winters in our Tucson, AZ home and summer’s in a Camden, ME retirement area, Quarry Hill. Our children, Janet and Hugh, live in opposite ends of the U.S. Janet and family in Rangeley, ME and Hugh’s family in the Seattle, WA area. I thoroughly enjoyed my four years at Hebron as a student as well as a one year faculty member.

1953 Class Agent: Dean E. Ridlon sdridlon@yahoo.com

1954 Class Agent: Michael Maher holland1936@hotmail.com

1955 Class Agent: Richard J. Parker rparker72@comcast.net Samuel A. Dibbins writes, “So enjoyed meeting with Pat Layman on her trip to Portland, OR. My best to all, SAD”

1956 Class Agent: Dr. Kenneth P. Mortimer kmortimer5@gmail.com

1957 Class Agents: Michael A. Mentuck mikem@salvor.com

& Charles B. Swartwood III cbswartwood@comcast.net

1958

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

We would like to extend our condolences to Kennedy Crane III who lost his father, Kennedy Crane Jr. in February of this year.

1959

55

Class Agent: Bernard L. Helm re un io n hebron59@aol.com

1960 Class Agent: David J. Williams djwill1942@yahoo.com

1961

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

George A. Gray writes, “Made a trip to New Zealand to visit my sister who lives there. Beautiful country. Daughter, Claudia (‘92) doing well, her older daughter just celebrated her 4th birthday. Claudia just came back from Angola, goes to Peru this fall.”

1962 Class Agent: Richard S. Forte rsforte@me.com Jon M. Brooks writes, “I enjoyed the huge Lumberjack edition of school and alumni/ae information.”

1963 Class Agent: William C. Harding, Jr. 2ndwavewill@gmail.com

Michael V. Bergamini writes, “I joined Nicox S.A. on 1 Aug.-14 as Chief Scientific Officer/EVP, US office in Fort Worth (so I didn’t have to move) but do spend 10 days/month in either SophiaAntipolis (Nice) France or Bresso (Milan) Italy-It’s a lot of time in a big alumnium tube. But it’s great to be back in the game of opthalmic drug and device R + D.”

1964 Class Agent: John R. Giger john@cybergiger.com

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1965 Class Agent: Allen C. Kennedy allen.clarke.kennedy@gmail.com Michael Rothschild is a writer, sculptor, printmaker and farmer. He was born in Maine where he has lived all his life. He has had 2 short story collections published by Viking/Penguin: Rhapsody of a Hermit and Wondermonger. He received a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and appeared three times in the Best American Short Stories collections. For the last 20 years Michael has made sculpture in wood, stone, bone and lead as well as numerous etchings, aquatints and linocuts that he prints on a large press in the farmhouse. His work is in many collections and museums and has been shown in the People’s Republic of China where he lectured on fiction and art in Beijing, Xi’An and Nanjing. Michael lives and works on his 200 acre farm where he and his extended family raise Suffolk sheep, Angus beef, hogs, flocks of chickens, Muscovy ducks and turkeys and a Jersey milk cow. He is currently grafting and setting out a new orchard of old strain apples and pears and building a large cider press out of rock maple. He may be contacted by email at michael@michaelrothschild.com. WWW.hebronacademy.org • 41


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

1966 Class Agent: Harvey L. Lowd hlowd@hotmail.com J. R. Bright proudly announces the birth of grandson Drexel Roosevelt Bright who was born in June.

We love hearing from you! Please send news or contact updates to your class agent or to Beverly Roy at broy@hebronacademy.org. Michael S. Zane shares a brief history of his company, Kryptonite Corporation: “In 1971, I met bicycle mechanic, Stanley Kaplan who had designed a new bicycle lock, which he named the Kryptonite lock. He and I became partners and sold 50 locks in our first year. In 1972, I bought the company from Kaplan, and founded the Kryptonite Corporation. Using my father’s sheet metal business to aid manufacturing we focused on sales in the Boston area where we were based. Realizing the need to expand our market but having no money for advertising, I tried an experiment. We locked a bicycle with a Kryptonite lock to a parking meter on the Lower East Side in New York City for a month. By the time we retrieved the bike, it was completely stripped except for the part attached to the lock. The resulting publicity helped move Kryptonite locks into New York, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. It was also at this time that Kryptonite began guaranteeing its locks, offering $500 if your bike was stolen while secured with a Kryptonite lock. That guarantee quickly became a selling point. The next year Consumer Reports awarded the Kryptonite lock its highest bicycle security device rating and distribution expanded westward. In 1977, Kryptonite introduced the K-4 lock, a design so innovative that it is in New York’s Museum of Modern Art permanent design collection. Over the next decade, Kryptonite expanded into the motorcycle and automotive industries. In 1994, we recreated the publicity event by successfully locking bicycles throughout New York City to prove the efficacy of its new New York locks. In the following year, Kryptonite celebrated its twenty-

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fifth anniversary and launched Flex Security, focusing on innovative locking systems for homeowners and contractors and entered the computer security market by creating locks for desktops and laptops. In 2001, Ingersoll-Rand, a leading industrial firm, bought Kryptonite.”

Impromptu Reunion

1967 Class Agent: Loring Coes, III lcoes@aol.com

1968 Class Agent: Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr. rlowenth@rochester.rr.com James K. Locke writes, “God Bless every one!”

1969 Class Agent: Jonathan G. Moll jonathangmoll@gmail.com

1970

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Class Agent: Craig Clark jcclark@myfairpoint.net George E. Powers writes, “40 full years in Wyoming; 31 years married to Marguerite Herman; 3 kids (poet, lawyer and labor organizer) 4 Cats. It has been a full time.”

Nick Carter ’73, Rick Garvin ’72 and Steve Gates ’72 met up in New York City last November to attend the historic 150th consecutive football game of Lehigh University vs.Lafayette College at Yankee Stadium. This is the longest, continuous football rivalry in the country. Nick and Rick are Lafayette alums and Steve’s son Nick is now a junior at Lafayette. Also shown is Rick’s son Chris (who is Steve’s Godson). The boys are shown outside of the famous Katz Deli. pathogenic mechanisms involved in neurodegenerative diseases. Our daughter Victoria, who completed an M.A. in Journalism at City University of London last year, has been working for Journal International, publisher of American Express Magazine, as a Junior Online Editor for the last nine months. Margreth & I recently celebrated our 25th wedding anniversary at a fabulous seaside castle just south of Rapallo, Italy.

1971 Class Agent: Harvey A. Lipman harveylipman@hotmail.com Harvey A. Lipman writes, “I look forward to our 45th reunion in 2016. The Lipman Family is growing. My daughter Sasha had her second child last fall. It’s great to be a grandfather. Still writing letters as Class Agent. I took over this position from Rick Rigazio in 1985, thirty years ago.” Arthur F. Pease writes, “Margreth and I have enjoyed several important events during the last few months. In May (2015) our son Daniel moved to Zurich, Switzerland, where he has joined the Center for Neurosciences PhD program. He will be working at the University of Zurich Hospital researching

Arthur & Margreth Pease in Italy

1972 Class Agent: Stephen R. Gates stephenrgates@msn.com

1973

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

We would like to extend our condolences to Philip Horsman who lost his mother, Ruth Higgins Horsman, on April 7, 2015.

1974 Class Agent: Roger T. Clark rclark@chmhotel.com Roger T. Clark writes, “Life continues at a frantic pace in the Clark household. I work out of our house now, and Marcia just finished a year and a half teaching a Montessori primary class at North Yarmouth Academy. Thomas has been thriving at Westminster College in Salt Lake City, Utah. He is an English major and full of great ideas. I credit Hebron for having a good part in his no nonsense attitude. I am searching for the words to tell you that Hebron Academy is special. I am aware how private schools can suffer with lack of vision and confused leadership. This year of finding direction as John King prepares to leave will be an important one for the school.”

1975

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Class Agent: Ellen L. Augusta eaugusta@msn.com

Jessica G. Feeley writes, “Wedding season is here! Our daughter Micaela was married last October to Benjamin in a lovely outdoor cerremony under a hand-made Chuppa. (That was a lot of work.)


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

Alumni Spotlight Geena Canning ‘79, One of Mainebiz Women to Watch 2015

Gena with Pat Layman at the Mainebiz Women to Watch Event in Portland this September Pine State Trading Co., founded in 1941 by Canning’s grandfather, has built a reputation for being able to deliver for its customers, throughout six New England states plus part of upstate New York. Canning, one of four Mainebiz Women to Watch for 2015, balances leadership at Pine State Trading with servics roles as vice chair of Bangor Savings Bank, a board memeber of the Maine Health Management Coalition, volunteer work with the Gardiner Area Boys & Girls Clubs and Maine Cancer Center Foundation’s “Tri for the Cure.” Last year, she was named a “woman of distinction” by the Girls Scouts of Maine. She is a resident of Yarmouth. Canning is part of the third generation owner-operators of Pine State Trading, along with her brother Keith Canning and cousin, Nick Alberding, who is CEO. She grew up in Augusta, went to Hebron Academy and then onto American University in Washington, D.C. Growing up, she worked in the family business, often stocking the warehouse. Like many young Mainers, she had visions of a life outside of the Pine Tree State. “I had a degree in communications and had no plans on working for my family,” she says. Gena joined the family business in the

Gena Canning ‘79 is a managing partner at Pine State Trading Co., which delivers products to more than 3,500 convenience stores. Pine State and its divisions have 1,050 employees, including 700 in Maine.

late 1980s, at a time when there we no women in their trade. Charlie Canning hired his daughter, but gave her open-ended directions. “He’d say, ‘You’ll figure it out.’” She’s quick to give advice for those bringing recent college graduates into their family business. There are two rules. “Have your kids go to work for someone else, so they know how to do that,” she says. “And never have your kids report directly to you. Have them be mentored by the appropriate level of management. You really need them to earn the respect of the people they work with.” “Our infrastructure in Maine is deep. We’ve been building on a great team for over 75 years.” That team has allowed Pine State teams to push the pace of change in the state. But As big as Pine State Trading has gotten, Canning says it still has to do the basics well. That’s why the managing partners are all too willing to make a delivery run on the way home. Perhaps a commitment to community and service strengthened not only by her family values but also by her time at Hebron? Congratulations Gena! (excerpted from Maine.biz article

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 43


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE Our son Patrick’s wedding is scheduled for April 2016. This time Stephen and I just get to sit back and enjoy the show.”

to say that Nancy got her start in the humanities here at Hebron - look where it has taken her.

1976 Class Agent: C. Reed Chapman creedclark@yahoo.com Reed Chapman gives a return salute to Michael Arel who has always been a loyal Hebron supporter. “Thank You!”

1980

1977

grandfather

Congratulations Nancy!

We would like to extend our condolences to Jane McKay Morrell who lost her mother, Pauline McKay in April.

1979

1978

Class Agent: Brian O. Cloherty bocl1011@yahoo.com Stephen B. Jeffries married Kimberlea Anne Tracey on May 30, 2015 at Trinity Church in Boston.

Class Agent: George M. Dycio gcldycio@roadrunner.com Dr. Cricket Corwin Wilbur has a doctorate in Environmental Studies from Antioch University, a MS in Geology from NC State University, and a BS in Geology from St. Lawrence. In her doctoral research Cricket investigated factors governing climate change by reconstructing a 10,000-year record of vegetation on an island in southwest Alaska to assess regional environmental changes and global connections. Cricket is an AmeriCorps alumni. She has extensive experience teaching science in diverse environments from inside classrooms and laboratories to outside in the field. Cricket spends her free time enjoying the outdoors with her family, and volunteering with conservation organizations. Nancy Briggs Marshall proudly announced the recent publication of her first book, PR Works!. Nancy is known throughout the state of Maine, and New England, as the PR Maven. She has written about some of her best practices for PR that have worked for her and many of her clients. We are proud 44 •

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Class Agent: Elizabeth Siekman Graves ‘betsy_graves@hotmail.com

Class Agent: Robert M. Hernon robert_hernon@yahoo.com

Klaus Fuhrmann is now a

Jane Harris Ash & Dan Ryan and their families had dinner together in San Jose in April. They hadn’t seen each other since they were both in college in Boston. In late May Jane attended the wedding of Stephen Jeffries. Jennifer Skiff and Reeve Bright ‘66 were also guests. In early June Jane and her husband Gary drove to Ithaca, NY in the 1965 Studebaker to attend Gary’s reunion at Cornell University. She and Laurie Shaver got together for the first time since their 10th Hebron Reunion!

1981 Class Agent: Jane Hepburn Fiore fancyjane@comcast.net

1982 Class Agent: Tucker Cutler tandgcutler@myfairpoint.net

1983 Class Agent: Debra Beacham Bloomingdale dbbloomingdale@yahoo.com

1984 Class Agent: John E. Donahue Sr. jdonahue@plangrid.com & Deborah Cote debscote@yahoo.com

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Jeffries ‘79

We would like to extend our condolences to Ian J. Ormon who lost his dad, Ian B. Ormon in November.

Laurie Shaver ‘79 and Jane Harris Ash ‘79 in Ithaca, NY

1985

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BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

1986 Class Agent: T. Scott Downs suffolkd@aol.com John Carl Engel spoke at the 2015 Hebron Career Connection Seminars in April and said, “I thought it was a great time, and great to interact with the students.”

1987 Class Agent: Kate Thoman Crowley thocro@comcast.net

1988 Class Agent: Ann Snyder Mooradian mooradia@comcast.net

1989 Class Agent: M. Hayes McCarthy hayes@bonvisagegroup.com Amy E. Clark writes, “In June 2014 I had the honor of serving as the Head Swim Coach for Special Olympics Team NC at The USA Games in Princeton, N.J. This July I was also honored to have been selected as an assistant swim coach for Team USA at Special Olympics World Summer Games!”

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Class Agent: Andrew M. Haskell andyhaskell22@yahoo.com Peter M. Koson is a Business Advisor in Bozeman, MT. He helps both startups and established businesses with financial, marketing, production, and organizational issues. He moved to Montana in 2014 with his wife, Angie. Previously, he was a CFO, small business owner, fly fishing guide, and winter station manager for Amundsen Scott South Pole Station, Antarctica


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

1991

1996

Class Agents: Marcus A. De Costa yankeeboynyc@gmail.com & Scott R. Nelson scott.ryan.nelson@mac.com

Class Agent: Devon M. Biondi dmbiondi@gmail.com

1992

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

1997

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

Todd D. Ray, from his website: Dr. Todd Ray has been practicing dentistry in South Portland since 2000. He holds a degree in biology from Union College, and his doctorate of dental medicine from Tufts University. Endodontics is a professional passion along with orthodontics, prosthodontics and cosmetics. In his spare time, he enjoys family time in nature and on the ski slopes.” Claudia M. Gray is doing well, her older daughter just celebrated her 4th birthday. Claudia just came back from Angola, and goes to Peru this fall.

1993

Al Switzer has been inducted into the Maine Swimming and Diving Hall of Fame. Switzer completed his 24th season this winter as Plymouth State University’s women’s swimming and diving coach after a 19-year stint as men’s swimming and diving coach at the University of Maine. He was inducted on April 12, 2015. Switzer began his coaching career here at Hebron before moving on to Orono. He is also a member of the Hebron Academy Athletic Hall of Fame. Austin C. Stonebraker graduated as Doctor of Physical Therapy from MCPH in May.

Class Agent: Kirsten L. Ness kirsten_ness@hotmail.com

Matthew W. Johnson writes “Another child is due any day now.”

Class Agent: Erica Litchfield ericalitchfield@yahoo.com

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Jake Leyden and his wife Liz welcomed a son on March 18. Meet Benjamin Thomas Leyden, the world’s newest Lumberjack.

Class Agent: Jessie D. Maher Parker jm4lfclvr@yahoo.com Sara M. Kendall has a yoga and acupuncture studio, Ebb and Flow, in Bath. She started practicing yoga regularly in 2009. Sara holds a Masters in Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine. She practices acupuncture in two clinics where she enjoys helping people lead more balanced, healthy, and painfree lives.

2004 Class Agent: John W. Slattery john.slattery23@gmail.com Helen L. Unger-Clark and her husband Iñaki Lozares Carpintero. welcomed a son, Iñaki Jr., to the world on July 3rd of this year.

2002 Class Agent: Katherine E. Curtis katherine.curtis@gmail.com

1999 Class Agent: Joseph J. Patry joseph.patry@gmail.com

1994

2001 Class Agent: Galen C. Wall galenwall@hotmail.com & Jessica Gilpatrick jess.takach@gmail.com

1998

Class Agent: Marko I. Radosavljevic mradosav@comcast.net

1995

PAST FACULTY RECOGNIZED

Christopher W. Rogers writes, “Thank you for reaching out. I think fondly of Hebron often. Without a doubt. it was the most memorable year I had in high school, and it would be an honor to come back and speak and paint live for everyone. All the best. Chris” His website is: http://www. chrisbomb.com/ Drew Laurie got married in August 2015.

2003 Class Agent: Sara Marquis Barker sara.marquis.barker@gmail.com

2000

Iñaki Jr. son of Helen Unger-Clark ‘04

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Class Agent: Erik P. Yingling erikyingling@gmail.com WWW.hebronacademy.org • 45


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

2005

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Class Agent: Bettina T. Voigt tinafish33@aol.com

Jade S. Furtado was married in May. Anna Geismar married Neal Cassidy in June of this year.

2008 Class Agent: Andrea J. Hart andrea.hart207@gmail.com & Jennifer A. Duguay duguayjen@gmail.com

2009 Class Agents: Claire E. Cummings claireelizabethcummings@gmail. com & Ye Chen re un io n sophia_chen917@hotmail.com

5

Class Agent: Sophia M. Bartolomeo flip_flopz_13@yahoo.com

2012 Class Agent: Maxwell A. Middleton mmiddlet@bowdoin.edu

2013 Class Agent: Kathryn M. Couture kcouture15@yahoo.com

2014

2010

2006

2011

Class Agents: Emma L. Leavitt emmalleavitt@gmail.com & Emily R. Powers epowers@bowdoin.edu Zac Creps is pleased to announce the birth of his daughter, Payton Elizabeth, on June 22.

BECOME THE AGENT FOR YOUR CLASS! Contact Bev Roy at 207-966-5251 or broy@hebronacademy.org.

Hebron Grads reunite at West Point. US Naval Academy senior Ally Strachan ‘12 congratulates Shane Hearn ‘12 at the US Military Academy’s senior ring ceremony.

Generations of Lumberjacks!

Class Agent: Allison M. Coombs allison@allisoncoombs.com

2007 Class Agent: Noah S. T. Love nlove88@gmail.com

We love hearing from you! Please send news or contact updates to your class agent or to Beverly Roy at broy@hebronacademy.org.

Bev Leyden with her great-grandchildren! Far left and in Bev’s lap: Maddie & Benjamin (Jake Leyden ‘99 & his wife Liz, both former faculty who are now at Loomis Chaffee) and center, Olivia (Nick Leyden ‘01 & his wife Ana, nowboth at Eaglebrook)

Fulbright Faculty Cindy Reedy, one of our long time faculty members has been

awarded a prestigious Fulbright Distinguished Award in Teaching grant - one of just 49 in the U.S. She will be teaching teachers in Morocco this Fall - so exciting! Cindy will be documenting her travels and experiences in her blog, MarrakechExpressed, which can be found at: http://cindyinmorocco.blogspot.com Congratulations Cindy! We will miss you this Fall but are incredibly proud of you and to have you represent Hebron in this exciting way!

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ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

BOSTON

Spring Alumni Gatherings

Peter Fallon, Jr. and Ted Reugg ‘51 Trustee Emeriti

Peter Buckley ‘08 and Anna Skeele, former faculty

Pat Layman and Molly Turlish, P’86, ‘87, Trustee Emeritus

Gary Ash, Jane Harris Ash ‘79, Steve Jeffries ‘79, Distinguished Trustee Emeritus and Kimberlea Jeffries

Peter Fallon, Trustee Emeritus, Harvey Lipman ‘71, Trustee Emeritus, Steve Jeffries ‘79, Distinguished Trustee Emeritus, Heather Stephens ‘88, Trustee, John King, Molly Turlish P’86,‘87, Trustee Emeritus, Scott Wilson ‘71, Trustee, Ted Reugg ‘51, Trustee Emeritus, Wally Higgins, Trustee and Dick Forte ‘62, Trustee Emeritus

PORTLAND Bev Leyden and Bill Allen ‘62

Albert Lepage ‘65, Deacon William Barrows Distinguished Trustee Emeritus, Ellen Augusta ‘75 and Don Bates ‘62, Trustee Emeritus

John King and Lonnie Taylor ‘12 WWW.hebronacademy.org • 47


PORTLAND

Brian Jurek, Tina Voit ‘05 and Jeanine Eschenbach

Lawrence Murch, Marjorie Bates and Shirley Allen

Doug Stewart, Meredith Strang Burgess, Trustee, Regis Lepage ‘69, Carolyn Lepage and Albert Lepage ‘65, Deacon William Barrows Distinguished Trustee Emeritus

Bill Becker ‘87 and Beth Becker

Rob MacClellan ‘11 and Brett Bisesti ‘09

Craig Clark ‘70, Henry Harding ‘70 and Kim Kenway ‘70, Trustee

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Bert Babcock ‘61, Rupert White and Valerie Babcock

Karen Hamilton ‘80 and Ed Stebbins ‘80

Neal Cassidy, Anna Geismar Cassidy ‘05 and Susan Geismar P’02,‘05,‘09,‘13, Trustee Emeritus


GI V E

PHOTO: LISSA GUMPRECHT

YOU MAKE A DIFFERENCE.

Your gift inspires today’s Hebron students to create memories that will last a lifetime. Memories of the Homecoming pep rally, making a speech to the entire school, movie nights in the dorm and that moment when being homesick gives way to the understanding that coming to Hebron was the best decision of your life. Please consider a gift to the Hebron Annual Fund today. You do make a difference. WWW.hebronacademy.org • 49


PHOTO: JENNIFER STONEBRAKER

obituaries

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ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

1937 J. E. Mahar James Eugene Mahar, affectionately known as Gene, age 97, of Scarborough, ME, passed away surrounded by family on March 29, 2015, at the Gosnell Hospice House. Born in Newark, N.J., the son of William Garfield Mahar and Mary Carney Mahar, he graduated from Norwood High School, Hebron Academy and the University of Maine in Orono in 1945. After serving in the Merchant Marine, he began work for Shell Oil in Ohio and then moved to Dallas, Texas, where he worked for LingTemco Vought. Retiring from Raytheon as an aeronautical engineer in 1983, Gene enjoyed many years of retirement between Bridgton, and Boynton Beach, Fla.

1942 Addison Merrick Addison Hoyt Merrick, 91, of Craftsbury, VT died July 21, 2015. He was completely independent and active physically, intellectually and socially until shortly before his death of complications from injuries in a car accident. He was born in Montclair, New Jersey, but his family spent summers in Ogunquit, Maine. Merrick’s family sent him to Hebron Academy, where he was part of a championship basketball team. He loved tennis, football and basketball as both an athlete and a fan. Merrick earned a bachelor’s degree at Middlebury College in 1948 and later a PhD from Harvard University. He served in World War II as a radio operator in a B-29 bomber in the South

Pacific. He was a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army Air Corps in the 883rd bombardment squadron. He earned a distinguished flying cross medal. After the war, Merrick went back to Montclair and worked for the Montclair Times newspaper. He later taught English literature at Johnson State College. After his retirement in the mid- 1980s, Merrick was a champion of wilderness and donated regularly to nonprofit organizations that helped protect the natural environment.

1943 Mario Marchisio Mario Marchisio, 93, of West Boylston, MA passed away on August 19th. He was born in West Boylston and graduated from both Leominster High School and Hebron Academy, where he played football, hockey, and baseball. His education was interrupted by WW II, where he served in the U.S. Army 27th Infantry Division, seeing action during the invasions of Makin, Saipan, and Okinawa. Upon his return from the war, Mario received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Illinois. Excelling in hockey, Mario had a brief tryout with the Chicago Blackhawks before taking his first football coaching position in Saline Michigan. He returned to Massachusetts in 1957 to take a coaching position in the West Boylston School System and obtain his Master’s Degree at Worcester State College. Mario was the varsity football coach at Shrewsbury High School for 21 years, retiring in 1981. He was a member of the Massachusetts Football Coaches’ Hall of Fame and the Shrewsbury High School Hall of Fame.

1948 Alan D. Kupper Alan Kupper of Ogunquit, ME, passed away on April 14, 2015. Alan was born in Boston. He attended Hebron Academy, served in the United States Air Force and graduated from the University of New Hampshire. He was a longtime resident of Nashua, New Hampshire, where he ran the family furniture business, Franklin Furniture. He also owned summer basketball camps with several members of the Boston Celtics, promoted the Harlem Magicians in northern New England, managed a minor league baseball team in Nashua, developed intramural sports programs in Nashua, and was a volunteer coach for countless teams. He also held many leadership roles at Temple Beth Abraham in Nashua.

1948 Frederick B. Webster Fred Webster died on April 14th, 2015. He was born in Portland, ME, attended Deering High School and graduated from Hebron Academy. He attended Williams College and spent 2 years at UNH Hotel School in preparation to manage Homewood Inn- a family run business. He served in the United States Air Force during the Korean Conflict. Upon returning, Fred worked for the John C. Paige Company and Dow & Pinkham Insurance until 1974. He was also co-owner of Webster and Goddard insurance from 1974 until 1990. He then managed Homewood Inn until his retirement.

1949 Charles F. Lambert Charles “Chuck” Lambert Jr., of

Goshen, KY, passed away suddenly and peacefully on July 2, 2015. Chuck was born June 6, 1931 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He attended Hebron Academy, Amherst College and received his Bachelor of Science and MBA degrees from University of Louisville. He served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War. Chuck was the fourth generation of the Lambert family to work at Clayton & Lambert Mfg. Co. Chuck also held a number of U.S. Patents. Bill Lewis Wilmot Eugene Lewis, 86, of West Dennis, MA passed away peacefully at home after a lengthy battle against declining health on July 20, 2015. Mr. Lewis was born in New York, NY and graduated from Hebron Academy before enlisting in the United States Air force during the Korean War. Upon honorable discharge, Mr. Lewis attended the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. After working for Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. in the Worcester area, Bill went on to work in the oil industry for over 35 years. A lifelong learner, Mr. Lewis was an ardent student of military history and music.

1954 Lincoln A. Mitchell Lincoln Mitchell resident of Atherton, CA, died on May 12, 2015 from complications following a stroke. Lincoln was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on August 10, 1936. He attended middle school at The Blake School in Minnesota and graduated high school from Hebron Academy. He also attended Dartmouth College, where he served as the editor for the Dartmouth Daily and was a member of Phi Delta Phi before

WWW.hebronacademy.org • 51


ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

graduating with a B.A. in 1958. For a brief time after college, he served as a field artillery officer for the U.S. Army. He then attended Stanford Law School, graduating in 1962. Lincoln practiced in Palo Alto for 50 years. He was a member of the Conference of Delegates, the President of the Palo Alto Bar Association and was Trustee of the Santa Clara County Bar Association. He also served as Trustee in the Golden Gate Chapter of the American Red Cross and as a director for the California Republican League.

1957 Patrick Austin Tracey Patrick Austin Tracey, of Naples, FL, passed away on September 2, 2015, at the age of 77. Pat was born on December 16, 1937 in Santiago, Chile. He attended the Grange School in Santiago, Hebron Academy, and received both his bachelor degree in fine arts and his MBA at the University of Pennsylvania. In a career that spanned two continents, he worked for Goodyear International in Akron, OH, Caracas, Venezuela, and Mexico City. He moved with his family to Naples in 1974, where he launched a career as a real estate developer and broker.

1958 Leonard C. Lee Leonard C “Lennie” Lee passed away June 5, 2015, after a lengthy illness. LtC. Lee was residing at the Community Living Center of the Northern Arizona VA facility. Lee was born in Portland, Maine. He graduated from Deering High School and from Hebron Academy, where he was an All-American swimmer and the recipient of the Hebron Cup.

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Lennie received an appointment to the Air Force Academy from Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine. Failing the eye sight requirements, he then enrolled at Bowdoin College, where he received his BS in Mathematics in 1962. Lee then joined the United States Air Force. During the Vietnam war, Capt. Lee planned, executed and flew as Lead Navigator of the initial element of the the first combat assault “Operation Junction City,” still considered one of the most highly successful aerial flight missions in the history of the United States Air Force and for which Capt. Lee was awarded both the Distinguished Flying Cross and the USAF Air Medal. LtC. Lee served over twenty-one years in the USAF and retired in 1983.

1963 Peter J. Rubin Peter J. Rubin at the age of 70. A Maine native, Peter was born and grew up in Bath. After attending Hebron Academy, he went on to study at Duke University and graduated in 1967. Peter graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1970. While there, he was elected to the Harvard Law Review. After graduating from Harvard, Peter served as a clerk for the Honorable Edward T. Gignoux, U.S. District Court in Maine. He went on to join the Portland law firm, Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer and Nelson in 1971. In 1975, Peter argued before the U.S. Supreme Court, winning a unanimous decision in the case of Mullaney v. Wilbur, which addressed questions surrounding how defendants in Maine were prosecuted for manslaughter and murder.

1967 Loring Coes Loring “Terry” Coes III - Loring “Terry” Coes III, died June 13, 2015, in Wakefield, RI. He grew up in Brookfield and Princeton, Massachusetts, and North Waterford, ME. Terry graduated from Hebron Academy and Williams College. In 1986, he completed his Master’s degree in mathematics at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, where he also received an honorary doctorate in 1991. He taught mathematics at Rocky Hill School in East Greenwich, RI for 41 years. He chaired the Mathematics Department from 1980-2006, and served as school photographer for many years. He was a 1987 Woodrow Wilson Fellow and in 1988 he earned a Presidential Award for Excellence in Teaching Mathematics. In 2010, Terry started Coes Photography.

1976 Audrey “Kim” Carpentier, 57, died in Brunswick, ME, on Aug. 24. She was very proud to be one of the first four-year female graduates at Hebron Academy. Over the past 17 years, she has lived in Brunswick. She was the manager of the Atrium Hotel in Brunswick, the Chuck Wagon Restaurant, and a member of the Maine Course Hospitality Group.

1978 Thomas A. Clausen Thomas Andrew Francis Clausen, 55, of Revere, died in late May, at home. Tommy was born in Northampton, Massachusetts, on July 30, 1959. He attended

the Cardigan Mountain School, Hebron Academy, Franklin Pierce College, where he earned a B.A. in history, with honors, and Suffolk University, where he earned an MBA. He was self-employed as a real estate appraiser.

2002 Kenneth K. Bryant Kenneth K. Bryant, 31, of Harrison, ME died Monday, August 10, 2015 as a result of injuries sustained in an automobile accident. Kenneth was born in Norway. He attended Harrison schools, Oxford Hills Middle School and was a graduate of Hebron Academy in 2002. He did tree work for most of his life and had also worked as groundskeeper at Point Sebago and Bridgton Highlands golf courses. .


hidden gems The Academy’s Bell-Lipman Archives host two centuries-worth of nostalgia. In “Hidden Gems,” school archivist and longtime Hebron faculty member Dave Stonebraker shares rare images and memorabilia that are important to the preservation of Hebron’s history.

SCIENCE OF THE TIMES: As courses in the sciences increased at the Academy over time, new laboratory spaces were created all across campus. Where were the following science laboratories located?

Physics laboratory, circa 1930: Sturtevant Hall, 3rd floor, East.

The Chemistry Laboratory, circa 1940: a building behind constructed Sturtevant Hall

BONUS FACT & QUESTION: On Cum Laude Day in 1973, Mr. Twitchell invited a NASA astronaut to visit Hebron to deliver the Cum Laude address. He spoke to the school in Sargent Gymnasium.

Who was this astronaut?

ANSWER: Donald H. Peterson, who was, at that time. a member of NASA’s MOL Project Team (Manned Orbiting Laboratory). He later became a Mission Specialist on the 6th Space Shuttle flight in 1983, which was the inaugural flight of Space Shuttle Challenger. WWW.hebronacademy.org • 53

Mr. Dwyer teaching Natural Science, circa 1935: Sargent Gymnasium, room adjacent to Pool Balcony


Hebron Academy PO Box 309 • Hebron ME 04238

Homecoming &

REUNION

SARA WILMOT

PHOTO: LISSA GUMPRECHT

October 23-24, 2015

we are saving you a seat! 54 •

hebron • FALL 2015

Visit hebronacademy.org/homecoming2015 or call 207-966-5236 for more information


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