BULLETIN
           
    Last Day, Celebrating the Class of 2023 p2
          610 Library: The Next Chapter p24
          The 100th Anniversary of the Red vs. White p34
          THE BREARLEY SCHOOL
          610 Library: The Next Chapter
          2023
           FALL
    FALL
          THE BREARLEY BULLETIN FALL 2023
         
    The supermoon, as seen on the way back from a hike during the fall Class IX trip to Camp Mariah (Fresh Air Fund). This is a bonding experience where students engage in team-building activities to help foster a supportive and collective class culture as well as enrich their Upper School journey.
           
     
    
              
              
            
            CONTENTS
          VOLUME XCVIII • NUMBER
          FALL 2023
          2 Last Day 2023
          14 Departing and New Trustees
          18 News and Events
          Events Recap, What’s on Your Desk?, Meet the New Alumnae Board President, Award Winners, Logan Hennes ’25 Goes to the White House and more
          24 610 Library: The Next Chatper
          34 Red vs. White 100th Anniversary
          36 Giving Review 2022–2023
          Letter from Modupe Akinola ‘92 and Jane Foley Fried, Total Gifts to Brearley, Benefit Committee, Fundraising Volunteers, Memorial and Honorary Gifts, Samuel Brearley Society
          56 Births, Marriages and Deaths
          60 Class and Faculty/Staff Notes
          Special thanks to Jennifer Bartoli, Marjorie Becker, Kristen Chae, Coy Dailey, Jane Fried, Jordan Hollender, Richie Bell, Jennifer Stewart and members of the Brearley community for sharing photos and artwork with us.
          THE BREARLEY SCHOOL BOARD OF TRUSTEES
          2023–2024
          Modupe Akinola ’92, President
          Susan Berresford ’61, Vice President
          Sue Meng ’99, Secretary
          Gideon Berger, Treasurer
          Tara Abrahams
          Alexander Brodsky
          Ranika Cohen
          Daphné Crespo-Helm
          Thomas Farrell
          Jane Foley Fried
          Martha Haakmat
          Ning Jin
          Megan Lui ‘10
          Katrina McCall
          John McGinn
          Margo Nederlander
          Terri Seligman ‘78
          Sidaya Moore Sherwood ’90
          Bill Shutzer
          Nekesa Straker ’97
          Lita Tandon ’06
          Olivia Wassenaar ’97
          Lauren Wasson
          Head of School
          Jane Foley Fried
          Content Manager
          Haley Swanson
          Director of Graphic Design
          Jennifer Bartoli
          Director of Communications
          Jennifer Stewart
          If you have any questions or comments about the Bulletin, please contact Haley Swanson at hswanson@brearley.org or (212) 570-8588.
           
    Brearley has offset the equivalent of 7,017,354 total standard pages of paper consumption by reforesting 842 standard trees since joining the PrintReleaf Exchange on August 7, 2018.
          Alan Yan
          Trustees Emeriti
          Christine Frankenhoff Alfaro ’91
          Georges F. de Ménil
          Evelyn Janover Halpert ’52
          David T. Hamamoto
          Stephanie J. Hull
          Ellen Jewett ’77
          Alan Jones
          John F. Savarese
          Priscilla M. Winn Barlow
          Faculty Representative
          Ann Saunders
          2 •
        FALL 2023 1
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    LAST DAY FALL 2023 2
        REMARKS FROM THE HEAD OF SCHOOL
          Last Day 2023
           
    Welcome all to Last Day 2023.
          Good morning on what is truly one of the most exciting and rewarding days not only for the 63 seniors who sit before me, but also for the parents, grandparents, siblings, relatives, friends, faculty and staff who have supported and stood behind every one of you on this challenging and fulfilling journey.
          Last Day marks the culmination of your Brearley experience. Today is your cathartic and ever-so-satisfying exhale.
          Over the years you have taken in so much that this school has offered, filling your body and soul with endless questions, dilemmas, emotions and pride. But today this phase of your Brearley experience does end, and it’s time to reflect, remember and, yes, exhale.
          Parents: You, too, deserve to take a breath and maybe a sigh of relief.
          This is the one day that we pause to consider all the experiences that marked your time at Brearley. If your first day at Brearley was the most important, Last Day may be the most significant.
          You’ve heard it said before that a Brearley education unfolds over a lifetime. Yes, I suppose, that does sound as if you’ll be eternally walking the halls and eating munster bagels. But, no, it means you will discover new and unexpected applications of your Brearley education, and your peers and the alumnae you have yet to meet will play an outsized role in your life. You’ll always be a part of Brearley.
          There is a reason that today is referred to as “Last Day” and not “graduation” or “commencement.” “Last Day” is exactly that: Your last day as a student here before your first day in your next educational institution. As our founder knew, Brearley students never graduate from learning.
          Tomorrow, you commence your first day of the next chapter in your life. And when you complete writing that next chapter, I will be most interested in reading the author’s updated bio. I cannot wait to see how you have developed as a person and what you have become.
          Probably the worst question the Head of School can ask a student is, “tell me, who are you?” But by transposing just two words, the question becomes one of the most important—and revealing—requests I can make to each of you: Tell me who you are.
          Describing who you are will ultimately be an ever-evolving process. You’ll be different next year from who you are today. And the young women I see before me today will be a different version of themselves in five years and in 10 years. Everyone here is destined to evolve into a better version of herself.
          Earlier this year, you listened to several alumnae who were about to celebrate their 10th reunion, learning about their time at Brearley and circuitous journeys afterward. One of you asked a pointed question to the panelists: How and when had they figured out who they were?
          It elicited some giggles from the speakers, but it struck right at the heart of what we hope to instill in those who enter Brearley: self-knowledge.
          The assemblies this year also featured other noted alumnae describing their travels and travails upon leaving Brearley. They, too, spoke about the ups and downs in their lives and careers. Maggie Cullman ’54, a Francis Riker Davis Award recipient
          continued on next page
          FALL 2023 3
        “ Everyone here is destined to evolve into a better version of herself.”
          for service, shared an illustration of her life’s journey, which more closely resembled the highs and lows of a weather map than a linear progression of the achievements and milestones one might expect to see in an intentional life of purpose.
          Let me assure you this morning that your journey will undoubtedly be as circuitous. Your quest for self-knowledge will hopefully take you to places equally comfortable and uncomfortable, and place you in situations that will test your resolve and reward you for your abilities. Self-knowledge is what leads you to being you. As you step away from a community that knows you very well, perhaps so well as to mask how well you know yourself, you will find yourself in the way you live and learn with others.
          Living and learning in Brearley’s intentionally diverse community, where you have engaged deeply in curricular and co-curricular offerings, has undoubtedly prepared you for the next step in your educational careers. The School has also provided an invisible classroom, of a sort, to learn about yourself. And that journey, thank goodness, has not been a straight line from point A to B.
          Why do I say this? Because as I look at you, I see your bright, inquisitive and thirtsy minds. You are an ambitious group and yet your strength as individuals and as a collective has come from some of the surprising, unexpected opportunities that required your mind to adapt to conflicting information, flex in sometimes unorthodox ways, heal and, yes, roam. Could you have imagined that by studying magic realism with Mr. Chu, the supernatural would help you make sense of history and the human condition? Or by taking China and Japan with Ms. Marcus, you would gain a greater appreciation for your own family’s culture and values? You transformed your plaster hands fashioned in Ms. Javens’s studio art course to another medium altogether that offers you and your audience insight into how you see the world. You wondered at the world’s origin after reading complex research articles about RNA world hypothesis with Ms. Chung-A-Hing and Dr. Saunders. Did your mind roam? I think yes. Did these courses change perhaps one thing you thought you knew for sure? Probably so. That experience of
          opening your minds to new ways of seeing the world is fundamental to understanding your role in it.
          Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. said, “A mind stretched by a new experience will never go back to its original dimension.” I cannot implore you more to stretch your minds. I urge you to greatly expand your comfort zones. Allow your mind to shape a new dimension for you.
          Currently there is a shift in education toward pre-professionalism in high school and college and away from a liberal arts program, which students at Brearley are immersed in from K to XII. “Liberal” refers not to politics but to pedagogy and connotes freedom. At this school, teachers have the freedom to create their curriculum, to adapt it each year or even midyear so that it continues to challenge and inspire you. You will not appreciate how “free” your education has been in exploring broadly and deeply across the disciplines until you meet your new classmates in college.
          I can’t overstate the value of the liberal arts education you have experienced. You have learned that your left brain is equally as important as your right. And unless both are firing on all synapses, you’re not using your full capacity. Unlike a pre-professional curriculum, the liberal arts serves as an incubator—not an assembly line—in which you are exposed to, and develop competence in, a wide range of disciplines that fuel your love of learning and will guide you to find your interests and purpose in life.
          You may revel in physics or poetry or photography. The connection you find with each discipline is part of the fabric that makes you who you are. Where you find your intellectual joy is not necessarily where you find the most ease of mastery. The beauty of math may call you as much as it eludes you, but the chase continues. The liberal arts allow the mind to encounter lots of different topics and ways of thinking, some of which will resonate and lead you to places you never expected to go and maybe a place where no one has been before. That rare but powerful experience will give you a glimpse of yourself. How? You find it in doing original work, which, as you know, is an essential component of a Brearley education. You have grown up here knowing that your thoughts, ideas and hypotheses matter.
          Your education will undoubtedly serve you on whatever career path you choose. Moving forward, you will likely major in subjects you love or perhaps fall in love with a subject totally unknown to you today.
          I recall the tone of my physicist father when I told him that I had fallen in love with philosophy and chosen it as a major. What was I going to do with that degree, he asked. Philosophize? I added history later, which made him a tad happier, but in truth, I call on my background in philosophy every day. Most recently, I’ve spent time bringing an ethical lens to conflicting morals within our society and, at times, within our own community. The freedom of the liberal arts provides choice and you are well prepared to handle any choice that comes your way.
          I can see our future scientists and mathematicians wondering about my liberal arts plea. Yes, I mean you, too. Keep in mind that those degrees— and careers they offer—will ask you to employ your competence in other disciplines to solve real life problems. The physicist will call on the humanities not only to deliver speeches and write papers but also to consider the impact on society of the process or project she is leading. And the mathematician may be called upon to collaborate with a team of meteorologists, chemists and biologists to model possible mitigation strategies for a global atmospheric problem (I wrote this before our city was engulfed in smoke last week). The problems we, as a country and a world, face now—whether it’s food scarcity, public health, political
          LAST DAY FALL 2023 4
         
    divisiveness or climate change—require a multidisciplinary approach. A liberal arts approach. Your training here gives you the capacity to become expert in one or two academic areas and to know enough about all disciplines to connect the dots in ways others can only imagine. And in being that connective tissue of problem solving, you will uncover what excites you, what fulfills you, what you can and want to do.
          So your days at Brearley will certainly serve to propel you forward on your journey to self-knowledge.
          Self-knowledge requires self-reflection—the practice of being honest with oneself, a willingness to be critical and an ability to ask tough questions of oneself. It also requires having the capacity to listen, to actually hear and reflect on what others are going through. By listening, you will hone a greater sense of empathy and compassion. This ability to better understand others will be a powerful mirror of who you are and the good you can do in the world.
          As we pursue our quest, it is wise to keep in mind how unreliable our own emotions can be. Our senses and passions can mislead us. Inundated by Instagram posts, celebrity gossip, bite-sized news and hourly trend updates, expectations of others or those we hold for ourselves, our reasoning and beliefs can be tricked by our senses. In response to this condition, Tamar Gendler, Yale Professor of Philosophy, Psychology and Cognitive Science, urges us all to practice active selfreflection, or as she calls it, “harness our inner Socrates.”
          The Apology in Plato’s Republic tells the story of Socrates on trial for corrupting the youth. He questions “wise men” to expose their false wisdom as ignorance. He famously claims to be the wisest man in all of Athens, because unlike another well-considered wise man, Socrates states, “I am better off than he is because he knows nothing, and thinks
          that he knows. I neither know nor think that I know.” Maybe this is the original humble brag.
          It’s also worth pointing out that in the Apology, Socrates is found guilty, and when told of his death sentence, he warns the jury that silencing their critic harms them more than they have harmed him. Perhaps history’s early cautionary tale about cancel culture. On this journey for self-knowledge, it may be wise to accept what you don’t know about yourself as a strength and broaden the scope of your experiences and friendships rather than isolating yourself by sticking solely with whom and what you know.
          Stretch your mind. Find those shape-shifting new experiences.
          And let me say that Brearley has been forced to stretch its mind, so to speak, these past three years in new and often uncomfortable ways. This School has demonstrated its steadfast commitment to its mission by listening to multiple perspectives, toiling in pursuit of truth, making difficult decisions and tolerating a fair amount of adversity. And this has yielded a stronger program and sense of community during a fractured and divisive time. We’ve expanded our minds and will not be returning to our original dimension. I thank you for being part of this challenging but extraordinary period of growth at the School.
          Finally, this class has spent a good deal of time thinking about how it is perceived by others. There is one quality that we, who work most closely with you, regularly attribute to the Class of 2023. It can be said that we have never seen a class so attached to this school. Your love for Brearley has been evident throughout your time here, even when you have complained or criticized us, and I hope you never lose that connection.
          I often think of Wordsworth’s poem “Tintern Abbey,” about a man who returns to a river he last visited five years ago. Perhaps this is you
          continued on page 12
          FALL 2023 5
        
              
              
            
            Class 23
          CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR NEWEST ALUMNAE
           
    FOURTH ROW: Caroline Lee, Oona Weinberg, Sofia Vargas, Harriet Shapard, Lillian Dick, Xuan Mai Perales, Liliana Falcone, Carolina Falcone, Audrey Feigin, Asha Chawla.
          SECOND ROW: Mahbuba
          Jaeden
          THIRD ROW:
          Lilly Fergang, Aliza
          FIFTH ROW: Kayla Massick, Shia Kramer, Phoebe Pallesen, Lila Hussein, Marina Rodriguez, Olivia Goldfinger, Anna Jordan, Eleanor Moses, Alexandra Hayes, Eleanor Keohane, Eleanor Apps, Lila Desai.
          SIXTH ROW: Nicole Faigen, Abigail Sturley, Samuelle Leibovitz, Sarah Wagman, Estella Shklyar, Julia Vasan.
          BACK ROW: Alexandra Gamboa, Olivia Oh, Sey Stein, Lilavati “India” Jayanti, Susan Leibovitz, Elizabeth Siddiqui.
          We would also like to congratulate the members of the Class of 2023 who went on to graduate from other schools.
          (Left to Right)
          FRONT ROW: Jessica Solit, Anna Steel, Kemi Diver, Luella Coffey, Clara-Cecil Popcorn, Sophia Waterston, Anna-Beatrice Glassner.
          Afreen,
          Casasnovas, Alexandra Durt, Jacqueline Snyder, Grace Schuur, Vivienne Jones, Gabrielle Ross, Alessandra Brevetti-Bergman, Emmanuelle Toulouse, Zara Suryadevara, Ariana Arabadjiev.
          Colette Hartman, Ava Yan,
          Fergang, Kayla Denis, Kate McNulty, Sarah Torres, Isabela Carvalho, Sophia Hoh, Hannah Marx, Yassamin Ehsani.
          OF ’
        LAST DAY FALL 2023 6
         
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 7
        UPPER SCHOOL AWARDS
          Upper School Discursive Essay Writing Prize
          Anna Jordan, XII
          Upper School Analytical Essay Writing Prize
          Sarah Wagman, XII
          Upper School Poetry Writing Prize
          Chloe Tan, XI
          Upper School Fiction Writing Prize Sofía Vargas, XII
          Juliet Whiton English Prize Phoebe Pallesen, XII
          Catherine Fairfax MacRae ’96 Prize
          Mahbuba Afreen, XII
          Upper School History Essay Writing Prize
          Alexandra Su, X
          Harper Simpson, XI
          Dorothy Mills History Prize India Jayanti, XII
          Ann Chalmers Greek Prize Yassamin Ehsani, XII
          Ann Chalmers Latin Prize India Jayanti, XII
          French Prize
          Anna-Beatrice Glassner, XII
          Spanish Prize
          Eleanor Apps, XII
          Mandarin Prize
          Emmanuelle Toulouse, XII
          Judith N. Conant Mathematics Prize
          Olivia Oh, XII
          Frances Arnold 1893 Mathematics Prize
          Sarah Wagman, XII
          Science Prize for Life Sciences
          Alessandra Brevetti-Bergman, XII
          Science Prize for Physical Sciences
          Ariana Arabadjiev, XII
          Technology Prize
          Gabrielle Ross, XII
          Ursula Loengard Berens ’47 Art Prize
          Estella Shklyar, XII
          Fanny H. Phillips Dramatics Prize
          Alexandra Gamboa, XII
          Berta Elsmith Music Prize
          Olivia Oh, XII
          The Brearley Alumnae Cup
          Eleanor Apps, XII
          Richard B. Stearns, Jr., Memorial Award
          Alexandra Hayes, XII
          Head’s Award
          Jaeden Casasnovas, XII
          FACULTY AWARDS
          The Class of 2018 Fund for Building, Kitchen and Administrative Staff Support
          Shanice Echeverria
          Efren Cruz
          Class of 1992 Award
          Brian Chu
          Teacher of English and Head of Class XII
          Serena Marshall Weld 1901 Award
          Kate Javens
          Teacher of Art
          Sandra Lea Marshall ’73 Award
          Cait Bradley
          Teacher of Mathematics and VIII Homeroom Teacher
          Margaret Riker Harding
          Lower School Fellowship
          Ayana Fletcher-Tyson Class II Room Teacher
          Chairs for Excellence in Teaching
          Luigi Cicala
          Teacher of Art
          Susannah Terrell
          Class V Homeroom Teacher
          Robert Duke
          Teacher of Drama
          LAST DAY FALL 2023 8
        KUNZ ART COLLECTION
          Class IX
          Priya Acharya
          Josephine Allen
          Emi Arabadjiev
          Cassandra Analei Calupe
          Chloe Casanova
          Analise Chen
          Labiba Chowdhury
          Sarah Elliott
          Annabel Feigen
          Marin Goldberg
          Gemma Hayes
          Ann Higgins
          Samara Islam
          Beatrix Mironoff
          Eva Nelson-Torres
          Amelia Neuburg
          Atalanta Pfeister
          Samantha Philip
          Alejandra Piedra
          Caroline Racanelli
          Jessica Ren
          Yasmeen Romero
          Anna Semel
          Jada Shutes
          Charlotte Stewart
          Sybil (Sadie) Tribe
          Lillias Trowbridge
          Lucia Xiao
          Class X
          Mayisha Alam
          Katherine Arnall
          Sofia Basilio
          Chanelle Batraville
          Josephine Carlock
          Giselle Chan
          Gaby Cruz
          Linden Frelinghuysen
          Beatrice Glasman Walker
          Alanna Guilfoyle
          Annabelle Hayes
          Audrey Hoh
          Bintou Jaiteh
          Ameera Karim
          Alice Lee
          Chloe Lucich
          Hadley Meyer
          Nora Moor
          Leena Mudawi
          Yossra Nizam
          Margaret Ratzan
          Danna Rios-Sosa
          Mira Schubert
          Sophia Seckler
          Amaani Sehgal
          Alexandra Shepard
          Jaya Shri
          Charlize Solares
          Isabella Stegman
          Alexandra Su
          Annabel Thomas
          Anaya Tsai
          Alyssa Zhou
          Grace Zhou
          Jenny Zhu
          Class XI
          Ines Alto
          Sophia “Zephyr” Andrews
          Nicole Chang
          Louise Crary
          Daniella Florencio
          Stephanie Garrett
          Caroline Gottlieb
          Cade Keys
          Ellery Kourepenos
          Ruqayah Mahmud
          Eleanor Nangle
          Emma Resetarits
          Alice Richmond
          Amelia Roman
          Inaya Shariff
          Sophie Tanenbaum
          Maria Ulke
          Sophia Wang
          Katherine Wepsic
          Harmony Zhu
          Class XII
          Mahbuba Afreen
          Asha Chawla
          Lila Desai
          Olivia Goldfinger
          Vivienne Jones
          Eleanor Keohane
          Grace Schuur
          Harriet Shapard
          Estella Shklyar
          Abigail Sturley
          
              
              
            
            Class of 2023
          COLLEGE DESTINATIONS
          American University of Paris/USC (1)
          Amherst College (3)
          Boston College (1)
          Bowdoin College (1)
          Brown University (2)
          Bucknell University (1)
          Case Western Reserve University (1)
          Columbia University (2)
          Connecticut College (1)
          Cornell University (5)
          Dartmouth College (1)
          Duke University (1)
          Georgetown (1)
          George Washington University (1)
          Harvard University (6)
          Kenyon College (1)
          Lafayette College (1)
          Middlebury College (2)
          Oberlin College (2)
          Princeton University (1)
          Sciences Po/Columbia University (1)
          Trinity College (1)
          Tulane University (1)
          UCLA (1)
          University of Chicago (4)
          University of Michigan (3)
          University of Pennsylvania (5)
          University of Southern California (1)
          University of Virginia (3)
          Vanderbilt University (1)
          Vassar College (1)
          Williams College (3)
          Yale University (3)
          *as of 9/15/2023
        FALL 2023 9
        
              
              
            
            Co-heads of Self-Government
          by Vivienne Jones and Grace Schuur
          
           
    This year, we spent a lot of time thinking of new ways to unify the Brearley student body. As a part of rebuilding our community after Covid-19, we distributed Brearley seal pins to everyone from 4th through 12th grade. Each pin represents everyone’s individual yet connected place in the larger Brearley community.
          Another core value that we tried to implement was appreciating those who guide us. With the inaugural Advisor Appreciation Day, we hoped to bring light to the incredible faculty members who put their time and energy into supporting us and teaching us invaluable lessons. They have shaped us into the people we are and their distinctive care for students unquestionably forms the foundation of the Brearley community.
          We also have to thank our marvelous USSG representatives. You discussed constitutional amendments, approved common interest organizations and wrote all the high schoolers’ names on hundreds of compostable plastic spoons. There is not a better group we could
          have delegated all our USSG tasks to.
          Starting with the first time we will be voting—in each diploma, there’s a voter registration form which can be sent or delivered to your local Board of Elections Office! Please go vote!—the 2022–2023 school year had a lot of firsts. It was the first year almost entirely maskless and it was the first time since our freshman year that we saw so many USSG traditions return. In 2019, we saw our first Upper School talent show, and this year, we ran the first one since then. We also ran the first and hopefully not last BASH along with the first Block Party in most current high schoolers’ memories. We hope that the tradition is carried long into the future.
          We’ve left our mark and made memories in every corner of 610, from the stage on B-Deck to the PE kickball games on 10. We love you all and are going to miss you.
          Thank you.
           
     
     
    LAST DAY FALL 2023 10
        Above: Vivienne Jones and Grace Schuur.
          
              
              
            
            Class XII Speakers
          by Anna Steel and Sarah Torres
          
           
    There are many ways to describe the Class of 2023. In fact, it may be difficult to settle on just one idea, thought or label.
          We’ve been called a lot of things over the years, but apathetic is definitely not one. We’re trailblazers, pioneers, the first grade in living memory to be banned from Red & White games!
          Now that we have established this one truth, we can articulate possibly the most fitting idea, thought or label to describe our class.
          The Class of 2023 is loud. Too often, we forget the phrase “making noise” can mean to support someone or something in a loud and obvious way, a concept that our grade has never shied away from when it comes to each other.
          We have been the highlight of every town hall, our Mountain Day has the most hype and our administration-encouraged grade rebranding has been the only one in Brearley history. Though we may not have always colored inside the lines, we threw our hearts into whatever we did.
          Our noise also encompasses the endless change enacted and
          accomplishments achieved by members of the class, from the impeccable DEI work fostered by many of our own—including record involvement within affinity groups—to our senior soccer captains leading us to AAIS victory and so much more.
          We are ambitious and unstoppable. Even as 5th graders we were ready to take on each new challenge offered: We managed to stumble through the entire Henriad in one assembly. Quite literally nothing could stop us.
          Throughout our time at Brearley, we have seen the Class of 2023 learn and love. As civil rights activist John Lewis once said, “Never, ever be afraid to make some noise and get in good trouble, necessary trouble.”
          To all the teachers who have given us help and support over the years, thank you for all that you do. And to the world beyond these walls about to receive 63 members of the Brearley Class of 2023, good luck.
          Thank you.
           
     
     
    FALL 2023 11
        Above: Anna Steel and Sarah Torres.
          continued from page 5
          “
          I urge you to greatly expand your comfort zones. Allow your mind to shape a new dimension for you.”
           
    returning to the School on the East River in five years for a reunion. Wordsworth’s speaker reflects on his past experiences as a boy and how this place—nature—was such an eye-opening and inspiring destination.
          In years past, he traveled to this peaceful and tranquil setting freely, but now finds himself visiting as a necessary escape from his busy life as an adult.
          How oft, in spirit, have I turned to thee,
          O sylvan Wye thou wanderer thro’ the woods, How often has my spirit turned to thee!
          He is back to encounter new pleasures, forge new memories and recall past experiences in the hopes that they will last until he can return again. He is much more mature now than when he ran freely through the woods, and doesn’t find himself sadly nostalgic as he overlooks the river below. He has gained so much and taken so much from this place. Nature has helped him self-reflect—and he advises us to learn and reflect from past pleasurable experiences.
          Nature isn’t fickle. It is consistent. It never betrays. And it possesses the power to lead you from one joy to the next.
          Wordsworth continues:
          Knowing that Nature never did betray
          The heart that loved her; ’tis her privilege,
          Through all the years of this our life, to lead
          From joy to joy: for she can so inform
          The mind that is within us
          Wordsworth strongly believes that this place—Nature—has such a powerful and nurturing impact on those who experience it.
          I hope you, too, believe that this place—Brearley—has had the same effect on you.
          May your life journey lead you far and wide, may you revel in its successes and lean into disappointments, and may it lead you to deepen your understanding of yourself and your power to contribute to the greater good. And may it lead you back to Brearley.
           
     
     
     
    LAST DAY FALL 2023 12
         
     
     
     
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 13
        
              
              
            
            SINCERE THANKS to Our Retiring Trustees
           
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 14 RETIRING TRUSTEES
        Clockwise from top left: Amina Elderfield ‘94, Rebecca Haile, Dusty Philip and Cory Nangle with her daughter.
          As Brearley embarks on highly anticipated, innovative projects and continues to develop bold and exciting initiatives, we gratefully acknowledge the members of the Board of Trustees who retired in June 2023 after providing many years of remarkable leadership. During their years of service, these board members faced numerous opportunities and challenges. This pivotal period of time was marked by the redrafting of the School Mission Statement and revision of our Strategic Vision; the construction of the 590 schoolhouse and the first transformational 610 project (our stunning 10th floor Middle and Upper School library); the introduction of formal departmental and divisional review; the launching of sexuality health education for K–XII; an enhanced institutional commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion and antiracism; and the management of the School’s fiscal and physical health through a global pandemic.
          We are deeply beholden to the following trustees for their guidance, expertise and unwavering dedication to Brearley.
          Amina Elderfield ‘94
          Trustee, 2020–2023
          President of the Alumnae Association, 2020–2023
          Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee Trusteeship Committee
          Rebecca Haile
          Trustee, 2017–2023
          Audit Committee
          Budget and Finance Committee
          Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee, Co-Chair, 2020–2023 Executive Committee, 2020–2023
          Cory Nangle
          Trustee, 2022–2023
          President of the Parents’ Association, 2022–2023 Building Committee
          Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee
          Dusty Philip Trustee, 2014–2023
          Trusteeship Committee
          Budget and Finance Committee
          Development Committee, Co-Chair, 2017–2023
          Executive Committee, 2015–2023, Vice President, 2018–2019, Senior Vice President 2019–2023
          BREARLEY’S STATEMENT OF BELIEFS
          MISSION
          The Brearley School challenges girls of adventurous intellect and diverse backgrounds to think critically and creatively, and to act with courage and integrity.
          The School fosters a love of learning, excellence in the liberal arts, and engagement in a lively and inclusive community. Guided by dedicated faculty and staff, students learn to uplift one another as they grapple with complex ideas and develop a strong sense of self. We value empathy, originality, and depth of thought and character.
          The Brearley community cultivates the joy of lasting friendships, the confidence to pursue one’s ambitions, and a commitment to the greater good.
          DIVERSITY, EQUITY AND INCLUSION
          The Brearley School believes that diversity of thought, practice and identity are essential elements in preparing students for principled engagement in the world. We believe in the importance of establishing and strengthening the structures and practices necessary to achieve equitable representation and participation in our school. We are committed to putting these beliefs into action and are therefore engaged in continuous study, self-reflection and dialogue in order to improve and adapt as we learn.
          We embrace the opportunities and challenges of learning and working in a diverse environment characterized by respect and consideration for the needs of others. In partnership with faculty, staff, students, families and alumnae, we are endeavoring to instill and sustain shared values that promote a welcoming, inclusive and affirming community.
          ANTIRACISM
          The Brearley School condemns racism in the strongest possible terms and is committed to building an antiracist community. This work requires active introspection, self-awareness and the determination to make conscious and consistently equitable choices on a daily basis. We expect our faculty, staff, students, parents and trustees to pursue meaningful change through deliberate and measurable actions. These actions include participating in antiracist training and identifying and eliminating policies, practices and beliefs that uphold racial inequality in our community.
          FALL 2023 15
        
              
              
            
            WELCOME to Our Incoming Trustees
           
     
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 16 NEW MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
        Clockwise from top left: Alexander Brodsky, Ning Jin and family, Katrina McCall, Terri Seligman ’78 and family and Megan Lui ’10
          Alexander Brodsky serves as a principal of the Brodsky Organization, a third-generation real estate development company. The Brodsky Organization is one of New York City’s leading developers, builders and property managers of luxury residential and mixed-use real estate. Alex focuses on the leasing of the organization’s commercial spaces, as well as the marketing and leasing of their residential units. A graduate of New York University, Alex serves on the board of Kids of NYU Langone and the St. Bartholomew’s Conservancy. He is married to Kate Rheinstein Brodsky. Their three daughters—Beatriz (X), Frederica (VII), and Delphine (II)—all attend Brearley.
          Ning Jin is the chief investment officer at Viking Global Investors LP where he is responsible for managing its public equity team and a portfolio of investments across sectors. Previously, Ning was Viking’s cochief investment officer and was a portfolio manager in its Hong Kong office. Prior to joining Viking in 2007, Ning worked at the Blackstone Group. Ning and his family returned to New York six years ago after living abroad in Hong Kong for seven years. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania’s Huntsman Program with a BA in international studies and BS in economics, Ning has served as a member of Brearley’s Investment Committee and is a trustee of the Tiger Foundation. Ning and his wife, Jessie, are the proud parents of Abigail (Class II) and 4-year-old Amelia.
          Megan Lui ’10 joined Brearley in Class VI through the Prep for Prep program. During her time at Brearley, she cofounded the Business and Financial Awareness student organization, and served as co-head of the Asian Awareness student organization and Art Club. She graduated from Princeton in 2014 with an AB in art and archaeology, with a focus on the history of art, as well as a certificate in Chinese language and culture. After graduating from Princeton, Megan spent almost a decade on Morgan Stanley’s trading floor as a part of their institutional equities sales team, on the corporate access desk. She is now on a personal break, devoting her time to family, to Brearley and to writing a novel based on six generations of her family’s history as Chinese Americans, starting with the transcontinental railroad. Megan has served on the Brearley Alumnae Board since 2020, and helped to found the Truth and Toil Award Committee during that time. She lives in Manhattan with her husband, Peter, and is the sister of Sybil Lui ‘13.
          Katrina McCall was born and raised in Southern California. She joined the Brearley community in 2016. Katrina and her husband, John, have two daughters, Avery (VII) and Sydney (IV). Katrina has served at Brearley as a library volunteer and class representative for both of her daughters, and currently serves as the president of the Parents’ Association. She graduated from Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Georgia, and then received a JD from New York Law School. Outside of Brearley, she handles extensive pro bono work helping children with immigration issues and senior citizens with Medicare and other health-related matters. She also enjoys volunteering for running-related organizations including Back on My Feet and New York Road Runners.
          Terri Seligman ’78 was a member of the Alumnae Board from 2012 to 2020, and served as president, and as a member of the Board of Trustees, from 2014 to 2020. After Brearley, Terri attended Wesleyan University, double majoring in music and American studies, and then New York University School of Law. In her professional life, she is a partner at the law firm Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz and co-chair of its Advertising, Marketing & PR Group. She is the mother of Sophie Hagen ’06, Brooklyn Hagen and Max Hagen ’19 and is married to novelist George Hagen. In her spare time, Terri is a member of two AfroBrazilian percussion ensembles, Batalá New York and Mambembé, and performs regularly throughout the New York area.
          FALL 2023 17
        Young alums from classes 2009 to 2020 gathered on a warm September night for the annual Lobster Rolls and Rosé, presented by the Young Alumnae Committee of the Alumnae Association. At the event, co-chaired by Chelsea Douglas ’13, Mina Mahmood ’15 and Amrita Ramamurthy ’15, alums reconnected and reminisced while enjoying a tour of the new 10th floor library and the sunset overlooking the East River.
           
     
     
     
     
    Submit to the Lois Kahn Wallace ’57 Writer’s Award
          Established in 1999 by the late Lois Kahn Wallace ‘57, this award honors and encourages a Brearley alum at the beginning of her career as a published writer, or the beginning of writing in a new genre. Nominated books must be the first by the author, or the first by the author in its genre. Fiction and nonfiction works are eligible, as are books for young adults. This award is conferred approximately every two years and carries an honorarium. To apply, submit six copies of the work to Lizzy Youngling, Alum Relations Manager, at Brearley, 610 East 83rd Street, New York, NY 10028.
          RECENTLY PUBLISHED BOOKS BY ALUMNAE Please send covers of your new books to classnotes@brearley.org.
           
     
     
     
     Ellen Boneparth ‘62
          Lydia Davis ‘65
          Felicity Sargent Blundon ‘70
          Phebe Lowell Bowditch ‘79
          Marcia (Dunbar-Soule) Dobson ‘59
          EVITA Alongside Head of School Jane Foley Fried, alums and their guests enjoyed Evita in Cambridge, MA. Attendees were treated to postshow talkback with Diane Paulus ’84, artistic director of American Repertory Theater.
    Ellen Boneparth ‘62
          Lydia Davis ‘65
          Felicity Sargent Blundon ‘70
          Phebe Lowell Bowditch ‘79
          Marcia (Dunbar-Soule) Dobson ‘59
          EVITA Alongside Head of School Jane Foley Fried, alums and their guests enjoyed Evita in Cambridge, MA. Attendees were treated to postshow talkback with Diane Paulus ’84, artistic director of American Repertory Theater.
          NEWS AND EVENTS FALL 2023 18
         
    
              
              
            
            WHAT’S ON YOUR DESK?
          PAUL BYRNES SCIENCE TEACHER, ADVISOR
          
          CLASS X
          1. Folding frame: Four pictures of the advanced physics class of 2013–2014.
          2. Mug from Kennedy Space Center: “It’s just Rocket Science.”
          3. Tony the Tiger mug: This was given to me by the Class of 2008. 4. Yearbook advisor mug: This was given to me from our yearbook publisher, Jostens.
          5. Beaver cartoon: What I would look like as a beaver, courtesy of the 2022 yearbook staff. 6. Bumper sticker: It says, “Actually, I Am a Rocket Scientist.”
          7. Framed photo on my bulletin board: A picture of me and my family on a beach vacation in North Carolina. 8. My schedule: Can’t be late! 9. Blue card: Featuring me in my car and given to me by my advisees last year.
          QUEERLY BREARLEY INTERSCHOOL MIXER
          Together with LGBTQIA+ Spence, Chapin and Nightingale alums, Queerly Brearley celebrated Pride Month in June with cocktails and hors d’oeuvres at Milady’s downtown.
           
     
     
    Megan Lui ’10
          New Alumnae Association President
           
    Brearley is pleased to announce Megan Lui ’10 as president of the Brearley Alumnae Association. An Alumnae Board member since 2020, Megan has served as secretary and vice president and helped to establish the Truth and Toil Award, honoring a living alum for her dedicated service to the Brearley community.
          Megan joined Brearley in Class VI through the Prep for Prep program, as a part of Contingent XXV, and commuted every day from South Brooklyn to 610. During her time at Brearley, she cofounded the Business and Financial Awareness student organization and served as co-head of the Asian Awareness student organization and Art Club. She graduated from Princeton in 2014 with an AB in art and archaeology, with a focus on the history of art, as well as a certificate in Chinese language and culture. After graduating from Princeton, Megan spent almost a decade on Morgan Stanley’s trading floor as a part of their institutional equities sales team on the corporate access desk. In this role, she advised technology/media/telecom C-Suite and investor relations teams on investor targeting, shareholder analysis and marketing strategy. She is now on a personal break, devoting her time to her family, Brearley and writing a novel, the origins of which began in the history and literature classrooms at Brearley. The novel is planned to be a magical realism take on six generations of her family’s history as Chinese Americans, spanning from the building of the transcontinental railroad to the present day. Megan has served on the Brearley Alumnae Board since 2020, first as secretary, next as vice president and now as president. She lives in Manhattan with her husband, Peter, and is the sister of Sybil Lui ’13.
           
     
     
    Catherine Henry ‘84
        Anthony ‘89
        ‘96
        Kate
        LaKisha Maxey ‘91 Hadley Freeman
        Abby Seiff ‘02
        1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
        FALL 2023 19
        Megan Lui ’10
          check out: faculty and staff summer reads
           
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     Jennifer Barrtoli
          Kate Bullock
          Amy Chow
          Luigi Cicala
          Jane Fried
          Sarah Hervieux
          Jenna Horowitz
          Mariel Isaacson
          Gail Marcus
          Erin Olsen
          Haley Swanson
          Gabi Tuboly
          Andy Vernon-Jones
          Tom Wright
          Lizzy Youngling
    Jennifer Barrtoli
          Kate Bullock
          Amy Chow
          Luigi Cicala
          Jane Fried
          Sarah Hervieux
          Jenna Horowitz
          Mariel Isaacson
          Gail Marcus
          Erin Olsen
          Haley Swanson
          Gabi Tuboly
          Andy Vernon-Jones
          Tom Wright
          Lizzy Youngling
          NEWS AND EVENTS FALL 2023 20
         
     
     
     
    
              
              
            
            ALUMNAE AWARDS
           
     
    2023 Frances Riker Davis Award Winners
          amanda eaken ’95 and molly rauch ’90
          In 1967, the friends and family of Frances Riker Davis ‘15 established an award in her name to honor the tradition of public service that Frances embodied. It is given annually to a Brearley alum for ongoing, dedicated service to the public good. We are delighted to let you know that Amanda Eaken ’95 and Molly Rauch ’90 were selected as this year’s two recipients of the 2023 Frances Riker Davis Award.
          Amanda’s career has been propelled by a deep, unwavering commitment to fight for environmental progress (thanks, Ms. Seminara!), coupled with her inner New Yorker drive to make American cities thrive by creating equitable, high-quality transit and safe streets for walking and biking. Appointed by Mayor London Breed in 2018, she is Chair of the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency Board of Directors, overseeing policy, strategy and a $1.3 billion budget. She is a Transportation Equity Leader-InResidence at U.C. Berkeley’s Othering and Belonging Institute and co-founder and Director of the $100M Bloomberg American Cities Climate Challenge—an innovative climate accelerator that supported 25 cities in exceeding the Paris Climate Agreement targets. As director of transportation at the Natural Resources Defense Council, Amanda
          managed a team that transformed transportation by shifting funds from highways to transit and other sustainable, equitable uses. She was named a Top 100 Influencer by the Sacramento Bee, a 40 Under 40 Leader by the San Francisco Business Times, and received the President’s Award for Sustainability Leadership from the Southern California Association of Governments.
          Starting in 2010, Molly Rauch ‘90 was involved with Moms Clean Air Force (MCAF), serving until 2022 as public health policy director. MCAF is a grassroots advocacy group affiliated with the Environmental Defense Fund, with local chapters in 15 states and over one million members. MCAF works in collaboration with other climate change and clean air groups to inform the public about the health impacts of pollution and how to fight for clean air. During her 12 years with MCAF, Molly helped shape the growth of the program, building relationships, alliances and partnerships with public health organizations to develop and implement strategies to influence regulatory and policy decisions.
          Molly helped create an evolving platform for scientifically-based activism, addressing environmental pollution and climate change, while Amanda has worked to tackle climate change through transforming transportation. In addition, each has shown remarkable creativity and dedication in addressing climate change and environmental pollution. Molly’s work focused on federal environmental policy, while Amanda’s efforts target the local and regional levels.
          In January 2024, Molly and Amanda will be honored at the annual Middle and Upper School Frances Riker Davis Award Assembly.
          2023 Truth and Toil Award Winner
          wilhelmina martin eaken ’64
           
    Created in 2022, the Truth and Toil Award annually honors a living alum for her dedicated service to the Brearley community and for strengthening connections across class years to inspire future generations of students. We’re delighted to announce Wilhelmina Martin Eaken ’64 as the recipient of the 2023 Truth and Toil Award.
          Mina, who is also a past parent, worked as Brearley’s alumnae director from 1991 to 2014. During her tenure, Mina helped establish various committees of the Alumnae Association, expanded the reunion program into a weekend of activities for the community, helped further develop alum online communications and created programs that offered networking and mentoring opportunities.
          Mina is a longstanding class agent, has served as reunion co-chair three times since she retired and is a member of the Lois Kahn Wallace Award Committee. Mina’s impressive knowledge of all alums makes her an invaluable member of the Brearley community.
          “Alums who make the community all the more close and strong with their time, energy, ideas and spirit, alums who inspire others in the community to do the same—these are the alums whom we seek to honor and thank every year going forward with this new award,” Megan Lui ’10, co-chair of the Truth and Toil Award Committee and incoming Alumnae Association president explains. “As a culture carrier, a leader who spearheaded the formation of many of our alum committees and as an alum who has been involved in the Brearley community in various capacities throughout the years, Mina is the true embodiment of the spirit of this award.”
          This autumn, Brearley will host a reception in Mina’s honor.
          Molly Rauch ’90.
          Amanda Eaken ’95.
          Wilhelmina Martin Eaken ’64
          FALL 2023 21
         
     
     
     
     
    Brearley at the White House
          LOGAN HENNES RECOGNIZED BY JILL BIDEN
          
          This past October, Logan Hennes ’25 was honored at the White House as part of the International Day of the Girl celebration called “Girls Leading Change.” The event, led by First Lady Jill Biden, honored 15 girls selected by the White House Gender Policy Council who have had a major impact on their communities. Logan was cited for her work with the American Jewish Committee in combating anti-Semitism.
          In her remarks, Dr. Biden said that girls like Logan “are protecting
          and preserving the earth, writing and sharing stories that change minds, and turning their pain into purpose. Together, they represent the potential of young people across the country, and it is my hope that others can learn from the power of their innovation, strength and hope.”
          Logan inspires us all to be the change we wish to see in our world— another example of Brearley’s commitment to the greater good. Please join us in congratulating her.
          NEWS AND EVENTS FALL 2023 22
         
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    
              
              
            
            Happy Anniversary
          THE BULLETIN
          Connecting people for 100 years
          “We have issued this first number in exactly three weeks time and against odds, such as disorganization, grippe, and complete ignorance of editorial ways. So be tolerant of our mistakes, that we may have the courage to continue.”
          –BULLETIN VOL. I, NO. 1, 1923
           
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 23
        6 10 library :
          
              
              
            
            THE NEXT CHAPTER
          BY HALEY SWANSON
          
           
     
    610 LIBRARY: THE NEXT CHAPTER FALL 2023 24
         
    “I am going to live here,”
          said one Middle School student brimming with excitement and speaking like a true Brearley girl upon seeing the new 10th floor library for the first time.
          Her enthusiasm was shared by everyone when the School opened its new environmentally cutting-edge, spacious and accessible Middle and Upper School library in the 610 building. Jim Mulkin, Associate Head of School for Academic Life, says, “It’s a breathtaking space. And most importantly, it’s always filled with students.” Head of School Jane Foley Fried agrees. “To see the library in full use at 7:30 pm with students sharing cozy window seats, immersed in their books, conjugating verbs in a seminar room or studying side-by-side at one of the long reading tables, signals to me that this new space is quickly becoming the heart of the School.”
          As every Brearley student past and present knows, the library has always been a special place. The physical collection boasts 24,000 volumes, with 3,300 e-books and audio books and 17,500 checkouts a year. Quite simply, the library is our space for learning in community with fellow students and faculty, a place where adventurous intellect is sparked and nurtured. Reading and research is the foundation for leading balanced, joyful and intentional lives inside the classroom and beyond; it’s a foundation for an education that lasts a lifetime. Each Brearley girl is called to principled engagement in their world and the library is where this conversation first begins.
          The new space, made possible by generous leadership donations from our community, opens to a sweeping panorama of the East River and Queens. As the 10th floor was formerly a gym, the windows needed to be lowered to fully capture the view beyond; director of construction and facilities Doris Coleman said it best: “It’s pretty dramatic.” Their infrastructure was updated, too, ensuring better weather-proofed space. In fact, every piece of the new library is made of locally sourced materials. No fossil fuels are used in cooling or heating; it’s all electric, showing our students by example to always seek out the environmental greater good.
          At the base of the soaring bank of windows are Brearley’s signature window seats where students can curl up with a good book year-round. These cozy seats have always been a focal point of Brearley libraries throughout the decades and so were preserved as a nod to our history in the midst of our modernization. As one Class VI student said in 1944, “I like the library because it is cheerful, quiet and homelike.” It remains that way today.
          FALL 2023 25
         
    FALL 2023 26 610 LIBRARY: THE NEXT CHAPTER
         
    FALL 2023 27
        
              
              
            
            “This new space is quickly becoming the heart of the School.”
          In another nod to our past, the final books were brought up from the old to new library by the Brearley Book Brigade. The brigade has been a fixture in our recent history each time a new library opens, as was the case for the Lower School library in 2019 and the 610 library’s many relocations. This time, students from Classes V and XII—the “bookends” of Middle and Upper School—shuttled volumes, one by one, up the stairs to their renovated home.
          The new library features more than one display of our living history. Each bookshelf is decorated with archival projects from students—dating all the way back to the early 20th century—depicting Brearley’s class mascots. From poems to drawings to stuffed animals, these glass cases atop each shelf tell the story of the School and the generations of students who’ve grown up within its walls.
          “When I showed the blueprints to students last year, their excitement was palpable,” says head librarian Erin Olsen. “They’d outgrown the space downstairs. Some students ended up sitting on the floor because there just wasn’t another chair.” Now, there’s more than enough room for everyone, with numerous long desks and smaller, two-person tables for all styles of study, be it solo or group projects.
          Another goal for Ms. Olsen was to increase the library’s browsability. And so, half of the bookshelves are stocked with fiction and literature from throughout the ages, while the other half houses nonfiction written by an array of authors on countless topics of interest. This makes the stacks more accessible for students who aren’t working on a research paper but instead rooting out their next favorite novel.
           
     
    610 LIBRARY: THE NEXT CHAPTER FALL 2023 28
        Facing page, top: 1984 Book Brigade where 12,617 volumes were moved from the Higginson Library on the 6th floor to the expanded library on the 1st floor. Middle: The Lower School Library Book Brigade in 2019 moving books from 610 Lower School library to the new library in 590. Bottom: This year’s Book Brigade which traveled all the way to the 10th floor.
           
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 29
         
     
     
     
    610 LIBRARY: THE NEXT CHAPTER FALL 2023 30
         
     
     
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    610 LIBRARY: THE NEXT CHAPTER FALL 2023 32
         
     
    The library also features group learning spaces with two classrooms at the back where the archives are kept. “These archives will foster the curious Brearley spirit,” says school archivist Zoey Ha. “Students can see how much writing has changed throughout the years.”
          The collection is split into two categories: special and general collections. School founder Samuel Brearley’s old textbooks are currently housed in the latter collection awaiting a careful rebinding process. Amongst the worn, antique covers are philosophical classics by Plato, Virgil and Cicero. The general collection will be housed in the library’s smaller classroom and available for viewing by appointment.
          The library’s special archival collection features volumes from the early 20th century as well as first editions and signed books like the priceless copy of In the Shadow of Man featuring Jane Goodall’s signature scrawled on an opening page. This collection is also viewable by appointment in the library’s larger classroom.
          Mary Herr, Brearley’s librarian in the 1920s, noted the School’s collection as groundbreaking for a time when “most schools still clung to the textbook method of teaching.” The library’s inaugural 5,000 volumes widened this narrow door of learning for countless girls—as it still does today. This moment in history finds libraries politicized and challenged. In fact, many schools are choosing to reduce their collections instead of expanding them. Brearley continues to foster an open space for learning that prioritizes curiosity and intellectual bravery over fear.
          “The library has always been an integral part of the life of the building and the community,” says Ms. Olsen. “It’s used by everyone.”
          Ms. Olsen hopes this welcoming new space will be a source of comfort when students feel the stress of an exam or project. In this age of rapid-fire, often inaccurate information online and on social media platforms, she believes it’s more important than ever to value our school’s library and the wealth of knowledge it holds. “It’s a safe place to ask questions,” Ms. Olsen says. “Students know that we’re going to guide them to reliable sources.” In our times, this could not be more valuable. Our new 610 library is the perfect embodiment of truth found through toil.
          FALL 2023 33
        
              
              
            
            RED VS.
           
     
    ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO, the infamous Red and White rivalry began. The then head of the Gym Department, Miss Carling, felt establishing schoolwide teams would encourage more interclass cohesion. Clearly a woman ahead of her time, she set her sights firmly on creating the now-familiar, tight-knit Brearley community. The first Field Day was attended by students and alumnae alike and held at 102nd Street and Fifth Avenue.
          Though Miss Carling affectionately deemed the rivalry a “good-natured war of the roses,” some students found the competitions to be “ferocious” and the process of picking teams “not nice.” One alumna wrote in the 1945 Bulletin: “Not everyone is or wants to be an athlete.”
          By the late 1960s, interest in the competition waned. Helen Peyonner ‘72, who was head of the Athletic Association her senior year, felt the politics and culture of her time—namely the antiwar movement and political and social turmoil—caused this downturn in participation. Nonetheless, Red vs. White persisted, many students continuing to wear color-coded belts over their PE uniforms.
           
     
    RED VS. WHITE 100TH ANNIVERSARY FALL 2023 34
        
              
              
            
            WHITE
          And so, by the 1980s, the decades-long rivalry had been revived—so much, that it was the principal competition at Brearley, even outweighing contests against other schools’ sports teams.
          Today, Red and White are still taken extremely seriously. Faces are painted and voices made hoarse from cheering. Once a student is assigned a color in the fall of Class V, she fiercely defends that color until graduation day. In fact, teams are kept within families to avoid friction at home.
          Games between the two are held once a month in PE class before the yearlong competition culminates on Field Day each spring. Middle and Upper Schools compete in a series of games including kickball, volleyball and handball, along with the now infamous grade-by-grade tug-of-war competition. Every student—from budding scientists to avid readers and varsity athletes—brings her A game. Then, as tradition goes, the final team score is awarded at the last athletics assembly of the year.
           
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 35
         
    2022–2023 GIVING REVIEW
        2022–2023 Giving Review THANK YOU
         
    Dear Alumnae,
          Parents, Grandparents, Faculty, Staff and Friends,
          We are deeply grateful to each of you for the many ways you fulfill the promise of a Brearley education for our students. In our newly updated Strategic Vision, Stepping Through the Open Door, we focus on what sits at the very heart of our unique, rigorous and joyful school—our people.
          Brearley has a proud tradition of giving: Our students give themselves wholeheartedly to their studies, to each other and to the community; our alumnae give immense time and energy to strengthen the School for the students who come next; our talented faculty and staff provide guidance and intellectual fuel to fire the curiosity of their students; our parents and grandparents offer love and enthusiasm for their family’s unique Brearley journey; and every person who makes a philanthropic gift, of any size, makes an impact and a meaningful difference.
          In the 2022–2023 academic year, your combined contributions helped us to hit our Annual Fund goals. We raised a record-breaking amount for a Class XII Fund dedicated to faculty and staff appreciation and exceeded our goals at a jubilant 1980s-themed Parents’ Association Benefit. Generous gifts also made the fully funded completion of our beautiful new Middle and Upper School library possible.
          Thank you for your generosity and enthusiastic support of Brearley.
          Yours in Truth and Toil,
           MODUPE AKINOLA ‘92 PRESIDENT, BOARD OF TRUSTEES
    MODUPE AKINOLA ‘92 PRESIDENT, BOARD OF TRUSTEES
          
           JANE FOLEY FRIED HEAD OF SCHOOL
    JANE FOLEY FRIED HEAD OF SCHOOL
          
          FALL 2023 37
        
              
              
            
            TOTAL GIFTS TO Brearley
          July 1, 2022–June 30, 2023
          GIFTS BY CONSTITUENCY
          Alumnae $2,140,000
          Alumnae Parents $560,000
          Parents $5,150,000
          Parents of Alumnae $1,000,000 Grandparents, Friends and Faculty $1,220,000
          TOTAL $10,070,000
          GIFTS BY PURPOSE
          Annual Giving $3,870,000
          Parents’ Association Benefit $370,000
          Facilities Projects $4,700,000
          Endowment and Other $1,130,000
          TOTAL $10,070,000
          giving at brearley
          Brearley is pleased to acknowledge the impact of your generous gifts. We are proud to celebrate the participation of our many donors and are grateful for your contributions at all levels. Please contact Development & Alumnae Relations with questions or preferences for future listings.
          If you would like more information about participating in philanthropy at the School, please contact:
          Phoebe Geer ‘97
          Director of Advancement pgeer@brearley.org (212) 570-8609
          Amina Holman
          Annual Fund Director aholman@brearley.org (212) 570-8610
          Patricia (P.J.) Kolman
          Major Gifts Officer pkolman@brearley.org (212) 570-8626
          FALL 2023 38
        2022–2023 GIVING REVIEW
        
              
              
            
            Library Plaque Winners
          THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE 2022–2023 ANNUAL FUND
          THE SPRING 2023 LIBRARY PLAQUE CHALLENGE GAVE ALUMNAE IN THE CLASSES OF 1950 TO 2018 A ONE-TIME OPPORTUNITY TO BE RECOGNIZED WITH A SMALL PLAQUE IN THE NEWLY RENOVATED 610 MIDDLE AND UPPER SCHOOL LIBRARY. TO QUALIFY, THESE CLASSES INCREASED THE AVERAGE GIVING FROM THE PREVIOUS FIVE YEARS BY AN ADDITIONAL 25 PERCENT BEFORE THE END OF THE FISCAL YEAR. WE THANK EVERYONE WHO WENT ABOVE AND BEYOND WITH THEIR SUPPORT OF BREARLEY. CONGRATULATIONS!
          1952 1961 1970 1963 1971 1973 1986 1981 1956 1958 1994 2000 2005 2006 2008 2012 2002 2004 2017 1996 1998 1999 2003 2007 FALL 2023 39
        Benefit Committee
          The 2023 Brearley Parents’ Association
          Benefit brought together over 650 members of the community for a Totally ’80s evening of music, dancing, throwback fashion and friendship at the Cooper Hewitt. We are sincerely grateful to the Benefit Committee for bringing this fantastic event to life, which raised $370,000 for Brearley faculty and staff support.
          GIVING REVIEW: BENEFIT COMMITTEE FALL 2023 40
        CO-CHAIRS
          Lindsay and Charlie Higgins
          Kamila and Munib Islam
          UNDERWRITING CO-CHAIRS
          Heather and JP Benveniste
          Haley Swindal and Jack Tantleff
          COMMITTEE
          Rebecca Birch ‘94 and Mark Pankoff
          Michel Botbol and Arthur Krystofiak
          Katie Brennan ‘92 and Jim Brennan
          Rebecca Carter and Demetris Giannoulias
          Kumar and Kavita Dharmarajan
          Erica Frontiero and David O’Leary
          Angeline Huang and Mark Higgins
          Sayuri Kaczynski ‘96 and Jeff Kaczynski
          Bo Young and Jeffrey Lee
          Alana and Steven Levine
          Emily McLellan ‘94 and Scott McLellan
          Sage Mehta ‘03 and Michael Robinson
          Peggy and Rajesh Midha
          Elizabeth Morgan and Paul Allan
          Abigail Young Moses ‘88 and Jonathan Moses
          Nancy Park and Matthew Turner
          Purva Patel-Tsai and Andrew Tsai
          Jyoti Patil and Anand Joshi
          Polly Klyce Pennoyer and Robert Pennoyer
          Fernanda and Edgar Piedra
          ShinHyung and Yong-Kyoo Rim
          Menna and Eli Samaha
          Lisa Schwartz and Ben Zeskind
          Teena Shetty and Mihir Desai
          Bonnie and Mitchell Spiegel
          Begum and William Taft
          Erica and Jonathan Teller
          Ellen and Bill Turchyn
          Tina and Philip Vasan
          Naomi Waletzky and Rowan Hajaj
          Patricia Walker and Waldo Glasman
           
     
     
     
     
    THANK YOU TO THE 2022–2023 BOARD OF TRUSTEES
          Modupe Akinola ’92, President
          Dusty Philip, Senior Vice President
          Susan Berresford ’61, Vice President
          Munib Islam, Vice President
          Sue Meng ’99, Secretary
          Gideon Berger, Treasurer
          Tara Abrahams
          Ranika Cohen
          Daphné Crespo-Helm
          Amina Elderfield ’94
          Thomas Farrell
          Jane Foley Fried
          Martha Haakmat
          Rebecca Haile
          John McGinn
          Cory Nangle
          Margo Nederlander
          Sidaya Moore Sherwood ’90
          Bill Shutzer
          Nekesa Straker ‘97
          Lita Tandon ’06
          Olivia Wassenaar ’97
          Lauren Wasson
          Alan Yan
          Trustees Emeriti
          Christine Frankenhoff Alfaro ’91
          Georges F. de Ménil
          Evelyn Janover Halpert ’52
          David T. Hamamoto
          Stephanie J. Hull
          Ellen Jewett ’77
          Alan Jones
          Edward F. Rover *
          John F. Savarese
          Priscilla M. Winn Barlow
          Faculty Representative
          Ann Saunders
          *Deceased FALL 2023 41
        Fundraising Volunteers
          Nearly 200 parent and alumnae volunteers lend their expertise, time and considerable efforts to advance projects across the School each year. We are proud to recognize them for their unflagging loyalty and commitment to sustaining Brearley’s educational mission and values.
          GIVING REVIEW: FUNDRAISING VOLUNTEERS FALL 2023 42
        Alumnae
          LEADERSHIP GIFTS COMMITTEE
          CO-CHAIRS
          Emily McLellan ’94
          Sage Mehta ’06
          Caroline Adams ’94
          Leyla Bader ’88
          Rebecca Birch ’94
          Rebecca Bloom ’99
          Mika Bouvard ’93
          Katie Brennan ’92
          Emily Rover Grace ’95
          Hannah Gross ’09
          Meghan Magyar ’97
          Emily Marzulli Rummel ’06
          Lita Tandon ’06
          Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi ’96
          Margaret Warden ’93
          Sarah Washkowitz ’00
          Olivia Wassenaar ’97
          ALUMNAE CLASS AGENTS
          CO-CHAIRS
          Emily Marzulli Rummel ’06
          Katie Brennan ’92
          1943
          Frances Fisher*
          1944
          Connie Tate
          1950
          Maisie Adamson
          Shelah Scott
          1953
          Ann Leventhal
          1956
          Myra Lipman
          1958
          Wendy Ecker
          Sally Stopford
          1959
          Joan Hartwell
          1960
          Annie-May de Bresson
          Martha Mendelsohn
          1961
          Louise Bozorth
          Ginny Keim
          Wendy Kleinbaum
          Carey Millard
          Marcella Wainwright
          1962
          Peregrine Whittlesey
          1963
          Martha Severens
          1964
          Wilhelmina Eaken
          1966
          Anne Mittendorf
          Laura Page
          1968
          Elena Droutzkoy Corso
          1969
          Barbara Hauge
          1970
          Helen Thurston
          1971
          Lindsey Folsom
          1972
          Ann Koppen
          Helen Pennoyer
          1976
          Kate Marshall
          1977
          Elizabeth Schiff
          1982
          Meyung Joh-Carnella
          Jaqueline Worth
          1986
          Emily Kirsch
          1988
          Karen Young
          1989
          Darleen Jobson-Larkin
          1991
          Amanda Kahn-Kirby
          Jocelyn Strauber
          1992
          Katie Brennan
          Lisa Falkson
          1993
          Mika Bouvard
          Margaret Warden
          1994
          Caroline Adams
          Caroline Sincerbeaux King
          1995
          Emily Grace
          Andrea Kassar
          Ann Whitman
          1996
          Annabel Noth
          Elizabeth Oelsner
          1997
          Annie Bystryn
          Phoebe Geer
          Meghan Magyar
          1999
          Courtney Andrialis
          Rebecca Bloom
          Amy Sharpe-Matthew
          2000
          Julia Foster
          Melissa Miness
          Dena Twain Sims
          2001
          Kimberly Stolz
          2002
          Elizabeth van Buren
          2003
          Amber Lam
          2004
          Natalie Moutoussis
          2005
          Vana Koutsomitis
          2006
          Emily Barnet
          Molly Battles
          Lizzie Ellis
          Emily Marzulli Rummel
          Lita Tandon
          *Deceased FALL 2023 43
        GIVING
          2007
          Thea Hogarth
          Margaret White
          2008
          Nell Ethridge
          Stephanie Sharp
          2009
          Hannah Gross
          2010
          Maite Cubilette
          2011
          Nicole Lam
          2012
          Rebecca McSween
          Annalise Perricone
          2013
          Colette Macari
          2014
          Rachel Goldstein
          Katharine Jessiman-Ketcham
          Victoria Kingham
          2015
          Suzhen Jiang
          Katherine Mann
          Amelia Sawyers
          Dani Seda
          2016
          Allegra DeLandri
          Lauren Goldstein
          Elizabeth Mann
          2017
          Allegra Colman
          2018
          Calista Washburn
          2019
          Mia Colman
          Sarah Mann
          Lauren Scheller
          Parents
          PARENT CLASS AGENTS
          CO-CHAIRS
          Kerry Kourepenos
          Whitney Mogavero
          KINDERGARTEN
          Rebecca Bloom ‘99
          David Coles
          Martha Driscoll
          Patricia Raciti
          Mike Yin
          CLASS I
          Shantanu Agrawal
          Jessie Ding
          Mandë Holford
          Elise Kang
          Fay Sardjono
          CLASS II
          Edwine Joseph
          Sarah Kessler
          Katie Lentz
          Brian Shaw
          CLASS III
          Jenny Gillette
          Emily Rover Grace ‘95
          Natalie Sheppard
          CLASS IV
          Matt Hemberger
          Jennifer Rogers
          Lauren Wilkins
          CLASS V
          Caroline Adams Caputo ‘94
          Ashima Garg
          Tina Klaric
          Whitney Mogavero
          Margo Nederlander
          CLASS VI
          Mika Bouvard ‘93
          Tina Bristol
          Kate Lauprete
          Olivia Wassenaar ‘97
          CLASS VII
          Scott Clemons
          Whitney Mogavero
          Lila Preston
          Rachel Russell
          CLASS VIII
          Jennifer Bab
          Ranika Cohen
          CLASS IX
          Ozzie Allen
          Helen Cantwell
          Tao Cheng
          Richard Do
          CLASS X
          Lizzy Kuhlenkamp
          Jennifer Rogers
          CLASS XI
          Kerry Kourepenos
          Stuart Murray
          Edward Nangle
          Melissa Raso
          Class XII Gift
          STUDENT CO-CHAIRS
          Aliza Fergang
          Hannah Marx
          Sey Stein
          Sarah Torres
          PARENT CO-CHAIRS
          Abigail Young Moses ‘88 and Jonathan Moses
          Tina and Philip Vasan
          COMMITTEE
          Cynthia Brauer and Stacy Dick
          Suzanne and Benjamin Casasnovas
          Florelle Diver
          Bridget Foley and J.D. Weinberg
          Wandy and William Hoh
          Erin and Samir Hussein
          Rena Krasnow and Robert Marx
          Line Lillevik and James Waterston
          Sorin and Imran Siddiqui
          Sarah and George Steel REVIEW: FUNDRAISING VOLUNTEERS FALL 2023 44
         
    
              
              
            
            The Class of 2023 Teacher Appreciation Fund
          The Class of 2023 Teacher Appreciation Fund was established by the members and families of last year’s senior class to honor Brearley’s beloved faculty and staff. The Class of 2023 had 100 percent student support for their fund, and exceeded the all-time fundraising record for a Class XII fund.
          A portion of dollars raised will be set aside to underwrite improvements to the 7th floor Faculty and Staff Lounge, to be completed as part of the phased 610 schoolhouse renovations. The remaining endowed fund augments Brearley’s faculty sabbatical program, a unique benefit that helps attract and retain our talented faculty members and exemplifies Brearley’s belief in the impact of lifelong learning.
          Thank you to every community member who helped establish this meaningful fund.
          FALL 2023 45
        Memorial and Honorary Gifts
          Donors to Brearley have a long tradition of thoughtfully recognizing others in the community through their gifts. We thank those who made memorial and honorary gifts this year and are pleased to recognize those they wish to honor through their philanthropy.
          FALL 2022 46 GIVING REVIEW: MEMORIAL AND HONORARY GIFTS
        
              
              
            
            Gifts in Memory Of
          LAURIE SCHNEIDER ADAMS ’59
          Caroline Adams Caputo ’94 and Giorgio Caputo
          John Adams
          EDITH ARNDT
          Richard Arndt
          MARGARET ARNOLD ’82
          Victoria Davidson ’84
          NINA KIVELSON AUERBACH ’52
          Julia Bernstein ’12
          Jo Ellen Finkel and Donald Bernstein
          SONIA GRACE AUSTRIAN ’50
          Sarah Austrian ’77
          JANE NORTHROP BANCROFT ’31
          Elizabeth Bancroft ’84
          IRENE NELSON BAREAU ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          LINDA BARRETT ’49
          Kate Barrett ’53
          MARY ELLIN BERLIN BARRETT ’44
          Elizabeth Barrett Matson ’71
          BERYL BENACERRAF-LIBBY ’67
          Peter Libby
          DEIRDRE BERGSON
          Michelle Wonsley ’97
          ROBERT BERNE
          Elizabeth Berne DeGear ’86
          PAULA BIRAN
          Alisa Biran Ben-Ami ’89
          Rebecca Bloom ’99 and Marvin Li
          Diane Deschamps Hockstader ’53
          Gail Marcus
          Linda and Scott Rafferty
          Ella Romero ’06
          Sharon Gates Stearns ’63
          LINDA BOLDT ’64
          Gail Marcus
          Ann Whitman ’95
          SUSAN BORBAY
          Heyden White Rostow ’67
          ELIZABETH MOSS BRADLEY ’69
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          BARBARA BAERWALD BRONFMAN ’56
          Sara Baerwald ’65
          JOY BROOKS ’81
          Laura Boyer ’81
          Catherine Foster-Anderson ’81
          CAROLINE BROWN
          Melinda Carley ’90
          SARA LINNIE SLOCUM BROWNELL ’63
          Antonia Bryan ’63
          Hope Ewing ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          MOLLY BRYANT ’59
          Catherine Detmar Nicholls ’59
          EDITH ISELIN BYRON ’55
          Ariel Hamill Herrmann ’55
          EDNA CARLING
          Sylvia Kalitinsky Brewda ’63
          RUTH CARPENTER
          Rebecca Dolinsky ’80
          Sophie Glazer ’70
          Cindy Spiegel ’78
          Elizabeth Levy Ward ’74
          LAURENCE CASPER
          Hillary Casper ’98
          CHRISTINE GIUSIO CHADWICK ’88
          Jeffrey and Alice Keimweiss ’88
          SHAO CHEN
          Ming Hui Chen ’78
          YUNG CHANG CHEN
          Ming Hui Chen ’78
          LINDA CHILDS-VAN WIJK ’59
          Mary Blum Cossette ’59
          BIRGITTA CLASSON
          Connie and Rolf Classon
          RUBEN COHEN
          Ranika Cohen
          EMILY TAYLOR CRIPPS ’50
          Pamela Taylor Morton ’48
          KENNETH M. CRONIN, JR.
          Jennifer Bartoli
          MARY DE KAY
          Alissa Rubin ’76
          SAMANTHA DEL CAMPO ’88
          Jeffrey and Alice Keimweiss ’88
          BYRON AND ELIZABETH RODGERS DOBELL
          Elizabeth Dobell ’79
          JACK AND HELEN EISNER
          Alexandra Gibson ’04
          NORA ELRINGTON
          Melanie Ellis Starks ’97
          VIRGINIA EPPERSON ’39
          Eileen Epperson ’67
          AMY MAZZOLA FLYNN ’81
          Laura Boyer ’81
          Faith and Peter Coolidge
          Joanna Delson ’81 and David R. Venderbush
          Terence Flynn
          Catherine Foster-Anderson ’81
          PHOEBE HARVEY FRACKMAN ’50
          Alexandra Bell Witten ’74
          MARGARET PARSONS FROST ’56
          Susan Lasersohn Frost ’56
          GIGI FUCHS ’82
          Thomas and Deborah Davis Ascheim ’82
          Lois Falberg and Brian Sinder
          Constance Rapp
          Cordelia Hodges Tilghman ’82
          HELEN GARRISON
          Evelyn Janover Halpert ’52
          Sharon Gates Stearns ’63
          SUSAN GORDON ’60
          Sallie Gordon Sperling ’62
          RACHEL HALL ’87
          Jessica Levenstein ’87
          MARY HAMBLETON ’71
          Priscilla Ryan ’71
          ANN HAMILTON
          Jane Hamilton Dorwart ’68
          FALL 2023 47
        DONNA LANDAU HARDIMAN ’77
          Elizabeth and James Auran
          Augusta Svoronos Lyras ’77
          MARGARET RIKER HARDING
          Linda Sonnenschein Kaufman ’52
          Elizabeth Tomlinson ’87
          MARJORIE BYWATER HARGRAVE ’28
          Audrey Adams Massa ’63
          NORMAN HARRINGTON
          Delphi Harrington
          RUTH KISSIN HELMAN ’69
          Rebecca Blank ’94
          Claudia Brodsky
          Rebecca Brooks ’13
          Lauren Goldenberg ’04
          Victoria Kingham ’14
          Abigail Lash ’88 and Austin Shapard
          Gail Marcus
          Rebecca McSween ’12
          Penelope Sinanoglou ’96
          SUSAN SANDERS HENCK ’70
          Jan Liss ’70
          Elaine Garofallou Rollins ’70
          EDWARD M.W. HINES
          Caroline Hines
          Gregory and Laura Hines Laufer ’97
          PETER AND HARRIET HOLSTEIN
          Victoria Holstein ’87
          HOLLISTER HOUGHTON ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          ROSEMARY JACKSON-SMITH ’65
          Regan O’Connell Roos ’65
          MEGAN JESSIMAN
          Linda and Scott Rafferty
          JEAN HAAS JONES ’55
          Walter Jones
          BLANCHE PERRIS KAHN
          Kimberly Kahn ’94
          FLORENCE MACK KELLY ’53
          Alice Mack Sawyer ’64
          JEAN GOLDSCHMIDT KEMPTON ’63
          Olwyn Maw Morinski ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          RACHEL KOCH SWICA
          Yael Swica and Laurence Sprung
          BONA KOSTKA
          Lydia Davis ’65
          Rebecca Dolinsky ’80
          Jessica Levenstein ’87
          BETTY KRAMER
          Jennifer Collins ’77 and Mark Ettinger
          Phebe Jensen ’77
          BOB AND JAN KRISSEL
          Kimberly Krissel Jones ’76
          SOPHIE DEPREZ KRY ’84
          Elizabeth Bancroft ’84
          Jocelyn and Andre Deprez
          Sarah Piper
          PATRICIA AND GEORGE LABALME
          Linda Sonnenschein Kaufman ’52
          HELEN BEAMAN LAKIN ’95
          Helen Hoffman Davies ’62
          Valerie Hoffman Takai ’58
          INGE LEDERER
          Katya Gibel Mevorach ’70
          ALICE LIPTON
          Gail Marcus
          Heyden White Rostow ’67
          ELIZABETH LOEB ’55
          John Loeb
          MARION SMITH LOWNDES ’23
          Susan Lowndes Blagden ’58
          L. EDWARD LUCAIRE, SR.
          Lewise Lucaire
          CATHERINE MACRAE ’96
          Caroline Hines
          Ann MacRae ’00
          Linda and Scott Rafferty
          Timothy and Dena Twain Sims ’00
          Leigh Stearns ’95
          Sharon Gates Stearns ’63
          SALLY DONOVAN MADDEN ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          SANDRA LEA MARSHALL ’73
          Jill Klein Grant ’73
          Emily Heilbrun ’73
          Patricia Taussig Marshall ’49
          Rose Schwartz ’73
          HELENE CHAMPRIGAND
          Anna Rapp Hostrop ’50
          JULIA MINARD ’03
          Alexandra Bowie and Daniel Richman
          JANET BACKUS MORGAN ’54
          Ellen Wood Barth ’54
          KATHLEEN MORIARTY ’71
          Elizabeth Barrett Matson ’71
          Priscilla Ryan ’71
          Marjorie Deane Swain ’71
          WILLIAM MOSS
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          LAURA MATLAW MURPHY ’70
          Alison Anthoine ’70
          Jan Liss ’70
          DORA NOBLE
          Ardena Noble Landsman ’73
          ELISABETH HIGGINS NULL ’60
          Nancy Bigelow Krause ’56
          JULIET BOYD PATTERSON ’48
          J. Ritchie Patterson ’76
          KATHRYN SCHAEFLER PERSHAN ’49
          Pamela Pershan Hochman ’82
          Sachiko and Edward Miller
          Julia Pershan ’88 and Jonathan Cohen
          Richard Pershan
          MARY JANE QUINLAN PETERSON ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          ELLEN HARFIELD PIEL ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          JAYMI GOODENOUGH PRIESTER ’66
          Joan Mitchell Fletcher ’66
          Sarah Tenney ’66
          FALL 2023 48 GIVING REVIEW: MEMORIAL AND HONORARY GIFTS
        KENDALL RICE
          Dionne Rice
          SHEILA RICHARDSON ’73
          Vanessa Weber ’73
          SAARTJE HITZIG RONAN ’58
          Ann Carlton ’58
          Betsy Bacon Newell ’58
          DARIA ROSE NORTON
          Diana Wade ’04
          ANDREA ROSENTHAL ’84
          Elizabeth Bancroft ’84
          Phyllis Rosenthal
          Katharine Weymouth ’84
          TIESHA SARGEANT ’98
          Ibijoke Akinola-Michel ’99 and Jean-Claude Michel
          Eliza Schnitzer Gairard ’98
          Catherine Gowl ’98
          Gail Marcus
          Amanda Meigher ’98
          Kimberly Kleinbaum Tsesarsky ’98
          ANN TWEEDY SAVAGE ’65
          Margot Tweedy Egan ’73
          Clare Tweedy McMorris ’63 and Howard McMorris
          Elisabeth McMorris ’05
          Michael Savage
          JULIE SCHIEFFELIN ’61
          Karen Wetter Nathan ’75
          Betsy Tanner ’75
          Alice Truax ’77
          ANNE SHEFFIELD ’48
          Linda Gross Kahn ’85
          HANNAH L. SHI
          Yan Sun and Rong Shi
          ALEXANDRA SICHEL ’81
          Laura Boyer ’81
          Catherine Foster-Anderson ’81
          CLAUDE DE FRANCE SMITH
          Ellen Seely ’73
          BARBARA HADLEY STANTON ’53
          Laura Stanton ’77
          v
          RICHARD B. STEARNS JR.
          Lee Grimes Evans ’63
          Mallory Rome ’92
          Sharon Gates Stearns ’63
          OTTO STEIN
          Suzanne Stein
          ANN TIPTON STORER ’52
          Gail Tipton ’55
          ADELE HALL SWEET ’43
          Caroline Leopold ’15
          RACHEL SWETT ’07
          Elizabeth and James Auran
          Marianne and Owen Davis
          Catherine Miller Goldstein ’07
          Shelly Guyer ’78
          RUTH SYLVESTER ’70
          Sophie Glazer ’70
          STEPHANIE BARKER TAYLOR ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          BEATRICE THOMPSON
          Victoria Davidson ’84
          Rebecca Dolinsky ’80
          Meredith Alderman Ritsch ’97
          GEORGE TOKIEDA
          Thomas and Deborah Davis Ascheim ’82
          Margaret Caldwell-Ott
          Gail Marcus
          Elizabeth Tomlinson ’87
          RODOLFO TORRES
          Cassandra Nelson-Torres
          THEA TRACHTENBERG ’86
          Carolyn Clark and David Patterson
          SOPHIA TRUSLOW ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          GORDON B. AND MARY J. TWEEDY
          Margot Tweedy Egan ’73
          Clare Tweedy McMorris ’63 and Howard McMorris
          Elisabeth McMorris ’05
          Michael Savage
          CONSTANCE UMBERGER
          Catherine Foster-Anderson ’81
          MARY ST. JOHN VILLARD ’30
          Elizabeth Villard ’63
          HELEN TWOMBLY WATKINS ’56
          Eric Watkins
          LOUIS WHITE
          Elspeth Woodcock Macdonald ’57
          Claire Albrecht-Carrie Tomlinson ’58
          SUZANNAH RYAN WILKIE ’53
          Serena Wilkie Gifford ’82
          PENELOPE WINDUST ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          Sharon Gates Stearns ’63
          Jane Handwerger Walker ’63
          GRETCHEN WOLFE
          Janice Condit and Edward Benett
          VIVIAN AND EDDIE WONSLEY
          Michelle Wonsley ’97
          MARY ELLIOTT WOODROW ’63
          Deborah Bancroft ’63
          Martha Ryan Severens ’63
          Sharon Gates Stearns ’63
          Robert Woodrow, III
          FRANCES HYDE ZABRISKIE ’14
          Christiane Citron ’67
          Gifts in Honor Of
          MARGARET ALLISON ’04
          Janet and Donald Allison
          JULIÁN ALTSCHUL
          Tao Cheng and Yiben Lin
          MARY MOSS APPLETON ’65
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          ANNE BALDWIN ’09
          Emily Baldwin ’12
          BEATRICE S. BARTLETT
          Lucy McDiarmid ’64v
          JENNIFER BARTOLI
          Jo David ’61
          This honorary contribution was also made in 2021–2022 and mistakenly omitted from last year’s Giving Review list. The Development Office apologizes for the error. FALL 2023 49
        GIVING
          ELISSA JABLONS BERNSTEIN ’78
          Shari Lusskin ’78
          SIMONE BLASER ’04
          Ronna and Martin Blaser
          SHERI BLAU
          Hilary Kramer
          TIM BROWNELL
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          Frank Zhang
          SOPHIE PALITZ BUINEWICZ ’09
          Miriam London
          LAURA BYRNES
          Margaret Grise and Adam Silver
          PAUL BYRNES
          Hilary Kramer
          MING HUI CHEN ’78
          Lee Grimes Evans ’63
          SARAI CHICO
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          BRIAN CHU
          Julie and Joaquin Gamboa
          Hilary Kramer
          Rena Krasnow and Robert Marx
          CLASS OF 1949
          Patricia Taussig Marshall ’49
          CLASS OF 1963
          Clare Tweedy McMorris ’63 and Howard McMorris
          Elizabeth Villard ’63
          CLASS OF 1968
          Alison Anthoine ’70
          Frances C. Taliaferro
          CLASS OF 1973
          Honor Lassalle ’73
          CLASS OF 1993
          Lauren Reiss Frank ’93
          CLASS OF 1994
          Jasmine Davila ’94
          CLASS OF 2005
          Hanna Miller ’05
          ANNAH CLONTZ
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          DORIS COLEMAN
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          JUDY CONANT
          Rebecca Q. Leonard McCauley ’85
          SARAH COX ’56
          Nancy Bigelow Krause ’56
          KITTY CUNNINGHAM
          Krysia Bereday Burnham ’78
          Katharine Marshall ’76
          Rebecca Q. Leonard McCauley ’85
          Elizabeth Parker Migliorelli ’76
          GAIL DAVIS
          Rebecca Q. Leonard McCauley ’85
          LAURA DELANY ’15
          Carol Brown-Hageman and Ivan Hageman
          CECILE MILLER EISTRUP ’58
          Andrea Matos ’88
          JANE FOLEY FRIED
          Samhita and Ignacio Jayanti
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          JOAN GARDINER
          Rebecca Q. Leonard McCauley ’85
          PHOEBE GEER ‘97
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          ANDREA GILROY
          Frank Zhang
          DEBRA GLICK
          Rena Krasnow and Robert Marx
          ANNABEL GORDON
          Linda and William Musser
          MARY JANE PEIGHTAL HAIGHT ’49
          Nina Haight Frost ’75
          EVELYN JANOVER HALPERT ’52
          Susanne and Donald McQuade
          Margery Baker Riker ’66
          Cynthia Saltzman ’67
          ELIANORA PALITZ HERBSTMAN ’06
          Miriam London
          ZOE HOPKINS ’18
          Keith Butler
          DAPHNE HURFORD
          Laura Turpin Borak ’00
          WINIFRED STEARNS HUSSEY ’78
          Shari Lusskin ’78
          MARIEL ISAACSON
          Hilary Kramer
          KELLY JEWETT
          Winifred Stearns Hussey ’78
          PATRICIA AND LLOYD KAUFMAN
          Matthew and Lily-Hayes Salzberg ’99
          FRANCES KEOHANE ’20
          Isabella Levenson
          GEORGIA KEOHANE ’90
          Isabella Levenson
          JESSICA ERNST KERNS ’00
          Margot and John Ernst
          JU YEON KIM
          Margaret Grise and Adam Silver
          DARYL KLEIMAN ’04
          Laurin and Norman Kleiman
          NOEL LAMBERTY
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          SARAH LANNOM
          Samhita and Ignacio Jayanti
          SUE LEONARD
          Flavia Golden ‘83 and Arthur Yee
          DOUGLAS LEVINE
          Frank Zhang
          Anonymous
          LOWER SCHOOL FACULTY AND STAFF
          Anonymous
          WINIFRED MABLEY
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          GAIL S. MARCUS
          Rena Krasnow and Robert Marx
          PATRICIA TAUSSIG MARSHALL ’49
          Kate Marshall ’76
          FALL 2023 50
        REVIEW: MEMORIAL AND HONORARY GIFTS
        PEGGY MCINTOSH
          Diana Wade ’04
          ARI MEDINA
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          RAOUL MEYER
          Hilary Kramer
          JILLIAN MINELLO
          Eloise Grace ’32
          CHARLOTTE MORSE ’05
          Stacey and Robert Morse
          ELLIOT MORSE ’09
          Stacey and Robert Morse
          MARGARET MORSE ’13
          Stacey and Robert Morse
          AMY MOSS ’70
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          Catherine Moss Warner ’68
          BARBARA MOSS ’81
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          Catherine Moss Warner ’68
          KATHRYN MOSS
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          JIM MULKIN
          Kate Glasner and Daniel Egan
          KAREN NEDBAL
          Margaret Caldwell-Ott
          JANE NEWMAN
          Jennifer Bartoli
          Jo David ’61
          LAURA OST ’74
          Nancy Ost
          GABRIELLE LONDON PALITZ ’76
          Jayne and PJ Kim
          Miriam London
          RICHARD PERSHAN
          Jayne and PJ Kim
          ASHLEY PRESCOD ’17
          Lucinda Noel
          v
          ALYSSA PUCCINELLI ’08
          Sabrina and Steven Puccinelli
          CHRISTINA PUCCINELLI ’15
          Sabrina and Steven Puccinelli
          GINA PUCCINELLI ’11
          Sabrina and Steven Puccinelli
          HANNAH RAU
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          CHARLOTTE RELYEA ’92
          Susan and George Relyea
          LILY RIOPELLE ’10
          Leslie Kanter and Roland Riopelle
          LIBERTY RUBY ’70
          Ann Lumbard Alexander ’76
          ANA SABATER
          Hilary Kramer
          ANN SAUNDERS
          Hilary Kramer
          MARY SUSAN SHENG ’20
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          SOPHIA SHENG ’13
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          ABIGAIL SOLOMON ’88
          Linda Schapiro
          CLAIRE SOLOMON
          Susan and Peter Solomon
          JENNIFER SOLOMON ’01
          Susan Solomon Shaderowfsky
          Robert Solomon
          Susan and Peter Solomon
          LILY SOLOMON
          Susan and Peter Solomon
          MAX SOLOMON
          Susan and Peter Solomon
          ANNIE SPADER BYERLY
          Lisa Schwartz and Benjamin Zeskind
          ELIZABETH STAINTON ’77
          Mary Claire Delaney and Luigi Cicala
          KELLY STEIN
          Katarzyna Dratewska and Pablo Rios
          Lisa Schwartz and Benjamin Zeskind
          RACHEL STURLEY ’19
          Jessica and Stephen Sturley
          KATHERINE BARRETT SWETT ’78
          Alexandra Schwartz ’05
          FRANCES C. TALIAFERRO
          Alison Anthoine ’70
          Constance and Corson Ellis
          Anne Fishel ’73
          Elizabeth Fishel ’68
          Lucy McDiarmid ’64 v
          YUE TANG
          Laura Yee ’21
          SUSANNA TERRELL
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          FRANCES P. THORNDIKE
          Guillaume and Mika Tsugiyama Bouvard ’93
          Hannah Gross ’09
          CORDELIA HODGES TILGHMAN ’82
          Fletcher Hodges
          CATHERINE MOSS WARNER ’68
          Patricia Moss and Kai Sheng
          FRANCES WHEELER
          Funke and Gbadebo Akinola
          ANNE WHIDDEN
          Lucy Whidden Hampton ’03
          ELLA WICKHAM ’20
          Leslie Stroth and Landon Wickham
          JESSICA GREEN WILSON ’93
          Karen and Joseph Green
          THOMAS WRIGHT
          Samhita and Ignacio Jayanti
          MARIA-ANNA ZIMMERMANN
          Margo and Jimmy Nederlander
          Fiona Shaw ’06
          Anonymous
          FALL 2023 51
        This honorary contribution was also made in 2021–2022 and mistakenly omitted from last year’s Giving Review list. The Development Office apologizes for the error.
          Samuel Brearley Society
          Legacy gifts to the Brearley School leave a lasting impact and are an opportunity to magnify a lifetime of generosity. The Samuel Brearley Society recognizes supporters of Brearley who have included the School in their estate plans.
          Thank you for your dedication to Brearley and its future.
          FALL 2022 52 GIVING REVIEW: SAMUEL BREARLEY SOCIETY
        Reed Abelson and Jaqueline Worth ’82
          Helen Mills Allen ’49*
          Catherine Huber Anderson ’40*
          Albert and Dorothy Appleton
          Peter A. Aron*
          Nina Kivelson Auerbach ’52*
          Hope Sinauer Babcock ’59
          Leyla Morrissey Bader ’88
          Eleanora Gordon Baird ’42*
          Emily Lind Baker ’61
          Ann Woolley Banks ’49
          Irene Nelson Bareau ’63*
          Mary Ellin Berlin Barrett ’44*
          Beatrice S. Bartlett
          Hugo and Louise Beit*
          Robert Belknap*
          George Bilon
          Lois Baldwin Bishop ’52*
          Laura Maioglio Blobel ’50
          Linda Boldt ’64*
          Katherine Stern Brennan ’70
          Amanda Brown ’74
          Gillette Brown*
          Sally Brown Brown ’57
          Merrill Buice ’84
          Edith Wise Burpee ’44
          Cassandra Cavanaugh and Natan Shklyar
          Joan Ridder Challinor ’45*
          Elizabeth Conklin Collins ’54*
          Henry S.F. Cooper*
          Mary Blum Cossette ’59
          Tandy Cronyn ’63
          Anne Chambers Crudge ’53*
          Marguerite Cullman ’54
          George* and Norma Dallal and Melissa Dallal ’89
          Nina Montgomery Dana ’41*
          Keith David
          Maude Davis*
          Diane de Coppet ’62
          Laura de Coppet ’64
          Georges and Lois de Ménil
          Diana de Vegh ’55
          Gioia del Campo
          Arnold and Nancy Diethelm*
          Nancy Nauts Dobbs ’47*
          Mary Ann Donovan ’44*
          Wilhelmina Martin Eaken ’64
          Jane and *Malcolm Edgerton, Jr.
          Cecile Miller Eistrup ’58
          Margaret Condon Elting ’45
          Eileen Epperson ’67
          Sylvia Montgomery Erhart ’45*
          Flora Feigenspan ’52*
          Joan Ferrante ’54
          Gwendolyn Fortson Waring ’73
          Beatrice Mathews Francais ’55
          Barbara Schwarz French ’30*
          Jane Fulton
          Jenny Gabler ’81
          Timur Galen and Linda Genereux
          Philomene Gates*
          Linda B. Gillies
          Jane Gladstone ’86
          Ann Godoff and Annik La Farge ’78
          Toni Krissel Goodale ’59
          Joan Goodheart ’52
          Margot Brady Gordon ’52
          Robin Hinsdale Gould ’47*
          Sarah Sillcocks Graham ’31*
          Penelope Hunter Grant ’33*
          Elizabeth Greenman ’87*
          Ann Richards Gridley ’58
          Rosemary Blackmon Grove ’69
          Mary Rodgers Guettel ’48*
          Mary Jane Peightal Haight ’49
          Elinor Lamont Hallowell ’53*
          Evelyn Janover Halpert ’52
          Dorrance Hill Hamilton ’46*
          Mary Jopling Harper ’33*
          Jane Andrews Harris ’50
          Barbara Hauge ’69
          Elizabeth Haynes ’40*
          Perrin Heard
          Stephen Heard
          Ruth Kissin Helman ’69*
          Natascha Hildebrandt ’85
          Caroline Hines
          Dorothy Schwarz Hines ’44*
          Susan Carr Hirschman ’49
          Kathrine Hamilton Hobbs ’42*
          Diane Deschamps Hockstader ’53
          Winifred Hussey ’78
          Barbara Ridder Irwin ’40*
          Susan Miller Jackson ’36*
          Elizabeth Shackford Jordan ’39*
          Emma Kalonzo ’97
          Amanda Kane*
          Barbara Adler Katzander ’46
          Hollis Kegg ’75
          Elizabeth Harpel Kehler ’79
          Marjorie Kellogg ’63
          Louisa Livingston Kennedy ’52*
          Romia Bull Kimball ’53*
          Alice MacRae Kissel ’29*
          George Labalme Jr. and Patricia H. Labalme ’44*
          Paul and Mary Lee Lambert ’53
          Louisa Lawrence ’55
          Elizabeth Maxwell Lee ’61
          Garrick Leonard and Leslie Feder ’77
          Alan* and Gail Levenstein
          Linda Markwett Liebes ’56
          Nancy Moffat Lifland ’45*
          Susan Worcester Light ’46*
          Elizabeth Loeb ’55*
          John Loeb
          Ian and Monique Sullivan Lowitt ’79
          Tamera Stanton Luzzatto ’75
          Lelia Wardwell Mander ’81
          Christopher and Claire Mann
          Kate Marshall ’76
          Lucy Welch Mazzeo ’31*
          Lucy McDiarmid ’64
          Nancy McDonald ’49*
          Pamela McGovern and Richard Gross
          Julia McVaugh
          Ginny Meding ’38*
          Marjorie Meacham Meek ’44*
          David Milberg*
          Carey French Millard ’61
          Gwenn Miller ’88
          Nancy Goldsmith Mistretta ’72
          Janet Backus Morgan ’54*
          Iris Frampton Muggenthaler ’47*
          Frances Dell Murray ’38*
          Ilse Nelson*
          Christine Vanderwarker Ness ’59*
          Mary Ann Nordeman ’53*
          Carol Rothschild Noyes ’35*
          Barbara Baker O’Brien ’42*
          Nancy (Anne) Pell Osborn ’36*
          Elinor Scott Oswald ’38
          Juliet Boyd Patterson ’48*
          Clarissa Wardwell Pell ’26*
          Joan McGeoch Perry ’48*
          Kathryn Schaefler Pershan ’49*
          Priscilla Kennaday Pick ’29*
          Angela Hill Plowden-Wardlaw ’62
          Ann Hochschild Poole ’43*
          Nansi Pugh*
          Julie Zwaska Quinn ’92
          Mary Louise Rankin ’52*
          Signa Lynch Read ’48*
          Esther Ridder ’43*
          Margery Riker ’66
          Aileen Robbins ’65*
          Felicia Warburg Rogan ’45
          *Deceased FALL 2023 53
         
    
              
              
            
            The 610 Library
          Brearley alumnae could be easily forgiven if they stepped off the elevators on the 10th floor of the 610 building and felt they were in the wrong place (a bit like Alice in the looking glass). What was once a vintage gymnasium with wire-caged windows, red padded walls, fluorescent lights and basketball court floors has magically been transformed into a new, beautiful library.
          With its nearly floor-to-ceiling windows that allow natural light to pour in, window seats overlooking the East River, study tables with lamps that evoke a classic library reading room and nearly double the capacity for students to sit, this spacious facility is a testament to the optimism and imagination of our community.
          The Middle and Upper School library is the first of many transformational projects that are part of the plans to renovate our historic schoolhouse. Each phase, each step, is an investment in Brearley’s future. The work to modernize 610 will take place over a series of summers and vacations, allowing the School to remain open and all parts of our program accessible for students. Improved, sustainable infrastructure and facilities, along with innovative designs of our spaces, will allow us to advance our extraordinary academic and extracurricular program, ensuring that Brearley continues to flourish for the next century and beyond.
          These once-in-a-century upgrades to our historic home do not just happen; they are the result of in-depth conversations with faculty, staff and the Board of Trustees about the programmatic needs of our school as well as meticulous planning on finances and schedule for construction requirements. As we turn our attention to the next project in 610—a state-of-the-art studio arts facility and classrooms on the building’s top floors—Brearley is deeply grateful for the time, strategic thinking and philanthropic contributions that make the 610 renovations possible.
          Jill Renaud Roosevelt ’79
          Patricia Ross ’63
          Mary Anne Goldsmith Schwalbe ’51*
          Andrea Selch ’82
          Elizabeth Munves Sherman ’73
          Cynthia Fuguet Shurtleff ’48*
          Jonathan* and Nealie Small
          Dorothea Wilder Smith ’33*
          Frederick Smith*
          Susan Bassett Southall ’58*
          Helen Grace Spencer ’53*
          Emily Spitzer ’72
          Kathleen Steed
          Anne Rosen Stern ’34*
          Diane Stevens ’58
          Ellen Weiler Stiefler ’76
          Amanda Stiff ’75
          Andrea Gray Stillman ’62
          Linda Stillman ’66
          Sheila Muldowny Stone ’53
          Betsy Sylvester*
          Ruth Sylvester ’70*
          Frances C. Taliaferro
          Jean Ballard Terepka ’70
          Rebecca Thomson ’71
          Harriet Backus Todd ’60*
          Juli Shea Towell ’51
          Joan Foster Twigg ’67*
          Sidney Howard Urquhart ’50*
          Andre-Francois* and Lisa Villeneuve
          Barbara Granbery Waldeck ’60
          Lois Kahn Wallace ’57*
          Sally Tilghman Wardwell ’54
          Sarah Hyman Washkowitz ’00
          Faye Wattleton
          Priscilla M. Winn Barlow
          Frederick Wonham*
          Karen Young ’88
          Ying Zhu
          Isabel Wademan Zisk ’88
          Anonymous (27)
          Estate Gifts
          Nina Kivelson Auerbach ’52*
          Mary Ellin Berlin Barrett ’44*
          Susan Bassett Southall ’58*
          Andre-Francois* and Lisa Villeneuve
          *Deceased
        FALL 2023 54 GIVING REVIEW: SAMUEL BREARLEY SOCIETY
        
              
              
            
            Thank You!
          annual giving 2022–2023 school year
          To our extraordinary community of alumnae, parents, parents of alumnae, faculty, staff and friends, we thank you for your generous philanthropic support. We are united in our belief in girls’ education, and your Annual Giving contributions provide vital funding to ensure that our students learn and grow in a school that prepares them for principled engagement in the world. Every gift makes a difference, and because of you, Brearley persists and progresses.
          Brearley Fund
          Unrestricted
          Fueling all aspects of the educational program, your gifts will have a direct and immediate impact on purposeful teaching and expansive learning for today’s Brearley girls. Unrestricted gifts allow the School to maintain and enhance the caliber of the academic program by supporting the general operating budget, faculty and staff salaries and benefits, library books, healthy lunches, athletic equipment, art supplies and all aspects of life at Brearley. Together, we are stewards for today’s and tomorrow’s Brearley girls.
          u nited Fund
          Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Antiracism Initiatives
          Embracing Brearley’s school song lyrics “By truth and toil united” and committed to building a more equitable school community, the United Fund empowers expanded programming in this priority area. Brearley is taking an all-encompassing approach to this work, with the goal of initiating meaningful and lasting change. We are dedicated to creating an inclusive school where all Brearley students feel a sense of belonging.
          Opening dOO rs Fund Scholarships
          Ensuring that talented students from families of lower, middle and upper-middle incomes can access a Brearley education, your gifts provide tuition assistance for families with demonstrated need. Starting with a comprehensive tuition model that covers all essential school programs, Brearley offers robust financial aid, ranging from partial to full grants that include funding for additional school-related expenses, as needed. The generosity of annual donors and those who have endowed scholarships allows Brearley to enroll an economically diverse student body, Classes K–XII.
          a dventur O us i ntellect Fund Faculty Support
          Providing for the dedicated architects of the School’s educational program, your gifts benefit curricular development, departmental review, professional growth and faculty salaries. To advance the curriculum and enhance culturally competent pedagogy, we are furthering learning opportunities for our faculty by providing them with the resources and skills needed to grow as scholars, artists and educators. The School’s dedicated faculty cultivates the passionate exchange of ideas that is a hallmark of a Brearley classroom.
          ANNUAL GIVING
          online giving:
          www.brearley.org/make-a-gift
          Venmo: Brearley_af
          via mail:
          The Brearley School
          610 East 83rd Street
          New York, NY 10028
          Attention: Development & Alumnae Relations
          Contact:
          Amina Holman, Annual Fund Director aholman@brearley.org
          (212) 570-8610
           
    FALL 2023 55
        BIRTHS
          2001 To KARINA SCHUMACHER-VILLASANTE and Antonios El Achkar Schumacher, a son, Raphael El Achkar Schumacher1
          2003 To AMBER LAM and Peter Chou Jr., a son, Hubert Hayes Chou2
          To VALERIE CHIN and Peter Decareau III, a son, Austin Thomas Decareau3
          2004 To BRITT CAPUTO BUNN and Nick Bunn, a daughter, Emilia Bunn4
          To ALY GIBSON and Matt Marcucci, a daughter, Isabel Claudia Marcucci5
          To LAUREN GOLDENBERG and David Plotz, a daughter, Simone Klion Goldenberg6
          2005 To ISABEL TEITLER and Claudiu Ursache, a son, Frederick Teitler Ursache
          To HAZEL BALABAN and Ky Harlin, a daughter, Augusta Elizabeth Harlin Balaban
          To ALEXANDRA SCHWARTZ and Jonathan Blitzer, a son, Benjamin Gabriel Schwartz Blitzer7
          To ALEXANDRA GINIGER and Bryan Scotland, a daughter, Sloane Victoria Scotland8
          To PAMELA LACHMAN and Alice Heath, a son, Arthur Isaac Lachman-Heath
          To ANDREA BARSK and Sean Roberts, a daughter, Sigrid Octavia Filippa Roberts
          To ELAINE SHI and Roy Shi, a daughter, Celia Elizabeth Shi
          To HELENA ANRATHER and Julian Rose, a daughter, Cosima Anrather Rose9
          2006
          To KATHARINE ETTINGER NAVARRE and Willie Navarre, a daughter, Lily Tyler Navarre10
          To TIFFANY STODDARD, a daughter, Aina11
          To MOLLY BATTLES and Noah Sherr Breslau, a daughter, Juno Sherr Battles12
          2007 To ANDI KLESTADT and Jacob Garber, a daughter, Eleanor Olivia Garber13
          To ELIZA LEHNER and Porter Diehl, a daughter, Georgina Diehl Lehner
          2008
          To HILARY BARTLETT and Kiel Zsitvay, twins, Arthur and Henry Zsitvay14
          To ASTRID BARSK-KNOTT and Ben Knott, a son, Axel Harald Knott
          To ANNIE SHI and Sean Anderson, a son, Walter Fitzrui Shi-Anderson
          2009 To SOPHIE PALITZ BUINEWICZ and Jacob Buinewicz, a daughter, Talia Brooke Buinewicz15
          To KATHERINE TENG and Brandon Kelly, a son, Oliver Powell Kelly16
          2010 To MAHALA PAGAN and Colin Delaney, a daughter, Cora McLeod Delaney17
          To MARINA LEHNER a daughter, Mira Lehner Greengard
          2012 To REBECCA MCSWEEN and Tim Barron, a daughter, Sadie18
          FALL 2023 56 BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND DEATHS
         
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    FALL 2023 57 4 3 5 7 10 8 11 13 17 6 9 12 14 18 15 16 1 2
         
     
     
     
     
     
     
    1 2 3 4 7 5 6 FALL 2023 58 BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND DEATHS
        MARRIAGES
          1973 SALLY PLUM to Robert Lee1
          1985 MARIE-ELIZABETH MALI to Patrick Page2
          2006 OLYMPIA SONNIER to Adam Littlefield3
          MOLLY BATTLES to Noah Sherr Breslau4
          2008 ANNIE SHI to Sean Anderson5
          2009 MONICA DODGE to John Corbett6
          LINDSEY-ROSE AGUERO-SINCLAIR to Neal Wadhwa
          2010 MEGAN LUI to Peter Na7
          DEATHS
          1939 Mary Fairbanks Stainton
          1943 Frances Fisher
          1944 Constance Tate
          1949 Julia Lovett Ashbey
          1951 Irene Duckworth Hecht
          1952 Lisa Nicholson
          1955 Tina Howe
          1955 Alison Fleischmann
          1958 Alison Kramer Bück
          1958 Suzanne d’Autremont Gouvernet
          1963 Mary Stalter Radsch
          1967 Beryl Benacerraf
          1967 Mary Kornblee Gabriel
          1970 Amy Miller
          1973 Margot Tweedy Egan
          1978 Winifred “Winky” Stearns Hussey
          FALL 2023 59
         
     
    On the river, on East
          
              
              
            
            83rd
          Street, we will be here.
           
    
              
              
            
            Create a legacy for Brearley.
          Incubator, proving ground, home. Brearley is a singular place that is all about the girls—who they are, what they are capable of, and who they can become.
          When you include Brearley in your estate plans, you join a generous group of supporters who safeguard the Brearley experience for the girls of future generations.
          For sample language to use in your will or trust, and further information, please contact:
          Phoebe T. Geer ’97, Director of Advancement (212) 570-8609 or pgeer@brearley.org.
           
    Above Left: 1950s; Above Right: 2023
         
    NON-PROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #129 19464 610 East 83rd Street New York, NY 10028