Emerging Transformed

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EMERGING TRANSFORMED

CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE

CO-CHAIRS

Michael S. Chae ’86

Glenn H. Hutchins ’73

Joseph C. Tsai ’82

Alexandra Buckley Voris ’96

VICE CHAIRS

Joseph B. Frumkin ’76 P’11

Jean Fang ‘90 P’27

HONORARY CHAIRS

Thomas L. Carter, Jr. ’70 P’01 ’05

Judith-Ann Corrente ’01 H’01 P’98 ’01

Edith Baird Eglin H’52 ’65 ’66 ’67 ’70 GP’19

Mortimer B. Fuller III ’60 P’89 ’01

Bert Getz ’55 H’56 P’85 GP’18 ’20

Martin D. Gruss ’60

Peter Lawson-Johnston ’45 GP’95 ’98 ’15 ’18

Truman T. Semans ’45 P’87

Raymond G. Viault ’63 P’96

Seth H. Waugh ’76 P’19 ’21

John C. Wellemeyer ’55 P’18 ’18

A LITTLE HISTORY, A LOT OF GRATITUDE

Sometimes great risks lead to greater rewards.

We announced our visionary Emerge Transformed campaign at the height of the pandemic—in May 2021—as students Zoomed into classes, most of our staff worked remotely, and our communications with donors were strictly virtual.

Despite the timing, we knew we had the ingredients for success. A good story to tell. A noble tradition worth honoring. A solid foundation on which to build an even brighter future for Lawrenceville.

You agreed. Resoundingly. And you responded with unprecedented generosity. Our entire community— alumni, parents, grandparents, and friends—came together to transform our ambitions into the most successful fundraising campaign ever undertaken by any independent school.

$475.7 MILLION

Donors created 88 new endowed funds during the Campaign, including 67 new endowed scholarship funds .

GROWTH IN ENDOWMENT 472.5 2018 2023 626.3 IN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS (PRELIMINARY ESTIMATE PENDING FINAL AUDIT) (PRELIMINARY ESTIMATE PENDING FINAL AUDIT) ENDOWMENT PER STUDENT 579.8 2018 2023 768.5 IN THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS GIVING IN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS SCHOLARSHIP AID FACULTY & ACADEMIC SUPPORT THE LAWRENCEVILLE FUND UNRESTRICTED & BUILDING ENDOWMENTS CAMPUS & COMMUNITY OTHER
117.8 69.8 43.6 60.9 141.1 42.5 RAISED FOR LAWRENCEVILLE
“YOUR GENEROSITY ENSURES THE BRIGHTEST POSSIBLE FUTURE FOR LAWRENCEVILLE AND OUR STUDENTS.”
Mary Kate Barnes H’59 ’77 P’11 ’13 ’19

7,054 TOTAL DONORS LEADERSHIP DONORS

5,038 ALUMNI DONORS

1,946 PARENT DONORS

1,350 RED & BLACK LEADERSHIP DONORS

1,493 FIRST-TIME DONORS

93 NEW PLANNED GIFTS

$97.4 MILLION PLANNED GIFT COMMITMENTS & REALIZED BEQUESTS

$100,00–$999,999 $25,000–$99,999 $1 MILLION & OVER 226 187 71
GIFTS OF $100 AND LESS
484 15,000
71 $1 MILLION+ DONORS

Transformation, like all great things Lawrenceville, is a community enterprise.

The Emerge Transformed campaign rested on four main pillars: celebrate and reinforce community; develop head and hands and lead the way with experiential education; promote professional excellence; and strengthen our future through major enhancements to our financial foundations. Here we outline our success in achieving these objectives.

TOGETHER WE TRANSFORMED...

LIVES

We opened our doors wider still to bring a Lawrenceville education within the reach of any student who deserves this opportunity.

LEARNING

We invested in the Lawrenceville experience, our academic culture, and the faculty who guide each student’s journey.

COMMUNITY

We reinforced the power of community by adding phenomenal new spaces.

THE WAY FORWARD

We secured the School’s financial foundations— enabling us to pursue an ambitious future.

TOGETHER WE MADE HISTORY...

We entered this campaign with a simple desire: to reaffirm Lawrenceville’s enduring purpose—our longstanding commitment to educating responsible leaders, creative innovators, and dedicated public servants.

Mirroring the path of our students, we have emerged transformed. To meet and exceed our goals, we built a set of priorities around preserving the best parts of the Lawrenceville experience and sustaining the ideals embedded in our Mission Statement, “inspiring the best in each to seek the best for all.”

The pages that follow outline our success and the impact of your support, and they highlight some of the many individuals and families whose partnership helped us reach new heights. All our major donors—gifts of $25,000 or more—are acknowledged by name at the back of this report unless they have chosen to remain anonymous.

Your generosity is changing lives and securing the future of this great school. On behalf of The Lawrenceville School, the Board of Trustees, our faculty and staff, and most important, our students, thank you.

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LIVES TRANSFORMED SCHOLARSHIP AID

“In order to deliver on our mission, we’ve got to ensure that we’re able to admit and educate students based on their strengths and potential and not on their ability to pay… By working to ensure that the core dollars of our scholarship aid budget are guaranteed by the endowment, we’re solidifying our commitment to recruiting and enrolling the most promising young people we can find, to changing kids’ lives, and to improving the Lawrenceville experience for all students.”

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Our Campaign goal of $100 million in new endowed scholarship aid was hugely aspirational but critically important. It was the amount needed to sustain current levels of scholarship funding for the long term.

We had never before asked our community to step up so boldly and generously for a single priority you couldn’t eat, play, learn, or study in. You did not disappoint. In the end, you gave $117.8 million to scholarship aid, demonstrating your commitment to making Lawrenceville affordable and accessible for the many talented and deserving students who could not attend otherwise.

Your support translates to 67 new endowed scholarship funds. That means less funding that has to come from the operating budget, freeing up resources for student programs, faculty compensation, and more.

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70 % of Lawrenceville scholarships will ultimately be endowed with new funding, up from 50% at the start of the Campaign.

A New Model: Comprehensive Scholarship Funding

When Stacy and Hyman Brody ’75 established The Brody Family Scholarship Fund together with their children, Samantha ’07, William ’08, and Nathan ’11, they were clear in their intention: No Lawrenceville student should feel different from or “less than” their wealthier classmates.

With a preference for students from southern states—the Brody family has deep roots in North Carolina—the Fund removes all the potential barriers, including geography, for students who might not even think about applying because travel costs are too high and supplies are too expensive. The Fund is the first of its kind, covering all costs of attendance and setting a new standard for scholarship support.

Geography is only one of the preferences donors can choose for endowed scholarship funds of $250,000 or more. Other preferences chosen during the Emerge Transformed campaign included scholarships for the children of first responders, aid for students from rural areas, and support for urban youth. In addition, a new relationship with the Orion Military Scholarship Fund is bringing children of actively serving military personnel to campus.

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The income from this endowment fund shall be used to provide full financial assistance, including, without limitation, tuition, room and board, school supplies, a weekly stipend, travel to and from campus, computer, and clothing, all as determined by the School, to one or more Lawrenceville students.

“It is our hope that Lawrenceville can continue to attract the best and brightest minds, regardless of individual circumstances. We have no doubt that these outstanding scholarship recipients will gain as much from the Big Red experience as the Lawrenceville community will benefit from having them on campus.”

Samantha Brody Moses ’07, William Brody ’08, Nathan Brody ’11, and Stacy and Hyman Brody ’75 P’07 ’08 ’11

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THE BRODY FAMILY SCHOLARSHIP FUND

“These past four years have been the most challenging, yet rewarding, years of my life. Thank you so much for providing me with the opportunity of a lifetime; I cannot overstate the extent to which your generosity has truly paved the road for the rest of my life.”

THE WORDS OF STUDENTS OFFER A WINDOW THE LIFE-CHANGING

“Over the past four years, I have tried to live by the words, ‘To whom much is given, much is expected.’ Whether it has been a trip to Italy with the Harkness Travel Program, a transformative summer at camp, winning championships with my teams, or just having the opportunity to live with my best friends, Lawrenceville has given me more than I will ever be able to repay.”

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“Every day I think about how lucky I am to be able to attend this fantastic school, and it’s all thanks to you. Thank you for your generosity.”

WINDOW INTO IMPACT OF SCHOLARSHIP GIVING.

“I would like one day to provide others the same opportunity to attend Lawrenceville as you have afforded me. Words cannot express my gratitude for your generous support. Thank you for believing in me and providing me with this life-changing opportunity.”

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LEARNING TRANSFORMED

FACULTY AND ACADEMIC SUPPORT

The life of the mind remains central to the Lawrenceville experience. The Campaign made significant investments in spaces, programs, and the faculty driving academic excellence.

In short, the future belongs to makers. Many will hail from Lawrenceville thanks to the expanded Gruss Center for Art and Design (GCAD). Modeled on Stanford University’s d.school and drawing inspiration from the culture of Silicon Valley innovation, GCAD connects students with the resources and opportunities to tinker, experiment, and grow as problem-solvers. In this technologyinfused, 15,000-square-foot, industrialstyle space, students prepare for a future where collaboration and improvisation will distinguish the leaders from the followers.

“The future belongs to a different kind of person with a different kind of mind: artists, inventors, storytellers—creative and holistic ‘right-brain’ thinkers…”
Daniel Pink
Author, A Whole New Mind
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“Lawrenceville’s plan to blend the principles of technology and design to create a center for innovation offered a thrilling opportunity.

The resulting makerspace —GCAD—encourages students to stretch the boundaries of their imagination and turn their vision into reality.”

Audrey and Martin Gruss ’60

Donors Audrey and Martin Gruss ’60 seized on the potential to transform the existing Gruss Center of Visual Arts into an interdisciplinary hub for S.T.E.A.M. learning—science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics. This spectacular conversion of the existing building preserves its visual arts core while adding 21st-century facilities devoted to engineering, robotics, and computer-assisted design and fabrication.

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Expanding Student Horizons

STUDENT RESEARCH INSTITUTES

The Hutchins Institute for Social Justice is the latest addition to our growing constellation of student research institutes, connecting our students with college-level scholarship.

Established with a lead gift from Debbie and Glenn Hutchins ’73 and support from Marina and David Ottaway ’57 P’86 ’91 GP’24, the Hutchins Institute for Social Justice asks students to consider, “How can we improve our communities by studying social justice through an academic lens?” and then challenges them to put into practice what they have learned.

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Hutchins Scholars in Social Justice join the Heely Scholars in Archival and Historical Research, the Merrill Scholars in Literary Research and Creative Writing, the Leopold Scholars in Ecology and Ethics, and the Hutchins Scholars in Science Research. The Campaign enabled the existing institutes to expand, and the Hutchins Institute in Science Research now includes the Hutchins Stanford Scholars, affiliated with the Seung Kim Lab at Stanford University, and the Hutchins Jefferson Scholars, a sevenweek internship with leading labs at Jefferson University Hospital.

Our Scholars are making an impact locally and globally, and they are experiencing what it’s like to be scientists, historians, authors, and community advocates—living out our mission and taking it with them into the wider world.

“Lawrenceville attracts gifted students from highly varied backgrounds and prepares them to be leaders, enabling them to make vital contributions in every walk of life. Community engagement in the pursuit of an ever more just society is a task we should encourage—and can expect of them.”

Glenn Hutchins ’73 Co-Chair, Emerge Transformed
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HARKNESS TRAVEL

Lawrenceville students are venturing farther than ever before thanks to dedicated travel funds. Once pandemic restrictions were lifted, spring and summer break trips resumed, with travel focused on service, culture, intensive study, and language acquisition. Every Lawrenceville student has the opportunity to travel internationally at least once. The Viault Family International Scholarship Fund takes this a step further, providing full scholarships to fund immersive summer study abroad.

“There’s a dramatic difference between being a tourist and living daily in another culture,” says Ray Viault ’63 P’96, who established the travel scholarship along with his wife, Lucille, and son, Russell ’96. “When you stay in hotels you get one perspective, but it’s another experience to live with a host family and see your own country through the eyes of others. Our family has traveled extensively and lived in other countries. You learn the language, deal with shopkeepers, and engage with local residents. It’s a transformative experience that changed our lives for the better, and we hope this gift will do the same for Lawrenceville students.”

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BIG RED FARM

Closer to home, the Big Red Farm is a resource tailor-made for putting lessons in plant and animal biology and environmental science into practice. The Farm has grown during the Campaign with support from Susan and Paul Atkinson P’21 ’22 ’24, the Karakin Foundation, Jessie and Andy Krusen ’66 P’95 ’08, and The Scurci Family Fund for Sustainable Agriculture (Vanessa Scurci ’01 and Ethan Plaut ’00).

Expanded operations have significantly increased learning opportunities. The Farm now supplies the School’s dining halls, School Camp, and local food pantries with a wide range of vegetables plus pork and lamb, teaching students about sustainable farming and food equity through internships, coursework, community service, and independent studies.

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25 cultivated acres make the Big Red Farm a valuable resource.

A WORLD-CLASS FACULTY

Our educators are always more than teachers. They serve as mentors, advisors, coaches, and in loco parentis, and enrich every facet of the Lawrenceville experience for our students. Lawrenceville excellence depends on their skills and commitment.

The Campaign made strides in ensuring we can recruit and retain outstanding faculty members and support their continuing professional development. Your gifts enabled us to make salaries more competitive; sponsored training in programs to provide increased emotional support to students post-pandemic; funded athletic endowments with stipends for coaching positions; and assisted in the recruitment of a more diverse faculty, reflecting the face of Lawrenceville today.

“We’re just so impressed with the Lawrenceville community and the support the teachers provide. They’re teachers, mentors, and surrogate family—they elevate the school experience to a whole different level. We thought it was important to acknowledge their contributions.”
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Karen and Tim Piacentini P’24

Leadership support of the faculty included:

» An anonymous gift to faculty compensation, providing every faculty member with an immediate and meaningful salary increase;

» The Bartlett Family Academic Impact Fund;

» The Shelby M.C. Davis ‘54 Dean of Enrollment Management, dedicated to the quality and equity of Lawrenceville admissions;

» The Dishner Family Mindfulness Fund, a current operations fund to support an additional full-time counselor and specialized programming;

» The Frumkin Family Fund for Faculty Housing;

» The Hu and Li Family Academic Impact Fund;

» The Gregory G. Melconian Best for All Fund;

» The Piacentini Faculty Support Fund, an endowment designated to faculty compensation;

» The Sabat Family Mathematics and Data Science Fund, an endowed fund to expand teacher knowledge of and teaching opportunities in statistics and data science;

» The Lisa and David Welsh P’21 Faculty Support Fund;

» The Margaret and Loyal Wilson Family Fund for Faculty Development.

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11 new endowed faculty support funds were created during the Campaign.

COMMUNITY TRANSFORMED THE CAMPUS PLAN

How does environment influence behavior?

Can conscious design of buildings and outdoor spaces help to forge human connections?

We challenged design firm Sasaki to create a campus plan that delivers on our aspirations for bringing together an increasingly diverse student body in compelling new ways, and for strengthening the ties among students, faculty, and staff.

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PHOTO: JEREMY BITTERMANN

We’ve all heard the saying, “The family that plays together, stays together.” We’d add, “especially when there’s food.” The simultaneous needs to replace an aging field house and a functionally outdated dining hall created a unique opportunity to design a facility that would gather the community over meals, games, and fitness.

Clara Wu and Joe Tsai ’82 were on board from the start. Joe played football and lacrosse at Lawrenceville and jokes that food was “very important” to him as a high school student. Tsai Field House, incorporating Tsai Commons for dining, was born of the vision for a community venue unlike any other at an independent school.

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Tsai Commons for III and IV Form dining, with Irwin Mezzanine for the II Formers, opened in fall 2022, along with a new pool and hockey rink. The balance of Tsai Field House, a top-to-bottom renovation preserving the bones of the old facility and modernizing it for today’s athletes, will be completed in early 2024. And in fall 2024, Big Red will play on a new, lighted multi-sport turf field sited at Keuffel Stadium. Underlying the turf will be a series of geothermal wells supplying energyefficient heating and cooling to Tsai.

But there’s more to Tsai Field House than topnotch athletic and dining facilities and arresting, undulating roof lines. The new construction enabled or encouraged a host of ancillary projects that further elevate Lawrenceville’s athletic facilities and advance the community-centered objectives of the campus master plan.

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Clara and Joe were joined by these generous donors to bring Tsai Field House to life:

Natalie and Fahad Al Rashid ’98

Jeanie and Tom Carter ’70 P’01 ’05

Alexa and Michael Chae ’86

Elizabeth and Stephen Davidson ’86 P’18

Jane and Larry Droppa P’07 ’11

The F. M. Kirby Foundation

Jeanet and John Irwin III ’72

Sarah Ketterer P’12 ’17

Bill and Maine Park ’88 P’22 ’23 ’23

Yiping Li and Chiu Hung Shum P’19 ’24

Amanda and Dan Tapiero ’86 P’20 ’22

Kevin Tse ’97

Maggie Zhang and Peter Wen P’23

Sunday Pan and Feng Yu P’21

memories revolve around the shared experience of playing sports and gathering for meals. It is

experience that inspired

to strengthen the foundation of our sense of community for future generations.”

Lyals Battle ’67 and Darrell Fitzgerald ’68 arrived on campus in the fall of 1964 as Lawrenceville’s first two Black students. Joe and Clara chose to dedicate the historic field house entryway to Lyals and Darrell as a tribute to their courage and as a testament to the ethos of Lawrenceville today.

“Lawrenceville was a life-changing experience for me. Some of my fondest
this
me
Joe Tsai ’82 Co-Chair, Emerge Transformed
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GETZ SPORTS COMPLEX AND DISHNER TRACK & FIELD COMPLEX

A total renovation of the Getz Sports Complex gives us allnew turf fields for soccer, lacrosse, and field hockey, upgraded spectator stands, and a lighted path from Tsai Field House, thanks to lead donors Sandy and Bert Getz ’55 H’56 P’85 GP’18 ’20 and Susie and Bert Getz Jr. ’85 P’18 ’20, along with Kit Howard GP’15 ’16 ’19, Mike Tiernan ’68 P’01 ’05 ’09, and the Violich Family. The Dishner Track & Field Complex is next door, courtesy of Cathy and Jeff Dishner ’83 P’15.

12 new fields, courts, and other outdoor athletic facilities

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BIG RED PARK

Tucked behind the Crescent, Big Red Park welcomes students, faculty, staff, and faculty families for pickup games of basketball, sand volleyball, and pickleball. We’re grateful to donors Karen and Jeff Kirby ’80 P’11 ’12 ’15 ’18, Luba Gontcharenko and Marcus Montenecourt ’87 P’26 ’26, Matthew and Liza Tobias Sharp ’89 P’24, Joyce and Stephen Shueh P’23 ’27, and Xueguang Du and Dan Zheng P’26, for providing the campus with this outstanding community play space.

CAMPUS LOOP

The master plan encouraged us to think about the campus organically, and to consider how it might support the focus on “head, heart, hands” that characterizes Lawrenceville 20/20, the strategic plan adopted in 2016. A new access road will allow us to remove cars from the central campus and eventually transform the Bowl into a pedestrian-only plaza. With support from Yama and Goodwin Gaw ’87 P’21, this new road will originate at Route 206 and loop around the Crescent, Tsai Field House, and the main campus to exit behind Clark Music.

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THE FUTURE TRANSFORMED THE WAY FORWARD

The ultimate goal of Emerge Transformed was to make Lawrenceville—its programs, its scholarship aid provisions, its campus—financially sustainable for the foreseeable future. Thanks to your support, we met this goal and exceeded it.

Campaign gifts to The Lawrenceville Fund made it the second-largest cash gift to Emerge Transformed and the third largest in School history.

THE LAWRENCEVILLE FUND

One of our goals for Emerge Transformed was to increase annual giving to a sustainable $7.5 million per year by the Campaign’s end for a total of $32.5 million. Thanks to wide-ranging support, gifts to The Lawrenceville Fund (TLF), which includes The Lawrenceville Parents Fund, topped $43.6 million.

Boosted by leadership giving through the Red & Black Leadership Society, totaling $36.9 million from 1,350 alumni and parent donors, support for The Lawrenceville Fund equaled the second largest cash gift to the Campaign.

Looking ahead, The Lawrenceville Fund will continue to play a critical role in our School’s financial health and will remain at the heart of our fundraising. Support for the Fund will power the programs and priorities established or expanded during the Campaign years, ensuring that a Lawrenceville education remains relevant, dynamic, and accessible. When we say, “every dollar counts,” we mean it.

Dollars don’t tell the whole story. Over 7,000 donors, including 5,038 alumni and 1,946 parents, made gifts to one or more Campaign priorities:

» 96 % of Campaign donors gave to TLF and The Parents Fund.

» 2,298 Campaign donors were members of the 1810 Loyalty Society, which recognizes alumni, parents, and friends who have supported the School for three or more consecutive years.

» 1,493 donors made their first gift ever.

The 1988 Society, which recognizes the School’s most outstanding alumnae donors, is only one of the new opportunities to maintain the momentum of support that has enabled Lawrenceville to emerge transformed.

THE ENDOWMENT

Borrowing terminology from our Mission Statement, Lawrenceville’s endowment has a higher purpose; it’s the foundation on which the essence of our School rests and relies. A strong endowment supports excellence in the present and ensures that the traditions and values important to us as a School and community will survive in perpetuity.

Emerge Transformed raised $212 million in endowed funds, supporting all the things that make Lawrenceville an outstanding, transformational experience. Donors established 88 new endowed funds during the Campaign—we’ll take that as a sure signal of your faith in our mission and direction.

Growing the endowment translates to an increase in annual income, with significant implications for School operations:

» A strong endowment supplements tuition to relieve pressure on the operating budget.

» Especially when financial headwinds hit, the endowment provides a consistent source of funding for scholarship aid, student programs, faculty and staff salaries and benefits, and capital renewal.

» Endowment per student, rather than the overall size of the endowment, may be the School’s most important measure of financial health, dictating real spending on the experiences that matter most.

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“The success of the Emerge Transformed campaign sends a message that resonates far beyond our community—that what we do at Lawrenceville matters. Regardless of how you supported the Campaign or the size of your gift, your investment in Lawrenceville will help to ensure an even brighter future for this great school, with our students as the ultimate beneficiaries. Our graduates have a long history of making the world a better place; your support makes you a partner in these achievements.”

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Transformational Giving

Planned giving—whether through bequests, insurance policies, IRA rollovers, or trusts—is one of the easiest ways to make a major gift to the School, and during Emerge Transformed, 93 donors generously chose to leave a Lawrenceville legacy through estate gifts. Planned gifts and realized bequests reached $97.4 million, or 20% of the Campaign total.

For some donors, planned giving is a family endeavor. Marina and David Ottaway ’57 P’86 ’91 GP’24 have been stalwart supporters of scholarship aid since 1992, when they established the Ottaway Family Fund, an endowed fund dedicated to student aid and diversity. As a trustee and then trustee emeritus, David has been a vocal advocate for scholarship aid, and he and Marina added to the Fund, increasing its value over time. Their commitment led to a generous bequest as part of the Emerge Transformed campaign, and they were joined in philanthropy by sons Eric ’86 and Robin ’91 P’24, who have made their own significant Will provisions for the Ottaway Family Fund.

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“Lawrenceville needs to continue to admit the widest possible array of students no matter their race, gender, nationality, or socioeconomic status. I give to Lawrenceville to ensure that the ability to pay is not a barrier for future generations to access the same springboard for life that still pays dividends to me. A planned gift is the ultimate way to pay that forward.”

Lawrenceville’s refounding as The Lawrenceville School in 1883 benefited from the legacy of John Cleve Green, one of nine original students of the School’s academic progenitor, Maidenhead Academy. The trustees of the Green estate—with family names like Woodhull, Cleve, and Dickinson—commissioned the Circle Houses, Edith Memorial Chapel, and Memorial Hall (now Woods Memorial Hall, following a landmark bequest from Janie H’40 and Henry Woods, Jr. ’40 H’59 ’62), enlisting famed landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted to shape the new campus. The John Cleve Green Society honors the alumni, parents, grandparents, and friends who have established planned gifts, including 642 living members spanning the Classes of 1943 to 2008.

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LEADERSHIP DONORS

We are enormously grateful to the 484 alumni, parents, and friends who made leadership gifts of $25,000 or more to Emerge Transformed: The Campaign for Lawrenceville.

$10,000,000 AND OVER

Anonymous

Audrey and Martin D. Gruss ’60

Andrew M. Meadow ’87

Marina and David B. Ottaway ’57 P’86 ’91 GP’24

$5,000,000–$9,999,999

Anonymous

Natalie and Fahad Al Rashid ’98

Marjorie and Walter Buckley ’56 P’96 ’99 GP’09

Alexa and Michael S. Chae ’86

Yama and Goodwin Gaw ’87 P’21

Hutchins Family Foundation

Lucille and Raymond Viault ’63 P’96

Amanda and John E. Waldron ’87

Sunday Pan and Feng Yu P’21

Andrew

“Tsai Field House is bringing our community together in all the ways we hoped it would—Tsai Commons and the new athletic facilities are amazing.”
Boanoh ’23, Yale ’27 2022-2023 Student Council President
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$2,500,000–$4,999,999

Anonymous

Stacy and Hyman J. Brody ’75 P’07 ’08 ’11

Jeanie and Thomas L. Carter, Jr. ’70 P’01 ’05

Jeremy B. Cloud ’96

Shelby M. C. Davis ’54 GP’06 ’07 ’15 ’18

F. M. Kirby Foundation, Inc.

Kathy Xie and Ben Meng P’26

Eric B. Ottaway ’86

Audra and Robin Ottaway ’91 P’24

David E. Reese ’58

Alanson C. Rogers ’66

Barbara Asch and Jonathan G. Weiss ’75

$1,000,000–$2,499,999

Anonymous

Bertrand Barrois ’69

Cornelius C. Bond, Jr. ’52

Alexandra Buckley Voris ’96 and Michael Voris

Arthur R. Clark, Jr. ’62

Edward B. Collins ’61 GP’21

Christopher C. Davis P’06 ’07 ’18

Jonathan C. Dickey ’71

Cathy and Jeffrey G. Dishner ’83 P’15

Richard L. Doege, Ph.D. ’57 *

Christina Seix Dow and Robert Dow P’08

Jane and Larry Droppa P’07 ’11

Debra Mayer and Joseph Frumkin ’76 P’11

Susan and Mortimer B. Fuller III ’60 P’89 ’01

Sandra and Bert A. Getz ’55 H’56 P’85 GP’18 ’20

Susan and Bert A. Getz, Jr. ’85 P’18 ’20

Andrea DeMuth Griswold ’99 and Benjamin

H. Griswold ’99

Kit Howard GP’15 ’16 ’19

Robert S. Howard P’64 ’68 GP’93 ’04 ’24

GGP’22 ’25 *

Jeanet and John N. Irwin III ’72

Helen Tang and Jinzhi Jiang P’15 ’19

Rupert H. Johnson, Jr. ’58

R. Michael Kasperzak, Jr. ’72

Scott M. King ’64

Nicole Agnew Konzelmann and Joseph Konzelmann ’00

Yvonne Cheung and Ting-Yiu Ma P’22 ’26

Grant Pothast P’14 ’16 ’17

Yiping Li and Chiu Hung Shum P’19 ’24

Edward S. Swan ’43 *

Amanda and Daniel M. Tapiero ’86 P’20 ’22

Thomas S. Tesauro Jr. ’08

Richard A. Tuggle ’66

Celeste Marie Mellet ’94 and Dan Turrentine

Paul A. Violich P’87 ’08 GP’25

Ye Shen and Herb Wang P’21 ’25

Louise and John C. Wellemeyer ’55 ’18 ’18

Maggie Zhang and Peter Wen P’23

Robert M. White ’66

Carolyn Wojciechowicz H’78 and Michael T.

Wojciechowicz ’78 P’06 ’10 ’12

Margaret Wu P’91 ’93 ’98

Jing Shen and Zheng Zhang P’22

$500,000–$999,999

Anonymous

Stephanie Chang and Danny Chiu P’23 ’23

Ross H. Claiborne ’44

Contempo Charity Foundation Limited

Mary and Walter B. Crain III ’68 P’99

William M. Davis ’49 *

Dan Zheng and Xueguang Du P’26

Jean Fang ’90 and Kenneth Lam

Candace and Vincent A. Gaudiani III ’64

Robert J. Hillier ’55 P’11

Christine and Geoffrey T. Ho ’79 P’13 ’15

Peter J. Holmes ’84

Kevin H. Huang ’05

Sarah Ketterer P’12 ’17

Seohyun Lee and Jaeyoul Kim P’23 ’25

Cynthia and Mark M. Larsen ’72 P’01 ’04 ’06

Bobby Lee ’93

Isabel and Jacques Mahe P’26

Jennifer and Jeremy K. Mario ’88 P’16 ’20

Allison and Jeffrey McKibben P’22 ’25 ’27

Elizabeth and William L. Robbins ’86

John P. Sauerman H’84 ’02 ’14 *

Truman T. Semans ’45 P’87

Liza Tobias Sharp ’89 and Matthew Sharp P’24

Robin* and Allan Shivers, Jr. ’64 *

Lisa and Michael W. Tiernan ’68 P’01 ’05 ’09

Kevin W. Tse ’97

Jackie and Alan L. S. Tung ’86 P’14 ’16 ’21

Allison and Jeffrey McKibben P’22 ’25 ’27

Allison and Jeff McKibben have been consistent leadership donors to The Lawrenceville Parents Fund since joining the School community in 2018. In 2020, they established the McKibben Family Fund for Financial Aid.

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“We give to Lawrenceville simply because it’s the best. The students, the faculty, the coaches—they’re all engaged members of the community. And the academics? Unparalleled.”

$250,000–$499,999

Anonymous

Dunbar Abston, Jr. ’49 P’79 *

Leigh Constable Bartlett and John Bartlett P’26 ’27

Lewis W. Bernard ’59

Buck Blessing ’81 P’10

Joan Blessing P’81 GP’10

Maria and Roberto Bonetti ’60 P’93

Joseph T. Breneman II ’49 *

Andrea and Anthony W. Bryant ’48 P’91

Sherman H. Burbank 1898 *

Katherine and Vincent J. Cahill, Jr. ’68

P’09

Brenton H. Carey ’71

Yvonne Chau ’98 and Tom Pen

Leigh M. Tung and Stanley Y. C.

Chou P’23

Judith-Ann Corrente ’01 H’01 P’98 ’01

Andrew Davis P’15

Sydney Davis P’15

Veronique and Diego De Giorgi P’24

William Adams Delano 1891 *

Laura Windatt Galante ’90 and Charles Galante P’25

Joyce Campbell and Robert J. Giuffra, Jr. P’26

John M. Gray ’66

Greg W. Hausler ’81

William F. Hofmann III ’61

Corrente A. Schankler ’98 and Nathaniel Hunt

Karen and Jefferson W. Kirby ’80

P’11 ’12 ’15 ’18

Olga Dukova and Aleksey Kokarev P’21

Jully and Michael Kumar P’24 ’26

Charles B. Lee ’95

Yan Hu and Guangxin Li P’21 ’24

Carol Ann and Leigh W. Lockwood ’65

P’97 ’02

Elaine Xu and Sean Lu P’22 ’23 ’26

Diana Daniel Lucas *

Bartlett A. McCarthy ’62

Nyire and Greg Melconian ’87 P’25

Burk C. Murchison ’67 P’94

Tara and Jim Negus P’24

Henry Z. Norton ’58

Lincoln Pan ’94

Donald R. Parfet ’71

Seymour S. Preston III ’52 *

Robert B. Rosenstein ’85

Shireen and John Sabat P’23

Douglas S. Simon ’76

Ralph C. Smith ’59

Barbara and John J. Stephan ’59

Anne L. Stone P’95

Iona and Peter L. Tompkins ’67 P’02

James K. Wade ’63

Jane and Seth H. Waugh ’76 P’19 ’21

Kathy Angele and A. Lorne Weil P’21

Margaret and Loyal W. Wilson ’66 P’05 ’12

Maggie Wu and Michael Zhou P’24

Elizabeth and Jaime Zobel de Ayala P’08 ’22

Kerry and T. Robert Zochowski, Jr. ’82 P’13

$100,000–$249,999

Anonymous

Upsana and Dhruv Agarwala P’20 ’23

James P. Alampi ’65

Christina and Jeffrey Alt P’21 ’23

Sarah Anschutz P’23

Jackie Reses and Matt Apfel P’22

Clifford K. Ayers ’67

Lawrence T. Babbio GP’21

John B. Baldwin ’58 *

Nancy and Rocky Barber ’69 P’08

Gail and Richard J. Barrett ’67

John H. Boddington ’65 *

Charles D. Broll ’55 GP’12

Kate and Wesley R. Brooks ’71

H’59 ’72 ’09 P’03 ’05

Holly and Norman L. Brown ’86 P’20 ’22

J. Lynne Cannon P’99

Louise Campi-Carroll and David Carroll P’26

Arthur J. Carlton ’50 P’86

Dominique and Michael J. Caron ’76

The Cerimon Fund

Lay Keng Teo and Mr. Jun Chen P’24

Richard A. Cheu P’80 ’82 ’83

Sandra and Winston Chow P’18 ’24

Robert Levy and Michael P. Clifford ’83

P’26

Charlotte and Robert Cloninger P’22 ’25

Richard P. Corl ’88

Jane Lynch Crain ’99

Debra and Dale C. Critz, Jr. ’76 P’10

Elizabeth and Stephen C. Davidson ’86

P’18

Michael A. Del Balso ’62

Frances and David S. Dickenson II ’58

Mrs. Conway W. Dickson W’1904 *

Charles N. Dragonette ’63

Kathy and Craig Drill P’20

Constance Deans du Pont H’74 and Michael B. du Pont ’74 *

Edith Baird Eglin H’52 ’65 ’66 ’67 ’70

GP’19

Ellen and Thomas W. Eglin, Jr. P’19

Daniel F. Fee ’88

George H. Fetterolf ’65

Christina and Brian Flaherty P’21

Lawrence C. Ford, Jr. ’64

Debra and Randy Gelber P’21

Loring Green ’55

Keiko and Anthony W. Greenberg ’94

J. Wilson Henley ’77

Lucius T. Hill III ’76

Erich C. Holmsten ’93

Burtis W. Horner ’38 *

William E. Howard ’68 P’93 GP’22 ’25

Ya-Li Wang and Paul Hsu P’23 ’26

Emma Liu Hu P’21

Lynn D. Johnston H’54 and Robert F. Johnston ’54 P’92 ’94

Margaret and Richard Johnston ’62

Kori and Jonathan Kalafer P’24 ’26

Andrea and David Kennedy P’24

J. Christopher Lauricella ’85

Bret Leas P’25

Min Bu and Donald Peck Leng Lee P’21

Amendy and Kevin K. Leung P’19 ’23

Douglas S. Luke ’60

Abigail and John Mahoney P’23 ’25

32
“Faculty and Academic Support funds are raising salaries and providing more professional development opportunities. This support elevates our work in and out of the classroom and will ensure that both the student and faculty experience are second to none.”
Bernadette Teeley P’24 Dean of Academics English Faculty

“I attended Lawrenceville on the Wells scholarship. This experience changed my life and made it possible for me to achieve much more than I would have without this wonderful experience. My wife and I are funding a scholarship to open the Lawrenceville education to young people who do not have the financial backing to attend. How could we do otherwise?”

Vincent Gaudiani ’64

Together with his wife, Candace, Vince established the Candace and Vincent Gaudiani ’64 Scholarship Fund in 2013. During Emerge Transformed, the Gaudianis increased their commitment significantly with a planned gift through a charitable remainder unitrust.

E. Anthony McAuliffe ’76

Xiaolian Li and Xiaofeng Mo P’26

Mrs. Quin Morton II W’32 *

Luba Gontcharenko and Marcus S. Montenecourt ’87 P’26 ’26

Reva and Charles E. Murphy III ’66 P’90 ’95

Christopher P. Niblock ’82 P’13

Nicholas S. Noyes ’65

Edwin B. Nyquist ’59

William U. Parfet ’65

Maine Huang Park ’88 and William Park P’22 ’23 ’23

Jignya and Alpesh Patel P’21 ’22

Kathleen and Laurence Paul P’25

Karen and Timothy Piacentini P’24

David A. Quaid ’48 *

Mamta and Roy Rodrigues P’25

Sara Darehshori and Ronald S. Rolfe ’63 P’21

James A. Rowan, Jr. ’66

Sheri and Gabriel Saltarelli P’25

Robert J. Saner II ’65

Cheryl Rathan-Schmitz and Andreas A. Schmitz ’87 P’21 ’24

Allen K. Shenk, Jr. ’58

Joyce and Stephen K. Shueh P’23 ’27

J. William Sinnott ’66 P’94

Robert H. Spofford ’59

Julie and Patrick H. Swearingen III ’80 P’17

William Sword P’69 ’71

GP’03 ’05 ’07 ’08 ’10 *

Colin R. Thompson ’53

John C. Vaughey ’57 P’86

Jamie and Lankford Wade P’26

Angeline and Andrew Walters P’24 ’27

James C. Waugh H’67 ’68 ’72 ’74 ’81 ’85 ’88 P’68 ’70 ’72 ’74 ’76

GP’12 ’14 ’16 *

Tyler F. Wean ’96

Liza and Edward A. Weihman ’67

Lisa and David Welsh P’21

Bruce A. Williamson ’83

J. Becket Wolf ’93

Steven K. Wong ’01

Gang Xu P’20 ’23

William J. Young ’45 P’71 *

Amy A. Zhou ’04

33

Shirley Gu ’09

Shirley has been a donor to The Lawrenceville Fund since her senior year in college and joined the ranks of leadership donors soon after. She is one of the youngest members of the Red & Black Leadership Council and, as a Hong Kong resident, serves on the School’s Asia Council.

$50,000–$99,999

Anonymous

John C. Abbott ’88

Kimberly and Kenneth C. Ambrecht ’93 P’24

V. James Andretta, Jr. ’49 P’79 GP’08

George W. Arnett III ’79 P’16

Penny and William G. Bardel ’57 P’93

Susan and Bruce A. Barnet ’63 P’92

Paul Barrett GP’24

Shari and Haim Blecher P’21 ’23 ’27

Frederick W. Bogdan ’77

Albert D. Brown ’71

John M. Bunn ’49 *

Jeannette and Willard Bunn III ’62

P’93 ’01 ’03 ’07 GP’25

Karen Snow and Timothy Bunnell P’21

Eva and Christopher J. Caputo ’83 P’25

Tara and Stephen A. Card ’96 P’24 ’25

Susannah and Thomas Carrier P’22

William Y. Chua ’87

HyunJung Noh and DaeSun Chung P’25

Anne J. Citrin ’92 and Jacob Citrin

David P. Clarendon ’43 P’72 *

Brackett David Clark ’58 P’83 *

Julia and Benjamin Clarke P’25

Ara Cohen P’21

Peter Colwell ’54

Katharine L. Culbertson ’13

Debra Blair and Richard deBart ’68

P’09 ’11

Leslie and Robert C. Doll, Jr. P’09 ’11 ’14

Jeffrey H. Ehret ’71

Kim and David Eisman P’22

Michael D. Eisner ’60

Patrick F. Elliott H’59 *

Sharon and Howell L. Ferguson ’62

P’88 ’90

Polly and Stephen Friess P’24

Patricia Tung and Kenneth Gaw ’88

Andrew T. Goodyear, Jr. ’83

Christine Smith and Alexander Guettel P’22

Leita V. Hamill H’65 ’88 ’97 ’99 and William H.B. Hamill ’65 P’96 ’99

Richard Jinsoo Han P’21

Matthew Carter Harris ’92

Timothy P. Hartshorn ’87

Gillian Hearst ’99

Raymond R. Herrmann, Jr. P’75 *

Bruce C. Hoffman ’64

William D. Hoffman ’79

Elton M. Hyder III ’72

Beverly and Keith S. Jennings ’62 P’94

William A. Klopman ’39 *

Peter C.H. Koo ’86

Betsy and Douglas Korn P’18 ’19 ’22

Hae Sun Hwang and Joon Mo Kwon P’15 ’19

Lois and Butler W. Lampson ’60 P’90

Ji Young Park and Wonbum Lee P’26

Lawrence E. Leibowitz ’78 P’09 ’11

Lawrence W. Leighton ’52 GP’16

Jeff Lyle ’76

Barbara and Ross Martinson P’18 ’22

Kristen and James Masserio P’25

Theodore L. McCaugherty ’66

Jane McCord W’63 P’92 ’93 ’95

Harold W. McGraw IV ’95

Kristin and Michael J. McLaughlin ’83

P’12 ’16 ’20

J. Gregg Miller ’62

Kate and Jason Moscowitz ’08

Kelli Kenny and Ricardo Mora P’25

Mark C. Mullervy ’98

Raoul H. Nehr ’32 *

Judith and John J. Preefer ’66 P’07

Jean E.H. Preston W’52

Heather Woods Rodbell ’91 and Jonathan Rodbell

Suzanne and Donaldson Mott Ross ’82 P’11

Michael C. Sapnar ’84

Matthew A. Schroth ’09

Philo Smith ’45 *

Richey Smith ’52 *

Lynne Mullervy Staartjes ’07

Doug Steiner P’14

David W. Sumner ’86

Zhiming Tang ’22

Lisa Skeete Tatum and Mark Tatum P’19 ’21

Courtney Lederer and Mark

Thierfelder P’19 ’22

Jeffrey W. Traenkle ’51

Susan and John L. Vette ’56 III P’93

Russell G. Viault ’96

Julie and Jeffrey C. Walker ’89 P’23

Robert S. Warth ’51

Curtis McGraw Webster ’75

Kirsten and Michael J. Weinstein ’94 P’23

Elizabeth Greenberg Wilkinson ’02 and Tj Wilkinson

Mrs. William Wilson III H’54 W’54

Kelly and Baowei Wu P’17 ’25

Alice Tong and Kang Zau P’21

Yan Li and Jian Zhuo P’20 ’23

34
“As I reflect on how much my Lawrenceville experience has shaped the person I am today, I also know that not everyone has access to the same resources and opportunities. By supporting the Lawrenceville Fund at a leadership level, I can make a real difference in the lives of students both now and in the future.”

$25,000–$49,999

Anonymous

Ibrahim Al Rashid ’02

Susan and Kenneth C. Ambrecht P’93 ’96 ’02 GP’24 *

John Warrington Bailey ’60

Christine and Charles F. Baird, Jr. ’71

James H. Baird III ’96

Edward L. Barlow ’52 GP’09

Veronica and Anson Beard P’25

Jennifer and Myron Bednar P’22

Bayne and Scott A. Belair ’65 P’08 ’09

Claudia and Eric Berg P’13

Sarah and Christopher Blundin P’21 ’24

John Bourger GP’24

Emery Holton Bourke ’07 and Michael Bourke

Juliana Elkouri and Porter Braswell ’07

Benjamin F. Briggs H’61 ’63 ’69 *

Alison and George Brokaw P’26

Whitney Hailand Brown ’91 and Claude L. Brown ’92 P’23 ’25

Michelle and Philip Burgess P’24

William D. Byrne, Jr. ’55

Sean P. Campbell ’94

Rajib Chanda ’93

Christine Lo and Kenneth Chiang P’23

Andrew H. Chun ’99

Kirby S. Culbertson ’06

Nimrata and Aroon Dalamal P’22 ’24

Lynette Kerrane-Darragh and Timothy Darragh P’13 ’21

Anne and Robert Dawson P’20

Betsy and Warren H. Dean ’75

P’07 ’09 ’10

Stacylyn Dewey Doore ’03 and Michael Doore

Maureen Ehret H’72 and John F. Ehret ’76 P’06 ’12

Allison and John W. Eustace ’68 P’00

R. Douglas Ezzell ’70

Elissa Niemiera ’05 and Samuel Fagelson ’05

Michael L. Fitzgerald ’72

Amanda Gordon Fletcher ’92

Betsy and Mark J. Gabrielson ’74

P’02 ’08

Ye Grace Lu and Jianming Gao P’23

David A. Goldberg ’72

Dana Farrington and Alexander Goldman P’24

Curt E. Goldman ’96

Scott D. Goldman ’97

Natalia and William R. Goldman ’94

P’26

Kenneth E. Growney ’78

Penny and David Gubbay P’22

Lisa and Robert Guida P’21

Wilson Handler ’03

Richard P. S. Hannum ’62

Molly and Robert Hardie P’17

Dukhui and Paul Holub P’23

Beatrice Howard W’64 P’24

Alexander Hufty-Griswold ’02

Michael S. Immordino ’79

Yves A. Istel ’53

Feng Wang and Weibo Jiang P’25

Christopher H. Joy ’72

William A. Jump III ’73

Jeffrey L. Kang ’73

Michael A. Kasper ’97

Robert E. Keiter ’53

Edward B. Keller ’05

Andrew M. Khatri ’97

Richard H. Kirk ’75

Michele and Michael Koch P’20 ’22 ’25

Tao Wang and Louis Kuijs P’24

Elizabeth and Andrew Labadie P’08 ’11

Elizabeth and David Laws P’21 ’23

Peter Lawson-Johnston ’45

GP’95 ’98 ’15 ’18

George W. Lee, Jr. ’50 *

Robert M. Lester ’66

Andre C. Loh ’69 *

Suzanne and Henry T. Lyons, Jr. ’62

P’86

Marcus B. Mabry ’85 and Christopher Hubis

Gordon MacGill ’03

Andy and Clark F. MacKenzie ’59 P’81

Mark B. Mahoney ’72

Kate and Jeffrey Majit P’25

Sheila and Joseph A. Mark ’53

P’82 ’84 ’89

Sarah and Robert McCain P’23 ’23

Robert Y. McCarter ’70

George Ashby McElveen IV ’97

Adam J. Mervis ’79

35

Dara Williams Miles ’90 and Thomas Miles ’90 P’18 ’21 ’23

Charlotte L. Mitchell ’09 and Blake Mitchell

Katherine A. Moore ’95

Meera J. Nathan ’90 and Paritosh Singh P’24 ’24

Jennifer and John C. Newsom ’88 P’23

Lesley and John Nicholson P’20 ’22

David A. Oestreich ’50 *

Elizabeth and Edward O’Reilly P’25

Roy H. Park, Jr. ’56

Minjeong Cheon and Sangman Park P’23

Mrs. Rolland B. Peacock, Jr. W’41 *

Lee and George B. Prince, Jr. ’52 P’87

Lawrence W. Prince ’58

Lisa and Michael Profenius P’22

Pamela and J. Michael Rediker ’59 P’99

Ian S. Rice ’95

Ashley and Earl G. Robbins II ’82 P’24

Catherine and James McKee Robinson P’23

Richard C. Rolle ’73

Annette and Curt Sang P’21

Joy and Liam Sargent P’21

Margaret Susan Schoelwer ’00

Joseph Schrade II ’59 *

Patricia Scott P’83 ’84

Gregory Scozzari ’80

Robert K. Simonds ’91

Sanchita and Sunil Singhal ’90 P’24

Scan this code for the complete list of donors to Emerge Transformed: The Campaign for Lawrenceville .

Gurney P. Sloan III ’77

Thomas A. M. Smallhorn ’85

W. Cordes Snyder III ’53

Lindsey Spindle ’90 and David Spindle

Jennifer Ridley Staikos ’91 and Bill Staikos

Stefanski Family Foundation

Mary Elise and Austin P. Sullivan, Jr. ’57

P’96

Susan and E. Scott Swanezy ’73 P’07

David A. Taft ’75

Mary and John Trousdale P’18

Debra Fierro and David Trucano

P’25 ’27

Christina Del Vecchio Tuller ’97 and Jared Tuller

Nicole and Michael Vermut P’22 ’25

Kimberly and Robert Vogel P’18 ’20 ’22

Marjorie and Kevin G. Volpp ’85 P’24

George White, Jr. ’53 *

Leslie Powell Wickham ’92 and Mitchell Wickham P’22

Samuel B. Williams ’85 P’24 ’26

Katherine Adams and Forwood C. Wiser III ’76 P’16 ’19

Sanghee Lee and Suk Mynn Yoon P’13 ’21

*indicates deceased

36
“I don’t think I would be where I am now without Lawrenceville and the opportunities it gave me to explore, to test new skills, and to achieve more than I could ever imagine. Scholarship support made this possible, and I’m so grateful.”
Tesia Thomas ’22, Harvard ’26

A FINAL THANK YOU

It has been our great pleasure to help lead the way for the Emerge Transformed campaign with our guidance and personal support. We hope you were inspired by our efforts, but ultimately it was the generosity and vision of the Lawrenceville community that made Emerge Transformed the most successful campaign in independent school history. It would be easy to point out all the ways our school is benefiting from your philanthropy, but we think there is an even more significant message embedded in the improvements to our campus, our programs, and the lives of our students, faculty, and staff—your faith in the enduring purpose of Lawrenceville.

Your generosity is what sustains our time-honored mission of integrity, service, and achievement for the greater good. We’re 213 years into this humble experiment in education, and while Lawrenceville has grown and adapted in response to industrialization, social trends, and technological progress, the value of the Lawrenceville experience has remained constant. With your support, a Lawrenceville education continues to represent the gold standard, and our school occupies an increasingly consequential place in the world. Thank you.

Alexandra

Co-Chairs, Emerge Transformed: The Campaign for Lawrenceville

Buckley Voris ’96 Glenn H. Hutchins ’73 Michael S. Chae ’86 Joseph C. Tsai ’82
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