TRANSFORMATIONS Annual Report
Transcription
TRANSFORMATIONS Annual Report
T RANSFORMATIONS Annual Report July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Museum of the Shenandoah Valley 901 Amherst Street Winchester, Virginia 22601 Phone: 540-662-1473 Fax: 540-662-8756 www.theMSV.org Photographs Cover: A participant in Camp MSV, a summer youth program at the MSV for the Boys & Girls Club of Northern Shenandoah Valley. Photo: Rick Foster Page 1: A young girl connects with a Shenandoah Valley icon in Becoming Patsy Cline. Photo: Rick Foster Page 2: A participant in the Start with Art: Beginner’s Pottery workshop. Photo: Rick Foster Page 4: American Impressionism: The Lure of the Artists’ Colony in the newly renovated Changing Exhibitions Gallery. Photo: Ron Blunt Page 20: A participant in the tomato relay race during the Tomato & Garlic TasteFest. Photo: Rick Foster T he Mission of the MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY is to preserve and enrich the cultural life and heritage of the Valley. C ELEBR AT I NG F I V E Y EARS 1 2 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY F ROM T HE DI R EC TOR “Transformation” is a In addition, economic and demographic shifts in strong word. It means a the United States convince us we must increase major change in form, our efforts to make the MSV accessible. In this nature, or function. It is a fiscal year, we forged more community dramatic term to define collaborations to combine and stretch limited fiscal year 2012–13, yet resources in innovative ways. an apt one. The previous year, to This Annual Report details the new path on which we embarked in fiscal year 2012–13. It develop the Museum’s path to the future, we also demonstrates our commitment to studied visitor data, analyzed museum models, stewarding current resources before building or and, most important, talked to the community. acquiring new ones. I especially thank the MSV The Strategic Plan that emerged is exciting and Donors who made every accomplishment relevant. Fiscal year 2012–13 witnessed the next described here possible. I hope you will step in the process, developing a Master Plan to conclude, after reading this Annual Report, that implement this strategic vision. your confidence in this Museum is a wise and Inspired by a new Mission, The Strategic and meaningful investment in our community. Master Plans direct this Museum to be This month, the MSV unveils its new Master responsive to community needs. This means, for Plan, the result of careful thinking and planning example, presenting exhibitions and that took place in fiscal year 2012–13. This new programming that appeal to new audiences as plan is creative and invigorating. It is, in fact, well as traditional ones. That goal directed a transformative, and I look forward to sharing it major shift in use of our gallery spaces this year. with you soon. Transforming the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Gallery into the Changing Exhibitions Gallery now allows us to program exhibitions of more widespread appeal. At the same time, it allows us to present one of our major resources, the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Collection, in a Dana Hand Evans Executive Director continually fresh and engaging way. November 2013 TRANSFORMATIONS 3 T R ANS F OR M AT I ONS In fiscal year 2012–13, the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley witnessed its most significant new strides since opening its new building in 2005. From implementing sweeping changes inside the Museum to planning for those in the landscape beyond, it was a year of transformations. TRANSFORMING EXHIBITIONS Over the years, the size of the MSV Changing Exhibitions Gallery has limited exhibition options. Concurrently, the larger, static Julian Wood Glass Jr. Gallery has failed to engage visitors as fully as we would like. These facts have challenged our goal to increase visitation. The solution that emerged, turning the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Gallery into the Changing Exhibitions Gallery, transformed this Museum in this fiscal year. Now the MSV can present changing exhibitions rivaling those in many of the largest museums in this country and, in the Founders Gallery, present the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Collection in a series of rotating exhibitions that are relevant and engaging. The effort to accomplish this transformation was significant: the MSV moved the large Julian Wood Glass Jr. Collection into storage, carefully examined each piece for conservation needs, and then renovated the space to function as a changing exhibitions gallery. Visitors test their text-messaging speed in a race against a video of a telegrapher in An American Turning Point: The Civil War in Virginia– Waging War. Photo: Scott Mason, courtesy of The Winchester Star. An American Turning Point. On view in the MSV August 3 through December 2, 2012, that exhibition was organized by the Virginia Historical Society as part of Virginia’s commemoration of the Civil War sesquicentennial. The MSV was one of the first venues on a three-year, statewide tour. On March 5, Moveable Feasts: Entertaining at Glen Burnie opened as the first MSV exhibition drawn from the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Collection. Scheduled to be on view through early 2015, this light-hearted exhibition tells the story of the entertaining that took place in the At the same time, in the original Changing Museum’s Glen Burnie House and Gardens Exhibitions Gallery, the MSV de-installed during the 1960s. TRANSFORMATIONS 5 Ellen Rose Pettitt of Harpers Ferry plays the “Butler Bamboozle” touch-screen game in the Moveable Feasts exhibition. The game challenges visitors to set a formal table before time runs out. Photo: Rick Foster The exhibition takes visitors on a stroll through Fine Clothing. The next day’s Member Tea was a garden maze to glimpse vignettes of the equally successful. Nearly 600 people “moveable feasts” that MSV benefactor Julian participated in these two events. Wood Glass Jr. and his partner, R. Lee Taylor, hosted at the site. The exhibition was strategic, planned to tell our benefactor’s story while the Glen Burnie House closed for preservation Following on the heels of Moveable Feasts, on June 1, the new Changing Exhibitions Gallery was unveiled with the opening of American measures. The most elaborate installation to that date of an MSV-organized exhibition, the popularity of the exhibition’s two interactive elements, including the touch-screen “Butler Bamboozle” game, has validated the inclusion of activities for all ages in our exhibitions. Opening activities for the exhibition included the cocktails-inspired Sixties Soiree, for which women donned elaborate cocktail hats to compete for a gift certificate donated by Bell’s 6 MSV Members enjoy the March 3 tea celebrating the opening of Moveable Feasts at the MSV. Photo: Rick Foster M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY Becoming Patsy Cline ushered in a new era of exhibitions at the MSV. Organized by the MSV in partnership with Celebrating Patsy Cline, Inc., the exhibition tells the Shenandoah Valley story of Patsy Cline, considered by many to be the most influential female country singer in recording history. The exhibition demonstrates the story-telling power now possible in the new Changing Exhibitions Gallery. Such exhibitions have a significant price tag, and the MSV is A participant in June’s sold-out Impressionism Art Class. extremely grateful to exhibition underwriters Grove’s Winchester Harley-Davidson, Impressionism: The Lure of the Artists’ Colony. The exhibition featured 75 oil paintings and nearly 30 works on paper from the collection of Pennsylvania’s Reading Public Museum. Its landscapes, portraits, and still-life paintings from the 1880s through the 1940s presented a Shenandoah Country Q102, Winchester Printers, Mr. and Mrs. Irving L. Hottle, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Hottle, The Estate of John of Brown, and McDonald’s® of Winchester. Next year’s Annual Report will provide more details about this groundbreaking exhibition. rare opportunity to see a wide variety of approaches to impressionism in America. The new Changing Exhibitions Gallery did not disappoint. Members and the community turned out in force for celebratory weekend activities, which included a Saturday-morning class in which participants learned to paint a landscape while enjoying a Mimosa, followed by a class for teenagers about American impressionists and the music that may have inspired them. That evening nearly 400 people attended the opening celebration. The opening of American Impressionism helped the MSV hone its planning for Becoming Patsy Cline, which would open in August 2013. By the end of fiscal year 2012–13, that exhibition’s design was complete and fabrication was well underway. TRANSFORMATIONS Becoming Patsy Cline on view in the MSV Changing Exhibitions Gallery. Photo: Ron Blunt 7 Second Time Around represents a milestone in the MSV’s growth as a museum, as in early 2013 we learned it will be the first MSV-organized exhibition selected by a traveling exhibition service to travel nationwide. That abbreviated version of the exhibition will begin traveling in late 2015 under the auspices of Exhibits USA of the Mid-America Arts Alliance, the nonprofit group that tours the National Endowment for the Humanities On the Road program. MSV benefactor Julian Wood Glass Jr.’s dinner jacket is on firsttime display in the Moveable Feasts exhibition. Photo: Ron Blunt As several years of planning for Becoming Patsy Cline culminated in fiscal year 2012–13, planning for another exhibition, Second Time Around: The Hubcap as Art, was also intense. The exhibition will present 285 objects from the collection of the nonprofit Landfillart Project of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, to demonstrate the potential of creative reuse of resources. Objects Becoming Patsy Cline and Second Time Around represent the MSV commitment to engage new audiences. However, we have not abandoned traditional audiences, as two other planned exhibitions demonstrate. This year witnessed planning for an exhibition that will open in spring of 2014 and shine new light on a Valley furniture form, the food safe (commonly called the pie safe). to be displayed were made by professional artists from around the world, with each artist responding to the challenge to turn a discarded hubcap into a work of art. Waste Not of the Smithsonian Institution’s Green Revolution exhibition will provide a significant component of the exhibition. Metal Hubcap Fish, 2011, by Ptolemy Erlington of Brighton, United Kingdom. This repurposed hubcap will be among the works of art on view in the upcoming Second Time Around exhibition. 8 Made in Rockingham County, Virginia, between 1840 and 1870, this punched-tin paneled safe will be among the food safes on view in an upcoming MSV exhibition. Private Collection. Photo: William McGuffin M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY The exhibition will be the first changing presentation in the Decorative Arts spaces of the Shenandoah Valley Gallery; it signals another transformation of space, this one to ensure the Shenandoah Valley Gallery always has something new to see. For The Founders Gallery, fine arts advocates will be pleased to know that planning for a paintings exhibition is now underway. The MSV will announce details about both exhibitions in the coming months. TRANSFORMING COLLECTIONS In last year’s Annual Report, the MSV announced its intent to expand its Shenandoah Valley Collection, with an emphasis on adding objects made by Valley artists and including craftspeople of the 20th and 21st centuries. In fiscal year 2012–13, the Museum made good on that promise. Among its most notable acquisitions were a number of carvings by Rockingham County folk artist John L. Heatwole (1948–2006). These included objects made specifically for a Rockingham County collector. The earliest pieces in the carved-wood grouping—Untitled and The Star Geezer—date to 1989. Other notable acquisitions in fiscal year 2012– 13 included: A sundial made by Goldsmith Chandlee (1751–1821), Winchester; a silver waste bowl by Charles Stewart (1797–1866) of Charles Town, Virginia (now West Virginia); two frakturs, one attributed to Jacob Strickler The Star Geezer, 1989, by John L. Heatwole (1948–2006), is among the MSV’s recent acquisitions. Photo: William McGuffin, courtesy (1770–1842) and made to commemorate the Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates, Inc. birth in 1810 of Anna Kaufman of Shenandoah 1890) and a pitcher by J. D. Heatwole of Dry County (now Page); a jar attributed to Emanuel River Pottery (operating 1860–70), both Suter of New Erection Pottery (operating 1866– Rockingham County; an alcohol and lard TRANSFORMATIONS 9 combination lamp, ca.1850–75, that was likely made by a Shenandoah County tinsmith using a pattern of J. K. Leedy (1829–1904) of Woodstock; and a pocket watch, ca. 1825, featuring a rare watch paper by Jacob Bear, who made clocks and watches around 1806 to 1823 in Lexington, Virginia. Significant gifts of objects this year include nine MSV Art in the Halls artist Virginia Dutton. Photo: Rick Foster pieces of pottery, two bank notes, and one wall clock donated by Auggie Van Dessel; three of the pieces of pottery are from S. Bell & Son (late 19th century) and two from W. H. Lehew & Co. Loans of objects also help tell the Valley story; we also thank William M. Henkel for the loan of his Valley highboy and sideboard this year. (1850–75), both Strasburg, Virginia. Other donations included a rocking chair, five baskets, The ability to tell the Valley’s story also requires three quilts, and a butter press from Mildred conservation of objects. Conservation also Hensley; four quilts from Dolores and Henry S. fulfills the MSV commitment to serve as a good Bausum; three paintings by Garnet Jex (1895– steward of Valley material culture entrusted to 1979) from Anne C. Webb, and a large painting our care. This year we conserved two pairs of of the Shenandoah Valley by contemporary wall sconces, including one pair now on display artist Forrest Moses from Carl and Marilynn in Moveable Feasts; a T’ang Dynasty horse; and Thoma. The MSV is extremely grateful to all Portrait of William Wood Glass by Edward these generous donors for donating these objects Caledon Bruce and a garden sculpture, both on to help us better tell the Valley story. display in Moveable Feasts. Changes in display of the Collection in the Shenandoah Valley Gallery made the visitor experience fresh this year. To allow the former Orientation Gallery to become a dramatic entrance for changing exhibitions, the orientation video was modified and placed in a portion of the Shenandoah Valley Gallery. This same area now includes a new display, Our Valley, Our Heritage, which reflects our collecting scope and diversity by presenting fine, folk, and decorative art, as well as other items Janie Carscallen, MSV registrar/collections manager, places silver in the Moveable Feasts exhibition. Photo: Ginger Perry, courtesy of of Valley material culture. These changes were The Winchester Star unveiled in May of 2013. 10 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY Finally, experiencing art in the MSV is not limited to the second-floor galleries. This year, the MSV was pleased to display the works of eight Valley artists in the Glaize and Lewis Halls via the Art in the Halls program. These presentations included The Bold and Romantic James by Geraldine Keifer; Open Spaces by Virginia Dutton, and The Africa Series by Julie Read. Artists Mark Strauss, Josie Tilton, Michael Timothy Davis, John Burns, and David Heatwole also presented their work in this program this year. TRANSFORMING OUR HOUSES AND LANDSCAPES (Back row, left to right) Winchester Planning Director Tim Youmans, Winchester Assistant City Manager Douglas Hewett, Winchester City Council Member Evan Clark, (front row, left to right) MSV Executive Director Dana Hand Evans, WinchesterFrederick County CVB Director Sally Coates, and Winchester Mayor Elizabeth Minor following the Green Circle dedication ceremony at the MSV. Photo: Rick Foster While transformations took place inside the As a prelude to the expansion and renovation of MSV galleries, the same was happening outside. the gardens that will begin in 2014, in fiscal In fiscal year 2012–13, the MSV developed a year 2012–13 a portion of the City of Master Plan (see the Fast Forward section of this Winchester’s Green Circle was opened on the report) that will dramatically reshape the visitor MSV property. We dedicated this portion of the experience of the Museum. Green Circle during the MSV National Public Gardens Day event in May, with the mayor of In the first step of this ambitious process, this Winchester and other city officials participating. fiscal year the MSV completed a historic As this Annual Report goes into publication, the structures report that included paint analysis, a MSV is exploring the possibility of expanding dendrochronology study, and lead and asbestos the Green Circle onto more of our landscape. testing leading to asbestos remediation. Informed by these reports, our listening sessions, and studies from groups such as the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the MSV also studied how the Glen Burnie House can best serve the Museum’s and community’s needs. Look for exciting announcements regarding this transformation in the months ahead. Right: Preservation specialist Dennis Pogue, PhD, examines the Glen Burnie House structure. TRANSFORMATIONS 11 and Recreation Department (FCPRD) are moving forward. Assuming a plan for public access is finalized with Frederick County, we will construct a new entrance and parking lot. This year we made the decision to restore the facade of the house to its 1800s appearance and return to the house’s use as a tenant property. Young visitors discover the gardens during the National Public Gardens Day celebration at the MSV. Photo: Rick Foster One renovation has already occurred in the gardens. In the spring of 2013, an important transformation took place with the refurbishing of the Pink Pavilion. With its new stucco and windows, this popular, small garden folly is now open to visitors on a daily basis during the season and presents another space for earned income through rentals. TRANSFORMING LIVES THROUGH COMMUNITY EVENTS AND EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS The MSV makes its most important transformations in the lives of people. We particularly do this through engaging education and community programming, as well as wide access to the site through many free-admission programs and initiatives. Every Wednesday morning the MSV is free to all, and it is always free to youth ages 12 and under. These policies, Along with the Glen Burnie House and along with many free-admission special events, surrounding landscape, the Historic Rose Hill make it possible for all community residents, no site is also undergoing a transformation. Plans matter their income, to enjoy the MSV. In this to install walking trails on the property in fiscal year, 5,837 individuals received free partnership with the Frederick County Parks admission through these initiatives. The Robbie Limon Band entertained a crowd of nearly 2,000 Gardens at Night attendees in September of 2012. Photo: Rick Foster 12 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY This year the Education Department conducted antique and modified car show coordinated by 70 youth, family, and adult programs and the Shenandoah Region of the Antique presented 25 programs or tours for student Automobile Club of America. groups, with 3,337 people participating in the programs. Students ranged from elementary grades to college-graduate levels. An outreach program taught an additional 700 elementary school students about the American Civil War. MSV staff also assisted with a Shenandoah University undergraduate class about museum work and the Valley’s material culture. Jared Wain, 12, of Methuen, Massachusetts, listens to and watches an interactive video as he visits the Virginia Civil War 150 HistoryMobile at the MSV on August 18, 2012. Photo: Ginger Perry, courtesy of The Winchester Star In August, the HistoryMobile visited us. This “museum on wheels” in a 53-foot expandable tractor-trailer is an initiative of the Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission. Designed in partnership with the Fredericksburg/Spotsylvania National Military Park and the Virginia Historical Society, the Attendees of the June 2013 Gardens at Night enjoy the concert from the hill beside the MSV. Photo: Rick Foster Gardens at Night (GAN) continued in its popularity this fiscal year, with 3,662 people HistoryMobile stop at the MSV complemented An American Turning Point: The Civil War in Virginia–Waging War in the Changing Exhibition Gallery. flocking to its four events. Shenandoah Country Q102 sponsored this series, which included free activities for youth and music by Unity Reggae Band, the Folsom Prisoners, the Robbie Limon Band, and the Bruce Ewan Band. September’s event attracted nearly 2,000 people, the largest crowd ever for a GAN event. Free-admission family days attracted 3,060 people this year. Highlights of this series included July’s Glen Burnie Gardens Day, which Members of the Massanutten Antique Tractor & Gasoline Engine Club arrive for the 2012 Tomato & Garlic TasteFest. included a free concert by Soul Gravity and an Photo: Rick Foster TRANSFORMATIONS 13 Also in August, nearly 850 people attended the Tomato & Garlic TasteFest. Now in its third year, this free event shines a spotlight on garlic and tomato production and the Valley’s agricultural heritage. This year it featured cooking demonstrations; samplings; culinary lectures; vendors selling related products; children’s games; and a display of antique tractors coordinated by the Massanutten Antique Tractor & Gasoline Engine Club. Billie Clifton of Sunflower Cottage garden center in Middletown, Virginia, was our guest lecturer. Participating chefs included Ed Matthews of One Block West restaurant; Patrick Evans, then the executive chef of Winchester’s George Washington Hotel; and Michelle Miller of Panache Catering Company. A young visitor enjoys the painting activity during February’s MSV Day. offered special tours in the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Gallery, which closed the next day for its transformation into the new Changing Exhibitions Gallery. Admission was free to all First Night Winchester at the MSV attracted 133 those wearing First Night buttons, as well as to people. For the second year, the MSV sponsored youth aged 12 and younger and Museum the event’s coloring contest and, as a First Night Members. Winchester partner, we opened that Monday with a day of family-oriented activities that included release of a rehabilitated, red-tailed hawk nursed by the Blue Ridge Wildlife Center in Millwood, Virginia. In addition, the MSV In February, 542 people attended MSV Day, despite two galleries being closed for renovations. The day offered guided tours in the Shenandoah Valley Gallery; Americana music from the Rolling Coyotes; and activities for youth in the BB&T Learning Center. In May, the MSV celebrated National Public Gardens Day with free admission, youth activities, and a family-friendly Tai Chi class for all ages in the gardens, led by Pat Rice of Winchester’s Shenandoah Taijiquan Center. A dedication ceremony for the portion of the City’s Green Circle Trail on the MSV property also took place, and the day concluded with familyoriented Galleries at Night and a concert by children’s musician Peter McCory. More than The red-tailed hawk just prior to its release at the MSV by the Blue Ridge Wildlife Center. Photo by Dave Shore 615 people participated in the festivities. 14 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY In September, the MSV participated in the Starkey and the Spiritual Seven Gospel Singers. Smithsonian Institution Museum Day Live! In This gospel concert was partially supported by this program, the MSV and other museums funding from the Virginia Commission for the offered free admission to all those who Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts. downloaded a ticket from the Smithsonian All holiday concerts are free to Members and magazine website. We also joined the Blue Star just five dollars for all others. We were especially pleased to offer entertainment resulting from a new partnership with Shenandoah Conservatory. Taking place in October, February, April, and May, the entertainment included a performance of Broadway standards, a presentation of love poems and scenes from Shakespeare’s famous plays, a musical journey through the history of the saxophone, and a piano recital by Sivan Negrutiu. A visitor enjoys the children’s activities during the National Public Garden Day celebration at the MSV. Photo: Rick Foster Museum collaboration of the National Endowment for the Arts, Blue Star Families, the Department of Defense, and more than 2,000 museums nationwide. The program offers free admission to the nation's active duty military personnel, including the National Guard and Reserve and their families, from Memorial through Labor Days annually. In fiscal year 2012–13, we also continued December’s holiday tea. Once again, the event sold out; 64 people attended to hear a humorous presentation, “The Nicety of Dining in the Late Eighteenth Century,” by Cathy Hellier, historian with The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. Mariea Terrell, a junior acting major at Shenandoah Conservatory, rehearses for her performance in the February 15 program at the MSV, “An Evening of Shakespeare and Love.” Photo: Rick Foster As yet one more example of partnering with another Valley nonprofit organization to present programming for the community, the MSV also was pleased to continue in its partnership with Winchester’s Magic Lantern Theater. The August presentation of Big Night complemented the Tomato & Garlic TasteFest and was preceded by The popular Holiday Concert Series also con- a performance by Shenandoah University opera tinued this year. Its five concerts featured Dixie students. September’s film, Glory, featured a pre- Rhythm, Bryan Shepherd, the Yesterday Swing movie performance of folk and Americana music Orchestra, Winchester Musica Viva, and Larnell by Andrew McKnight. TRANSFORMATIONS 15 Rose; agronomist Mal Sarna; Master Gardeners Megan McLarin and Lynn Hoffman; and Shenandoah Valley farmer and fruit-grower Bill Makintosh. In 2013, this series became Lunchbox Lessons; these free, 20-minute programs focused on a variety of garden subjects presented by MSV staff and other experts. Orchid Show and Sale attendees with their purchases. This fiscal year marked the third event of our partnership with the Lord Fairfax Orchid Society. This free Orchid Show and Sale in March featured advice from the experts and an orchid display and sale. Associated activities requiring a fee included a potting station and class for novice growers. While impossible within this Annual Report to list all 70 of the fiscal year’s individual education programs, highlights begin with a mention of the Tuesday Garden Talk Series. Outside experts featured in the programs included arborist Ben Participants in December’s Holiday Centerpiece Workshop used greens from the Glen Burnie Gardens to create table decorations. Another popular garden program, the holiday centerpiece workshop, sold out this year, as did workshops on building terrariums and bonsai gardening. New programs in the gardens included July’s silent walking and meditation instruction from meditation expert Shell Fischer and June’s yoga sessions in the gardens, led by instructor Caroline Felix. In the Museum, workshop subjects included meditation, calligraphy, knitting, and quilting. In fiscal year 2012–13, the MSV continued its tradition of expert lectures. Lecturers included: Andy Talkov, the Virginia Historical Society and curator of An American Turning Point; Dennis Pogue, PhD, author and preservationist; Shepherd University professor Dawn Raines The MSV launched the Lunchbox Lesson garden program series in 2013. Burke, PhD; horticulturist André Viette; and in 16 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY Also in January, the MSV again collaborated with the Shenandoah Valley Genealogical Society (SVGS) to present Shenandoah Valley Heritage Day. This free event helped area residents research their female ancestors. Nearly 130 people attended the event to hear expert presentations and browse information tables hosted by area genealogical and historical societies and research organizations. The day’s Horticulturist and author André Viette signs a copy of his latest book for MSV Member and Docent Karen Brill following his April 13 lecture. presenters included Constance Potter, archivist from the National Archives in Washington, DC; Charles Mason, certified genealogist; quilt conjunction with the local One Book One expert Pamela Pampe; hair-jewelry collector Kay Community effort, John T. Jacobs, PhD, Cogswell; and Depression-era historian Nancy Shenandoah University professor and founder of Thompson. the Willa Cather Institute. To complement American Impressionism: The Lure of the Artists’ Colony, Scott Schweigert, curator of art and civilization at the Reading Public Museum, discussed artists’ colonies in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In addition, a program series featuring Valley artisans premiered in January of this year; attendees packed the reception hall to learn the art of making Windsor and ladder-back chairs from expert chairmakers Jack McAllister, Jeff Lefkowitz, and John Weissenberger. Budding artists learned how to use design elements to create a work of art in the sold-out Principles of Art and Design class. Rounding out adult education programming this year, art classes proved to be especially popular. Among those that sold out were February’s Elements of Art and Design and its companion class in March, Principles of Art and Design. In June, the MSV introduced the Cocktails and Design workshop series with a class in which participants enjoyed a Mimosa and live music Chairmaker John Weissenberger demonstrates his craft during January’s chairmaking program. Photo: Rick Foster TRANSFORMATIONS while learning how to paint a landscape. 17 In addition, in June, teen artists participated in a weeklong Teen Art Camp to work with a variety of art media and interact with professional artists. For youth ages 6 to 12, three hands-on workshops introduced the history of handwriting, Colonial quilling, and pottery. Despite gallery closures due to renovations, winter and spring programming did not skip a beat. Free weekly Gallery Explorers for ages 5 to 8 took place from February through March 1; Teen art enthusiasts experimented with a variety of art mediums and interacted with professional artists during Teen Art Camp at the MSV. programs included a guided gallery tour and hands-on activities. The MSV is increasingly focused on youth programming, with Camp MSV being a stellar example. In this seven-week program, more than 500 youth in the Boys & Girls Club of Northern Shenandoah Valley experienced the MSV. The experience included physical and learning activities and healthy snacks. This program was developed to meet the goals of the nationwide Let's Move! Museums and Gardens Initiative, part of the Let’s Move! initiative launched by First Lady Michelle Obama. A grant from the Ronald McDonald House Charities to the Boys During one session of Camp MSV, Boys & Girls Club campers learned about recycling. Photo: Rick Foster & Girls Club made the camp possible, with funding providing transportation, supplies, snacks, and a camp instructor to plan and coordinate activities. Other youth programs included weekly EcoFriends, a program teaching youth ages nine through 12 about recycling, ecosystems, and gardening, and the weekly Garden Explorers SUPPORTING THE TRANSFORMATIONS The programs outlined in this Annual Report require funding. In fact, every education program and community event about which you have just read was provided by donor support. programs for preschoolers through age eight, In fiscal year 2012–13, the MSV achieved its which sold out in 2012. These free programs annual fundraising goal of $300,000, thanks to included guided garden tours and special hands- the continuing support of both longtime and on garden activities. new donors who helped us successfully meet a 18 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY challenge grant of $78,500. Please see the pages With so many people now receiving information at the conclusion of this Annual Report for a online to inform leisure-time decisions, forward- complete listing of all these generous people. We thinking museums pay particular attention to also are grateful to those Donors who provided digital communications. In late fall of 2012 the additional generous support to make possible MSV stepped up its efforts with the hire of a special programs; you will find a summary of specialist to manage our social media and digital these people and the programs they supported communications program and direct on pages 27 and 28. development of the new MSV website, made Members’ participation is important, too, for it brings vitality and energy to every event. Membership is the best way to experience all the possible by a generous donation from David Denham. This effort included launching a new URL: www.theMSV.org. MSV has to offer, and benefits continue to Our investment is paying off. The MSV has include free general admission and free or experienced increased engagement on social reduced admission to many special events, media sites, such as Facebook and Twitter. We discounts in the Museum Store and Café, the also had 58,030 visitors to the MSV website, MSV Now newsletter, and special Member trips. with 69% being new visitors and 31% Membership in the MSV remained steady at 1,200 Members in fiscal year 2012–13. With a goal of increasing Membership and visitation overall, this year the MSV made a renewed commitment to marketing outreach. This included a redesigned, family-focused calendar returning; 7,542 visits were made from mobile devices, an increase of about 58% over the previous year. Web visitors predominantly represent Virginia, the District of Columbia, Maryland, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania, all key areas to promote MSV visitation. of events, MSV Now. The new size makes for Finally, as we analyze the MSV impact in the easy posting on the refrigerator, and there is community, we note the thousands of people now a special section for youth. who enjoy the MSV through rental events on site. Many nonprofit organizations took advantage of our free or reduced-rental program. These partners included the United Way, the Junior Century Club, numerous garden clubs, the March of Dimes Walk and Chelsea’s Epilepsy Walk/Run, the Shenandoah Arts Council, Magic Lantern Theater, Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation, the Old Town OCTOBER, NOVEMBER & DECEMBER, 2013 The MSV launched a redesigned calendar/newsletter in fiscal year 2012–13. TRANSFORMATIONS Development Board, the City of Winchester, the Piedmont Blue Ridge Horticulture Society, Winchester Medical Center, and many others. 19 FAS T F ORWAR D: T HE Y EAR AHEAD The MSV entered the current fiscal year inspired by the vision set forth in the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley Strategic Plan 2013–2018. Directed by this blueprint for our priorities, strategies, and tactics for the next five years, we devoted much of fiscal year 2012–13 to developing a Master Plan to determine the ways and means to achieve our objectives. A conceptual drawing from the MSV Master Plan. Image courtesy Reader & Swartz Architects, P.C., and Siteworks It is useful to recall the process that informed In addition, members of the Board and staff the development of these plans. Drs. Dan traveled to ten museums to observe other Jordan, Charlie Bryan, and Brent Glass, three of models. Executive Director Dana Hand Evans’s the country’s most distinguished museum participation in the Getty Leadership Institute professionals, guided us through the process that also played a role, as the MSV was selected as a included 16 listening sessions and review of 25 case study for analysis by that entire group of documents outlining trends in the museum field. leading museum professionals. TRANSFORMATIONS 21 Accessibility: The MSV provides a welcoming and accessible environment that encourages engaging and meaningful visitor experiences. Innovation: The MSV exemplifies innovative leadership, pursuing original research to develop collections, engaging exhibitions, creative publications, and unique programs. Excellence: The MSV achieves excellence through stewardship of resources and collections and by maintaining integrity and accountability MSV Exhibitions Manager Corwyn Garman examines a painting from the Julian Wood Glass Jr. Collection during the gallery deinstallation project. Photo: Rick Foster in all areas of its operations. The Strategic Plan identifies seven key values to direct all future MSV programming. These values are as follows: Education: The MSV places education and scholarship about the art, history, and the material culture of the Shenandoah Valley at the forefront of its activities, providing visitors with engaging and enriching experiences. Preservation: The MSV is dedicated to caring for and preserving our collections, historic properties, and surrounding landscapes, while serving as a resource for our community as stewards of the material culture of the Valley. Community: The MSV contributes to the regional community by being accessible to all and employing material culture, past and present, to explore and celebrate the cultural diversity of our region. Family fun during Gardens at Night. Photo: Rick Foster These values now are the measurement against which the MSV plans and evaluates all programs. Here is a glimpse into some of those Fun: The MSV is dedicated to providing an immediate plans, listed according to the main enjoyable experience for all. objectives of the MSV Vision. 22 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY A conceptual drawing of future garden expansion from the MSV Master Plan. Image courtesy Arentz Landscape Architects, L.L.C. Objective #1: Develop and Adopt a Master Plan The MSV adopted its new Master Plan in July of 2013. This new plan considers the future of the Museum campus as a whole rather than as fragmented components by considering all existing buildings and proposed improvements. It also expands public access to the gardens, adds improvements to attract more visitors, and directs us to define and consider potential partnerships. Susan L. Buck, PhD, and Daniel Miles, PhD, Oxford Dendrochronology Laboratory. Objective #2: Build the MSV Reputation as a Center for Scholarship and Educational Programming about the Shenandoah Valley’s Rich Heritage and Material Culture Organizing and presenting at least one Valleythemed exhibition annually is a key component Consultant and professional firms working with the MSV to inform or develop this plan included Brent Glass, PhD, Director Emeritus, Smithsonian Museum of American History; Reader & Swartz Architects; Siteworks; Arentz Landscape Architects; The Design Minds, Inc.; Painter-Lewis; Howard Shockey & Sons; and preservation specialists Maral Kalbian, Dennis J. Pogue, PhD, TRANSFORMATIONS of this objective. Becoming Patsy Cline, now on view in the Changing Exhibitions Gallery, fulfills that pledge by focusing on one of the Valley’s most recognized personalities. In 2014, the MSV will present a new exhibition focused on a popular Valley furniture form, the food (or pie) safe. That exhibition and companion publication will advance original research. We are pleased 23 that this project, the first in a new installation strategy to keep the Valley Decorative Arts Gallery continually fresh, involves joint programming with the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA). Such exhibitions directly advance this strategic objective. They also inspire many related educational programs, further advancing our focus on the art, history, and culture of the Valley. Finally, a planned revision of the Acquisitions Policy will define the collecting categories considered most important to MSV exhibition and educational goals, while a renewed emphasis on pursuing long-term loans will address gaps in the Collection. Significant to this objective, the redesigned MSV website now allows online visitors to browse the Shenandoah MSV visitors Beverly Hickerson and daughter Karen Perry, both of Orlando, Florida. Photo: Rick Foster. Valley Collection by category, artists, date, place, and subject tags. The plan also includes a new vision for the Glen Burnie House as a space that is more responsive Objective #3: Increase Collections, Broaden Access, and Serve as Good Stewards for Our Objects, Buildings, and Landscapes Broadening access to the MSV is especially crucial as it regards the historic portions of the landscape and house. The MSV is working to develop a new rehabilitation and revitalization plan that is not only exciting, but will also provide ADA accessibility. This plan, to be unveiled in the months ahead, dramatically to the needs of the community and our visitors. This follows a major preservation effort to ensure the house’s future. Also as previously mentioned, the MSV has already unveiled a redesigned website that allows considerably more access to information regarding our programs and Collection. The MSV will launch an outreach program in fiscal year 2013–14 to take programs to classrooms, senior centers, and more. reshapes the visitor’s experience of the gardens Finally, the MSV is committed to increasing its by providing a new visitor entrance, vistas, and Collection to tell the Shenandoah Valley’s story. spaces; restoring the formal gardens; improving Acquisitions of fiscal year 2012–13—as noted lighting; and evaluating ADA-accessibility needs earlier in this report—indicate the Museum’s to prepare appropriate recommendations. commitment to this objective. 24 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY expanding our group of dedicated volunteers and anticipate that diverse new programming, exhibitions, and interpretation in the Glen Burnie House will provide a magnet for more interest. This rare matched pair of pottery whippet figures made by Valley potter Samuel Bell (1811–1891) was acquired in July of 2013. Objective #5: Serve as a Cultural Center of the Region and Become a “Must See” Attraction Photo: Ron Blunt The MSV seeks to establish itself as the region’s Objective #4: Build the MSV “Family” by Expanding Membership, Attracting New Audiences On Site and Online, and Recruiting a Diversified Board, Staff, and Volunteers By providing the capability for people to become Members or renew Memberships online, the MSV has made great strides in achieving its objective to increase Membership. To attract more visitors to the MSV, we will build on the popularity of existing events, add new events with potential to draw significant numbers of visitors, and eliminate underperforming events. In addition, we will present exhibitions and programming to satisfy traditional audiences but also attract new, cultural center in the minds of local residents. To that end, we will continue to develop “must see” exhibitions. We also will continue in our commitment to use our outdoor spaces to teach and engage, with the Tomato & Garlic Tastefest, Gardens at Nights events, free family days, and exhibition-opening events being good examples. We also commit to continuing and expanding community partnerships, including continuing our popular Art in the Halls series to support Valley artists and attract new audiences to see their works. Finally, we are particularly excited about the potential of using the Glen Burnie House as a venue that is more responsive to community needs; look for more information regarding this new vision in the approaching months. diverse ones. All these efforts require staff to support them. The MSV has already added a staff member focused on social media marketing, a vital addition to respond to how many people now receive their information and make decisions for leisure-time activities. In addition, the MSV will add a Deputy Director for Arts and Education to its staff and increase staffing in the membership and development areas. We also will focus on TRANSFORMATIONS Art in the Halls artist Neil Staveley. Photo: Scott Mason, courtesy of The Winchester Star 25 ago, we began an effort to communicate the difference between enjoying all the MSV has to offer as a Member and supporting these programs as a Donor; we are committed to continuing that educational process in the coming months. The addition of a fundraising section on the website and the hire of an additional staff for the development effort should Barbara Grove and Lenny Millholland show their stage presence in Becoming Patsy Cline. Grove’s Winchester Harley–Davidson provided critical underwriting support for the groundbreaking exhibition. Photo: Rick Foster help us make great strides in annual fundraising. To that end, we hope all Members reading this now will respond generously to the opportunities Objective #6: Diversify the Sources of Revenue and Ensure a Sustainable Financial Environment How do we pay for all this? The question is increasing relevant as the MSV continues to grow into a major regional resource. that this report outlines; the MSV is dependent upon donations to make all programming possible. For your convenience, a remittance envelope for your gift is provided in this report. Finally, the MSV is determined to be the most efficient money manager possible. We monthly While grateful for the support we receive from the monitor performance of endowment and Glass–Glen Burnie Foundation, the MSV seeks to investment accounts and make adjustments. We reduce dependency on that resource by increasing also wish to maximize earned income through donated and earned income. We are committed paid-admission goals and rentals, with the Glen to better identifying and communicating Burnie House newly key to the latter strategy. In opportunities for grants and corporate addition, we are implementing technology underwriting of exhibitions, major programs, and solutions and forging new partnerships to initiatives. The MSV is grateful that Grove’s improve operational effectiveness. Winchester Harley-Davidson, Shenandoah Country Q102, and Winchester Printers, Inc. stepped forward to support Becoming Patsy Cline. We are hopeful that potential corporate underwriters will similarly see the advantages of supporting Second Time Around: The Hubcap as Art and other upcoming exhibitions. In summary, this glimpse into the immediate future of the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley validates the choice of this year’s Annual Report theme. In the midst of significant transformations, and with values newly defined and plans identified, the MSV seeks to be a resource that is regarded nationally and relevant locally. As we move fast forward, we Recognizing the importance of individual will focus on programs that are innovative in donations, the MSV also is focusing on design, excellent in content, and meaningful in the encouraging Members to become Donors. A year lives of people in this community and beyond. 26 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY S PEC I AL R EC OGNI T I ONS Left to right: Becoming Patsy Cline underwriter Irving Hottle, Charlie Dick, and Russ Potts at the exhibition’s opening celebration. Photo: Rick Foster The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley is This represented a 25% increase in the total grateful to its Donors for making all MSV number of gifts from the previous year. programming possible. Every gift provides invaluable support for changing exhibitions, lectures, workshops, and other MSV programming that enriches the cultural life of our Valley. We appreciate each of you. In addition, over the past fiscal year, four new thoughtful and generous Donors, Sallie Madison Baylor Grow, Nelson and Barbara Keech, and Karey Starnes, joined the Irene S. Wischer Society for Planned Giving. Members of the In fiscal year 2012–13, the Museum received an Wischer Society help secure the future of the anonymous matching challenge. A group of MSV through their estate planning. friends of the Museum provided a dollar-fordollar match of up to $78,500 for new and We also recognize gifts received this year that increased gifts to our Annual Campaign. Our supported special program needs at the MSV. donors helped us surpass our goal of $300,000 For underwriting the new MSV website, we by raising a total of $328,161 through 332 gifts. extend our gratitude to David Denham. For TRANSFORMATIONS 27 Butler; a Japanese Maple for Peg Romine; and a Japanese Lilac for Jean Rodgers. It was an especially poignant memorial for Betty Salyan and Gen Stimmel, as both had been part of the MSV docent and volunteer family. This tribute is a fitting transition to our thanks to the dedicated MSV volunteers. In this fiscal year, MSV volunteers provided 7,805 hours of service, with 62 to 108 individuals donating John and Cathleen Romine of Fredericksburg, Virginia, stand by the Japanese Maple tree planted by the Old Fredericktown Garden Club in the honor of John’s mother, Peg Romine. Photo: Rick Foster their time in any given month. Without this support, the MSV would be unable to operate, and we are grateful to all these dedicated people. underwriting Camp MSV, which served 500 youth from the Boys & Girls Club of Northern Shenandoah Valley, we extend thanks to Ronald McDonald House Charities. For providing support for the 2012 Business Forum Luncheon, we thank Valley Health; BB&T; Sodexo Catering; Shenandoah Valley Westminster Canterbury; VNBTrust; Wells Fargo; and Yount, Hyde & Barbour, P.C. And for making Becoming Patsy Cline possible, we thank our partner, Celebrating Patsy Cline, Inc., and underwriters, Grove’s Winchester HarleyDavidson; Shenandoah Country Q102, Winchester Printers; Mr. and Mrs. Irving L. Hottle; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Hottle; The Estate of John Brown; and McDonald’s® of Winchester. We also thank the Old Fredericktown Garden Club. In May, club members donated and planted seven trees in memory of seven of their members: a Parrotia Tree for Margaret Laise; a Sweet Bay Magnolia for Betty Salyan; Pink Styrax trees for Genevieve Stimmel and Madeline Stewart; a White Oak for Nancy Nelson and Barbara Keech celebrated the opening of Moveable Feasts at the Sixties Soirée. Photo: Julie Napear Photography 28 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY F I NANC I AL S U M M ARY For the Years Ended June 30, 2013 and 2012 2013 2012 $ 3,448,078 $ 4,316,283 94,172 87,601 Admissions from tours, events, programs 165,453 154,934 Rental, retail, other income (at gross) 348,223 393,428 REVENUE AND SUPPORT Contributions and grants Membership revenue Investment income (realized and unrealized) 3,660,781 426,138 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Total revenue and support $ 7,716,707 $ 5,378,384 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ EXPENSES AND CHANGES IN NET ASSETS Program services $ 4,148,013 $ 3,806,470 Fundraising 233,938 238,003 Management and general 546,443 516,926 Investment fees 446,915 31,270 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Total expenses $ 5,375,309 $ 4,592,669 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Increase in Net Assets $ 2,341,398 $ 785,715 Net assets, beginning of fiscal year, restated 28,981,970 28,196,255 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Net assets, end of fiscal year, restated $31,323,368 $28,981,970 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley’s audited financial statements with an unqualified opinion and our Form 990 are available on www.theMSV.org and upon request to [email protected] or 540-662-1473, ext. 223. Revenues Contributions, Grants 45% Expenses Membership, admissions, retail, rental, other 8% Investment Income 47% TRANSFORMATIONS Management and general 10% Fundraising 5% Program services 77% Investment Fees 8% 29 M ANAGEM ENT ’S R EPORT The MSV focuses on effective resource Gardens, and provided for the preservation of management in a trying economy. In fiscal year Rose Hill and the Glen Burnie House. The MSV 2012–13, revenues totaled more than $7 also offered educational programming, million. Income from contributions and grants community events, and Membership program was $3.5 million, with the Glass–Glen Burnie benefits; enhanced the visitor experience through Foundation generously being the largest single the MSV Docent program, café, and gift store; donor. Earnings and realized and unrealized and conducted marketing outreach efforts. gains from endowments and investments accounted for nearly 47% of total revenues. High returns made possible the transfer of approximately $858,000 from endowments and a restricted-investment account to support important programs to advance our Mission. Other sources of revenues included admissions, Membership fees, Museum Store and café sales, and site rentals. Revenues from retail segments decreased by 4% this year, and admission revenue also declined. These predicted decreases were due to closures for gallery renovations and preservation of the Glen Burnie House, as well as a prolonged road construction project that impeded access to the MSV. Slight increases in rental income, Memberships, and admission fees for educational programs and public events helped offset these decreases. The MSV strives to maximize the impact of each dollar spent. In fiscal year 2012–13, our expenditures funded development of a Master Attracted by all the MSV offers, more than 30,000 people visited the MSV this year. Playing a role in this achievement were the numerous free opportunities we offered in support of our commitment to be accessible to all. Historically, 80% of MSV expended dollars has directly funded Mission-advancing program services. At 77%, this year’s percentage is slightly lower due to increased investmentmanagement fees; the MSV Finance Committee monitors these fees, calculated in accordance with agreements with the Museum’s investment managers. Investment fees for our endowment funds directly relate to earnings and market appreciation; increased revenues resulted in increased fees this year. Fiscal Year 2013–14 efforts will seek to increase and diversify sources of revenue and increase operational efficiencies. In this and all we do, thank you for your continued support. Plan, renovation of the Changing Exhibitions Gallery, and presentation of the Moveable Feasts, American Impressionism, and Becoming Patsy Cline exhibitions. We expanded and cared for Dana Hand Evans the Collection, maintained the Glen Burnie Executive Director 30 M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY LETTER FROM THE TREASURER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CHAIRMAN OF THE FINANCE COMMITTEE The role of the Finance Committee is primarily to provide financial oversight for the organization. Although the entire Board carries fiduciary responsibility for the organization, the Finance Committee serves a leadership role in this area as it is a standing committee of the Board of Directors of the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley. The committee is comprised of regional volunteer members and management, with chairmanship by the treasurer of the Museum Board. The committee, which meets four times annually, is responsible to the Board A participant in the Start with Art: Beginner’s Pottery workshop. Photo: Rick Foster for reviewing and reporting on all matters pertaining to the fiscal operations of the Corporation, including but not limited to: In addition, this fiscal year the committee made preparation and oversight of the annual budget; substantive modifications to several operating short- and long-term financial planning, policies and rules that will further enhance the including management of the organization’s financial integrity of the Museum. investments and endowments; maintenance of proper accounting and control procedures; recruitment and selection of an independent auditor and final review of the draft audit and 990 as presented by the auditor, and presentation of the audit report to the full Board of Directors. The Finance Committee is also charged with ensuring compliance and/or developing other policies that further serve to protect the organization and manage its As treasurer of the Board of Directors of the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley and chairman of the Finance Committee, I am pleased to report that the Finance Committee is committed to the principles of good stewardship and to building and preserving the Museum's financial resources in order to support the accomplishment of both the short and the long term goals of the Museum exposure to risk. These include oversight of the personnel policies and employee benefits program; review of insurance requirements; review of capital purchases, leases, and David L. Blount Treasurer contracts; and oversight of the earned income activities of the Corporation. TRANSFORMATIONS 31 GI F T S , GR ANT S & M EM BERS HI P Contributions above and beyond Membership dues provide annual support for the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley, including important programs that distinguish this site as a museum. We thank all those who contributed so generously to these important efforts. The Donor and Member names listed in this Annual Report reflect contributions made in the 2012–2013 fiscal year between July 1, 2012, and June 30, 2013. Please notify the development office at 540-662-1473, ext. 217, of any edits or additions to this list. The Col. James Wood Circle for Lifetime Membership Giving Circle Donors Mr. James A. Arnold* Mr. Michael Gore* Mr. and Mrs. R. William Bayliss, III James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust Beverly B. Shoemaker, Trustee Mr. Eugene F. Dearing, Jr.* and Ms. Virginia Guthridge Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Fetter Mr. and Mrs. John G. Lathrop Dr. and Mrs. W. D. McWhorter Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Dr. and Mrs. H. G. White, Jr. Wise Foundation Mr. Lewis B. Pollard and Mr. Lewis S. Wiley The Irene S. Wischer Society for Planned Giving The Estate of John E. Brown Dr. Peter G. Bullough Mr. David C. Fogelsanger Mr. Julian Wood Glass Jr.* Mr. J. Matthew Gaglione Ms. Sallie Madison Baylor Grow Mr. and Mrs. T. Nelson Keech Mrs. Jane K. Krug* Ms. Ruth Farley Massey Ms. Madeline MacNeil Mr. Christopher A. and Mrs. Maria Molden The Estate of Bertha M. Muti Ms. Karey J. Starnes Mr. Sidney L. Stern Mrs. Kathryn Perry Werner Mrs. Irene S. Wischer* Glen Burnie Circle ($2,500) Rose Hill Circle ($1,500) Annual Campaign July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Mr. and Mrs. W. Blakely Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Bertram R. Firestone Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kalbach Dr. and Mrs. James C. Laidlaw Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Long Mr. and Mrs. Terese S. and Mark H. Merrill Dr. and Mrs. W. Tyler Mistr Mr. and Mrs. James T. Riley Mrs. Sara M. Stern Mr. Sidney L. Stern Mr. and Mrs. John C. Williams Dr. and Mrs. Dennis W. Wise Compass Society Giving Level Shenandoah River Circle ($1,000) Mr. J. Matthew Gaglione and Dr. Richard Certo Mr. and Mrs. Don Hernley Mrs. Peggy A. Jackson Rev. and Mrs. Donald D. Jones Dr. and Mrs. Don G. Karolyi Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Keech Mr. Jerrald K. Knight Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Kremer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Major Mrs. Margaret Mangano Mr. and Mrs. William E. Miller, II Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Mitchell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Molden Mrs. Eleanor Monahan Mrs. Judith F. Napps Mr. and Mrs. George L. Ohrstrom, II Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Rockwood Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Schulz Mrs. Dorothy M. Shaull Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. C. Robert Solenberger Mr. Richard W. Stephenson* Mr. Donald W. Stewart Mrs. Joan S. Symmes Mrs. Mary Toth Mr. Roger W.* and Mrs. Suzanne J. Vaughan Dr.* and Mrs. James R. York Carousel Level ($250) Cornerstone Circle ($10,000 and above) Dr. Peter G. Bullough Mr. David D. Denham Mr. and Mrs. James T. Holland Mr. and Mrs. John P. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Allan G. Paterson, Jr. Mr. August Van Dessel and Ms. Angela McDonald Windcrest Foundation Mr. and Mrs. David L. Blount Julian Wood Glass Jr. Circle ($5,000) Mr. John C. Allen, Jr. Mrs. JoAnne Armstrong-Jones BB&T Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Benham, III Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Byrd Mr. and Mrs. Mazen Farouki Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Fawcett Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur M. Feltner Dr. and Mrs. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Hollis Dr. Benjamin F. Lewis and Ms. Paula K. Bromley Mr. and Mrs. John K. Marlow Dr. and Mrs. John E. McAllister Mrs. Nicole H. Perry Mr. and Mrs. David H.O. Roth Mr. and Mrs. Rupert W. Werner The Honorable and Mrs. Henry K. Willard, II Dr. and Mrs. John B. Willey 32 Mr. Joseph A. Allen* Mr. and Mrs. Calvin H. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Byrd, III ExxonMobile Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Andrew U. Ferrari Mr. David C. Fogelsanger Dr. and Mrs. Allen A. Futral, Jr. Mr. Thomas M. W. “Wilke” Green Mr. and Mrs. Gregory F. Hutchinson Ms. Judith A. Landes Mr. and Mrs. David Lee Ms. Sally G. McGlyn Mrs. Rachel L. Mellon Mrs. Ellen M. Parsons Mrs. Grace Ritzenberg and Mr. Charles Wakeley Ms. Toni Ritzenberg Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Shockey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Smith, Jr. Mrs. Joan Smith Mr. and Mrs. F. Dixon Whitworth Ms. Ann R. Aldrich Anonymous Mrs. J. Victor Arthur, Jr. Mrs. Edith J. Bayly Mr. and Mrs. Childs F. Burden Mr. and Mrs. Cary M. Craig, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. deButts Emmart Oil Company Dr. H. Michael Hanna, Jr. Dr. David K. Harry Mr. and Mrs. John T. Hazel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Leigh, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Stuart A. Monroe Dr. and Mrs. John H. Neumann Norfolk Southern Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. deButts Mr. John Staelin and Ms. Elizabeth Locke Mr. and Mrs. Alan L. Wurtzel Ms. Patricia L. Zontine Wal-Mart Foundation Winchester Country Club Stove Plate Level ($125) Timber Frame Circle ($500) Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Apostle Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Beaudoin The Honorable Katherine M. B. Berger Mr. and Mrs. James V. Boone Mr. and Mrs. William F. Brandt, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles L. Burns, Jr. The Honorable Harry F. Byrd, Jr.* Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Comstock Mrs. Margaret Denison Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Dick Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Edwards Dr. and Mrs. William W. Ellis Ms. Amy L. Fielder Ms. Virginia McGehee Friend Lord Fairfax Orchid Society Mr. and Mrs. William T. Armstrong, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Cocina Ms. Frances W. Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Cunningham Dr. Charles Drake and Ms. Bonnie Paulsen Mrs. Veerle S. Foreman Dr. and Mrs. John L. Goodloe, III Ms. Autumn W. Gray Mr. and Mrs. Leon Griffith Mr. and Mrs. Grant H. Griswold Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie S. Harp Mrs. Mildred I. Helsley Dr. and Mrs. Michael Hendren Dr. and Mrs. Vicken V. Kalbian *Deceased M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY Ms. Patricia Kelley and Mr. David Daniel Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Lyon Mr. and Mrs. Monroe D. Macpherson Mr. and Mrs. Larry R. Marsh Dr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Martenson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. Monahan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James Mueller Mr. and Mrs. John C. Palmer* Mrs. William H. Pifer Mr. and Mrs. Lynn M. Poole Mr. and Mrs. Hal Raffa Mr. and Mrs. Robert Randolph Ms. Beth Reader and Mr. Chuck Swartz Mrs. Virginia S. Saunders Drs. Mark Schroeder and Laurel Tschirgi Mr. and Mrs. David L. Schroeder Mrs. James Stafford, Jr. Mrs. Mary Toth Mr. Azmi Uthman and Ms. Susan Greenwalt The Honorable and Mrs. John E. Wetsel, Jr. Drs. Mary Beth Wood and John Wood Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Zuckerman Contributor Level (Under $125) ExxonMobil Foundation Mr. and Mrs. W. Gary Adams Mr. and Mrs. Richard Todd Armel Mr. and Mrs. William T. Armstrong, Sr. Mr. Tom M. Arthur Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Baker Mr. and Mrs. Dale M. Barley Mr. and Mrs. Chip Barr Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Barta Ms. Barbara Batterton The Rev. Dr. Ralph Bayfield and The Rev. Maevalouise Bayfield Dr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Bechamps Mr. and Mrs. Aleck Beeman Mr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Begley Mr. R. Dixon Bell Ms. Mary Kay Blake Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Bohnet Mr. and Mrs. James E. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Bray Mrs. Magalen O. Bryant Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Butler Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Bylenga Dr. and Mrs. Winston Cameron, Jr. Ms. Anne S. Carr Ms. Janie Carscallen Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Casey Mr. Michael B. Chipley Mrs. Ellen M. Cochrane Mr. and Mrs. Mickey W. Coffman Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Comstock Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Copenhaver Mrs. Joy H. Costello Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Creasy Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Cross Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Cunningham Mr. Russell O. Cutshall Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Devlin Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Dick Ms. Elizabeth P. Duncan Mr. and Mrs. William Eddy Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Eisenhard Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Fowler Ms. Marian B. French Mr. and Mrs. Warren B. French, Jr. Ms. Pamela Friestad and Ms. Stephanie Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Vernon M. Gale Dr. and Mrs. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gilmore Mr. and Mrs. Terry L. Golladay Mr. and Mrs. John Greely Mr. and Mrs. Leon Griffith Ms. Suzanne Grimsley Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Gyauch Rev. Dr. Kitty Hahn-Campanella and Mr. Bruce Campanella Mrs. Patricia Haislip TRANSFORMATIONS Dr. and Mrs. Hobart Hansen Ms. Eleanor L. Heishman Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Henderson Mr. and Mrs. Dan Herney Mr. Boyd A. Hill Maj. Gen USAF Ret. and Mrs. Henry M. Hobgood Mrs. Nancy P. Hough Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Hougham Dr. John Howe and Ms. Tyrrell Flawn Mr. and Mrs. Adam Humphreys Mr. and Mrs. Allen D. Johnson Dr. and Mrs. William Keefe Mrs. Barbara E. Kessler Mr. and Mrs. George Kirkpatrick Ms. Lois A. Kirkwood Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kowalczyk Ms. Aliene M. Laws Ms. Rhea L. Lindstrom Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Lovan Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Lyman Mr. and Mrs. R. Bruce MacDermott Ms. Pauline S. Manuel Mr. and Mrs. John K. Marlow Dr. and Mrs. William H. Mason Mrs. T. H. McCoy Ms. Page M. McEachern Ms. Mollie McGarvey and Ms. Jill Butler Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. McKay Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Muller Mrs. Mary C. Mulvey Mr. John C. Murphy Ms. Elizabeth A. Murray Dr. and Mrs. Eric J. Myer Mr. and Mrs. Keller C. Nichols Mr. Brad Omps and Ms. Susan Coffelt Cones ‘n’ More Mrs. Rebecca Parkin Mr. and Mrs. William S. Peebles, IV Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pell Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Pettit The Honorable and Mrs. H. R. Potts, Jr. Mrs. Louise C. Pulliam Ms. Anne Repaske Mr. Marshall M. Rich Mrs. Patricia A. J. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Ridings Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Ross Mr. Warren Ruefer Mr. and Mrs. John G. Russell, III Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Sabatino Mr. Douglas C. Saffell Dr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Schiavone, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene F. Schultz, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schuweiler Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman Mr. and Mrs. Don Sears Ms. Diane Sheehey and Mr. Matthew Jones Mr. and Mrs. William T. Shepherd Mrs. Pat Shiley Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Silek, Jr. Ms. Sarah B. Simpson Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Chet Spielman Mrs. Barbara K. Stickley Mr. Carter A. Strader Mr. and Mrs. Bob Strati Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Troup Mr. and Mrs. John E. Trueblood Mr. and Mrs. Massie Valentine Mr. and Mrs. William R. Walls Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Walter Mr. and Mrs. John W. Warren, Sr. Mr. William C. Westgard Mr. Jerry White and Ms. Roxanne Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Gary White Mr. and Mrs. William D. Wiley Mrs. June Wilmot Mrs. Carol Yanniello Mr. and Mrs. Dave Zarefoss MEMBERSHIPS & GIFTS Honorary Level Membership July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Cross Restricted Gifts July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Commonwealth of Virginia Commission for the Arts GlaxoSmithKline Foundation Mrs. Karen E. Brill and Mr. William J. Meyer Grove’s Winchester Harley-Davidson Ms. Barbara Grove Marlow Motors, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Marlow Old Fredericktown Garden Club The Estate of John E. Brown The Luminescence Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Zohar Ben-Dov Wal-Mart Foundation Mr. Joseph A. Allen* Mrs. Mary Braga Dr. Peter G. Bullough Mrs. Karen E. Brill and Mr. William J. Meyer Mr. David D. Denham Mr. J. Matthew Gaglione and Dr. Richard Certo Ms. Tracy Hulver Dr. and Mrs. James C. Laidlaw Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Nerangis Mr. and Mrs. George L. Ohrstrom, II Mr. and Mrs. F. Dixon Whitworth, Jr. Gifts of Heritage July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Mr. and Mrs. Henry and Dolores Bausum Mrs. Mildred I. Helsley Mr. August Van Dessel Gifts to the Living Legacy Program July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Old Fredericktown Garden Club In Honor of July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Aids Response Effort, in honor of Ms. Dana Hand Evans Ms. Mary Kay Blake, in honor of Mr. J. Matthew Gaglione Mr. and Mrs. Bylenga, in honor of Mrs. Shirley Gaunt Dr. and Mrs. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., in honor of Mrs. Mary Stickley and Mr. Raul Godinez Dr. John Howe and Ms. Tyrrell Flawn, in honor of Mrs. Dianne H. Wake Ms. Amanda Hulver, in honor to the preservation of the Rose Hill Civil War Site Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. Monahan, Jr., in honor of Mrs. Eleanor Monahan Mr. and Mrs. William S. Peebles, IV., in honor of Ms. Frances W. Crawford Ms. Toni A. Ritzenberg, in honor of Ms. Frances W. Crawford The staff of Blue Ridge Pediatric Associates, in honor of Dr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Schiavone, Jr. 33 In Memory of July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 James L. and Mary Jane Bowman Charitable Trust Mrs. Beverly B. Shoemaker and Ms. Rachel E. Shoemaker, Trustees, in memory of James and Mary Jane Bowman Ms. Page M. McEachern, in memory of Mr. Richard Stephenson Mr. Russell O. Cutshall, in memory of Mrs. Patricia Cutshall Mrs. Veerle S. Foreman, in memory of Mr. Michael M. Foreman Mr. and Mrs. Terry L. Golladay, in memory of Mr. Gene R. Haislip Mr. Jerry Knight, in memory of Mrs. Janet W. Battaile Mrs. Virginia S. Saunders, in memory of Mr. Winston D. Saunders Mrs. Mary Toth, in memory of Mr. Paul J. Toth Donated Services or Gifts In Kind July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Apple Valley Tree Farm Ms. Dawne Raines Burke Ms. Kay Cogswell Mr. Patrick Evans Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Shendow Mr. Derek Tucker Dual/Family Level Memberships July 1, 2011–June 30, 2012 Mr. and Mrs. Ed Acker Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Adams, III Mr. and Mrs. W. Gary Adams Barbara and John Adamson Mr. and Mrs. Ted Ahrens Mr. and Mrs. James M. Aliucci Mrs. Jean W. Allen and Ms. Leslie Allen Mr. and Mrs. Calvin H. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ammirati Mr. and Mrs. James G. Anderson, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. James D. Anderson, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Scott Andres Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy Angelo Mr. and Mrs. Cabell Angle Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Argall Mr. and Mrs. Richard Todd Armel Mr. and Mrs. William T. Armstrong, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. John H. Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Mike Arnold Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Atkins Mr. and Mr. Larry Atkinson Mr. and Mrs. William Averitt Mr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Babb Mrs. Pat Bacuros and Mr. Mike Patierno Mr. and Mrs. R. Milton Bageant Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Baker Mr. and Mrs. Scott Ball Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Bandyke Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Barbour Mr. and Mrs. Dale M. Barley Mr. and Mrs. Allan Barmak Mr. and Mrs. Scott T. Barnes Mr. and Mrs. James J. Barretta, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Barta Mr. and Mrs. Cary Bartlett Ms. Beth Batdorf and Mr. John Bresland The Rev. Dr. Ralph Bayfield and The Rev. Maevalouise Bayfield Dr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Bechamps Ms. Michon Bechamps and Mr. Steve Pugliese Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F. Beck Mr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Begley 34 Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Bell Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Benham, III Mr. and Mrs. George P. Bennett Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Berlin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Philip E. Bettendorf Ms. Linda W. Beville and Mr. Jim Charest Mr. and Mrs. Ray W. Bierlein Mr. and Mrs. Gary B. Bisson Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bittel Mr. and Mrs. J. David Black Mr. and Mrs. David L. Blount Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Bohnet Mr. and Mrs. Keith J. Boi Mr. and Mrs. Murrell Bolliger Mr. and Mrs. James Boone Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Boppe Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boulter Mr. and Mrs. Rob Bovey Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bovey Mrs. Hulda Bowman and Mr. David Bowman Mr. and Mrs. George Bowman Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. Boxley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Eric Boyers Mr. and Mrs. Darwin S. Braden Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. Bradford Mr. and Mrs. Gary Braswell Ms. Mary Braun Mr. and Mrs. Abram Bray Mses. Cynthia and Jessica Brenneman Mr. and Mrs. David Brewster Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Bridgeforth Mrs. Karen Brill and Mr. William Meyer Ms. Reva Brill and Mr. Treaty Allamong Mr. Paul Britner and Ms. Karen Nelson Ms. Jenny Brockwell and Mr. Mark Baker Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Bromley Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Brookfield Ms. Anita Brown and Mr. Jay Turner Rabbi and Mrs. Jonathan M. Brown Dr. and Mrs. Erich Bruhn Mr. and Mrs. William Brumback Dr. Nan K. Bryant and Mr. Neil R. Bryant Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood Bryant Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Buettner Ms. Julie Bulger and Mr. Nathan Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Hal Bullock Mr. and Mrs. George Burgess Mr. and Mrs. Glen P. Burke Mr. and Mrs. David F. Burks Dr. and Mrs. Charles L. Burns, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. William A. Burslem Mr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Bush Mr. and Mrs. Marty Butcher Rev. and Mrs. Jeff Butcher Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Butler MSV Members Jenny Brockwell and Mark Baker got engaged at The Sixties Soirée. Photo: Julie Napear Photography Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Butler Mr. and Mrs. John Buursink Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Byrd Mr. Clarke and Lee Cagey Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cahill Mr. and Mrs. George B. Caley Dr. and Mrs. Winston Cameron, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Cameron Mr. and Mrs. Jay Camery Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Canody Mr. and Mrs. Bill Carl Mr. and Mrs. Gary A. Carlisle Mr. and Mrs. Tom Carpenter Mr. and Mrs. Jack Carroll Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Carter Mr. and Mrs. Richard I. Carter Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Casey Mr. and Mrs. David M. Catlett Mr. Louis Cesa and Mrs. Gail Hermosilla Drs. Catherine Christen and Peter Leimgruiber Mses. Martha Christian and Margaret Kingdon Mr. and Mrs. Basil Clark Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. Clark Mr. Dylan Clark Mr. and Mrs. John R. Clawson Mr. and Mrs. John H. Claybrook Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Claytor Mr. and Mrs. Denny L. Clevenger Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Clevenger Mr. and Mrs. David E. Coffin Mr. and Mrs. Mickey W. Coffman Dr. Irma Collins and Ms. Jo Pilette Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Combs, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Comstock Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Conner Mr. and Mrs. James L. Cook Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Copenhaver Mr. and Mrs. Michael Cordero Mr. and Mrs. Philip Covell Mr and Mrs. William Cowley Mr. and Mrs. Cary M. Craig, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Crawford Dr. and Mrs. Richard G. Creasey Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Creasy Mr. and Mrs. Richard Croad Mr. and Mrs. James R. Cross Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Curley Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Brian Daly Dr. and Mrs. Joe Damron Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Daniel Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Daugherty Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Davenport, III Mr. and Mrs. Brian Davet Dr. and Mrs. James A. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Wayne E. Davis Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Davis Mr and Mrs. Richard Davis Mr. and Mrs. Stan Daywalt Mr. John C. De Pollo Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. DeHaven Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Devlin Mr. and Mrs. Mark DeWitt Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Dick Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Dickinson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dodson Mr. Paige Dolan Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dolsen Mr. and Mrs. John M. Doty Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Dowty Mr. and Mrs. David S. Doyle Dr. Charles Drake and Ms. Bonnie Paulsen Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Drummond, Jr. Mr. Heyward Drummond and Mr. John Ellis Mrs. Amy DuBrueler and Mr. John McGrath Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Duke Mr. and Mrs. Gary Dungan Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Dyke Mses. Cindy Ebert and Diane Hobbs M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY Mrs. Judy Eckert Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Ward Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Russ L. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Eisenhard Mr. and Mrs. Stephen S. Eisenhauer Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ekberg Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elson Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Enochs Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ensogna Dr. and Mrs. Yener S. Erozan Ms. Dixie Erwin and Mr. Kenneth Hockin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Esposito Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan T. Esposito Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Evans Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. H. Ewald Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Ewing Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Farris Mr. and Mrs. Andrew U. Ferrari Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fine Mr. and Mrs. Henry Firey Mr. and Mrs. John R. Fisher, III Mr. and Mrs. Philip M. Fisher Dr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Flax Ms. Tammy Davis and Mr. Shane Fletcher Mr. Ronald Fletcher and Ms. Eleanor Shutt Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Floyd Mses. Karen Follett and Erica Helm Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ford Mr. Rick Foster Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Fowler Mr. and Mrs. John J. Fox, III Mr. and Mrs. Charles French Mses. Pamela Friestad and Stephanie Anderson Mr. Terry Frye and Mr. David Look FAIA, FAPT Mr. and Mrs. William E. Frye Mr. Robert Frye and Mr. Bernie Zerkel Mses. Helen and Joan Funkhouser Reba and Carl Funkhouser Mr. and Mrs. Wally Gage Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gagner Mr. and Mrs. George H. Garber Mr. and Mrs. Gordon V. Gay Mr. and Mrs. Ricky E. Gearhart Dr. and Mrs. Martin Gentile Mr. and Mrs. Richard Giles Mr. and Mrs. Russell Gilkison Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gilmore Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Gilpin Mr. and Mrs. George W. R. Glass Mr. and Mrs. Alan R. Gober Mrs. Renee Godwin Mr. and Mrs. David W. Goff Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Good Mr. and Mrs. Alfred C. Goodhand Mr. and Mrs. Hal Goodman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Graham Mses. Betty and Gail Gramprie Mr. and Mrs. John Greely Mr. and Mrs. K. S. Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Leon Griffith Mr. Grim and Family Mr. and Mrs. David Grosso Mr. Michael Gur Mr. Roger Gurner Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Gyauch Mr. and Mrs. Andre Haddock Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Haddox Rev. Dr. Kitty Hahn-Campanella and Mr. Bruce Campanella Mr. and Mrs. Phil Haines Mary and Ken Hall Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hanks Mr. and Mrs. Orlan J. Harman Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Harmon Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie S. Harp Ms. Joan and Mr. Michael Harper Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Harris Mr. and Mrs. John Harris Ms. Mary Haskins TRANSFORMATIONS Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Hassert Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Haun, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Hawkins Ms. Linda Wyman and Mr. William D. Hayes Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Haynes Mr. and Mrs. Joe L. Headley, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Heclo Mr. and Mrs. Robert Heffern Mr. Peter Heffern Mr. and Mrs. William Heidelberger Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Heisey Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Helm Mr. and Mrs. Mark K. Helsley Mr. and Mrs. Roger G. Henderberg Mr. and Mrs. Irvin C. Henschen Mrs. Elizabeth H. Herbert Mr. and Mrs. Steve Herholtz Mr. and Mrs. Dan Herney Mr. and Mrs. James Herr Mrs. Ann Herren and Ms. Jean McCullough Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Hess Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hess Mr. and Mrs. Alex Hewes Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hickman Mr. and Mrs. Frazer Hilder Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hill Ms. Heidi Hiller and Mr. Chad Braun-Duin Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hoak Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A. Hodges Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hody Mr. and Mrs. Anthony L. Hoffman Dr. and Mrs. Warren Hofstra The Hollinger and Curren Family Mr. Christian Holloway and Mr. Brad Hodgson Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Hoopes Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Hoover Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hopkins Mr. and Mrs. Bill Horn Mses. Suzy Hough and Sara Hough Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Hougham Mr. and Mrs. Richard Howell Mr. and Mrs. Todd W. Hulsey Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Hulver Mr. and Mrs. Adam Humphreys Mr. and Mrs. Russ Hunt Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Huntsberry, Jr. The Honorable and Mrs. Dennis L. Hupp Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Hutchins Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Hyland Dr. and Mrs. P. H. Hylton, Jr. Ms. Alice Irvan and Dr. Bruce Shull, Ph.D. Dr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Jackson Mrs. Patricia Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. John Jacobs Dr. and Mrs. Martin A. Janowitz Mr. and Mrs. David F. Jaswa Mr. and Mrs. Michael Jeffries Ms. Milinda D. Jensen Dr. Peter Johnson and Ms. Marilyn Heath Mr. and Mrs. Broc B. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Allen D. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur S. Johnston Rev. and Mrs. Donald D. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jones Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Jones Dr. and Mrs. David C. Jones Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Joyner Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kalbach Ms. Maral Kalbian and Mr. Branson McKay Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kalogeropoulos Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kearns Mr. and Mrs. Terry M. Keating Dr. and Mrs. William Keefe Dr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Keenan Dr. and Mrs. Douglas B. Keim Mrs. Jane Ann Kelchner and Mr. P. Vincent Kelchner Mr. and Mrs. Rodney M. Keller, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Keller, Sr. MSV collections interns Michael Friedmann of Ashburn and Meg Schloemer of Winchester assist with the installation of American Impressionism. Photo: Jeff Taylor, courtesy of The Winchester Star Ms. Patricia Kelley and Mr. David Daniel Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kent Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kercheval Mr. and Mrs. Jerry P. Kerr Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert R. Kesser Mses. Victoria Kidd and Christy Berghoff Mr. and Mrs. Don Kienzle Mr. and Mrs. Cary Kimble Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Kirk Mr. and Mrs. George Kirkpatrick Dr. and Mrs. James V. Kiser Mr. Michael Kitt and Mrs. Paranee Hopple Mr. and Mrs. Frank Klebieko Mr. and Mrs. James L. Klimm Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Kobernik Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Kofalt Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Koirtyohann Mr. and Mrs. Carroll E. Koller Dr. and Mrs. Bryan Kornreich Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kowalczyk Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Krause Mr. and Mrs. James Kremer Dr. and Mrs. George J. Kriz Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Kruhm Mr. and Mrs. Marty Kushner Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. La Follette Mr. and Mrs. Jim Laise Drs. Paul Lambert and Anita Minghini Mr. and Mrs. Roger Lamborne Mr. and Mrs. John G. Lathrop Mr. and Mrs. Nick Lauderdale Mr. and Mrs. Louis L. Lauve Mr. and Mrs. William H. Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Law Mrs. Evelyn Lederer Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Lee Mses. Carol Lefevre and Linda Zawacki Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Legge, III Mrs. Anne Legge and Ms. Adriana Pavlinovic Mr. and Mrs. H. Harold Lehman Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Leigh, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Mark T. Leonard Dr. and Mrs. Mark E. Levinson Mr. Phillip E. Lewis and Ms. Betty Barr Mr. and Mrs. Bernie Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Rumsey S. Light Capt. USN (Ret.) and Mrs. John Lincoln Ms. Amanda Lindquist Dr. and Mrs. John W. Lloyd, III Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Lloyd Mr. and Mrs. Ken Lloyd Mr. and Mrs. James L. Lockard Mr. and Mrs. David Logan Mr. and Mrs. George Lombardi Dr. and Mrs. Garrett I. Long Mr. and Mrs. Gary Longerbeam Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lore Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Louque, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Lovan Mr. and Mrs. Richard Love Mr. Daniel Ludwin and Dr. Donald Vernon 35 Left to right: Pem Hutchinson, Mary Fetter, Shirley Gaunt, Dianne Wake, and Brookie Phillips graciously served tea from their own silver tea services at the March 3 tea event celebrating the opening of Moveable Feasts. Pem, Mary and Dianne serve on the MSV Board of Directors; all of the ladies pictured above volunteer their talents on the Lee’s Ladies flower committee. Photo: Rick Foster. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lukens Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Lumsden Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Lutz Mr. and Mrs. Shane O. Lympus Mr. and Mrs. Mark P. Lynch Ms. Rachel Lynch and Dr. Robert Shriner Mr. and Mrs. Hiram W. Lyon Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Lyon Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Maccubbin Ms. Joy MacCue and Mr. Ken Goodwin Mr. and Mrs. R. Bruce MacDermott Mr. and Mrs. Justin Mackay-Smith Mr. and Mrs. Monroe D. Macpherson Mr. and Mrs. Howard Manheimer Mr. and Mrs. Dean Marchese Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Mark Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Marks, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Marlow Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Marlowe Mr. and Mrs. Paul Marqurdt Mr. and Mrs. Larry R. Marsh Mr. and Mrs. Donald Marshall Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Martin Dr. and Mrs. William H. Mason Mr. and Mrs. Gary F. Mason Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mathewes Mr. Hayden Mathews and Ms. Kay Robertson Ms. Kristen Matthews and Mr. Jesse Harvey Mr. and Mrs. Marty Mayfield Dr. and Mrs. Mark McAllister Ms. Kathleen McAnally and Mr. James Boyd Rev. and Mrs. Dan M. McCoig Mr. and Mrs. David McCormick Ms. Diane McDaniels and Mr. George Williams Mr. and Mrs. Marshall McFarland Mses. Mollie McGarvey and Jill Butler Mr. and Mrs. William C. McGee Mr. and Mrs. Bob McIntire Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. McKay Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. McKay Drs. Russell B. McKelway and Laura Dabinett Mr. and Mrs. Laurence V. McKenna Mr. Michael McKenney and Mr. Kevin Craemer Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. McLoughlin Mr. and Mrs. Keith McMurdo Ms. Jo Marie McNeill and Mr. Rainer Therleweit Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. McQueen Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. McTavish 36 Mrs. Patricia A. Meehan Mr. William Melson and Mrs. Judith McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Menefee Dr. and Mrs. Timothy F. Merkel Mr. Charles Middleton and Ms. Robin Smith Drs. Rolf H. Mielzarek and Lee Anna Mielzarek Mr. and Mrs. Ben Miles Mr. and Mrs. Dwight B. Miller Ms. Judy Miller and Mr. Stewart Brown Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Miller Mr. and Mrs. William W. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Jim Millman Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. John J. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. Michael C. Mohn Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Molden Mr. and Mrs. John W. Monroe, III Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Moore Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Bill Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Dino Morgoglione Mr. and Mrs. George H. Morris The Honorable and Mrs. Norman D. Morrison Drs. Rebecca and Barry Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Morrow Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Moyer Mr. and Mrs. James Mueller Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Muller Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mulvaney Dr. Rebecca M. Murray Dr. and Mrs. Eric J. Myer Mr. and Mrs. Richard V. Myer Dr. and Mrs. Matthew Neely Mses. Barbara Nelson and Margaret Whitmore Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Nemitz Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Nerangis, Sr. Mr. Bill Neufeld and Ms. Kim Lowry Mr. John Newcomer Ms. Yeunshin Kim and Mr. Thomas Newcomer Mr. and Mrs. Keller C. Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Alan M. Noble Mr. and Mrs. Patrick B. Nolan Ms. F. Elizabeth Nuelsen Mr. and Mrs. Calvin O'Neil Ms. Wendy Oesterling and Mr. Jim Greene Mr. Mitchell Ohriner and Ms. Taliah Weber Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Oliver Ms. Judith Omslaer and Mr. Charles Alton Mr. and Mrs. Robert Orbacz Mr. and Mrs. John M. Orndorff Dr. and Mrs. Tim Orphanides Mrs. Natalia Ossinova and Mr. Patrick Wagner Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey J. Owen Mr. and Mrs. James H. Painter Mr. and Mrs. John C. Palmer* Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Pampe Ms. Kathryn Parker and Ms. Patricia Hoffmann Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Parrish Mr. and Mrs. John A. Patterson Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Patteson, III Mr. and Mrs. Bruce E. Patton Mr. and Mrs. Gary Paulson Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pawloski Mr. and Mrs. Lance J. Pearce Mr. and Mrs. Bradley C. Pedersen Mr. and Mrs. Kimball Peele Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pell Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Brad Perry Mr. and Mrs. William J. Petersen Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Pettit Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Pettler, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pheiffer Mrs. Debbie Phelps Ms. Susan S. Phillips and Mr. Christopher Slonaker Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Phillips, Sr. Ms. Sabine Phillips and Mr. Scott Edmondson Mr. and Mrs. John Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Bob Pinner Mr. and Mrs. John E. Pinto Mr. and Mrs. Syd Pitzer Mr. and Mrs. Ron Place Mr. and Mrs. Dwain R. Place Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Place Mr. and Mrs. Terry S. Plank Mr. and Mrs. Steven Plante Dr. and Mrs. Gregory R. Pleasant Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Plog Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Poland Dr. and Mrs. Harry E. Poling Mr. and Mrs. Melvin G. Poling Mrs. Kimberly Pollak Mr. Thomas Potts and Mr. Richard Seckinger The Honorable and Mrs. H. R. Potts, Jr. Ms. Anita Pratt and Mr. Keith Pratt Mr. Sumpter Priddy, III Mrs. Cheryl A. Prokop Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rae Mr. and Mrs. Hal Raffa Dr. and Mrs. Tayman Rafter Mr. and Mrs. John Ramsthaler Mr. and Mrs. David Ray Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Read Ms. Beth Reader and Mr. Chuck Swartz Mr. and Mrs. Waverly G. Reames Mr. and Mrs. Grayson Redford Mr. and Mrs. Tom Reed Mr. and Mrs. Len Reeves Mr. and Mrs. David Regamey Mr. and Mrs. Russell A. Reid Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Reiff Rev. and Mrs. Richard W. Reifsnyder Mr. and Mrs. Larry Renner Mr. and Mrs. Mike Repine Mr. and Mrs. Stevan A. Resan Mr. and Mrs. John Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. William L. Rice Mr. and Mrs. James Rice Mses. Debbie L. Richards and Natilie Brown Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Lee Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Earl Riddick Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Ridings Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Riley Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Ringwood Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Rinker, Jr. M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY Mr. and Mrs. Carmen Rio Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robb Mr. and Mrs. Wilborn M. Roberson Mr. and Mrs. Donald Robertson Dr. and Mrs. G. R. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Rockwood Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Rodgers Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. John Romano Mr. and Mrs. Joe Roseman Mr. Thomas C. Gibbs and Mrs. Linda Q. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Ross Mr. Dan Rowzie Mr. Warren Ruefer Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rupert Mr. and Mrs. John G. Russell, III Mr. and Mrs. Robb Russell Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Sabatino Mr. William A. Salyan and Ms. Kathleen Salyan Lee and Steven Sanford Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sankovich Mr. and Mrs. George Schember Dr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Schiavone, Jr. Mrs. Andrea Schmahl Drs. Andrea and Joseph Schmitt Ms. Joanne Schreiner and Mr. Paul Stern Mr. and Mrs. David L. Schroeder Drs. Mark Schroeder and Laurel Tschirgi Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schue Mr. and Mrs. Eugene F. Schultz, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Schutte Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schuweiler Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman Mr. and Mrs. Steven Schwartzman Dr. and Mrs. Roy Schwarz Mr. and Mrs. Don Sears Mr. and Mrs. Larry Selzer Mrs. Dorothy M. Shaull Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shaw Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Shendow Mr. and Mrs. William T. Shepherd Mr. J.R. Shepherd and Mr. Brian Woodruff Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Shimer Mr. and Mrs. Andrew G. Shope Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Shull Mr. and Mrs. James R. Shull Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Shultz Mrs. Cynthia Sibay Mr. David Sicree and Ms. Lavinia Schoene Mr. Joshua Silva Mr. and Mrs. David F. Simpson Mr. and Mrs. George Sims Dr. and Mrs. Terry L. Sinclair Mr. and Mrs. Morgan J. Sincock Mr. and Mrs. William A. Sirbaugh Mr. and Mrs. Jay Skidmore Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Skiles Mses. Beth Skinner and Caren Werlinger Shown above: one of the 14 couples who married at the MSV this fiscal year. Photo: Aaron Riddle Wedding Photography TRANSFORMATIONS Mr. and Mrs. George Slack Ms. Kim Slevin and Mr. Warren Hoke Mr. and Mrs. Richard Slider Mr. and Mrs. David Smallwood Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Smith Mr. and Mrs. Buck Smith Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kim T. Smith Dr. and Mrs. Norman J. Smith Lt. Gen. and Mrs. Norman Smith Mr. and Mrs. Trammel Smith Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Smith Dr. and Mrs. Eli Snelgrove Mr. and Mrs. Henry Snider, Jr. Ms. Betty M. Snyder Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Solak Mr. and Mrs. C. Robert Solenberger Mr. and Mrs. Calvin L. Sonner Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spangler Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Spencer Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Stallard Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Stanfield Mr. and Mrs. Todd Stehlin Mr. and Mrs. John C. Steigerwald Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stein Mr. and Mrs. John V. Stevens Dr. Cindia Stewart and Mr. Bill Stewart Dr. and Mrs. William Stiebel Mr. and Mrs. George C. Stierhoff Mr. and Mrs. James D. Stillwell Mr. and Mrs. Dale L. Stokes Dr. and Mrs. Craig C. Stoner Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Stovall Mr. and Mrs. James Stovall Mr. and Mrs. Bob Strati Drs. Karen Straus and Alan Donnenfeld Mr. and Mrs. Roger Straw Mr. and Mrs. Gary Strickler Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Stubblefield Mr. and Mrs. Patrick M. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Owen E. Sumner Mr. and Mrs. David Sunter Mr. and Mrs. William Swartz Mr. and Mrs. James F. Swartz Ms. Donna B. Sweeney and Mr. Steven Dailey Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Swope Mr. and Mrs. Martin Tabaka Mr. and Mrs. Gerald W. Talley Mr. and Mrs. David A. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Jim Taylor Mr. and Mrs. John A. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. David M. Thalman Dr. and Mrs. Edward G. Thompson Mr. Tyler Thompson and Mr. John Nagley Mr. and Mrs. Terry Tierney Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tilton Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Tomsey Mr. Hai Tran Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Trant, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm L. Trevor Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Troup Mr. Ted Troxell and Ms. Karen Fitzpatrick-Troxell Mr. and Mrs. John E. Trueblood Ms. Michele Trufant and Mr. Thurston Willis Ms. Amy Ulland and Mr. Sean Lloyd Mr. and Mrs. Charles Uphaus Mr. Thomas M. Urtz Mr. Azmi Uthman and Ms. Susan Greenwalt Rev. and Mrs. James H. Utt Mr. and Mrs. Gary Van Meter Dr. and Mrs. Ward P. Vaughan Mr. Robert Vazquez Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Veatch Mr. and Mrs. Jim Venuto Mr. and Mrs. Michael Vergot Mr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Versley Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Vorpahl Dr. and Mrs. William N. Wade Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Wagniere Dr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wake Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Walcroft Mr. and Mrs. John P. Waller Mr. and Mrs. William R. Walls Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. William A. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Walter Mr. and Mrs. John W. Warren, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Washington Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wasko Dr. and Mrs. Blake H. Watts Mrs. Wendy Werner The Honorable and Mrs. John E. Wetsel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Whitacre Mr. and Mrs. Gary White Mr. Jerry White and Ms. Roxanne Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Pete Whitlock Mr. and Mrs. F. Dixon Whitworth Mr. and Mrs. James Wigginton Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Wilder Mr. and Mrs. William D. Wiley Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Wiley Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Wilkerson Dr. and Mrs. John B. Willey Mr. and Mrs. John C. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Alan Williams Mr. and Mrs. Rod Williams Ms. Roxanne Williams Mr. and Mrs. David Williams Mr. Charles* and June Wilmot Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Bill Witt Mr. and Mrs. Joel Woerl Mr. and Mrs. James R. Wolfe Drs. Mary Beth Wood and John Wood Mr. and Mrs. Dana Woodard Mr. and Mrs. Bob Woodson Mr. and Mrs. Dan Wooley Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Worrel Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Wright Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Wright Mr. and Mrs. Alan L. Wurtzel Mr. and Mrs. David Yereb Mrs. Angie Yonally and Mrs. Jill Rogers Dr. and Mrs. Henry E. York Mr. and Mrs. Ed York Mr. and Mrs. Philip Yount Ms. Penelope Yungblut and Mr. Raymond Ewing Ms. Zelda Zadnik and Mr. Joe Schad Col. and Mrs. Roger L. Zebarth Mr. Robert W. Zimmerman and Ms. Jeanne Teller Mr. and Mrs. Mark Zimmerman Mr. and Mrs. Paul Zisserson Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Zuckerman Mr. and Mrs. Ian Zuckerman Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zydelis Business Memberships July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Elite Chauffer Service of Winchester Mr. and Mrs. Stuart A. Wolk Executive Limousine Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Riley The 1717 Design Group, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. John Crank Courtyard by Marriott-Winchester Medical Center Mr. and Mrs. Dan Martin Orndoff’s Appraisal & Auction Services Mr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Orndoff Ressa Construction, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ressa Sperry Van Ness Mr. Conrad E. Koneczny Veramar Vineyard Mr. and Mrs. James C. Bogaty Ponte Vecchio Living Ms. Eileen Isola Winchester Weight Loss Mr. and Mrs. Scott Shoemaker *Deceased 37 Individual Level Memberships July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Ms. Bernadine S. Adams Ms. Ann R. Aldrich Mrs. Judith R. Anderson Ms. Dorothy B. Arrick Ms. J. Victor Arthur, Jr. Ms. Suzanne K. Arthur Mrs. Geneieve Banas Ms. Reba M. Barley Ms. Mary Barley Mr. Richard E. Barnsback Ms. Linda Bartlett Mr. James D. Bauserman Ms. Marcia B. Baylis Mrs. Edith J. Bayly Ms. Ursula M. Bean Ms. Pamela A. Bell Mr. Edward Bell Ms. Carolyn L. Bell Ms. Tiitu Bernheimer Ms. Sallie C. Booker Mrs. Sharon H. Boone Ms. Pam Borgel Mrs. Sara Ann Bounds Ms. Rebecca A. Bowman Ms. Virginia T. Boyce Ms. Amy Bracewell Mr. Arthur Bragg Mrs. Claudia L. Brinckmann Ms. Joan R. Bronson Ms. Kathleen T. Brown Ms. Jan M. Brown Ms. A. Joan Brubaker Mrs. Judy Bruce Dr. Peter G. Bullough Mrs. Mary K. Burke Ms. Carmen K. Burnette Ms. Cindy Butterfield Mrs. Jane M. Campbell Mrs. Carol L. Carnes Mr. Russell Carrier Ms. Jean Carrigan Ms. Donna Carroll Dr. Jennifer Carroll Mrs. Ruth P. Carter Ms. Mary Owen Chatfield-Taylor Ms. Melinda P. Childress Mr. Michael B. Chipley Ms. Chythia Christoffel Mr. Peter J. Chu Ms. Marybelle Clark Mr. Donald S. Cline Mrs. Ellen M. Cochrane Mrs. Katherine Coffman Mrs. Earlene Cone Mrs. Joy H. Costello Mr. Jack A. Cowan Ms. Toni Crane Ms. Beth D. Cristy Mr. Mike L. Crites Ms. Anne W. Crocker Mr. Dennis L. Cupp Mr. Russell O. Cutshall Mrs. Karen E. Dains Ms. Jeannine Danielson Ms. Della F. DeHaven Ms. Carol G. Delauter Mr. Joe Delawder Mrs. Barbara W. Devers Miss Linda Devers Ms. Moira Dewilde Ms. Barbara Dickinson Mr. Mike Didawick Mrs. Jan Dirckx Mr. Robert J. Dolehide Ms. Amaryllis Dove Ms. Johanna A. Dow Ms. Danna Doyle Ms. Martha A. Drake Ms. Elizabeth P. Duncan Mrs. Benjamin B. Dutton, Jr. 38 Ms. Cheryl D. Dyksen Mrs. Joyce S. Early Ms. Carol Ebert Ms. Shirley T. Echelman Ms. Eileen Eddis Ms. Janet L. Edgar Ms. Janet W. Eltinge Mr. William W. Endorf Ms. Judith Enterline Ms. Dee Ey Mr. Lawrence Fagg Mrs. Doris C. Farr Ms. Muriel Fears Ms. Amy Fielder Mrs. Suzanne Fleming Ms. Jacqueline J. Fleming Mrs. Ellen Folk Ms. Donna M. Ford Mrs. Veerle S. Foreman Mr. David Franke Ms. Megan Gallagher Mrs. Martha W. Gaines Mrs. Shelly Gardner Miss Aubrey Geyer Ms. Janita G. Giles Mrs. M. T. Gilpin Ms. Cathleen E. Gleason Ms. Susannah Godlove Dr. Daisy Goodwin Ms. Betty Gossard Ms. Autumn W. Gray Ms. Sharon S. Gray Mr. Robert E. Gresham Mrs. Anne P. Grim Mrs. Audrey O. Grimes Ms. Barbara A. Grupe Mrs. Patricia Haislip Ms. Amy Hammond Mr. James L. Hatcher, Jr. Ms. Helen M. Hatfield Ms. Martha V. Hayes Mr. Tyrel W. Hayton Ms. Eleanor L. Heishman Ms. Melanie Henry Mrs. Patricia Hepner Ms. Sigrid Hepp-Dax Mr. Douglas J. Hewett Ms. Erin Hickman Mrs. Wanda G. High Mr. Boyd A. Hill Mrs. Ann F. Hoffman Ms. Carolyn R. Hott Mrs. Fadua Houser Ms. Susan B. Howard Ms. Cheryl W. Humphries Mrs. Phelps Hunter Ms. Marion E. Ibach Ms. Amy M. Jackson Ms. Fran Jackson Ms. Dixie H. Jackson Ms. Paulette Jennis Ms. Gail M. Johnson Mrs. Sandra A. Jones Ms. Carolyn Jones Mr. William H. Jones Mrs. Frances Kane Ms. Judy Kane Mrs. Emmy L. Kappler Dr. Colleen Karn Mr. John Kauten, Jr. Ms. Elizabeth E. Kaylor Ms. Evelyn J. Kealey Ms. Kay C. Keely Mrs. Robert G. Kendall Ms. Mary L. Kennedy Mr. Scott T. Kenney Mrs. Anne B. Kerr Mrs. Barbara E. Kessler Mrs. Nancy Keyton Ms. Mary E. Kilgore Ms. Sylvia C. King Mr Rick C. Kinsey Dr. Linda F. Kirby Ms. Lois A. Kirkwood Ms. Suellen G. Knowles Ms. Sue S. Lam Mr. Robert Lancaster Ms. Maureen D. Lane-Maher Ms. Aliene M. Laws Ms. Sandra LeDrew Ms. Susan C. Lee Ms. Michele Lefevre Mr. Marcus Lemasters Ms. Jacki Lewis Ms. Elisabeth Lindon Ms. Rhea L. Lindstrom Ms. Deloris L. London Mrs. Shirley M. Louthan Mrs. Dorothy Lowe Mr. Steven C. Lowe Ms. Mindy J. Loy Ms. Nancy E. Luttrell Ms. Karen A. Lynch Ms. Madeline R. MacNeil Dr. Elaine F. Magee Dr. Robert A. Magill Mrs. Kathryn Maginnis Ms. Elizabeth Manning Ms. Pauline S. Manuel Ms. R. Farley Massey Mr. John T. Massie Ms. Jean K. Massie Mr. John Massoud Mrs. Lisa Mauck Mrs. Kendra L. McBride Mrs. Virginia B. McClure Ms. Martha Mead Mrs. Debra H. Medcalf Mrs. Sally H. Megeath Ms. Millie Mennard Ms. Antoinette Metivier Mrs. Carol B. Miller Ms. Donna T. Miller Ms. C. Marian Miller Ms. Suzanne Montgomery Ms. Dorothy Moore Virginia S. Morbeck Mrs. Maralyn D. Morency Ms. Barbara S. Morrell Mr. Steven L. Moyer Mrs. Mary C. Mulvey Ms. Roberta Munske Ms. Margaret Neiberger Mrs. Louise Nelson Ms. Mary R. Nelson Ms. Lori O'Neill Dr. Janette Ogg Ms. Judith W. Owen Ms. Frances C. Owens Ms. Emily F. Palmer Mrs. Rebecca Parkin Mr. Wayne L. Patteson Ms. Karen C. Patton Ms. Bonnie L. Paul Mrs. Robin Pedler Ms. Ellin J. Peters Mrs. Janice L. Pettitt Mrs. Debbie Phelps Mrs. William H. Pifer Ms. Vera M. Piper Ms. Charlotte W. Powers Mrs. Irene H. Ramm Mr. Richard D. Raymond Ms. Mary Lou Raymond Mr. John Reiley Ms. Mary Rhodes Ms. Evelyn S. Ricci Pat Rice Mr. Marshall M. Rich Mrs. Patricia A. J. Richardson Mr. Joel Richardson Ms. Linda Riddle Dr. H. Bruce Rinker Ms. Mardell Rogers Mr. Stephen Rosenblatt Dr. Marshall Ruffin M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY Ms. Mary C. Ruos Mr. Douglas C. Saffell Mrs. Virginia S. Saunders Ms. Judith N. Seddon Mrs. Freda S. Sencindiver Ms. Ruby M. Sewell Mr. G. Joseph Sewell Ms. Lisa A. Shaffer Ms. Dianne Shanks Ms. Donna L. Sheets Mrs. Ellen M. Shell Mrs. Pat Shiley Ms. Jeanne Shobe Mr. George O. Siekkinen, Jr. Ms. Dolores Silman Mr. Demetrios Sioris Ms. Helen R. Sioris Mrs. Joan Smith Ms. Julie A. Smith Ms. Susan M. Smith Mr. Gregory A. Souders Mrs. Helen G. Sperry Mrs. James Stafford, Jr. Ms. Karey J. Starnes Mrs. Marilyn Stearns Mrs. Gloria A. Stickley Mr. Robert W. Stieg, Jr. Mr. I. F. Stine Mrs. Diann Stout Mr. Carter A. Strader Ms. Elizabeth Stratton Ms. Carol Stroebel Mr. James E. Stromberg Mr. Donald R. Strosnider Ms. Gina Sullivan Mr. Daniel Sullivan Mr. Thomas W. Sweeney Mr. F. D. Taylor Ms. Joyce Tennant Mrs. Ann W. Thomas Mr. Gary F. Thomas Mrs. Mary Toth Ms. Genevieve J. Trandem Mr. David J. Gonzol Mrs. Karen Gonzol Ms. Elvira Griffith Mrs. Melody S. Harmon Ms. Bethina S. Huddleston Ms. Martha G. Joyner Dr. Geraldine Kiefer Ms. Sally A. Meredith Ms. Karlena Sakas Dr. Katherine P. Simpson Ms. Jean Stewart Ms. Barbara S. Thomas Dr. Cheryl Thompson-Stacy Mrs. Judy B. Whiting Mrs. Belinda Widmaier Mrs. Sheila Yeager Ms. Deborah Tucci Ms. Linda S. Tucker Mrs. Jenny Vega Ms. Annette C. Venskaske Mrs. Diane Volinsky Mr. Rex L. Wakeman Ms. Abby Chapple Walker Ms. Katherine Ward Ms. Mary Lou Warren Rev. Dr. Raleigh H. Watson Mrs. Carolyn Watts Mr. William C. Westgard Ms. Linda C. Wheeler Mr. Jay Whetzel Mrs. Sybil White Mrs. Emily A. Whitehorne Mrs. Olive G. Williams Mr. Ian R. D. Williams Ms. Sylvia Wilson Ms. Maria Wohlslagel Mrs. Joan Wood Ms. Carolyn D. Woodrum Mrs. Carol Yanniello Ms. Mary Lou Zickefoose Ms. Patricia L. Zontine Valley Neighbor Level Memberships July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Mr. Robert Boylan and Ms. Charlotte Story The Honorable Rick Claybrook Mr. and Mrs. Ralph DePaola Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Ehlke Mr. and Mrs. Tim Elliott Ms. Diane L. Ferguson and Mr. Patrick Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Vernon M. Gale Mr. and Mrs. Jay Herson Mr. and Mrs. Mark Keeler Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. Keesecker Mr. and Mrs. Tim Kelly Ms. Lisa Maloney Mr. and Mrs. John Mirabella Mrs. J. Ridgely Porter, III and Ms. Eleanor M. M. Porter Mr. and Mrs. Shane Quinlan Mr. Frank Raucci and Ms. Wendy Bottinor Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Scherder Mr. and Mrs. John M. Volkhardt Mr. Alfred H. Wilson Student Level Memberships July 1, 2013–June 30, 2013 Ms. Marianne Argall Mr. David Beaudoin Ms. Elizabeth Chappell Ms. Amanda Hulver Mr. Matthew Jackson Educator Level Memberships July 1, 2012–June 30, 2013 Ms. Sharon M. Adams Mrs. Nancy Albert Ms. Amy Angelo DOC ENT S JULY 1, 2012–JUNE 30, 2013 Mrs. Jean W. Allen Mrs. Cora Helen Anderson Mrs. Helen Anderson Mrs. Edwina Apostle Ms. Carolyn Argall Mrs. June Babb Mrs. Phyllis Baker Mrs. Lucia Barbour Mrs. Darla Barrett Mrs. Edith Bayly Ms. Courtney Beach Mr. and Mrs. Robert and Paula Becker Mr. J.D. Berlin Ms. Babs Bodin Ms. Kim Brennen Mrs. Karen Brill Mr. Stan Bridinger Ms. Virginia Brothers Ms. Joan Bronson Ms. Jean Burdett Mr. and Mrs. George and Joan Burgess Mrs. Judy Burks Mrs. Linda Caley Mrs. Joan Cameron Ms. Beth Camery Ms. Donna Carroll Ms. Melinda Childress Ms. Marybelle Clark Ms. Margaret Cummings Mr. and Mrs. Bob and Peggie Cunningham Mrs. Marie Curtis Mrs. Rachel Daly Ms. Moira DeWilde Ms. Carolyn Dinsmore Mrs. Jean Downs Ms. Lauren Earley Ms. Carol Ebert Mrs. B.J.Fawcett Mrs. Amy Fielder Ms. Terri Flynn-Smith Mrs. Nora Garber Ms. Lynne Gardner Ms. Shelly Gardner Dr. Hunter Gaunt Mrs. Eileen Gilliland Mr. Hal Goodman Dr. Daisy Goodwin Mr. Tom Graham Ms. Donna Gray Ms. Judy Greathouse Mr. John Guiser Mr. and Mrs. Len and Sheryl Gunderson Mrs. Carolyn Hadley Mrs. Nina Hidelberger Mr. and Mrs. Bill and TRANSFORMATIONS Janet Helbig Mr. and Mrs. Roger and Linda Henderberg Ms. Melanie Henry Mr. and Mrs. Irv and Marian Henschen Ms. Jean Herring Ms. Susan Howard Rev. and Mrs. Leslie and Christina Inglis Mrs. Carol-Faye Janowitz Ms. Paulette Jennis Ms. Kay Jones Mrs. Sandy Jones Mr. Joe Kalbach Mrs. Jessie Kanurin Dr. Don Karolyi Mr. and Mrs. Ron and Gail Kercheval Ms. Sylvia King Ms. Suellen Knowles Mr. and Mrs. Dan and Tina Lane Mrs. Liz Lindon Ms. Mary Linger Mrs. Gail Long Mr. Mark Lore Mr. James Louque Dr. Winston Lutz Mrs. Elsbeth Malik Ms. Lauren Mallory Mr. and Mrs. Robert and Joy Markley Mr. Benoit Mathieu Ms. Adrienne McKenna Ms. Martha Mead Ms. Ashley Miller Mrs. Martha Mitchell Mrs. Eleanor Monahan Mrs. Sigrid Mueller Mrs. Michelle Muller Mrs. Mary Lou Mulvey Ms. Sheila Murphy Ms. Margaret Neiberger Ms. Barbara Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Pat and Sally O’Neil Ms. Lacie Omps Mrs. Betsy Orndorff Mr. Lance Pearce Mr. Art Perkins Mr. Richard Phalen Ms. Mary Lou Raymond Mr. Marshall Rich Mrs. Carol Richardson Mrs. Pat Richardson Ms. Susan Roberts Ms. Melissa Rock Mrs. Linda Roseman Mrs. Mary-Louise Roth Mr. Lee Ruddle Mrs. Carolyn Sabatino Mrs. Virginia Saunders Ms. Kristen Schoenberger Mrs. Lisa Shaffer Mrs. Lora Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Walter and Audrey Shropshire Mrs. Pat Skidmore Mrs. Jan Smith Ms. Julie Smith Ms. Rhonda Smith Ms. Susan Smith Mr. Robert Strider Emma Sullivan Mr. Bill Swartz Mrs. Ann W. Thomas Ms. Jerri Trandem Mrs. Jocelyn Vena Ms. Sara Vondy Mr. William Westgard Mrs. Micki White Mr. and Mrs. Jim and Robbie Wiggington Ms. Janet Woolverton Mrs. Carol Yaniello Dr. and Mrs. Bob* and Cummie York Dr. Ted York Ms. Annette Young *Deceased 39 M U S EU M BOAR D OF DI R EC TORS JULY 1, 2012–JUNE 30, 2013 Officers Mary S. Riley David H. O. Roth† William D. Wiley John B. Willey, M.D. John C. Williams Directors John C. Allen, Jr. Katherine M. B. Berger Peter G. Bullough, M.D.† Sharon M. Byrd Carolyn A. Farouki Mary G. Fetter Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D. Thomas M. W. Green James T. Holland† Pembroke D. Hutchinson John P. Lewis John K. Marlow Christine T. Mistr Allan G. Paterson, Jr.† President John G. Lathrop Vice President Calvin H. Allen, PhD Second Vice President W. Blakely Curtis Secretary Dianne H. Wake Treasurer David L. Blount Honorary Board Members Harry E. Byrd, Jr.* Wilbur M. Feltner †Glass-Glen Burnie Foundation Trustee *Deceased M U S EU M C OM M I T T EES JULY 1, 2012–JUNE 30, 2013 Ad Hoc Building Committee Ad hoc Glen Burnie Upgrades Committee David L. Blount, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio W. Blakely Curtis Christopher A. “Kit” Molden Rupert W. Werner William D. Wiley Christopher A. “Kit” Molden, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio John C. Allen, Jr. H. K. “Bunny” Benham, III The Honorable Katherine M. B. Berger Joseph E. Kalbach Maral Kalbian John P. Lewis Donald J. Louque, Jr. Rupert W. Werner Edwin E. White Kay S. Whitworth Ad Hoc Business Advisory Committee John C. Williams, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio B. Scott Arthur David L. Blount Thomas T. Byrd Elaine M. Cain Micky W. Coffman W. Blakely Curtis Marie DiLorenzo Andrew U. Ferrari Thomas T. Gilpin Thomas M. “Wilke” Green Ronald L. Hottle Christopher A. “Kit” Molden The Honorable H. Russell Potts Dianne H. Wake William D. Wiley Ad Hoc Capital Campaign Steering Committee Sharon M. Byrd, Chairwoman Cary M. Craig, Jr. W. Blakely Curtis Mary G. Fetter Thomas T. Gilpin James T. Holland Broc B. Johnson Christy T. Mistr Christopher A. “Kit” Molden The Honorable H. Russell Potts Eugene F. Schultz Daniel J. Troup Dianne H. Wake Kay S. Whitworth William D. Wiley Dr. John B. Willey John C. Williams 40 Ad hoc Rose Hill Restoration Committee William D. Wiley, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Calvin H. Allen David L. Blount David D. Denham Joseph E. Kalbach Collections Committee Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D., Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Calvin H. Allen W. Blakely Curtis H.R. “Bob” Edwards Carolyn A. Farouki Mary G. Fetter Benjamin F. “Frank” Lewis, M.D. Pembroke “Pem” D. Hutchinson John E. “Jack” McAllister, M.D. The Honorable Ronald L. Napier Dianne H. Wake Development Committee W. Blakely Curtis, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Christopher A. “Kit” Molden Dianne H. Wake William D. Wiley John B. Willey, M.D. John C. Williams Government Relations Committee John K. Marlow, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio The Honorable Katherine M.B. Berger Broc B. Johnson Kay S. Whitworth Finance Committee Nominating Committee David L. Blount, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Sharon M. Byrd W. Blakely Curtis James T. Holland John K. Marlow Christy T. Mistr Mary S. Riley Sharon M. Byrd, Chairwoman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D. William D. Wiley John C. Williams Gardens and Grounds Committee John G. Lathrop, Chairman Calvin H. Allen, PhD H. K. “Bunny” Benham, III The Honorable Katherine M.B. Berger David L. Blount Peter G. Bullough, M.D. W. Blakely Curtis John K. Marlow Dianne H. Wake Rupert W. Werner, Chairman John G. Lathrop, ex-officio Peter G. Bullough, M.D. Carolyn A. Farouki Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr., M.D. Jean E. R. Gilpin Don G. Karolyi, M.D. Diane Kelly John P. Lewis Stephanie J. McWhorter William O. Minor Mary S. Riley The Honorable John E. “Jay” Wetsel, Jr. John B. Willey, M.D. Mary Beth Wood, M.D. Strategic Planning Committee M U S EU M OF T HE S HENANDOAH VALLEY M U S EU M S TAF F, C ONS U LTANT S & I NT ER NS JULY 1, 2012–JUNE 30, 2013 Dana Hand Evans Executive Director Michael Friedmann Collections Intern John Adams Head Security Specialist Misty Gabriel Media Specialist Julie Armel Director of Marketing and Public Relations Corwyn Garman Exhibitions Manager Amelia Arnold Operations Manager/Assistant to the Executive Director Tom Arthur Security Liaison to Special Events Bonnie Barr Museum Store Manager Josefina Bautista Museum Technician Dana Blume Museum Technician Rick Blume Facilities Manager Catherine Bogaty Special Events Coordinator Amanda Cansler Youth and Family Programs Coordinator Janie Carscallen Registrar/Collections Manager Stephanie Choi Visitor Services Associate Charles Clare Security Specialist Laurie Cocina Museum Technician Tamara Cooper Director of Finance and Administration Frances W. Crawford Director of Development Susie Drummond Museum Technician Sara Durham Museum Technician Josh Gibbs Gardens and Grounds Technician Mary Stickley-Godinez Gardens and Grounds Manager Ann Goodman Gate House Assistant Autumn Gray Community Programs and Marketing Coordinator Amberly Griffith Café Manager Bruce Groh Security Specialist Brian Hart Security Specialist Julie Hendren Human Resources Manager Charlotte Henning Assistant Controller and Grant Writer Deborah Hilty Curator of Education Troy Newbraugh Incoming Director of Development Carly Mullin Museum Technician Mary Toth Information Coordinator Robert Pampe Visitor Services Associate John Trueblood Visitor Services Associate/ Lead Educator Pam Pampe Lead Educator Sherry Wells Maintenance Technician Lance Pearce Security Specialist Kay Whitacre Museum Technician Morgan Pierce Curator of Collections Matt Wickham Grounds Technician Debbie Price Volunteer and Group Tour Coordinator Ben Wilson Seasonal Grounds Technician Sue Ridley Development Assistant and Membership Coordinator Colleen Ritter Visitor Services Associate Lee Robertson Maintenance Technician Matthew Robertson Arts & Education Collections Specialist Rebecca Rogers Museum Technician Rachel Hilty Museum Technician Douglas Saffell Visitor Services Associate/ Lead Educator Ruth Jackson Maintenance Technician Robert Saunders Security Specialist Donna Kowalczyk Visitor Services Associate/ Lead Educator Megan Schloemer Collections Intern Jack Lambert Gardens and Grounds Technician Robert Stotler Security Specialist Ginny Schuweiler Visitor Services Associate James Lambert Gardens and Grounds Technician Bryan Shepherd Manager of Gardens and Grounds Ric Lambert Gardens and Grounds Technician Joan Smith Visitor Services Coordinator Lauren Layman Museum Technician Rhonda Smith Adult and Gallery Programs Coordinator William Eddy Visitor Services Associate/ Lead Educator Marge Lee Marketing Consultant Harry Ewald Visitor Services Associate/ Lead Educator Joel Lowery Assistant Manager of Gardens and Grounds Carolyn Spielman Museum Technician Ed Farrace Buildings Maintenance Coordinator Garland Meehan Maintenance Technician Robert Staup Security Specialist Emily Sparling Garden Programs Coordinator MSV Development Director Frances “Franny” Crawford greets an MSV Member and good friend at The Sixties Soirée. Franny retired at the end of the fiscal year after managing the Museum’s fundraising efforts for 12 years. Franny also served as acting executive director of the MSV from March 2010 to February 2011. Photo: Julie Napear Photograhy MUSEUM OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY Winchester, Virginia