Winter 2012 Interiors

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winter–spring 2012

INTERIORS


Director’s Notes–George W. McDaniel, Ph.D.

thank you, friends. For most non-profits, building up and sustaining an engaged group of members is something that takes years of planning and hard work. Sometimes these programs work, sometimes they fall flat. But as I look back over Drayton Hall’s 30-year-old Friends program, it seems that you’ve always been there, encouraging our work and supporting us in ways most non-profits only dream of. In the mid-1990s when our land across the river was threatened by condo developments, Friends stepped forward from across the country and enabled us to buy the land and to stop the threat. In every instance that I can recall when the paint, plaster, or structural systems of the main house needed conservation and repairs, Friends have risen to the challenge and responded to our appeals generously. In the early 2000s it was Friends, led by Parker and Gail Gilbert, who funded the Landscape Master Plan and over the last decade, have enabled us to implement its recommendations. Just last year you helped us raise over $300,000 in a little over two months, to repay into our endowment the funds we had to use to purchase the George Edwards Watercolors for our collection. For our part, we continue to work hard to improve our house tours, and to uncover new and important information about this remarkable place and the people that lived here, helping to attract more first-time visitors with each passing year. Thanks to the Landscape Master Plan, the grounds now look better than they have in decades. For the last several years we have also enhanced our school programs so they are now attracting nearly 12,000 students a year. But our work at Drayton Hall is never completely finished. At a site as dynamic as Drayton Hall, once one project is successfully wrapped up, another one comes along that must be addressed. Perhaps better than any group of people, Drayton Hall’s Friends understand all the hard work that goes into sustaining its preservation and education programs. To preserve something, to maintain it in a way that ensures its survival for decades to come, is never-ending work. We must be constantly on alert in order to keep the house in a state of preservation that will allow new generations of Friends to enjoy it and learn from it. In reflecting over the past thirty years of our Friends program, I am amazed at what we’ve accomplished and look forward to seeing what the next thirty years has in store for us. Happy Anniversary!

The mission of Drayton Hall, a historic site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, is to preserve and interpret Drayton Hall and its environs, in order to educate and inspire people to embrace historic preservation.

Drayton Hall Site Council Anthony Wood, chairman Elizabeth Alston, Mary Ravenel Black, Lonnie Bunch, Mimi Cathcart, Edward Crawford, Elise Davis-McFarland, Jane deButts (emeritus), Chad Drayton, Charles Drayton (emeritus), Frank Drayton, W. Eric Emerson, Carl Gable, Phil Gaines, Stephen F. Gates, Marilynn Hill, Douglas Lee, Benjamin Lenhardt, Sandy Logan, Peter McGee (emeritus), Hampton Morris, Monty Osteen, Duane Parrish, Suzanne Pollak, Michael Prevost, Connie Wyrick (emeritus) Executive Director George W. McDaniel

interiors staff Kristine Morris, editor Natalie Baker, graphic designer Emily C. Pack, associate editor Robert A. Johnson, volunteer proofreader

What our teachers say (read more on page 10): “This experience was so much more than I expected from a field trip. The educators were knowledgeable, professional, and worked very well with the students. Everyone was actively engaged and had a wonderful time learning about the history of Drayton Hall and the American South.” – Michael Joyce, high school teacher, NJ

“Several students said that Drayton Hall was the best field trip they had ever experienced.” - Charlotte Fitts, Mt. Pleasant, SC

From our group tour organizers: “We felt very honored and special to have Sarah* lead our tour, and she did a FABULOUS job! Thank you so much for everything you did to make our visit so wonderful!” – Carol W., Daniel Island Lowcountry Explorers *Sarah Stroud, archaeologist & preservation coordinator

“Debbi†, your tour was phenomenal. Your knowledge of the home, the family, and the architectural elements was exceptional, and you...gave the students a wealth of information...I look forward to bringing the students back annually.” – Jonathan C., Sotheby’s Institute of Art † Debbi Zimmerman, group tour coordinator

Favorite

quotes:

“I love everything about Drayton Hall – the history the beauty – I have only been fortunate enough to go there once and fell in love with it the minute I saw it and hope to make it back there very soon.” – Khristie S. “Charles Drayton and Richmond Bowens. The Last Generations. What a treasure!!” - Randy H.

cover story begins on page 4

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3380 Ashley River Road, Charleston SC 29414 Phone: 843-769-2600 Fax: 843-766-0878 www.draytonhall.org dhmail@draytonhall.org


by eric becker, landscape & horticulture manager

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hen Charles Drayton, the second owner of Drayton Hall, made an entry in his plantation diary in 1792 concerning the blooming status of his hyacinth bulbs, he probably never realized how important these entries would be to scholars and garden enthusiasts over two hundred years later. These rich journals, kept annually from 1784-1820, allow us to create demonstration gardens to illustrate the botanical world Charles lived in two centuries prior. Recently, Drayton Hall staff and interns have been reading, transcribing, and researching Charles’ writings, book subscriptions, library content, and social interactions between him and his peer group associated with the natural and botanical world of the 18th and early 19th centuries. This information has allowed us to cultivate a small demonstration garden of flower bulbs that would have been available to Charles and to showcase the

botanical world that Charles and his contemporaries enjoyed. In the fall of 2011, the Drayton Hall horticulture staff planted 1300 bulbs of assorted daffodils, tulips, crocuses, squills, and hyacinth. Theses species of plants were included based upon their inclusion in Charles Drayton’s diaries and botanical publications issued before and during the time Charles and his children lived at Drayton Hall. This year we were able to purchase 13 different species of bulbs; among them Roman Hyacinth, Florentine Tulip, and Mammoth Crocus. Since some are now hard to find, we contacted specialists to acquire rare bulbs from as far afield as Holland and Israel. These bulbs began flowering in late January 2012; some will continue to bloom through spring. In the future, we hope to make additions to the plantings through our ongoing research and to uncover new and exciting information to share.

above: Photos of spring flowers at Drayton Hall. Corresponding botanicals: L-R: Crocus Luteus, Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen, Johann Georg Sturm, 1796; Hyacinthus Orientalis, Hortus Eystettensis, Basilius Besler, 1613; and Tulipa Sylvestris, Flora Batava, Jan Kop et al., 1828.

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by jessica garrett, former director of development

Sometime in 1982 or 1983, a list was prepared with 303 names and addresses. A good number of the names are familiar—many Draytons, one Robert E. Lee Barker—but many are not. The people on the list come from as close as Charleston and as far away as New York, Illinois, and California. They seem to be listed in no particular order— not alphabetically, not by state. It’s only a faded header at the top of each typed page that explains what brings this group of people together. They are the individuals, couples, and organizations that donated $25 to join a fledgling organization called The Friends of Drayton Hall. This year marks the 30th anniversary of its founding, and Drayton Hall would like to salute all those who have stepped up over the past three decades to play a part in Drayton Hall’s mission of preservation and education. While Drayton Hall’s interpreters had invited visitors to become members of the National Trust for Historic Preservation ever since the site opened to the public in 1977, it wasn’t until 1982 that visitors could choose to directly support Drayton Hall. Drayton Hall’s second director, Letitia Galbraith Machado, founded the Friends organization to provide Drayton Hall with unrestricted support—to keep the lights on, to ensure the driveway was graded, and to allow guides to give tours as more and more people heard about the magnificent Palladian house along the Ashley River. And while much has changed—over 7,000 people count themselves as Friends today—much has stayed the same, including the reason many people become members. Mrs. Machado, who worked here from 1982 until 1989 and who saw the organization grow from just a few hundred people to over 1,500, believes that the rapid growth in the number of Friends was due to “the guides’ fabulous tours and the 4

interpretation of Drayton Hall—how you could look at a building as a work of art, as an artifact. That approach was so different.” By the end of the tour, she explained, “you would realize that you had never before thought about a house in the same way.” Nancy Ryan Huggins, who ran the gift shop in the 1980s and 90s, adds another reason: “[People] were in awe of the building and what we were trying to do there. It was so easy to sell memberships because people were convinced that Drayton Hall needed to be saved.” While membership benefits—discounts at the shop, parties, concerts, lectures, and the ability to bring guests to Drayton Hall—were important to people who lived near Charleston, just as many people who became friends were from “Ohio, Mississippi, and New England. They might not come back for two or three years. They just believed in saving this place.” Of course, for many years one of the most visible and beloved benefits of becoming a Friend has been the Drayton Hall rice spoon. Bob Barker, who has worked at Drayton Hall since it first opened to the public, has always carried a spoon on tour. At first, it was a silver serving spoon in the Nellie Custis pattern, which he used to point out architectural features of the house, just as he does today. Soon thereafter, Director Machado decided that Drayton Hall should give something to visitors who became members. According to Mr. Barker, “we tried candle snuffers and a small spoon the Trust offered” before settling on the rice spoon. Visitors “weren’t familiar with rice or dressing spoons,” explained Mrs. Machado. “It wasn’t something you could get in stainless steel. It was a traditional item in silver chests, a wonderful thing from the South.” The spoon also has the symbolic connection to the Drayton family’s role in rice cultivation and though each spoon is not an heirloom, it continues to be valuable to members because it provides


Not only have Friends helped us actively preserve Drayton Hall’s bricks and mortar, historic landscape, and collections, but they have also advocated for the preservation of Drayton Hall’s environs. When asked about the preservation projects at the house that he is most proud of, Harlan Greene, one of the original Friends, said “Those that have preserved the house’s structural integrity without drawing attention to themselves…like valiant workers who do their jobs and then modestly withdraw without fanfare.”

above: Thanks to the National Trust and donors from across the country, the land across the Ashley River will never be developed. below: A computerenhanced image generated at the time of the land’s sale illustrates how the land might have looked had it been developed at 22 units per acre.

above: A photo gallery of just a few of the many Friends-funded projects over the years. With so many challenges still ahead, please consider making a special donation in honor of this 30th Anniversary Year. As always, a reply envelope is enclosed for your convenience. THANK YOU!

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a very special reminder of their connection with Drayton Hall. Another important part of membership has been this very newsletter, which Mrs. Machado began publishing during her tenure and which she named Interiors. Also contributing to this build-up of the Friends organization were Bill Fudge and assistant director George Neil, who worked at Drayton Hall from 1986 until 1996, and under whose direction several thousand more people became members. Mr. Neil also initiated the popular Friends Fall Lecture Series, which ran for many years. Today, Friends also rely on Drayton Hall’s website, our blog, and even our Facebook page to stay connected. Just this past February, Drayton Hall reached 1,500 “friends” on Facebook. Here Drayton Hall can post quick announcements or progress updates

six months before Hurricane Hugo damaged over 70% of the trees on site—and reflected on being greeted by Richmond Bowens. Mr. Huber wrote that it was “thrilling to listen to a few of his personal accounts of the home and the Drayton/Bowens family history.” This, in turn, inspired three other friends to post their remembrances of Mr. Bowens. The ability to connect with members has been and continues to be paramount to the success of the Friends organization, but the way in which we connect is constantly evolving.

have spoken, they unknowingly echoed each other when they explained why they feel certain that the Friends of Drayton Hall will continue to grow and help the site prosper. In separate interviews, both concluded by saying, “Drayton Hall’s story is not just about Charleston, not just about the South. It’s about our nation.”

So what is in store for Friends in the next decade, or even the next century? Charles Drayton, who together with his brother Frank made the difficult decision to sell Drayton Hall to the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 1974, and who in 1982 became one of the original Friends,

Spoon as gift or discipline?

l-r: Interiors 1982 - 2012 as they occur. During our annual “cleaning week” this February, staff members new and old—including Ashley Darland and Casey Euart, who joined Drayton Hall this year, along with Raymond Nesmith who has worked in the Preservation Department for over 25 years—posted pictures of each other cleaning the shutters of the main house and installing wood duck nesting boxes at one of the ponds. These pictures sparked a Facebook discussion on cleaning historic houses, including recommendations to use dental picks. Another Facebook friend, Randy Huber, posted pictures from his March 1989 visit to Drayton Hall—just

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frames his hopes in terms of Drayton Hall’s as-of-yet untold stories. He speaks of Drayton Hall’s remarkable collection—specifically the furniture collection—and of the potential to exhibit it in a future interpretive center. Raising the funds for such a facility is the “next big challenge and the next big opportunity” for Friends because it will enable a more complete story to be told, one that engages so many more interests than our present venue allows. As a result, members who have loved Drayton Hall for what they have learned thus far will discover new ways and new reasons to love it. In fact, while it’s been years since Charlie Drayton and “Tish” Machado

For as long as interpreters have carried a rice spoon, visitors have asked about its purpose far before interpreters have explained its connection to the Friends of Drayton Hall. Many guides and visitors have suggested the spoon might be a good way to maintain control over unruly guests, and as it turns out, there may be a kernel of truth to this story. When asked about it, Bob Barker laughed. “If we snuck into the kitchen when we were little, our cook, Ethel would give us a whack with a spoon, and then a cookie. Mother didn’t know about the cookie.” Mrs. Machado remembers a cousin, who would punish misbehaving children (he had eight) at the dinner table, with a tap on the head by a rice spoon. Every interpreter who has worked at Drayton Hall has received at least part of their training from Bob, and maybe that’s why so many smile and pop an invisible guest on the head with their spoon when asked early on in a tour why they carry it.


Charles Drayton’s favorite Friends event: Dinner in the house For Charles Drayton, the Friends event that stands out most in his memory occurred last spring. Friends gathered for dinner in the house to celebrate the purchase of the 18th-century George Edwards watercolors thanks to a leadership gift from Friends Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Lenhardt and donations from other members. “It was quite an occasion. I don’t ever recall going to a seated dinner at Drayton Hall. It might have been the first, not just since the beginning of the Friends of Drayton Hall, but this century because the family didn’t live there after 1905-1910.”

Do you remember? If you’re a longtime member, how many of these past events are among your favorites? • 1983: Halloween Party. According to former director Letitia Galbraith Machado: “Friends brought their children and we told ghost stories. Richmond Bowens told his story about the will o’ the wisp, which really was scary!” • 1985: A “spirited croquet competition” with “courts for beginners, intermediates, and ‘cut-throats.’” • 1988: Drayton Hall began the celebration of its 250th anniversary with a “Starlight Swing” dance held on the grounds. • 1989: “Rice Culture in the Carolina Lowcountry” lecture by Dr. Richard Porcher • 1991: “Uncovering New Clues about Drayton Hall” lecture by Dr. Frank Matero • 1992: “18th-century Decorative Arts (or How Drayton Hall Might Have Been Furnished) lecture by Tom Savage • 1996: Reception to celebrate the purchase of “The Land Across the River”

l-r: Robert E. Lee “Bob” Barker, senior interpreter, and Charles Henry “Charlie” Drayton, seventh generation Drayton.

We’d love to hear from you! Please email Director of Development Randy Boone with your favorite Friends memory at randy_boone@draytonhall.org or mail to Drayton Hall to his attention.

About the author

above: On every third Wednesday of the month since 2009, Friends have participated in Preservation Wednesdays, gently cleaning centuries of dirt from thousands of artifacts.

Jessica Garrett, former director of development for Drayton Hall, is a fulltime mother to 4-year-old twin daughters and a 2-year-old son, and is a part-time writer. From 2003 until 2011, Jessica met, corresponded with, and gave tours to many of you Friends. 7


by trish lowe smith, preservation technician Although we’re open to the public, very few people are allowed past the ropes and up the narrow winding staircase that leads to our attic. In recent weeks, this little-used space received a thorough cleaning, which removed enough dirt and rubble to fill four 32-gallon trash cans and eleven Shop-Vac bags. Imagine how many trips it took to carry that much debris down the small spiral staircase one bucket at a time! All of that hard work paid off, however, because we can now see the wood frame of the house more clearly, which is an excellent tool for studying our Georgian-Palladian masterpiece.

above: Execution of the scribe rule. Plate 284 from A Diderot Pictorial Encyclopedia of Trades and Industry, Volume Two, Denis Diderot,1763

During the 17th and 18th centuries, builders used a practice during construction commonly called “scribe rule.” In this method, the carpenter began by laying out the wooden framing members on the ground in order to mortise and tenon the joints together, and then labeling each intersecting member of a joint with Roman numerals. All of the joints in the frame were given a unique number so that the frame could be reassembled on site exactly as it had been laid out in the carpenter’s building yard. In the picture, you can see where the carpenter marked each timber in the joint with the Roman numerals XII. Marks like these are important to us now, because they help us identify original members of the house’s timber frame.

by joyce keegan, collections manager After a decade of use, Drayton Hall’s furniture storage building is being upgraded! Built in the late 1990s, it was at the time an energy-efficient, cost-effective, and technologically innovative solution to the shortage of space for our Museum Collection. In accordance with Drayton Hall’s Collections Initiative, and through financial support from the Historic Sites Fund of the National Trust, the storage building is now being reorganized to allow the Museum Collection, currently housed in various locations, to be consolidated, re-housed, and made more easily accessible for study and maintenance. During the reorganization, Project Assistant Joseph “Joe” Mester oversaw the relocation of the furniture to ensure its safety as the work in the building began. The next step in the process was to install new shelving units according to a floor plan designed by Preservation Technician Patricia “Trish” Smith. Additional storage furniture included two new museum specimen cabinets, which will house small objects. The Museum Collection will greatly benefit from the new arrangement as each object will have its own “home” where it can be viewed with the least amount of disturbance. This new arrangement and storage furniture will provide a safe and secure home for the many precious objects that comprise the Drayton Hall Museum Collection, such as the sofa shown to the right. This will help our staff with maintenance and repair issues as well as scholars and others who study the many wonderful pieces in our collection.

before: (Top) Made in the “pillar and scroll” style, this 1830s sofa was donated to the National Trust in 1977, having served the Drayton family well for many years. after: (Bottom) Previously stored on its side, for want of three legs, the sofa now stands on a support base fabricated by Joe Mester. Although it remains in poor repair, it has regained its dignity by being repositioned in its intended, upright position. The project team is shown left to right: Collections Manager Joyce Keegan, Joe, and Trish.


Drayton Hall, the Center for Palladian Studies in America, the Graduate Program in Historic Preservation at Clemson University and the College of Charleston, and the Historic Preservation and Community Planning Program at the College of Charleston present

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n April 13th and 14th 2012, Drayton Hall will co-host an inaugural symposium on the development of American architecture and design, focusing on the prominent role played by Charleston architects and patrons. Titled VITRUVIANA in honor of Vitruvius (c. 80 -15 BC), the author of De architectura, the only major book on architecture to survive from classical antiquity, the symposium will begin on the 13th in downtown Charleston with a full day of lectures at the Circular Congregational Church and an evening cocktail reception at the Charleston Library Society. This will be followed on the 14th with an optional guided bus tour exploring parish churches of the Lowcountry, including Old St. Andrews Parish Church (1706), St. Thomas and St. Denis Church (1706), Pompion Hill Chapel (1763-1765), Strawberry Chapel (1725), and St. James Parish Church (1768). Friends of Drayton Hall will find the symposium of particular interest as Drayton Hall’s Director of Education and Preservation, Dr. Carter Hudgins, will explore the roots of Drayton Hall’s design in relation to the legacy of Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio (1508-1580). Acknowledged as the most influential individual in the history of western architecture, Palladio was heavily influenced by Vitruvius and adopted the principles of classical architecture to construct palaces, churches, and villas throughout Italy’s Veneto. In 1570, Palladio published Quattro Libri dell’Architettura (The Four Books of Architecture), and the designs within spread across Europe and to North America. Today, Drayton Hall is regarded as the first fully executed Palladian domestic structure in North America and an icon of colonial architecture and design.

For more on VITRUVIANA 2012, please contact Eugenia Payne 843-769-2627 or eugenia_payne@draytonhall.org or go to: www.draytonhall.org/news/event_calendar

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above l-r: Welcome to Drayton Hall: Patricia “Trish” Smith, preservation technician and former Wood Family Fellow, and Eugenia Payne, development associate and Ashley River Region coordinator.

Charlie Drayton’s 93rd Birthday. Shown here with his beloved friend and fiancé, Julia Porter Cart Smith. Sadly, Porter passed away on February 20th of this year and will be greatly missed by her many friends at Drayton Hall.

above: David J. Brown, Executive Vice President and Chief Preservation Officer of the National Trust visited Drayton Hall last November and took time to meet with the staff. Shown here with (left) Carter Hudgins and (right) George McDaniel.

left: Jim Cothran 1940 – 2012 A noted author of books on historic gardens of the antebellum South and of Charleston, Jim completed remarkable landscape planning and studies for Historic Columbia Foundation, Magnolia Plantation, and elsewhere in Georgia and South Carolina, including Drayton Hall where he had recently completed our Phase 1 baseline management plan in preparation for our future interpretive center and new facilities. Jim was in private practice with Robert and Co. as a landscape architect, and also taught at Georgia State University, where he was popular with students and respected by his peers. Jim’s work will be reflected in countless ways in the years to come as his efforts and that of his colleagues helped to shape Drayton Hall’s site master plan, which was unanimously approved by our site council last December.

Charleston’s Cruise Ship Debate. Since 1738, Drayton Hall has been, and still is, an integral part of the city of Charleston. In recent years, there has been growing concern about the size and increase in the number of cruise ships docking in downtown Charleston and the associated pollution, traffic, and congestion. In June 2011, the National Trust designated the city as a National Treasure and added it to its new “Watch” list of potentially endangered places in America. Since that designation, the Trust has acted behind the scenes to provide legal advice as well as financial assistance for an economic study commissioned by the Historic Charleston Foundation. While win-win solutions have proved elusive, it is still hoped that they may be found. Read more about the issue here:

https://trustnet.nationaltrust.org/networking/sightlines/SightlinesBlog/Lists/Posts/Post.aspx?ID=368 http://historiccharleston.org/news_events/pdf/HCF_CruiseReport.pdf http://www.postandcourier.com/news/2012/feb/09/report-on-cruise-industryshould-open-the-citys/ 10

above: Planning in Progress for our future interpretive center and facilities. Shown here: Drayton Hall staff and architects from Thomas & Denzinger.


by rikki davenport, acting director of interpretation

In the 1750s, the young Drayton children were likely playing draughts and tossing quoits on the garden lawn of Drayton Hall. Today, our young visitors learn about history while enjoying some of the same activities or by using their computers to play our new interactive games on the Drayton Hall website. Drayton Hall educators developed a series of mindtesting picture puzzles and a game that challenges one’s ability to get a sloop of rice to market. Then, teachers from Drayton Hall Elementary School reviewed the games with their students and offered helpful comments and suggestions. While the games and activities are designed for children in elementary, middle, and high school, our staff has had a great time trying to solve the picture puzzles and navigate the sloop down the Ashley River. In preparation for your next visit to Drayton Hall or just to have some fun with history, visit our website and click on Games and Activities, listed under the Visit tab. Funding for this project was provided by the Interpretation and Education Fund of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

“The graphics are excellent and the activities are directly connected to the third grade South Carolina social studies standards regarding daily life on a plantation in colonial America.” -Amy Winsted, 3rd grade teacher, Drayton Hall Elementary

In December of 2011, Drayton Hall engaged The Rev. David Randell Boone, Ph.D., of Hendersonville, North Carolina, to become its new Director of Development. The hiring decision was made at the conclusion of an extended nationwide search. Boone served for nearly five years as the Director of Institutional Advancement for Kanuga Conferences, Inc., an Episcopal center on the National Register of Historic Places. Prior to that, he was development officer for The Hill School in Middleburg, Virginia, The Cathedral College at Washington National Cathedral, and served for twenty years in positions of pastoral leadership with congregations of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). Randy’s career has evolved like that of many pastors who develop prodigious fundraising skills within their faith community and then go on to apply them in the non-profit world. In 2001, inspired by a successful capital campaign that he designed and led as the pastor of an historic church in Chicago, Randy made the official move from the pastorate into professional fundraising. A native Texan, Randy holds graduate degrees from Vanderbilt University and a certificate in fundraising management from DePaul University. An avid sailor, Randy is thrilled to be living near blue water again and hopes to become familiar with all the incredible waterways in the Lowcountry. He is a devotee of dancing to classic jazz arrangements from the American Songbook, and is an avid proponent of genealogy as a tool for understanding and interpreting history. He has one child, Kathlene Boone, who is married and works as an editor in Baton Rouge. Reflecting on fundraising challenges that lie ahead at Drayton Hall, Randy says, “Drayton Hall is poised to continue to improve its yearly membership enrollment and to merit generous philanthropic support from friends, corporations, and foundations across the nation for its annual, capital, and endowment needs. This is due in no small measure to the work of my recent predecessors in Development: Jessica Garrett, Monte Parsons Gaillard, Jennifer Richard, Emily Pack, and Courtney Bates. Adding to these efforts, Drayton Hall’s role as an historic site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation is an asset that can underscore its credibility and accountability in our community. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the spirit of teamwork and cooperation that George McDaniel and Chairman Tony Wood have cultivated among our Site Council members, staff, guides, and volunteers, puts Drayton Hall among the best nonprofit workplaces anywhere. I am grateful, hopeful, and proud to be at Drayton Hall and expect great results as our leaders and many loyal Friends work together to advance its mission.” 11


Drayton Hall is always most grateful for generous financial support from friends and benefactors who undergird the mission of preservation and education through membership dues, donations, and grants. In these pages, therefore, we wish to recognize and express our heartfelt thanks to individuals, families, foundations, corporations and other organizations that helped make our work possible by contributing $100 or more during calendar year 2010. While we have made every effort to ensure that this recognition list is accurate, we would appreciate learning about any unintentional errors reflected here (843-769-2012). Please note that we intend to recognize members and donors who contributed during 2011 in the pages of an annual report to be published later this spring.

The Society of 1738 $50,000 and up Robert A. and Marion K. Kennedy Charitable Trust

$10,000 and up Mr. and Mrs. Jamie W. Constance Mr. and Mrs. Peter R. Kellogg Mr. and Mrs. Fulton D. Lewis, Jr.

$5,000 and up Mr. Larry G. Steiner Mr. Anthony C. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wyatt

$2,500 and up Mrs. Mary Betts Bohm Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Brumley Mrs. Robert S. Cathcart, III Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Crawford Mr. and Mrs. John Culhane Mr. and Mrs. M. Graham Drayton Mr. Charles H. Drayton Mrs. Eric G. Friberg US 52 Associates Mr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Gates Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Dupont Hayward Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Hellwig Mrs. Charles H. Jones, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Lenhardt, Jr. Miss Isabella T. Lynn Mrs. Peter Manigault Mrs. Frank McClain Mr. and Mrs. J. Alex McMillan, III Mr. and Mrs. W. Hampton Morris Mrs. J. Garnett Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Newkirk Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Osteen, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Phipps, Jr. 12

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Pollak Ms. Barbara M. Pooley Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Prioleau Ms. Kathleen A. Skeels

Drayton Hall Society $1,000 and up Mr. and Mrs. John D. Bowe Mrs. Charlotte Caldwell and Mr. Jeffrey Schutz Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Chilton, Jr. Mrs. Davilynn B. Cowperthwaite Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Drayton, III Mr. and Mrs. Berryman Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Richard Galeucia Mr. Thomas R. Goldberg Mrs. Roger Hanahan Mr. Winslow Hastie Mrs. Charlotte McCrady Hastie Mrs. E. Bronson Ingram Ms. Judith D. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Jim Kelligrew Mr. and Mrs. Larry London Mr. and Mrs. Lee W. Mather, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. George W. McDaniel Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. McGee Mr. and Mrs. G. Wilson Miller Mr. and Mrs. James Morrill Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Negles Ms. Nancy Pratt Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Rash, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Reahard, III Ms. Angela B. Rowsey Mr. John W. Sullivan Mrs. Anne P. Sylvester Mrs. Elizabeth Drayton Taylor Dr. and Mrs. George F. Tolhurst Ms. Deborah Wexler Mr. Anthony C. Wood

Sustainers $500 and up Ms. G. A. Adelson Ms. Helen C. Alexander Mr. Ernest Clifford Barrett, III Mrs. Dorothy C. Brown Mr. and Mrs. T. Heyward Carter, Jr. Mrs. Susan H. Clark Mr. and Mrs. William C. Cleveland Mr. and Mrs. John Coppedge Capt. and Mrs. Ward W. De Groot Mr. and Mrs. P. Steven Dopp Mrs. Susan Eichelberger Mrs. Maureen Field Mrs. Florence Goodyear Mr. and Mrs. Reese Grams Ms. Bernadette Guest Mr. and Mrs. Stan Halstead Mrs. Tamara Harrison Mr. and Mrs. George S. Hartley Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hill Capt. James D. Huck and Ms. Jeanne Defliese Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Jenrette, III Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Michael Johnson Ms. Annelore Kurtz Mr. Allen Lang Mrs. Richard Lewine Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Lowery Capt. and Mrs. Nat D. Malcolm Ms. Patricia Mallon Dr. and Mrs. Stuart McDaniel Richard Mishaan Mr. David M. Morris Ms. Barbara Moser Mrs. Jennifer O’Brien Mrs. Carol S. Peschel Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Pownall Mrs. Kathleen Riley The Honorable and Mrs. Mathew Robins Ms. Elaine K. Segelken Dr. and Mrs. Robert G. Shong

Mr. Lee A. Taylor Mr. Theodore W. Vasiliou Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. Wagner, Jr. Mr. Westford D. Warner Mr. and Mrs. John Winthrop

Contributors $250 and up Dr. and Mrs. James C. Allen Mr. and Mrs. William M. Ardrey Maj. and Mrs. Henry Drayton Barratt, USMC (Ret.) Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Battle, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Bilas Mr. and Mrs. Charles Black Dr. and Mrs. Robert P. Bland, Jr. Mrs. Emily Blount Mr. Charles Bosak, III Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Brokes Mr. J. A. Bucy, II Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Butler Mr. and Mrs. John T. Cahill Mr. Richard Evans Carlson Ms. Paula B. Carson Miss Lucy Anne Cathcart Dr. and Mrs. David Chalker Dr. Stanley S. Chmiel, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Daniel Mr. LeRoy J. Dare Mr. and Mrs. D. Gaither Dean, Jr. Mrs. William Hunter deButts, Jr. Mrs. H. C. DeMuth Mrs. Lucile DeSoto Mr. John A. Dominick Mrs. Roland W. Donnem Ms. Alexis J. Dougherty The George Drayton Family Mr. and Mrs. J. Henry Fair Mrs. Yvonne K. Fee Mr. and Mrs. Helmut Fiedler Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Fuller Mr. and Mrs. Alex Gaines Mr. and Mrs. John R. Gall Ms. Linda Amelia Giller Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Gimarc


Mrs. Carolyn B. Glover Mrs. Gordon S. Gray Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Greenholtz Mrs. Christine Grochowski Mr. and Mrs. David Lott Hardy Ms. Katharine M. Hartley Mr. Ron Hirsch and Ms. Betty Reid Mr. and Mrs. Horst W. Huber Mr. Mark C. Huey Mr. and Mrs. Gene Humphrey Mr. Lee Hurdelbrink Mrs. Sue A. Idleman Mr. and Mrs. Rick Jerue Dr. and Mrs. M. Craig Johns Mr. and Mrs. George R. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Starling R. Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. W. Craig Leese Mr. and Mrs. James Linam Mr. and Mrs. David Martin Mr. John W. Martin Mr. Bill Maynard Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. McAdams Dr. and Mrs. John McCardell Mr. and Mrs. Gary McDaniel Mr. Dan Michalak Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Michaud Mrs. George W. Miller Mr. Guy E. Montgomery Mr. Ham Morrison and Ms. Mimi Van Wyck Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Mosimann, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Murtagh, Jr. Mr. Eric Nelson Mrs. Katharine C. Nevin Ms. Lisa Nevin Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peters V. Adm. Douglas C. Plate Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Pohl Mr. Jerry Poore Mr. and Mrs. Michael Prevost Mr. and Mrs. James L. Redmond Mr. and Mrs. Eldon W. Riley Mr. John M. Rivers, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Samuelson Mrs. Marlene E. Shales Ms. Joan Stephenson Ms. Sandra L. Sully Mr. Gary A. Thieret Ms. Marcia Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Tubman

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Varin Mrs. Harold A. Via, Jr. Ms. Adrienne Wilds Mr. and Mrs. Roy Williams, III Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wyrick, Jr. Mrs. Darell E. Zink, Jr.

Partners $100 and up Mrs. Bonnie Ahrens Mr. Daniel B. Akers Mr. and Mrs. Richard Alkire Mrs. Albert Alston Mr. and Mrs. John B. Anderson Miss Karen M. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Allan J. Anderson Ms. Joni M. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Shepard B. Ansley Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Armfield Mrs. Christy Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Arrington Mr. C. W. Augur Mr. and Mrs. Gayle Averyt Mr. Michael Babcock Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bailey Ms. Diana and Mr. Charles Bain Mr. and Mrs. Porter Baldridge Mr. and Mrs. William Barksdale, Jr. Ms. Sue F. Barnett Mrs. Gianna Barrow Mr. and Mrs. Ron Barwick Mrs. Robert N. Bavier, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Pat Beaird, Jr. Mr. Eric Becker Mr. and Mrs. Brian Beem Mrs. John W. Bell, III Mr. Paul Belotti Mr. and Mrs. John T. Benton Mr. Richard Blackburn and Ms. Nancy Whyms Dr. David H. Bland Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Bliss Mr. Richard B. Bodman Mr. Rick Bolt Mr. and Mrs. Livio M. Borghese Mrs. Eve Borshy Mr. Samuel A. Bowman Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Boylston Mr. and Mrs. Scott Brandenburg Mr. and Mrs. R. Breiling Mr. Frederick Breimyer and Ms. Adele Langevin Ms. Michelle Bricker Mr. and Mrs. Robert Briskman Mr. and Mrs. John Brooks

Mrs. Marian L. Broomfield Mr. Dirk Brown Mr. and Mrs. William Brown Dr. and Mrs. Robert Broyles Mr. and Mrs. John Bruhn Mr. Christian Brutzer and Ms. Regina Anderson Mrs. Judith Drayton Mayers Bryan Ms. Sheila Bryson Mr. Edward Buchan Ms. Susan L. Buck Ms. Jean L. Buehler Ms. Susan Bungert Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burke Mr. H. C. Burn Mr. Edward J. Burnell Mrs. Darlene M. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Bill Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Patrick D. Cardon Mr. Steve Carter Dr. and Mrs. Brian Catto Mr. Wayne S. Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Faris F. Chesley Mr. Joe T. Clarke Mr. Matthew Cochrane-Logan Mr. and Mrs. William C. Coleman Mrs. Harriet S. Connor Ms. Lanette Cook Mr. and Mrs. Jess C. Cook Ms. Johnnie Coomes Ms. Diana Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Evan Copsey Ms. Betty J. Cosmos Mrs. Bonnie Craiglow-Clayton Mrs. Beatrice Crane Mr. Brian Crawford Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Crutchfield Mr. and Mrs. G. Jeremy Cummin Ms. Judy Cunningham Mrs. F. Willson Daily Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Dalgliesh Dr. Todd E. Dantzler Mr. James Daues Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Day Mr. Richard L. Dehart Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Delong Dr. and Mrs. Ronald C. Demas Mr. and Mrs. George Demas Ms. Antoinette Denisof Mr. and Mrs. V. Thomas Deville Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Deweese, III Mr. Charles Di Marco Mr. and Mrs. Richard Didas Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Dillinger

Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Dinger Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dobbs Mr. and Mrs. J. Gardiner Dodd Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dolson Mr. Richard P. Donohoe Mr. Joseph M. Doss Mr. and Mrs. John W. Douglas, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Douglas The Drake Family Mr. Rob Draper Miss. Dorothea Drayton Mr. Bruce B. Dunnan Ms. Kimberly Edge Mr. David Ellett Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellis Mr. Leonard Emory Mr. Rodric H. Eslinger Mr. Frederic A. Eustis II Mr. Sheldon Evans and Ms. Martha McMaster Mrs. Anne Marie Ezzo Mr. and Mrs. Craig W. Fanning Mr. Norman C. Farrar Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fedorchak Mr. Jeffrey Feltman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Fette Ms. Susan Flaster Ms. Patricia B. Fleming Ms. Shirley D. Forbes Dr. Linda L. Fossum Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fox Mr. Dennis M. Foye Mr. and Mrs. Lee H. Frame Mrs. Darlene Fredrick Mr. Paul Freeman and Mr. John Hasouris Ms. Lisa Friedlander Mrs. Ann Friend Dr. and Mrs. Robert A. Frist Mrs. Violet Fryer Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gabel Ms. Leize Gaillard Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Gaillard, III Ms. Corynn Ganley Ms. Kathy Gates Dr. and Mrs. W. David Gemmill Mr. Arthur Giardino Mrs. Jessica Gibadlo Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Gibson Mr. and Mrs. Robert Giesy Mr. Tim Glover Ms. Liz Goodloe Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gordon Miss Mary Gorman Mrs. Susie J. Goss Mrs. Amy Grace 13


Mr. Chris Gramkow Mr. Harlan Greene Mr. Bill F. Greschel Mr. L. W. Grimke-Drayton Drs. Kristy McDonald and Bennett Grimm Mr. and Mrs. Carl Grisier Mr. and Mrs. Phil Grose Mr. and Mrs. Orin Guidry Mr. and Mrs. James Guignard Mr. and Mrs. Warren Guilmartin Mr. and Mrs. William E. Guthrie, Jr. Mr. Tommy Haddock Ms. Dee B. Haggard Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Hale Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Halkyard Mr. Russell Hall Mr. Matthew Hallett Mrs. Christopher W. Hammond Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hanlin Mr. and Mrs. James Hanson Dr. and Mrs. Michael Harres Mr. Steve Hartstern Mrs. Eaddy Williams Hayes Mr. Stephen Hays and Mrs. Gladys Hays Dr. and Mrs. John Hegley Mr. George Henry and Ms. Cathleen O’Shea Mr. Foster Hensel Mr. and Mrs. Richard Heusel Ms. Suzanne J. Higgins Mr. and Mrs. Philip L. Hildreth Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hines Mrs. Ann M. Hirsch Mr. and Mrs. Russell A. Hitt Mr. E. Dean Hodge Mrs. Louise B. Holden Mr. and Mrs. Randy E. Holton Mr. Del Hooker Mr. Charles W. Hopkins Mr. Ervin W. Houston Ms. Carol Ann Howard Mr. Jim C. Howe Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Hudson Ms. Jane Huntington Mr. H. W. Israel and Mr. H. M. Grix Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Jacobs Mrs. Martha James Mr. and Mrs. David Janssen Mrs. Elizabeth D. Jett Drs. Michael and Deborah Jinkins Ms. Terrie Johansen 14

Mr. Randy Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Greg Johnson Ms. Priscilla Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Bari Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Brent Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Johnstone, II Mr. and Mrs. Ernst R. Jolas Mr. Steven Josma Mr. and Mrs. John M. Kaeser Mr. Donald and Mrs. Nicole Kamb Mr. William R. Keane Ms. Mickey Kelley Ms. Teresa Kennedy Ms. Colleen Kennedy Ms. Margaret D. Kennedy Mr. Douglas B. Kent Ms. Carol A. Kilman Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Klein Mr. Michael E. Klein Mrs. Bonnie Klemann Mr. and Mrs. J. Stephen Knapp Mr. Dennis and Mrs. Paulette Kotan Mr. and Mrs. Kim Krause Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kubu Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kuconis Ms. Jeanne LaFleur Ms. Nancy Lampton Ms. Elsie R. Landon Mr. Mitch LaPlante Mr. and Mrs. Douglas B. Lee Mrs. Linda Leemon Mr. William M. Lennon Ms. Margaret M. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Brian J. Linke Mr. and Mrs. Ernest B. Lipscomb, III Mr. William G. Litchfield Mrs. Diane Litchford Mrs. Christina M. Lofgren Mrs. Duanna J. Long Mr. and Mrs. T. Michael Long Mr. and Mrs. Michael James Lowery J’Ann Weldon Luedke Ms. Valerie Lyons Mr. and Mrs. John W. MacDonald, Jr. Ms. Karla Machacek Mr. and Mrs. Ward MacKenzie Mrs. Robert C. Maguire Mrs. Carol Mahoney Mr. and Mrs. Joe Maloney Mr. and Mrs. Robert Malyuk Mr. and Mrs. Hal Marshall

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Matthews Mr. Guy C. Maxwell Mr. and Mrs. David Maybank Ms. Bonnie McAlister Mr. and Mrs. Bob McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Roger C. McClary Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. McDaniel Mr. Herman McDaniel Mr. and Mrs. David B. McDonald Mr. Arthur McFarland and Dr. Elise Davis-McFarland Mr. and Mrs. Craig McKee Dr. Robena Medbery Mr. and Mrs. James Meer Mrs. Karen Megura Owen and Ann Merrill Mrs. Priscilla J. Meserole Ms. Rosemary L. Meszaros Mr. and Mrs. Craig Meyer Mr. Jonathan Millen Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Miller Mr. and Mrs. L. Fred Miller Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller Mr. and Mrs. Roger D. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Mobley Mr. James D. Mohr Mr. Alan Monson Mr. G. Thomas Moore, Jr. Mrs. Gloria Moore Mr. Louis K. Mowbray Dr. Lloyd H. Muller Mr. and Mrs. James B. Mundt Ms. Pamela H. Murdock Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Gerald W. Musselman Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Myers Mr. and Mrs. Mike Nadal Mr. and Mrs. Steven Nagle Mrs. Mustafa Naguib Mrs. Jane Nicholson Mr. John Nickum and Dr. Linda Lear Mr. and Mrs. Russell Norris Ms. Marjorie Nunn Hon. and Mrs. Sam Nunn Mrs. Robert M. Ogden, III Miss Karen Orloff Ms. Marjorie Osgood Mr. Ron Oswalt Mrs. Rhett Outten Ms. Sandra Owen Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Owen, Jr. Mr. Richard C. Owens Ms. Kathleen Pallotta

Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Panton Mrs. Tita Parham Mrs. Constance S. Parramore Mrs. Virginia G. Parsons Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Partridge Mr. and Mrs. J. Laurence Passmore Mr. Ronald D. Patrick Mr. and Mrs. James Paul Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Paulsen Mr. Donald C. Pearl and Ms. Bonnie E. Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Felix C. Pelzer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James D. Penny Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Peters Mr. Howard and Mrs. Linda Peterson Mrs. Virginia C. Petura Mr. and Mrs. George William Pike Mr. and Mrs. Mark Pilgrim Mr. and Mrs. Bob Pitts Mr. Philippe Podhorecki and Ms. Oriana Oppice Mrs. Mary Ann Pohlmann Mr. Robert L. Pollard Dr. Richard Porcher Mr. and Mrs. F. Sherrill Poulnot Mr. and Mrs. Barry Pounders Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pribbernow Mrs. Wilhelmina Provost Mrs. Dorothy Puhl Ms. Sharon Quinn Mr. and Mrs. Lon Raby Mr. and Mrs. Haywood F. Rankin Mrs. John B. Rapp Mrs. Marguerite Rathbun Dr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Rawe Ms. Alison Brue Rea Ms. Margaret S. Reider Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Reiners Ms. Susan Reynolds Ms. Andrea Rhiel Mrs. Elinor T. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. William R. Richardson, Jr. Mrs. Kathy Rider Mr. Ralph L. Riggs Ms. Harriet R. Ripinsky Mr. Raleigh Roark and Ms. Beth Preslar Mr. and Mrs. David Robb Mr. and Mrs. Harold Robling Mr. Charles E. Roemer Dr. and Mrs. Edward Roth Dr. and Mrs. Terence Roth


Mrs. Carole Ruse Mr. and Mrs. William Ruwe Ms. Paula Ryan Mrs. Darla Ryan The Rev. Dr. Alan K. Salmon Mrs. Melissa Sample Mrs. Doris D. Sandberg Ms. Vicki Sawyer Mr. Herbert J. Scholz, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Scott Mrs. Beverly Scott-Corcoran Mrs. Sarah Seddelmeyer Mr. Thaddeus Seymour Mr. A. Lee Shapleigh, III Ms. Natalie Shivers Mr. Thomas E. Shockley Mr. and Mrs. John Shults Mr. and Mrs. Alan Siman Mr. and Mrs. Charles U. Slick Mrs. William F. Slocum Mr. R. Ted Smith Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Smith, Jr. Ms. Jann Smith Mrs. Terry C. Smith Phil and Starr Snead Mrs. Teryl Snyder Mr. and Mrs. Ted Sodergren Mr. Lanis A. Speights Mrs. Theresa Sprowl Ms. Pat Starr Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Steenson Mr. and Mrs. David A. Steffen Ms. Rett Stegall Ms. Anna W. Stephens Mr. and Mrs. John D. Stewart Mr. Daniel Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Stiehr Ms. Bonnie Stook Ms. Sarah Stroud Mr. and Mrs. Michael Stuck Ms. Shanna S. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Jan H. Suwinski Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Swindell Mrs. Anne R. Tankard Mr. and Mrs. David E. Tate Mrs. Frederic M. Taylor Ms. Martha A. Teichner Ms. Sherrie Temple Mr. and Mrs. Steve Tepperman Mr. and Mrs. D.T. Thibodeau Mrs. Tanya Thielemann Ms. Anna Belle Thomas Mr. James G. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Thompson Mrs. Cynthia A. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. John Huger Tison

Mrs. Yolanda Tjerandsen Mrs. Beverly Tobey Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tongberg Mrs. Denise V. Trucillo Ms. Elizabeth S. Tucker Mr. and Mrs. John L. Turchi Mr. Peter M. Turner Mr. Harry Valentine Mr. and Mrs. Wilson VanArsdale Miss Lynne Vitale Mr. and Mrs. Keith Waibel Mrs. Jayne S. Wall Ms. Susan Ware Mr. and Mrs. Richard Was Mr. and Mrs. Dale Wassergord Ms. Sharon Watson Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Wauford Dr. and Mrs. C. Douglas Webb, Jr. Mrs. Ross Webb Mr. and Mrs. William M. Webster, III Ms. Teresa Weikel Dr. Allyson Wheaton Mr. J. William Wheeler Mrs. Kandy White Mrs. Diane White Dr. Cynthia White Mr. Raymond Whitesell, Jr Ms. Kari Whitley Mr. C. B. Whitley, Jr. Ms. Martha Wicksall Miss Jeanne M. Wiedenman Mr. and Mrs. D. Sykes Wilford Dr. and Mrs. Morgan L. Willeford Mrs. Floyd A. Willette Mrs. Jody Fisher Williams Dr. and Mrs. George W. Williams Mrs. Lois K. Willis Dr. Betty Karol Wilson Mrs. Davida B. Wines Dr. William Wingfield Mr. James Wischnowski Mr. and Mrs. Gordon D. Wishard Mr. C. L. Woodbridge Ms. Pat Woodcock Mrs. Dixie Lane Woodruff Dr. Thomas J. Worrall Mrs. Karen A. Wright

Gifts to honor… Courtney Bates Mrs. Jessica K Garrett Charles H. Drayton, III Mr. and Mrs. John D. Bowe

Mrs. George W. Miller Drayton Hall Volunteers Mr. Ron Oswalt Madyson Halstead Mr. and Mrs. Stan Halstead Willie and Earleen Hefner Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Samuelson The Historians of Drayton Hall Mr. and Mrs. Stan Halstead Carter C. Hudgins Mr. and Mrs. Reese Grams Suzanne Kirby Mrs. Tamara Harrison Tony and Amey Lewis Dr. and Mrs. George W. McDaniel Mrs. J. Garnett Nelson George and Mary Sue McDaniel Mr. and Mrs. James Guignard Mrs. G. Wilson Miller Mr. and Mrs. Jim Kelligrew Mary Ellen Miller Ms. Barbara M. Pooley Anne Drayton Nelson Ms. Cornelia Pelzer Molly Osteen Mrs. J. Garnett Nelson Monte Parsons Mr. and Mrs. David Maybank Arthur Gray Powell, II Mrs. Marguerite McDaniel Wood Leda K. Rapp Mrs. John B. Rapp The Rowlands Family Mr. Bob Rowlands Merritt P. C. Snyder Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Johnson Sarah E. Stroud Mrs. Mary R. Stroud

Mr. Charles H. Drayton, III Ann Haselton Hartley Ms. Katharine M. Hartley Willis Johnson, Sr. Ms. Catherine Braxton Herbert Scholz Mr. Charles H. Drayton, III Dr. and Mrs. John A. Siegling Mr. and Mrs. David L. Fortiere Glenn W. Snow Mrs. Jeanne E. Eckhart Mario de Valmarana Mrs. J. Garnett Nelson Mrs. W. D. Warner Mr. Westford D. Warner Dr. Ross A. Webb Mrs. Ross Webb Elizabeth N. Wilds Ms. Adrienne Wilds Henry Wyatt Ms. Alice Wyatt Dillon

Gifts in memory…

Anonymous The Chilton Foundation The Coastal Community Foundation of South Carolina The Peter R. and Cynthia K. Kellogg Foundation The Robert A. and Marion K. Kennedy Charitable Trust Magnolia Plantation Foundation Susan R. and John W. Sullivan Foundation

Nell Ward Allen Mrs. J. Garnett Nelson John Bee Ms. Jeanne LaFleur Phillip Cook Mr. and Mrs. Jess C. Cook Charles H. Drayton, Jr. Mr. Charles H. Drayton, III Charlotta D. Drayton Mr. Charles H. Drayton, III Emily Beatty Drayton Mr. Charles H. Drayton, III Frederick Rogers Drayton Mrs. Frances Drayton-Ichijo Mary Jervey Drayton

Matching Gift Companies Alliant Energy Foundation Ameriprise Financial Bank of America Chevron Humankind Gap Foundation IBM Lincoln Financial Foundation McMaster-Carr Supply Company Pfizer Foundation The Prudential Foundation Research Affiliates LLC Sara Lee Foundation Tyco Employee Matching Gifts Program USA Funds Vanguard

Foundations

15


|

PAID º

10%

Total Recovered Fiber All Post-Consumer Fiber

6

“TEA & JAZZ” A CELEBRATION of the 30th ANNIVERSARY of the FRIENDS of DRAYTON HALL 30 years calls for a party and we hope you’ll plan on joining us! Festivities will take place 3:30pm to 6:00pm at Drayton Hall and will include a private unveiling and exhibit, special tours just for the occasion, and a tented reception with live jazz. Watch for your invitation in the mail. Space is limited; to inquire or reserve in advance, please contact Leslie Newman, interim development assistant for membership and annual giving, at (843) 769-2612 or leslie_newman@draytonhall.org.


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