EHS 2023-24 Annual Report Highlights

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2023 - 2024 ANNUAL REPORT

EPISCOPAL HIGH SCHOOL

“We are grateful for your loyal support, and we take great pride in making sure that the experience of our students is second to none.”

A MESSAGE FROM THE HEAD OF SCHOOL

It is with a great sense of pride and gratitude that I look back on the 2023-24 school year. Led by an outstanding senior class and our gifted and caring faculty and staff, the School experienced remarkable success and excitement in all areas of school life. From elevating academic excellence to new heights through the use of Washington’s many resources to enhancing the strength of community and unity on campus in any number of ways, the students and adults accomplished so many wonderful things together. These many accomplishments would never have been possible without the amazing generosity and support of our parents, alumni, and many special friends.

It was especially rewarding in the 2023-24 school year to see so many initiatives from our Strategic Plan and our Courage Campaign fully blossom. Our McCain-Ravenel Center for Intellectual and Moral Courage inspired our faculty to use Washington as never before, and nearly 700 distinct academic class visits to interact with intriguing Washington resources took advantage of our new daily and weekly schedule. Our new residential life curriculum engaged the students around critical strength of character and community questions including how to be a good friend, roommate, classmate, and teammate while reminding them that our core values of honor, kindness, respect for each individual as a child of God, and rigorous pursuit of genuine achievement represent the bonds that unify us. It was exciting to live into a full year of operation for our two wonderful new dorms and our exceptional deButts Health & Wellness Center, and we used this past summer to prepare our Hummel and McGuire dormitories to host our new Freshmen Village for all our ninth grade students.

None of these exciting aspects of this past school year as well as the many other spectacular moments in athletics, arts, and service beyond our gates would have been possible without the outstanding support and generosity of so many in our school family. The success of our ongoing Courage Campaign efforts as well as our annual Roll Call campaign this past year were inspirational. I continue to marvel at the dedication and commitment of our alumni as they help us to ensure that Episcopal not only remains an exceptional school but also constantly seeks to reach new heights of excellence. Our parents are also fantastic in helping us pursue critical initiatives. All of these resources allow us to support our wonderful faculty and staff as they seek to strengthen the student experience.

The School and our Board of Trustees appreciate how vital these resources are. This past year the Board and its Investment Committee also worked diligently to provide exceptional oversight of our endowment resources and other funds. A new investment consultant, Partners Capital, joined forces with the Investment Committee and will serve as a key support system in the stewardship of our endowment moving forward.

Special thanks once again to all who supported Episcopal in this past year. We are grateful for your loyal support, and we take great pride in making sure that the experience of our students is second to none.

SUMMARY OF GIFTS AND COMMITMENTS TO EHS 2023-24

CONTRIBUTIONS BY CONSTITUENT

CONTRIBUTIONS BY DESIGNATION

$11,006,680 (49%)

CURRENT PARENTS

$3,047,452 (14%)

FRIENDS, FACULTY, GRANDPARENTS, PARENTS OF ALUMNI

$7,044,612 (31%)

CORPORATIONS AND FOUNDATIONS

$1,396,469 (6%)

RESTRICTED ENDOWMENT

$11,049,160 (49%)

UNRESTRICTED ENDOWMENT/CAPITAL

$7,099,643 (32%) ROLL CALL

$3,561,910 (16%)

RESTRICTED CAPITAL

$784,500 (3%)

TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONS

$22,495,213

A MESSAGE FROM

THE ASSISTANT HEAD FOR ADVANCEMENT

At Episcopal, we are all in. If you are receiving this report, you know.

On campus, year after year, adults and students go all in, giving themselves over to an undeniably exhilarating rhythm of work, play, competition, and “life” together. Off campus, alumni, parents, grandparents, and friends of the School engage with each other, respond enthusiastically to opportunities to connect with students and fill crucial volunteer roles, share their school pride, and make Episcopal a philanthropic priority, thereby making all that happens on campus possible.

This year, Charley Stillwell and Christina Holt visited students, parents, and alumni in Beijing, Shanghai, and South Korea. Pictured left to right are Haige Shen P’24, Christina Holt, and longtime EHS Chinese teacher Julie Wang.

Indeed, the philanthropic commitment of our alumni, families, and dear friends is simply remarkable. Our students are the direct beneficiaries of our community’s generosity, as our adults are able to dream big and deliver our mission, day in and day out, in new and innovative ways.

This year, our community came together to contribute over $3.56 million to the Roll Call, providing 9% of the School’s operating revenue and $7,685 per student. This would not have been possible without each of the 2,741 gifts received this year and the tremendous efforts of our many volunteers.

In addition to the Roll Call’s success, the Episcopal family’s enthusiasm for the priorities of Courage: the Campaign for

Episcopal resulted in just under $12 million in new gifts and commitments, for a total of $15.5 million in contributions this year — bringing overall campaign commitments to just over $133 million. Our community’s response to this Campaign’s call to action has been astounding, and already, every aspect of the student experience on The Holy Hill has been strengthened as a result.

The Courage Campaign’s $150 million comprehensive goal is within reach, and it is with profound gratitude that we will continue our work together to complete this historic effort and bring all of the priorities of the Campaign to life for our students today and for generations to come.

On behalf of all of us at 1200 North Quaker Lane, who continually strive to advance our mission to prepare our students to be courageous forces for good in the world, thank you for your generosity and for being “all in” with us and for our students.

It is truly a joy and a privilege to be part of the EHS family and to share in the bond and commitment that strengthen our School with each passing day.

OPERATING REVENUE AND EXPENSES 2023-24

$30,897,700 (63%)

$7,492,000 (15%)

$909,500 (2%)

$21,276,000 (43%)

(7%)

$8,805,000 (18%)

(9%)

A MESSAGE FROM THE

CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

The 2023-24 school year was a year of tremendous achievements. Most notably was the leadership of our senior class and the restoration of so many important School traditions that had gone by the wayside during Covid. It only takes a couple of years to start a tradition at Episcopal as well as end one. Thankfully our seniors made sure that they were passed down to the underclassmen.

In addition to this important student life achievement, we also reversed our endowment’s downturn and restored it back to its pre 2022-23 level. Our total endowment is now over $340 million. Progress continued to be made in other areas on campus. We completed the solar installation on the roofs of Flippin Field House and Hershey Athletics Center. We expect this installation to provide about 10% of the campus’s electricity. The new Class of 1976 Golf Center, which is adjacent to the Goodman Squash Center, is well on its way to completion. This facility will provide stateof-the-art technology for our boys’ and girls’ golf teams.

Boota deButts walks to accept the dedication of the 2024 Whispers during the ninth annual Fortiter, Fideliter, Feliciter service. “We take heart in knowing that he has invested too much of himself in this place for him to truly leave it, or us, behind,” the Whispers editors wrote. The School would like to thank deButts for his brave, faithful, and joyful service as the Chief Financial Officer since 2005.

The mundane but important part of balancing our revenue and expenses was executed according to the Board-approved annual budget. There were no unpleasant surprises. Our expenses came in either as forecasted or below and our revenue exceeded our forecasts.

Without the generous support of our alumni, parents and friends, we would not have been able to accomplish any of the things I have mentioned above. Nor would we be in the sound financial position we are in only a few short years from Covid and the resulting economic downturn. You are all critical to the continued success of Episcopal, and we are eternally grateful.

Supporting priorities set forth in the 2018 Strategic Plan, COURAGE is a $150 million campaign — the most ambitious in Episcopal’s 185-year history.

This is a defining moment for The High School. Our bold plans are only possible with equally bold support from our community. Our thanks to all the donors who have joined this historic effort to date!

DONORS: 760

ALUMNI: 412 PARENT (CURRENT & PAST): 241 FOUNDATIONS: 22

$133 MILLION RAISED $150 MILLION GOAL as of June 30, 2024

MEET OUR DONORS

BILL AND LINDA CUSTARD GP’22 ’24

The Episcopal family expands far beyond current students, parents, and alumni. It includes grandparents, aunts, uncles, and other special family members and friends who watch their loved ones go off to Episcopal and then fall in love with the place themselves. Proud grandparents Bill and Linda Custard GP’22 ’24 are an excellent example of the ties that bind us all.

Inspired by a love of their grandchildren (Isabella ’22 and William ’24) and the influence the School has had on them, the Custards recently joined The Power of Parent Giving, an initiative launched in 2023 as part of Episcopal’s historic Courage Campaign. The initiative aims to raise $30 million from current parents and grandparents to reach the end goal of $150 million.

When asked why they chose to invest in their grandchildrens’ school, the Custards had a simple and powerful answer: They believe in leaving places better than they found them. As lifelong philanthropists to many institutions close to them and their family,

Bill and Linda Custard (third and fourth from right) celebrate their grandson William’s graduation with their family.

the Episcopal grandparents have proven time and again that investing in communities they love is a powerful thing.

The Custards believe in living a life of integrity — something they know is a hallmark of Episcopal’s mission. They spoke of how their grandchildren grew throughout their time at Episcopal. “What a wonderful experience it was in every way,” said Linda, “academically, socially, personally, and spiritually.” When they first encountered EHS, they knew that “it was a total immersion in all the values that our family has,” Linda said.

Bill and Linda’s son and daughter-in-law, Allen and Mason, have long been inspired by the patriarch and matriach’s example. “To be a spectator alongside Linda and Bill Custard’s enduring legacy of giving back has been a privilege,” they said. “Their recent gift to EHS reflects the value they place on both education and family. It is a testament to the quality of the education that our children received at EHS.”

MM

Families play an integral role in supporting and enhancing the Episcopal mission, and giving to Episcopal is an important way parents and grandparents make a difference.

20MM

$27MM raised

AS OF JUNE 30, 2024

All families are invited to take part in The Power of Parent Giving and help achieve the goal of raising 25% of campaign funds from our parents.

MEET OUR DONORS

LIN LUO AND MAN LI P’25

The Episcopal experience is universal. Whether you are down the street, on the other side of the country, or across the world, we all are connected by a love for this place. That certainly is the case for Lin Luo and Man Li, parents of Cindy Luo ’25.

When Cindy first came to Episcopal at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, her parents were worried. They were 7,000 miles away in Beijing, where quarantines and travel restrictions prevented them from seeing their then 13-year-old daughter for an entire year. Despite the distance, they felt at peace knowing Cindy was safe and cared for at Episcopal. “You all connect families around the world,” they said, “making us one big family.”

The Luos view philanthropy as a way to give back to a place that has given much to them and their daughter.

To learn more about the five priorities of the Courage Campaign and how you can play a part in the final phase with your support, visit episcopalhighschool.org/courage.

This year, the family contributed an unrestricted gift to The Power of Parent Giving, an initiative within the Courage Campaign which aims to raise $30 million from parents and grandparents. They said they were inspired by other parents at the School who joined the initiative, and they wanted to give back in their own way.

The Luos feel passionate about giving their time to EHS as well. “We always want to do more for the school,” Li said of their mindset. This summer, Head of School Charley Stillwell and Assistant Head for Advancement Christina Holt traveled to Beijing, where the Luo family and other local parents took them around their city, giving them a firsthand look into the city’s rich culture and history. For the Luos, it was an opportunity to show Stillwell and Holt the hospitality they have always felt on Episcopal’s campus. “When we come to EHS,” Luo said, “we feel nothing but kindness.”

MEET OUR DONORS

THE NOELL FAMILY

Eleanor Noell ’04 was the quintessential Episcopal alumna. A standout student, athlete, leader, and friend, she thrived during her four years at The High School. After her death in 2016, her older siblings, Nell Noell Byrd and Davis Noell, began to consider how to honor her memory. One thing was certain, they said — it had to include education.

Despite not attending Episcopal themselves, Byrd and Noell saw firsthand the positive impact the experience had on their beloved younger sister.

“Episcopal gave Eleanor so much strength and confidence,” Noell said. While he was working his first job in New York City and Byrd was finishing college at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Eleanor was paving her own way at EHS, making deep friendships and finding a true home on campus.

Byrd and Noell included their spouses, Rusty and Stacey, and their parents, Charlie and Paula, in

Learn more about Eleanor’s Episcopal experience in this admissions video from 2001. Eleanor’s section begins at 13:25.

the conversation, and the family quickly came together to establish the Eleanor Carraway Noell ’04 Scholarship. The Noell Scholarship grants will be awarded to female students who begin their EHS journeys as freshmen, exhibiting outstanding character and academic achievement in addition to demonstrated financial need. Recipients will be eligible to receive the grant through Commencement. With the initial scholarship awarded in the 2024-25 school year, there will always be an Eleanor Carraway Noell ’04 Scholar at The High School to honor her memory.

The Noell family hopes that the scholarship grants will provide future female students with the same opportunities Eleanor had while at Episcopal.

“Eleanor would want whomever receives these scholarships to find their purpose and always follow what they believe in,” Byrd said. As Eleanor did so beautifully throughout her life.

HIGHLIGHTS FROM LEADERSHIP COMMITMENTS TO THE COURAGE CAMPAIGN IN 2023-24

$200,000

FROM A 2000 s ALUMNUS UNRESTRICTED BEQUEST

$200,000

FROM CURRENT PARENTS UNRESTRICTED SUPPORT

$1,600,000

FROM THE FAMILY OF AN ALUMNA NEW MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP

$300,000 FROM CURRENT GRANDPARENTS UNRESTRICTED ENDOWED FUND

LEADING WITH COURAGE

$1,000,000

FROM CURRENT GRANDPARENTS DORM ENHANCEMENTS AND FACULTY ENDOWMENT

$200,000

FROM A 1970 s ALUMNUS 401( k ) BENEFICIARY DESIGNATION TO FINANCIAL AID AND M c CAIN-RAVENEL CENTER

$100,000

FROM PAST PARENTS UNRESTRICTED BEQUEST

$1,000,000

FROM A SENIOR PARENT FINANCIAL AID ENDOWMENT

Launched over Reunion Weekend in June as part of the COURAGE CAMPAIGN , The Bell Society Legacy Challenge provides an immediate cash match for donors who document with EHS a new, existing, or increased planned gift commitment.

Three generous alumni have committed $275,000 in matching funds. Include EHS in your estate plan and you will unlock 10% of the value of your planned gift from the matching pool fund that you may direct to the campaign priority of your choice.

how it works

FOR EXAMPLE, if you document a $50,000 gift in your will or trust, $5,000 from the matching pool will immediately be directed to your chosen COURAGE CAMPAIGN priority. For a planned gift of $250,000, you will unlock a $25,000 cash gift from the matching pool. The 10% “match” caps at $25,000, so for a bequest of $500,000 a match of $25,000 would be available to designate at your direction.

why the bell society legacy challenge?

Planned giving is a wonderful way to give, but the impact of these gifts is not immediate. With this match opportunity, your planned gift will benefit your area of interest now.

questions?

We are happy to work with you to ensure your gift qualifies for the LEGACY CHALLENGE.

CONTACT: Kent Alley P’22 Director of Planned Giving

EMAIL: kda@episcopalhighschool.org OFFICE: 703-933-4026

Scan the QR Code for more information on planned giving.

Planned gifts are an important source of future funding for teaching and learning. The Bell Society recognizes members of the EHS community who have chosen to provide a legacy to the School through wills, trusts, charitable gift annuities, life insurance policies, and other planned gifts.

MEET OUR DONORS

LAURA FAULDERS JORDAN ’02

Laura Faulders Jordan ’02 never planned to work in planned giving. After falling in love with history at Episcopal, she continued on to major in the subject at the University of Virginia. But when her father Tom accepted a job as the president of UVA’s Alumni Association while she was in college, she began to see the merits of working to advance the mission of beloved institutions.

Jordan’s career path took her from The Citadel, a military college in Charleston, S.C., to Westminster Schools in Atlanta, Ga. Now, she works in the advancement office at Ashley Hall School in Charleston, where she connects with parents, alumni, and friends of the school as they consider long-term estate gifts.

One of the youngest members of The Bell Society, which recognizes those who include EHS in their

estate planning, Jordan joined Episcopal’s newly launched Legacy Challenge to practice what she preached. According to Jordan, planned giving is such a unique vehicle because it is a way to increase giving, especially at an expensive time of life while raising two daughters. “I see it as a creative way to up my lifetime giving at an age where I can’t do that with regular liquid cash,” Jordan said. “Gifts from estates can usually be more significant.”

Along her professional journey, Jordan has realized that putting institutions in estate plans means that one considers that place as family. “I see my planned gift as putting Episcopal on the same level as family. I think of all my EHS friends as brothers and sisters,” she said in closing. “And it’s a great way to step up for that family.”

TUITION

(54% OF 2023-24 OPERATING BUDGET) :

» 2023-24 tuition was $69,700 per student, the ninth lowest among the nation’s forty leading boarding schools.

» This fee is inclusive of academic tuition, room and board, basic health center expenses, and the vast majority of school-sponsored academic, athletic, and recreational activities.

» Tuition only covered 69% of the full per-student cost ($101,540) to fund a year at EHS.

» 36% of EHS families received some need-based financial aid during the 2023-24 year.

DONATIONS TO THE ROLL CALL

(9% OF 2023-24 OPERATING BUDGET) :

» Donations to the Roll Call — Episcopal’s annual fund — are immediate-use dollars, and provided close to $8,000 per current student.

» Contributions range from $1 during a student’s graduating year to leadership gifts of $5,000 to $50,000 or more.

» The School’s greatest expense is people: salary and benefits for our faculty and staff. Other operating expenses range from theater costumes to 3D printers. Roll Call dollars do it all and, most importantly, help moderate tuition costs.

TUITION END O W TNEM OR L L C ALL

FUNDING THE EHS STUDENT EXPERIENCE 2023-24

COURAGE CAMPAIGN

COURAGE: THE CAMPAIGN FOR EPISCOPAL

» Publicly launched in Fall 2022, this $150MM campaign is the largest in the School’s history.

DRAW FROM THE ENDOWMENT

(35% OF 2023-24 OPERATING BUDGET) :

» The endowment serves as the School’s trust fund: a way to enable our strategic priorities and secure our financial future.

» Thanks to Episcopal’s longstanding culture of philanthropy, the current value of the endowment was approximately $342 million as of June 30, 2024, and its funds are invested and professionally managed.

» The School takes a draw of 4.5% each year to support School operations while ensuring long-term growth.

» Thanks to COURAGE , EHS has constructed 12 faculty residences, two new dormitories, the deButts Health & Wellness Center, and a new track and field.

» Endowment priorities include financial aid, faculty and staff support, student life and wellness, the McCain-Ravenel Center, and a capital renewal fund for the maintenance of our facilities.

» Capital and endowment gifts are typically larger donations ranging from $25,000 to multi-millions. Gifts are often received as multi-year pledges and estate gifts.

CALL

The Roll Call gives Episcopal its edge. Established in 1947, this annual fund provides dependable support that allows EHS to be more accessible and more exceptional, thanks to the ongoing care and investment of EHS alumni, families, faculty, staff, and friends.

During the 2023-24 school year, over 2,500 donors invested $3.56 million in Episcopal’s mission. To every Roll Call donor and volunteer: thank you, thank you, thank you! EHS demands a great deal of every student, and, because of your generosity, our students could rise to the challenge backed by the best people and resources possible. Your impact on their lives is testament to the power of this community.

The Important Role of Roll Call Gifts

Contributions to the Roll Call provided ~9% of the 2023-24 operating budget, which funds all of the day-to-day needs of the School, its students, and its employees. The vast majority of gifts to the Roll Call are unrestricted, which means donors allow the School’s leadership team to be nimble and strategic in directing resources where they are most needed. Unrestricted gifts find their way to every area of the School, helping to fund core functions as well as respond to unexpected expenses and opportunities.

We also love to see alumni and families supporting the causes on campus that are a priority to them. In 2023-24, just over one-quarter of Roll Call donors chose to designate their gift for a specific area of school life. Our community was generous in supporting the following areas:

• ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE & FACULTY SUPPORT

• ARTS

• ATHLETICS

• COMMUNITY & EQUITY

• FINANCIAL AID

• HEALTH & WELLNESS

• McCAIN-RAVENEL CENTER FOR INTELLECTUAL & MORAL COURAGE

• RESIDENTIAL LIFE & STUDENT ACTIVITIES

• SPIRITUAL LIFE

$1,857,444 (52%)

$962,803 (27%)

FACULTY/STAFF, GRANDPARENTS, PARENTS OF ALUMNI

$358,370 (10%) CORPORATIONS AND FOUNDATIONS

$383,293 (11%)

RAISED FOR ROLL CALL

$3,561,910

Parents who are also alumni are represented in the alumni number.

Alumni Giving

During the 2023-24 school year, 40% of Episcopal alumni made gifts to the Roll Call, collectively donating $1,857,444 to pay it forward to the next generation. Alumni gifts ranged in size, covering everything from the cost of donuts for an advisee group to the cost of a faculty member’s salary. Every dollar made the year better and more impactful.

We owe thanks and gratitude to so many alumni.

Thank you to the 1,466 donors who renewed their support for yet another year.

Thank you to the 363 donors who renewed their support after one or many years away.

Thank you to the 104 seniors from the Class of 2024 who made their first-ever gifts as they transitioned from students to alumni.

Thank you to the 1,162 members of the Callaway Loyalty Society, who have given to the EHS Roll Call for at least five consecutive years, often decades.

Most especially, thank you to our amazing class chairs, the volunteers who show up year after year to connect with, galvanize, and inspire their classmates. We are so proud to have you all out there representing The High School!

1,884

CALLAWAY MEMBERS 1,162 (62%)

ADDITIONALLY, 65 OF OUR COLLEGE-AGED ALUMNI HAVE GIVEN EACH YEAR SINCE GRADUATION.

Current Parent Giving

It was an amazing year for EHS parents and families! During the 2023-24 school year, current families showed up in a big way to support their students through the Roll Call. We are so grateful to partner with families in shepherding their amazing children through these important years of growth and self-discovery.

An incredible 80% of current parents made a gift to the Roll Call last year, reflecting widespread enthusiasm, camaraderie, and participation. Together, these families contributed $1,038,717 in Roll Call gifts to supplement tuition and help the School go above and beyond for each child. Thank you again to every donor and volunteer who joyfully joined in this effort!

PARENTS OF CURRENT STUDENTS

ROLL CALL GIVING AND PARTICIPATION

$1,038,717 (80%)

Thank you, Class of 2024!

Each year, senior parents play a pivotal role in the School’s fundraising efforts, as families honor their seniors’ time at EHS with especially generous gifts and high participation. The School celebrates the generosity of senior families by adding the names of each senior to bricks on the alumni walk outside Callaway Chapel. Special thanks to the members of the Class of 2024 Senior Parent Roll Call Committee and to co-chairs Mason and Allen Custard P’22 ’24, who were always generous with their time, wisdom, and enthusiasm.

Members of the Class of 2024 gather on alumni walk for the long-awaited unveiling and blessing of their senior bricks.

Always Up For a Challenge

The competitive spirit is alive and well at EHS, even when it comes to philanthropy.

YOUNG ALUMNI SPIRIT CHALLENGE

We asked our youngest alumni to help us reach a 122-donor goal in the weeks between Seminary Hill Cup and The 122nd Game against Woodberry Forest. 137 young alumni answered the call, raising $10,350 to support current students and faculty and earning some limited-edition EHS prints along the way.

EHS 24/7 CHALLENGE

On April 4, 2024, our annual day of giving returned with vigor. 1,172 donors – including parents, grandparents, alumni, faculty, staff, and even students – donated $456,940 and helped the School earn generous matching gifts. Thank you for investing in Episcopal’s 24/7, 100% boarding experience and showing students that our community is all in, all the time.

THE EHS 24/7 CHALLENGE GROUP

This group of parents and alumni inspired our community by committing $60,000 in challenge and matching gifts. Thank you for inspiring and leading us all in this incredible team effort!

Chris and Lisa Alfieri P’26

Tamara Bensky P’24

Bryan and Farleigh Cunningham P’25

Ernest and Holly Hunt P’22 ’24

Ji and Xueqin Liu P’25

Andrew and Rebecca Pomeroy Shores ’02

Dre and Leah Kannensohn Tennille ’01

Putt and Margaret Wetherbee P’26

Chawki and Alice Zarari P’25

Anonymous

SPECIAL THANKS:

The Class of 1982

Highest participation, dollars raised, and donors from an alumni class

The

Class of 1979

Highest participation, dollars raised, and donors from a reunion class

Families of The Class of 2024

Highest participation from a parent class

Families of The Class of 2025

Most dollars from a parent class

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Chair of the Board

Sarah Akridge Knutson ’96 P’26 Alexandria, Va.

Vice Chair of the Board

E. Jenner Wood III ’70 P’06 Atlanta, Ga.

President

Charles M. Stillwell P’18 Alexandria, Va.*

Secretary/Treasurer

William deButts III ’76 P’08 ’10 ’12 Alexandria, Va.*

Members of the Board

Lynn Alexander P’16 ’20 New York, N.Y.

Zack H. Bacon III P’23 ’23 Wilmington, N.C.

Jonathan S. Beane ’88 P’24 New York, N.Y.

Cedric M. Bright ’81 Greenville, N.C.

Gretchen C. Byrd ’95 Richmond, Va.

Max C. Chapman Jr. ’62 P’91 Houston, Texas

Jeffrey B. Clarke ’89 New York, N.Y.

Amanda Weisiger Cornelson ’08 Charlotte, N.C.

Elizabeth W. Davis P’23 ’23 Louisville, Ky.

Craig A. A. Dixon ’93 P’23 ’26 McLean, Va.

David R. Dougherty ’64 P’86 ’88 Wilmington, N.C.

Edmund N. Durden ’88 P’20 ’22 Charlotte, N.C.

*Ex Officio Member p 2023-24

William S. Farish P’14 ’24 ’27 Versailles, Ky.

Lenora P. Gant P’96 Upper Marlboro, Md.

Barbara Kennedy Harty ’96 P’26 Greenwich, Conn.

William L. Hughes ’79 P’12 ’16 Greenwich, Conn.

Steven C. Lilly ’88 P’21 ’23 Raleigh, N.C.

Alexander Y. Liu ’76 Las Vegas, Nev.

N. Thompson Long ’77 Atlanta, Ga.

Ransom C. Lummis ’80 P’20 Houston, Texas

Lauren M. Marshall ’09 Washington, D.C.

Helen Grassi Vest ’02 Chesnut Hill, Mass.

John Wickham P’15 ’16 ’16 ’25 Charlotte, N.C.

Trustees Emeriti John W. Burress III ’54 P’79 ’85 Winston-Salem, N.C.

H. Gordon W. Leggett Jr. ’50 Philadelphia, Pa.

George W. Logan ’63 P’96 Roanoke, Va.

Hugh J. Morgan Jr. ’46 P’83 Morganton, N.C.

John L. Townsend III ’73 Greenwich, Conn.

Departing Trustee Remarks

The following Trustees’ tenures ended after the 2023-24 school year. Episcopal thanks them for the many combined years of dedicated service and leadership.

WILLIAM L. HUGHES ’79 P’12 ’16

I have been doing a lot of thinking about our school and how special it is. I don’t use the word “special” lightly. I come to it through my personal experience first as a student for four years, as a parent for seven years, and as a Trustee for six years. Here’s what I have learned and experienced about our history, heritage, and culture along the way: The commitment, dedication, passion, and love of school I’ve seen from the Board, faculty, staff, administration, student body, and alumni over the years have been consistently inspiring and memorable.

I also want to be clear that being a special institution doesn’t come with some guarantee of success. We all know

better than that. There is no manifest destiny for high schools like ours. We have to earn our reputation every day. It’s just like life. Just because you made it to your 185th birthday doesn’t mean you will be eating cake and blowing out candles on your 200th.

As Trustees, we have been left a powerful legacy and an immense responsibility. It has always been our mission to make sure the best parts of our culture, purpose, and commitment to honor and community endures, while being courageous to abandon any that caused harm or hurt. We must connect with what has made The High School truly special and adapt to opportunities we have today.

We have continued to discover and excavate what has been a part of The High School and take head on and

acknowledge the troubling issues of the past. But it is also important to understand that we are not creating anything from scratch. It is another one of those things that makes us special.

As a Board, as a school, and as a leading academic institution, our ambitions are greater and our vision must always be longer.

Thank you for allowing me to be part of The High School and this impressive group. I have learned much over the years from my fellow trustees and leave the Board knowing that the School is in great hands.

N. THOMPSON LONG ’77

Serving as a Trustee was an honor, and it rekindled those powerful feelings of hope and promise I felt as a student. It brought back to me the purpose for which EHS stands; in my words, to build character and community. And no one built a stronger Board community than Charley Stillwell. He modeled patience and steadfast purpose as he steered us through Covid and this enormous capital campaign and campus expansion.

I had the great privilege to work with Lee Ainslie ’82. His wisdom and drive to expand the School and fund it with both the capital campaign and the lowest debt rates in nearly a century

To begin my freshman year as a new boy rat at Episcopal in September 1976, my parents put me on an airplane with instructions to get a cab at National Airport and go to 1200 North Quaker Lane. So began a unique learning experience that is no longer offered, becoming obvious to me when my daughter enrolled at a now co-ed EHS as a 9th grader in 2016. However, EHS still provides a rigorous academic and athletic program while emphasizing

were genius. Sarah Akridge Knutson ’96 has continued that legacy, advancing the School’s sense of community and connection to greater Washington.

I have to single out a few people among the terrific Board members with whom I was privileged to work. Bill Hughes was a classmate of mine. His command of the English language was beautiful to see and hear. The great Jenner Wood ’70, fellow Tarheel and fellow Atlantan, will be missed. His 18 years of service showed. A great listener, his remarks were succinct, timed right, and on the money.

Special call out to Louis Smith of the EHS faculty and Trustees Jonathan Beane ’88 and Billy Peebles ’73 for navigating so productively our journey on race, understanding, and belonging.

These men showed principled leadership and combined it with humility and patience in our search for common understanding. It was the essence of courageous conversations at work.

Lastly, thank you to Boota deButts ’76, who survived my years as chair of the Finance Committee and who asked only one thing of me: to secure a fixed budgeting methodology for the longterm maintenance of our buildings and grounds. I am delighted that before his retirement, just in the nick of time, we were able to develop a sinking fund as a standing budgetary process. This will ensure the magnificent campus is maintained to the glory of God and for the great benefit of all who pass this way.

basic virtues such as respect for others, honor, faith, trustworthiness, and selflessness.

Initially, I was flattered to be invited onto the Board but I quickly realized the scope of work wasn’t what I expected: mental wellness, social media, the Covid-19 pandemic, the School History Working Group, etc. I did find pleasure, however, in witnessing the construction of essential new buildings, the undertaking of a comprehensive capital campaign, the evolution of the strategic plan, revamping the investment policy and management of the endowment, the

commemoration of 50 years of integration, etc.

During the past six years, the School’s administration consistently provided effective leadership by engaging the Board in open debate, listening, exhibiting institutional neutrality, and being pragmatic. EHS is certainly different from the institution I found in 1976, but it remains the place where I, as well as my daughter 40 years later, was prepared for a life of ethical service.

Fortiter, fideliter, feliciter.

RANSOM C. LUMMIS ’80 P’20

E. JENNER WOOD III ’70 P’06

Why would you sign up for a third six-year term as a Trustee at Episcopal High School? For me, it was because EHS was a most positive experience at a critical time in my life that would influence the way I would lead my life. And that is even after staying at EHS for a post graduate year! Also, our son Jenner was at EHS from 2003-2006 and he greatly valued his experience in the community of Episcopal. Finally, I was curious to check in on Episcopal a decade after Jenner graduated.

What I found was a very strong Board with equally strong leadership by the Head of School Charley Stillwell and

his staff. It was a pleasure to serve under Lee Ainslie ’82 and Sarah Akridge Knutson ’96, and to participate freely in many important issues, discussions, and decisions. Free speech is alive and well on the EHS Board, and it is good for the institution. The nurturing and caring community of 100% boarders continues to be our greatest strength, and through the McCain-Ravenel Center for Intellectual and Moral Courage, the students have extraordinary experiences in our nation’s capital. And as has been the case as long as I have known EHS, we have a fabulous faculty whose focus is on the student experience and their growth.

As I retire from the Board, I have decided to make a planned gift towards the future of Episcopal. It will be

additive to a financial aid fund we set up several years ago so that a deserving student will have the same opportunity, and ultimately the advantage, to experience the Episcopal Way. Due to a matching gift from a couple of generous alums, this planned gift will be partially matched now! It has been my pleasure and honor to give back to a place that was very good to and for my family and me. God bless The High School.

With generous gifts and the School’s able management of funds, Episcopal’s endowment remains strong at $342,417,339.

ENDOWMENT ASSET ALLOCATION

TOTAL ENDOWMENT

$342,417,339

LEADERSHIP GIVING

THE LEADERSHIP CIRCLE

FELLOW: $50,000+

Mr. and Mrs. Max C. Chapman, Jr. ’62

Mr. and Mrs. Tench Coxe ’76 Crosland Foundation

Mr. Alex Liu ’76

Mr. David S. Phillips, Jr. and Mrs. Lauren C. Templeton

Mr. and Mrs. George M. Rogers

The John Templeton Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. John L. Townsend III ’73

Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation

BENEFACTOR: $25,000 - 49,999

Mr. and Mrs. Lee S. Ainslie III ’82

Mr. Louis M. Bacon ’74

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas S. Boszhardt

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Burress III ’54

Mrs. Rosalie G. Campbell

Mr. and Mrs. John E. Cay IV

Karl Bulow Hancock 1925 Estate

Mrs. Barbara Kennedy Harty ’96 and Mr. Edgar V. Harty

Mr. and Mrs. William B. Howell, Jr. ’79

Mr. and Mrs. James C. Kennedy

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Logan ’63

Mr. and Mrs. N. Thompson Long ’77

Mr. and Mrs. Ransom C. Lummis ’80

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Mason IV ’77

The Moore Charitable Foundation

Mr. Christopher Ocasal and Ms. Anastasia M. Parker

Mr. Brent A. Patry and Ms. Regan Otto

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Perry ’97

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Ravenel

Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Sands, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Todd Savage

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Timon

Anonymous

PATRON: $10,000 - 24,999

Ms. Lynn Alexander and Mr. Christopher E. Morris

Mr. and Mrs. Zack H. Bacon III

Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Laird Bieger

Mrs. Frederic Scott Bocock

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burn III ’62

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Burns ’82

Mr. and Mrs. Sean Cameron

Mr. Yuedong Chen and Ms. Rong Gao

Mr. Young Joon Cho and Mrs. Heyjeon You

Mr. Robert M. Collie III ’94 and Mr. Brandon W. Murphy

Mr. and Mrs. William A. Custard

Mr. and Mrs. William Allen Custard III

Mr. and Mrs. Edmund N. Durden ’88

Mr. and Mrs. Courtland W. Durling

Mr. and Ms. Jordan Fowler

Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Fox IV ’71

Mr. Zhiping Fu and Ms. Zhuo Li

Mr. and Mrs. John C. Glover ’81

Harrison Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. F. Robertson Hershey

Mr. and Mrs. William F. Hipp ’72

Mr. and Mrs. William L. Hughes ’79

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. Hunt

Mr. and Mrs. Yusef Jackson

Mrs. Mary T. Keevil

Mr. Heejun Kim and Ms. Sunjoo Shim

Mrs. Gray MacNair King ’96 and Mr. Andrew N. King Korean Alumni and Parents

Mr. Judson Luke Kroh ’01

Mr. and Mrs. William D. S. Kuhne ’84

Mr. Po-Ta Kuo and Ms. Chiung-Hui Huang

Mr. Philip Dandridge Laird III ’65 and Mr. Newton Don

Dr. and Mrs. Ross W. Lampe, Jr. ’73

Mr. John D. Leeby and Dr. Cheralyn P. Leeby

Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. Lilly ’88

Mr. Hankai Liu and Ms. Kun Zhang

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Locke

Mr. and Mrs. J. Evander MacNair III ’62

Mr. and Mrs. James Matthews

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Andrew McMillan

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen McMillan

Mr. Charles Henry Merriman III ’51

Mr. Randolph Carlos Metcalfe ’72

Mrs. Laura Lewis O’Connor and Mr. Kevin J. O’Connor

Mr. and Ms. Clark Orr, Jr.

L. Gordon and June D. Pfefferkorn Trust

Dr. Henrik Petersen Porter ’52

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Poston

Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Preiss

Mr. and Mrs. Noah F. Rhodes III ’99

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Sexton

Mr. and Mrs. Stephenson P. Shuford ’87

Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Hamilton Sloan, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Smith III ’76

Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Stillwell

Mr. and Ms. Joei Tse

Mr. Thomas Ruffin Vandeventer ’74

Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas VanMeter ’10

The Hon. Laurance B. VanMeter ’76 and The Hon. Lucy VanMeter

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Velasquez

Mrs. Helen Grassi Vest ’03 and Mr. Chad Vest

Mr. and Ms. Friedrich A. von Maltzahn

Mr. and Mrs. John M. Walker

Mr. Charles Wardell

Mr. and Mrs. John R. Wickham

Dr. and Mrs. Henry A. Wise II ’55

Mr. E. Jenner Wood III ’70

Mr. Mei Yang and Ms. Xiaoyun Qin

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Young ’66

Mr. Bo Zha and Ms. Ying Cai

Mr. Lingwei Zhan and Ms. Lu Han

Mr. Tao Zhang and Ms. Pei Wang

Anonymous

THE HONOR SOCIETY $5,000 - 9,999

Mr. Craig Albright

Mr. and Ms. Christopher T. Alfieri

Mr. John C. Allen, Jr. ’88

Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Anderson

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bagley IV ’72

Ms. M. Cameron Baker ’11

Mr. and Mrs. James H. Barton ’61

Mr. and Mrs. George R. Bouchard

Mr. and Mrs. Abney S. Boxley III ’76

Mr. and Mrs. Morton Boyd, Jr. ’54

Mrs. Eliza Hoffman Brewer ’95 and Mr. Jeremy W. Brewer

Mr. and Mrs. James M. Burke ’72

Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Byrd III

Fuller E. Callaway 1948 Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. John P. Carr

Edward Langhorn Carrington 1914 Charitable Trust

The Beirne Carter Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. John S. Cathcart ’69

Mr. and Ms. James Caulfield

Mr. Geng Chen and Ms. Yuan Wen

Mr. Guoqing Chen and Ms. Shenbin Fu

Mr. and Mrs. Brooks S. Clark

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Clarke ’89

Mrs. Lynn P. Cochran-Schroder

Mr. and Mrs. William S. Cogswell, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Elwood B. Coley, Jr. ’73

Mr. and Mrs. William Bryan Cunningham

Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Davidson III ’64

Mr. and Mrs. Brooks E. DuBose ’94

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Fitts ’71

Mr. H. Todd Flemming

Mrs. Meghan D. Fowler and Mr. Cooper Fowler

Mrs. Christine Fruehwirth

Mr. John M. Fruehwirth

Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner W. Garrard III

Mr. and Mrs. Dylan C. Glenn ’87

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver R. Grace III

Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Griggs

Mr. H. Thomas Hall ’64 and Mr. Ken Jewett

Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hardison IV ’75

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Harrison ’73

Mr. and Mrs. David M. Hicks

Mr. and Mrs. Landon Hilliard III ’58

The Hon. and Mrs. Truman M. Hobbs, Jr. ’76

Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee S. Hobson ’83

Mrs. Augusta Brown Holland ’94 and Mr. J. Gill Holland, Jr. ’83

Mr. and Mrs. Howell Hollis III ’66

Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Holt ’83

Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Hughes III

Capt. Beirne Carter Hutcheson ’10 and Capt. Clare Hutcheson

Mr. and Mrs. John Randolph Hutcheson

Mr. Harold Eustace Igoe III ’82

Mr. and Mrs. William C. Jackson

Mr. and Mrs. Johns P. Jaudon ’51

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Johnson

Arthur Percy Jones Trust

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher E. Joseph ’03

Mr. and Mrs. Russell C. Joseph

Mr. and Mrs. David B. Kelso ’70

Mr. Hansin Scott Kim and Ms. Jihyun Hong

Mr. Dongwook Kim and Mrs. Dongyoung Park

Mr. and Mrs. Scottow A. King ’75

Mr. and Mrs. David A. Kurzweil

Ms. Jungmin Lee ’96 and Mr. Chang-Kyun Ha

Mr. H. Gordon Leggett, Jr. ’50 and Ms. Madeline E. Miller

Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Liddell III ’82

Mr. Ji Liu and Ms. Xueqin Zhang

Ms. Katherine Merrill Lummis ’00

Mr. Douglass Sorrel Mackall III ’49

Mrs. Talbott Bryan Maxey

Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin W. McCollum

Mrs. Elizabeth Watts Metcalf ’00 and Mr. David C. Metcalf

Mrs. Blair Harbour Moreau ’02 and Mr. Geoffrey Moreau

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Morgan, Jr. ’46

Mr. and Mrs. Shade Murray, Jr. ’59

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Nolan

Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Nulsen III ’75

Dr. and Mrs. William L. Old III ’68

Mr. and Mrs. C. Elis Olsson ’82

Mr. and Mrs. Bailey W. Patrick ’79

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Peelle, Jr. ’66

Mr. L. Anthony Pfohl ’94

Mr. St. George Bryan Pinckney ’65

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick O. Porter

Mr. Edwin A. Rasberry III ’79

Mrs. Gail Williamson Rawl

Mr. John B. Richert and Mrs. Katherine K. Bone

Mr. and Mrs. James W. Rizzo ’96

Mr. and Ms. Lyle Roberts

Mr. and Ms. Devraj Roy

Mr. David Hyde Ryland ’82

Ms. Gillian S. Sarofim ’13

Mr. and Mrs. Chris L. Schroeder, Sr.

Mr. and Mrs. Ugo Sensoy

Dr. Rebecca Pomeroy Shores ’02 and Mr. Andrew Shores

Mr. and Mrs. A. Pope Shuford ’58

Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Smith, Jr. ’01

Mr. Yixin Song and Mrs. Lanping Yu

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Strang IV ’82

The Estate of Rudolph Turk 1909

Mr. Edward B. Walker ’85

Mr. RongFu Wang and Ms. XiaoChun Lin

Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Wetherbee III

Ms. Annette Williamson

Mr. and Ms. George H. Wilson

Mr. and Mrs. David J. Wood, Jr. ’42

Mrs. Anne Lummis Wright ’02 and Mr. Douglas William Wright

Mr. and Mrs. Chawki Zarari

Mr. Qing Le Zhuang and Ms. Shulian Lai

Anonymous

YOUNG ALUMNI LEADERSHIP SOCIETY

Mr. William Scott Addis ’09

Mr. Pendleton Clark Agnew, Jr. ’11

Mr. Michael Sutton Alford ’11

Ms. Mary Cameron Baker ’11

Ms. Conally Reed Bell ’23

Ms. Tweed Pendleton Bogache ’15

Ms. Margaret Harriet Cahill ’19

Ms. Ward Witt Cammack ’20

Mr. William Morgan Cauthen ’11

Mr. John Conger Glover, Jr. ’14

Mr. Lawrence Anderson Glover ’18

Ms. Sallie Harris Glover ’11

Ms. Carson Leigh Goodwyn ’16

Mr. Gray Fountain Goodwyn ’18

Ms. Caroline Lide Haley ’15

Ms. Lindsey Brion Harrison ’19

Ms. Elizabeth Leigh Heebe-Russo ’11

Mr. Edward Gallagher Hobbs ’09

Mrs. Emma L. Holt Hurley ’12 and Mr. Thomas A. Hurley ’11

Capt. Beirne Carter Hutcheson ’10 and Capt. Clare Hutcheson

Mrs. Julia Baker Kerns ’13 and Mr. Trent Sydnor Kerns ’13

Mr. William Preston Laws ’16

Ms. Lauren Marie Marshall ’09

Ms. Augusta Mattes Nau ’15

Mrs. Caroline Hagood Patrick ’12 and Mr. William W. Patrick ’12

Mr. Baker VanBuren Patton ’12

Mr. William Cole Riggsbee ’20

Ms. Gillian Stude Sarofim ’13

Mr. Darius Gaylor Simonson Khosrovani Scott ’18

Mr. Craig Whitfield Lewis Shelburne ’18

Mr. Fathay E. Smith-Kiawu ’09

Mr. Nicholas Kent Styles ’10

Mr. George B. Thorne ’11 and Mrs. Ryan Bennert Thorne ’12

Ms. Delia D’Arcy Tyree ’19

Mr. Matthew Thomas Valcourt ’12

Ms. Maya Carolina Valcourt ’16

Mr. John Thomas VanMeter ’10

Ms. YingShan Wang ’22

Ms. Grace Adair Weisiger ’13

Ms. Catherine Royall Wood ’19

Mr. William McDonald Wren ’09

Mr. Frederick Christian Wright V ’18

COURAGE CAMPAIGN LEADERSHIP DONORS

We are grateful to the following donors who have made commitments of $25,000 or more to Courage: The Campaign for Episcopal (July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2024).

Mr. and Mrs. Garth Q. Ainslie ’84

Mr.* and Mrs. Lee S. Ainslie, Jr. ’56

Mr. and Mrs. Lee S. Ainslie III ’82

Ms. Lynn Alexander and Mr. Christopher E. Morris

Mr. and Mrs. Michael K. Alford

Mr. M. Sutton Alford ’11

Mr. and Mrs. R. Cotten Alston III ’63

Mr. Alexis Dan Amit ’95

The Estate of Blanche R. Bacon

Mr. Louis M. Bacon ’74

Mr. and Mrs. Zack H. Bacon III

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bagley IV ’72

Mrs. Paul B. Barringer II

Mr. and Mrs. Ian D. Beed ’03

Mr. Frederick H. Billups, Jr. ’56

Mr. Henry Ernest Blake ’57*

Mr. and Mrs. William W. Bland

Mr. Alexander Hamilton Bocock ’86 and Dr. Amy Sullivan

Mrs. Frederic Scott Bocock

Mr. and Mrs. Beau Breckenridge

Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Broll, Sr.

Mr. and Mrs. Leonard H. Brooks, Jr. ’81

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce T. Brown ’74

Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Brown ’79

Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Brown, Jr.*

Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Brown III ’72

The Brown Foundation, Inc.

Mr. James K. Bruton, Jr. ’62

Mrs. J. Stewart Bryan III

Mr. and Mrs. Gray F. Bryant ’09 and The Bryant Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burn III ’62

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Burns ’82

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Burress III ’54

Mrs. Helen Noell Byrd

Mr.* and Mrs. Benjamin R. Cadwalader ’40

Mr. and Mrs. Sean Cameron

Ms. Lucie W. Cammack

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Cammack, Jr.

The Beirne Carter Foundation

Mr. Guoqing Chen and Ms. Shenbin Fu

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Clarke ’89

Mr. Robert M. Collie III ’94 and Mr. Brandon W. Murphy

Mrs. Amanda Weisiger Cornelson ’08 and Mr. Martin Shaw Cornelson, Jr. ’04

The J.W. Couch Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Tench Coxe ’76

Mr. and Mrs. William A. Custard

Mr. and Mrs. W. Page Dame III ’59

Mr. and Mrs. Oscar S. Davis ’54

Ms. Ania G. DeJoy ’14, Mr. Andrew L. DeJoy ’14, and the Louis DeJoy and Aldona Z. Wos Family Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. J. Caulley Deringer ’82

Dr. and Mrs. Macdonald Dick II ’59

The Dorman Family:

Mr. and Mrs. David Wyatt Dorman, Mr. Andrew Wyatt Dorman ’01, Mr. Tyler Blake Dorman ’03, and Mrs. Lindsey Dorman Johnson ’07

Mr.* and Mrs. James K. Dunton ’55

Mr. and Mrs. Edmund N. Durden ’88

Mr. Richard Snowdon Durham ’58*

Lettie Pate Evans Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Faris

Mr. and Mrs. William S. Farish, Jr.

The William Stamps Farish Fund

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon N. Farquhar ’42*

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Fitts ’71

Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Fox IV ’71

Dr. Lenora Peters Gant and Dr. Raymond Gant

Mr. Cecil Gant, Jr. ’44*

Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner W. Garrard III

Ms. Carson Leigh Goodwyn ’16, Mr. Gray F. Goodwyn ’18, Mr. William F. Goodwyn and Mrs. Leigh J. Goodwyn

Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Griggs

Mr. Jianli Guo and Ms. Jun Chen

Mr. Kris Hagerman and Ms. Marian Kremer

Mr. H. Thomas Hall ’64 and Mr. Ken Jewett

Mrs. Joey L. Halm

Mr. Brenton S. Halsey ’45*

Mr.* and Mrs. Alexander Hamilton IV ’52

Mr. and Mrs. George B. Hamilton ’55

The Hardaway Family:

Ms. Eliza Hoffman Brewer ’95 and Mr. Jeremy Brewer,

Mr. and Mrs. William S. Cogswell, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Mason Hardaway Lampton ’92

Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy T. Head

Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee S. Hobson ’83

Mrs. Augusta Brown Holland ’94 and Mr. J. Gill Holland, Jr. ’83

Mr. and Mrs. Howell Hollis III ’66

Mr. Wayne J. Holman III ’53

Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Holt ’83

Mr. and Mrs. John C. H. Hooff, Jr. ’67

Mr. John Carlyle Herbert Hooff III ’95

Mrs. W. Barrett Howell, Sr.

Mr. and Mrs. William B. Howell, Jr. ’79

Mr. Curtis Randolph Hudgins III

Mr. and Mrs. William L. Hughes ’79

Mr. Larkin Hundley 1921*

Capt. Beirne Carter Hutcheson ’10 and Capt. Clare Hutcheson

Mr. and Mrs. John Randolph Hutcheson

The Inman Family:

Mr. Edward H. Inman II ’68, Mr. Samuel Walker Inman ’99, Mrs. Susanne Inman Frayser ’02, and Mrs. Caroline Inman Dyson ’03

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher E. Joseph ’03

Mr. and Mrs. David B. Kelso ’70

Mr. and Mrs. James C. Kennedy

Mr. and Mrs. David M. Kern ’71

Mr. Hyun Soo Kim ’93 and Ms. Young-Mi Na

Mr. and Mrs. Gudmundur Kjaernested

Korean Alumni Association

Mr. Judson Luke Kroh ’01

Mr. Po-Ta Kuo and Ms. Chiung-Hui Huang

Mr. H. Gordon Leggett, Jr. ’50 and Ms. Madeline E. Miller

Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. Lilly ’88

Mr. and Mrs. N. Thompson Long ’77

Mr. and Mrs. P. Bradley Lummis ’73 and The Frill Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Ransom C. Lummis ’80

Mr. Lin Luo and Ms. Man Li

Mr. Nigel Savage MacEwan ’51*

Mr.* and Mrs. Robert Elijah Mason III ’52

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Mason IV ’77

Mr. and Mrs. James Matthews

Mr.* and Mrs. David Maybank, Jr. ’50

Mr. Alexander C. McAree

Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin W. McCollum

McGuire’s School Foundation

Mrs. Katharine Trotter McNeil ’06 and Mr. Fletcher McNeil

Mr. Randolph Carlos Metcalfe ’72

Sarah Watts Miller Trust

The Moore Charitable Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Morgan, Jr. ’46

Mr. James McKay Morton ’69*

Mr. and Mrs. John Reid Murchison III ’72

The Nelson Family:

Mr. Calvin R. Nelson ’94 and Ms. Melissa Gomez, Ms. Kristine E. Nelson ’95 and Mr. Peter Oh, and Dr. and Mrs. Victor E. Nelson

Mr. Andrew R. Nickle ’11

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Nickle

Mr. Charles Edwards Noell III

Mrs. Paula Davis Noell

Mr. and Mrs. R. Davis Noell

Mrs. Laura Lewis O’Connor and Mr. Kevin J. O’Connor

Mr. and Mrs. C. Elis Olsson ’82

Mr. and Mrs. Bailey W. Patrick ’79

Mr. and Mrs. William S. Peebles IV ’73

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Peelle, Jr. ’66

Mrs. C. D. L. Perkins

Ms. Nicole H. Perry and Mr. Andrew T. C. Stifler

Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Pfefferkorn ’75

The David M. Phillips, Jr. Family

Mr. St. George Bryan Pinckney ’65

Dr. W. Reid Pitts, Jr. ’59* and Mrs. Marguerite Orr Pitts

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick O. Porter

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Poston

Mr. Peyton Davis Prospere ’70

Mr. and Mrs. W. Trent Ragland III ’74

W. Trent Ragland, Jr. Foundation

Mr. Edwin A. Rasberry III ’79

Mr. Julian Hart Robertson, Jr. ’51*

The Robertson Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. George M. Rogers

Mr. and Mrs. Dalton D. Ruffin, Jr. ’76

Mr. Milton J. Sams ’70

Mr. and Mrs. William T. Saunders, Jr. ’56

Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Todd Savage

Mr. Dodson R. Schenck, Jr. and Dr. Robin Schenck

Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Schorr IV

Mrs. Amanda Whitfield Phillips Schwartz ’96 and Mr. David Schwartz

The Estate of Lewis Claiborne Seward 1916

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Sexton

Mr. and Mrs. James L. Sherrill ’53*

Mr. and Mrs. A. Alexander Shuford II ’62

Mr. and Mrs. Stephenson P. Shuford ’87

Mr. and Mrs. Jack N. Sibley, Sr. ’66

Ms. Katie Simon and The William E. Simon Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Singletary III

Mr. and Mrs. John R. Sloan ’83

Mr. and Mrs. John M. Smith, Jr. ’90

Ms. Karyn Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Smith, Jr. ’01

The Starr Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. David C. Stotler

John Philip Strubing ’93 Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Swinford, Jr. ’72

Mrs. Leah Kannensohn Tennille ’01 and Mr. Dre Tennille

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Timon

Mr. and Mrs. Rixey B. Todd ’65

Mr. and Mrs. James P. Totten ’65

Mr. and Mrs. John L. Townsend III ’73

Ms. Olivia Helene Tucker ’19

Mrs. Kathryn G. Tyree and Mr. William B. Tyree

Mr. Thomas Ruffin Vandeventer ’74

Mr. and Mrs. Leonidas C. Vaughan IV ’93

Mrs. Helen Grassi Vest ’03 and Mr. Chad Vest

Mr. Louis Stephens Waldrop, Sr. ’42*

Mr. Edward B. Walker ’85

The David S. Walker, Jr. ’43 Foundation

Mr. RongFu Wang and Ms. XiaoChun Lin

Mrs. Georganna Howell Weatherholtz

Mr. Charles Whitley

Mr. and Mrs. John R. Wickham

Mr. Donaldson G. Williams ’80

Dr. E. Edwin Wilson, Jr. ’45*

Mr. and Mrs.* E. Jenner Wood III ’70

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Wood II ’45*

Mr. Brent W. Yessin ’81

Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. York, Jr.

Anonymous (5)

1200 North Quaker Lane | Alexandria, VA 22302

The School recently completed the installation of over 42,000 square feet of solar panels on Flippin Field House and Hershey Athletics Center. We expect this installation to provide about 10% of the campus’s electricity.

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