Inside Whitehall - Summer 2018

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Inside Whitehall

TM

The Magazine for Flagler Museum Members

Summer 2018 Volume Twenty-Five • Number Three


Throughout the summer, brief demonstrations of Whitehall’s original 1,249-pipe J.H. & C.S. Odell Co. organ, and the Steinway Model B art-case grand piano, serve to exercise the instruments and showcase popular music of the Gilded Age. The demonstration schedule can be found on the Museum’s website.

Museum Trustees

Museum Hours and Admission

President: George G. Matthews Vice President: G. F. Robert Hanke Treasurer: William M. Matthews Secretary: Thomas S. Kenan, III Trustee: Alexander W. Dreyfoos Trustee: Kelly M. Hopkins Trustee: Richard M. Krasno

The Flagler Museum is open year round, Tuesday through Saturday, 10 am to 5 pm, and Sunday, noon to 5 pm. Closed Mondays, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. Admission is $18 for adults, $10 for youth ages 13-17, $3 for children ages 6-12, and children under 6 are free. Admission is free for Members. Special rates are available for groups. The Museum and grounds are wheelchair accessible.

Leadership Staff

Inside Whitehall is published quarterly by the Henry Morrison Flagler Museum, Inc., a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation.

Executive Director: Erin Manning Deputy Director: Gina Pampena Chief Financial Officer: Rudina Toro Chief Curator: Tracy Kamerer Member & Visitor Services Director: Allison Goff Public Affairs Director: David Carson Store & Cafe Manager: Kristen Cahill

On the Cover

The Henry Morrison Flagler statue reinstalled at its new location in Palm Beach.

The Flagler Museum One Whitehall Way Palm Beach, Florida 33480 Telephone (561) 655-2833 Fax (561) 655-2826 e-mail: mail@flaglermuseum.us website: www.FlaglerMuseum.us © Flagler Museum, 2018


First Ladies Visit the Flagler Museum

(L. to R.) Erin Manning, Executive Director; Allison Goff, Member and Visitor Services Director; Mrs. Akie Abe, wife of Japanese Prime Minister; Tracy Kamerer, Chief Curator; Melania Trump, First Lady of the United States; Hector Fontanez, Security Supervisor; and William Matthews, Treasurer Board of Trustees. Official White House photo by Andrea Hanks.

The Henry Morrison Flagler Museum was honored with a visit by the First Lady of the United States, Melania Trump, and Akie Abe, wife of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, for a tour of the Museum on Wednesday, April 18, 2018. The First Ladies were guided by Flagler Museum’s Treasurer, and great-grandson of Henry Flagler, William M. Matthews, and Executive Director Erin Manning, who imparted the story of Henry Flagler, his winter home Whitehall, and America’s Gilded Age.

A Sneak Peek into our Season of Style Join us for a “Season of Style.” The 2018 fall exhibition presents the glamorous magazine work of influential photographer Edward Steichen (1879-1973). The nearly 80 dramatic black and white photographs from the 1920s-30s depict fashion accessories and models, as well as artists and celebrities, shot mostly for magazines such as Vanity Fair and Vogue. The 2019 winter exhibition will highlight more than 200 unique pieces of handcrafted art jewelry from the early twentieth century, made in the United States, United Kingdom, and Europe. The pieces, by significant artists such as Louis Comfort Tiffany and René Lalique, celebrate the impact of women on art jewelry as both designers and subjects. Watch for more information about these exhibitions and other stylish programs soon!

The Artificers’ Guild, Pendant, c. 1900. Gold, silver, opal, sapphire, zircon, tourmaline, amethyst, almandine, garnet, moonstone, pearl. Collection of Richard H. Driehaus. Photograph by John A. Faier, 2014, © The Richard H. Driehaus Museum.


Museum Honored With Two Awards

(L. to R.) Discover The Palm Beaches President and CEO, Jorge Pasquera, presents the Partner of the Year Award, nonaccommodations category, to David Carson and Erin Manning of the Flagler Museum, with Heather Andrews of Discover The Palm Beaches. Photo: Jen Scott Photography.

On May 11, Discover The Palm Beaches (DTPB), the tourism marketing organization for Palm Beach County, presented their second annual Partner of the Year Award, non-accommodations category, to the Flagler Museum. Executive Director, Erin Manning, and Public Affairs Director, David Carson, attended the annual Travel Rally Day event at the Richard and Pat Johnson Palm Beach County History Museum to accept the award. The award recognizes the Museum’s commendable efforts to help DTPB fulfill its mission by implementing innovative marketing programs and providing guided tours to visiting media representatives and travel writers. Each year, the Flagler Museum hosts visitors from virtually every state in the Union, and dozens of countries around the world.

An aerial view of Whitehall’s restored Cocoanut Grove.

On May 18, during its 40th Anniversary Conference in Jacksonville, the Florida Trust for Historic Preservation presented the Flagler Museum with its Historic Landscape award for the restoration of Whitehall’s Cocoanut Grove. Palm Beach acquired its name from the coconut palm groves that were once common along the eastern shore of Lake Worth, which separates the City of West Palm Beach from the island Town of Palm Beach. It was this natural feature that first attracted Henry Flagler to the area, leading him to build the world’s largest resort in 1894, the Hotel Royal Poinciana, the Palm Beach Inn, later re-named The Breakers, and his 75-room winter estate, Whitehall. Once numerous throughout the island, these groves have disappeared altogether, lost to land development for housing. Today, the Museum uses the Grove for many of its signature programs, including Valentine’s Day Tea, Mixing It Up, and Member Events.


Flagler Statue Returns to Royal Poinciana Way On Thursday, June 14, the Henry Morrison Flagler statue was returned to Royal Poinciana Way! The statue was donated to the Town of Palm Beach by Flagler Museum Trustee, and Henry Flagler’s great-grandson, Col. G. F. Robert Hanke. Hundreds gathered on December 11, 2010, as eight school children unveiled the bronze statue. The dedication ceremony was the official start of the Town of Palm Beach’s Centennial celebration. During the dedication, G.F. Robert Hanke spoke of Henry Flagler’s accomplishments saying, “No other individual has had a more positive or lasting influence than Henry Flagler has had on Florida.” Originally located on the western-most median of Royal Poinciana Way, the statue was relocated after construction of the bridge that also bears the Flagler name. The statue is now located in the median at the intersection of Royal Poinciana Way and Cocoanut Row, a location that offers safe and convenient pedestrian access to view the statue and read the inscriptions. The Henry Flagler statue is cleaned in preparation for reinstallation by Rosa Lowinger and Associates.

Beyel Bros. crew prepares the statue for transportation to the new location.

Museum staff at the conclusion of reinstallation in the median at Royal Poinciana Way and Cocoanut Row.


Mother’s Day 2018

The Museum’s Café des Beaux-Arts opened on May 12 and 13 to offer visitors a Mother’s Day Celebration. More than 200 guests took advantage of the last chance to enjoy the Gilded Age tradition of Afternoon Tea for the Season.

Father’s Day 2018 On Sunday, June 17, the Museum provided visitors the opportunity to celebrate Father’s Day in the Flagler Kenan Pavilion. Families played classic card games, including Old Maid, Whist, Solitaire, and Gin Rummy, with the recentlyintroduced replica Florida East Coast Railway souvenir playing cards. Specialty coffee drinks were offered at a pop-up barista bar.


Upcoming Events Grandparents Day • September 9 Family played an important role in the history of the Flagler Museum. The Museum’s founder, Jean Flagler Matthews, was a granddaughter of Henry Flagler. She preserved Whitehall and its collections to honor her grandfather. Share your own family history by celebrating Grandparents Day, Sunday, September 9, at the Flagler Museum. Tour Whitehall with a Tour and Activity Guide for Kids and then visit the Flagler Kenan Pavilion to enjoy family-friendly activities.

Book Talk with Senator George S. LeMieux October 14, 3-5 pm. The Museum is collaborating with the LeMieux Center for Public Policy at Palm Beach Atlantic University to present a book talk, signing and reception with Senator George S. LeMieux and co-author Laura E. Mize, to celebrate the launch of their recent book titled Florida Made: The 25 Most Important Figures Who Shaped the State. Henry Flagler is the subject of the first chapter.

The most significant individual in Florida’s history, he [Flagler] connected Jacksonville to Key West and created Florida cities along the way.

See You in November Mother’s Day marked the end of another highly successful Season for the Museum’s Café des Beaux-Arts. With new, tasty menu options, and a staff that treats each guest like family, Afternoon Tea in the Café has become a lunch time favorite for our Members, local businesses, and social groups alike. Remember, it’s never too early to schedule your special Tea engagement for next Season. We expect another busy year ahead beginning the day after Thanksgiving!


The Fascinating Story of Railcar No. 91

Unidentified photographer, Railcar 25 of the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway, ca. 1886-1889. This early image shows Railcar No. 91 before its multiple name changes, and before the signature oval windows were added. Flagler Museum Archives.

During the Gilded Age many wealthy Americans relied upon private railcars for their travel needs. The private jets of their day, such cars could be attached to scheduled trains and, upon arrival, often served as temporary housing. Reflecting the status of their owners, private railcars were lavishly decorated and outfitted with the latest in technology. Henry Morrison Flagler owned three such private cars, one of which, Railcar No. 91, is on display at the Flagler Museum. Recent research has helped piece together the long and illustrious histories of this car and its siblings. Railcar No. 91, Henry Flagler’s first private railcar, was built in 1886 by Jackson & Sharp Company in Wilmington, Delaware. The car was constructed to Flagler’s specifications at a cost of $70,000.00. Originally given the number 25 (and possibly also 35), it was part of the fleet of the Jacksonville, Tampa and Key West Railroad, a Florida East Coast Railway precursor. The 56’ 10” car included an observation room/parlor, private bedroom and bath, dining room with eight berths, shower, toilet, and kitchen.

The interior of the car, while elaborate, was of smaller scale and simpler design than Flagler’s later cars. Unfortunately, no period images of the inside exist, but the original plans by Jackson & Sharp have survived. Receipts in the Flagler Museum Archives show that Pottier & Stymus, the interior designers for both Whitehall and Satanstoe, provided some of the design work, and tableware was purchased from the prominent silver manufacturer Meriden Britannia Company. Three years after its completion the car was renamed number 90, and became part of the fleet of the Jacksonville, St. Augustine and Halifax Railroad (another FEC Railway precursor). Archival documents and period reports reveal that Flagler used the car extensively through 1897 for both short trips around Florida and longer trips to New York. In late 1889 to early 1890, for example, Flagler and his second wife, Ida Alice, took an extended trip to Florida in the car. In November 1891, Flagler, Captain Marcotte (an FEC employee), and Dr. Andrew Anderson (St. Augustine mayor, physician,


The aging Railcar No. 91 was returned to Jackson & Sharp for repairs in June 1899, which is not surprising, considering the wear and tear the wooden car would have experienced due to heavy usage. Once repaired, it continued to be used for inspection tours of the FEC’s vast operations, as it was in February 1905, when Flagler, Parrott, R. T. Goff (an FEC Unidentified photographer, Railcar No. 91 Before Restoration, ca. 1959. Flagler Museum Archives. official), and other officials took a and friend of Flagler) traveled to San Mateo, Florida two-day trip down the line. in the car, an event featured in local newspapers. Flagler’s railcar excursions up and down the coast The biggest event involving all three of Flagler’s were often reported in the press; in fact, the car private railcars was the opening of the Over-Sea achieved a sort of celebrity status in its own right. Railroad to Key West on January 22, 1912. Railcars In 1896, when the Jacksonville, St. Augustine and No. 90, 91, and 92 (a business car built in 1893) were Halifax Railroad was folded into the newly-created all part of the First Train. Period sources reported Florida East Coast Railway, Railcar No. 90 formally that Flagler rode in his private Railcar No. 90, while became part of the large organization’s inventory. 91 and 92 were used by other FEC employees and dignitaries. Flagler frequently made Railcar No. 90 available to friends, family, and politicians. In 1891, he lent it After Flagler’s death in 1913, Railcar No. 91 was to both Edward Wilmot Blyden (educator, author, used by FEC Railway executives until ca. 1934-1935, and diplomat) and United States Vice President when it was sold to Charles W. Pidcock, owner of the Levi P. Morton and his family. The car transported Georgia Northern Railroad, and renamed Moultrie. Florida Governor Francis P. Fleming in 1892 from In 1947, the Georgia Northern Railroad sold the Jacksonville to St. Augustine. In April 1905, it was car to D.W. Thomas, president of the Chesapeake also among three FEC Railway cars lent to carry the & Western Railway. In 1949, Mr. Thomas sold the body of actor Joseph Jefferson, a friend of Flagler, railcar to his section foreman, Jesse Lam, for $1,000.00. and Jefferson’s family from Hobe Sound, Florida to Lam rented it as living space for the next 10 years, Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts. mostly to migrant farm workers. Little is known about the staffing of Railcar No. 90, but receipts in the Flagler Museum Archives indicate that Jonathon W. Bush served as porter of the car between 1889 and 1891. Bush was paid a monthly salary of around sixty dollars in November 1889, and he was sometimes reimbursed for incidental expenses. The car was also occasionally staffed with a chef. In January 1898, a new, larger, and more ornate railcar was delivered, and it was given the number 90. The original Railcar No. 90 became Railcar No. 91. Once the new number 90 was added to the inventory, the history of Railcar No. 91’s use is not well documented. It appears that car 90 became Flagler’s primary car, and the older 91 was utilized primarily by Joseph R. Parrott (President of the FEC) and other FEC employees for business trips.

Unidentified photographer, Railcar No. 91 Arrives at the Flagler Museum, 1966. Flagler Museum Executive Director Grant R. Bedford and founder Jean Flagler Matthews are in the foreground. Flagler Museum Archives.


In 1959, Railcar No. 91 was purchased by the newlyincorporated Flagler Museum and transported to the FEC Railway yard in St. Augustine. It remained there until around 1966, when it was transported to Pickens Railroad Company in Pickens, S.C. for restoration of the exterior. Upon completion, the railcar was transported to the grounds at Whitehall, and on February 3, 1967, it was dedicated to the memory of William R. Kenan, Jr., a former FEC Railway President and brother of Mary Lily Kenan Flagler. William R. Kenan also had his own private railcars, named Railcar No. 95 and the Randleigh.

of the Over-Sea Railroad. In fact, primary sources indicate that from 1889 until the late 1890s, Railcar No. 91 (then called 90) was referred to as both Alice and Alicia, in honor of Flagler’s second wife, Ida Alice.

As the decades passed, the various names of Flagler’s private railcars became muddled. Railcar No. 91 was often called the Rambler, while Railcar No. 90 was referred to as the Alicia. It is now clear that car 91 was never called Rambler prior to its arrival at the Flagler Museum, when its history was confused with the real Rambler, an open car used on inspection trips of the FEC Railway during the construction

The condition of Railcar No. 91 deteriorated after years of service and from the harsh Florida climate, when it was displayed outside for decades at the Flagler Museum. The car underwent several restorations between 1982 and 2002. For a while, the car’s original color was thought to have been yellow, but further research revealed that the car was dark green during Flagler’s lifetime. In 1998, the color of Railcar No. 91’s exterior was changed back to green, damaged siding and windows were replaced, and the wooden platforms were conserved. Since 2005, Railcar No. 91 has been preserved inside the climatecontrolled Flagler Kenan Pavilion, where visitors can still climb aboard and experience the luxury of Gilded Age rail travel.

The observation room/parlor of Railcar No. 91 today.

The First Ladies receive a guided tour of Railcar No. 91, during their visit on April 18, 2018. Official White House photo by Andrea Hanks.


Bluegrass in the Pavilion Blue Highway

The Gibson Brothers The Gibson Brothers and Blue Highway presented an afternoon of entertainment for a sold-out audience, in the Flagler Kenan Pavilion, during the 2018 bluegrass concert.

Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver

The 2019 Bluegrass in the Pavilion concert will see the return of Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver, and 2018 GRAMMY Nominee Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper, perform on Saturday April 6, 2019. Tickets for the 2019 Bluegrass in the Pavilion concert are available now through the Museum’s website.

Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper


Founder’s Day 2018

Never too young for history!


Contributors, Sponsors & Grantors June 8, 2017 - June 8, 2018 $250,000 and above

Palm Beach County Tourist Development Council

$50,000 and above Florida Division of Cultural Affairs Relgalf Charitable Foundation Samuel J. & Connie M. Frankino Charitable Foundation

$25,000 and above Fortin Foundation of Florida, Inc. (Mrs. Lesly S. Smith) Col. & Mrs. G. F. Robert Hanke † Mr. Thomas S. Kenan, III † Mr. & Mrs. William M. Matthews THE MOSAIC FOUNDATION (of R. & P. Heydon) † Randleigh Foundation Trust Jean S. and Frederic A. Sharf † Stautberg Family Fund of the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties Wise Foundation

$10,000 and above The Abraham and Beverly Sommer Foundation Alexander W. Dreyfoos, Jr. Charitable Foundation, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Butler Eric Friedheim Foundation Flagler System (Mr. Thomas S. Kenan, III & Mrs. Sterling H. Kenan) Ms. Roe Green PNC Seth Sprague Educational and Charitable Foundation (Mrs Patricia M. Dunnington)

$5,000 and above Bardes Fund David Minkin Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Henry Mrs. John C. LaMonte Mr. & Mrs. Milton S. Maltz Marmot Foundation Mrs. Betsy K. Matthews † MBS Family Foundation Palm Beach Daily News Mr. & Mrs. Ellis J. Parker Deborah & Charles Royce Sharkey Family Foundation (Ms. Linda Dunhill) Sidney Kohl Family Foundation Mr. Harold Byron Smith Soter Kay Foundation The Eliasberg Family Foundation The Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation, Inc. The OLB Foundation, Inc.

$2,500 and above Atwater Kent Foundation Ms. Maria L. Bacinich John J. Pohanka Family Foundation Marni & Morris Propp, II Family Foundation Nancy and Joel Hart Charitable Foundation Richard S. Johnson Family Foundation, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Scott, Jr. Templeton & Company Tiro A. Segno Foundation, Inc. VISIT FLORIDA

$1,000 and above Mr. & Mrs. Stanley A. Applebaum Mr. Andrew J. Armstrong Ashton Foundation Mr. & Mrs. John M. Blades BMO Harris Bank D.A. Hamel Charitable Trust Donald M. Ephraim & Maxine Marks for the Donald M. Ephraim Family Foundation Elizabeth E. Matthews Fund of the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties Forest Foundation GE Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Murray H. Goodman Mr. Lamont B.P. Harris Mr. & Mrs. John H. Johnson Mrs. Frank H. Kenan Mr. & Mrs. Douglas M. Kinney Mr. & Mrs. Robin B. Martin Mr. & Mrs. Donald K. Miller Peter R. & Cynthia K. Kellogg Foundation The Richard Foundation Mrs. Rebecca Rimel & Mr. Patrick Caldwell Mr. & Mrs. John J. Rinker Sallie B. Phillips Foundation Whitehall Foundation

$500 and above Mr. & Mrs. Larry Austin Breneman/Plasket Family Fund Charlotte and Edward K. Wheeler Foundation Mrs. J. Simpson Dean, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph T. Harper Herndon Foundation Kanders Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Richard Lightburn † Denotes a full or partial in-kind contribution, or a donation to the Museum’s Permanent Collection.


Contributors, Sponsors & Grantors June 8, 2017 - June 8 2018 $500 and above (cont’d) Mr. Steve B. Lowden Lucille and David Fannin Charitable Fund Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Maltese, Jr. Merriman Foundation Mrs. Evelyn B. Richter Rochelle Ohrstrom Charitable Fund Ruth and Vernon Taylor Foundation Mr. William H. Saltzman Mr. Peter C. Steingraber

$250 and above AJK Giving Fund Berwind Corporation ConocoPhillips U.S. Matching Gift Program Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel B. Day Mr. Ronald W. Luque Mr. Steven Peluso Mr. & Mrs. James C. Pizzagalli Mr. Tim Radigan-Brophy Ms. Barbara G. Rentschler Riehm Corporation The Riley Family Charitable Foundation Mr. David P. Silverman (in memory of Ms. Ethel K. Bob) Ms. Josephine Wurster

$100 and above Mr. & Mrs. Louis Astorino Dr. Bunny J. Bucho Mrs. Sandra Kay Crawford Mrs. L. Rodger Currie Mr. & Mrs. H. Spencer Everett, Jr. Ms. Alexandra Flinchum The Garden Club of Palm Beach Ms. Daphne Hoge & Mr. Paul D. Flach Dr. Eleanor Laudicina & Dr. Robert Laudicina Mrs. Eleanor G. Major Ms. Carol Mann Mr. Thomas O. McCarthy Mr. Thomas S. Nicholson Nottingham Family Fund Ms. Danute M. Nourse Ms. Gina Pampena Mrs. Mary Pampena Mrs. Richard C. Pietrafesa Mr. Albert Primavera

Ms. Diane Riley Mr. & Mrs. Stephen W. Rothermel Mrs. Stanley M. Rumbough, Jr. Mr. Donald E. Runge Scott Ziegler Charitable Fund Mrs. William T. Seed The Honorable & Mrs. Thomas F. Shebell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Eliot I. Snider Mr. James Edward Sved Mr. & Mrs. David L. Wagner Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Welch

$50 and above Mr. & Mrs. Burton Anderson (in memory of Mrs. Joan S. Runkel) Mr. & Mrs. Keith D. Beaty Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Ganger Gregg Gilden † Ms. Nancy Lofye (in memory of Mrs. Joan S. Runkel) Mrs. Virginia C. Longo Ms. Mary Pedone

Corporate Memberships Corporate Chairman

Informa SpartanNash UTC Climate, Controls & Security

$25 and above Mr. Djamel Bennoui Mr. Frederick A. Braman Mr. William Carter Dr. Helen Franke Mr. & Mrs. Ross Grumet (in honor of the marriage of Arthur & Carol Fabrakant) Mr. Michael McCabe Ms. Karen McKelvie (in memory of Mrs. Joan S. Runkel) The Pontarelli & Bogusz Family Ms. Trudy A. Ruddy Dorris J. Smith † Ms. Sandy Szakach Dr. Hilda B. Templeton Mrs. Doris M. Welsch

Whitehall Society Memberships Mr. William B. Blundin & Mr. Kyle Kahriman Mr. Vincent T. Cloud Ms. Ellen Oshins & Mr. John Cohen Mr. Nelson Varajao

You can make a lasting difference for generations to come by remembering the Flagler Museum in your estate plan. If the Museum can be of any assistance to your attorney or estate planner, please have them contact the Museum’s Executive Director at the Museum’s main telephone number or via email at executivedirector@flaglermuseum.us. Donor Recognition Panels, on permanent display in the Flagler Kenan Pavilion, acknowledge annual gifts. A complete list of annual Memberships is included in the Museum’s Annual Report. † Denotes a full or partial in-kind contribution, or a donation to the Museum’s Permanent Collection.


New and Renewing Individual Memberships March 20 - June 8, 2018 Legacy - $10,000

Ms. Patrice Coppola Ms. Maria Goryaeva & Mr. Steven Mandel Ms. Lesley Keither & Mr. Spencer Carey Mr. & Mrs. Alan Shibley

Flagler Associate - $5,000

Mr. & Mrs. Angelo Bologna Mr. Mark W. Cook Mr. & Mrs. Christopher Cowie Dr. & Mrs. Sebastian Kent Mr. & Mrs. Berton E. Korman Dr. & Mrs. Jan W. Kronish Mr. & Mrs. John J. Pohanka Ms. Courtney Trivino & Mr. Alexander Redfearn

Benefactor - $2,500 Mr. & Mrs. Stanley N. Gaines

Patron - $1,000

Mr. & Mrs. F. Ted Brown, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John K. Castle Mr. & Mrs. Raymond V. Gilmartin Ms. Juanita Henson Mr. & Mrs. Stephen E. Memishian Mrs. Suzette Smith Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Wright

Sponsor - $500

Mr. & Mrs. Jay Axelrod Mr. & Mrs. David O. Charland Mr. & Mrs. James A. Erneston Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Horowitz Dr. & Mrs. Richard Lazzara Mrs. Caroline B. Sory

Sustaining - $250

Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Atkiss Mr. & Mrs. John J. Cusick Mr. & Mrs. John W. Davis, III Mr. & Mrs. Mitchell Evans Ms. Alexandra Garrison Mr. & Mrs. George Gottlieb Ms. Catherine G. Haines & Ms. Linnea C. Haines Mr. & Mrs. John Harnett Dr. Joann Hendelman-Pearl & Dr. Bill Pearl Mr. & Mrs. Barry Hoyt Ms. Christy LaCasse-Cruz & Ms. Linda LaCasse-Cruz

Dr. Eleanor Laudicina & Dr. Robert Laudicina Mr. & Mrs. Robert Nelson Ms. Joan Reiher & Mr. William R. Price Ms. Lynne F. Romeo Mrs. Isabelle Schmitt & Mr. Bernard G. Perron Ms. Deborah Schreibel Mrs. Silvana Tsoflias & Mrs. Melena Audrey Ward Mr. & Mrs. Lazaro Valladares Ms. Michelle Winfree & Mr. Jerry Hedges Ms. Yim Ping Cynthia Wong & Ms. Karen Wong

Family - $125

Mr. & Mrs. John D. Andrica Ms. Alison Beimler & Mr. Charles Sieving Mr. & Mrs. Mark Blanchat Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Burns Mr. & Mrs. James J. Craig Mrs. Susan DePaula Mrs. Katherine Drew & Mr. Terry Strecker Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence E. Duane Ms. Bebe Duke & Mr. Rich Mascolo Mrs. Kathryn Eddy Mr. & Mrs. Stephen R. Ehrlich Mrs. Esther M. Feldberg & Ms. Mollye Block Mr. & Mrs. Robert Galleta Mr. & Mrs. Joshua Gross Ms. Janice Gruber & Mrs. Lillian Gruber Mr. & Mrs. David Gurberg Mr. & Mrs. William J. Hayes The Honorable & Mrs. Harris N. Hollin Mr. & Mrs. Richard Holmberg Mr. & Mrs. Dan Leitman Ms. Anita E. Manuel & Ms. Wanita DeToma Mr. & Mrs. Richard Mozeleski Mr. Murray Newman & Mr. Harry Koster Mrs. Barbara Smith O’Connell Mr. & Mrs. Bill O’Heaney Mr. & Mrs. Jerry K. Pearlman Mr. & Mrs. Robert Redmond Mr. Juan Rivas & Mr. Shkelzen Hoxhaj Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Searcy The Honorable & Mr. Thomas F. Shebell, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Eliot I. Snider Mr. & Mrs. Bruce C. Stoesser Mr. & Mrs. William Stuart Mr. & Mrs. Brent Weingarten Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Weiss

Individual - $75

Mr. Bernard R. Baker, III Ms. Natalie Dejoux Mrs. Pat Doman Mr. James J. Donatelli Mr. Edward C. Dukehart, Jr. Mr. Edward Elinoff Mr. Gary Elkins Ms. Page Ferrell Mrs. Carol Goldenhersh Ms. Sarah Greeley Ms. Alexandra Hall Ms. Frances Hammond Mr. Christian Havemeyer Ms. Sylvia James Ms. Page Kjellstrom Ms. Sandi Lutz Marquesa de San Damian Mrs. Sheri Mirsepahi Ms. Katherine McSweeney Ms. Barbara Newhouse Ms. Denise-Marie Nieman Mr. William Nobles Mrs. Joanne D. Payson Ms. Norlyn Poto Mr. Rick Rose Ms. Lynn Salberg Ms. Dorothy Slover Ms. Marty Straton Mr. Robert Stickney Dr. Hilda B. Templeton Mr. Jim Wangard Mr. Stephen Williams Ms. Jeanne Wasser Ms. Nina Yacavino

Educator - $50

Mrs. Marilyn Stefanoff-Fraelich Ms. Kathryn Elizabeth Wood


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