Fall 2013 Hamptonia: The Magazine of New Hampton School

Page 1

THE MAGAZINE OF NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

T. HolmeS

“ BUD 1”920-2013

MOORE


A THOUSAND WORDS

PHOTO BY KAREN BOBOTAS


The Ralph S. O’Connor ’44 House

At a Glance: • Dedicated October 2013 • 22,000 square feet • Home to 33 students • Four two-story faculty apartments • Located in the School's "West Village" • Faculty-to-student ratio of 1:7 • 16 double-occupancy rooms • One single room for a proctor • Spacious common room area extending to the second floor • Natural light from two-story windows


New Hampton School

D I G I TA L 360° VIRTUAL CAMPUS TOUR With a visit to the NHS web site and a click on the 360-degree tour widget, you can take a peek inside a transformed campus that still maintains the cozy feel that suited thousands of alumni. The panoramic photography and embedded videos make the 360 Tour a virtual viewbook.

NHS INSTAGRAM One of the best ways to explore New Hampton School is through photos. Experience the beautiful seasons of central New Hampshire in pictures. Follow NewHamptonSchool on Instagram.

NHS LIVESTREAM Do you relish the atmosphere inside the Smith Gymnasium when the Men’s Varsity A Basketball team is rallying against a rival and Husky Pride is bursting out of the gym? Watch hoop games and more events on NHS TV. Visit  www.newhampton.org/TV

2  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


NHS TODAY Do you want to stay connected with the New Hampton School student experience? The NHS Today page on the web site includes all the latest videos, slideshows, and links to blogs, social media, and the latest news. Click on the camera widget on the New Hampton School web page.

NHS MOBILE On the go, in the train, or on a plane, you can still follow scores, schedules, and news from NHS.

NHS ON LINKEDIN Looking for a way to expand your professional network and meet fellow alumni in your industry? The New Hampton School Alumni Group LinkedIn page will connect you to one of the most robust alumni networks in the independent school world. In a rapidly changing economy, you must take a proactive approach. Post jobs in your area and help guide other alumni to professional opportunities.

1st

NHS ON YOUTUBE What is it like at New Hampton? Hear student voices and learn what it’s like to take IB classes, play women’s lacrosse, and go to a school that was named an Apple Distinguished School in 2013. It’s all a video and click away on the NHS YouTube channel. youtube.com/

NewHamptonSchool1821

NHS iPAD PROGRAM

youtube.com/ NewHamptonSchool1821

How did New Hampton School become a leader in technology integration? It was not overnight, but a detailed, meticulous process of evaluation and a successful pilot program. Learn more.

youtube.com/ NewHamptonSchool1821

FIND nhs on

pinterest.com/nhshuskies

twitter.com/NHSHuskies twitter.com/NHSHuskySports twitter.com/AndrewMenke

facebook.com/NewHampton facebook.com/NewHamptonSchoolAlumni


Editor  WILL McCULLOCH Design and production  KIA MOSENTHAL Contributors  JASON ALEXANDER ’13, JENNIFER SHACKETT BERRY ’83, P’07, ’09, VICTORIA BLODGETT ’80, CINDY BUCK P’01, ’05, SANDY COLHOUN, BOB KENNEDY ’50, ANDREW MENKE P’12, ’16, RYAN McCANN, WILL McCULLOCH, JASON PILALAS ’58 Photographers  JAMIE ARSENAULT P’13, ’15, KAREN BOBOTAS, JESSE BURKE, JON CHASE  P’13, SANDY COLHOUN, CHARLES GEORGE P’17, RYAN McCANN, WILL McCULLOCH, ANDY MOORE ’65, SUZI MOORE, MIA PELOSI, CHIP RIEGEL, AMY WILSON P’16, FAH ZIMMERMAN Printer  FLAGSHIP © 2013 New Hampton School www.newhampton.org Hamptonia is published once a year by New Hampton School. The magazine reports news of the school, its students, teachers, and alumni. We welcome submissions for publication, news from and about alumni, and letters in response to articles. Inquiries, comments, and letters may be directed to: Hamptonia, New Hampton School, 70 Main Street, New Hampton, New Hampshire 03256. Or, call 603-677-3417 or e-mail hamptonia@newhampton.org. New Hampton School does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, creed, national or ethnic origin in administration of its admissions and educational policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school administered activities. Hamptonia is printed on sustainably produced, chain-of-custody stock certified to Forest Stewardship Council (fsc) standards. Hamptonia is printed using only wind-generated renewable power, and inks derived from vegetable sources.

4  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

welcome

T

he uphill drive from campus to Bud and Jinga Moore’s old farmhouse on Pinnacle Hill Road has always been a beautiful one, a soothing departure from the hectic schedule of school life. It includes a tree-canopied dirt road past archetypal New England landscapes that have withstood time. The ride home, though, has always felt better. I made trips to see Bud and Jinga for New Hampton history lessons, quotes for stories in this magazine, and an understanding of a man who transitioned from playing the trumpet for college tuition to flying planes in the South Pacific in the Navy. Though I visited the Moore homestead with the intent to learn more about the School, I departed less anxious about the challenges of parenting, optimistic about the future of my marriage, and a little more at ease about working with students. Is this a familiar refrain? This issue is for T. Holmes “Bud” Moore ’38. Hopefully, it embodies the spirit of someone who lived most of his life for New Hampton School and served his country. When he made critical decisions with the future of the School in mind, he imagined a student who would leave Meservey lawn with a diploma and a purpose. The nurses and doctors featured in the medical industry story (page 64) typify the ethic of service for

which Bud cared deeply. Mike Chambers ’05 (page 58) challenged himself with his attempt to summit Mount Everest, but his work for the non-profit Flying Kites puts him in a class of global citizens that Bud would admire. Recent Meservey Medal winner Jason Alexander ’13 chronicles the history and future of Meservey Hall (page 54), and we recognize a building, only months away from restoration, that is as iconic as the silver-haired headmaster who once played music inside its walls. This School, its students, its alumni— this community—were molded and nourished by T. Holmes Moore, and it continues to reflect his enigmatic touch. As we toast him with a tribute to “A Legendary Life” (page 42), we say thank you. Thank you for the ride up the hill. Thank you for the ride down. Thank you for everything, T. Holmes “Bud” Moore. You cared more than we ever could fathom.

WILL McCULLOCH Editor, Hamptonia Director of Communications

* wmcculloch@newhampton.org @willmcculloch11


contents

DEPARTMENTS 4

WELCOME

8

HEADS UP

11 HUSKY HEADLINES

12  14  20  22

Across Academic Row Campus Currents Sports Wrap-Up Alumni In Brief

32

FACULTY PROFILE

35

UPCOMING EVENTS

75

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

76

TRUSTEE PROFILES

77

CLASS NOTES

88

IN MEMORIAM

91

DO YOU KNOW YOUR SCHOOL?

92 2012-2013 STATE OF THE SCHOOL REPORT ON THE COVER: T. Holmes “Bud” Moore ’38 passed away on August 18, 2013. We dedicate this issue to his memory and legacy. (Photo by Sandy Colhoun) LEFT: Marcel Johnson ’15 and a handful of musicians recorded music in a recording studio for Project Week 2013. (See Page 16)


Hamptonia FEATURES

28

36

42

COMMENCEMENT 2013, The Class of 2013 left its mark with a combination of scholars, artists, athletes, and volunteers.

REUNION 2013, Beautiful weather, a campaign celebration, and plenty of Husky Pride greeted hundreds of alumni who returned for a festive celebration.

A LEGENDARY LIFE, T. Holmes “Bud” Moore ’38 passed away on August 18, 2013, but the former Headmaster left an unparalleled legacy.  BY WILL McCULLOCH

54

58

64

MESERVEY HALL: A HISTORY, As New Hampton’s most iconic building gets a makeover, a look at its past and future provide a telling tale.  BY JASON ALEXANDER ’13

A STEADY CLIMB, Mike Chambers ’05 did not reach the summit of Mount Everest, but his story brings new meaning to global citizen.  BY WILL McCULLOCH

HELPING HANDS, Healthcare is a polarizing issue, but quality care remains vital. Two doctors and two nurses share their medical journeys in their own words. BY WILL McCULLOCH AND RYANN McCANN

6  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


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heads p

Three years ago at Commencement,

I defined stewardship as “planting trees under whose shade you do not expect to sit.” I love this quote! And though I’m not entirely sure how I came upon it, it is widely attributed to Nelson Henderson, perhaps fittingly, an author about whom little is known. The concept of stewardship grew out of the environmental movement and such champions as Emerson and Thoreau, Berry and Muir, Abbey and Stegner, Dickinson and Kingsolver to name but a few. Initially linked to the caretaking of resources, stewardship expanded to incorporate the more universal and contemporary view of congruence between self and others. In effect, what will each of us do to leave our world a better place than when we found it? It is largely about others, and this is precisely why stewardship is at once such a dauntingly complex and yet exhilarating concept to engage in with adolescents. 8  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

On that late May day, Commencement 2011, the most profound steward I have ever known sat to my right—Mr. Thomas Holmes “T.H.” “Bud” Moore. Bud and his amazingly capable partner for nearly 70 years, Norma Jean “Jinga” Smith Moore, stewarded New Hampton School for more than a half-century. The 2013-14 school year is my first—our first—without him, and I must confess I feel slightly adrift. Three days after I arrived at New Hampton in 2005, Bud stopped by my new office in Berry Hall. He was pleased with my uninformed decision to set up shop in the same office that Fred Smith and Bud had occupied for so many years. He laughed when I explained that it was pure coincidence. The next afternoon, Jennifer and I—along with our thensixth-grade daughter—joined Bud and Jinga on their back porch and an amazingly impactful relationship was born.


“As with many before me, I was mesmerized with Bud but not the least bit intimidated. That sunny afternoon, Bud fortified in me, and for me, a central tenet of stewardship—that a meaningful life, a life of stewardship, should be spent in the journey of service to others.” While I thought I was going for a history lesson, what I found was a man intensely interested in me— my background, what I thought important, what I believed in, and what made me and my family happy. Far from an interrogation of the “new guy,” I was invited “in” to the confidence of a pastoral figure. As with many before me, I was mesmerized with Bud but not the least bit intimidated. That sunny afternoon, Bud fortified in me, and for me, a central tenet of stewardship—that a meaningful life, a life of stewardship, should be spent in the journey of service to others. And this was the journey Bud and his wife Jinga were on for decades together. He capably led NHS through the challenging economic times of the 1950s, the cultural upheaval of the 60s, the transition to coeducation in the 70s, and enrollment challenges of the 80s and early 90s. He built New Hampton into a school and in the process transformed thousands of lives. In my first few years at NHS, Bud and I traveled together often. At events early on in my tenure, he would introduce me by saying, “Folks, this is Andrew Menke, he’s the new Headmaster at New Hamp-

ton School, and I quite like him.” A punctuated pause was followed by, “And you should like him too!” And then he sat down, and with this simple endorsement, I had credibility! I initially thought that his authority and influence emanated from tenure, but I realized over time that it was a result of his ability to authentically convey his care and, perhaps more importantly, his belief in others. Bud was one of those gifted people, a human being in whose presence we feel better, stronger, more capable, and safer. But it was more about how he always made the conversation about you. In every interaction I had with him and in each one I observed, Bud was remarkably present. Time with others was a celebration of what the other had to say, what they believed, an exploration of hopes and dreams and not a chess match of cleverness or ingenuity. Bud was an amazingly smart man, resilient, hard working, creative, and remarkably innovative, open to new ideas and contemporary research on education. But through his humor and his collaborative, self-effacing style he always let others in, let them close, let them know they mattered. His vibrancy both inspired and intimidated me—not because of Bud, but because of my own insecurity. And, I feel lucky to have known Bud Moore well enough to share with him all of my failings (and there are many) including not being able to remember all members of the incoming class well enough to introduce them by name and hometown as he did for decades at the first school meeting of the year. Bud’s almost photographic recall was simply astounding! Bud was my monthly lunch companion at Bristol House of Pizza and when his hearing waned, we moved to Pat’s Seafood (smaller

dining room, easier to hear), also in Bristol. Although his wisdom is unsurpassed, as he counseled me through a number of challenging decisions, he never gave advice. He merely asked questions and affirmed, building in me the capacity to grow and learn each time. I referenced Bud in my address at Baccalaureate 2013, explaining his colloquialism “Top Drawah”— Bud’s standard response when I visited him in the hospital this past year. I tried to impress upon the graduating class that one’s mindset, despite circumstances, is a choice, and the consciousness of their choices could very well spell the difference between perceptions of success and failure beyond our campus walls. And now we are without him. It is September 14, and I look out my Berry Hall office window. I miss my guidepost, my mentor, my teacher—my friend. But as I see the Meservey maples blowing in the breeze, I am convinced that he is still with us and knows that his legacy here is secure. As a result of his six decades of remarkable service, Bud left a school with the muscle memory to continue to change lives, to build in young men and women the capacity to be more than they ever thought possible, and to recognize that relationships are the key to leaving things better than when you found them. Mr. Moore, thank you for being a tree planter. We will continue the cultivation and benefit from the shade you have so capably provided. 

Andrew Menke, Head of School

* amenke@newhampton.org @andrewmenke

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  9


friendship! challenge! adventure! fun!

2014

Summer Programs accelerated english learning program (aelp) five reasons to attend aelp: 5. Improve speaking and writing skills 4. Get an “insider’s guide” to American culture 3. Experience an unforgettable summer 2. Make lifelong friends 1. Find out at www.newhampton.org/esl

elite summer athletic camps Come to New Hampton School and get your game in tip-top shape! Experience high-level training or enjoy fun, summer play. NHS hosts day and overnight camps for athletes in soccer, lacrosse & basketball!

visit www.newhampton.org/summer to explore and register


huskyheadlines Across Academic Row  12 Campus Currents  14 Sports Wrap-Up  20 Alumni in Brief  22

project week: husky high altitude balloon project

During Project Week, a group of students designed, constructed, launched, and recovered a weather balloon carrying a scientific payload to 100,000 feet in altitude. It captured video of the whole journey (pictured here is a still), and recovered the balloon from a pine tree on an island in Squam Lake. Scan the QR code to watch! FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  11


husky headlines

across academic row Global Community: Student Hometowns  2013-14 Countries

States

Azerbaijan

Nigeria

Alaska

New Jersey

Belize

Norway

California

New York

Bermuda

Panama

Colorado

Oregon

Canada

Peru

Connecticut

Rhode Island

China

Philippines

Delaware

Texas

Czech Republic

Russia

Florida

Virginia

Ecuador

South Korea

Georgia

Vermont

Finland

Spain

Idaho

West Virginia

Germany

Sweden

Illinois

Hong Kong

Switzerland

Massachusetts

Iran

Thailand

Maine

Italy

Ukraine

Michigan

Japan

United Kingdom

Missouri

Kazakhstan

United States

North Carolina

Macau

Vietnam

New Hampshire

Mexico

2 &2

Two books & two documentaries that should be on everyone’s queue.

MATT FISK is a history buff and educational wonk. His twitter feed (@mtfisk78) is one-stop shop for the latest educational trends and ideas. Now the Director of Studies, he is spending even more time reading books on educational pedagogy and research. But he never gets too far from his roots as a history teacher; a good history book is always on his iPad or on his coffee table. Whether you are an education guru, a history enthusiast, or merely looking to learn a little bit more, Fisk has something for everyone. Here are two books and two documentaries to educate and entertain.

War Tapes and Restrepo

War Tapes follows three men from the New Hampshire Army National Guard. This documentary captures, from their perspective, the alternating terror and boredom that they experienced during their deployment. Restrepo gets its title from an army medic, Doc Restrepo, who was killed early in one group’s deployment to Afghanistan. This documentary captures the extraordinary bond that soldiers form while surrounded by armed militants on all sides of them. BOTTOM LINE: These two documentaries about the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are essential if we are going to understand the needs of our veterans. Although both of these documentaries were filmed and released several years ago now, the men and women who served in these wars need our understanding more than ever.

Red Summer: The Summer of 1919 and the

Brain Rules by John Medina

Awakening by Cameron McWhirter

In this book by molecular biologist John Medina, the way the brain works and the way that we learn is investigated. BOTTOM LINE: It doesn’t matter if you’re a teacher, a business leader, or a parent. There is something in this book for everyone to understand how we learn.

Author Cameron McWhirter uses a wide swath of primary sources to paint a picture of racism, oppression, and violence that gripped American cities in the summer of 1919. BOTTOM LINE: This is a powerful book and a chapter from American history that needs to be told. 12  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


ACROSS ACADEMIC ROW

nhs by the numbers

152

2.1

iPads deployed by the Tech Office in September 2013

Terabytes of data that passed through the School Internet connection in the first week of school

300 721

Dozens of eggs consumed in the dining hall in one week

College applications submitted by the Class of 2013 (101 students) last year

7,036 The number of living New Hampton School alumni

115

The number of colleges and universities that visited campus in 2013-14

40

Dozens of cookies made for dessert each dinner in the dining hall

boomerang: they came back

FREDDY PETKUS ’01 Mathematics Instructor, Head Women’s Basketball Coach Years at NHS: 7

JENNIFER SHACKETT BERRY ’83 Director of College Counseling Years at NHS: 27

SAM CIEPLICKI ’08 Academic Support Program Instructor, Basketball, Mtn. Biking Years at NHS: 1

ERIN O’TOOLE WALSH ’01 Spanish Instructor, World Language Dept. Chair Years at NHS: 7

MATT DODGE ’07 Math Instructor, Football, Skiing Years at NHS: 1

PETE HUTCHINS ’01 Assistant Director of Admission, Head Men’s Basketball Coach Years at NHS: 8

MEGAN FRAME ’04 Assistant Director of Admission Years at NHS: 1 JESS KANG MACLEOD ’02 Biology Instructor, Field Hockey, Ice Hockey Years at NHS: 7

RADAR ONGUETOU ’06 History Instructor, Diversity Coordinator, Head Men’s Varsity B Basketball Coach Year at NHS: 2

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  13


husky headlines

campus currents Underclass Awards ARTS DEPARTMENT Dedicated Artist: Alexandra Keith ’14 The Scholar in the Studio: Eliza Solman ’14 ENGLISH DEPARTMENT The Writing Prize: Timothy Sestak ’14 The Literature Prize: Cara Vogel ’14 HISTORY DEPARTMENT The Emerging Writer in History Award: MacKenzie Little ’14 The Emerging Contributor in History Award: Graeme Brown ’15 SCIENCE DEPARTMENT

APPLE DISTINGUISHED SCHOOL

A little company in Silicon Valley recently provided New Hampton School with a stamp of approval. A leader in technology integration in independent schools, NHS was named an Apple Distinguished School in February 2013 for the implementation of a 1:1 iPad Program in 2012-13 that was the culmination of a three-year process and planning. Director of Technology Integration Hans Mundahl has led the charge for a school that has big dreams about how technology will be utilized in education. “At the core of what we do is building a relationship between the teacher and student that will enhance learning. iPad integration is only successful when used as a tool for learning and teaching in better ways,” Mundahl says. “I’m proud to work with students who are excited to learn in innovative ways and teachers who are not afraid to take risks in and outside the classroom for the sake of their students. The 1:1 iPad program and its three-year installation process has provided the necessary time for our school to build the best and most sustainable program possible.” Visit www.newhampton.org/ipad where you can learn more about technology integration at New Hampton School.

The Scientific Inquiry Award: Lukas Odermatt ’14 Scientific Achievement Award: Mian Horvath ’14 MATH DEPARTMENT Mathematical Communication Award: Shi Chen ’16 Mu Alpha Theta Underclass Mathlete of the Year: Bo Yuan Zheng ’14 WORLD LANGUAGES Spanish Young Language Award: Taylor Lacaillade ’14 French Young Language Award: MacKenzie Little ’14 Mandarin Young Language Award: Starr Phillips ’15 ATHLETICS 2013 Skip Howard Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year Kevin Goshorn ’14 2013 Skip Howard Female Scholar-Athlete Gabby Vautour ’14

14  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


CAMPUS CURRENTS

“I’m proud to work with students who are excited to learn in innovative ways and teachers who are not afraid to take risks in and outside the classroom for the sake of their students.”

PERFORMING ARTS

On the Stage With a talented cast of students, Director of Performing Arts Joe Sampson and Technical Director Meredith Brown pieced together three great performances. All in the Timing was the fall play — a collection of hilarious one-act plays. Taming of the Shrew, directed by Brown, brought Shakespeare to the stage in the winter, and the spring production produced by Sampson was a musical variety show titled SWAG!

— HANS MUNDAHL, Director of Technology Integration, on the 1:1 iPad Program

PERFORMING ARTS

Resonating Voices Music Concerts under Music Director Kyle Masterson have become must-attend events for the entire community. NHS has been blessed with some versatile musicians. A group of these students spent Project Week recording songs in a local recording studio. Visit SoundCloud to check out the tunes at soundcloud.com/new-hampton-school. ANNUAL FUND

New Husky

There’s a new Husky mascot in town. Thanks to the Class Gift of the Class of 2013, Harry had a makeover this spring.

INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM

International Night

One of the most anticipated events of the year, International Night remains a strong tradition at New Hampton School, celebrating the over 30 different countries in the student body. Food, music, and cultural learning make it an enjoyable evening. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  15


CAMPUS CURRENTS

Black Gold: A New Frontier in Education Coffee will not merely be a morning beverage choice for New Hampton School community members this academic year. It will be the topic of analysis, reflection, research, and healthy debate. With the most recent Strategic Plan as a guiding force and a partnership with Green Mountain Coffee Roasters providing key curricular elements, New Hampton School launched a new semester course titled “Black Gold” in September. Taught by science and history teachers, the new offering, open to juniors and seniors, embodies all of the innovative educational practices that have made New Hampton School a leader in independent school education. “One of the goals of our current Strategic Plan is to create innovative globally orientated programs to help students make personal connections and nurture lifelong learning,” said Head of School Andrew Menke. “What better way to get our students to think more globally than to use a universal commodity like coffee as a way to look at essential questions.”

Guest Speakers Bringing the world to New Hampton students and faculty for added perspective and professional development continues to be of paramount importance. Community speakers included 2012 Convocation speaker Kent Bicknell ’65, a New Hampton graduate and Head of School at the nearby Sant Bani School; Chris Herren (pictured), a former professional basketball player who spoke about his battle with and recovery from drug addiction; and Blaine Harden, world-renown journalist and author of Escape from Camp 14, the all-school read.

Faculty benefited from a start-the-year presentation from the world-renown Harvard University educational scholar Tony Wagner and an end-of-the-year address and workshop on the future of schools with Pat Bassett, former president of the National Association of Independent Schools.

“It was a tremendous success.” EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING

— JUSTIN JOSLIN, Director of Experiential Learning, on Project Week.

Project Week (www.newhampton.org/projectweek) Do you remember Project Week? After a more than two-decade absence, New Hampton School re-ignited a tradition and the programmatic success was nothing short of spectacular. Students left the traditional classroom for the last week of the Winter Term and embraced 24 different projects. It all culminated with the Project Week Symposium. Projects challenged students to tackle an essential question, engage with their peers/outside speakers/authorities, and reflect on the experience. The result was quality content on the Project Week Blog, activity throughout the week on Twitter, and chatter around campus. “I couldn’t be happier with the effort and energy that students and faculty brought to this week,” Director of Experiential Learning Justin Joslin said. “It was a tremendous success.” The following projects were completed in March: Building a simple 3D printer; Creating Music in a Professional Recording Studio; Production of two short films; Habitat for Humanity: Camp Mowglis; HHAB: Husky High Altitude Balloon; Kids Helping Kids; Make It Grand! Speak Your Mind; The Business of Upcycling; The Interdisciplinary Nature of Cooking; Exploring Lobster; Become a Lifeguard; Winter Expedition; Is Science Good or Bad?; Gettysburg; Sports Management; A Practical Retreat; My Big Backyard: Exploring New Hampshire’s Outdoors; Beyond Disability with Northeast Passage; Write On!; Exploring Business in Los Angeles; Makin’ It In New York; The Grand Circle Classroom Tour; and China Exchange.

16  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


CAMPUS CURRENTS

MacKenzie Little’14 , Matt Fisk (center), and Graeme Brown’15 BACCALAUREATE AWARDS

Fisk Wins Award and Earns a New Role WINTER CARNIVAL Toboggan rides, school spirit, and an indoor/outdoor festival of games make Winter Carnival a much anticipated event.

Matt Fisk spent the last three years leading the History Department as chair and teaching International Baccalaureate history classes. He was recognized at Baccalaureate with the Ralph S. O’Connor Prize for Excellence in Teaching. According to one of his students, “He has set a precedent as a teacher and has become a role model for my academic, athletic, and social aspirations.” A Civil War history buff who also coaches cross country and is a house parent in Phillips House, Fisk took on the role of Director of Studies in July and will be instrumental in the reshaping of the School’s academic vision.

Worthy of Words Fifth-year English teacher Eric McCollom received the O’Hara Family Excellence in Teaching Prize for English at Baccalaureate. McCollom, a graduate of Middlebury College who also holds a Masters from the Breadloaf School of English, was lauded for his curiosity. “His desire to learn and draw conclusions

COLLEGE COUNSELING

is a personal battle. He often asks tough questions, to his students and his

New College Counselor

peers. He wrestles with ambiguity, seeking policy clarifications, discussion

Jennifer Shackett Berry ’83 spent the last 26 years preparing students for the college classroom as an English teacher and as the most recent Director of Studies. In June she was named the new Director of College Counseling. A graduate of New Hampton and Colby College, Jen has guided two children Kelsey ’07—currently a history teacher at Holderness School—and Emma ’10 to St. Lawrence University. Her son Hayden ’14 begins the process in earnest this year. For more info on the NHS College Process and matriculation data, visit www.newhampton.org/college.

the next lesson, the next book, or the next year.” McCollom, who has coached

of protocol. He is always trying to decide how he should proceed, whether in baseball and skiing, recently became the Chair of the English Department.

ARTS DEPARTMENT

IB Art

International Baccalaureate art classes have provided an additional level of challenge in both technique and concept for NHS’s most ambitious artists. Artists (“Hand of Man” by Katie Campbell-Tompkins ’13, left) created their own conceptual installations that resonated as evocative pieces of visual art. Learn more at www.newhampton.org/arts. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  17


CAMPUS CURRENTS

The upgraded cobblestone entrance and stone wall on Academy Drive designed by Eric Buck ’01. FACILITIES

Campus Transformations Summers can be sleepy times on independent school campuses, but NHS Director of Facilities Kirk Beswick and his team steered more than 80 projects large and small during a summer that was nothing short of dizzying. Though the ongoing Meservey Hall restoration and completion of the Ralph S. O’Connor ’44 House provided the most construction noise, numerous other campus improvements created construction zones in all corners of the physical plant. Constant improvement is a theme on campus.

18  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Campus Improvements and construction included: •

Draper Hall renovation

Exterior renovation of Smith House/Alumni Hall

Academy Drive (Admission Office entrance) upgrade with cobblestone entrance and stone wall

Berry Hall first-floor remodel

Expansion of the footpath from Caswell Lane to Berry Hall

Moore House garage renovation

Facilities Office remodel

Back-of-campus entrance (Dr. Child’s Road) improvements, including construction of a retaining wall and a vinyl fence

Renovation of Clarke House: conversion to faculty housing

Fire alarm system improvements: Berry Hall, Phillips House, Caswell House, Lindsay House, and Galletly House

Tennis courts resurface work


campus currents facilities

Campus Construction: What’s Next? Jacobson Ice Arena $6,500,000

casey kesselring head men’s varsity hockey coach

“A new rink would be a game-changer. It would attract top student-athletes and help the program regain its place as a prep power. An indoor facility would allow the players on campus to skate and work on skill development in the offseason and put us on an even playing field with other programs.”

With a lead gift of $2,000,000 from GO BEYOND campaign chairman Dean Jacobson ’68, the design and development of a new ice hockey arena is underway. Likewise, New Hampton School hockey is on the move. Women’s Ice Hockey coach Craig Churchill has developed one of the most dynamic teams in New England in the last three years. Meanwhile, the men’s team is following suit. New Men’s Hockey coach Casey Kesselring is poised to bring the success he has enjoyed as a player, coach, and skill development guru to New Hampton. NHS has a long tradition of ice

hockey excellence. To build on the success of this program, the school will build a state-of-the-art facility. The new ice hockey arena will provide a location for team-building and instruction that will allow New Hampton School athletes to grow as players and teammates. A modern rink will allow greater flexibility for ice-making, and will also provide the necessary space for our student-athletes. Contact Director of Advancement Sandy Colhoun with questions at 603-677-3413 or scolhoun@newhampton.org for more information.

craig churchill head women’s varsity hockey coach

“The opportunity to have a designated locker room with a spacious and comfortable area will be transformational. It will allow us to continue to build on the strong culture of ‘team-first’ play that we treasure. The new arena will instill a sense of pride in Husky Nation that will inevitiably show up on the ice in each and every practice and game.” FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  19


husky headlines

sports wrap-up

named

signed Letters of Intent to play Division I & II athletics —

NOAH VONLEH ’13, who will star for Indiana, played in the prestigious McDonald’s All-American Game and also competed in the Jordan Brand Classic. Vonleh, a 6’9” forward from Haverhill, Massachusetts, was the 13thranked recruit in the country JESSE BURKE

according to ESPN.

walk-ons

• Shayla Hubbard Assumption, basketball • Noah Vonleh Indiana, basketball • Travis Jorgenson Georgia Tech, basketball • Lincoln Davis Fairfield, basketball • Jeff Peras Sacred Heart, football • Alex Stanko Vermont, lacrosse

Athletes playing D-I athletics as preferred walk-ons — Cole McConnell (Michigan) basketball; Dustin Triano (Gonzaga) basketball

more college-bound student-athletes • Anthony Maiuri St. Michael’s, ice hockey • Abby Rutt Wesleyan, ice hockey • Lizzy Aveson Plattsburgh State, ice hockey • Ryder Arsenault Colby,

baseball and football • Caleb Kane St. Lawrence, lacrosse • Pat Bolton

New Hampshire Tech, soccer

• Mark Mannara Bard, soccer • Trevor Chapin Keene State, baseball

20  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

• Todd Collier Hobart, football • Eddie Conroy St. Anselm, lacrosse • Devin Corchoran Elizabethtown, lacrosse • Garrett Dorfman Transylvania, basketball • Cole Franklin Curry, lacrosse • Eric Hanover Cazenovia, lacrosse • Caroline Kelly

University of New England,

ice hockey • Courtney Moulton Salve Regina, field hockey

8

DID YOU KNOW? The number of current New Hampton School athletes that have verbally committed to Division I schools as of October 2013:

1. Notre Dame, 2. Virginia (Men’s Lacrosse); 3. Boston College, 4. University of North Carolina (Women’s Lacrosse); 5. Pennsylvania, 6. Princeton 7. Colorado, 8.Syracuse (Men’s Basketball)


SPORTS WRAP-UP

recognized

ABBY RUTT, CLASS OF 2013

College: Wesleyan University Hometown: Scarborough, Maine

Justin Simon, third-year men’s lacrosse coach, as the USA Lacrosse Northern New England Coach of the Year after leading the Huskies to a 10-4 record and the program’s first win over Holderness in the last two decades. … New Hampshire Hockey Legends named a number of Husky players to their All-State team. Anthony Maiuri was recognized on the men’s side while Allie Munroe ’15, Abby Rutt ’13, Alisha Gilbert ’14, Mallory Rushton ’15, and Dempsey Arsenault ’15 were named on the women’s side.

Three-sport Legacy Since New Hampton School embraced co-education in 1970, numerous superb female athletes have worn the Husky green, secured New England championships, and prepared for stellar college careers. When the conversation about the greatest female athletes in the history of the School surfaces, though, recent graduate Abby Rutt ’13 will be on the shortest of lists. A field hockey, ice hockey, and softball player from Scarborough, Maine, Rutt will not only be remembered for her toughness, skill-level, and passion for competition, but also for her leadership during a renaissance for women’s athletics at the School. Rutt arrived on campus in the Fall of 2011, and was nothing short of spectacular as she juggled three sports and the academic commitments of an International Baccalaureate Full Diploma Candidate. A captain in all three sports, Rutt was the recipient of the Joe Plaia Athlete of the Year Award at graduation. As a defenseman in ice hockey, she notched 18 goals and 25 assists for 43 points in 62 games, contributing close to 40 percent of the team’s offense. In softball, she led the Huskies to a 11-1 record and a Lakes Region title. She hit an amazing .844 on the season with 30 runs scored, 44 RBIs, 13 doubles, and a school-record 10 home runs while not striking out once all year. “She was a major factor in our team’s transition from Division II to Division I in the NEPSAC,” says New Hampton Women’s Ice Hockey Coach Craig Churchill, who recruited Rutt in what came down to a decision between New Hampton and Phillips Exeter. “She allowed us to be competitive right from the beginning. She is a special talent who showed a lot of development during her time here. She had a lot of interest from Division I and III schools, but in the end education was paramount for Abby and that is why she made the decision to attend Wesleyan.”

WON

Four spring athletic teams secured Lakes Region League titles. The baseball team knocked off Holderness to capture the first-ever league playoff championship. The softball team dominated its competition en route to a Lakes Region title. The women’s lacrosse team shared the league title with Holderness, and the women’s tennis team enjoyed one of its most successful seasons in recent memory.

selected

Sidney Swormstedt ’15 (Laconia, New Hampshire) was named a US Lacrosse All-American this summer after a standout sophomore season that included 64 goals and 24 assists for the Huskies, who finished the season 10-6 and with a share of the Lakes Region championship. Swormstedt already verbally committed to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She was one of four New Hampshire players selected to play in the 2013 Champion All-American Showcase. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  21


husky headlines

alumni in brief

GARY MARGOLIS ’63

Award-winning poet Gary Margolis ’63 recently published Raking the Winter Leaves: New and Selected Poems, 240 pages from Bauhan Publishing which includes a selection of poems from his new collection, The Other Flag. Read his tribute poem to the late T. Holmes Moore ’38 on page 49. Executive Director Emeritus of College Mental Health Services at Middlebury College where he was also a part time Associate Professor of English and American Literatures, Margolis is a recipient of Vermont Arts Council and Millay Colony Awards, and a Robert Frost Fellow at the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. His poems and essays have appeared in Poetry, American Scholar, Poetry Northwest, and the Journal of the American College Health Association. He

has taught at Bread Loaf, University of Tennessee and University of Vermont Writers’ Conferences. Dr. Margolis was awarded the Sam Dietzel Award for mental health practice in Vermont by the clinical psychology department of Saint Michaels College and the Covey Community Award by the Counseling Service of Addison County. Says English poet Josephine Dickenson: “Reading a Gary Margolis poem is like being taken on a walk in a landscape, sometimes rural, sometimes urban, sometimes public, sometimes intimate, and led on a gently winding path until suddenly, one cannot quite see how it happened, one is looking out upon a huge vista from a great height, and hears the ringing of bells, joyous, majestic, ceremonial.”

JACQUELINE VIENNEAU ’09 OLIVIER HANLAN ’12

Jacqueline Vienneau finished a historic career at Suffolk University, leading her team to a 23-7 record in her senior season. The Salem, New Hampshire native wrapped up her four-year career with 1,273 points scored, while holding the program record with 455 assists. She became the first player in Suffolk women’s basketball history to reach the career milestones of 1,000 points, 500 rebounds, and 300 assists.

Olivier Hanlan ’12 earned ACC Rookie of the Year honors after a standout freshman year at Boston College. He received 10 of 11 possible votes among the conference’s head coaches. A two-year student at New Hampton hailing from Quebec, Canada, Hanlan also earned Freshman of the Year honors from the Atlantic Coast Sports Media Association (ACSMA), and was the only unanimous choice for the ACC All-Freshman Teams voted on by both ACSMA and the coaches. Hanlan averaged 14.6 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 2.3 assists during his first year at the Heights, leading all ACC freshmen with 26 double-digit scoring games. Hanlan received the award before the ACC Tournament in which he dropped 41 points in BC’s win over Georgia Tech.

22  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

COLLIN BRAY ’02

Collin Bray ’02 was a critical member of New Hampton School’s 2002 New England Championship basketball team. Now he is a mover in the frenetic Boston Real Estate scene. Bray, who was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, was selected as a finalist for a national honor, the annual “30 under 30” awarded by Realtor Magazine and the National Association of Realtors. This award highlights the top real estate professionals in the country under the age of 30. Bray, who recently completed a $3.5 million-dollar sale at the Ritz, is active in the Boston community through a number of organizations including Showdown Youth Development Group, The Doug Flutie Foundation and the Brookline Community Foundation.


ALUMNI IN BRIEF Describe the thrill of being a part of the Super Bowl title? The Super Bowl run and time in NOLA was such an amazing experience—an absolute thrill, something you work for your whole career.

MEGAN COLLINS ’98 College: UNC Chapel Hill Title: Event and Game Presentation Manager for Baltimore Ravens Years with Organization: 11

How did your job change with the victory over the 49ers? We hosted the NFL Kickoff week (five thousand people, a sponsor village, and huge concert) the week before our first game. And I got to help with aspects of those events. It also pushed some of the normal offseason around. Everyone was behind as we went so far into playoffs. We would all do it again but that was not something we could plan for. We have a wonderful fan base so everyone was really excited! What’s the best part of your job? It is never the same day twice, and I work with great people.

 hall of fame

What people do not know about the NFL that they should know? We work in the offseason. It is almost more busy. It is

year-round. I have a least one large event every month in the offseason. Advice for NHS grads who want to get into pro/college sports? Network and internships. I did not know about a lot of the of the opportunities in sports front offices until I was in college, but while at NHS I would talk with (Adam) Tyson about the training room and Cindy Buck about alumni relations and really started to learn about some sports aspects off the field. Sports have always been part of my life, and I knew they would be in college. I worked in athletic communications and was a student manager for the UNC women’s lacrosse team. The team atmosphere is important to me. A lot of what happens on the field can be translated into an office setting. Ask people about how they got started in their field. There are so many opportunities out there, but they are competitive and non-traditional hours. NHS offers so much for its students and they graduate with a lot of skills that will allow them to succeed not just in college but in life post-college. The broad spectrum and multicultural aspects of NHS are intangibles for post-graduation.

NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL 2012 ATHLETIC HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES Three individuals and one transcendent team were inducted into the New Hampton School Athletic Hall of Fame on November 10, 2012. Inductees included former faculty member and coach Joe Gauld, male athlete Ron Norwood ’72, female athlete Euginnia Manseau ’01, and the 1995-96 Women’s Ice Hockey Team.

Visit www.newhampton.org/halloffame to read more about the inductees.

1995-96 WOMEN’S HOCKEY TEAM

RON NORWOOD ’72

EUGINNIA MANSEAU ’01

JOE GAULD

Members of the 1995-96 team from left to right: Assistant Coach Bob Ewell, Jamie Lalos ‘97, Megan Collins ‘98, Mandy Cronin ‘98 and Mary Marren ‘99 A dynamic mix of talented athletes and enthusiastic newcomers, coached by Christy Everett and Robert “Bob” Ewell, the team won its second straight New England Championship. This group of young women set a standard for athletic and leadership success for female athletes that endures today.

A former Providence and DePaul standout, Norwood (pictured on the left with Barry Smiley ’72) is regarded as one of the most talented players to wear Husky green in a tradition-rich basketball program. He led his team to the Class B Championship in 1971 as a junior, and took a less talented squad to the quarterfinals during his senior year, averaging 38.7 points per game.

Also a soccer and softball player, Manseau (pictured with current faculty Darren Redman) was one of the most accomplished female alpine skiers in school history. She played soccer and skied at Colby-Sawyer College, where she was awarded the Athlete of the Year, MVP three times for the ski team and was a five-time All American.

A master tactician, motivator, and visionary, Gauld (pictured with his family) spent more than a decade at NHS molding young men in various capacities as a football, basketball, and baseball coach, between 1951 and 1962. During a winning streak from 1958 to 1960, his football teams lost one game.

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  23


alumni in brief

A Night in Denver

From L to R: Scott Forbes ’80, John Correa ’80 (his wife Daphne in front of him), Michael Sherwood ’72, Sadie Mohr ’08, Stacey Galletly ’00, Jessica Epstein ’09, two guests, and Kate Epstein.

Director of Advancement Sandy Colhoun and Leadership Giving Officer Tracy White P’13 traveled to Denver for an alumni reception at the Wynkoop Brewery on October 3.

What’s the best part of your job? Best part of the job by far is getting to meet all the different people, whether it is viewers, coaches, or athletes.

derek forrest ‘98 Your Position: Sports Reporter/Weekend Sports Anchor, WLKY Residence: Louisville, Kentucky Hometown: Brooklyn, New York Follow on Twitter: @WLKYDerek

How long have you been at WLKY? I have been here five months. Before this I was with WYMT in Hazard, Kentucky for six- and-a-half years as a Sports Director. What is your job in a nutshell? Reporting local sports news. Includes writing, editing, and shooting all of our content as well from around the Louisville area. We cover the University of Kentucky, Indiana (including former NHS basketball player Noah Vonleh ’13), and several smaller local colleges. 24  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

What is your favorite story you have ever covered? I don’t know if I have a favorite story. My goal with stories is to make sure the person, team, or coach I do a story on is happy with the outcome. In terms of the best trip I have ever taken, currently it is covering the NAIA National Basketball Tournament in Kansas City. I have been there two years in a row now, and I love the city. What should people know about the TV business? It’s not as easy as I think most people would think it is. You work long hours, but if it’s what you love, then it’s nothing! I love my job. I couldn’t see myself doing anything else. You need patience with the job as well. Patience may be the most important quality you can have. Career Goals? My goal would be to either work at ESPN (which is

where I began my TV career) or the MLB Network. Advice for NHS grads trying to make career decisions? Regardless of what you want to do, the best thing you can do for yourself is job shadow. Never just decide to do something. Check it out, do your research. So many times I see people walk through the door who have no clue what we do for a living and think it is something it isn’t. The best way to figure it out is to job shadow and then find a mentor in the field of your choosing. How did NHS shape you? NHS made me the person I am today. It is a big step being away from home, family, and friends. But you soon realize that NHS becomes your home, where you find your family and your friends. Without NHS, I don’t know if I would be where I am today. I have such fond memories of the place, and it has always been a place, which when I go back to visit, always puts things back in perspective and gives be another view on how lucky I am to be able to be where I am.

mary penniman ‘11 Mary Penniman ’11, a junior at Bryant College and the president of the student body during her time at NHS, recently earned a slot at the 25th Annual International SuperComputing13 (SC13) Conference this November. Majoring in environmental studies and an Army ROTC cadet, Mary is focusing her studies on modeling ecosystem communities and relationships. Through a highly competitive selection process, Penniman was one of 85 students chosen from a pool of 335 national and international applicants. “I have made it my goal to learn as much as possible about all angles of science,” Penniman said. “Hands-on experience is very important to me and I try to seize every opportunity to learn something new. I am very excited about being selected to attend SC13.”


ALUMNI IN BRIEF What is your business? We’re landscape architects—so we do site planning and landscape design. We’re currently doing projects from as far north as Franconia all the way south to Norwell, Massachusetts. How did you get started in the industry? I started working for the grounds department at NHS when I was 12 years old and worked on campus all through high school. … I started Pollock Land Planning seven years ago with Bob Pollock P’94 ’97, who is a parent of NHS alumni and former trustee. In July 2012, I bought him out and changed the name to Terrain Planning and Design.

1.

ERIC BUCK ‘01

2.

3.

4.

At NHS: Meservey Medal Winner Education: University of Connecticut Position: Principal and Owner, Terrain Planning and Design, Bedford, New Hampshire Residence: Bedford Family: Brooke (wife), Keegan (son) More Info: www.terrainplanning.com

Eric Buck ’01 has returned to campus with more frequency recently in a professional role. Buck’s landscape architecture firm handled three projects on campus this summer, including the landscape design on the new O’Connor House and the re-design of Academy Drive Entrance at the front of the campus. This spring his design for the landscape surrounding the restored Meservey Hall will be unveiled. A new father this summer, Buck is as busy as ever, with his company growing by 40 percent in each of the last seven years. He even gets to see his buddy and classmate Ben Huntington ’01, whose Pleasant View Gardens provides many of the plants and flowers for projects.

Top of the Hub Alumni, faculty, staff, past parents, and current parents gathered on October 1st at the Top of the Hub in Boston for a festive reception. It was a great time to connect with friends and learn more about what’s happening at the School. Look for more exciting events on the Events Page. 5.

What part of the business do you like best? Seeing the completion of the process, beginning with a simple sketch and then seeing it built. What’s the biggest challenge in running a small business? Wearing all the different hats when ideally I could just design. I have to manage, do taxes, and talk to lawyers. What was it like working at NHS recently and what was your vision for project? I wanted the landscape around campus to match what the buildings are starting to do. In terms of the landscape, the School has never had anything identifiable. It’s been different. It’s been neat to see the changes. It’s a different community than when I was here, and it’s changing for the better. What skill set do you need in your profession? It’s art and science together. There are physical things like drainage and storm water management—everything Mother Nature throws at us. Then there are the plants, where they live and how they live. The artistic side is materials and how they compliment each other and function and how the site works.

1. L to R: Liz Aquilino, Ben Brewster ‘08, Nicoya Borella ‘08, Rosemary Brewster P’08, ‘14, Liam McMahon ’12, Jennifer McMahon P’12, ‘13, ‘16, Sam Cieplicki ‘08 2. L to R: Paul Altmeyer ‘80, Brian Driscoll ‘80, Brian Waldron ‘80, Bob Kelley ‘80 3. L to R: Jennifer Shackett Berry ‘83, Steve Thomas ‘82, David Sampson ‘82, Lisa Kaplan Davy ‘83 4. L to R: Sara White Hart, Chris Hart ‘04, Peg Frame P’04, ‘10, Kayla DiBari ‘08, Lara Arsenault P’13, ‘15, Jamie Arsenault P’13, ‘15 5. L to R: Roddy Ames ’02, Pete Hutchins ’01, Rob Stockwell ’02, and Andrew Menke P’12, ’16 FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  25


ALUMNI IN BRIEF schools, offer appointments for college and financial aid counseling in our Concord, NH office, and have numerous on-line resources available for families. Every day is different. There are new challenges, opportunities for growth and learning. Plus, I’m part of a great team that has a lot of fun making a positive difference in the lives of those we help.

JAY HAUSER ‘95 Your Position: Senior College Counselor, The Center for College Planning (CCP) Residence: Concord, New Hampshire Hometown: Concord, New Hampshire

The New Hampshire Union Leader recognized a group of 40 people under the age of 40 who are making a difference. The Class of 2013 included 25 men and 15 women, cited for their contributions to communities throughout the state. Jay Hauser was a deserving recipient.

What is your job in a nutshell? Whether giving presentations at schools, community organizations or local businesses or working one-on-one to help a student make a plan for college. Every day I have the privilege of working with college-bound students and their families. My colleagues and I work with 30,000 people a year, complete over 1,500 presentations in New Hampshire high

What’s the best part of your job? Building lasting relationships with the families that I work with. There is nothing better than seeing a student I have worked with follow their passion and become successful. What should people know about higher ed? That it’s possible and that it doesn’t matter where you go. It’s about what you do when you get there. Make the best with whatever sweatshirt you put on! Also, don’t let anything stand in your way. As a student with a learning difference, New Hampton gave me the educational confidence, strong work ethic, and push I needed to pursue higher education. If I can do it, anyone can!

Advice for NHS grads trying to make career decisions? Make sure to have a dream, make a plan, and do the work with anything in life… Use your NHS connections by doing job shadows, informational interviews, and be proactive while going after your dreams. I think it’s also important to have mentors as well. ...You’ll work thousands of hours each year and tens of thousands over your professional life. Make a difference. Enjoy what you do! How did NHS shape you? It gave me a chance to be an individual within a strong community. I owe a lot of my success to my mentors and the people of the New Hampton School, people like Craig Kozens (baseball coach, dorm parent, teacher), Jeff Beedy (past Headmaster), Mark Tilton, Harry Golden, Jennifer Berry, Coach Arsenault, and all of my teammates, friends, and teachers at New Hampton School for such a wonderful life experience. People always ask me in my career what my favorite educational experience was. It’s an easy answer, “New Hampton.”

alumni hockey games Men’s and women’s hockey alumni returned to campus and joined current players and faculty on February 12, for two great games. Don’t miss this year’s games on February 16, 2014! Register online! L to R: Head of School Andrew Menke P’12, ‘16, Casey Goll ‘11, Dane Caracino’11, T.J. Bond ‘11, Mike Rotondi ‘09, Steve Berry ’12, John Humphrey ‘11

MEN’S ALUMNI HOCKEY GAME: Front L to R: Guilliaume Belanger ’13, Coach David LoPresti; Middle Row L to R: Ryan McHugh (Faculty) , Steve Thomas ’82, Geoff Denton ’72, John Humphrey ’11, Dane Caracino ’11, Steve Berry ’11, Joe McCabe’09; Back Row L to R: Ray Desmarais ‘80, Steve McClelland ‘80, Scott Tkachuk ‘96. Billy Aufiero ‘96, Casey Goll ’11, Mike Rotondi ’09, TJ Bond ’11, Kevin Mahoney (Faculty), Kyle Stewardson ’08, Kyle Tufts (Faculty), Mike Levine ‘00

26  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


ALUMNI IN BRIEF

NICK CHECOVICH ‘09 Stage Name: Nick Checo Graduation Year: 2009 EP: The New Age One the Web: www.facebook.com/NickChecoMusic www.twitter.com/nickcheco www.soundcloud.com/nickcheco

Nick Checovich ’09 graduated from Fordham University in the spring of 2013, and quickly launched a professional music career. Checovich recently released an EP (available on iTunes) and has been playing live shows in recent months.

When did you get really serious about music? I really started taking music a little more serious just this past summer. I recorded this five-track mixtape during my spring break with a friend from home who produces. It was a style I had never really created before, and I kind of just threw it on the Internet and to friends at college. I was fortunate enough for some of the songs to get picked up by a few prominent music blogs, which is what really generated outside interest of my music. I wasn’t really expecting it, but one thing led to another and the next thing I know I am an opening act at a Live Nation venue in front of a 400-person crowd, something I had never done before. How would you describe your style of music? I primarily grew up playing acoustic stuff, but I love hip-hop and reggae. So on the mixtape we fused all these different sounds together that ended up sounding pretty cool. Ultimately, I still haven’t really defined my sound yet; there is a lot more experimenting to do but for now I would call it a mix between hip-hop/reggae/indie. It’s funny because I am used to always playing guitar on stage, but for this music I have to act more as an MC, sort of like a rapper, because of the nature of the music, which is completely out of my element, but I am getting more comfortable with it and it is actually a lot of fun.

WOMEN’S ALUMNI HOCKEY GAME: Front row L to R: Ryder Arsenault ‘13, Heather King ’16; Middle Row: Samantha Pinsonneault ‘06, Patty Germani ‘92, Hilary Cashin ‘15, Tori Fitzgerald ‘14, Allie Munroe ‘15, Mallory Rushton ‘15, Courtney Moulton ‘13, Caroline Kelley’13, Mary Marren ‘99, Jamie Lalos ‘97 Back Row L to R: Coach Craig Churchill, Renee Tocci Cerqua ‘92, Tracey Turgeon Jenkins ‘92, Gabby Vautour ‘14, Stephanie Hampton ’15, Samantha Hersey ‘08, Whitney Brown ‘08, Laura Henderson, Amber Rich ‘07, Jessica Kang MacLeod ‘02, Michelle Cote (Faculty), Lara Arsenault P’13, ‘15 (Faculty) Meg Pechinek (Faculty), Lelie Hoyt, Pat Therrien, Alisha Gilbert ‘14, Liz Aveson ‘13

What has been your favorite live show? I think this most recent show I played in California at Santa Clara University, just because I’ve only been doing this music thing for a few months and this show was the most official I guess you would say. They flew me out, accommodated me very well, and it was about a thousand-person crowd of college kids who were very energetic and into it. It kind of opened my eyes to this really cool side of music that makes it a lot more fun. Do you still play music with NHS folks? I do with one of my really good friends Zak Baskin ’09, who lived in the same dorm as me in my time at New Hampton. He is actually a huge reason why I am playing music at this small level right now. He and I spent a lot of time playing together while in the dorm, and we would always hang out in the music room in the springtime. He went to Berklee College of Music, so I have learned a lot from him. He was part of my first ever actual band, and we played a lot of reggae/ rock stuff. He is in another band though, and they are doing really well in the Boston area so it was tough to coordinate between me, him and our drummer to put shows together and to practice. But I see him a lot and we will always just talk music for an hour or play some music together. I’ve been lucky to have someone so musically inclined to help guide me, because I wouldn’t have really known how to approach a music career to start out. One of your lyrics is familiar: “Don’t give up what you want most, for what you want right now.” That is a Mr. Tilton quote. That was one of those quotes that I heard while at New Hampton, and it always just kind of resonated with me. So many times in the past I have come across people who are successful in their field of work, and their advice always relates to that quote. It’s a simple quote, but also very true. It was kind of in my head when I had the opportunity to record this mixtape. It was my senior year this past year and I had never gone on spring break, and I also had a week to record music when my buddy was free to do it. So, in my mind I was like, “Yeah spring break would be cool, but making music is cooler to me,” not really knowing that it would lead to me playing some cool shows over the summer. So looking back on it, if I had gone on spring break like everyone else, I probably wouldn’t be playing any shows right now. Granted, I had a run of some good luck with the shows I have been booking, but it’s still cool to look at how it played out and kind of relate it to that quote. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  27


ONE-HUNDRED NINETY-SECOND COMMENCEMENT THE 99 GRADUATES FROM 11 DIFFERENT COUNTRIES AND 15 DIFFERENT STATES FINISHED THEIR NEW HAMPTON CAREERS WITH REFLECTION, CELEBRATION, AND SOME INSPIRATIONAL REMARKS.

FOR THE SECOND STRAIGHT YEAR, commencement exercises were held inside because of poor weather, but it could not deter the celebration of New Hampton’s 192nd graduating class. Commencement speaker Alan Khazei brought a special connection to his Commencement Address. The Co-founder of City Year and the Founder of Be the Change, Khazei spoke to a graduating class that included his niece Hayden Huff, a native of Winchester, Massachusetts, who will attend the University of Missouri. Ben Cecil Speaker Briana Cardwell ’13 of Everett, Massachusetts, reminded her classmates how the last four years profoundly affected her. She addressed the change she underwent as a student of color arriving on a bucolic campus in Central New Hampshire, and the people who helped her along the way.

“We have teachers here who hold you and hug you like parents when you cry,” Cardwell said. Valedictorian Jason Alexander offered an intellectually provoking speech, urging his classmates to “customize and continue to conquer the challenge.” Alexander—a four-year student from Rumney, New Hampshire who will attend Colgate—was also awarded The Meservey Medal, the School’s most prestigious award, which recognizes outstanding contributions to the academic, co-curricular, and community life of the School. Alexander was one of nine students in the class who comprise the School’s second class of International Baccalaureate Diploma Program candidates. 


valedictorian meservey medal

salutatorian citizenship medal

jason alexander

Ryder arsenault

Hometown: Rumney, New Hampshire Headed to: Colgate University

faculty citation

faculty citation

rachel mcmenaman

briana cardwell

Hometown: Belmont, New Hampshire Headed to: Hobart & William Smith Colleges

Hometown: Everett, Massachusetts Headed to: Bowdoin College

intellectual curiosity award

academic and personal growth medal

amanda lemonnier

marci weinstein

Hometown: Rabot, France Headed to: Syracuse University

Awards presented by department at Baccalaureate on May 23:

Yuchi Wang

golden-tilton postgraduate athlete Todd Collier Salem, Massachusetts Hobart and William Smith Colleges

Tharathep Sangsawang

Joe Plaia Outstanding feMale Athlete Abby Rutt

Joe Plaia Outstanding Male Athlete

science Department

Ryder Arsenault

performing arts Amanda Brady Andover, Massachusetts Muhlenberg College

Scarborough, Maine Wesleyan University

History Department Jason Alexander

mathematics department

Hometown: Greenwich, Connecticut Headed to: Lafayette College

Muang Pattani, Thailand Pitzer College

English Department Wuhan, China Franklin and Marshall College

Hometown: New Hampton, New Hampshire Headed to: Colby University

visual arts JaeHoon Jang Jeonju, Korea Rhode Island School of Design

world languages JaeHoon Jang

Yuchi Wang FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  29


C L O C K W I S E F R O M TO P L E F T D a r r e n R e d m a n , Yu c h i W a n g , Andrew Menke; Abby Rutt, Kay McMahon, Courtney Moulton; Class of 2013 members each have a brick on the Milne patio to commemorate their time in Husky Nation; Cornell-bound Julian Dinwoodie on guitar; Members of the Khazei and Huff families including Commencement speaker Alan Khazei (second from left) and Hayden Huff ’13 (middle); JaeHoon Jang with parents Kyeong Hee Kim a n d B y e o n g Yo n g J a n g ; E m i l y Moulton, Mauricio Mendez, and Maggie Adair; The Commencement Baton; Roger Ballou P’11, ’13 and Mariza Ballou.


2013 COLLEGE MATRICULATION College of Charleston  [3] Fairfield University  [3] Hobart and William Smith Colleges  [3] Michigan State University  [3] University of Vermont  [3] Franklin and Marshall College  [2] Keene State College  [2] Pennsylvania State University, University Park [2] Saint Anselm College  [2] St. Lawrence University  [2] Syracuse University  [2] University of Colorado at Boulder  [2] University of Missouri Columbia  [2] Assumption College Bard College Bowdoin College Brandeis University Bryant University Cazenovia College Central Washington University Colby College Colby-Sawyer College Colgate University College of the Holy Cross

Community College of Philadelphia Concordia University, Montreal Cornell University Curry College Elizabethtown College Emmanuel College Endicott College Fudan University Georgia Institute of Technology Gonzaga University High Point University Indiana University at Bloomington Ithaca College Johnson & Wales University (Providence) Lafayette College Lynn University Manhattanville College Muhlenberg College NHTI, Concord’s Community College Northeastern University Norwich University Pitzer College Plymouth State University Providence College Reed College

Rhode Island School of Design Roanoke College Rochester Institute of Technology Sacred Heart University Saint Michael’s College Salisbury University Salve Regina University Savannah College of Art and Design SRH Hochschule Berlin State University of New York - Plattsburgh Sterling College Stonehill College Suffolk University SUNY College at Cortland Susquehanna University Transylvania University University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign University of Massachusetts, Amherst University of Michigan University of New England University of Rochester University of Wisconsin, Madison Wake Forest University Wesleyan University

NOTE: One student per school unless noted; does not include gap years.

YOU ALL ARE COMING OF AGE IN A TURBULENT TIME. THE PROBLEMS WE FACE ARE SERIOUS. BUT THEY ARE ALSO ONLY HALF THE STORY. THE OTHER HALF IS WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT THEM, AND WHAT MANY ARE DOING ALREADY. — Alan Khazei, Commencement Speaker, Founder of City Year and Be the Change FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  31


32  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


faculty profile

The ARSENAULTS Years at NHS: 17

Jamie, Athletic Director Lara, Registrar Ryder ’13 Dempsey ’15

A sport for each season holds as much relevance these days as a Blockbuster Video Store. Specialization is the path for the majority of young athletes in the United States. With college scholarships and access to elite universities and colleges as the end game for so many parents and high school athletes, teenagers have dropped second and third sports to focus on one sport year-round. But there is a family on the New Hampton School campus that is preserving the tradition of three-season athletics and carrying the banner for the multisport athlete. The Arsenaults—Jamie and Lara, and their children Ryder ’13 and Dempsey ’15—arrived on the New Hampton School campus in 1997. For them, athletic specialization is synonymous with boredom. Jamie and Lara were each three-sport standouts in college, combining for 22 varsity letters, and each of their children has embraced three sports at New Hampton. “I always encouraged them to play all three,” says Jamie, who teaches math and serves as the Director of Athletics. “Each season I enjoyed that sport I was playing, and I couldn’t get to the point that I could play baseball 365 days a year. When it was football season, it was on TV and it was football season. And the same for basketball season. Each season drew me in, and my kids were very similar.” Perhaps the Arsenault athletic prowess is equal parts genes, fate, and environment. Jamie—NHS’s former Men’s Varsity A Basketball Coach—was a three-sport standout at Colby College (football, basketball, baseball) and Lara—the School’s registrar and a house parent—starred in soccer, basketball, and track at Brandeis University, qualifying for the NCAA Championships in the triple jump. They met because of a game. It was the Boston Celtics Rookie Camp in 1989 when Jamie was working the Red Auerbach Basketball Camp at Brandeis and Lara was fundraising for her team’s senior trip to Greece. Jamie knew her basketball coach. After a date in Prescott Park in Portsmouth, the spark was lit. Soon enough they were married, and it wasn’t long before they were living in Lindsay House after a stop at Bridgton Academy in Maine. Few families have been more entrenched in the culture of New Hampton School. Along with the McMahon, Brewster, Redman, and Fay families, Jamie and Lara have raised their children over the last two decades on a bucolic campus with an army of balls, bats, sticks, skates, and sneakers as the vehicles to enliven mosquito-laden summer nights and get through cold winter days. It’s summer camp every day for kids. "


“They’ve had every necessary facility available to them,” says Jamie, reflecting on his kids growing up on campus. “They could skate in the rink, shoot balls on the turf, play soccer. They got off the bus at 2:30 and played for 3 to 4 hours, just unsupervised games.” It has paid off. Ryder and Dempsey are more than serviceable athletes. Ryder is now a freshman at Colby College, poised to make the same multi-sport impact his father did nearly two decades ago (Jamie’s number is retired in baseball). Still, his athletic career at New Hampton was as much a hobble as it was a sprint. He broke his leg in the Powder Keg football game in his sophomore year and missed the entire ice hockey season. In his junior campaign, an injury derailed another two seasons. He tore his ACL in the NEPSAC football bowl game and spent the rest of the year watching hockey and baseball, but acted in the winter play to keep the adrenaline flowing. The starting quarterback his senior season, Ryder broke his collarbone in the second game of the season, but rebounded to play junior varsity hockey and lead the Huskies baseball squad to a Lakes Region playoff title. After graduating second in his class and as the student body president, he followed his father’s path to Colby where he starts at wide receiver in football and will help the Mules’ baseball team in the outfield, on the mound, and behind the plate. Yes, the versatility extends to the diamond.

Dempsey Arsenault ’15

“WHETHER WE ARE PLAYING BOARD GAMES, WHIFFLE BALL, OR RUNNING AN OBSTACLE COURSE, WE HAVE ALWAYS ENCOURAGED OUR KIDS TO HAVE FUN WHILE DOING THEIR BEST.”

— Lara Arsenault Dempsey already cemented her college destination last January in her sophomore year before she even had her driver’s license. A field hockey, ice hockey, and lacrosse standout at New Hampton, she will play lacrosse at Boston College—an elite D-I program that won a competitive recruiting tussle. Dempsey runs like a deer, charges back on defense in all three sports with a constant motor, and possesses the distaste for losing that her mother shows in board games and pick-up basketball games. Field hockey coach Bekka Joslin has no doubt that Dempsey could play Division I field hockey. Women’s ice hockey coach Craig Churchill has coached her for two seasons in a sport she considers her third-best. Nevertheless, the fourth-year coach believes she can leave a special legacy at New Hampton. “I think she brings a work ethic and level of athleticism that is second to none,” Churchill says. “Her ability to control the play with sheer determination is unparalleled.” On a recent fall afternoon, long after her field hockey practice ended, Dempsey was in the lower gymnasium, playing the solitary game of wall-ball with a lacrosse stick and ball. Jamie and Lara believe this type of dedication to getting better is a product of growing up around elite, dedicated athletes. Dempsey and Ryder had countless surrogate big sisters and brothers who were great athletes when they were faculty brats in Lindsay House, and their father coached a handful of future NBA players in basketball. The competitiveness, coupled with a passion for enjoying the games, is a part of the fabric of the family. “Whether we are playing board games, whiffle ball, or running an obstacle course, we have always encouraged our kids to have fun while doing their best,” says Lara. “Ryder and Dempsey have grown up surrounded by very talented and driven student-athletes 34  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Ryder Arsenault ’13

who value competition and sports, so it has been ingrained in their upbringing to work hard and compete at whatever they do.” As Jamie and Lara have helped shape the tight-knit community at New Hampton with the attention they paid to so many students over the years, their children have benefited. They’ve made every attempt to open doors for college athletic opportunities and put countless miles on their cars driving to club team tournaments, but dropping a sport and missing the opportunity to be a part of another team was not an option. Former faculty member Dave Doyle, now the Director of Athletics at Hamden Hall Country Day School in Connecticut, saw it firsthand during his time at NHS. “I loved how they never pushed them into certain sports, or pressured them into the world of specialization,” Doyle says. “They encouraged them both to play multiple sports, knowing that would make them more well-rounded athletes.” So little was the push that two parents who were basketball players in college ended up with two ice hockey players. The cold mornings in ice rinks throughout New England and the long car rides have never been a burden, though. As Jamie is so often heard saying when considering his life at New Hampton and his years as sports parent, “We get to do this!” 


upcoming events february 1

NHS at the Manchester Monarchs 7 pm game, Manchester, NH

14 & 15

28th NHS Invitational Basketball Tournament

16

Men’s and Women’s Alumni Hockey Games 10 am and 11:30 am respectively

Men’s and Women’s Alumni Basketball Games 10 am and 11:30 am respectively

march TBD

NHS in Florida

may 30 — june 1 Reunion Weekend 2014

Classes ending in 4 & 9

Reunion 2014: may 30 – june 1 Register Online at www.newhampton.org/reunion for Reunion Weekend 2014, and

come back for a weekend filled with memories, friends, and entertainment!

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  35


REUNION 2008

capt capt capt

REUNION WEEKEND WAS A BLAST! OVER 275 ALUMNI AND FACULTY (CURRENT AND FORMER) RETURNED TO CAMPUS FOR A WARM AND FESTIVE WEEKEND AT NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL .


8

T

he Class of 1963’s 50th Reunion Dinner on Friday evening (May 31) at Smith House was a trip down memory lane for all, while the Manitou Circle Breakfast on Saturday morning brought alumni together to share stories. The Class of 2008 had an impressive turnout with over 30 classmates back (see page 41 for captions)!

Despite the heat on Saturday, runners explored the NHS Cross Country course in a 5k Race and the Men’s Alumni Lacrosse Game was packed with Husky pride on Kennedy Field. The “Back to School Classes” were well attended and provided fantastic insight to life in the classroom at NHS today! Saturday evening’s Reunion Reception and GO BEYOND! Capital Campaign Celebration was a fitting and joyous way to bring the weekend to an end. Thank you to the Reunion Volunteers for rallying your classmates and bringing many back over the weekend. Your efforts helped to ensure a successful Reunion 2013! Additionally, a huge thanks to all who made the trek back! Reunion Weekend is a special time for New Hampton School. 


1. Richard Dupee ’63 with fiancée Ailene dela Cruz 2. L to R: Head of School Andrew Menke, Margaret Barnett who recently retired from the NHS Business Office after more than 30 years of service, and Cindy Buck, Director of Alumni and Parent Relations. 3. L to R: Dean Jacobson ’68, Andrew Menke, Pete Galletly ’73, P’09 4. L to R: Stuart Bicknell ’63, Former Faculty Norman Farwell, George Kittredge ‘63, Don Mudgett ’63, Richard Dupee ’63 5. L to R: Sandy Colhoun, Director of Advancement, Rick Peyser ‘68, Dean Jacobson ‘68, Jeff Glidden ‘68, John Romagna ‘68, Phil Sawyer ‘68 and Andrew Menke. 6. Former Trustee Deborah Leach P’96 and Sandy Colhoun

1

2

3

4

AWARDS & RECOGNITIONS REUNION 2013

THE MOST DISTINGUISHED ALUMNUS AWARD: Given each year to the alumna/us who represents one of the oldest classes over the course of the weekend, this year’s award went to Irving Cushing ‘46.

THE MARCO POLO AWARD:

5

6

Each year this award is given to the alumna/us who traveled the greatest distance geographically to attend Reunion. The School was thrilled to welcome

THE LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD:

back Jill Radding Korst ‘83, who flew in from San

Given each year to a member of a Reunion class, this award

Anselmo, California.

recognizes exceptional achievement in his or her personal or professional work. This year, the award was presented to Dr.

THE HEADMASTER’S SERVICE AWARD: Presented each year to recognize an alumnus or alumna for his, her, or their service to the School in

Richard Dupee ‘63. (Read more about Dr. Dupee’s career in the Medical Industry Feature on page 66).

a particular year, this year’s award was given to the

THE SMITH-MOORE SERVICE AWARD:

Class of 1968’s 45th Reunion Committee, which

This award recognizes an alumna, former or present faculty member

went beyond to support the School and its mis-

for her service to New Hampton School. Margaret Barnett received

sion: PM Costello, Jeff Glidden, Rick Peyser, Dean

this year’s Smith-Moore Service Award for her service and hard work

Jacobson, John Romagna, and Phil Sawyer.

for New Hampton School for over 30 years in the business office.

38  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


Class of 1953: Left to Right: Charles Oliver and Jack Vohr ’52  Class of 1963: Seated L to R: Frank Copenhaver, Tom Beeler, Kevin Kavanagh, Tom Moore  Middle Row L to R: Tim Farnham, Lawson Ramsay, Bill Turville, Don Mudgett, Bill Cohnstaedt, Doug McIninch, George Kittredge, Jim O’Neill, Jerry Brecher, Harry the Husky, Stuart Bicknell and Roger Lotz.  Back Row, L to R: Tony Donovan, Jim Noonan, Jack Metcalf, Former Faculty member Skip Howard, Jim Shaw, Richard Dupee, Charlie Ferris, Gary Margolis and Dougall Fraser

Class of 1958: Seated Left to Right: David Abraham ’57 and Ed Koplow ’57 Standing Left to Right: Jon Granger and Jim Salvucci Class of 1968: Seated L to R: Richard Humphreville, John Romagna, Neil Stalker, Larry Garland Middle Row l to r: Jeff Tulis, Former Faculty member Al Keith, Dot and Former Faculty member Tom Diehl, Copley Bean, Rick Peyser, CB, Jeff Glidden, Dean Jacobson, Harry the Husky.  Back Row L to R: Dean Johnson, Robert “Tito” Meyer, Former Faculty Member Skip Howard, Rusty Nordstrom, Lansing Deane, Gary Lemberger, Matthew Hinzpeter and Phil Sawyer.

Commissioned portrait by Joe Swan of beloved Norma Jean “Jinga” Moore and T. Holmes Moore ‘38, Headmaster Emeritus which now hangs in the Academic Research Center.

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  39


Class of 1973: Seated L to R: Victoria Makris, Chris Daughterty, Tom Haas.  Back Row L to R: Rob Moore, John Morin, Charlie Burch, Ken Reever, Peter Galletly, Holli Hamel Siff ’72, Peter Richmond ’74

Class of 1978: SEATED L TO R: Pamela Harbach Harley Anita Galletti, Liz Hassinger,   standing: Steve Corbally

Class of 1983: Seated L to R: Jon Tilton, Jennifer Shackett Berry  Standing L to R: Bill Walsh, Jill Radding Korst

Alumni Lacrosse Game: FRONT ROW L-R: Kevin Driscoll ’10, Jordan Vittner ’10, Crosby Fay, Eli Curry, Nate Barry ’11, Nick Maggio ’09, Griffin Votolato ’12  BACK ROW L-R: Marc Perroni ’10, Head Coach Justin Simon, Chris Little P’14, ’17 (Faculty), George Jenkins ’08, Kyle Stewardson ’08, Mike McBournie ’11, Craig Cameron ’09, Mystery Player, Steve Fay P’12, ’14 (Faculty), Liam McMahon ’12, Mark Marino ’12, TJ Bicknell ’12, Matt Fay ’12, David Ackerknecht ’96, Jamie Arsenault P’13, ’15 (Faculty) Class of 1988: top left: Rebecca Sparck Cotton.  bottom left: David Kelley and William Roche surround Harry the Husky.

40  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


Class of 2008: Front L to R: Adam Pabst, Long Ding, Jared Gobbi, George Jenkins, Rob Borzillo, Nick Caruso.  Back, L to R: Gunnar Hildebrand, Connor Burrows, Young Jun Kim, Will Burke, Nicoya Borella, JiHoon Shim, Matt McFadden, Mike Lyon, Samantha Hersey, Will Natoli, Kyle Raynor, Torrey Gurley, Ryan Janvrin, Kyle Stewardson, Casey Shaughnessy, Victoria Wiseman, Mike Helms, Katina Athanas, Katie Seraikas, Taryn Houghton and guest, Kayla DiBari and Alle Karol. Lou Gnerre Alumni Softball Game: FRONT ROW L-R: Tyler Hill ’10, Darren Redman P’08, ’12, ’17 (Faculty), Lou Gnerre (Former Faculty), Don Mudgett ’63, Roger Lotz ’63, Richard Dupee ’63, Rick Peyser ’68, David Berman ’68  BACK ROW L-R: Tony Donovan ’63, Lawson Ramsay ’63, Bill Turville ’63, Jim Shaw ’63, Craig Corson ’68, Gary Lemberger ’68

Class of 1998: Ryan and Jill Falconi Mahady Former Faculty: Kneeling/Sitting L to R: Zach Zimmerman, Jane Willingham Smith, Norman Farwell, Nancy Conkling (spouse), Dot Diehl (spouse), Rob Moore ’73.  STanding L to R: Lisa Falconi Perfield ’01, David Perfield, Harrison Golden, Jared Smith, John Conkling, Lou Gnerre, Ruthie Gulick (spouse), Skip Howard, Al Keith, Peter Gulick, Dan Paradis, Mark Tilton, Tom Diehl.

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  41


Legendary Life T. Holmes “Bud” Moore ’38

1920-2013 By Will McCulloch When T. Holmes “Bud” Moore ’38 enrolled at New Hampton School in 1936, he was in need of a transformative educational experience and a connection to a community. He benefited on both accounts and returned the favor to the School with a lifetime of service. Along the way, he connected with students, created a distinctive boarding school environment, and touched the lives of countless graduates with inspiration and incessant guidance. We remember a legend. Mr. Moore, who served New Hampton School in various capacities for over 70 years, including 33 years as Headmaster and President, passed away peacefully on August 18. He was 93 years old. A 1938 graduate of New Hampton, Moore worked at the School from 1946 to 1959 as a faculty member and his many responsibilities ranged from English teacher and department head to Director of Admission and Executive Headmaster. In 1959, he became Headmaster of the School and led New Hampton until his retirement in 1992 (from 1972-1990 his title was the President of the School). Moore was a 1946 graduate of Middlebury College and Veteran of World War II in which he served four years in the Navy. He was also a member of the Board of Trustees as Headmaster Emeritus since 2006. “We have been blessed as a school and as individuals to have T. Holmes Moore in our lives. He devoted his life to New Hampton

School,” said Andrew Menke, current Head of School. “The School would not be where it is today but for his steadfast commitment to the principles that we hold dear today: hard work, community, personal growth and personal responsibility. His legacy is one of positive, enthusiastic and dynamic leadership that impacted generations of graduates who have gone on to impact their communities in business, education, and public service.” Moore will be remembered as a loving husband to Norma Jean “Jinga” Moore, a former faculty member, who also served the School in many capacities, and a remarkable father to five children: Thomas Moore ’63, Andrew Moore ’65, Robinson Moore ’73, Elibet Moore Chase ’75, and Jamie Moore Sheff. In his role as Headmaster and President, Moore left an indelible mark on NHS. The School built five new dormitories, the McEvoy Theater, a Lower Gymnasium, a Student Center, and Memorial


“One of the few truly unforgettable people I have ever met!”

Dining Hall under his leadership. He ushered began and the community gathered, it was customary for Moore to introduce without New Hampton back to co-education in 1970 – Tom Adams ’64 notes each student on the first day of school, and steered the School through the turbulent knowing their name and some personal fact times of the Vietnam War and the ensuing culabout each of the students. tural shifts in adolescent life and education. Moore’s commitment to New Hampton was Though Moore’s dedication to improving the also illustrated in the way he managed a distinct path physical plant and ensuring the long-term health of the School will be an enduring part of his legacy, his greatest impact for the School. Over six different decades and through incomperhaps can be seen and felt in the friendly, unpretentious cul- prehensible change and transformation, Moore maintained ture of the School that was founded in 1821. The son-in-law of his a clear educational philosophy and a vision for the School. predecessor, Headmaster Frederick Smith ’10, Moore continued “When I became Headmaster in 1959, I had been around long Smith’s tradition of connecting with students on a personal level enough to realize that I could take the School in any direction,” Moore wrote in his unpublished memoirs. “I was tempted to fill even when enrollment grew. Alumni often recall with amazement Moore’s flawless mem- the School with pre-selected winners taught by eminent scholory and commitment to detail. As another school year officially ars, but I chose to continue it as it was when I was a student


“This man was the most influential person in my life.” Linda Tatar Landau ’72

and during the years when I was on the faculty. I believe that the basis of personal success is self-confidence, which comes from knowledge of self: strengths, weaknesses and talents. I wanted New Hampton to be a School that continued helping its students discover their strengths, weaknesses, and talents and devise programs which remedy weaknesses, discover strengths, and develop talents. “I looked around and realized that many schools have a vision of the ideal graduate, develop a program to realize that vision, accept an inevitable diversity of students and gradually eliminate that diversity so that all graduates are look-alikes. New Hampton starts with this same diversity, but it helps individuals understand how they are different, and develops programs to accentuate these differences so that when they graduate they are even more different.” Moore always believed in the magic of boarding school and the way in which a place like New Hampton—with caring, attentive faculty —could influence and transform the 44  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

lives of students. Though it appeared ed to explore the possibility of enrollhe seemed destined for a career in ed- ing his son at New Hampton School. ucation, Moore’s early life suggested “Somehow my father made a deal,” he would not be a likely candidate for Moore wrote in his memoirs, “and I boarding school as a student or later became one of Fred Smith’s ‘worthy as a professional. A passion for music boys,’ which meant that I worked in and time in the military nearly pushed various jobs to pay the room, board, him toward different career paths. and tuition charge.” T. Holmes Moore was born in Moore was a timid 16-year-old boy Grafton, New Hampshire on June 14, in the fall of 1936 when he stood in 1920. He lived in Grafton and Canaan, the New Hampton School auditorium New Hampshire as a young boy before for the first time; and Frederick Smith moving to Penacook, New Hampshire, introduced him by name and shared a with his mother, father, and sister Ollittle biographical information about ive. The Moore family, as with so many Moore with his new schoolmates. other families, struggled through the “It was in that brief moGreat Depression. Neverthement in time that a less, the young Moore self-confidence and blossomed as a mu“Bud was my father’s sense of worth that sician, playing the English teacher. He was my Headwould sustain me trumpet in a nummaster. And, he was Headmaster for the rest of my ber of bands. After life were born,” Emeritus while my son attended attending the high Moore wrote. New Hampton. He touched all our school in PenaMoore gradulives in wonderful ways. What can cook for his first ated in 1938 after two years of high one say? The man is a legend!” two years as a solid school, his father— – Whitney Ward ’71 student, leading muwho was then working as a car salesman—decidsician, and a manager to


numerous athletic teams. During his time at the School, including summers working at the Resort on campus, Moore met his future wife Jinga, the daughter of the Headmaster who lived on campus with her parents and brothers. Though he didn’t believe he would have many college options, Moore once again looked to Headmaster Smith for guidance. At the arrangement of Smith, he matriculated to Middlebury College. Moore continued his studies and paid his way through college with his trumpet, playing in more bands and working the summer music circuit. After three years at Middlebury, the military came calling. Moore enlisted in the fall of 1941 and quickly found himself the Junior Ensign on a ship of 2,109 men and the Junior Officer in the V (Aviation) Division. He flew OS2U Kingfishers off the battleship Indiana and became the Senior Aviator at the age of 21 to his disbelief. He spent the majority of his time in the South Pacific where he transitioned from the USS Indiana to the

USS New Mexico, another battleship. after four years, and he returned to His responsibilities primarily included Middlebury with his wife in 1945. After finishing his degree at Midreconnaissance over the Marshall and Solomon Islands. For his efforts in the dlebury in 1946 and doing a little South Pacific, Moore was presented graduate work at the Breadloaf School, with the Air Medal for “consummate Moore returned to New Hampton skill and daring beyond the call of duty with Jinga and their first-born son in the performance of duty as Senior Thomas. He was hired as an English Aviator of the Indiana and the New teacher, became Executive HeadmasMexico in the Gilbert Islands, Marshall ter in 1954, and succeeded Frederick Smith as Headmaster in 1959. Islands, and Marianas campaigns.” “I got into the Navy because I In 1972, he became President of the School and served in that position unwanted to learn to fly and serve my til 1990 when he became Headmaster country,” he explained in his memoir. again before retiring in 1992. “The Navy served me well. I realized In retirement, Moore lived on my childhood dream of being a Pinnacle Hill in the farmfighter pilot and along the house the family purway learned a lot about chased in 1976. He “Who else but a great guy like leadership, problem remained active TH could convince my father it solving, performing in many of the was ok for me to come to New under pressure, decharities and orHampton even if there were cision-making, and ganizations to managing people.” 200 guys and 20 girls? I had which he contribDuring a leave three of my happiest years at uted throughout from the Navy, he New Hampton.” his life as a resident married Jinga on Sepof New Hampshire – Ellen Edersheim ’74 tember 9, 1944. Moore’s and New Hampton. service in the Navy ended Continued on page 48. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  45


T. Holmes Moore ’38 LEGENDARY LIFE

Make a Gift to the Norma Jean and T. Homes Moore Endowed Scholarship read memorial speeches from family members photo slideshow Watch the memorial service

Visit www.newhampton.org/ tholmesmoore

1936

1930s

T. Holmes Moore enrolls at New Hampton School in the class of 1938

1938

Graduates from New Hampton School

1938

Enrolls at Middlebury College

1941

1940s

Enlists in the Navy

1944

Marries Norma Jean Moore on September 9

1945

Returns to Middlebury College after Navy service

1946   Begins working at New Hampton School as English Teacher, Starts and Leads Glee Club


1990s

1992  Retires as Headmaster of New Hampton School

Frederick and Grace Smith (left) with T.H. and Jinga Moore (right).

1954  Named Executive Headmaster 1959  Named Headmaster

1950s

1970s 1970

Oversees the re-introduction of co-education at New Hampton School

1972

Named President of the School

1977 Receives Honorary Doctorate, Franklin Pierce College

2000s

2006  Becomes member of the Board of Trustees 2008  Receives Granite State Award at Plymouth State University


“Mr. Moore was the first person I met when I toured at New Hampton. It was Christmas

break,1981. It had snowed a foot the night before, and the campus was empty. He was shoveling the front steps of Berry Hall, and

I assumed he was the maintenance guy. He let me into Berry and told me to sit in the front office while he turned up the heat. He came back into the office, sat behind the desk, took off his gloves and hat, and told me he was Bud Moore, he was the President of the School, and he would be interviewing me. Immediately I knew this is where I wanted to go.” –Michael O’Brien ’84 This includ- New England Foundation for IndeContinued from page 45. ed but was not limited to service pendent Schools, serving as presion the boards of the Bristol Bank; dent for 17 years; the New England Lakes Region General Hospital; Gor- Association of Schools and Colleges don Nash Library; Bristol Chamber for 14 years, rising to the position of of Commerce; NH Library Trustees president; and the Council for the AdAssociation; NH Council on World vancement and Support of Education Affairs; Concord Gen’l Mutual Insur- (CASE) for six years. ance Co.; Green Mountain Insurance In 1977, Moore was awarded an Company; Vermont Accident Insur- honorary doctor of law from Franklin ance Co.; Peoples Service Insurance Pierce College. In 1982, he received Company; State Mutual Insurance UNH’s highest honor, the Pettee MedCompany; The Mayhew Program; al, for distinguished service to the Pemigewasset Choral Society; Town state of New Hampshire, and in 1986 of New Hampton; and New Hampton he was voted an NH Notable. In 2008, he received the Granite State Award Community Church. after giving the commencement A tireless champion of edaddress at Plymouth State ucational opportunity, University. Moore served on the “What could mean more to His influence Independent School a person than to be rememon New Hampton Association of bered. And Bud remembered School endured Northern New Eneveryone- and where you came over the last eight gland (ISANNE) from, what your father did for a years as Moore for 45 years; the living and later, your spouse’s served on the Non-Public School name and his occupation.” Advisory CommitBoard of Trustees. tee for 30 years, risMenke developed a — Holley Keyes ’74 ing to the position of close friendship with chairman; the Northern Moore and leaned on him 48  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

not only as a vital voice in the institutional intelligence of the School, but also as a mentor. “Despite all he had accomplished, he was always available and accessible and without ego or pretense... and what a sense a humor,” Menke said. “We are fortunate to have been graced with his presence for so many years. We are a better school, and I am a better Head, but more importantly, a better human being as a result of my relationship with this amazing man.” Moore leaves his wife of 69 years, Norma Jean “Jinga” Moore; his sister Olive Calef of Exeter, New Hampshire; his five children and their spouses: Tom and Tina Moore of Rohnert Park, California; Andy and Suzi Moore of New Hampton, New Hampshire; Jamie and Paul Sheff of Boylston, Massachusetts; Rob and Laura Moore of Groton, Massachusetts; and Elibet and George Chase of Concord, New Hampshire; 14 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. A celebration of Moore’s life was held on Sunday August 25 at the School. More than 800 people attended. 


tributes

BUD Foliage Day For T. Holmes “Bud” Moore By Gary Margolis ’63

what would bud do? By Jennifer Shackett Berry ’83 Director of College Counseling Bud Moore taught me many lessons. He taught me to be a steward of others, my school, and my community. When my parents both passed away, he wrote me a note about preserving their legacy. My devotion to my family, my work, and my community extends from this prompting. In my work at New Hampton School, I often think, “What would Bud do?” prior to acting. I joined the Board of Trustees of the Newfound Lake Region Association to help maintain a legacy in the purity of the lake that was such a part of my childhood, and also because Bud and Jinga modeled serving community-based non-profits to complement their family and professional lives. Bud also taught me the value of unwavering loyalty and positivity in the face of adversity whether it related to his school, family, friends, or his final medical issues. At the start of my career, New Hampton School faced financial struggles. Bud was able to make difficult decisions that were institutionally driven. I surmise these were incredibly challenging times for him, but he remained steadfast in his loyalty to the institution. When my husband or I faced adverse situations, it was Bud who advised us and helped us to see the silver lining and remain focused on the future. During a visit with Bud in his final months, when asked how he was doing, he replied, “top drawer”. My husband Tom says, “Bud saw the light in people and made it flourish.” So true; he made us believe we were all special and important; he was a believer in good causes, whether institutions or people. We push forward, doing our best for our family, friends, students, and the School—always guided by “What would Bud do?”

One day a year we sat waiting to hear this was the day we didn’t have to go to school. The buses idled among the leaves we couldn’t see. We fidgeted among ourselves guessing if this was the day. If the maples were peaking. If classes were canceled. If Mr. Moore would announce what we’d come to believe that this was the day. His hair was always silver grey. He could say anything we came to believe to keep us in our seats. He knew each of our turning names. Save the day he knew it was his secret to let us out. To climb a hill. To lose ourselves in the leaves. So we could return to school for the rest of the year. So we could say we always knew which day it was he would tell us you can learn everything you need to know, one leaf at a time. When you know each boy’s name. Even today, when he isn’t here. When he’s saying you can say, (you can use any word) like each boy’s name from whence we came. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  49


T. Holmes Bud Moore ’38 graduated from New Hampton School living selling ladies’ hosiery on the side, running a babysitting in 1938, but it was also a significant year for a lot of events. It was service and a dating service—whatever that was in 1938. In the summer of 1940, he was still chasing Norma Jean, the same year Benny Goodman and his band became the first jazz musicians to play Carnegie Hall. It was also the year the first but playing five nights a week with Harry Meehan and his New ski tow began operation in Vermont. And Bud Moore graduated Yorkers at the Jungle Ballroom on Newfound Lake. They called it the Jungle Ballroom because they had monkeys in artificial trees from New Hampton with his horn in hand. But it wasn’t before Bud, who had been working his subtle way swinging around down in the basement and featuring Bill Bopre, into Headmaster Fred Smith’s notice, squired Norma Jean Smith, the Liberace of the steam calliope on band breaks. The war catches up, and Bud enlists after three years at Fred’s daughter, with limited success for two years (Bud was 17, Jinga was 13 when he took her to her junior prom at Bristol High Middlebury in the Naval Aviator Program and ends up flying a scout School). Bud at 17 and Norma Jean at 13—now there’s something. seaplane off a battleship. This is nasty business catapulting off a There are laws against that now you know. What’s more, he battleship, a bit tricky getting back on that catapult, too. It is the borrowed Jinga’s mother’s car for the date. You might remember first time earning an honest living without having to blow his horn. Bud was always a man of letters, and he proposes by mail to it, the old Ford station wagon with the wood paneling. He was so taken with her, Bud let Jing drive the car all the way Jinga, now a student at Mount Holyoke and nearing the age of around Newfound Lake—then they stopped right there on the Old consent. He similarly composes a letter to her dad, Fred Smith, New Hampton’s beloved Headmaster from Bristol Road on the way home to dance to 1927 to 1959, setting forth his bona fides the car radio, kissed her goodnight on the and asking for Jing’s hand in marriage. Fred, back porch of “The Mansion,” jumped down, a man of few words, wrote a note on the and went off whistling in the dark. (Picture the letter and sent it back: “Dear Bud. ok — F.S.” setting with Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed Fred was all business, and happy to keep the in the classic movie It’s a Wonderful Life) and By Bob Kennedy ’50 car in the family. singing down Shingle Camp Hill “Buffalo gal Trustee Bud went back to the war for a little won’t you come out tonight.” Grace got her bit after the wedding as a fighter carrier car and her daughter back, all in 1938. instructor at Pensacola for the duration Bud never had any money back in those where he took up golf with Jinga. days. As one of Fred Smith’s “worthy young And, then, the clever fellow finished up at Middlebury and boys” on scholarship, he worked. His first job was playing trumpet for the Bessie Worm Band (Bessie played the piano and led the landed a job with his father-in-law at New Hampton, teaching band). She needed a trumpet player for her band Bessie Worm English for one year. That was the deal—one year and no more and the Night Crawlers with the motto “wiggle and squirm with monkey business with the horn. Well, that was nearly 70 years ago—the early years. And if you Bessie Worm.” Bessie used to say “You ain’t been kissed ‘til you’ve been kissed by a trumpet player.” We’ll never know. It was a boy’s believe we are largely shaped by our early years, that’s what then produced this couple and what then followed. school back then, you know. And what followed next? Next is the modern history of the New And finally it’s June 1938, Bud graduates and Joe Louis knocks out Max Schmeling in the first round at Yankee Stadium. Hampton School. Bud was the Head of School from 1959 to 1992, a Bud heads to Middlebury in the Fall of 1938. Meanwhile, Neville history that we all share, and 65 years of legacy of the Smith family Chamberlain returns from a meeting in Munich with Adolph and the Moore family—32 with Fred and Grace, 33 with Bud and Hitler and proclaims, “peace in our time,” which lasts less than Jing. It’s a legacy of over 6,000 young men and women over 65 six months. The Yankees win the pennant and World Series after years educated and prepared for college and life, through at least finishing 9½ games ahead of the Red Sox. two more wars, through the change to co-education, through 14 At Middlebury, Bud is engrossed in academics and on presidents of the United States, five new dormitories, Memorial scholarship again, still a worthy boy who must work to pay for Hall, The Moore Center, McEvoy Theater, The Academic Research school. He’s in a new band and soon becomes leader of it. It is called Center, and The Field House. Five kids and 14 grandkids later, Bud the Middlebury College Black Panthers band. He also earned a and Jinga endure in all of our minds—the pretty red-head who went on to become a great Spanish teacher and chair of the department, who wanted to get out of the car and dance on the road to Bristol, and the trumpet player, arranger, who turned the Glen Miller sound into Bessie Worm and the Night Crawlers and who could whistle four-part harmony to “How you Gonna Keep ‘em Down on the Farm” and “Heart of My Heart”. Together they became the personality of the New Hampton School—the heart and soul of the New Hampton School. If a society mirrors its leadership, the reflection of the New Hampton School for the Bud and Jinga years is this: lovable, laughable, devoted educators—shaping lives—the horn player and the beautiful Spanish-speaking red-headed mom. Thanks Bob Kennedy ’50 and Jing and Bud for this “string of pearls.” Bud Moore ’38 in 1997.

Heart and Soul


My thoughts and prayers go out to Jinga and the Moore family during this difficult time. I hope you feel the love that the entire NHS community and the town of New Hampton had for Bud. His loss is painful, but his legacy is inspiring to all who were fortunate to cross paths with this amazing human being. From the first time I got to converse with Mr. Moore at dinner at the house on Pinnacle Hill in the fall of 1979 with some of my classmates from Lewis, to chatting with him at the Hall of Fame Dinner for the 1980 hockey team in the fall of 2008, he was always more interested in what I was doing than talking about himself. He had an uncanny ability to put you at ease, build your confidence, get you to talk, and then remember it! During our last conversation at that dinner, I asked him why he hadn’t become Governor of New Hampshire yet and with his beautiful grin he replied, “because I can’t talk out of both sides of my mouth!” What a remarkable response from a tremendous leader, teacher, and mentor. Godspeed Bud, you will be missed, but always remembered.” —Jonathan Karalekas ’80 FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  51


It is my honor and privilege to share a few thoughts about my during economic slowdowns. Unlike other New England boarding savior and our headmaster, teacher, disciplinarian, role model, schools, NHS never had the means to build an endowment of size, colleague and friend, T. Holmes “T.H.” Moore. If that sounds a bit and depended almost exclusively on tuition while striving to also dramatic, read on. I first met T.H. In the summer of 1954 when bring in more worthy boys and girls. my father was looking for a school where I would be out of his Bud was determined to put the school on firmer financial ground, sight and largely his mind. As Bud described it many years later, and fortunately recruited Bob Kennedy ‘50, CEO of Union Carbide the conversation between the two of them was like two big cats and an acknowledged international business leader, as Board warily circling each other, looking for an opening. As he learned Chair. I like to characterize Bob as the best friend New Hampton more about my family situation, and, accurately discerning he was has ever had. Teaming with Bob, Bud brought NHS through the getting just a sanitized version, Bud’s reaction was, “I’ve got to deep recession of 1989-92, which hit New Hampshire real estate, get this kid away from this mess.” Thus my admission to NHS as a our alumni donor base, and prospective family pool particularly freshman and why savior fits so well. hard. Rather than despair, together they put in place plans, policies, Headmaster, teacher, disciplinarian and role model—these and people that gave us a solid foundation for the success to follow. will be common feelings for all the boys and, starting in 1970, the Even in retirement, Bud continued to work to benefit the girls who passed through his care. T. H. fit the part perfectly. In the School. His extraordinary memory was constantly utilized to help vernacular, he had the “Right Stuff.” He had never been given a reconnect alumni and remind them of their youth, achievements, thing and earned everything he accomplished. From his early teens, old classmates, and their debt to the School, which tried so hard to NHS and to Middlebury, then getting his to help them forward. And of course, since Navy wings, and back to college to finish his Bud was the keystone of that part of the arcs degree, it was grit and effort that led him of their lives, his appeals were very hard to forward. It was his great good fortune to win resist, even when only lightly pressed. the love of his wartime bride, Jinga, which Together, Bud and Bob laid the foundation led him back to New Hampton and then into for the energized and solid academic and the hearts of six decades of our students. financial position and reputation we now By Jason Pilalas ’58 By his return, his experiences and enjoy. It is a culture and institutional health Trustee academic success, a commanding presence, that the current leadership of Head of School an easy familiarity and obvious humanity Andrew Menke and Board Chair Peter came together with a manner friendly or Galletly ’73 is now further enhancing. stern depending on circumstances. Over Bud deeply loved Jinga, his bride and time, these reinforced a reputation for fairness and firmness, and wife of 68 years, the extended Moore and Smith families, and despite our youth showed through even to us. Our respect mirrored the School they have served since 1926. They and it were the more T.H. the person than the position he held. building blocks and cornerstones of his life. We are fortunate that For many of us, he was a key figure in and shaper of both through Jinga and current trustee Rob Moore ’73, the connections our young and later lives. He had a sixth-sense, which gave him endure. For my generation, T.H. is the root of our love for New an understanding of teenage boys and girls, their hopes, partly- Hampton and the principal reason for our past, present, and formed abilities and personas, conflicts and circumstances, and future commitment and support. In my family and in many others, a wonderful insight into how to best help and nurture them. In he will never be forgotten. my case, it was all this plus the quality of mercy which allowed me to continue at school, then go on to eventually mature and pursue a successful career. After NHS, he was instrumental in getting me a largely undeserved college scholarship and subsequent Navy commission. I always hugely admired his courage as a World War II Naval Aviator, flying low and alone over heavily defended enemy islands in the Pacific, then landing on the open sea to hopefully be picked up by his ship. As James Michener once wrote, “Where do we get such men?” Of course as students, our school lives revolved around classes, grades, dorm life, and athletics. The behind-the-scenes workings of the School were very largely a closed book to us. Not to Bud. Taken in by Headmaster Fred Smith in the depth of the Depression as one of his “Worthy Boys”—the translation is he couldn’t begin to pay—Bud well understood how the School’s financial situation became parlous at times, especially

the life-changer

Bud Moore ’38 and Jason Pilalas ’58 chat at the

52  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

GO BEYOND! launch celebration in 2009.


During the summer of 1978, I needed a do-over. I needed a big- The more than 800 people who attended his memorial in August time, let’s-start-from-scratch, all-is-forgiven, nobody-knows-your- are a living testament to his kindness, generosity, and grace. name do-over. Frankly, I had reached my teenage version of rock There are hundreds of stories of Mr. Moore shaping young lives, bottom and was going nowhere fast. I was 16. My parents and I pushing and pulling, saving and sheltering, caring for young had been called to school for yet one more conference. The four people who needed it, and launching those who didn’t. There are of us were in a three-person office with voices that were talking those, like me, who still struggle to find the right words, the oh-soimportant words that might adequately tell words and numbers and excuses. I didn’t the whole story, to express our inexorable really hear them then, and I don’t remember gratitude. With the simple act of placing his them now. All I could hear was my own voice arm around my shoulder and inviting me to saying I needed to leave this place and dinner the first night of my parentless family these people, and begin again. weekend, Mr. Moore helped me believe that Although we weren’t prep school I was going to be ok. I was safe here, in this people, my parents were amazingly place for which he had responsibility. supportive, and understood that I was By Victoria Blodgett ’80 Even now, I have no words to convey telling a soul wrenching truth when I said, Trustee how profound the impact his presence and “I want to leave here, go into the wilds of compassion had on me that day, and most New Hampshire where nobody knows me, all of my days at NHS. Never a rich man, and start over.” They understood that my “hometown” didn’t feel like home, the public schools didn’t fit me, my father gave what he could to NHS until he died in 2005. My Dad would be so proud to know that since 2009, I have tried to and I was getting lost in the chaos of an “educational” machine. Six weeks later, I was unpacking my bags into the tiny closet serve NHS as a member of the Board of Trustees, experiencing of the attic room of the barn behind Gables Hall, and greeting my the great honor of sitting beside Bud Moore, the man whose fabulously funny and brilliant roommates Gretchen Rosenquist ’80 caring arm around my shoulder 30 years ago changed my view and the spirited NHS senior Jeanne Internicola ’79. I had never of the world forever. seen any place more beautiful in my life. I knew I was home, and I was getting my fresh start. There were small classes with teachers who became manna from heaven, sports, creative people and places, nature— all of it wrapped up with just enough mischief to make it great fun. Three weeks later, my father fell down a flight of stairs and broke his neck. My fear during those next few days was palpable. My mother asked that I remain at New Hampton, safe and under the School’s care, until the situation was clearer. But I couldn’t see how I was going to stay here in my new home, when life for my family had changed so drastically. The uncertainty of Victoria Blodgett ’80 (left) and Susan my situation was frightening and Overton greet Bud at the Dedication of confusing. the Pilalas Center in 2009. T. Holmes Moore, as I understand 30 years later, answered similar calls for many families.

answering the call

honor bud

Memorial donations may be made to New Hampton School in support of the T. Holmes and Norma Jean Moore Endowed Scholarship Fund. (www.newhampton.org/giving or New Hampton School c/o Sandy Colhoun, 70 Main Street, New Hampton, NH 03256) or to the Mayhew Program (www.mayhew.org/ or P.O. Box 120, 293 West Shore Rd., Bristol, NH 03222). FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  53


Meservey Hall: a history

BY JASON ALEXANDER ’13

Standing for 155 years, Meservey Hall remains the historic center of scholastic life at New Hampton School. It has endured numerous phases of structure and function. The revered building has weathered both renovation and destruction, but Meservey’s core has maintained a significant presence in community life. Over the decades, continual attention has been paid towards keeping Meservey fully updated and surpassing the needs of the School. As we reflect on its rich history and promising future, the brick front of Meservey stands as a poignant metaphor for New Hampton School and its evolution.


2 The fire of 1935

1 Chapel Hall Chapel Hall, the original building, was constructed in 1858. A new three-story brick front formed the main part of Chapel Hall, and the existing wooden village church was annexed to become the back wing of the building. Chapel Hall was the third building constructed on the campus of New Hampton Literary and Biblical Institution (NHLBI), after Hamptonia Hall and Randall Hall. Students prayed daily in the chapel, and since the male and female students were not allowed to interact, they kept to separate sides of Chapel Hall. The space was usually busy, holding laboratories, libraries, and classrooms. The 16 rooms were designed with high-quality standards, agreed upon to be convenient and pleasant to use, and unsurpassed in the region. At the time, NHLBI was a six-hour ride from Boston and well-connected with New England universities. Approximately 100 students graduated each year. Generous patrons and the School invested in upgrades over the next few decades, adding to the teaching capabilities of Chapel Hall. Scientific equipment, collections of geological and biological specimens, and an attractive library were added. A new museum held stuffed birds, minerals, biological material, shells, fossils, and Native American artifacts. By 1903, new steam heating and electricity made the building more comfortable. However, from 1904 to 1910, Chapel Hall underwent massive renovation. The 13 rooms focused on science labs with running water for extensive experimental work, offices, and modernized classrooms. In autumn of 1910, the state-of-the-art building was officially renamed to be the Meservey Building, commonly called Meservey Hall. This was in honor of recently deceased Principal Atwood Bond Meservey. The NHLBI was renamed New Hampton School in 1925. The extensive scientific curriculum in Meservey’s classrooms covered Zoology, Biology, Physics, Chemistry, Earth Sciences, and Anatomy. Further renovation in 1930 expanded Meservey’s uses to the athletic realm. It sported a gymnasium with lockers and showers, fulfilling a 20-year-old need for a new gym. In addition to games, the students convened in the gym for school meetings, theatrical and musical performances, social dances, and commencement exercises.

Meservey Hall caught fire the night of May 1, 1935. Faulty wiring sparked a dangerous blaze, fanned by the wind, that consumed the wooden back section. The New Hampton, Bristol, and Ashland fire crews siphoned plentiful water from the pond-fueled hockey rink. They were able to protect the rest of Academic Row from being harmed, but only the brick front of Meservey was saved. Meservey lost its Belfry—its bell became a “melted mass in the ruins”—along with the labs, most scientific equipment, and facilities. The great loss of most of the building resonated in New England; the Boston Herald even picked up the story. Sympathetic companies immediately met to amass the funds to rebuild. Alumni living as far away as a missionary serving in India and a 91-yearold Californian sent gifts to rebuild. Meservey Hall was repaired by the end of 1935.

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REV. A.B. Meservey

Reverend Atwood Bond Meservey, born in 1831, hailed from Maine. Meservey was ordained after attending New Hampton, Bates College, Brown University, Bowdoin Medical School, and Andover Theological Seminary. In 1862, he began teaching math and science at New Hampton, until he became the School’s Principal in 1868. Meservey worked tirelessly and devotedly for 30 years in this position. An intensive scholar, he led a trend of teaching bookkeeping and economic accounting, publishing textbooks on the worldly subject, and stimulating a Commercial College department. He impressed and inspired, keeping an “affable disposition” with “phenomenal tact.” Meservey’s grand lectures and clear vision inspired great respect in his personality and abilities. He died from kidney disease in 1901, three years after finishing his career as Principal. Respected and treasured for his memory, Meservey’s work had a lasting effect on the School’s health, growth, and trajectory into the 20th century.

3

Rebuilding

The transformed Meservey Hall lived up to its old claim to be “the center of student life,” an academic, athletic, and social hub. The laboratories were restocked with experimental equipment and outfitted to teach. An indoor running track was installed in the back section of Meservey, along with jumping pits, boxing and wrestling rings, with practice space for basketball, tennis, badminton, and baseball. In 1942, the School formed an accelerated Wartime Program to train willing students, using Meservey’s facilities to improve their fitness and readiness for the world. A large trophy and lounge room housed clubs and provided a popular space for students to relax. In 1947, the School invested in a new assembly hall with a modern motion picture theater. This auditorium replaced Meservey’s old chapel. New technology helped teach through educational films, but the more exciting use for the “thoroughly-modern” projectors was to show students new amusing motion pictures every Saturday night. After the 1950s, as the School’s campus grew and newer buildings sprung up, the uses of Meservey slowly dwindled to only classrooms and offices. The Frederick Smith Gym, complete in 1961, made Meservey’s gym into a temporary secondary practice space. There were plans to convert it into a dining hall, but Frederick Smith Hall was expanded for this purpose while McEvoy Theater provided a better auditorium. In the past decade, the science labs moved to the Pilalas Center, and the History Department remained in Meservey Hall’s aging classrooms.

Want more Meservey? Follow progress as the restoration nears its completion in the Spring of 2014 at www.newhampton.org/meservey.


4

Future Plans Academic Row currently includes a construction site. Cranes, bulldozers, and crews are chipping away at the most comprehensive restoration of this historic building yet. Scheduled to be completed by Summer 2014, the Meservey Restoration will provide a new home for the History Department and the Academic Support Program. Historically, Meservey Hall has been home to the math and science departments. With the dedication of the Pilalas Center in 2009, these two disciplines moved next door on Academic Row, creating an opportunity to restore Meservey Hall into a home for two critical departments. The front portion of Meservey will be restored in keeping with its original, historic style. The front doors will be opened once again as the main entrance and create a welcoming entry. The back wing of the building (pictured above), a major campus transformation, will allow a connection to the inner campus and provide supporting exterior spaces and walks. Follow progress as the restoration nears its completion in the Spring of 2014 at www.newhampton.org/meservey.

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a

STEADY

CLIMB


New Hampton, Kenya, Mount Everest: MIKE CHAMBERS '05 HAS TACKLED IT ALL By Will McCulloch


T

hree weeks after his attempt to summit Mount Everest failed, Mike Chambers ’05 was thinking about business school applications. Babson and MIT were on the list, and he was even considering that other university in Cambridge. Heck, he spent two months climbing the tallest peak in the world. What could business school at Harvard dish out that he couldn’t handle? Consideration of an intellectual challenge was perhaps a distraction from the notso-cold-anymore truth Chambers was facing each day since arriving back in the United States—he was no longer on the mountain. “It has been a difficult transition coming back, to say the least,” Chambers said this summer from his home in Needham, Massachusetts, where he lives with his fiancé Leila de Bruyne. He hesitated calling his return symptoms post-traumatic stress, but adrenaline withdrawal could suffice. For two years he planned the expedition of a lifetime while juggling his full-time gig with Flying Kites, the non-profit founded by his fiancé. And from March 20 to May 16, 2013 he spent every day thinking of that piece of world 29,029 feet above sea level. The sense of accomplishment melded with the what-could-have-been, a lingering storyline as he shares his tale. Nevertheless, Mike Chambers’ Everest story remains only a piece of a personal transformation that is both startling and inspiring. Though a climber sees only the black and white of his expedition, a “failed” summit of Everest is not exactly a fair description. To consider the kid who showed up to New Hampton School in the fall of 2002, wayward and disjointed, would tackle the world’s tallest peak 11 years later would be a “failure” to be realistic by any measure—ask his former teachers. His two months on Everest are much like the last decade of Mike Chambers’ life, a steady climb in which the kid in boots never reaches the top. And that’s okay.

May 16, 2013 Chambers sat in a tent at Camp 4, the last stop before a push for the summit of Everest. He looked across at his tent mate Dan. It felt like that lucid moment of purpose before a big game, the kind of focus he experienced nearly a decade before in 2004 as kickoff approached of the New England Prep School football title game. There was no possibility for sleep. The duo stared at each other until the time was right. Equipment was checked, and oxygen tanks and other necessities were double-checked with the precision of a surgeon before entering the operating room. All the while, Chambers was taking time to reflect. “It was a pretty special time,” Chambers recalls. “When I talk about it I always smile.” With a finger on the things he could control, Chambers and his fellow climbers—a group of five that had climbed together around the peak for the previous two months—stepped out into something they could not control—the conditions. It was 10 pm, and though 24 hours later groups of climbers would ascend through ideal conditions, Chambers did not have that benefit. He had chosen an earlier window for his summit to avoid the crowds and the bottlenecks (In 2012, these crowds produced some fatalities). The tactic for success on Everest is to climb through the evening, when the weather and wind conditions are more favorable, and then have as much sunlight as possible on the descent. 60  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Mike Chambers '05 Current Residence: Needham, Massachusetts Hometown: Westport, Massachusetts Education: B.A. Government St. Lawrence University Occupation: Director, Adventure Challenges, Flying Kites Global Adventure www.michaelrchambers.com/ Everest Expedition Posts: expeditionx.com/ Twitter: twitter.com/closeincontours

mount everest elevation: 29,029 ft. (8,848 m) first successful summit: Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, 1953 location: Border of Nepal & Tibet number of summits 2013: 600 number of fatalities 1922-2010: 219


mount everest (6.8% O2) 29,029 ft.

cirrus clouds ≈21,000 ft. mount McKinley (denali) (9.7% O2) 20,320 ft.

MOUNT EVEREST, CAMP 2

cumulus clouds ≈6,500 ft.

(Looking toward the infamous Lhotse face)

21,500 ft.

mount washington, NH (16.6% O2) 6,288 ft.

Burleigh Mountain (20.9% O2) 1,462 ft.

The wind that engulfed Chambers when he inched out of his tent never took a nap. Gusts of 80 miles per hour tried to chop block the summit dreams of the former offensive lineman turned adventurer. When Chambers and his crew reached the Balcony, a venerable landmark in the ascent to the peak, the Everest climber’s worst adversary began to win. Rime ice was playing defense for the Summit, and Chambers and the rest did not have a sensible play past. “Rime ice is real nasty stuff that accumulates on your gear. It’s like walking with a snowmaking machine in front of you. It freezes your oxygen valves and the condensation on the masks makes it difficult to breathe,” he explained. Any hope evaporated when he saw his Sherpa turn around and start praying. Chambers called Basecamp on his satellite phone. The command was to turn around. One of the first to leave Camp 4 that night, Chambers headed down and had the undesirable task of passing along the information to 40-plus other climbers who trailed his group. “Telling them was probably harder than turning around myself,” he said. With a limited amount of oxygen and only a little time to be up in the altitude, Chambers was heading home. The disappointment didn’t register, though, because he was so committed to finding his way down the mountain.

“Telling them was probably harder than turning around myself.”

“The summit of Everest in all its glory is beautiful and wonderful, but I have too many things going on at home.” If reconciliation with one’s dreams were only that easy.

FLYING KITES What happens to a soon-to-be college graduate who travels to Washington D.C. with hopes of changing the world? In the case of Mike Chambers, ambitions toward a career in law and government turned sour. “I was turned off by the whole environment,” he said of his experience as an intern during his college days. “I always had this urge to give back but I felt so removed from it and got turned off.” Not long after graduating from St. Lawrence University, Chambers—with a desire to get his hands a little dirty and tackle that detachment— worked for an organization called Surf for the Cause in Nicaragua that combined surfing waves in Central America with building houses for families in need in the community. The organization was featured in a film called the Human Experience, which also told the story of Flying Kites and its founders. One of the founders, Leila de Bruyne, hired Chambers to work for Flying Kites. She also unknowingly hired her future fiancé. They were living in nearby towns on the coast of Rhode Island at the time.

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  61


flying kites founded: 2007 mission: Flying Kites provides high quality residential care to some of Kenya’s most desperate orphaned and abused children. links: www.flyingkites.org

Mike and Rahab. left: School assembly at Flying Kites Leadership Academy.

In Flying Kites, Chambers found a passion for an organization that provides high quality residential care to some of Kenya’s most desperate orphaned and abused children. Located in the foothills of the Aberdares Mountain Range, the School has become a special place for Chambers. “When I first went out to Flying Kites I fell in love with the place instantly,” said Chambers. “We have a magical place over there. The kids are incredible and very inspirational. They’ve been through incredible hardships. …They embody mental toughness.” With an eye on generating more funding for the non-profit, Chambers co-founded Flying Kites Adventure, an arm of the organization that utilizes partnerships to lead clients to a number of different adventure opportunities internationally and domestically while raising money for the organization. The idea is that someone can sign up with Flying Kites and climb Kilimanjaro or to Everest Base Camp, among other options. “It works like a small adventure travel company with a twist,” Chamber said. “Instead of paying for the trips out of pocket, individuals have an opportunity to meet a fundraising target which covers the majority of their expenses with the exclusion of international airfare, visas, etc. We have negotiated deals with local outfitters to keep our costs low which provides us large margins of unrestricted funding to be used where we see fit.” The work has been rewarding on many levels for Chambers, and the prospect of heading to business school is once again a combination of a determination to push himself to62  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

ward something and be prepared to help folks in need in an even more impactful way. “I’d like to scale the program I’ve developed for Flying Kites and bring in other organizations,” Chambers said. “I have some good ideas but want to be sure I’m ready for all aspects.” Preparation for Everest, as with a little school in Central New Hampshire, has taught him a few lessons.

THE KID WHO SHOWED UP AT NEW HAMPTON Former NHS faculty member and football coach David Perfield first met Mike Chambers when Mark Tilton demanded that he wrestle on Perfield’s team. Perfield, who is now the Director of Development at the Cardigan Mountain School, recalls a kid who “lacked consistent discipline and structure.” Chambers wasn’t exactly a put-together student, or even a work-in-progress, when he made the transition from two previous high schools. Work-in-progress was more of a desired outcome. His advisor, longtime faculty member Jennifer Shackett Berry, recalls a student whose “appearance and social and academic habits were somewhat disheveled when he arrived.” “When I came to New Hampton I was still a lost soul,” Chambers recalled. “I was in awkward teenage years and rebelling against everything. I didn’t know who I was.” But he had wonderful support from caring, loving par-


ents, and he began to make incremental strides with the help of faculty members. He took some calculated risks and slowly embraced a community that accepted him. “He started playing football, and I thought he was going to really struggle,” said Perfield, who calls Chambers one of the greatest success stories he has seen in 12 years working in schools. “But he ended up being the most improved player on our championship team.” And what better setting for an energetic teenager to discover a passion for climbing? The White Mountains became a door to self-discovery. Chambers participated in NHS’s Sophomore Expedition and later was a student leader on the trip.

Climbers spend two months on the mountain before they can even consider the summit. While some groups achieve their goals without the support of any local logistic help or even Sherpas, others—the most criticized—pay loads of money to ensure their entire experience is supported and made as hassle-free as possible. Chambers’ expedition involved moderate logistical support and working with local Sherpas. Everest demands that you climb most of the mountain three times to get acclimated to the altitude. You work with Sherpas. And therein lies the tangled memories Chambers will always carry away from Everest. One month into the expedition, DaRita Sherpa died on the mountain.

“It was amazing on so many different levels. It’s sensory overload the whole time you are there, living with a whole lot of fear on a daily basis and you have to accept it.” “It opened my eyes,” said Chambers, whose sister Marielle graduated from NHS in 2012. “With the location, it was optimal to take advantage of the trips.” Before Chambers arrived at St. Lawrence, his promising football career was cut short by a neck injury. He didn’t recede into the periphery of the college landscape. Instead, he developed a passion for challenging himself physically, became of the member of the track team, and continued to feed his growing appetite for mountaineering. Little did he know that a neck injury would lead him to the most feared mountain in the world.

REFLECTION Everest was in sight long before the night of May 16. The planning and preparation stretched back years with eight summits of Mount Kilimanjaro and a true test when he added the 23,000-foot summit of Aconcagua, the highest mountain in the western hemisphere located in Argentina. There was the technical mountaineering in New England and the trips that built stamina, like the Pemi Loop he undertook a year ago with Perfield on a weekend trip. Then there were the financial challenges. Chambers, who ended up raising over $100,000 for Flying Kites with a trip to base camp—benefited from corporate sponsors like Merrell. As Chambers reflected on the journey and the mission, his voice resonated with the conflict that comes from not making it to the peak while realizing incredible fundraising goals for Flying Kites in the process, developing wonderful friendships, and experiencing a horrific life-changing tragedy. “It was amazing on so many different levels. It’s sensory overload the whole time you are there, living with a whole lot of fear on a daily basis and you have to accept it,” he explained. “You are there and you’re going to do it. It’s sad to read the media reports about Everest. Everest is a beautiful place. There is some accurate reporting. There are people up there who have no business being there in terms of physical capabilities and technical skills, but for the most part it’s an incredible mountain. ...It was 90 percent good and exciting and 10 percent terrifying and depressing.”

Chambers says they will never know what happened to him. The intersection of selfish climbers determined to conquer a life’s climbing dream and Sherpas, people trying to make a living, nearly pushed Chambers home well before his night in Camp 4. “I felt like a lot of people didn’t care,” Chambers said. “The guys on the team and leadership didn’t really care or they had a better way of dealing with it. Or maybe it wasn’t as a big of a deal to them because he was a Sherpa. It was heavy. It was pretty scary.” The sadness and astonishment was in his voice as he relayed dispatches from the expedition via the Internet. Various social media including Instagram, Twitter, and his blog were all set up to provide his supporters, friends, and family access to the experience. They could share the highs and lows of the journey. But Chambers persisted, pushed forward by his dream to reach the peak and help the orphans in Kenya that benefited from his fundraising. He pushed through because that’s what he’s been doing since he showed up at New Hampton School. “I owe everything I’ve done to New Hampton,” Chambers said. “Who knows where I would have ended up if had not gotten on the straight and narrow. I didn’t truly realize until my sophomore year in college how much the School changed me and set me up for success.” A school and its teachers can only do so much. For his former advisor, there is an overflow of satisfaction when she considers what Chambers has accomplished with his climb toward Everest. “A lot of people are so self-absorbed when they are trying to summit Everest,” said Jennifer Berry. “But with Mike it’s about him summiting and helping someone else.” As much as he will tell his story of Mount Everest, the invigoration and the excitement, Mike Chambers’ imprint on that mountain vanished quickly when he returned home. Yet at a school in Kenya, where orphaned kids dream big dreams, his climb, his work, and his passion resonate every day. And that has nothing to do with reaching the summit.  FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  63


help hand huskies in the medical industry

by Will McCulloch and RYANN McCANN

richard dupee ’63 carolyn ricards crosby ’81 halary patch leblanc ’01 leslie sawicki pellegrino ’03

Note: Answers were edited and condensed for publication.


ing s Thousands of New Hampton graduates over the last two centuries have followed their passions and desires for success into an array of vocations—corporate law, investment banking, education, technology, manufacturing, military, sports management, marketing, agriculture, and hospitality to name a few. In recent years, though, few have entered into or found themselves entrenched in a more polarizing, unpredictable, or complex economic workspace than the medical industry. Hamptonia caught up with four graduates who have embraced the challenge, one for which we need sacrificing citizens and one that is not going away. Doctors and nurses with a shared alma mater talk about how their desire to help people guided them through years of education and rewards that are less about money and more about our country’s future.


richard dupee, MD class of 1963 Residence: Wellesley, Massachusetts Richard dupee wants to make your life more comPosition: Primary Care Physician, Chief fortable. Only months after his Geriatrics Service, Tufts Medical Center 50th Reunion from New HampEducation: Tufts University, Tufts ton School, Dupee can only imagUniversity Medical School ine the myriad aches, pains, and Chairs/Honors: Associate Clinical physical ailments his classmates Professor, Tufts University School of and other grandparents experiMedicine; Governor, American College ence as they move closer to 70 and beyond. But he’s also spent of Physicians, Massachusetts Chapter; most of his career thinking about President, Massachusetts Geriatrics ways to improve the lives of older Society; Medical Director, Alliance for folks and educating future doctors Quality Care LCO about the importance of geriatric work. Still, he’s had to contend with an American medical system that finds anyone over the age of 75 with more doctors than they have shoes in the closet. But Dupee loves a challenge. His passion for helping our oldest citizens is the oxygen that fuels his expansive involvement in the Boston medical community. He is a true trailblazer in the world of geriatric care, and the proof is not only on his resume, but in the way patients and peers value his contributions. “Geriatrics bloomed at Newton Wellesley Hospital, Tufts Medical Center, and TUSM under his passionate and dynamic leadership. Pre-clinical, clinical, and medical resident positions were made available again under Richard’s aegis,” says Dr. John Harrington, former Chief of Geriatrics Service at Tufts Medical Center, the Doctor who mentored Dupee. “... Under his direction, one of the major medical wards at TMC now is devoted to geriatrics. He is a superb physician.” Whether it is his booming primary care business at Wellesley Medical Associates (started in 1974) or other responsibilities as an educator or leader, Dupee brings an incredible optimism and energy to it all. The former soccer and basketball player at NHS with a mischievous streak has redirected his zeal. A 1963 graduate of NHS, Dupee received his undergraduate degree and studied medicine at Tufts. He now works as Chief of the Geriatric Service at Tufts Medical Center and Clinical Professor of Medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine. He is responsible for teaching geriatric medicine at both institutions. He also cameos as an expert witness in court cases and serves as the Governor of the Massachusetts Chapter of the American College of Physicians, the largest organization of internal medicine specialists in the world. Recently engaged, Dupee has two sons—Matthew, who runs his medical office in Wellesley—and Joshua, a 1998 graduate of New Hampton who is a special education teacher and also raises alpacas with his wife.  –W.M. 66  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Q&A How did you get into medicine? Since I was a little kid I’ve been fascinated by the whole medical complex, from interpersonal relationships with patients to the mystery of how the body works. I had asthma as a kid, and there was very little medication at that time, so the local GP would show up and give me a shot of adrenaline at 3 am in the morning and get me out of what was called status asthmaticus. Today it would be treated in emergency room. It had a big impact on me. The fact that he came to see me in the middle of the night—this was powerful. I always wanted to be in medicine. Initially, I thought I was going to be a pediatrician. I really thought it would fulfill my goal of helping kids who were like me—getting better. Through all the rotations I did at Tufts at all the medical centers in Boston, I got more interested in the chronic disease states—not necessarily the acute ones. There was very little effort being made to deal with chronic disease—patients who suffer day-to-day with poorly controlled diabetes and poorly controlled heart disease—those types of things. I was influenced by my grandparents. You begin to realize that if you have an impact up front, you’ll be able to save a lot of these people from these chronic diseases. So I got into preventative medicine. That’s what I did early in my career. I was an internist for adults long before anyone was talking about geriatrics. With all the patients I inherited from two practices in Wellesley, I built a practice quickly around preventative health exams—controlling blood pressure, controlling cholesterol. Back in the 70s and 80s, people were not talking about taking care of the 75- and 85-year olds, people were dying before then.


How rewarding was it getting into geriatrics? I was teaching internal medicine like so many people, and then I became a specialist. I was still in internal medicine with a sub-specialty of caring for the older population, but it was huge. There are very few of us. The children of older adults are savvier now. They flock to my practice. On any day, I have one to two new older patients. The kids of these patients realize it’s a specialty. They understand that geriatrics is

What can our society do better related to older people and their healthcare? One, take care of yourself so when you are older you don’t suffer the way they do. Remember, the vast majority of the older population that does suffer from some disease, it’s because they aged in an era when we did not understand the concept of preventive medicine. Now we have a lot of medicines that are keeping people alive who nor-

It was so rewarding to be recognized for making the effort and having the passion to take care of older adults.” a specialty dedicated to maintaining function above anything else. If a patient has chronic diseases and tons of medication, they come to my office and I either eliminate some of the medications they don’t need or cut the dosages down and work on function. Keeping them functional and happy without some of the symptoms they had before is the cornerstone of geriatrics.

What have been the highlights in your career? Certainly becoming the Chief of Geriatrics at Tufts Medical Center, a major academic medical center. That was a huge turning point. It put me on the map in the city of Boston. It was so rewarding to be recognized for making the effort and having the passion to take care of older adults. The second one was when I was elected Governor of Massachusetts Chapter of the American College of Physicians. It was a complete surprise. I was fellow since the early 80s. I was very active. I was published and board certified, but it was a surprise …It’s a huge honor. There is one in each state. Two times a year we have our governor meetings and four times a year we have our council meetings. And we have a tremendous impact on what happens in Washington DC as far as affordable care and electronic health records and meaningful use.

mally would have died in their 70s and 80s and are living into their 90s. So preventive medicine is the key thing to avoid usual problems that occur with aging and that includes exercise, diet, blood pressure and cholesterol control, etc.. The number two issue is caring for the older population is a major challenge. It is so painful to watch a family really struggle over whether to put mom or dad in a nursing home. Everything changes when that happens. Husbands and wives struggle to keep their spouse at home. And with a single grandparent, 50 percent of the children who are responsible for a demented parent not in a nursing home have to stop working.

So 24/7 care is very expensive. And in order to pay for a nursing home, Medicare will only pay for a nursing home for 21 days after you get out of the hospital—then you have to go privately or whittle down your expenses to qualify for Medicaid. It’s quite painful to watch. This country is not prepared for baby boomers like myself who are going to get older and are going to need some type of specialized care. Who’s going to pay for it? There is not going to be enough funding to pay for it. You’re going to have to run your money down to almost nothing before you are Medicaid eligible. The system does not work in this country.

Any advice to students and alumni interested in getting into Medicine? If you interview a primary care physician and he/she starts to complain, don’t talk to them. We have a lot of unhappy primary doctors and they are my age. The way primary care has evolved, it requires a lot of unreimbursed work. My generation continues to complain—mind you we started off with a pay-forservices model. There is a dearth of primary care doctors. There is a need, but it’s difficult to convince medical students and residents who are hearing all


these negative comments to go into primary care. They’d rather go into cardiology where you can make half a million or radiology ($400K) and not have to bear the suffering in primary care. There is no suffering and it is not a burden. Once you understand how to do it, primary care is the most rewarding of all of the specialties. I’m an internist. We feel it is a specialty. There is plenty of support for primary care. With the affordable care act, there is a 10 percent increase in primary care income coming in 2014. There will be more incentive for going into primary care. You are the captain of the ship and you’re responsible for the patient and you can decide if they need a specialist. If it worked like that, the cost in this country would go down dramatically. Now you can go to whomever you want. I have patients I inherited that come up from Florida after a spouse dies to live with their children, and they have a cardiologist, a neurologist, nephrologist, and rheumatologist —all of these who are providing them with care that I can provide for them under one roof. It’s not all that difficult to do.

How rewarding is the teaching? The teaching is key. It keeps you on your toes and makes you a better doc. It’s critical. I’m with students all day Monday and then I have second-year residents working in outpatient.

To me, it’s the reason to get up in the morning. You get students and residents who need to learn. Afterall, someday they’re going to be taking care of me, so I want them well trained. And to me it’s a lot of fun.

I was just a kid who fooled around a lot, which was why my parents sat me down and said if you want to go to medical school, you’re not even close to meeting your potential. Once I got into the environment—an all boys

“To me, it’s the reason to get up in the morning. You get students and residents who need to learn.

What is he most important quality to have with patients? To understand what the aging process is all about. I get up in the morning a little stiff and I work out almost every day. I can only imagine what it’s like for an 85-year-old with very bad arthritis or spinal stenosis. These people really suffer and my role is to find ways to make them more comfortable so they can get up in the morning and be more functional. It’s a huge challenge but an absolute need.

How did New Hampton shape your career? A lot of my classmates went into business, and I did not feel I was made for that. I was more of an academic. And I was not an academic before I came to New Hampton.

school, very academic, and sports-related with the structured schedule—I knew I wanted to be a doctor. During my senior year, I took advanced calculus. I remember taking an exam, and Lou Gnerre was the teacher. We turned in our exam and it was just impossible. He got in front of the class and said “None of you did well so we’re going to grade it on the curve. Dupee you got a 25.” I ended up getting an A+ in the class. I got that reinforcement from him. I lived in Caswell with Lou. I realized by putting your nose to the grindstone and doing what you have to do, you can get into a good school and move on. My whole goal was to go to Tufts because I could go to the medical school. With the help of Bud, who had a lot to do with me getting there, I kept going. The sports were great fun and there was a lot of camaraderie at New Hampton, but it was the academics.


carolyn crosby, md class of 1981 Carolyn Richards Crosby feels lucky. On a recent summer evening, she stayed late in the office to see another patient who was suffering. And even after dinner with her husband and children, she figured that she had two-and-a-half hours of chart writing to do before the day was complete. But she’s not complaining. She’s been finding the appealing moments in a hectic schedule for years. Crosby was the class president and Meservey Medal winner when she graduated in 1981, played numerous sports, and soaked up science courses with her career goal in mind. Ambition leads to busy days. Accepted to a number of selective east coast colleges out of New Hampton, she opted for Ohio Wesleyan, which offered can’t-turn-down scholarship money. Crosby, who graduated from NHS in three years, relished the small classes and the connections she developed with her science professors at a small, liberal arts college without graduate students. She was labready when she arrived at Dartmouth Medical School, but her family was not prepared for her next move—a Navy Health Professions Scholarship, which paid for medical school with obligated service as a doctor. It began an odyssey from the mid 1980s through the mid 90s. Crosby notched her four years in Hanover in medical school. Only hours after graduating, she was in San Diego and beginning her service to her country. In between three years of residency, she worked in the Navy Hospital, served in the Persian Gulf during a two-year stint overseeing medicine for 1,500 soldiers on the USS Cape Cod, and then with two more years of service. “When you are on the high school end of it, it sounds like forever,” said Crosby, who lives nearby in Meredith with her husband, Peter—a New Hampton School grad whom she met while waiting on his table in the dining hall— and twin children who are in high school. “When I look back now, I think of what a small percentage of my life that was. It’s funny. It was so worth it to put in that time to do what you want.”  –W.M.

hometown: Meredith, New Hampshire Residence: Meredith, New Hampshire position: Family Physician, Belknap Family Health Center; Hospice Physician, LRGH

Q&A How did you decide to become a Doctor? I knew when I was six years old. As a young kid, my Mom got remarried when I was five and my stepdad was a family doctor in Meredith. That had a significant influence on me. When I was very young and told people I wanted to be doctor, people said it was cute, but I stuck with it. Sometimes ambulances would pull into the driveway, and I was always fascinated. I would peek in to see what was happening. I really liked to observe him when he sewed up lacerations. I would go down to watch. When I was 12, I worked in the office during the summer filing charts. When there was something interesting, I could look. I was 12 when I learned how to draw blood. When I moved back to Meredith, a woman caught up to me in the Golden View parking lot and said “Dr. Crosby, you drew blood from me when you were 12.” It was cool to have that exposure and experiences at a young age.

Why the Navy? I got into Dartmouth and discovered it was one thing to have an abstract idea of what it would cost to go to Medical school and then to see your name on the bill. So after the first couple of weeks I met a classmate who was applying to ROTC as a health professional. I ended up meeting a Navy recruiter and was impressed. I applied for a scholarship. My stepdad got wind of it, and took me out to lunch and tried to talk me out of it. He said he would sell some land to pay for med school. But I said, “this is my responsibility.” He helped me with college. It worked out well.

What was it like being a Doctor on a ship? I was an intern at a Naval hospital and then instead of residency, they interrupt it and send you out on active duty. They don’t need as many specialists. I was in charge of a general medical office on the USS Cape Cod. I oversaw 26 Navy corpsmen and one physician assistant. We took care of 1,500 people on the ship and

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  69


supervised care for some other ships. It was a great experience because I had to do inspections, order supplies, and was responsible for a budget.

How did you get into family practice in Meredith? I got out of the Navy in 1996, which worked out, because I had twins and it was nice to not have to face threat of deployment. So I resigned my commission. My parents decided to sell their house, and my husband shocked me by asking me, “Would you ever consider moving back here?” I now live in that house. We never contemplated coming back to New Hampshire. But we were back here for the first time in the fall. We missed the seasons. It was great to be outside with the smell in the air and hear the crunch of the leaves. It sounds crazy, but the weather in San Diego had gotten monotonous. Needless to say, we bought the house from my parents. I was living in the house I grew up in and was going into family practice in the same town that my father worked for so many years.

What is the most rewarding aspect of your work? The relationships I’ve been able to build with multiple generations of families. It’s so fun. I have some of them that are four generations. And I love the puzzle. Specialists know what they’re dealing with. The patient has a disease and you have to choose a treatment. Today for instance, my last patient of the day was a 27-year-old man who had four days of neck pain, night sweats, and fever. I have to figure out what it is. Is it West Nile, is it something else?

Any advice to folks considering medicine for a career?

Are you solely a primary care physician?

I would say it’s still a fabulous field and don’t be turned off by the curmudgeons who say “medicine has been ruined.” I disagree. It’s still great, primary care in particular. I love what I do. I’m always trying to recruit young doctors into primary care. I feel like I’m happier than anyone. There are always hassles with insurance and pa-

For the last nine years I’ve also been working in palliative care and hospice. It’s very rewarding. I think end of life is a really special time, and people are often very open to spirituality and have special needs and really want to set things right. ...They are willing to have someone to step in and a team that is going to make a difference.

“I would say it’s still a fabulous field and don’t be turned off by the curmudgeons who say ‘medicine has been ruined.’ i disagree. It’s still great, primary care in particular. perwork, and it bugs me. But when I look at it on balance, at the end of the day, there are so many positives.

What’s the best advice for serving patients best? Talk less and listen more. I think the patients tell you what’s wrong. You need to know what to ask and lead them. The less pontificating the better.

How did NHS influence you? I had so many wonderful experiences at New Hampton. Academically it challenged me. Al Keith (Math) and Doc Chase (Chemistry) stood out as people who really challenged me to go further than I could. I had tons of fun and really loved the sports—I just loved it. I was given opportunities to be a leader, which really paid off.


halary patch

leblanc, np class of 2001

Halary answered her phone, never anticipating Karen would be on the other end. After all, she hadn’t spoken with her in over a year since she left Massachusetts General Hospital to tackle her busy life as a new mom, finish her Master’s Degree, and work in general medicine. Life was a bit more manageable now that her daughter Scarlett was 2 ½ , her degree was complete, and she had moved on to a private general cardiology practice. However, something was missing from her professional life. Halary felt destined to return to a hospital to work with cardiac ICU patients. Her per diem shifts at MG left her craving more time to care for these patients. Mass General’s Heart Transplant team needed another nurse practitioner on their team and they wanted her! Karen was a nurse practitioner on the team and was present for the most recent Friday meeting among doctors and nurses. There was a vacant spot and they needed the right nurse for the job; a caring individual that wanted the position. A doctor in the room stated, “I think it’s time to call Halary!” “It was the right time” says Halary. “I knew a lot of the doctors. I had grown a lot personally and professionally there.” Less than one year later, Halary appreciates working with “amazing people” as a heart failure/transplant nurse practitioner in the division of Cardiology at Mass General. Halary finds it “intellectually stimulating” to work at a teaching hospital with ongoing research and cutting edge medicine. She recently participated in a heart/lung transplant, the first successful one completed at Mass General. “I feel blessed to be a part of that medical history.” “When you see people struggle and you go on that journey with them and you get the call they got a heart and then they recover and you find yourself saying ‘goodbye’… it’s surreal because you never thought you’d see the day!” says LeBlanc. “…At MG, we always emphasize that a heart or an organ is a gift and it needs to be taken care of.”  –R.M.

Hometown: Glen, New Hampshire Residence: Danvers, Massachusetts Position: Heart Failure / Transplant nurse practitioner in the division of Cardiology at Massachusetts General Hospital

Q&A What are the most gratifying parts of your job? The relationships you develop with people. I think for me I’m thankful every single day that I get to wake up and smell the air or someone cutting their lawn and that I get to come home and see my daughter. Some of the people here don’t get to do that. There are young patients that I have that won’t get to experience having a child or develop a loving relationship with a partner. I live everyday knowing that if I were to receive a diagnosis like these patients that I wouldn’t have any regrets.

Why did you want to be a nurse on the cardiology transplant team? My mother was a nurse and a great role model. I didn’t think of being anything else. I liked taking care of people, even as a child. Caring for patients while they wait for heart transplants is humbling. It makes me thankful every day for my friends and family, and for the simple things in life that we often take for granted. During my senior year at New Hampton School, I joined the New Hampton Fire Department as an EMT to test the waters and see if I could handle the field, the blood, etc. While in college at Colby-Sawyer, I had to pick a senior practicum and knew I wanted to be in an ICU. I was going to choose pediatric ICU but it fell through, and the only other choice was cardiac ICU.

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  71


I was very apprehensive but loved it and have been doing it ever since. I love learning, so for me it’s very intellectual stimulating to be in this current position. We get patients from the west coast and as far south as Florida. They set up shop in Boston and are here until they get a heart.

What are the most challenging parts of your job? It is challenging to see patients from the initial onset of evaluating them for candidacy for a heart transplant or if they could survive with a VAD (ventricular assist device or artificial heart pump). We must determine the initial diagnosis of whether or not they will survive with their heart or not. It’s hard to get attached to families. It’s a long road. For instance, one patient has been currently waiting for eight months. She is from New York and has no family in the Boston area. The monotony of every day life in the hospital is challenging. And, when the outcome is not good and a patient doesn’t get a transplant or gets very sick or he or she doesn’t want to continue with the process, there is a loss you grieve. You spend so much time with these people. And, at the end of a day, going home to a 3-year-old that doesn’t understand the complexity of my job is hard. When you’re having a bad day at work, you must put on a poker face and move on.

Being able to connect emotionally with patients makes a nurse a good nurse. You must find that balance of emotion and still doing your job. At times, when the patients are let down… you feel for them. And with that, you have to understand that someone lost that life to give up that organ. You always keep that in the back of their mind. Someone’s family is choosing to give life to someone else.

I developed key relationships and friendships with people that made me realize how much I valued personalized relationships with people. That is what my job is all about… developing personal relationships with colleagues and patients. My parents got divorced when I was a freshman. The New Hampton community was my family. I had adopted parents in Jen Berry, the Redmans,

“When you’re having a bad day at work, you must put on a poker face and move on. Being able to connect emotionally with patients makes a nurse a good nurse. You must find that balance of emotion and still doing your job.

How did your NHS years and the people there prepare you for your calling? First of all, my four years at NHS were by far the best four years of my life! I also call them the “Glory Days.” I formed better relationships there than at college. It was because of the faculty and the students that knew me so well.

and the Arsenaults. They were my other family. I was also close with Lisa Falconi Perfield’s (2001) parents. Also, my uncle passed away my senior year. That was incredibly difficult for me. What eased the process was the family that I developed at New Hampton. I was able to share in their joy and their pain, just as my mentors and friends at New Hampton School shared in my joy and pain.


leslie sawicki

pellegrino, rn class of 2003

It was the spring of 2006. A frustrated nursing student sat in her dorm room at Rivier University, a small Catholic institution located in Nashua, New Hampshire. Leslie’s microbiology professor broke it down for her. She needed to score 100 percent on her final exam in order to secure a B average and advance on with her degree. As she sat in that dorm room, her stress level crawled to an all-time high. Leslie (Sawicki) Pellegrino ’03 decided during her junior year at New Hampton School that she would become an oncology nurse. Her grandparents were both diagnosed with B cell lymphoma. As Leslie, her sister Krystal Sawicki Alpers ’00, and their parents spent time with her sick grandparents, they quickly realized that the nurses were special. They had “a huge impact” on the family. As Leslie contemplated her future that night in May of 2006, she suddenly looked back to her New Hampton School days. What helped her get through biology? Minutes later, Leslie sifted through her stuff and pulled out her notes from her biology and AP biology classes at NHS, both courses she took with David Perfield, a former teacher at New Hampton School. She studied only those notes for the rest of the evening, knowing that it would provide her with the best chance at scoring the 100 she needed. Biology semed to make sense when Perf taught it. Leslie took her final the next day and earned that 100. She received the B she needed in order to continue to pursue her degree and become the nurse who provides her patients and their families with comfort, knowledge, care and love. At the end of these rough days, she travels home to Danbury where she finds her own support and love from her husband Manie and children, Connor and Anna. David Perfield still recognizes Leslie as one of the hardest working students he had as a teacher at NHS. “Leslie stands out because she just continued to work and never let up,” says Perfield. “She was independent, self-motivated, and set the standard for how I wanted to work with students.” To this day, Leslie feels as though she has Perfield to thank for her understanding of biology and ability to conceptualize this subject. The feeling, however, is mutual. “Leslie probably doesn’t know this but she made me a better teacher,” Perfield added. “She opened my eyes to how I can help students outside of the classroom and how I can help them transition their skills and talents into the challenges they’ll face in college.”  –R.M.

Hometown: Meredith, New Hampshire Residence: Danbury, New Hampshire Position: Registered Nurse in Oncology, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center

Q&A What are the most gratifying parts of your job? Helping people die with dignity and making them comfortable, because the majority of patients we get pass away. We receive a lot of patients with solid, stage-four tumors that are more severe. A lot of the people that come in are treated, but most end up passing away with us instead of at home. We help talk the families through the dying process. A lot of them will come in for inductions of chemo and may have to stay for one to three months at a time because they get so sick from the chemo or have to be moved to ICU. Then, they return and we have to nurse them back. I have had relationships with some of my patients for more than five or six years. I have to continue to remind myself though that a majority of our patients are not in a good place.

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  73


Why oncology? I don’t think I could work anywhere else. You see what the patients are going through and want to ease their pain. The main reason I chose this was because I wanted to form relationships with my patients and get to know them so I could help them. I know what works for them, what they like and don’t like. All of this makes me a better nurse. After working with these patients, I don’t think I could be a good nurse to others who don’t know what oncology patients are going through. I work with incredible nurses. They are going through the same thing. We all learn to love these people.

How does the job make you feel about your contributions to society? I enjoy helping others. They are going through the worst time of their lives. You are helping them and their families get through it. So many people have to face this unfortunate disease. They need to be properly medicated, comfortable, and well educated about it.

What are the most challenging parts of your job? The most challenging part of my job is seeing people I love die. I learn to love them as I form a relationship with them. I learn to hold myself back because their families are there and they are grieving. You have to grieve quietly, which is hard. Most family members of patients come in and say “we got

so hard because most patients that come through are so progressed that they are at a turning point where there isn’t much we can do.

How did your NHS years and the people there prepare you for your calling? Perf was a huge part of it for me. I would not have made it through mi-

“The most challenging part of my job is seeing people I love die. I learn to love them as I form a relationship with them. I learn to hold myself back because their families are there and they are grieving. You have to grieve quietly, which is hard. this… we’re going to beat this.” Then, they experience what their loved ones are going through with the treatments, bone marrow transplants, etc. It puts their loved ones through so much. It’s

crobiology in college if it weren’t for him! He had a huge impact on me. He was the best teacher I have ever had. He was incredible! He was the one who truly prepared me for college. 


WHERE are they

now?

Each issue, we track down a former faculty member who left an impact on New Hampton School. Will Levy arrived as an intern in 1997, but left with an indelible place in the minds of young alumni. He also left with an entrepreneurial spirit that produced and executed the plans for an authentic cycling tour business. Hamptonia caught up with Will to see what he’s been up to the last decade. What have you been doing since you left NHS?

I worked at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra for two years; I completed an Honors Year at the University of Canberra; I was Head of Sport at The Pittwater House Schools in Sydney for three years; and now I run a Mountain and Road Bike Touring Company www.mtnbike.com.au and www. twowheeltours.com.au. We do tours in Australia, New Zealand, and also Europe. We also run Bike Skills Sessions and transport bikes all over the East Coast of Australia to different cycling events.

What do you love about your business/work?

What have you learned about the importance of traveling and seeing the world?

The world is an amazing place. When you get the chance to travel, do it! It helps to open your eyes. I’m lucky enough to travel the world for “work.” I am writing this while sitting in a hotel room in the town of Lourdes in France. I am about to fly back to Sydney, Australia after three months of tours here in the EU. I have made many friends during these tours, both locals and clients, many of whom will come back and tour with us again in the years to come.

Any stories that you retell with regularity?

Name: Will Levy (Former Faculty) Years at New Hampton School: Seven (1997-2004) Residence: Ebbels for a few weeks, back of Gables, top floor apartment of Draper. Job Title: Assistant Men’s Varsity A Basketball Coach, JV Girls Basketball Coach, JV-B Boys Basketball Coach, Strength and Conditioning Coach for Performance Plus, House Parent, Sports Science teacher, Health teacher, Academic Support Program tutor.

:

Find Will on the web: www.mtnbike.com.au www.twowheeltours.com.au Contact Will at: will.levy@mtnbike.com.au Follow on Twitter: @twowheeltours and @_mtnbike_

Every day is different. I love working with people, traveling, the challenge of growing a business, and the reward of seeing it all unfold.

I have great memories from NHS: Ski Day, the 2002 Basketball Championship, stories from the dorm, plus trying to understand Mark Tilton with a mouth full of cigar.

much free time. I do enjoy getting out on my bike to escape emails and the phone.

Any advice for those starting a small business?

With whom do you stay in touch?

What are your fondest memories of NHS?

Take a chance. I remember Alan Crocker (former Assistant Headmaster) talking to parents at one of the information nights. He asked them to think about the course that they studied at college/university. How many of them were currently in a profession in which they studied for their first degree?

The list is long, thanks to Facebook. I have had a few students and teachers come visit me in Sydney. One person who hasn’t made the journey yet is Mark Tilton.

How do you spend your free time?

Since I work for myself, there isn’t

First and foremost—the people. The teachers, staff, and students are what make the place. The weather, coming from Sydney Australia, we never have snow so seeing it for months is hard to forget. The basketball—I just threw away my sweater from the 2002 NEPSAC Championship Winning Team. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  75


trustees

Lorna Cobham Mendelson ’87

david ives P’15

Lorna Cobham Mendelson ’87 joined the Board of Trustees in April 2013. Since 1994, Mendleson has worked for RBC Capital Markets in New York City. After serving as a manager of corporate banking from 1994 to 1998, she became a Director in Securitization Finance. Before arriving at RBC, Mendelson enjoyed stints at SunTrust Bank and Oppenhiemer. A recipient of the Frederick & Grace Smith Academic Scholarship while at New Hampton, Mendelson graduated from Emory University. She has been married to fellow NHS graduate Scott Mendelson ’85 for the last 18 years. The couple lives in Irvington, New York with their three children. An entrepreneur with extensive experience in computer programming and innovation, David Ives joined the Board of Trustees in July 2013. The father of triplets, Ives has a son John in the Class of 2015. Ives is the founder and CEO of TVEyes and the creator, along with a team of highly skilled developers, of its core technology. For nearly 30 years, Ives has focused on designing custom databases and highly specialized software. He holds an AS in Business Data Processing from Nashville State Technical Institute and a BA in Information Science from Fordham University. He lives with his wife Betsy and three boys in Southport, Connecticut.

2013-14 Board of Trustees v ic toria A . blodge t t ’80 ne w hav en, connec ticut alicia Burrows ’0 0 S y r acuse, NY S te v en G. Del ane y ’65 Harrison, NY Alford J. dempse y ’65 Atl anta , georgia Pe ter W. Galle tly ’73, P ’09 bondv ille, v t William F. Guardenier ’62 Mt. K isco, NY Mark Hay es P ’13 Dall a s, T X Dav id I v es P ’15 southpor t, C T De an P. Jacobson ’68 delr ay Be ach, FL Samantha m. Je we t t, Esq . ’77 Gilford, NH Rober t d. K ennedy ’50 Ne w C ana an, C T K Arl V. K imball ’74 doy les town, PA Lisa L AUDICO P ’16 Wes tpor t, C T E arl r . Le wis ’62 bos ton, MA C arl Lieber t P ’10 ’12 ’15 San antonio, T X Louis D. Maiuri P ’13 topsfield, MA

douglas j. wenners P’16

76  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Douglas J. Wenners joined the Board of Trustees in the October 2013. The father of Caroline, Class of 2016, Wenners lives in Bedford, New Hampshire with his wife and three daughters. For the last 13 years, Wenners has worked for WellPoint, Inc., the largest managed health care for-profit company in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. In June of 2013, he was named Senior Vice President and regional CEO, Local Group and Individual Business. Prior to joining Wellpoint, he was an attorney in private practice at the New Hampshire law firm of Wiggin & Nourie, P.A. A graduate of Boston College, Suffolk Law School, and Dartmouth College, Wenners presently serves on the Board of American Well, and is a former Trustee of Southern New Hampshire University.

Lorna CoBham Mendel son ’87 Irv ington, NY Robinson C . Moore ’73 Groton, MA Frederick M. Pe yser III ’68 Underhill , VT Ja son m. Pil al a s ’58 nor th palm be ach, fl Eugene E. R ain v ille ’57 Bluff ton, SC Dougl a s Wenners P ’16 bedford, nh jun Yao Beijing, china


classNOTES

Walter Umla ’41 and his plane, “Snowball’s Gesarium.”

The Class Notes below reflect information received through July 23, 2013. Please send news and/or high-resolution photos of yourself or other alumni to include in these pages to Hamptonia, Class Notes, Alumni Office, New Hampton School, 70 Main Street, New Hampton, NH 03256 or e-mail alumni@ newhampton.org. Thank you.

1941 Walter Umla sent a note updating his militar y ser vice for New Hampton School’s archives: “I was at New Hampton for two wonderful years. Fred Smith, Sr. ’10 was headmaster, his brother Maur y was a teacher and, as I recall, young red-headed Freddy (Fred Smith, Jr. ’45) was just entering school the year after I graduated. I went on for two years at Colgate and then joined the Air Force as a cadet, went through pilot training , became a fighter pilot with the 20th fighter group, 8th Air Force f lying the P51 Mustang and had credit for two enemy destroyer and one damaged. After the war went into the lumber business, sold out in 1986, and retired to live the life of Riley since.”

1943 Roger Lyons recently called advising he would not be able to return to NHS to celebrate his 70th NHS Reunion as he would be in Mexico. He hopes to get back east soon and visit his alma mater!

1944 An update from George Ahl: “Having a great time with my granddaughter, Signe. She was made co-captain of the Deerfield Ski Team for 2013-14. I told her about my becoming co-captain for New Hampton School in 1945. I remember Rocky Holman and I had this responsibility. This is ver y special at this time in my life, and it would not have happened without my time at NHS.” Bill Rankin visited campus last summer (2012) with his daughter on their way to a family reunion in Maine. He followed up afterwards with a note to Director of Alumni and Parent Relations Cindy Buck:

“ The recent (2011) passing of Governor Walter Peterson ’42 reminded me of a New Hampton event that occurred during World War II. I was in the Navy and was assigned to the crew of the USS PC 1214. A PC is a 165-ft. Patrol Craft used mainly in the anti-submarine warfare. Our mission was to convoy merchant ships that passed through the Panama Canal from the Pacific to the Atlantic to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. While my ship was tied up at the Coco Solo Naval Base on the Atlantic side (April 1945), awaiting the formation of a convoy, I ran into Governor Peterson in the enlisted men’s beer hall one evening while on base liberty. He was an officer and was treating members of his crew to a few beers for doing an outstanding job that day. His ship was a Seagoing Tug and was there awaiting passage through the Canal to the Pacific. He remembered me and we talked about New Hampton. He said it would be about 10 days before they could get passage through the Canal. Remembering how good a basketball player he was, I suggested a game between his ship FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  77


class notes and mine. The base had excellent sports facilities including a basketball court. He immediately accepted the challenge, and the game was arranged. The captain on my ship said he wanted to play. The game was played, and they won handily. Walt must have scored fifty points as his repertoire of shots was impossible to block. Before his ship shoved off I visited him aboard. He actually had a basket and backboard set up on the fantail of his ship where he was able to practice in his off hours. I thought New Hampton alums would enjoy that little bit of WWII history!”

1947

Right: (L to R) Tracy White, Major Gifts Officer Cindy Buck, Director of Alumni and Parent Relations, Irving Cushing ’47, and Sarah DeBenedictis, Director of Annual Giving at the Manitou Circle Breakfast on June 1 at Alumni Hall. Below: Old Ski Tow near Irving Cushing’s home in New Hampshire.

Irving Cushing and his daughter Donna Campbell visited New Hampton School to attend the recent Manitou Circle Breakfast during Reunion Weekend 2013. Irving was recognized with the Most Distinguished Alumni Award at the breakfast. A note from his daughter followed: “My dad was so excited and couldn’t wait to show ever yone the gift that was presented to him. He really enjoyed himself, and I was so happy to be able to bring him. He is one special man. …Thanks again.”

1948 Tom Monahan recently sent a copy of the Oral Roberts University Basketball program when the Golden Eagles played UC Ir vine with a note, “New Hampton gets around.” Damen Bell-Holter ’09 played for Oral Roberts while Travis Souza ’11 and Will Davis II ’11 both played on the UC Irvine team.

1949 (William) Bruce Crowell checks in with the Alumni Office from time to time and more specifically to talk about his favorite people, T. Holmes ’38 and Jinga Moore. He recently provided an update for his classmates: “It has been 64 years since I saw New Hampton School fade in the rear view mirror. What a fantastic experience…a firm foundation upon which to grow. I guess I always knew I would pursue the military as a career. I loved every second of it and wouldn’t change a thing: Distinguished Militar y Graduate from the University of Rhode Island; University of Shippensburg, MS; United States Army War College; Master Army Aviator and after retirement in 1979 on to United Technologies, Pratt and Whitney Aircraft, West Palm Beach, program management for all three aircraft engine programs. It was a great second career from which I, again, retired in 1991. I could not have accomplished any of it had it not been for my wife Sally—the best thing that ever happened to me. She is the reason for all my success! Our children, Judy and Steve, are our pride and joy. They and our 78  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

grandchildren are a constant source of joy and admiration. So—Go Go Go Class of 1949… but only fast enough so you don’t hurt anything!”

1950 John Knapton recently shared the following stor y about what was originally known as Mailbox Hill Ski area at New Hampton School: “I spent many enjoyable hours walking the nearby countr yside, mostly following old roads, occasionally through woods. But at that time I could go along at four miles per hour. Now I would be lucky to make two mph. The pictures, along with a sermon from (the local minister at that time) Reverend Chester Howe, also brought back memories of what I considered for many years as one of man’s fundamental desires: to be in conf lict with nature. When satisfied, man is less prone to take up arms against his fellow man. After all, man evolved in constant contact with nature. And of course,

after a long walk or skiing at Mailbox and after using up any excess energ y, I was always content to sit in peace with my classmates, and do my lessons. Of course having blisters from poorly fitting shoes also helped me to sit still. Reverend Howe’s comments were related to a challenge he put to the congregation (attendance was required by New Hampton students). The Sunday morning temperature was minus 35 degrees Fahrenheit; his challenge or advice, which I followed, go outside and enjoy the weather. And I followed up with a walk through the snow around the campus—no 10 or 20-mile walk! From the Reverend’s advice, it was a simple step to my conclusion that physical exertion can have a soothing effect on one’s basic desires, and if the interaction is done by interacting with nature, then I think a basic desire is satisfied. I always thought it unfortunate that more youngsters are not able to enjoy the pleasures of combining good exercise and the beauty on what nature has to offer.”


class notes

1954 An update from James Wright writes: “I retired after 50 years in high school teaching and administration, but I couldn’t stand the quiet and am now teaching at a local Community College. I spend a lot of email time trying to get Tom Grady and Toni Torti into main-stream politics. I went to the Reunion in 2012—it was a blast. NHS is ‘with it.’ See you at the 60th in 2014.”

1957 It has been another busy year for George McEvoy. In July of 2012, George had the honor of being Parade Grand Marshall for the annual Windjammer Days Parade in Boothbay Harbor. More recently, George was recognized with the Rotary Lifetime Achievement Award at a surprise ceremony held in June 2013 in Boothbay Harbor, Maine. George has been a loyal benefactor of many programs, non-profit organizations, and businesses in Maine for several decades, including the Boothbay Region YMCA , Boothbay Region Historical Society, Boothbay R ailway Village, Maine Maritime Museum, R am Island Preser vation Trust, Boothbay Fire Company to mention but a tiny smattering of his many venues of interest and support. His plaque reads: “Preser vationist for R ailway Village, Lighthouse, Ships and Buildings—Lovable Curmudgeon—and Lifelong Friend and Benefactor to Us All!” Well deser ved, George and our heartiest congratulations to you!!!

Norman Poitras shared a photo of the 1951 Tennis team in front of Lewis Mansion with the Alumni Office. L to R: Coach Lansing Bicknell, David Oakland ‘51 Earl Hart ‘51 , Norm Poitras ‘51, Richard McKeage ‘51, Louis Shurtleff ‘51, Alan Levenson ‘51 and Robert O’Donnell.

1960 Thomas Greenbaum has published his sixth book You Can Do It: A Guide To Starting and Running a Small Business. It was written based on four years and over 500 client experiences as a member the of Fairfield County (Connecticut) SCORE chapter. The book is available on Amazon and is covered in the website Youcandoitbook.net.

1963 Gary Margolis, after celebrating Reunion 2013 with 30 classmates, shared the following ref lections: “So much appreciate being able to see your faces, to spend a few minutes in the circle of our shared memories, by those time- spent brick buildings, the timeless hills and trees. And for your generosity in not reminding while I was revering Joe Rice that Jim Shaw and I actually lived in Lewis not Lane—although the time in Lane sometimes felt endless.”

1971 John MacLeod sent photos of Curtis Middleton and David Skilling at a ski

Rusty Nordstrom ’68 dancing with younger sister Ellen Nordstrom Baer ’76 at an NHS Spring Fling during the 1960’s.

David Skilling ’71 (left) and Curtis Middleton ’71 (right) who were visiting and skiing with classmate John MacLeod ’71.

outing with this note: “During our sophomore year, Curt invited David and I to be his guests at his home in Brattleboro for Februar y vacation. We had a great time skiing then and almost 44 years later we are all still skiing. David graduated Northeastern with a degree in medical technolog y but decided to use his science background selling organic chemicals. He has

been, and still is, ver y successful in his career. He has a sailboat and when he discovered Curt liked sailing the discussion became lively between the two. I, on the other hand, like terra firma and understand nothing of the biological sciences.”

1972 Holli Hamel Siff recently provide this update: “Dad ( Wayne Hamel) ran into George Copadis ’71 last week and discovered that he is the Commissioner of NH Employment Security. He has been Commissioner since July 2012 and served as L abor Commissioner before then.” FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  79


class notes Holli also heard from Sweed Dalton, who was unable to attend this year’s Reunion. Sweed recently retired from the Information Technology field and is currently teaching mathematics.

from the Guard with 20 years of service in 2017. I will be the ripe old age of 60.”

1973

Bill Lemmond was sorry to miss Reunion 2013. He shared that he has won local, state, regional and nation awards for cartoons he has created.

Check out the 1973 photo gallery sent by John Morin and Rob Moore during their months of planning for Reunion 2013 as reunion volunteers for the Class of 1973! Reunion planning must be better atop a snow-covered mountain!

1974 Maron Thorne sent the Alumni Office a quick note: “I was reading the military ser vice list and noticed that Morris G. Powers was omitted; he ser ved in the US Army. Thanks for all you do for New Hampton! I enjoy hearing about what is happening on campus. I live here in St. Croix, US Virgin Islands (as does Kathy Pugliese ’85) and although I can’t get back to campus as often as I would like, I still think of it with great fondness.”

1975 John Chagnon shared a press release recently featuring a New Hampton School Student: “Bowen Zheng ’14 was named New Hampton School Trig-Star for 2013 at the Trig-Star competition held recently at the school. Bowen is the son of Grace Wang. Bowen also competed for the title of NH Trig- Star in the Statewide Trig Star Contest on May 11, in Concord, New Hampshire. Trig-Star is a mathematics competition sponsored by Land Surveyors throughout the country to determine the most highly skilled high school students in the USA at the practical application of trigonometr y. John Chagnon was the local contest sponsor. John is the owner of Ambit Engineering, a Civil Engineering and Land Surveying consulting firm located on Griffin Road in Portsmouth. John is a licensed Professional Engineer, Land Sur veyor, and Septic System Designer. Ambit Engineering is licensed to practice in Maine and New Hampshire. The TrigStar contest is sponsored nationally by the National Society of Professional Surveyors

1976 James Browne contacted the Alumni Office in early January: “Greetings from the snow covered state of Maine...After I left New Hampton I joined the Navy and ser ved for 10 years until I was injured. I spent the next 13 years as co-owner of a 75-foot Dragger working the waters off the New England coast...In 2006, I went back into the military as a member of the Maine National Guard with one deployment to Iraq and one to Afghanistan. I will retire 80  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

1978

1979 Michael Reingold provided this update: “Hi from New York. Working at Yankee Stadium!! Probably not the thing to talk about with people from New England, but I am in my 11th season working for the Yankees. My daughter Amy is a rookie, and this is her first year. That is for fun. My real job is the Executive Director of Bronx Lebanon, Highbridge-Woodycrest Center. Here we take care of those aff licted with the AIDS virus, which unfortunately has not gone away, affecting around 40,000 people in the US annually. I think about New Hampton School often. It was a great place to be for high school. I am married to my wonderful wife Edilene, and we live in Eastchester, New York.”

1980 Drake Corrigan shared news of a reunion in Miami Beach including 1980 classmates, Glenn Petry, Kevin Iwankow and Rusty Halverson who descended upon Miami Beach and the annual world-renowned art event “Art Basel.” Drake Corrigan, based in Miami and St. Moritz, is an avid investor in real estate and art collector; Glenn Petry, based in Manhattan and Shelter Island, is a founding partner of 21C Media Group; Kevin Iwankow, based in the Domincan Republic, is a professional golfer and the owner of KM Cigars worldwide. Rusty Halverson, not pictured in photo, is based in Corona, California, and is an artist and accomplished poet.

1983 L ast summer, L oraine Gre enwo o d Hobausz informed the Alumni Office that she had a new job as a Healthcare Career Success Coach at Manchester Community College. Congrats, Loraine!

1986 Bill Gratton and his wife Joanna welcomed daughter Gabrielle (Gabby) Rose Gratton May 29, 2012. Gabby weighed 9 pounds, 4 ounces and according to Bill, “already has me wrapped around her little finger!” Teresa Place sends the following update from Tanzania: “My husband Caito and I have two kids now, Justis (7) and Nadya (2). We run an orphanage, school, and support group for HIV positive kids.

(L to R) John Morin ‘73, Pete Galletly ‘73 and Pete Richmond ’74 during Reunion 2013.

Gordon Plumb ’60 and former faculty member Joseph Gauld at the 2012 Athletic Hall of Fame at NHS.

(L to R) John Morin ‘73, Jim Hill ’72 , Michael Tamposi ’72, Marc Shattuck ’72 and Nick Tamposi ’75.

We live and work on an organic farm in Tanzania. If any NHS students or alum are interested in visiting or volunteering, karibu! (welcome in Swahili). We need people with farming, teaching, and marketing experience (www.tzkids.org).”

1988 In March 2013, AmyLouise Murawski joined Peabody Smith Realty in Franconia, New Hampshire, as a commercial/ investment sales agent. Amy-Louise returned to New Hampshire from Murawski New York City, where she spent the majority of her real estate career focused on commercial/office leasing and third party property management. For the last six years, Murawski worked for ABS Partners Real Estate, LLC and The Dana


class notes

Rob Moore ’73, Trustee and Pete Galletly ’73 , Chair, Board of Trustees at Stratton Mountain, VT.

Commercial Group at Douglas Elliman in New York. While Murawski has been a commercial agent for a number of years, she earned a B.A . in Art Histor y from Rockford College, and a Certificate from Christie’s Education, a graduate level program in art market, auction house practices, and connoisseurship.

1991 In October of 2012, Travis Gardner and his wife visited campus while traveling to Vermont for a wedding. He had not returned since graduating and was thrilled with the campus improvements. Travis and his wife live in New York City where she is in graduate school. He also works for the History Channel in Stamford, Connecticut. He asked about Mark Tilton, Harrison Golden and happened to see Jennifer Shackett Berry ‘83 briefly during his visit.

1992 George Fearons and family welcomed Molly Molloy Fearons (5 pounds, 15 ounces) on April 20. Congratulations! Richard Spritz announces the birth of his daughter Lila Sophia born May 26, 2012. Congratulations to the Spritz family!

1994 Kirstie Scobo Perry shared this update: “I am very pleased to announce the birth of my son Alexander Joseph Perry on July 31, 2012. He is a beautiful little boy whose determination to live let him beat the odds twice when coming into this world. He is doing great.” Congratulations, Kirstie!

1995 Sam Webster has a new position as a registered agent and financial adviser with Signal Ridge Capital Partners in Framingham, Massachusetts. Congratulations, Sam!

Michael Reingold ’79 and daughter Amy in NYC..

1996 Emily Hawkins Stahl announces the arrival of her daughter, Elcie, born last November. Congrats Emily and family! Erika Holmes Collins shared happy news on the birth of her third daughter, Ryan Marie, born in July 2012.

Drake Corrigan ’80 (center) flanked by classmates Glenn Petry, and Kevin Iwankow during a recent mini Reunion in Miami, Florida.

traveled to Finland to ser ve as a goalie coach for the U-18 IIHF Camp. This fall, Mandy ’s nephew will join Husky Nation as a member of the Class of 2017. McGregor Chadwick and his fatherin-law, Wesley Hays, were recently hon-

1997 Douglas “Doug” Rockel was married on July 28, to Jennifer (Jenn) Wilhelm, who is a speech therapist in the Cincinnati school system. Doug works in commercial real estate. During October 2012 travels to Asia with Head of School Andrew Menke, Jennifer Shackett Berry ‘83 visited some of her former students from Japan: “We had a wonderful time with Michiko Tanaka yesterday. She took us to Meiji Jingu, a shrine, and then for a quick shopping trip. Following our time with her, she went to the hospital to visit Emi Komatsu Brennan. Emi delivered her son Haruki Byron on January 20, 2013, but had been hospitalized earlier during her pregnancy. Later in the day, I received this message from Emi: ‘Ms Berry, Thank you for the NHS gift and citation. Michi came to the hospital and drop them off for me this afternoon. Hope you had a nice visit in Korea and Japan. Looking forward to seeing you next year perhaps with my son!” Geoff and Nicole Metts welcomed daughter Adalyn Nicole, who was born September 25, 2012. Congratulations. John Pollock, a member of the Agawam, Massachusetts Fire Department continues to challenge himself by competing in grueling athletic events such as Tough Mudder in Vermont, “Spartan Sprint Hurricane Heat” in Amesbur y, Massachusetts and more recently the “Spartan Death Race” in Pittsfield, Vermont. He was featured in an August 2012 issue of the Chicopee Register.

1998 Last summer Amanda “Mandy ” Cronin

Hotel Impossible, a popular TV show on the Travel Channel, was in Rincón, Puerto Rico to fix the Casa Verde Hotel. Travis Moore ’95 (right) congratulates Hotel Impossible’s host, Anthony, on a successful first surfing lesson!

Harry Jenkins, son of Tracy Turgeon Jenkins ‘91 and Harry Jenkins ’91 shares a Husky hug with Madeleine Isabelle, daughter of Alison Kirk ’90. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  81


class notes

Megan Collins ’98 holding Carly, her dear friend and daughter of classmate Molly Rogers Ebitson ’98.

ored at the ICF (Insulating Concrete Form) Builder Awards in Las Vegas. Wes is the owner of Northstar Contractors, and McGregor serves as a project manager. The awards are given annually to “projects that demonstrate outstanding innovations, quality, and craftsmanship in ICF construction. McGregor is married to fellow NHS graduate Jenlian Hays Chadwick ’99. Molly Rogers Ebitson shares this update: “My husband Michael and I had a daughter on October 19, 2012. Her name is Carly. When she was about 5 weeks old Megan Collins came up for a visit to see her.” Tim Glassett and his wife Laura welcomed their daughter Riley last year and currently reside in Jupiter, Florida. He is a pilot for Spirit Airlines, f lying the Airbus A320. Life is good and the Glassetts tr y to visit family in New Hampshire as often as possible. Joshua R. Henderson is the owner of J’s Aviation. He recently shared the following update: “I started f lying in September 2002 in Minnesota while I was in college. It was a slow process between basketball, school, lack of money, and winter. Let’s just say f lying lessons where spaced out. My senior year was a blast. I had passed my check ride and was a private pilot. I enjoyed f lying friends around; it was a hit. After some time in the real world, living and working in busy Atlanta, I real-

Emi Komatsu Brennan ’97 with her Athletic Hall of Fame Citation as part of the Women’s 1995-96 Ice Hockey team and classmate Michiko Tanaka ’97 in Japan. 82  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

David MacAlpine ‘00, Kevin Cooper ‘00 and Mike Levine ‘00.

A Pollock family reunion: L to R: Andreea Ungureanu Foster ’02, John Pollock ’97, Matt Dorsey ’02, Dot Dyer ’03, Terry Pollock ’94 and Andrea Louis ’04 with her son Conner.

ized f lying would be an awesome career. I attended A.T.P. Inc., (a f light school) in Jacksonville, Florida, where I became an Instrument Single & Multi-Engine Commercial Pilot. A .T.P. Inc. hired me on as a f light instructor. I started out as a dispatcher in the ‘pit’ as they call it. I was on my way to getting paid to f ly, which is a big turning point. By definition, I became a professional pilot. After a short stint in the pit, my career began teaching privates. With a few students under my belt, I began to teach in the multi-engine and got moved to ‘add-ons.’ I was soon teaching it all, between commercial, ATP, and f light instructor ratings. I was busy; busy improving as an instructor. W hile at A.T.P. Inc., I trained a gentlemen who had thousands of hours in a Huey during Vietnam, owned his own air plane, and needed a pilot. He made me an offer and I took it, f lying a cabin-class, pressurized Navajo, PA-31P. On my days off, I started some freelance f light instruction for people who had their own aircraft. I realized that I really enjoyed teaching, and I came up with the idea of purchasing my own aircraft for training and rental. So J’s Aviation was created and here we are today.”

1999 Alice Milu Black and her family sent a new

Alice Milu Black’s ’99 daughter.

address in recently as well as a photo of her daughter, a future NHS husky proudly wearing her NHS baby bib! Evan Shafer is a partner and editor for Bonesteel Films, in Asheville, North Carolina, putting his background in sound and recording technology to good use. Visit www. bonesteelfilms.com for more details about this innovative video production company. Kimberly Law Stephens and her husband Remminald announced the arrival of Graham Michael Stephens, born on May 23, 2012, weighing 9 pounds 2 ounces and almost 23 inches long. Congratulations!

2000 Ben Dernis was married in June near his home in Montreal. He and his wife Pam hope to visit NHS again soon! Classmates Mike Levine and Kevin Cooper faced off against each other this winter as Cooper’s Bridgton Academy team fell to Levine’s Kimball Union Academy team in a hard-fought 3-0 game. Classmate Dave Macalpine was on hand to root for Levine, not Cooper according to Mike! Big news for Coach Levine: Mike has recently joined the coaching staff as an assistant coach for the Men’s Ice Hockey Team at Brown University. Mike previously was the head men’s coach at New Hampton and assistant coach at his alma mater Utica College. Congratulations Mike!

Brooke and Eric Buck ’01 are the proud parents of Keegan Paul Buck born August 14 weighing 8 lbs 5 oz.


class notes

Bailey, daughter of Danielle “Dot” Dyer ‘03.

Joel and Jessica (Kang) MacLeod ’02.

Gabriel Chami’s ’04 son Idan Gabriel Chami.

2001

2003

Sean Kennedy and his wife announce the arrival of their son Brady John born November 27, 2012. Lisa Falconi Perfield and David Perfield (former faculty member) announce the arrival of their second daughter Lexi Grace, born April 22, 2013, weighing 8 pounds, 3 ounces. Big sister Anna was ver y excited to welcome her baby sister home. Congratulations Lisa and David! Rocky P. Milot, Jr. shared news on the birth of his son, born August 13, 2012, weighing 7 pounds, 10 ounces and stretching 20.5 inches long. Very exciting news Rocky!

Matthew Greenwood sent the following news: “I’ve been living in Colorado for the past few years. After NHS, I went onto Full Sail University, got a degree in recording arts, then got a job working on cruise ships doing audio/visual work. I got tired of working on the ships and it’s hard getting a decent job doing sound on land. I’m now working on getting a degree for web design, just looking through colleges now, trying to decide if I want to do a trade school and get it done fast, or go to a college.” Will McDonough is in Master’s Program through University of Illinois in Global Studies in Education. Will and his wife Nicole also celebrated the birth of their second child, Jonah Reed McDonough, on May 26, 2012 in Norwalk, Connecticut. Jonah joins his big sister, Naomi, as a proud supporter of Husky Nation! Jill Nugent recently accepted a teaching position to teach math and science at a high school in the Northwest Territory of Canada.

2002 In addition to a busy work schedule in commercial real estate in Boston, Collin Bray has more recently become involved with a program offered through Landmark Education. He has most recently created a project connecting a handful of eighth graders at The Driscoll School with a group of retirees at The Providence House. Through a series of intergenerational meetings and collaborations, the students and retirees will share experiences of growing up in different eras. Tanya Gallagher is planning to be married in September to M. Anthoney Da Costa in Pomeys, Rhone-Alpes, France. Tiffany Killeen married Nick Plouffe on July 21, 2012. Congrats! Jessica K ang, alumna and current NHS Science Department faculty, and Joel MacLeod were married in the Bahamas at the Garden of the Groves on June 4. They were engaged there and decided to return for the wedding. Once they returned to New Hampshire, they enjoyed an outdoor reception at The Bridgewater Inn in Bridgewater, New Hampshire, owned by Jess’ parents. Among the NHS alumni attending the reception were classmates Kendra Gilpatric-LaPlume and Kelly Williams, and her brother, Justin Kang ’03 as well as several friends/current NHS faculty. Joel and Jess will be living on campus in Bickford with their dog Marley.

Victor Lima-DeAngelis ’03 was honored at Fenway Park this summer for his continued service to the United States, which most recently includes several tours in Afghanistan.

NHS was well represented at the wedding of Chris Hart ‘04 and Sara White.  L to R: Eric Toczko ‘04, Trevor Lowell ‘04, Brian Smith ‘04, Chris Hart ‘04, Sara White Hart, Former Faculty Mark Tilton, Jennifer Schongalla ‘80, and Russell T. Hart ‘70.

2004 L auren Casadona Dean announces the arrival of her daughter Violet, born December 1, 2012. Gabriel “Gabe” Chami and his wife Olga welcome their son Idan Gabriel Januar y 14, 2013, weighing 8 pounds and measuring 22 ¼ inches long. Gabe adds: “ With that size, he is looking forward to being a Husky!” Kristen Eisner writes: “Life is wonderful! I’m in my third year of working at Mascoma High School. I work in the alternative program. Every day is a challenge, but so rewarding. Just over a year ago I bought a house with my amazing boyfriend of almost four years. This summer we adopted a handsome black lab puppy, Max. I am currently taking my last graduate class at Plymouth for my masters in education for school counseling. Lisa Falconi Perfield ’01 is taking the class also for professional development. And

Ruth McDonough ’04 flanked on left by NHS faculty Michelle Cote and on the right by former NHS faculty Kris McClure at a conference at BB&N where Ruth teaches Arabic studies. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  83


class notes

Dylan Ferguson ‘06 and Claire Katz.

Far right, Katie Calder ‘07, Calder Dance Connection.

since we only live 15 minute apart we are carpooling. It has been amazing to catch up and reminisce about the good old days at NHS.” Chris Hart and Sara White were married at Gedney Farm in New Marlborough, Massachusetts on May 4. Groomsmen included Brian Smith and Trevor Lowell. Chris recently graduated from Babson with an MBA (check this). He and Sara live in Natick, MA. Ruth McDonough is teaching Arabic at BB&N in Cambridge and getting her master’s from the Monterey Institute of International Studies.

2005 For news on Mike Chambers, who will be visiting New Hampton School soon to share his experiences during his recent attempt to ascend to the top of Mount Everest, read the story in the feature section. Marisol Vincent provided this update: “I work two jobs now! One job is primarily to pay for my on-going education. I am currently studying to become a Traumatic Brain Injury Specialist. As I already work with brain injury, it’s something I would like to become my life career. I am also a member of the Brain Injury Association of New Hampshire. I have to take a national exam. I also plan on going back to school to gain an associate degree in Behavioral Science. I love my “day” job.” It keeps me active and alert. My afternoon job is working as a receptionist at a BMW dealership in Manchester. I am also hoping to work with War Veterans who have TBIs (Traumatic Brain Injuries) or have acquired other disabilities while in active duty.”

2006 Amelia Feigenbaum recently shared that she is currently living in Philadelphia, working in medical sales with a territory covering New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and New York. Her fiancé, Kenny Torsey, is teaching and coaching at Governor’s Academy. Christopher “Chip” Provost and Jill St. Pierre from Hooksett, New Hampshire, were married on July 20, 2012 at St. Cath84  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

During a recent visit to St. Lawrence, Development Office staff member Tracy White met with an NHS contingency in upstate New York. Left to right: Aaron Lawton ’09, Emma Berry ’10, Luke Horton ’09, Alex Dodge ’09, Ozzie Morales ’12 and Brian Alexander ’11.

erine’s Church in Manchester. Their reception was held at the Currier Museum of Art in Manchester. As for New Hampton people who were in attendance, Andrew Scalingi ’05, (Class of 2005 Class President) and Tom Jenis ’05. Chip followed up, “We took off for our honeymoon in Bermuda shortly after the wedding. I am currently working as a franchise support manager for the retail franchise Flip Flop Shops. My wife Jill just finished up with art school at the New Hampshire Institute of Art where she got a degree in Ceramics. She is currently working as a waitress at The Republic restaurant in Manchester. We are living in Manchester.”

2007 Katie Calder checked in with this update: “I am a Marketing and Entrepreneurship major at Oklahoma State. I worked as a recruiting assistant in the OSU Football Office for four years. I took a semester off to volunteer for the United Way and a small dance studio in town. The studio shut down, and I decided to open my own. Owning a dance studio has been a dream of mine since I was 12. I can’t imagine ever starting my own studio if it weren’t for the work ethic I was taught while at New Hampton. Not only was I taught to chase my dreams and stand out from the crowd, but I was given the opportunity to teach and choreograph while at NHS which gave me the courage to follow my passion and believe in myself. Calder Dance Connection (CDX) was opened in July of 2011 and had a ver y successful first year. The CDX Dance Company dancers won several top honors at competitions and conventions all year, while having the opportunity to work with the best teachers and choreographers in the nation. I have won choreography awards for my work as well. My goal is to finish up college soon, but I’m taking my time and focusing on building up the studio. I’m also a marketing intern in the Intramurals office at OSU. Super busy, but wouldn’t have it any other way!” R yan Fitzpatr ic k recently shared the following update with Head of School

Andrew Menke during the winter: “For a little over a year now I have been living in Washington, DC and working in Political Affairs and Federation Relations at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The Chamber is the world’s largest business federation representing the interests of more than three million businesses as well as state/ local chambers and industry associations. My division’s principal job is to help elect pro-business candidates to the U.S. House and Senate and advocate for policies that will allow our members to grow and create jobs. This past election cycle my team endorsed about 300 congressional candidates and 80 percent were elected. We invested in the most competitive races across the country in order to educate and mobilize free enterprise voters, launching multiple rounds of advertisements. This election year was an experience of a lifetime, and I had the opportunity to meet and work with some tremendous people. I find myself restless for the next one…I always reflect on my time at New Hampton around this time of year; there’s something magical about the campus during the winter months. In my current position, there are so many things New Hampton prepared me for. Chief among them is the ability to be a great team player and identify unique talents in those around me. The level of diversity New Hampton exposed to me enables me to enter new environments with energy and confidence. I am always grateful for the time I spent at NHS.” Yoon Joo “Jade” Jung was married in April and relocating from current address in Dallas, Texas. She recently connected with Bob and Chris Pollock, P ’94, ’97 to share her happy news!

2008 Justin DeLuca enjoyed a successful tennis career at Nichols College and was named to the All-CCC Doubles First Team on the All-CCC Singles First Team. DeLuca posted a perfect 8-0 record in CCC action including a trio of 6-0, 6-0 decisions for the Bison as he pushed his career regular season conference record to 21-0.


class notes

2009 Nick Checovich played one of his first big gigs June 28, at the Brighton Music Hall. Faculty members Jamie and Lara Arsenault and Freddy Petkus ’01 were there to cheer him on. His brother Todd graduated in 2003. Michael Topercer graduated from Bentley University on May 18, 2013 with a Bachelor of Topercer Arts in Psychology.

2010 Meighan Bourbeau married K ayman Spaulding October 29, 2011, and they have a daughter, Paytyn Anne Rose, who was born February 25, 2012. Head of School Andrew Menke ran into Paul Brown last summer at Wentworth by the Sea in Rye New Hampshire where Paul was working. Paul can be reached at brown256@sc.edu.

2011 Joseph MacConnell has been play ing junior hockey for the last few years and recently received an offer to attend Worcester State University. T homas “C lay ” Garlow recently checked in with a note to Head of School Andrew Menke: “While I was not a student for long at the New Hampton School, I greatly appreciate the acknowledgement in the Kantian metaphysical nature of the education process applied to the student body during my brief stint in the program. The idea of a global citizen was first introduced to me in this cloister of a place I realized so pivotal to the essence of composing oneself into a true aesthetician and the autonomy around which the core values stressed at NHS are built. Even more so, I applaud

Madeleine Blais ’12 and Samantha Brenner ’12.

NHS on their overwhelming ability to have had a staff of individuals deeply committed not only to stressing the rationality in this ethic, but as well as provided guidance at critical moments toward the development of each student into a matured individual themselves. While I can not call myself an alumnus of NHS, I do still have an absolutely huge respect for what has occurred in the regality of the classrooms tucked away in those compendious New Hampshire mountains. Without said introductions to academia in an honest manner, I may never now be on the ventures of which I now seek.” Well said, Clay!

2012 Freddy Petkus ’01, current faculty member at NHS as well as the Women’s Varsity Basketball Coach, watched two of his former players, Madeleine Blais and Samantha Brenner playing against each other in the college ranks after teaming together for two years. Here is Coach Petkus’ recap of the evening: “After serving as co-captains with Lizzy Ball ‘12 in their senior campaign of a very successful 23-2 season, Maddy and Sam accepted athletic scholarships to play college basketball. Maddy chose Marist College while Sam selected the University of Vermont. Their first official game was against each other. UVM traveled to Poughkeepsie New York to face Marist. After a back and forth game, Marist College took the win and with the victory, Maddy has bragging rights. Both

girls saw action in the game, and at one point were guarding each other!”

FORMER FACULTY Myles Kent Gleason was born on July 9, 2013 to proud parents, Mike Gleason ‘96 and Lara Gleason. Lara and Mike met working at New Hampton in 2000. The Gleasons currently live in Southborough MA, where Mike is the lead brewer at Jack’s Abby Brewing, in Framingham, and Lara is the Director of Residential Life at Fay School. Longtime faculty member Ted Stiles (1997-2012) has created a new company, TRS Energ y Solutions, which does comprehensive home performance and energy assessments to determine what is the most cost effective solution for residential and commercial building. He got his start at a non-profit, Plymouth Area Renewable Energy Initiative (PAREI), as a BPI-certified energy analyst and solar installer. He still works with them, including presenting “Button Up NH” workshops, one at the Peterborough Library. He’s on the steering committee of MERI (Monadnock Energy Resources Initiative), which focuses on home weatherizations and solar energy.

Christopher “Chip” Provost ’06 and his wife Jill St. Pierre. Myles Kent Gleason.

Meighan Bourbeau Spaulding ’10 and Kayman Spaulding.

The Gauld family prepares to depart Hyde School in Bath, Maine to attend patriarch Joseph Gauld’s induction into the New Hampton School Athletic Hall of Fame in the category of Coach in November 2012: Laurie Gauld Hurd ,Joseph W. Gauld, founder, Georgia (Gigi) Gauld MacMillan, and Malcolm Gauld. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  85


in memoriam

Herman and Doris Hassinger at Camp Rockywold.

Herman and Doris Hassinger P’77 ‘78, GP’90 October 25, 2012 Longtime member of the Board of Tr ustees Herman Hassinger and his wife Doris died on October 25, 2012 after being involved in a plane crash en route to a Board of Trustees meeting at the School. They were the parents of two New Hampton School graduates and grandparent of another. A self-employed architect, Hassinger and Doris made their home in Block Island, Rhode Island, and routinely flew in Herman’s plane to the School’s four annual Board of Trustees meetings. “Her man and Dor is were some of the greatest suppor ters of New Hampton School,” said Peter Galletly, Chairman of the New Hampton School Board of Trustees. “Herman was the longest serving trustee on the board and he contributed in so many ways. Herman was the architect for many 86  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

of our buildings on campus. He was incredibly generous with his time and thoughtful of the student experience at New Hampton.” Hassinger ser ved the School on the Board of Trustees since 1978. His son John graduated in 1977, and his daughter Elizabeth graduated in 1978.

“He was incredibly generous with his time and thoughtful of the student experience at New Hampton.” – peter galletly ’73 P’09, chairman of nhs board of trustees

New Hampton Head of School Andrew Menke said that Hassinger was a wonderful presence and a consistent voice on the Board of Trustees. “Herman and Doris were wonderful people,” said Menke. “He was instrumental in our adoption of the International Baccalaureate program, and as an outstanding architect, he was

a strong supporter of campus capital improvements. His committed stewardship has helped the school reach unprecedented health. Herman and Doris will be missed greatly, and their legacy will endure forever on this campus.” Board of Trustees Chairman Emeritus Jason Pilalas ’58, who became a dear friend of Hassinger’s, was interviewed by NHPR Radio a day after the Hassingers’ passing, and commented on the legacy Herman’s designs have left on the NHS campus. “ There are some buildings that are well over a hundred years old, and there are some that are one or two years old,” Pilalas remarked, “But they all fit together wonderfully...His hand prints, his foot prints, are just all over this campus.” Hassinger, 83, a retired Coast Guard commander, operated Herman Hassinger Architects of Moorestown, New Jersey. He was known for religious architecture, including work on more than 200 churches. He designed new churches, renovated old ones,


in memoriam

and furnished church interiors, his family said. “My dad was all about his work,” said his daughter, Judi Hall. “He was never without a pencil in his hand and writing on a paper napkin, a placemat or a church bulletin.” One of his creations was St. Matthew Lutheran Church, his home congregation in Moorestown. “He put a lot of himself into that building,” Hall said. His most recent project was a new sanctuary for Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Kingston, R .I., where a funeral ser vice for the couple was held. Hall said the church was on a tight budget, so she and her father shopped for affordable lighting; he finally chose a cooking item — the wok — to sit behind the sanctuary lights. “He insisted on leaving the handles on the woks so everybody would know what they were,” Hall said. In another church, he adapted a teak salad bowl to be part of the baptismal font. In a third, he camouflaged a smoke detector above the altar by surrounding it with colored tiles.

“If you have to hide something, hide it in plain sight,” Hall said her father told her. While Mr. Hassinger could sometimes be opinionated, Mrs. Hassinger was good-natured, personable and “a

“My dad couldn’t be my dad without my mom. She really let him be who he wanted to be.” – judi hall P’90, daughter of herman and doris

rock,” Hall said. “My dad couldn’t be my dad without my mom. She really let him be who he wanted to be,” said Hall. “All of us thought he would go first, and my mom would be around for a while. It would give my mom that period of time to be herself without my dad. But the fact that they both went together — they are together — maybe that’s good.” Mrs. Hassinger, also 83, was a community volunteer. She ser ved with

Herman receives a gift at a Board of Trustees meeting in the Spring of of 2012 when he became a Trustee Emeritus.

the Burlington County Hospital Auxiliary and volunteered at the Philadelphia Museum of Art while raising a family in Moorestown. In 2000, the Hassingers made Block Island their permanent home. Mr. Hassinger was born in Germany, his wife in Philadelphia. The two met in fourth grade in Mount Airy and married at age 21. Mr. Hassinger graduated from Central High School and the University of Pennsylvania with a bachelor’s degree in architecture. Mrs. Hassinger was a graduate of Philadelphia High School for Girls and earned an associate degree from Drexel University in secretarial skills. T heir love of ar t and culture spurred them to travel the world. As members of the International Flying Rotarians, they often flew their plane throughout the United States, and to Canada, the Bahamas, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. Mr. Hassinger had more than 45 years of experience as a pilot. Mrs. Hassinger was also a licensed pilot for several years, and periodically took instruction to qualify as his copilot. Mr. Hassinger was a fellow of the American Institute of Architects and in 1971 ser ved as president of the organization’s Philadelphia chapter. His work also included commercial buildings and residences, mostly in Moorestown and Block Island. He earned awards for churches, offices, school buildings, and his home on Block Island. The Hassingers shared an interest in education and literacy. Mrs. Hassinger worked on committees at the Art Museum and at the schools and churches that she attended, and on Block Island as a literacy volunteer. She recently completed a term on the board of trustees of the island librar y. Sur viving in addition to his daughter, are a son John; two other daughters, Virginia and Elizabeth; 12 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. Mrs. Hassinger also is survived by a brother, Bruce Lighty. Note: Exerpts from a Philadelphia Inquirer story were used to complete this story. FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  87


in MEMORIAM 1935

1937

DONALD B. OTIS of Redding,Massachusetts passed away on Wednesday, May 23, 2012. Upon graduation from the University of New Hampshire, he ser ved as an officer in World War II and the Korean War, retiring with the rank of Lt. Colonel. He joined IBM in 1952 and held numerous positions, including Controller of the Kingston, NY Plant and the Office Products Division, Treasurer of IBM World Trade and upon retirement, Director of Investor Relations. Mr. Otis was a member of the Greenwich Rotar y Club, the Board of Governors at Innis Arden Golf Club and Vestr y Member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church where he was Chairman of the Day School Board. Don’s greatest dedication was to the University of New Hampshire where he was elected in 2001 to the Athletic Hall of Fame. He served as Class President for over 60 years and faithfully attended each home football game. His passion for this university was passed down to his children and grandchildren. He is survived by his wife of 70 years, Eleanor. His commitment to family fostered by this long lasting relationship formed a lasting legacy for their three children, nine grandchidren and 11 great-grandchildren.

John F. “Jack” Maxfield III, D.O., 93, passed away in New London, New Hampshire on Jan. 17, 2013. He graduated from New Hampton School, 1937; pre-med at Syracuse University, 1939; Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine, 1943; post-graduate training at Mass Osteopathic Hospital, 1943 to 1945. He practiced osteopathic medicine in Newport and Claremont from 1945 to 1989. Always an active skier and golfer, Jack enjoyed life to the fullest. You could find him riding his bike or running barefoot on the golf course in Florida right up until his 90th birthday. Jack will be remembered for always having a smile on his face. In 2009, he moved back to New Hampshire to be closer to his children. He is sur vived by five sons, a daughter, a sister-in-law, seven grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews.

1936 David P. Goodwin died on December 2, 2011, at his home following a brief illness. He attended the New England Institute prior to joining his grandfather in the family business, Goodwin Funeral Home, and ser ved the community there for over 50 years. Mr. Goodwin was long-active in many organizations in the Manchester community. A trustee of the Cogswell Benevolent Trust for almost 40 years, he volunteered for more than 70 years for the American Red Cross and was a 65-year member and a past-president of the Manchester Rotary Club. Many of the institutions in which he was involved had honored him over the years: Neighborworks Greater Manchester presented him with the “Outstanding Neighbor Award,” the Manchester Boys and Girls Club honored him with a “Hall of Fame Award,” and he was honored by Easter Seals of New Hampshire with the “David P. Goodwin Lifetime Commitment Award,” named in his honor. Mr. Goodwin was married for 64 years to Dorothy M. (Kilton) Goodwin, who died in 2010. Members of his family include his three children, several grandchildren, three great-grandchildren, a sister, and nieces and nephews. 88  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

1940 Robert Allen of Bradenton, Florida passed away June 5, 2012. A Veteran of the US Navy during war time in World War II and the US Army during the Korean War, he was a member and past president of Woodpark Home Owners Association, Maine Teacher ’s Association and a lifetime member of the National Education Association. Survived by wife of 68 years, Mar ylyn, two daughters, two grandchildren, and six great grandchildren.

1941 George C. Congdon, a lifelong resident of Keene and Troy, New Hampshire died on December 14, 2012. George attended Troy schools and completed his secondar y education at New Hampton School. During World War II, George was accepted at the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy where he graduated in 1944 as a commissioned officer in the Maritime Ser vice and the United States Navy. He served as a navigator on merchant ships in the European, Mediterranean and Southern Hemisphere areas. In 1961, after self employment, he worked as World Sales Ser vice Manager at MPB Corp., now a division of Timken, in Keene. Following 25 years at MPB, he formed Specialty Products International to export and import precision products used in manufacturing applications. He was a member of the International Trade Center of New England. Sur vivors include his son, daughter-in-law, and three grandchildren.

He was predeceased by his wife, Lillian (Rock), his son, Christopher, and granddaughter, Sara Lynne. Donald M. Flocke of Marstons Mills, Massachusetts, died January 18, 2013.He was a graduate of Belmont High School and New Hampton School. Donald also attended Boston University. He proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II taking part in the invasion of Normandy. Prior to his retirement, he owned and operated a travel agency and professional building in Cohasset, MA. Along with his wife of 56 years, Alma, he is also survived by his two nieces.

1942 Wright Bolton III of New Bedford, Massachusetts died July 20, 2012. He graduated from Punchard High School in Andover, New Hampton School in New Hampshire, and Brown University in Providence, RI. Wright spent his working life in the textile industry as a sales representative for the American Viscose Corp., a division of the FMC Corp. In later years Avtex Fibers, Inc., bought out American Viscose and he was given responsibility for all textile sales in New England until his retirement. He was a member of the Textile Club of Boston, the Northern Textile Association, and the Southern New England Textile and Yarn Peddlers Association. In 2008 he was honored by this association for long and exceptional ser vice to the textile industr y and to the Yarn Peddlers Association of New England, which established an annual Wright Bolton III Award. Golf was a lifelong passion. He served in the U. S. Army Air Corps for three years during World War II. He was a devoted father and is sur vived by three sons, two daughters, two grandchildren, his sister-in-law, and two nephews.

1943 Harris Chadwell died on August 21, 2005. He was the beloved husband of Audrey (Albert) Chadwell; dear father of Louisa (David) Larson, Harris Jesse (Kim) Jr., Clifton (Linda) Chadwell; grandfather of Kristin, Rebecca, Craig, Ben, Melyssa and Michaela; brother of the late Margaret Stutesman; brother-in-law of John Stutesman; also sur vived by nieces and nephews.

1944 David E. Harvey, 86, of Keene, died


in memoriam Tuesday afternoon, April 30, 2013, at the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire, follow ing a brief illness. He attended Brookline High School and graduated from The New Hampton School in New Hampshire. He received his bachelor’s degree from Tuft’s University, his master ’s degree from Brown University, and did further graduate work at the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Harvey served the in the United States Air Force for two years during the time of the Korean War, earning the rank of Staff Sergeant, before his Honorable Discharge. A school teacher by profession, he served on the faculties of the Rockport (MA) High School, the Community College of Temple University, and at Keene State College, where he was a member of the History Department from 1965 until his retirement in 1991. David Harvey married Mary W. (Wagner) Teeter on October 29, 2011. He is sur vived by his wife: Mary W. Harvey, his three sonsin-law, their wives and children, three sisters-in-law, his nieces and nephews, as well as a cousin. He is predeceased by his first wife Mary Louise (Hood) Harvey, who died in 2006.

1945 Dr. Howard Eugene Butler, age 84, passed away July 20, 2012.

1946 Donald L . Johns of Alabaster, Alabama, died on Sunday, February 10, 2013. Sur vivors include two daughters, a son, nine grandchildren, five great-grandchildren, a special friend, Barbara Poston, nieces, nephews, cousins, in-laws, and friends. He attended New Hampton School, and Lafayette College in Pennsylvania where he majored in engineering. He served in the United States Army, stationed in Panama, and was very proud to be a Mason. At a cousins wedding, he met the beautiful and graceful Canadian band singer, Margaret Lashmore. They married in 1950 and settled on Long Island. He was the long-time owner of D.L . Johns Construction and The Counter Toppers, and acted as a consultant to others.

1947 George P. Bart, of Bow, New Hampshire died Januar y 7, 2013. He attended Concord High School, New Hampton School, and MIT and served honorably in the U.S. Navy. He owned and operated, with his brother, the Granite State Candy Shoppe in Concord until his retirement in 1995. George is sur vived by his loving wife, Mary (Fournier) Bart; two sons and a daughter, three grandchildren, one brother, two sisters and several nieces and nephews.

Arnold G Hampson of Dolores, Colorado, died on May 12, 2011. Richard Herbert Teel of Centerville, Massachusetts, passed away on July 23, 2013. Beloved husband of 60 years to Virginia (Morganstern) Teel. Loving father of C hristine Teel Hall of Norwell and Richard H. Teel Jr. of Wellesley Hills.“Dick” was an athlete, coach, Shriner, WWII Navy Veteran, avid gardener and longstanding member of the Osterville Men’s Club. He was a graduate of Cor nell University where he lettered in track, hockey and baseball; and composed the third stanza to the University’s famous “Song of Cornell.” As a coach, he mentored numerous young men in PeeWee Hockey and Little League Baseball at the Kennedy Rink, for many years. Noble Richard was a Life Member of the Saladin Shriners, Grand Rapids Michigan. He was a Member and former Deacon at the South Congregational Church, and for years served as the distinguished traffic officer (wearing his Yankees hat) for the Church’s Friday Night Lobster Dinners.

1948 Ben Roberts Chapman of Sebago Lake, Maine passed away March 1, 2013. Ben was a graduate of Deering High School (1945), New Hampton School (1948), and The University of Maine College of Engineering where he received a BS (1952) and Masters in Mechanical Engineering (1963.). He also attended The University of Mar yland, Baltimore for post graduate studies and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Doctoral Program. Professor Chapman star ted his career as a project engineer with The National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C. That was followed by an appointment as Assistant to The Super visor of Production Planning, U.S. Army, Rocky Mountain Arsenal, Denver, Colorado. In 1956 he accepted an appointment to the faculty of Mechanical Engineering Department at the University of Maine a position he held for 38 years, retiring in 1994. Ben ser ved in the U.S. Army Signal Corps in World War II and again in the Engineer Corps during the Korean War. Sur vived by his wife and best friend of 51 years Dorothy Nancy McKenney Chapman; two children, one grandson. David Lyons died on December 26, 2012. Survived by his wife, Ann, his three children, four grandchildren, great granddaughter, sister, three nieces, a nephew and their families. Henry T. Spear Jr., of Beverly Hills, Florida, died on Saturday, June 2, 2012. He was a veteran of the World War II Era and Peacetime, serving in the Coast Guard from 9/22/45 to 6/30/47. He was an electrician by trade and retired from General Electric in Apopka, FL. He was preceded in death by his beloved wife of 50 years, Vivian Carol Spear, his daughter Carol Joy Spear and son

James Matthew Spear. He is survived by his two daughters, a son, five grandchildren, and two great grandchildren. George P. Tasse passed away on Oct. 25th. His wife, Barbara Ann (Hughes) Tasse, died in 2009. He leaves three sons, a daughter, his former wife, three stepsons, and four grandchildren. He was a US Navy Veteran of the Korean War and was a graduate of Middlebur y College. George was the second generation owner of Tasse Fuel Co. in Southbridge from 1967 to 1988.

1951 James “Jeep” Donlon, 81, of Milton, New Hampshire, died Sunday Sept. 22, 2013 with his loving family by his side after a long illness with lewis bodies dementia. He was born in Boston, Mass. June 11, 1932 the son of the late Richard R . and Margaret (McKay) Donlon. He moved to Rochester at the age of 3 and was a graduate of Spaulding High School, Class of 1950 and played basketball. He attended New Hampton School as a postgraduate. Jeep joined the U.S. Navy and served on the USS Wren from 1950-1954 during the Korean War. He met his wife Estelle Ouellette, to whom he was married for 55 years. He was general manager of Dix Wood Heel. After raising their family they took up golf. They enjoyed going to Florida every winter, playing golf and spending time with friends as snowbirds. He owned and operated Lakehurst Resort in Milton. Members of his family include his wife Estelle (Ouellette Donlon of Milton; son, James and wife Noreen (McL ain) Donlon of Rye Beach; daughter Julie Donlon and the love of her life, Paul Carignan, of Milton, brother, Richard “Mike” Donlon and wife Marceline of Gonic; grandson, Jim Jim Donlon and his fiance, Jesse Skzyniarz, many nieces, nephews and his favorite dog, Tucker. He was predeceased by his son Kenneth Donlon in 2000 whom he missed very much.

1953 Robert N. Weeks, St. Augustine, Florida, died July 17, 2012. He is survived by his wife, Janice and son, two grandsons, and one sister. Bob was a verteran of the U.S. Marine Corp. (1953-1957).

1954 Normand V. Ferdinando, of Boca Raton, Florida, died on Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. He was a retired U.S. Army officer and decorated combat veteran. He was a graduate of Manchester Central High School, New Hampton School and graduated with a B.S. degree in business from the University of New Hampshire in Durham, N.H., and an MBA from Florida Institute of Technolog y, Melbourne. His FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  89


in memoriam military education included being a graduate of the Army Command and General Staff College, the Army Logistics College and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, Washington, D.C. Family members include two granddaughters, two brothers, one sister, and his companion Pat Langley of Rye, N.H.; and numerous other cousins nieces and nephews located throughout the U.S.

1955 Robert A . Barrows of Hingham, Massachusetts died July 21, 2012. He is sur vived by his wife, Judith (Brown) Barrows, a son and a daughter, a brother-in-law, nieces and nephews, and two grandchildren. Bob will be remembered as a true gentleman with a kind and giving heart. He will be sadly missed by all those who knew him.

1956 John Hill , of Glendale, Arizona graduated with the class of 1956. John held various positions at American Express and retired in 1995. He graduated from Utah State University in 1964 with a B.S. in Educational Psycholog y. John leaves his wife of 48 years, Sally Johnson Hill; a son, a daughter-in-law, two grandchildren, a sister, and many nephews and nieces.

1960 Chandler (Sagar) Knight, of Daytona, Florida passed away Jan. 1, 2013. He resided in Nashua and Hollis for many years before relocating to Florida in 1992. Survivors include his wife, Linda Knight of Milford; his mother-in-law, his son and daughter-in-law, two grandchildren, his daughter, and two stepdaughters.

1961 Richard C. Ekholm, 69, of Marlborough, Massachusetts died Nov. 18, 2011. He was a graduate of the New Hampton School and Boston University College of Fine Arts. Mr. Ekholm spent his career in insurance claims and earned his CPCU designation. Survivors include his wife, Susan (Blair) Ekholm of Marlborough, his daughter and son-in-law, and his son and daighter-in-law.

1962 Philip Thomas DeRing, III, of West Palm Beach, Florida, and formerly of East Haddam, Middletown and Portland in Connecticut, passed away on Januar y 24, 2013. He was born in Troy, New York on Januar y 16, 1943. After New Hampton School, he graduated from New 90  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

England College. He was President of the Middletown Chamber of Commerce from 1970-1976; and he owned and operated two Steelcase Office Furniture dealerships from 1976 to 1999; at which time he retired. He is survived by his children: Kathleen DeRing, of Colchester, Kristine M. Howard, of Portland, Major P. Thomas DeRing, of Portland, Joseph DeRing, of East Haddam, 7 grandchildren, a cousin, Brooke Hauf of Albany, NY; his first wife, Susan of Portland and second wife, Lisa of Singer Island, FL.

1963 Thomas Daly passed away on October 20, 2012. Tom is survived by his wife, Rita Daly, three children, seven grandchildren, two brothers and a sister, two stepsons, and his beloved Gigi. John Miles McSweeney died February 11, 2013.

send a tribute We accept any number of materials to help us in preparing obituaries. Please send a copy of an obituary, a note listing a few facts about the deceased, or an e-mail version of these. You can also send a photo. Mail information to Hamptonia, Alumni Office, New Hampton School, 70 Main Street, New Hampton, NH 03256 or e-mail information and photos to alumni@newhampton.org.

1972 Peter Schneider, of Andover, New York, died April 3, 2013. He graduated from New Hampton School in 1972. He graduated from Alfred State College and settled into a comfortable life in Allegany County. In addition to Linda, his devoted and longtime companion, he is sur vived by his siblings, his nieces, and nephew,

1988 Heather Coombs, of Fort Collins, Colorado, died on January 20, 2011. Heather will be missed by family and friends alike, including her brother her mother, her father and step-mother, a nephew and niece, and two step brothers.

1999 Charles P. Bassin of Palo Alto, California died on March 17, 2013. He leaves behind his parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, siblings, friends and his Spaniels.

Former Trustee Former Trustee Herman Hassinger and his wife Doris Hassinger died on October 25, 2012. See full obituary on Page 86.

Former staff Marcia True Burch, age 83 passed away on February 17, 2013. Her husband Charles J. Burch, Jr. was former Athletic Director and Varsity Football Coach and sons Charles ‘73 and Dan Burch ’74 both attended and graduated from NHS.

send us your email We’d love to keep you informed with alumni newsletters about all of the great work that is going on at New Hampton School! Please send your email address to alumni@newhampton.org.


do you know your school?

The Theatre program at New Hampton has always been a strength. Can you name the New Hampton School Theatre production in the photo, the year of the performance, and at least five of the cast members pictured? Send answers to Director of Alumni and Parent Relations Cindy Buck at cbuck@newhampton.org

Fall 2012 Hamptonia Winner

Congratulations to Doug McIninch ’63, who correctly identified Skip Howard as the owner of the Volkswagen Beetle, and its location in Berry Hall after a successful student prank. He won an NHS blanket from the Campus Store.

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  91


92  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


STATE OF THE SCHOOL REPORT 2012-2013


state of the school report  2012-2013

LETTER from the Chair from the chair of the advancement committee of the board of trustees The 2012-2013 Annual Report of Gifts underlines the continued success at New Hampton School. Throughout these pages you will see the growing strength of this wonderful school. It is my honor to express sincere thanks on behalf of the Board of Trustees to the New Hampton School community for its financial support this year. New Hampton School is able to deliver on its mission to cultivate lifelong learners who will serve as active global citizens because of the generosity of our alumni, parents, past parents, grandparents, and friends. Since the beginning of GO BEYOND: The Campaign for New Hampton School in 2007, the Annual Fund has grown by more than 100 percent, placing New Hampton School’s Annual Fund among the top of peer schools. Because of the generosity of so many loyal donors, the Annual Fund surpassed it's $1.2 million goal, raising a total of $1,402,254 in unrestricted donations and $296,216 in restricted donations. In addition to the Annual Fund, New Hampton School has also continued to raise money for GO BEYOND: The Campaign for New Hampton School

94  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

which officially ended in June raising over $40 million. The completion of the Campaign brings two new construction projects which are already underway. The restoration of historic Meservey Hall will be completed in the spring of 2014 and will be home to the history department and a new learning center for the Academic Support Program. The Ralph S. O'Connor ’44 House opened as a student and faculty residence in September 2013. With the exceptional leadership of Head of School Andrew Menke and his team, New Hampton School continues on its extraordinary forward trajectory. Your generous donations to New Hampton School make a dramatic difference. The School’s incredible momentum is in large part due to the donors listed on the following pages. Thank you for your tireless support of New Hampton School. Sincerely,

Roger Ballou P’11, ’13 Trustee and Chair, New Hampton School Advancement Committee


2012-2013   state of the school report

endowment funds

Market Value Total Received Market Value

Total Endowment

$10,798,689 $144,575

6/30/2012

This Fiscal Year

6/30/2013

Academic Research Center Endowment Fund $1,575,742 $1,738,222 Mary E. Avery Fund $441 $489 Mary A. Bartlett Fund $6,333 $7,023 Jeffrey Pratt Beedy Scholarship Fund $456,460 $503,527 Ellen Brown and George Woolsey Bierlin Trust Fund $117,500 $135,259 Mr. and Mrs. William Edwin Bierlin Sr. Trust Fund $63,189 $70,909 Butler Book Endowment $37,762 $41,677 Butler Scholarship Fund $12,164 $14,002 Class of 1948 Book Endowment Fund $12,775 $14,071 Class of 1961 International Baccalaureate Fund $46,192 $4,233 $55,673 Eva Dodge Fund $38,742 $42,961 W. R. and S. C. Dow Fund $79,163 $87,783 Coach Preston Eames Fund $2,319 $2,670 David and Eleanor Eldredge Fund $10,555 $11,705 Farrelly-Gilmore Fund $42,917 $6,000 $56,310 George and Sandra Fearons Endowed Scholarship Fund $182,218 $201,007 Ora Field Fund $10,555 $11,705 Edward E. Ford Fund $99,001 $108,560 Donald R. Galletly Scholarship Fund $583,544 $643,715 The General Endowment Fund $3,612,981 $10,000 $3,982,578 Louis Gnerre, Jr. Endowed Fund $48,340 $53,325 Harrison Golden Endowed Fund for Professional Development $83,885 $92,535 The Barbara Guardenier Master Teaching Chair in Science $88,755 $8,000 $107,116 Gurnett Trust Fund $271,392 $300,941 Ryan Haran Scholarship Fund $111,441 $4,150 $127,707 David ’38 and Jane Heald Memorial Fund $121,527 $134,058 Learning Center Endowment Fund $25,294 $27,902 Richard Lilly Scholarship Fund $32,360 $31,948 Agnes M. Lindsay Trust Fund $54,886 $60,862 A. Stanley Little Fund $79,608 $89,083 Loeb-Tomasko Fund $25,208 $27,807 Charles G. MacVane, Jr. Scholarship Fund $41,082 $47,291 Mildred McEvoy Fund $10,555 $11,705 Fred Merrow Fund $10,555 $11,705 Milne Fund $351,697 $389,989 T.H. Moore and Norma Jean Moore Endowed Scholarship Fund $37,861 $11,668 $54,866 New Hampton School Community Scholarship Fund $106,942 $117,969 Nolet Project Fund $28,136 $31,573 Guy Alang Ntang Scholarship Fund $11,002 $12,664 Ralph S. O'Connor Prize for Excellence in Teaching $32,538 $22,066 $60,235 Ordway Lecture Fund $3,800 $4,375 Ordway Student Aid Fund $21,110 $23,408 The Peyser Family International Baccalaureate Scholarship Fund $96,680 $106,649 Robert A. Phillips Scholarship Fund $32,507 $200 $36,085 Pilalas Center for Math and Science Endowment $78,733 $25,000 $114,429 Pingree Family Theater Endowment Fund $21,814 $29,898 $58,003 Provost Scholarship Fund $54,487 $5,000 $65,861 David Rice Fund $121,802 $136,683 Donald Richardson Fund $37,491 $550 $43,790 Fritz Robbins Fund $42,220 $46,817 The Romagna Music Fund $10,210 $11,753 Ralph Shackett ’59 Fund $14,405 $15,974 Fredrick and Grace Smith Fund $82,208 $1,100 $95,897 Richard Sterndale Fund $18,507 $20,522 William D. Stirrup Fund $718,561 $1,500 $828,887 Tessier/Tyson Cross Country Scholarship Fund $38,189 $5,000 $47,882 Mark Tilton Endowed Fund for Professional Development $88,978 $98,153 Dewitt Wallace: Reader’s Digest Endowed Fund $169,537 $195,160 Leslie J. Weed and Alice H. Weed Scholarship Fund $590,878 $651,806 Woodman Fund $3,165 $3,510 $12,126,771

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  95


state of the school report  2012-2013

thank you!

Sandy Colhoun with daughter Eloise and son Stuart.

from the Director of Advancement There are so many reasons to be proud of New Hampton School. New Hampton School combines academic rigor with a commitment to global citizenship. New Hampton School is a community of students, faculty, and staff focused on pushing personal boundaries while being deeply supportive of one another. New Hampton School students and faculty are passionate about the arts, athletics, and academic exploration, all based on a stunning campus nestled in the Lakes Region of New Hampshire. New Hampton School is a special place. Today's students and faculty would not achieve their dreams without you, our loyal supporters. During the 20122013 fiscal year, the New Hampton School Annual Fund crossed its $1.2 million goal, 100% of the faculty and staff supported the School, the Class of 2013 achieved 96% participation with its Senior Class Gift, and we successfully completed our $30.6 million GO BEYOND Campaign, receiving over $40 million in donations. For your thoughtful and generous support, we are most

appreciative. We recognize that the success of New Hampton School depends on your investment, and we are deeply grateful that you choose to make it a priority each year. We encourage everyone who has a connection here to dedicate time to our wonderful school. Volunteer to serve on your Reunion committee, send in a class note, reconnect with old friends and faculty, and please invest in the School each year by giving back. The New Hampton School experience is better because of you. With great appreciation,

Sandy Colhoun Director of Advancement

The 2012-2013 State of the School Report acknowledges all gifts received by New Hampton School during the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2012 – June 30, 2013. In an effort to recognize each contributor and provide a comprehensive account of every gift, credit is given to all supporters of New Hampton School's fundraising efforts. The financial totals reported herein represent unaudited fig-

96  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

ures and may differ slightly from the audited reports of the School. Every effort has been made to ensure their accuracy for publication in this report prior to the official audit. Corrections or questions should be addressed to Sandy Colhoun, Director of Advancement, New Hampton School, 70 Main Street, New Hampton, NH 03256; 603-677-3413; scolhoun@newhampton.org.


2012-2013   state of the school report

5-YR Financial HIGHLIGHTS FISCAL YEAR

2008-2009

2009-2010

2010-2011

2011-2012

2012-2013

$934,460

$1,011,220

$1,054,540

$1,393,244

$1,698,470

$888,321

$958,224

$1,020,873

$1,132,916

$1,402,254

$46,139

$52,995

$33,767

$260,328

$296,216

Leadership

$783,978

$718,668

$960,046

$1,088,210

$1,604,153

Alumni

$467,516

$511,488

$458,199

$403,806

$465,685

Current Parents

$282,087

$304,073

$399,717

$458,872

$696,785

Other

$116,759

$142,664

$162,957

$270,238

$533,500

AF Totals

Unrestricted

Restricted GIVING BY CONSTITUENCY

GO BEYOND annual fund growth 22% growth $296,216 32% growth $260,328

4% growth

$1,402,254

8% growth 13% growth 4% growth $52,995 $46,139 $131,745

$80,161

$888,321

$958,224

$33,767

$1,132,916

$1,020,873

$744,457 $662,885

$625K GOAL

$700K GOAL

$800K GOAL

$880K GOAL

$950K GOAL

$1.1M GOAL

$1.2M GOAL

FY07

FY08

FY09

FY10

FY11

FY12

FY13

Unrestricted Gifts

Restricted Gifts FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  97


state of the school report  2012-2013

The Headmaster’s Circle

giving societies THE GRANITE SOCIETY Members of the Granite Society provide a solid financial foundation for NHS, donating $1,000,000 or more to NHS over their lifetime.

The Meservey Leadership Circle $25,000 and above

The Headmaster’s Circle $10,000- $24,999

The Frederick Smith Society $5,000–$9,999

T. Holmes ’38 and Norma Jean Moore Society $2,500–$4,999

The Louis Gnerre, Jr. Society $1,000–$2,499

Green and White Society $500 to $999

The Husky Pride Society $250–$499

Friends of New Hampton $1–$249

The Belfry Society The Belfry Society distinguishes donors who have made a contribution for five consecutive years or more. Belfry Society members are noted throughout the Gift Report with a bell adjacent to their name.

1821 Society

Members of the NHS community who have chosen to include the School in their estate plans. The Granite Society Anonymous Mr. Robert C. Galletly ☨ and Mrs. Pauline B. Galletly Mr. and Mrs. Dean P. Jacobson Mr. Robert D. Kennedy and Mrs. Sally Kennedy ☨ Mr. and Mrs. Earl R. Lewis III Mr. Ralph S. O’Connor Mr. and Mrs. Jason M. Pilalas Mr. Robert I. St. Clair ☨ and Mrs. Regina B. St. Clair ☨

The Meservey Leadership Circle

Mr. and Mrs. Roger H. Ballou Mr. and Mrs. R. William Burgess Mr. and Mrs. James L. Elcock Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Galletly Mr. Jeffrey D. Glidden Dr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Goos ☨ DECEASED

Mr. and Mrs. William F. Guardenier Mr. Xiaobo Hu and Mrs. Rongyan Sun Mr. Robert D. Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Leach Mr. and Mrs. Earl R. Lewis III Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Maine Mr. and Mrs. Louis D. Maiuri Mr. George H. McEvoy Mr. Douglas A. McIninch Mr. William C. Morton Mr. Ralph S. O’Connor Mr. and Mrs. Jason M. Pilalas Mr. and Mrs. Will L. Pingree Mr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Rainville Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Schwing, Jr. Mr. Pill Chong Shin and Ms. Seung Hae Han Mr. Robert I. St. Clair ☨ and Mrs. Regina B. St. Clair ☨ Mr. and Mrs. Shinya Tabata Mr. Jian Ping Yu and Mrs. Mindy Yu

98  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Mr. and Mrs. Scott L. Adair Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bleicher Mr. and Mrs. Bennie M. Bray Mr. and Mrs. Zhong Chen Conneston Construction, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Christopher F. Corapi Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Dailey Mr. and Mrs. Steven G. Delaney Mr. Thomas J. Fitzgerald Mr. Liang Fu and Ms. Li Xian Zhai Mrs. Pauline B. Galletly Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Galletly, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Peter J. Grillo Mr. Paul J. Hamel Mr. and Mrs. Dean P. Jacobson Mr. Byeong Yong Jang and Mrs. Kyeong Hee Kim Mr. William C. Kerchof Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Koenig, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Donn S. Lux Ms. Anna Makarova Mr. Kenneth D. Miller Dr. and Mrs. Hiroshi Miyachi Mr. and Mrs. Samson A. Momoh Mr. Baeyoung Park and Ms. Danyoung Son Mr. and Mrs. Axel Prey Mr. John A. Romagna Mr. William C. Saturley Mr. and Mrs. Hansrudolf Schmid Mr. and Mrs. Il Ho Son Mr. and Mrs. Jon T. Tallarida Mrs. Xiu Bin Wang and Mr. Josef Tatelbaum Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Weber Mrs. Anne White Mr. and Mrs. William L. Yeager Mr. Alexander Zaytsev and Mrs. Irina Zaytseva Mr. Yeguang Zhang and Ms. Dan Wang The Frederick Smith Society

Anonymous Mr. Shixue Cheng and Mrs. Jianqin Zhu Mr. Frank Dennen Mr. Cody V. DuBuc Mr. R. Kurt Durrant and Mrs. Piyaphan Chirathivat Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Enxing Ms. Lorna M. Fenenbock Colonel Normand V. Ferdinando, Retired ☨ Mr. Dougall C. Fraser, Jr. Mr. William H. Goldberg Mr. and Mrs. Edgar V. Guardenier II Mr. and Mrs. Hiroyuki Itakura Mr. and Mrs. David Ives Ms. Yong Jiang Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Kennedy Mr. Hyun Young Kim and Ms. Sung Ha Kang Mr. Hyung Tae Kim and Mrs. Young Joo Lee

Mr. and Mrs. Karl V. Kimball Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. Liebert III Ms. Kelly Mason Verrochi and Mr. Paul M. Verrochi Mr. Mark G. McLaughlin Ms. Kathryn W. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Tomohiko Minagawa Mr. Asan Nugmanov and Mrs. Gulzhan Sarsenova Mr. and Mrs. Abayomi S. Olujimi Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Provost Mr. and Mrs. Matthew M. Rutter Dr. and Mrs. Michael L. Seigle Mr. and Mrs. Scott N. Solman Mr. Yuhai Song and Mrs. Jianping Cui Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Tessier Mr. and Mrs. James F. Tully Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Wakeham Mr. Yao Huang Wang and Mrs. Hong Yan Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Wenners Mr. Bing Xie and Mrs. Fengqing Zhang Mr. Keyuan Zhang and Ms. Xiaoqun Li The T. Holmes ’38 and Norma Jean Moore Society

Dr. and Mrs. Barry J. Alperin Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery G. Barlow Mrs. Susan Wagner Bergen Mr. Shaun P. Carroll, Sr. Mr. Zhijian Chen and Ms. Liping Zhu Mr. Kwon Sung Cho and Ms. Mun Hee Choi Mr. Dennis M. Corcoran and Ms. Terilyn Fountain Dr. and Mrs. Roger H. Emerson, Jr. Mr. Robert H. Haselton Mr. David L. Heald Mr. and Mrs. Timothy R. Huyck Mr. Jonathan A. Karalekas Mr. Jeremy C. McCamic Mr. Thomas C. McConnell and Ms. Latricia A. Turner Mr. and Mrs. Eugene B. McLean Mr. and Mrs. Scott J. Mendelson Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Menke Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Miller Mr. M. Whitson Sadler Mr. Walter E. Umla, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Vrana Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wagner Mr. and Mrs. Richard Weinstein Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Winslow Dr. and Mrs. Rudolph L. Wise The Louis Gnerre, Jr. Society

Mr. David Abraham Mr. Stephen J. Bandoian Dr. Theodore Barton and Ms. Cindy Litzenberger Mr. Elliott Berkowitz and

Ms. Nancy Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Berry Ms. Victoria A. Blodgett and Ms. Susan Overton Mr. George B. Boone Mr. Gerald I. Brecher Mr. Arthur M. Brink, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. D. Ari Buchler Captain Alicia M. Burrows Mr. and Mrs. Gary Caruso Mr. David L. Chambers and Dr. Michele M. LeComteChambers Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Chau Mr. Steven E. Clancy Mr. John B. Clark Mr. Andrew M. Cohen Mr. William B. Cohnstaedt, Esq. Ms. Jacqueline M. Cormier-Riddle Ms. Lois Dehls Cornell, Esq. Colonel W. Bruce Crowell Mr. and Mrs. John P. Delea Honorable Alford J. Dempsey, Jr. Ms. Jill A. Duncan and Mr. Richard J. Wargo Mr. George T. Fearons Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Fox Mr. W. West Frazier and Ms. Christine Collins Frazier Mr. Robert R. Greene Mr. Robert M. Greene Mr. and Mrs. George M. Haivanis Mr. and Mrs. Luke J. Haran, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Hernon Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Jansen Mr. and Mrs. Steve Jenkins Ms. Samantha M. Jewett, Esq. and Mr. Brian Connelly Mr. and Mrs. David R. Kaiser Mr. Robert G. Kesten Mr. Hwan Kyoon Kim and Mrs. Tae Ae Lee Mr. John D. Knapton Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Laudico Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Liu Mr. Jianliang Liu and Mrs. Dongping Ying Mr. Philip W. Lobo Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Lynch Mr. Nicholas M. Maggio Mr. and Mrs. Wayne D. Maggio Mr. ZhiHua Mai and Mrs. Xuezhen Zhu Mr. and Mrs. Anthony H. Mannara Dr. Gary F. Margolis Mr. and Mrs. Shinichiro Miyachi Mr. T. Holmes ☨ and Mrs. Norma Jean Moore Mr. Thomas J. Motley, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Mumma Mr. Kihong Na and Mrs. Hyeong Wook Kim Mr. James B. Nicholson Mr. and Mrs. J. Philip O’Hara Mr. Stephen H. Paneyko Mr. Stephen H. Perry Mr. Henry H. Peterson Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Peyser III Mr. Robert A. Pollard


2012-2013   state of the school report

Mrs. Irina Raskina Reverend and Mrs. Tom Rhodes Mr. R. Edward Rose, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Roth Mr. Leo-Pierre Roy Samyn D’Elia Architects Mr. Thomas W. Saturley Mr. Frederick Smith, Jr. Mrs. Jane B. Smith Mr. Peter A. Stirrup Mr. John F. Teague Ms. Karla S. Todd Mr. Robert H. Traylor Mr. Allan R. Turner Mrs. Lynn H. Van Cleave Mr. Arthur W. Vietze, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gregory W. Wagner Mr. Cangshan Wang and Mrs. Yan Qi Mr. Kai Wang and Ms. Yingchun Ma Mr. Robert W. Warburgh Mr. Whitney O. Ward Waukewan Golf Club Mr. Shengmin Wei and Mrs. Shumei Li Mr. Jun Yao The Green and White Society

Anonymous Mr. Richard A. Aube Dr. John W. Barlow and Dr. Elizabeth Poulsen Mr. and Mrs. Arthur N. Barron Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Bass Mr. Harvey A. Bazarian Mr. Robert T. Bennett, Jr. Mr. Mark Bouzianis Mr. George Buehler Mr. Sandy Colhoun and Ms. Selina Rossiter Mr. Michael P. Conforti Mr. Craig B. Corson Mr. and Mrs. Patrick M. Cox Ms. Cathy Creany and Mr. Cary Gordon Mr. Joseph W. Cubellis Mr. W. Scott Cubellis Mr. Lansing K. Deane, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Dibert Mr. and Mrs. Erik A. Dithmer Mr. Harlan Dodson III and Mrs. Margaret Behm Mr. and Mrs. George J. Dorfman Mr. Charles A. Ernst III Mr. Robert A. Feldman Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fusick Mr. Lawrence B. Garland Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Garvey Mr. Malcolm Gauld Mr. Gregory C. Golembe Mr. and Mrs. Alan Hart Mr. and Mrs. Mark D. Hayes Mr. R. Christopher Henry Mr. David N. Hinman Mr. Matthew E. Hinzpeter Mr. Charles W. Howard II Mrs. Laurie G. Hurd

Mr. Dean Johnson Mr. Ronald J. Logdahl Mr. William B. Logie Mrs. Georgia G. MacMillan Macy’s Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Maganzini Mr. Michael H. Marra Mr. Paul G. McIntire Mr. Matthew S. McKenna Mr. Ronald F. Milardo Mr. and Mrs. Robinson C. Moore Mr. William C. Moyes Mrs. Celena Neal Mr. Cuong Ich Nguyen and Mrs. Hien Dang Thi Thanh Mr. and Mrs. Keith A. O’Hara Mr. and Mrs. Phillip O’Reilly Mr. and Mrs. William A. Paulos Mrs. Dorothy D. Peterson Mr. and Mrs. Hugh B. Richardson Mr. George S. Robinson, Jr. Mr. James G. Salvucci Mr. Robert E. Sanson Mr. George B. Schofield, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Schwing, Sr. Dr. James S. Shaw Mr. John P. Smith Mr. Robinson V. Smith Mr. R. Neil Stalker Mr. Jeffrey K. Tulis Mrs. C. Wesley Tyson, Jr. Mr. Harold A. Uttley, Jr. Mrs. Denise Van Dyke Burgess Mr. and Mrs. David Vogel Mr. Owen M. Ward Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan B. West Mr. George L. Winlock Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Wolcott The Husky Pride Society

Mr. Alexander C. Albert Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Auger Mr. Hugh E. Barry, Esq. Mr. Ralph A. Brown Mr. Robert W. Burgess Mr. Peter J. Carbone Mr. John P. Carter Mr. and Mrs. Eric R. Cederberg Mr. Gordon E. Clement Mr. Robert B. Coan Mr. Clement T. Cole and Ms. Maggie E. Marshall Mr. Edwin M. Corns III Dr. Paul M. Costello Mr. Peter M. Costello Mr. William C. Descary Ms. Barbara K. Doud Dr. Judith S. Fish Mr. George R. Geehan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gehrig Mr. and Mrs. Jay P. George Mr. John J. Gilbert, Jr. Mr. Alan P. Goode Mr. William H. Gunther Mrs. Phyllis S. Hamblet Mrs. Sally J. Hill Mr. Richard L. Humphreville Mr. Mark C. Iber

Ms. Krista P. Katz Mr. G. Duncan Kendall Mr. Jay F. Kimball Mr. Warren L. King Dr. James F. Klein Mr. Benjamin A. Kudary Mr. Matthew S. Lambert Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Link Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. MacAndrew Mr. Duncan C. MacInnes Mr. Richard S. Mackay Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Magee, Jr. Ms. Doreen B. Marshall Mr. and Mrs. M. John McMahon Dr. and Mrs. John M. Messinger Mr. John T. Metzger Mr. Robert N. Meyer Mr. Neil B. Middleton Mr. and Mrs. James A. Morison LTC Donald M. Mudgett Mr. John M. Muldoon Mr. Peter M. Neisel Ms. Cheryl A. North Mr. Robert L. Pascucci Mr. Jeffrey C. Pattee, Esq. Mr. Eric T. Philippi Mr. Peter N. Phillips Mr. George P. Ponte Mr. Michael P. Reardon Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Ryan Mr. Edward J. Sanson Mr. A. Corey Sarkisian Mr. Philip W. Sawyer Mr. and Mrs. Michal Sestak Mr. Michael S. Sherwood Mr. Carl D. Smith Mr. and Mrs. H. William Smith, Jr. Mr. Stanton T. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Jeff F. Sobczyk Ms. L. Patricia Stanley Mr. Charles R. Stauffer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. J. Sung Mr. Anthony C. Torti Mr. and Mrs. Mark Troiano Mr. Stephen A. Tuite Mr. John H. Vohr Ms. Whitney L. Walsh-Cardozo Mr. Henry S. Warren Mr. Paul A. Weinman Mr. Robert L. Zirinsky Friends of New Hampton

Anonymous Ms. Margaret Adair Mr. and Mrs. James P. Adams Mr. John J. Adams Mr. Neale T. Adams Mrs. Susan R. Agger Ms. Janice Ahern Mr. George W. Ahl, Jr. Mr. David R. Albro Ms. Christine Alexander Mr. Jason M. Alexander Mr. Byron A. Allen, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Alperin Ms. Mercedes R. Amador Mr. and Mrs. Dennis R. Ames Mr. Gerald F. Anderson

Mr. William H. Armes Mr. and Mrs. Dana G. Arsenault Mr. and Mrs. James L. Arsenault Mr. Ryder J. Arsenault Mr. Marc E. Atkinson Mr. Louis F. Auger Mr. and Mrs. David B. Aveson Ms. Elizabeth J. Aveson Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Baker Mr. William E. Balcom Mr. and Mrs. Rolf L. Ball Ms. Mariza H. Ballou Mr. Peter C. Barach Mr. Edward H. Bardes Mr. Robert S. Barlow Mr. Marcus Barnes-Reilly Mr. and Mrs. Michael Barnett Ms. Jeanne C. Baron Mr. William E. Barrett Mr. Rodney J. Bascom Mr. Prescott W. Baston, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dana Bates Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Beaudet Mr. Thomas D. Beaulieu Mr. Thomas T. Beeler III Mr. Guillaume Belanger-Therien Mr. George A. Bell, Jr. Mr. William D. Benisch Mr. Bradley Bennett Ms. Holly L. Bennett Ms. Alexandra P. Berkowitz Mr. Roger L. Berman Mr. Steven A. Berman Ms. Emma L. Berry Ms. Kelsey B. Berry Mr. Kirk Beswick Mr. George W. Bierlin Mr. Charles H. Birch Mr. J. Thompson Black Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Black Mr. Robert F. Blakeley Mr. Kenneth W. Blood Mr. Bruce S. Bogart Mr. Brian D. Boire Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Boisvert Mr. and Mrs. Gregory B. Bolton Mr. Patrick J. Bolton Mr. Clifford S. Bonney Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Borry Mr. Robert A. Borzillo Mr. Richard A. Boulter Mr. Robert M. Bowen Mr. William J. Box, Jr. Ms. Amanda C. Brady Mr. and Mrs. Morgan J. Brady III Mr. Oliver B. Bragg Mr. Collin D. Bray Mr. Stephen R. Bray Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Brenner Ms. Joan B. Brewer Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Brewster Ms. Leia M. Bridgham Mr. Aaron K. Broughton Mr. James K. Brown Mrs. Jennifer E. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Joel D. Brown Ms. Meredith C. Brown Mr. Milton K. Brown, Jr. Mr. Russell N. Brummer and

Ms. Amy Wilson Ms. Jourdan S. Buchler Mr. Conrad F. Buck Mr. Eric R. Buck Mr. John S. Buck and Mrs. Suzanne Walker Buck Mr. Matthew K. Buck Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Buck Ms. Dana B. Buckley Mr. John Bucklin Lt. Col. Eric F. Buer Mr. Scott Bugbee Ms. Ha Thanh Bui Mr. F. Thomas Burke III Mr. and Mrs. Gerald T. Burke Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Burke Mr. William M. Burke Mr. Kenneth G. Burr, Jr. Mr. Raymond A. Buskey Mr. and Mrs. Chester Butcher, Jr. Mr. Thomas W. Butcher Mr. James E. Butler, Jr. Mr. Charles M. Calley Mr. Daniel K. Calley Mr. and Mrs. Kevin G. Calley Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Callif Ms. Deirdre A. and Ms. Elizabeth A. CampbellTompkins Ms. Katherine T. J. CampbellTompkins Ms. Elena Carboni Ms. Briana C. Cardwell Mr. James M. Carifio Mr. Alan R. Carlsen Mr. M. Geoffrey Carlton II Ms. Jessica P. Carpenter Mr. Nicholas E. Caruso Ms. Nora E. Cascadden Ms. Cynthia F. Casner Ms. Rossli Chace Mr. John R. Chagnon Mr. Philip A. Chagnon Mr. William A. Champney Mrs. Irene A. Chandler Mr. Stuart E. Chandler Mr. and Mrs. Gregory J. Chapin Mr. Trevor J. Chapin Mr. and Mrs. George W. Chase III Ms. Maya W. M. Chase Ms. Wenhui Chen Mr. Yifu Chen Ms. Michele M. Cheney Mr. Yifu Cheng Dr. Dale R. Childs Mr. and Mrs. Craig E. Churchill Mr. Matthew J. Cicchetti Mr. Gregory R. Clancy Ms. Kathleen Clark and Mr. John Ambrosini Mr. Reginald H. Clark Mr. Stuart F. Clark Mr. Richard W. Cleveland Mr. Robert N. Cleverdon Mr. Richard R. Cleverly Ms. Vickie D. Clifford Mr. Michael F. Close Mr. David C. Coen Ms. Mary E. Cogswell

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FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  99


state of the school report  2012-2013

Dr. Hal D. Cohan Ms. Megan E. Collins Mr. Henry G. Conkey, Jr. Mr. Edward D. Conroy Mrs. Carolyn S. Cook Mr. Frank T. Copenhaver Mr. Devin M. Corcoran Mr. Daniel Corey Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Costello Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Cota Ms. Michelle Cote Mr. Richard A. Cote Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Coursey Mr. Jack R. Craig Mr. and Mrs. John Craig Mr. Roger L. Creighton Mr. Kenneth D. Cressy Mr. Alan B. Crocker Mr. Allan C. Crocker III Mr. Thomas A. Crocker Mr. Lawrence R. Crosby, Jr. Mrs. Alitia C. Cross Mr. Robert H. Cross Mrs. Jerrica M. Crowder Mr. David B. Crowley Mr. Cam M. Cundy Mr. Irving B. Cushing Mr. Hooper W. Cutler Mrs. Sarah R. Cutler Mr. Joseph L. Dalferes III Mr. David E. Dath Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Davis Mr. Lincoln M. Davis Mr. Ramsay F. de Give Mr. William Deacon Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dean Mr. and Mrs. Patrick M. DeBenedictis Ms. Cheryl DeFosses Mr. G. Paul Denecke Mr. Mark P. DesMeules Mr. James H. Dewhirst

Mr. William R. Dexter Ms. Kayla M. DiBari Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Diehl Mr. and Mrs. Glen Dillon Mr. Michael S. Dillon☨ and Mrs. Holly Dillon Mr. Julian P. Dinwoodie Mr. Michael D. Disbury Mr. Alex W. Dodge Mr. and Mrs. Earl C. Dodge Mr. Matthew E. Dodge Mr. Robert N. Dodge Mr. Harlan K. Dodson Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Doell Mr. John C. Donatelli Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Donnelly, Jr. Ms. Morgan M. Donovan Mr. Thomas A. Donovan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel K. Dorian IV Mr. and Mrs. George G. Draper Mr. Brian M. Driscoll Mr. Josiah H. Drummond, Jr. Mr. John R. Duffett Dr. Sean R. Dugan Mrs. April Dumont Mr. Roger A. Durant Mr. Charles E. Eastman Mr. Blake E. Eberhardt Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Eberhardt Mr. Ralph A. Edson, Jr. Mr. John W. Ehrlich Mr. Michael V. Elliott Ms. Catherine H. Emerson Mr. Stephen H. Erwin Mr. Vincent J. Every Ms. Mackenzie L. Ewing Mr. Richard M. Ezequelle Mr. William D. Fabrocini Mr. and Mrs. Ryan H. Mahady Mr. Timothy A. Farnham Mrs. Katerina Farr-Williams Mr. and Mrs. Norman D. Farwell

Ms. Nan T. Fay Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. Fay Mr. and Mrs. Gregor E. Fellers Ms. Jo E. Fendley Ms. Hannah M. Fiore Mrs. Catherine E. Fischer Mr. Raymond E. Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Matthew T. Fisk Mrs. Virginia M. Fitzgerald Mr. James Ford Mr. Gregg E. Fowler Dr. Marc Frader and Ms. Janis Hersh Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Frame, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Franco Mr. Cole G. Franklin Ms. Sydney L. Frazier Mr. and Mrs. Stephen W. Freeborn Mr. and Mrs. Justin K. Freeman Mr. Thomas H. Freese Mr. and Mrs. David Fuller Ms. Lauren K. Gale Mr. Peter E. Gall Mr. Michael E. Gallagher Ms. Anita E. Galletti Ms. Sandy L. Gates Mrs. Susan E. Gavitt Mr. Andrew J. George Dr. and Mrs. Ronald D. Geraty Mr. William E. Gifford Mr. Thomas Gill Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Gilpatric Mr. Barry S. Gilvar Mr. Trevor N. Glassman Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Glidden Mr. Jarrod A. Gobbi Ms. Delores W. Godwin Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Godwin Dr. Henry F. Goode, Jr. Mr. Bruce A. Goody Ms. Ariel E. Goos

Ms. Cynthia Gordon Ms. H. Gail Gordon, R.E. Mr. Mark Gordon Ms. Shoshanah B. Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Gorman Mr. and Mrs. Mark Gould Ms. Gina Graciano Mr. and Mrs. Uwe Gradias Mr. Jonathan G. Granger Ms. Felicia Grant Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Grant Mr. Thomas L. Greenbaum Mr. David B. Greer Mr. Daniel N. Gregory Mr. Rentoul C. Grevatt Mr. Frederick J. Griffin, Jr. Mr. Robert H. Griffin Ms. Elizabeth Grosart Ms. Cindy F. Guldemond Mr. and Mrs. David T. Gunn Ms. Ariana J. Guy Mr. Robert W. Haas Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Haas Mr. Carter G. Haff Mrs. Ann Hall Mr. Richard L. Ham Mr. and Mrs. David Hampton Mr. Henry Hanlan and Mrs. Daniele Malo Mr. Eric C. Hanover Mr. Devin Haran Mr. Andrew M. Hargrave Mr. William H. Haring Dr. Eugene L. Harley Mr. Christopher A. Harlow Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Harlow Ms. Amanda Harrington Mr. Webster L. Harrison Mr. Christopher M. Hart Ms. Dale T. Hart Mr. Dylan D. Hart Dr. Elizabeth Hassinger

Mr. Malcolm X. Hayes Mr. Allan W. Haynes Mr. Bradford P. Hazeltine Mrs. Tina Hazelton Mr. Evan E. Heckel Mrs. Debra L. Heckman Mr. John Heiner and Mrs. Lynn Pascoe DTCM Karl W. Henry, USN Dr. David C. Henshaw Mr. Coleman D. Hernon Mr. Tyler J. Hill Mr. John H. Hinchcliffe III Mr. Charles M. Hines Mrs. Loraine K. Hobausz Mr. Allan F. Hodgkins Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Hoffman Mr. and Mrs. Kent J. Holce Dr. Peter B. Hollis Mr. Jonathan P. Holzberger Mr. John B. Horton Dr. and Mrs. Scott L. Horton Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey P. Howard Mr. and Mrs. Gary D. Howe Mr. and Mrs. Keith A. Hrasky Ms. Maureen A. Huber Ms. Hayden K. Huff Mr. Benjamin R. Huntington Mr. Jeffrey R. Huntington Mr. Theodore P. Hurwitz Mr. Peter F. Hutchins, Jr. and Dr. Chelsea Woodard Ms. Gale S. Jackson Mr. Jae Hoon Jang Mr. Frederick W. Jean Mr. Hilary D. Jean Mr. Charles H. Jenkins Mr. Kanyang Jiang Mr. Dan Johnson and Mrs. Cydney Shapleigh-Johnson Mr. Gregory G. Jones Mr. Rodney A. Jong

FROM AN Alumnus T.J. Fitzgerald ’58

Pictured with his 1958 classmates from L to R: Thomas Moss, Gard Thompson, T.J., Ed Rose, Jon Granger, Jim Salvucci, and Hooper Cutler.

☨ DECEASED

100  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

"Having just celebrated our 55th Reunion with our classmates allowed me to reflect on how fortunate I was to have a New Hampton School education: small classes, wonderful faculty, fine coaches, and the superb leadership of T. Holmes Moore ’38. It became a building block for college, the military and gave me confidence for the corporate world. I give to New Hampton School every year. Head of School Andrew Menke has brought incredible leadership to the School. He has built a wonderful team of faculty and staff, and the students are the proof! I believe my giving is a good investment for the future of NHS students."


2012-2013   state of the school report

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Jordan Mr. and Mrs. Tharen T. Jorgenson Mr. Travis K. Jorgenson Mr. and Mrs. Justin C. Joslin Mr. Caleb M. Kane Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kane Ms. Jessica A. Kang Ms. Reiva J. Keith Dr. Edmund A. Kellerman Ms. Caroline M. Kelly Mr. John M. Kelsey and Ms. Sally Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Myron Kibbee Mrs. Ellen D. Kidd Mr. and Mrs. George Kidd, Jr. Mr. Dennis J. Kievit Mr. Chang Kyung Kim Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth P. King Captain Charles W. Kirchhoff Mr. George D. Kittredge III Mr. Philip S. Kleiman Mr. and Mrs. Andrew P. Klein The Honorable Christopher M. Klein Mrs. Ruthann M. Kline Smith Ms. Julia Knobloch Ms. Kayla E. Kommit Mr. and Mrs. Ken-ichi Kondo Ms. Jill R. Korst Mr. Charles M. Koutsogiane Mr. G. Howard Krauss, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Derek Krein Mr. Akinori Kumagai Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Kumph Mr. Robert J. Kurtz Mr. and Mrs. Rory LaBate Mr. Eric W. LaCroix Ms. Jamie Lalos Mr. Gerald T. LaMarque Ms. Maura C. Lane Mr. Daniel G. Larson Mr. Paul A. Lazdowski Mr. and Mrs. John G. Legg, Jr. Ms. Rachel A. Legg Mr. H. Lester Leland Ms. Amandine Lemonnier Mr. Gavin J. Lentz Mr. Alan J. Levenson Mr. Jackson E. Lewis Mr. Jacob A. Liebert Mrs. Veronica P. Lima-DeAngelis Mr. Alexander Lincoln III Mr. Kenneth L. Lincoln Mr. C. Robert Lindquist Mr. Christopher T. Little Mr. and Mrs. David H. Little Ms. Elaina M. Little Mr. and Mrs. Tim Little Mr. and Mrs. Warren M. Little Mr. Stephen W. Litvin Mr. Hengyan Liu Mr. Martin D. Lodge Mr. and Mrs. David E. LoPresti Mr. Roger E. Lotz, Jr. Mr. Daniel W. Love and Ms. Amy Sedestrom Mr. James C. Lowell Mr. David T. Lucey Ms. Duyen Thuy Luu

Mr. Kevin K. Lynch Mr. Michael B. Lyon Mr. Robert W. Lyons Mr. Rodger V. Lyons Mr. Robert W. MacArthur Mr. Robert W. MacCuspie Mr. Earle P. MacGillivray, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ryan H. Mahady Mr. and Mrs. William A. Maheia Mr. and Mrs. Kevin P. Mahoney Mr. Lingfeng Mai Mr. Anthony A. Maiuri Ms. Victoria E. Makris Mr. Mark A. Mannara Mr. Matthew Mansur Mr. James H. Maroney, Jr. Mr. D. Bruce Marshall Ms. Melody Martel Ms. Florence E. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Michael Martinez Mr. and Mrs. Kyle W. Masterson Ms. Maeve Matthews Mr. Scott A. Maxwell Ms. Jolene A. May Ms. Jenna E. McCabe Mr. and Mrs. Scott McCann Mr. Kristopher B. McClure Mr. Eric A. McCollom and Ms. Kristie Gonzalez Mr. Cole W. McConnell Mr. William L. McCulloch and Mrs. Carolina Ansaldo Ms. Melissa McGee Mr. Henry H. McIntosh Colonel Robert W. McKeen, USA, Retired Mr. D. Van McLeod Mr. Robert H. McLeod Mr. Ryan A. McLeod Mr. and Mrs. James P. McMahon Ms. Katherine R. McMahon Mr. Philip W. McMaster Ms. Rachel E. McMenaman Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. McNally, Jr. Ms. Jacqueline T. McNally Mr. Cory W. McPhee Mr. Roger C. McPherson, P.E. Dr. H. Jay Melosh IV Mr. Edgar Mendelsohn Mr. Mauricio Mendez Mr. Peter A. Meneghin III Mrs. Abigail S. Mercer Ms. Sharon F. Merrill Marino Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Mershon Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Meservey Mr. Jack A. Metcalf Mr. and Mrs. Eric Miller Mr. James A. Miller Mr. and Mrs. James E. Miller Mr. Jesse C. Miller Mr. Tory Miller Mrs. Ann M. Minahan Mr. John G. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. William H. Mitchell Mr. Thomas C. Monahan Mr. David W. Moody Dr. Thomas H. Moore, Jr. Ms. Erin K. Moran Mr. F. Myles Moran and

Mrs. Mary Jo Levitsky Ms. Molly S. Moran Ms. Nathalie M. Morgan Mrs. Nancy Morganstern Mr. Thomas C. Morganstern ☨ Mr. Charles D. Morrill, Jr. Mr. Dennis Morrisey Mrs. Sally S. Morse Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth R. Morton Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Moseley, Jr. Mr. Thomas B. Moss Ms. Courtney J. Moulton Ms. Emily A. Moulton Mr. and Mrs. Rory L. Moulton Mr. Charles R. Mouquin Mr. Frederick W. Moynihan Mr. Thomas N. T. Mullen Mr. and Mrs. Hans D. Mundahl Mr. Jarvis Murray Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. Musicant Mr. and Mrs. Seth Natter Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Nazzaro Mr. Chester E. Nichols II Mr. Zachary J. Noe Mr. and Mrs. Scott Nolan Mr. Donald S. Noot Ms. Ellen Nordstrom Mr. Christopher J. Northrop Mr. David F. Noyes Mr. W. James O’Neill Mr. Jonathan S. O’Toole Mr. William P. Oberndorfer III Mr. Charles F. Oliver III Mr. Radar Jones O. Onguetou Mr. Barry H. Orenstein Mr. Robert T. Osborne Mr. Shawn Ouellette Ms. Lorna L. Outerbridge Mr. and Mrs. Robert Page III Mr. Christopher J. Palmer Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert F. Palmer Mr. Bradley K. Palmiter Mr. Sungho Park Mr. Robert L. Parrish, Jr. Ms. E. Nicole Pasceau Mr. Anthony J. Pate Mr. Gabriel Pate and Mrs. Georgette Barnswell Ms. Amy Patenaude-Gunn Mr. and Mrs. Dov Pechenick Mr. Peter L. Pequignot Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Peras Mr. Jeffrey M. Peras Mr. and Mrs. David Perfield Mr. Richard D. Peters Mr. Alfredas Petkus Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Petrocelli Mr. Whang Phang Mr. Donald A. Phillips Mrs. Donna Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Piscitelli Mr. Norman A. Plaisted Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J. Plansky Mr. Robert J. Pludo Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Pluhar LTJG Tristan D. Poh Mr. and Mrs. James K. Polese Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Pollock, Jr. Mr. Joseph E. Powers, Jr.

Mrs. Gail L. Pratt Ms. Nancy A. Prentice Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas H. Preston Mr. Robert A. Price, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Pullen Mr. Thomas R. Pynchon Mr. Brennan B. Quackenbush Mr. and Mrs. William L. Quackenbush Ms. Kathryn T. Quigley Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Randall Ms. Julie Randall Mr. William W. Rankin Mr. and Mrs. Darren L. Redman Mr. Robert G. Reed, Jr. Mr. Kenneth P. Reever Mr. Joseph V. Reineman III Mr. Michael E. Reingold Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. Rich Mr. James M. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Richard Risteen Mr. Paul J. Ritzman Ms. Lesley A. Robbins Ms. Chloe D. Rochon Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Rockel Mr. Cephas B. Rogers III Mr. Anthony J. Romano III Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Rose Mr. and Mrs. John Roth Mr. Joshua Routhier Dr. D. Alan Russell and Mrs. Cristin Camaione-Russell Ms. Abigail E. Rutt Mr. Joseph A. Sampson Mr. Neil Samuels Mr. Tharathep Sangsawang Mr. Evan C. Schafer Mr. Peter J. Schiot Mr. William J. Schneiderman Mr. Stephen W. Schultz Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan A. Schwab Ms. Abigail R. Schwing Mr. Richard L. Seavey Mr. J. Drew Segadelli, Esq. Mr. Jeremy N. Seigle Mr. William P. Seldon Mr. Anthony N. Senese Ms. Ellory E. Shackett Mr. Jeffrey S. Shackett and Mrs. Carolynn W. Santamaria Mr. R. Jon Shackett Mr. Neal Shartar and Ms. Sheryl Anderson Ms. Karen M. Shea Ms. Martha C. Shepp Mr. Edwin L. Sherrill, Jr. Mr. Woo Jin Shin Mr. Vincent J. Sica Ms. Holli Hamel Siff Mr. Justin M. Simon Mr. Michael F. Simpson Mr. Richard B. Sizer Mr. Frederick J. Slamin Mr. William E. Smeaton Mr. Allen E. Smith Mr. Carey T. Smith Mr. David L. Smith Mr. David E. Smith Mr. Jared R. Smith

Mr. Karl G. Smith II Mr. M. Daniel Smith Mr. Richard G. Smith Mr. M. Trent Smither Ms. Kendra L. Snow Mr. Kenneth W. Spalding, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Spalding Mr. Joseph A. Spitzer Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Stafford Mr. Stephen Stafford Mr. Alexander J. Stanko Mr. and Mrs. Allan Stanley Mrs. Susan E. Stark-Beeson Mr. Thomas C. Steinmetz Ms. Nicole P. Stepanek Mrs. Barbara E. Stolov Ms. Carolyn L. Stolov and Mr. Steve A. Savage Mr. Brian J. Sullivan and Ms. Erika P. Hoddinott Mr. David R. Sullivan Mr. William H. Sullivan, Jr. Mr. Jonathan Sung Mr. Robert S. Tatigian Mr. Richard M. Taylor Ms. Ruth I. Taylor Mr. Stephan W. Taylor and Mrs. Elizabeth M. SnowdenTaylor Dr. Steven H. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Sean M. Teague Mr. Thomas N. Tessier Mr. Richard C. Thall Mr. Eric Therien and Ms. France Belanger Dr. Daryl J. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Stephen V. Thomas Mr. Gard R. Thompson Mr. Rodney D. Thorn Dr. Lance M. Tibbetts Mr. William Tighe Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tilton Mr. Luke R. Tobin Mr. Stephen K. Tomaro Mr. Dustin J. Triano Mr. and Ms. Howard J. Triano Ms. Jean M. Troiano Mr. and Mrs. Chester A. Truskowski Ms. Jialei Tu Mr. Kyle J. Tufts Mr. and Mrs. Anthony P. Tur Ms. Caitlin K. Turton Mr. and Mrs. Adam R. Tyson Ms. Lea S. Tzimoulis Mr. and Mrs. Craig Untiet Mrs. Cynthia A. Van Buren Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Vautour Mr. Douglas T. Viles Ms. Chieko Villas Mrs. Mary R. Vincent Mr. Thomas D. Vohr Mr. Noah Y. Vonleh Ms. Lynn H. Wadhams Ms. Kayla L. Wagner Mr. Frederick J. Walker Ms. Nanci M. Walker Mr. David W. Wallwork Mr. and Mrs. Sven Walsh Mr. James Walsh

☨ DECEASED

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  101


state of the school report  2012-2013

Class of 1940

Ralph Budd Welsh, Jr.

Class of 1941

Roger L. Creighton John J. Gilbert, Jr.  William H. Gunther Robert H. Haselton Samuel L. Spalding  Walter E. Umla, Jr.

• •

Stuart F. Clark Roger C. McPherson, P.E. Edwin L. Sherrill, Jr.  M. Daniel Smith  Robinson V. Smith  Samuel B. Wood, Jr. William L. Yeager

• •

"I have never been more proud of my New Hampton School alliance. When I was asked to serve on the Board of Trustees at New Hampton School I could think of no better way to give back to the place and people that provided me with a solid foundation upon which to lead my life. It gives me great pride to be able to support New Hampton School and the people who make it so special."

Mr. William B. Walsh Mr. Yuchi Wang Mr. Nathan G. Ward Mr. Wyman B. Ward Mr. James F. Watkins III Mr. Brandt A. Wax Mr. and Mrs. David D. Webster Mr. Samuel D. Webster Mr. Xingchen Wei Ms. Marci B. Weinstein Mr. Ralph B. Welsh, Jr. Mr. Kevin R. West Mr. Reilly E. West Mrs. Veronica Whall Ms. Kathleen Whitcher Mr. Barrett S. Whitcomb Mr. Owen H. White Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Q. White Mr. Jonathan A. Wiederecht and Mrs. Nur Kilic Mr. and Mrs. George E. Wilcox Mr. and Mrs. Allen R. Williams Mrs. Erica Willingham Mr. Keith J. Winking Mr. and Mrs. Joel R. Wohlfeil ☨ DECEASED

Mr. Samuel B. Wood, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Woodland, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Wright Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Wright Mr. John S. Yancey Ms. Lee D. Young Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Young Ms. Egle Zelnyte Dr. Arnold S. Zide Mr. Allen P. Zornow Mr. Mark W. Zurwell Alumni Donors

George W. Ahl, Jr. Louis F. Auger  Robert W. Lyons  Ralph S. O’Connor  William W. Rankin  Robert E. Sanson Stanton T. Smith

Allan F. Hodgkins  Robert G. Kesten Gerald T. LaMarque  Earle P. MacGillivray, Jr.  J. Philip O’Hara  John P. Smith Wyman B. Ward

Class of 1944

• • • •

Class of 1945

• • • • • •

Class of 1939

George B. Boone  Rentoul C. Grevatt

• BELFRY SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP

102  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

• •

Gordon E. Clement  Robert B. Coan  Allan R. Turner

• •

• •

• • •

Class of 1957

David Abraham  John J. Adams David R. Albro Robert H. Cross  Roger A. Durant  William E. Gifford  Barry S. Gilvar Carter G. Haff  Daniel G. Larson  George H. McEvoy  Peter M. Neisel  Robert J. Pludo  Eugene E. Rainville  Hugh B. Richardson  Brandt A. Wax

• • • • • • • • • •

Class of 1953

• •

Class of 1948

Robert S. Barlow  John R. Duffett Ralph A. Edson, Jr.

• •

Class of 1952

William E. Barrett  Charles F. Oliver III  Robert T. Osborne George P. Ponte  Carl D. Smith  Harold A. Uttley, Jr.

• • • • •

Anonymous William E. Balcom  George A. Bell, Jr. James E. Butler, Jr.  John B. Clark Reginald H. Clark Richard W. Cleveland  Richard L. Ham Charles H. Jenkins Dennis J. Kievit Robert W. MacCuspie Robert A. Pollard  Thomas D. Vohr  Henry S. Warren

Gerald F. Anderson Henry G. Conkey, Jr. Irving B. Cushing James H. Dewhirst Robert J. Kurtz  Jeremy C. McCamic

Class of 1946

• • • • • •

Ralph A. Brown  Shaun P. Carroll, Sr.  Richard A. Cote  Raymond E. Fisher Allan W. Haynes  H. Lester Leland  Martin D. Lodge John T. Metzger  Robert L. Pascucci Donald A. Phillips Michael P. Reardon  Cephas B. Rogers III  Richard L. Seavey  Joseph A. Spitzer  William H. Sullivan, Jr. Richard C. Thall

Class of 1956

Class of 1951

Lawrence R. Crosby, Jr. Alan J. Levenson  Donald S. Noot Robert G. Reed, Jr. Kenneth W. Spalding, Jr.  John H. Vohr

Class of 1947

• •

• • • • •

Oliver B. Bragg  F. Thomas Burke III  G. Paul Denecke  William C. Kerchof  Robert W. MacArthur  Frederick Smith, Jr.

Class of 1938 G. Howard Krauss, Jr.  T. Holmes Moore ☨

Class of 1950

Kenneth D. Cressy  Rodger V. Lyons  Edward J. Sanson  Owen M. Ward

• • •

Judge Alford J. Dempsey, Jr. ’65

• • • • • • •

Byron A. Allen, Jr.  Conrad F. Buck  Colonel W. Bruce Crowell  Erik A. Dithmer  Robert N. Dodge  Jackson E. Lewis  Kenneth L. Lincoln  Peter J. Bergen ☨ Alan R. Carlsen Stephen H. Erwin  Peter E. Gall Robert D. Kennedy  John D. Knapton  George B. Schofield, Jr.  Carey T. Smith  Arthur W. Vietze, Jr.

Class of 1943

FROM A Trustee

Class of 1955

Class of 1949

Class of 1942

• •

Peter N. Phillips  Anthony C. Torti  David W. Wallwork James A. Wright

• • •

Eugene L. Harley  Charles M. Hines William B. Logie  D. Bruce Marshall  Thomas C. Monahan William E. Smeaton

Class of 1954

Class of 1958

Charles H. Birch Robert F. Blakeley  Richard M. Ezequelle  Normand V. Ferdinando ☨  Robert H. Griffin  William H. Haring  Theodore P. Hurwitz Charles Raymond Mouquin Chester E. Nichols II

• •

William A. Champney Dale R. Childs, M.D. Hooper W. Cutler Thomas J. Fitzgerald  Jonathan G. Granger  Colonel Robert W. McKeen  Robert H. McLeod James A. Morison

• •


2012-2013   state of the school report

• • •

Thomas B. Moss John M. Muldoon Henry H. Peterson  Jason M. Pilalas  R. Edward Rose, Jr.  James G. Salvucci  Gard R. Thompson

• • • • •

Class of 1959

David L. Heald  Earl R. Lewis III  James C. Lowell  James H. Maroney, Jr. Thomas N. T. Mullen Norman A. Plaisted  Thomas C. Steinmetz  Robert W. Warburgh

• • •

Class of 1963

Stephen R. Bray William R. Dexter Edgar V. Guardenier II  Webster L. Harrison  Peter B. Hollis, DMD  Barry H. Orenstein Eric T. Philippi  James M. Richardson  M. Whitson Sadler  Frederick J. Slamin Allen E. Smith Peter A. Stirrup

• • •

Class of 1960

Richard A. Boulter John P. Carter  William C. Descary  Josiah H. Drummond, Jr.  Charles A. Ernst III  Robert A. Feldman  Thomas L. Greenbaum Evan E. Heckel  John H. Hinchcliffe III G. Duncan Kendall  Captain Charles W. Kirchhoff Philip W. Lobo  David T. Lucey Richard W. Maine  Henry H. McIntosh  James B. Nicholson Michael F. Simpson David L. Smith  David E. Smith Barrett S. Whitcomb

• • • •

• •

Class of 1961

• •

Thomas T. Beeler III William D. Benisch  Gerald I. Brecher Charles M. Calley Philip A. Chagnon William B. Cohnstaedt, Esq. Frank T. Copenhaver  Peter M. Costello David B. Crowley Thomas A. Donovan, Jr. Timothy A. Farnham Dougall C. Fraser, Jr. Warren L. King George D. Kittredge III  Alexander Lincoln III Roger E. Lotz, Jr. Gary F. Margolis, Ph.D.  Douglas A. McIninch  Jack A. Metcalf Neil B. Middleton Thomas H. Moore, Jr.  Donald M. Mudgett W. James O’Neill A. Corey Sarkisian James S. Shaw, M.D. Richard G. Smith Charles R. Stauffer, Jr.

• • •

Class of 1964

Prescott W. Baston, Jr. Clifford S. Bonney  Michael P. Conforti  Edwin M. Corns III  John W. Ehrlich  R. Christopher Henry  David C. Henshaw, Ph.D. Frederick W. Jean  Christopher M. Klein  Richard S. Mackay  Peter A. Meneghin III  Charles D. Morrill, Jr. Dennis Morrisey Jeffrey C. Pattee, Esq.  John F. Teague Robert L. Zirinsky

• • • •

George W. Bierlin  Kenneth G. Burr, Jr.  James M. Carifio Bruce A. Goody Robert M. Greene  Peter L. Pequignot George S. Robinson, Jr. Richard B. Sizer Karl G. Smith II George L. Winlock

Class of 1965

Class of 1962

Richard A. Aube  Harvey A. Bazarian Robert T. Bennett, Jr.  Arthur M. Brink, Jr.  Richard R. Cleverly Joseph L. Dalferes III Frank Dennen  William F. Guardenier

• •

• • •

Steven G. Delaney  Alford J. Dempsey, Jr.  Michael V. Elliott Alan P. Goode  Frederick J. Griffin, Jr.  Karl W. Henry, USN  Charles M. Koutsogiane Kevin K. Lynch  D. Van McLeod

H. Jay Melosh IV Joseph E. Powers, Jr. Stephen W. Schultz  Steven H. Taylor Frederick J. Walker

Robert M. Bowen John B. Horton Edmund A. Kellerman David W. Moody Robert S. Tatigian

Neale T. Adams William H. Armes Marc E. Atkinson  Milton K. Brown, Jr.  David C. Coen  Gregory C. Golembe Hilary D. Jean James F. Klein Duncan C. MacInnes  Philip W. McMaster William C. Moyes  David F. Noyes Paul J. Ritzman Rodney D. Thorn  Lance M. Tibbetts  Paul A. Weinman

Mark P. DesMeules Charles E. Eastman Robert C. Galletly, Jr.  George R. Geehan, Jr. Robert R. Greene William P. Oberndorfer III Matthew M. Rutter Douglas T. Viles Whitney O. Ward

• •

Class of 1966

Ellen Nordstrom Neil Samuels  Mark W. Zurwell

Class of 1977

• •

Class of 1971

Bruce S. Bogart  Steven E. Clancy  Samantha M. Jewett  Thomas R. Pynchon  William J. Schneiderman

Edward H. Bardes John W. Barlow, DVM  Anita Pedersen Galletti Amanda Miller Harrington Elizabeth Hassinger, DVM Matthew S. Lambert  Ronald F. Milardo Frederick W. Moynihan  William P. Seldon  Nanci M. Walker

William J. Box, Jr. Raymond A. Buskey Robert N. Cleverdon Jay F. Kimball  Philip S. Kleiman Benjamin A. Kudary  C. Robert Lindquist Ronald J. Logdahl  Thomas J. Motley, Esq.  Whang Phang  Michael S. Sherwood  Holli Hamel Siff

Class of 1979

Andrew M. Cohen Rodney A. Jong John S. Yancey Arnold S. Zide

Class of 1968

Susan Lyons Agger Gregory R. Clancy Robert W. Haas Amy Patenaude-Gunn  Michael E. Reingold  J. Andrew Segadelli

• • • •

Class of 1973

Hugh E. Barry, Esq. Roger L. Berman Craig B. Corson Paul M. Costello  Lansing K. Deane  Thomas H. Freese  Lawrence B. Garland Jeffrey D. Glidden  Matthew E. Hinzpeter  Richard L. Humphreville Dean P. Jacobson  Dean Johnson Stephen W. Litvin Robert N. Meyer Robert L. Parrish, Jr.  Frederick M. Peyser III  John A. Romagna  Thomas W. Saturley  Philip W. Sawyer R. Neil Stalker Jeffrey K. Tulis

• • • •

Class of 1969

Henry F. Goode, Jr. Ph.D. Daniel N. Gregory David N. Hinman Paul A. Lazdowski  Paul G. McIntire  William C. Morton Richard M. Taylor

• • • •

Class of 1980

Stuart E. Chandler Barbara K. Doud Sean R. Dugan Peter W. Galletly  William H. Goldberg Thomas H. Haas  Victoria E. Makris Robinson C. Moore  Kenneth P. Reever  William C. Saturley

• • • • •

Victoria A. Blodgett  Jennifer E. Brown Matthew J. Cicchetti  Hal D. Cohan, M.D.  Brian M. Driscoll  Jonathan A. Karalekas  Bradley K. Palmiter Stephen T. Rich Anthony J. Romano, III Allen P. Zornow

• •

• • •

Class of 1974

Class of 1981

Kenneth W. Blood Terri Hamel Haas  Debra Langevin Heckman Karl V. Kimball  Stephen H. Perry

Michael H. Marra Robert A. Price, Jr.  Stephen A. Tuite

• •

Class of 1982

Class of 1975

Thomas W. Butcher Michael E. Gallagher Stephen V. Thomas

John R. Chagnon Elibet Moore Chase  Lois Dehls Cornell, Esq. Catherine Storms Fischer Andrew M. Hargrave Mark C. Iber Mark G. McLaughlin Leo-Pierre Roy

Class of 1983

Class of 1976

Richard D. Frame, Jr. Jay P. George

Peter C. Barach Jennifer Shackett Berry  Elena Carboni Jacqueline M. Cormier-Riddle Gregg E. Fowler  Loraine Greenwood Hobausz Gregory G. Jones Jill Radding Korst

Class of 1970

Rodney J. Bascom

Class of 1967

Class of 1978

Class of 1972

• • •

• •

☨ DECEASED

• BELFRY SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  103


state of the school report  2012-2013

Matthew S. McKenna  Jeffrey S. Shackett Vincent J. Sica William B. Walsh Whitney L. Walsh-Cardozo

Class of 1984

• •

Lt. Col. Eric F. Buer  Allan C. Crocker III William D. Fabrocini  Susan Healey Gavitt

Class of 1985

Anonymous Scott J. Mendelson Lynn Hetherington Van Cleave

Class of 1991 M. Geoffrey Carlton II

Class of 1992

George T. Fearons

Class of 1995

Brian D. Boire Samuel D. Webster

Class of 1996

Michael F. Close David B. Greer

Class of 1987

Peter J. Carbone Lorna Cobham Mendelson

Jamie Lalos

Class of 1998

Megan E. Collins  Jill M. Falconi Mahady Ryan H. Mahady Scott A. Maxwell

Class of 1999

Evan C. Schafer

Class of 2000

Class of 1989

Sarah Rice Cutler  Daniel S. Petrocelli

Alicia M. Burrows  Christopher J. Palmer Kendra L. Snow

Cory W. McPhee

Eric R. Buck

Class of 1990

Class of 2001

The Ellen Brown and George Woolsey Bierlin Trust and The Mr. and Mrs. William Edwin Bierlin, Sr. Trust This year, the income from the Mr. and Mrs. William Edwin, Sr. Trust and the Ellen Brown and George Woolsey Bierlin Trust supported faculty professional development in the areas of science, world language and English with a focus on International Baccalaureate training. New Hampton School remains deeply grateful to the Ellen Brown and George Woolsey Bierlin and the Mr. and Mrs. William Edwin Bierlin, Sr. Trusts for their support of the School's commitment to provide a globally relevant curriculum.

☨ DECEASED

• •

Class of 2002

Collin D. Bray Jessica A. Kang  Nathalie M. Morgan Tristan D. Poh

• BELFRY SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP

104  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Ramsay F. de Give Mackenzie L. Ewing  Christopher M. Hart Jonathan S. O’Toole E. Nicole Beal

Class of 2005

Alexander C. Albert Matthew K. Buck  Cody V. DuBuc John G. Mitchell James F. Watkins III

Class of 2006

Jeffrey Thompson Black Jessica P. Carpenter Joseph W. Cubellis Radar Jones O. Onguetou Thomas N. Tessier

Class of 2007

Kelsey B. Berry Thomas A. Crocker Matthew E. Dodge Jean M. Troiano  Keith J. Winking

Class of 2008

Robert A. Borzillo Dana B. Buckley William M. Burke Nicholas E. Caruso Kayla M. DiBari Jarrod A. Gobbi Michael B. Lyon Nicholas M. Maggio  Julie Randall

Class of 2009 Alex W. Dodge Morgan M. Donovan Molly S. Moran

Class of 2010 Emma L. Berry Andrew James George Tyler J. Hill Jacob A. Liebert Kayla L. Wagner

Class of 2011

Marcus Barnes-Reilly Reiva J. Keith

Class of 2012

Class of 2004

Class of 1988

Alitia C. Cross

Class of 1997

Class of 1986

Vincent J. Every  Bradford P. Hazeltine  Daryl J. Thomas, Ph.D.

Christopher A. Harlow Benjamin R. Huntington  Peter F. Hutchins Christopher J. Northrop Lisa Falconi Perfield Alfredas Petkus  Lesley A. Robbins  Caitlin Andrews Turton Erin O’Toole Walsh

Daniel K. Calley Sydney L. Frazier Erin K. Moran

Class of 2013

Margaret Adair Jason M. Alexander Ryder J. Arsenault Elizabeth J. Aveson Mariza H. Ballou Guillaume Belanger-Therien Alexandra P. Berkowitz Patrick J. Bolton Amanda C. Brady Aaron K. Broughton James K. Brown Jourdan S. Buchler Ha Thanh Bui Katherine T. J. CampbellTompkins Briana C. Cardwell Trevor J. Chapin Maya W. M. Chase Wenhui Chen Yifu Chen Yifu Cheng Edward D. Conroy Devin M. Corcoran Jack R. Craig Cam M. Cundy Lincoln M. Davis Julian P. Dinwoodie Michael D. Disbury John C. Donatelli Blake E. Eberhardt Catherine H. Emerson Hannah M. Fiore Cole G. Franklin Trevor N. Glassman Ariel E. Goos Shoshanah B. Gordon Ariana J. Guy Eric C. Hanover Dylan D. Hart Malcolm X. Hayes Coleman D. Hernon Jonathan P. Holzberger Hayden K. Huff Jae Hoon Jang Kanyang Jiang Travis K. Jorgenson Caleb M. Kane Caroline M. Kelly

Chang Kyung Kim Julia Knobloch Kayla E. Kommit Akinori Kumagai Rachel A. Legg Amandine Lemonnier Gavin J. Lentz Elaina M. Little Hengyan Liu Duyen Thuy Luu Lingfeng Mai Anthony A. Maiuri Mark A. Mannara Cole W. McConnell Katherine R. McMahon Rachel E. McMenaman Mauricio Mendez Jesse C. Miller Courtney J. Moulton Emily A. Moulton Zachary J. Noe Sungho Park Anthony J. Pate Jeffrey M. Peras Brennan B. Quackenbush Joseph V. Reineman III Abigail E. Rutt Tharathep Sangsawang Abigail R. Schwing Jeremy N. Seigle Anthony N. Senese Ellory E. Shackett Woo Jin Shin Alexander J. Stanko Nicole P. Stepanek Jonathan Sung Stephen K. Tomaro Dustin J. Triano Jialei Tu Noah Y. Vonleh Yuchi Wang Nathan G. Ward Xingchen Wei Marci B. Weinstein Kevin R. West Reilly E. West Owen H. White Egle Zelnyte

Current Parent Donors

Scott and Josephine Adair James and Heidi Adams Daniel and Rebecca Alperin Mercedes R. Amador Jamie and Lara Arsenault  Daniel and Gail Auger David and Marji Aveson Michael and Lisa Baker Roger and Georgeann Ballou  Jeffery and Missy Barlow Theodore Barton and Cindy Litzenberger Theodore and Robin Bass Robert and Wendy Beaudet Elliott Berkowitz and Nancy Phillips Steven A. Berman Thomas and Jennifer ’83 Berry


2012-2013   state of the school report

FROM A legacy Family Stephen ’82 and Carol Thomas, Christian ’17 and Dominick ’16 "My New Hampton School experience was wonderful, and we are so pleased that our two sons now have the opportunity to attend New Hampton School as well. It is always great to return to see the incredible improvements made throughout campus, but also to know my sons will have the opportunity to be surrounded by and learn from caring faculty just as I did 30 years ago. Carol and I give as a way to say thank you to the people who have made a difference in all our lives."

Bert and Nicola Bleicher Philip and Jennifer Boisvert Gregory and Colleen Bolton Mark Bouzianis Morgan and Eileen Brady Bennie and Stephanie Bray Benjamin and Rosemary Brewster  Joel and Mary Brown D. Ari and Helene C. Buchler George Buehler Bill and Barbara Burgess Kevin and Kerry Calley  Deirdre A. Campbell-Tompkins and Elizabeth A. CampbellTompkins Gary and Patricia Caruso  Eric and Tavia Cederberg Gregory and Cynthia Chapin Calvin and Yvonne Chau Zhijian Chen and Liping Zhu Zhong Chen and Xiuqin Chen Shixue Cheng and Jianqin Zhu Kwon Sung Cho and Mun Hee Choi Kathleen Clark and John Ambrosini Clement T. Cole and Maggie E. Marshall Christopher and Joy Corapi Dennis M. Corcoran and Terilyn Fountain Kathleen and Timothy Costello Patrick and Karen Cox John and Jane Craig Richard and Karen Dean Charles and Ailsa Dibert Michael ☨ and Holly Dillon Richard and Elaine Doell Robert and Sandra Donnelly George and Tammy Dorfman George and Anne Draper

Robert K. Durrant and Piyaphan Chirathivat Ronald and Rosalie Eberhardt Roger and Patricia Emerson Stephen and Priscilla Fay Lorna M. Fenenbock Judith S. Fish Liang Fu and Li Xian Zhai Philip and Joann Godwin Samuel D. and Sarah R. Goos  H. Gail Gordon, R.E. Stephen and Lynn Grant David and Deborah Hampton Henry Hanlan and Daniele Malo Mark and Latonya Hayes Martin and Susan Hernon Gary and Kathleen Howe  Xiaobo Hu and Rongyan Sun Hiroyuki Itakura and Yuka Itakura David and Betsey Ives Byeong Yong Jang and Kyeong Hee Kim Richard and Juliette Jansen Yong Jiang Dan Johnson and Cydney Shapleigh-Johnson Tharen and Candace Jorgenson Peter and Carrie Kane Krista P. Katz Rebecca and Myron Kibbee  Ellen D. Kidd  Hyun Young Kim and Sung Ha Kang Hyung Tae Kim and Young Joo Lee Kenneth and Susan King Kenneth and Lisa Kumph Rory and Wendy LaBate Anthony and Lisa Laudico John and Cheryl Legg Carl and Amy Liebert

Christopher T. Little  David and Heidi Little Dennis Liu and Milena Y. Liu Jianliang Liu and Dongping Ying Daniel and Leslie Lynch Stephen and Grace Maganzini William and Ellen Maheia ZhiHua Mai and Xuezhen Zhu Louis and Cheryl Maiuri Anna Makarova Anthony and Marina Mannara Melody Martel  Kelly Mason Verrochi and Paul M. Verrochi Thomas C. McConnell and Latricia Turner James and Jennifer McMahon  Andrew and Jennifer Menke  John and Susan Messinger Eric and Kathryn Miller James A. Miller James and Sandra Miller Kathryn W. Miller Tomohiko and Michiyo Minagawa Hiroshi and Christine Miyachi Samson and Ebehijie Momoh Rory and Martha Moulton Jarvis Murray Steven and Susan Musicant Kihong Na and Hyeong Wook Kim Stephen and Amy Nazzaro Asan Nugmanov and Gulzhan Sarsenova Phillip and Kristen O’Reilly Abayomi and Yetunde Olujimi Baeyoung and Danyoung Park Gabriel Pate and Georgette Barnswell Jeffrey and Corinne Peras Richard D. Peters

• •

Ute and Axel Prey William L. Quackenbush Irina Raskina Tom and Lettice Rhodes Stephen ’80 and Carol Rich Cynthia and Andrew Roth John Roth and Caro Farr Roth David A. Russell and Cristin Camaione-Russell Timothy and Elizabeth Ryan Hansrudolf and Nenet Schmid Walter and Elizabeth Schwing Michael and Janet Seigle Michal and Maide Sestak Jeffrey S. Shackett ’83 Pill Chong Shin and Seung Hae Han Jeff and Brenda Sobczyk Scott and Kristi Solman Il Ho and Young Hae Son Yuhai Song and Jianping Cui L. Patricia Stanley Carolyn L. Stolov and Steve A. Savage Theodore and Yuri Sung Shinya and Yoko Tabata Stephan W. Taylor and Elizabeth M. Snowden-Taylor Eric Therien and France Belanger Stephen ’82 and Carol Thomas Karla S. Todd Howard and Elizabeth Triano James and Kelley Tully Anthony and Maria Tur Denise Van Dyke Burgess Daniel and Nancy Vautour David and Julie Vogel Michael and Lisa Wagner Cangshan Wang and Yan Qi Kai Wang and Yingchun Ma Xiu Bin Wang and

☨ DECEASED

Josef Tatelbaum Yao Huang Wang and Hong Yan Jeffrey and Deborah Weber Shengmin Wei and Shumei Li Richard and Dina Weinstein Douglas and Eleni Wenners Jonathan and Katharine West Andrew and Tracy White George and Rhonda Wilcox Amy Wilson and Russ Brummer Bing Xie and Fengqing Zhang Lee D. Young Jian Ping and Mindy Yu Alexander and Irina Zaytsev Keyuan Zhang and Xiaoqun Li Yeguang Zhang and Dan Wang Parents of Alumni Donors

Dennis and Jean Ames Dana and Corinne Arsenault Roger and Georgeann Ballou  Stephen J. Bandoian  Michael and Margaret Barnett  Jeanne C. Baron Thomas and Jennifer ’83 Berry  Jeffrey and Cynthia Black  Douglas and Margaret Brenner Benjamin and Rosemary Brewster  Paul and Cindy Buck  Gerald and Alice Burke  Robert and Deborah Burke Chester and Mary Butcher Kevin and Kerry Calley  Gary and Patricia Caruso  David Chambers and Michele LeComte-Chambers George W. and Elibet ’75 M. Chase Vickie D. Clifford

• •

• BELFRY SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  105


state of the school report  2012-2013

Carolyn S. Cook  Robert and Shelly Coursey Alan B. Crocker W. S. Cubellis Thomas and Joyce Dailey Harry and Suzanne Davis  Richard and Karen Dean John and Kathryn Delea  Earl C. and Beth A. Dodge  Daniel and Lisa Dorian Jill A. Duncan and Richard J. Wargo  James and Kathleen Elcock Daniel and Denise Enxing Norman and Margaret Farwell Nan T. Fay  Stephen and Priscilla Fay Gregor and Carol Fellers  Robert and Linda Fox Marc Frader and Janis Hersh Richard and Margaret Frame Richard ’76 and Margaret Frame Thomas and Cheryl Franco W. West Frazier and Christine Collins  Michael and Robin Fusick Pauline B. Galletly  Peter ’73 and Karen Galletly  Robert ’71 and Joni Galletly  Michael and Patricia Garvey Joseph and Jane Gehrig Jay ’76 and Gretchen George  Thomas Gill Russell and Gretchen Gilpatric  Cynthia and Kenneth Glidden Cynthia Gordon Mark Gordon Daniel and Beth Gorman Mark and Cynthia Gould Uwe and Patricia Gradias Peter and Marion Grillo  Edgar ’59 and Barbara

• • •

• •

• •

Guardenier  David and Jane Gunn George M. and Ruth E. Haivanis  Paul J. Hamel and Cheryl Hamel  Henry Hanlan and Daniele Malo Luke and Lynda Haran  Paul and Victoria Harlow Alan and Donna Hart  Dale T. Hart David ’69 and Jan Hinman Richard and Helen Hoffman  Kent and Karen Holce Scott and Donna Horton  Jeffrey R. Huntington  Timothy and Louise Huyck Gale S. Jackson Richard and Juliette Jansen Steve and Cindy Jenkins William and Mary Beth Jordan David and Jennifer Kaiser  John M. Kelsey and Sally Wilson Thomas and Anastasia Kennedy  Rebecca and Myron Kibbee  Ellen D. Kidd  Hwan Kyoon Kim and Tae Ae Lee  Andrew and Jayne Klein  Ruthann M. Kline Smith Joseph and Deborah Koenig Ken-ichi and Shirley Kondo  Edwin and Deborah Leach John and Cheryl Legg Alan ’52 and Elizabeth Levenson  Carl and Amy Liebert Michael DeAngelis and Veronica Lima-DeAngelis  Lawrence and Cynthia Link Donn and Michele Lux Joseph and Ann MacAndrew

• •

• • •

Paul and Joanne Magee Wayne and Maria Maggio  Melody Martel  Anonymous Current Parent Eugene and Deborah McLean  James and Jennifer McMahon  Edgar Mendelsohn Andrew and Jennifer Menke  Abigail S. Mercer Sharon F. Merrill Marino Herbert and Irma Mershon  James A. Miller Kathryn W. Miller Kenneth D. Miller Mark and Mary Ann Miller Ann M. Minahan William and Debra Mitchell T. Holmes ’38 ☨ and Norma Jean Moore  F. Myles Moran and Mary Jo Levitsky James ’58 and Gay Morison William C. Morton ’69 Daniel and Margaret Moseley  Michael and Margaret Mumma  Seth and Marian Natter  Scott and Colleen Nolan  Keith and Dena O’Hara  Lorna L. Outerbridge Robert and Marsha Page  Gilbert and Patricia Palmer  William and Julie Paulos Will and Lucy Pingree  Paul and Deirdre Piscitelli  Vincent and Patricia Plansky  Robert and Christina Pollock Nicholas and Susan Preston Stephen and Virginia Provost  Christopher and Gwendolyn Randall  Darren and Stacey Redman  Donald and Dorothy Rockel

• • •

• • • •

• •

• • • •

R. Edward ’58 and Emma L. Rose  Peter J. Schiot Frederick Smith Jr. ’45  Bill and Patsy Smith  Scott and Kristi Solman Carroll and Sandra Stafford Susan E. Stark-Beeson Jon and Annette Tallarida  Sean and Nancy Teague  Thomas and Diane Tessier  Mark and Sandy Tilton Robert H. Traylor  Mark and Pamela Troiano  Chester and Mary Truskowski Susan B. Tyson Lea S. Tzimoulis Daniel and Nancy Vautour Charles and Jan Vrana Lynn H. Wadhams  Gregory and Gina Wagner  Owen M. Ward ’43 Whitney ’71 and Vicki Ward  David and Debora Webster Jonathan A. Wiederecht and Nur Kilic Allen and Janet Williams  Stephen and Kathleen Winslow Rudolph and Corliss Wise Joel and Rachel Wohlfeil Robert M. and C. Sharon Wolcott  Robert and Diane Young

Grandparent Donors

Janice Ahern Susan K. Allen Barry and Mimi Alperin Joan B. Brewer Robert W. Burgess Marvin and Sera Callif  Cynthia F. Casner

Hugh and Carol Cota Edward and Lois Mary Diehl Glen and Mary Dillon Virginia M. Fitzgerald David and M. Katharine Fuller Pauline B. Galletly  Ronald and Sheila Geraty Delores W. Godwin Felicia Grant John Heiner and Lynn Pascoe Jeffrey and Cheryl Howard Robert D. Kennedy ’50   George and Diane Kidd  Warren and Jean Little Doreen B. Marshall John and Jeanne McMahon  Gerald and Laura McNally Jacqueline T. McNally Robert and Evelyn Meservey Shinichiro and Yoshiko Miyachi T. Holmes ’38 ☨ and Norma Jean Moore  Ellsworth and Joyce Morton Celena Neal Cuong Ich Nguyen and Hien Dang Thi Thanh J. Philip ’51 and Patricia O’Hara  Anthony and Barbara Pluhar James and Adeline Polese Gail L. Pratt Robert and Anne Pullen Walter and Carolyn Schwing Frederick ’45 and Jane B. Smith Carroll and Sandra Stafford Allan and Barbara Stanley Barbara E. Stolov Ruth I. Taylor Sandy and Mark Tilton Mary R. Vincent Owen M. Ward ’43 Charles and June Woodland

• •

FROm a Family abroad Xiabo Hu and Rongyan Sun and Xinyi “Jessica” Hu ’14 "Andrew Menke's vision for New Hampton School and the hard work of the faculty have made all the difference for our daughter. With her being so far away from home, it is important for us to know she is well cared for and challenged academically each day. The caring faculty that surround our daughter reassure us that she is receiving the best education possible. We make a donation to the School because we know our gift makes a difference for all students."

☨ DECEASED

• BELFRY SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP

106  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013


2012-2013   state of the school report

Faculty and Staff Donors Christine Alexander Sheryl Anderson  Jamie Arsenault  Lara Arsenault  Arthur Barron  Charlotte Barron  Dana Bates Thomas Beaulieu Bradley Bennett Holly Bennett  Jennifer Shackett Berry ’83  Kirk Beswick Rebecca Borry Rosemary Brewster  Leia Bridgham  Meredith Brown  Russell Brummer Cindy Buck  Paul Buck  Johnny Buck  Suzanne Walker Buck  John Bucklin  Scott Bugbee Jessica Carpenter Nora Cascadden Rossli Chace Michele Cheney Craig Churchill Jennifer Churchill Sandy Colhoun  Daniel Corey  Michelle Cote Robert Coursey Cathy Creany  Jerrica Crowder  David Dath William Deacon Patrick DeBenedictis  Sarah DeBenedictis  Cheryl DeFosses Beth Dodge  Harlan Dodson April Dumont Jill Duncan  Katerina Farr-Williams  Stephen Fay Jo Fendley Matthew Fisk James Ford Peg Frame Morganne Freeborn Stephen Freeborn Justin Freeman  Lauren Gale Sandy Gates Gretchen Gilpatric  Cynthia Glidden Gina Graciano Elizabeth Grosart  Cindy Guldemond Ann Hall Tina Hazelton  Erika Hoddinott Kathleen Howe  Keith Hrasky Maureen Huber  Peter Hutchins ’01

• • • • •

• •

• • • •

• •

• • •

Justin Joslin  Rebekka Joslin  Jessica Kang ’02  Derek Krein Eric LaCroix  Maura Lane Veronica Lima-DeAngelis  Christopher Little  Jacque Little David LoPresti Daniel Love  Kevin Mahoney Rene Martinez Matthew Mansur Melody Martel  Florence Martin  Kyle Masterson Jolene May Jenna McCabe Ryann McCann  Kristopher McClure Eric McCollom  William McCulloch Melissa McGee  Ryan McLeod Jennifer McMahon  Andrew Menke  Hans Mundahl  Sarah Mundahl  Radar Jones Onguetou ’06 Shawn Ouellette Margaret Pechenick Alfredas Petkus ’01  Daniel Petrocelli ’89 Nancy Prentice Kathryn Quigley Gwen Randall  Darren Redman  Donna Risteen Chloe Rochon Kelvin Rose Rita Rose Joshua Routhier Joseph Sampson  Jonathan Schwab Amy Sedestrom Jon Shackett  Neal Shartar  Martha Shepp  Justin Simon M. Trent Smither Stephen Stafford  Brian Sullivan Luke Tobin Kyle Tufts Adam Tyson  Sara Tyson  Craig Untiet Chieko Villas Gina Wagner  Erin O’Toole Walsh ’01 James Walsh Kathleen Whitcher Tracy White Erica Willingham Amy Wilson Matthew Wright

• •

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• •

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• •

Friend Donors

from a Staff member

• •

Rolf and Carla Ball  Susan Wagner Bergen Irene A. Chandler  Mary E. Cogswell Harlan Dodson and Margaret Behm Malcolm Gauld Phyllis S. Hamblet  Devin Haran Sally J. Hill Charles W. Howard II  Laurie G. Hurd Georgia G. MacMillan Nancy Morganstern Sally S. Morse  Cheryl A. North Stephen H. Paneyko  David Perfield  Dorothy D. Peterson Donna Phillips Karen M. Shea Jared R. Smith Regina B. St. Clair David R. Sullivan William Tighe Cynthia A. Van Buren Veronica Whall Anne White Waukewan Golf Club

Maureen Huber – 26 years of service to New Hampton School "I have been at New Hampton School for a long time and have seen many changes over the years. I give to the Annual Fund because I believe in the School's mission and the people that work here. I want to support our students to make New Hampton School the best possible place it can be and am doing my part to maintain the positive energy at New Hampton School today."

Gifts from Corporations and Foundations

Arnold Baggins Foundation, Inc.  AYCO Charitable Foundation BoDeans Cone Company  BoDeans Wafer Company  The Boston Foundation Conneston Construction, Inc.  Denver Foundation  Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund  Lola B. Grillo Foundation  Paul and Cheryl Hamel Family Foundation  Haselton Family Foundation, Inc. Samuel P. Hunt Foundation Jewish Community Foundation Kemper Educational & Charitable Fund Koenig Family Charitable Foundation Mildred H. McEvoy Foundation McIninch Foundation  The Michael Scott McLaughlin Foundation Samyn D’Elia Architects Schwab Charitable Fund  Patricia M. and H. William Smith, Jr. Foundation  The Sol Foundation T. Rowe Price Program for Charitable Giving TARGET  Tiedemann-Bevs Industries Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program

• •

• •

Vrana Family Foundation Waukewan Golf Club Wells Fargo Foundation

Matching Gift Companies

Bank of America Matching Gifts Program Benjamin Moore & Company BNY Mellon Chevron Humankind Coca-Cola Matching Gifts Program Cornerstone Real Estate Advisers LLC Edison International Follett Corporation Matching Gifts Program GE Foundation

☨ DECEASED

Goodrich Foundation ING Invest In Others Charitable Foundation John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Macy’s Foundation Shell Oil Company Foundation Gifts-in-Kind

David Abraham ’57 Scott and Josephine Adair Jamie and Lara Arsenault Robert and Wendy Beaudet Thomas D. Beaulieu Steven A. Berman Victoria A. Blodgett ’80 Morgan and Eileen Brady Douglas and Margaret Brenner

• BELFRY SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP

FALL 2013 HAMPTONIA  107


state of the school report  2012-2013

Benjamin and Rosemary Brewster Meredith C. Brown Nora E. Cascadden Kathleen Clark and John Ambrosini Hugh and Carol Cota Michelle Cote John and Jane Craig Ramsay F. de Give ’04 Richard and Karen Dean Charles and Ailsa Dibert Glen and Mary Dillon Michael☨ and Holly Dillon Robert and Sandra Donnelly Sydney L. Frazier ’12 Justin K. Freeman David and M. Katharine Fuller Lauren K. Gale Ronald and Sheila Geraty Cynthia and Kenneth Glidden Gina Graciano Edgar ’59 and Barbara Guardenier Benjamin R. Huntington ’01 Jeffrey R. Huntington Dan Johnson and Cydney Shapleigh-Johnson Justin and Rebekka Joslin Kenneth and Lisa Kumph Carl and Amy Liebert Michael DeAngelis and Veronica Lima-DeAngelis Daniel W. Love and Amy Sedestrom Kevin P. Mahoney Rene D. Martinez Jeremy C. McCamic ’46

1821 Society

☨ DECEASED

Kristopher B. McClure Eric A. McCollom D. V. McLeod ’65 James and Jennifer McMahon Hiroshi and Christine Miyachi F. Myles Moran and Mary Jo Levitsky Thomas N. Mullen ’62 Jarvis Murray Jeffrey and Corinne Peras Robert A. Pollard ’56 Darren and Stacey Redman Chloe D. Rochon Kelvin and Rita Rose David Russell and Cristin Camaione-Russell Joseph A. Sampson R. J. Shackett Neal Shartar and Sheryl Anderson M. Trent Smither Carroll and Sandra Stafford William Tighe Stephen K. Tomaro James and Kelley Tully Cynthia A. Van Buren Veronica Whall Erica Willingham Matthew J. Wright Waukewan Golf Club Memorial Gifts

Bedford W. Chandler ’55 Richard Wright “Buck” Ellison, teacher and soldier Eleanor Gallagher William P. Hamblet ’56

Ryan Haran ’97 Herman and Doris Hassinger John J. Hill III ’56 Anna and Max Hinzpeter Denise Natter ’93 Lucy and Paul Pantano David Rice Peter and Nancy Rutter Arthur L. Sullivan, Jr. ’37 Honorary Gifts

Jennifer Shackett Berry ’83 Brady Black ’04 Tommy Black ’04 Meredith Brown Jourdan Buchler ’13 Craig Churchill Alitia Cross ’88 Patrick DeBenedictis Sarah DeBenedictis Harlan Dodson Barbara Doud ’73 Katka Farr-Williams Matt Fisk Jonathan Frader ’06 Peg Frame Steve Freeborn Sandy Gates Joe Gauld Lydia Gill ’10 Lou Gnerre Gina Graciano Radar Jones Onguetou Bekka Joslin Jacob Leibert ’10 Seth Leibert ’12

The strength of New Hampton School's future endowment depends in large part upon the foresight and support of those alumni, parents and friends who have chosen to include the school in their estate plans. The 1821 Society serves to acknowledge their confidence and vision. Members of the New Hampton School community who have established bequests, life income gifts and charitable trusts for the ultimate benefit of the school recognize the value of a New Hampton School education and their responsibility to help preserve the opportunity for future generations.

108  NEW HAMPTON SCHOOL  FALL 2013

Sam Leibert ’15 Joe Marsh Rene Martinez Kyle Masterson Jenna McCabe T. Holmes ’38 ☨ and Jinga Moore Meg Pechenick Freddy Petkus Brian Sullivan Doug Thompson Mark Tilton Kyle Tufts Kent Wiederecht ’10 Amy Wilson Matt Wright 1821 Society

David Abraham ’57 and Johanne L. Abraham George W. Ahl ’44 Irving T. Bartlett Jr. ’42 Peter J. Bergen ’50 Thomas H. Berry and Jennifer S. Berry ’83 George W. Bierlin ’61 and Ellen B. Bierlin William D. Blake ’49 Mildred S. Braley Arthur M. Brink Jr. ’62 Wallace C. Butterfield ’33 and Eleanor L. Butterfield Richard A. Cascio ’50 George and Helen J. Chandler Peter C. Charron ’54 Cornelius and Mary Dekker P’65 Preston N. Eames

New Hampton School is most appreciative of the generous commitment made to preserving the school’s future by the Society's current members. We encourage others to join those honored here who recognize the value of sharing their legacy. By indicating your intentions to remember New Hampton School in your estate plans, you earn membership in the 1821 Society. If you have New Hampton School in your estate plans and have not notified the School or would like more information, please contact Sandy Colhoun, Director of Development (603-677-3413; scolhoun@newhampton.org).

Alice M. Ebbels P’61 Charles Fields and Ora M. Fields ’03 Richard D. and Marilyn Frame P’76 GP’04 GP’10 Peter W. Galletly ’73 and Karen Galletly P’09 M. David Giardino ’49 William H. Gunther ’41 Charles H. Gurnett ’32 Robert R. Gurnett ’32 William A. Hazard ’48 and Genevieve Hazard David Heald ’38 and Jane Heald P’62 P’71 Charles M. Hines ’48 Rockwell Holman ’44 and Irene T. Holman Martin H. Howell, Jr. ’35 Robert E. Irish ’50 Samantha M. Jewett, Esq. ’77 Theodore A. Jones ’49 Donald C. Jordan ’41 Robert A. Jungst ’48 George M. Kendall P’60 Robert D. Kennedy ’50 and Sally Kennedy GP’10 D. Bruce Marshall ’48 Robert A. McCown Helena M. Milne ’19 and Douglas M. Milne Rodman S. Moeller ’39 and Dorothy B. Moeller F. Maurice Morrill James B. Nicholson ’60 John A. Nordhouse ’53 Kenneth R. Norris ’33 Leonore Lane Paneyko P’57 Robert L. Pascucci ’55 Preston Perlman ’58 Robert A. ’42 and Donna Phillips Jason M. Pilalas ’58 and Rena Pilalas Rodney F. Poland, Jr. ’37 Robert A. ’56 and Nancy Pollard George P. Ponte ’53 Frances A. Richardson ’22 George S. Robinson, Jr. ’61 Cephas B. Rogers III ’55 Eleanor E. Rogers P’63 Howard and Geraldine Saturley P’68, ’73, ’78 Stephen W. Schultz ’65 and Romey Stuckart Alfred B. Small ’30 Dexter N. Smith ’37 Kenneth L. Snow ’53 Robert I. St. Clair ’36 and Regina B. St. Clair Thomas and Diane Tessier P’06 John L. Threshie ’47 and Elizabeth Threshie Walter E. Umla Jr. ’41 Anthony K. Van Riper ’44 Martha Bartlett Walker P’68 Albert L. Watson ’45 Robert-Grant Wealleans ’68 and Lori Wealleans Leslie Weed ’22 and Alice H. Weed


Leave a Legacy We invite you to leave your own legacy. New Hampton School alumnus and former trustee George Ahl ’44 wants to ensure a wonderful future for New Hampton School. The former co-captain of the ski team is creating his own New Hampton Legacy.

How did you get connect with NHS as a child? My parents wanted me to go away to a good school in New England. Through a very careful search, we found NHS.

What was most influential for you at NHS? I find myself going back to the history of the school. The word vision comes to mind. Early on there was a vision regarding the development of the student: that vision has carried forward through all these years, through Fred Smith, Bud Moore and now with Andrew Menke. And that vision was to build on the inner potential of the student. I was exposed to a very stringent academic standard and I rose to the occasion. NHS brought out the potential in me and still does so today.

What prompted you to make a gift in your estate? I wanted to help. An NHS education is critical for future leaders in a complex world. Educating students from around the world requires tremendous foresight and a continued focus on the school’s enduring mission. I hope my small contribution can be of help towards these goals and continuity.

The generosity displayed by George has been shared by alumni, parents, and friends of the School who have made planned gifts and have thus been recognized as members of the 1821 Society. Whether it is a bequest, a life insurance designation, or a life income gift, you can help secure New Hampton’s future success. For more information on ways to support New Hampton School, please contact us: Sandy Colhoun scolhoun@newhampton.org 603-677-3413 www.newhampton.org/gobeyond


70 Main Street New Hampton, NH 03256-4243 (603) 536-3401

NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE

PAID FLAGSHIP MAILED FROM 01889

Jennifer Shackett Berry ’83 27 years of service

Who will you honor?

“I had Jen Berry ’83 as a teacher in English composition, which was a subject I viewed as a weakness of mine. I credit her for helping me become a much better writer. Jen has been instrumental in guiding me as I step into my new role as a faculty member here at New Hampton School. She is the perfect person to honor with a gift to NHS, not only for the influence she’s had on me as a student and a new teacher, but also to celebrate her lifelong service to NHS and the impact she has had on so many students!” —  Matt Dodge ’07 First-year faculty

BY MAKING A GIFT to New Hampton School, you are honoring the people who made an impact on your life. From coaches to house parents, kitchen staff to the maintenance crew, math teachers to dance instructors, someone at New Hampton made a difference in your life. Our alumni, current parents, and friends provide the backbone of support for the people who make a difference at New Hampton School. Your donation to the Annual Fund will directly benefit our faculty, staff and students. When you believe, and when you give, you make a difference.

Thank you for believing in the people at NHS. Visit www.newhampton.org/giving to honor your mentor with a gift.


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