Country Zest and Style Fall 2020 Edition

Page 39

For Retiring Educator, It’s Magna Cum Love

A

sections of the building “bubbled off” with plastic curtains and playgrounds cloroxed daily.

By M.J. McAteer

lice Duggan skipped first grade. She started hating school in the second. By fourth grade, she was already set on what she was going to do to change that: When she grew up, she vowed, she’d start a school that children actually would want to go to.

“Alice always has a very positive spirit,” said Cyndi Ellis, president of the center’s board. “What I love about her most is that she says, ‘There is always a solution, and we’ll work together to find it.’ ”

That precocious sense of mission never wavered. Straight out of James Madison University, Duggan started a kindergarten in Clarke County with “a $4,000 budget, an empty room and 19 puzzles.” She later tutored Native Americans, worked with special needs students and earned a master’s degree in family and human development. Then, in 1984, destiny came knocking in the form of a three-weekold help-wanted ad placed by Upperville’s Trinity Episcopal Church, searching for someone to start a daycare center. The rest is local history. “I’m normally a five-year person,” said Duggan, who just retired as director of the Piedmont Child Care Center. “But I’ve been here 36 years because of the problem-solving.” Problems tend to be as common as swing sets at daycare facilities, so Duggan definitely had found her element. The latest problem has been Covid-19, but after a closure of a few months, a “battened down” Piedmont reopened. There are fewer children (ages six months to 12-years-old), no mixing between the age-designated classrooms, no entry for parents,

Long before the virus hit, Duggan had solved a problem for many hundreds of families: Finding a place for their children to learn and grow and feel safe and happy. Alice Duggan

“I loved it there,” says Sean D. White, an equine dentist in Middleburg. As a four-year-old, he attended Piedmont when it was housed in Trinity’s basement. These days, the center sits across Route 50 from the church on a nine-acre site with its own playgrounds, gardens, and nature trails. “It hasn’t changed a lot,”White said. “It’s just on the other side of the road.” White’s 4-year-old daughter, Lillian, has been going to Piedmont since she was six months old. “She loves it there, too,” her father said, adding that lately, Lillian has been especially excited about

helping to build a Mr. McGregor scarecrow that looms over the strawberry patch, the alphabet and herb gardens and the sunflower house. In the winter, when darkness comes early, Duggan said the children “have a lovely time out there with flashlights.” White said he appreciates that Duggan is not overly protective, instead encouraging the children to be as autonomous as possible from an early age. “I don’t believe in a baby-sitting atmosphere,” Duggan explained, and once children feel comfortable in their new environment, she works on their self-confidence. She pointed to stripes on the hallway floor that are color-coded, leading to various classrooms and said even the two-year-olds can find their way around the building with minimal help, thrilled with that display of independence. “They just have to know their colors,” she said. “Alice has put her heart and soul into the place,” said Diana Lichliter, her assistant for ten years and now the new director. “She’s funny and easy going, but serious when it comes to what’s best for the children. I have big shoes to fill.” Betsy Crenshaw, the center’s long-time bookkeeper, has known Duggan since the ’80s and seconds that sentiment. “Alice can be tough, but the end result is that the child changes for the better,” she said. “Her M.O. is to make children love school.” Make that her “M.A.” As in Mission Accomplished.

THE HILL SCHOOL Serving Students in Junior Kindergarten Through 8th Grade

Individualized, caring attention with a 6:1 studentteacher ratio

Outdoor science center, ponds and wetlands

Educating confident and happy children since 1926

Total education: academics, art, music, drama and athletics for every student

2019

Bus Service and Before-and-After School Care | TheHillSchool.org Country ZEST & Style | Fall 2020

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HERE and THERE

1min
page 35

A ZEST Filled Summer

1min
page 24

Cup of COFFEE - Oh To Be Back at Saratoga

3min
page 50

Pheasant’s Eye Focused on Historic Home

1min
pages 48-49

National Sporting Library & Museum Polo Classic

1min
page 45

Local Montessori Schools Keep Carrying On

2min
page 44

A Perfect Match for Thatch

1min
page 43

Literary Style

3min
page 42

The Arts Are Alive and Well at Allegro

4min
pages 40-41

For Retiring Educator, It’s Magna Cum Love

3min
page 39

Historic Fauquier White Sulphur Springs Remembered

4min
page 38

A Collector’s Paradise at Marshall Curated

2min
page 37

Someone’s in the Kitchen…

1min
page 34

For George Patton, It Was Cash and Carry

2min
page 33

The Scoop on Scruffy’s Ice Cream Parlor

2min
page 32

Food For Thought And Thoughful Books

1min
page 31

The Warthog:Rebirth of a Brand

2min
page 30

For Alfred Austin, a Matter of Survival

2min
page 28

The Remains of the Day with The Smithwicks of Sunny Bank

2min
pages 26-27

For Pam Jones, It’s All About Building Relationships

2min
page 23

History Helps Stoke Morison’s Passion

3min
page 22

Laura Kelsey, Historian and Genealogist

2min
page 21

Snider’s Riders Are Always on the Way

3min
page 20

This Natural Can’t Be Fenced In

3min
page 19

Exploring the Knights of the Golden Horseshoe

3min
page 18

Leo Grant Preaches Your Will, Your Way

2min
page 17

Hot Stuff with Peaches and Peppers

2min
page 16

At Home on the Range

3min
page 12

Amazing Grace in Restoring Historic Church

4min
pages 8-9

Vineyard VIEW Middleburg’s Colony Cocktails Offers a Unique Blend

2min
page 10

LEATHER BRITCHES

2min
page 3
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