Woodberry Annual Report 2021-2022

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Annual 2021–2022 Report

Accessing the Online Annual Report

We have once again chosen to deliver a printed report that focuses on results from the past year and stories about those who have advanced the Woodberry experience. We continue to publish class giving lists and additional material at woodberryannualreport.org

From the Headmaster: Philanthropy Focused on the Boys

Dear Woodberry alumni, parents, and friends,

When the class of 2022’s prefect board gathered at their retreat, the boys spoke about making the 2021–2022 school year one of renewal. We were all eager to return to a more normal Woodberry experience after the changes forced by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the prefects recognized that only their class — and even then only some of them — had been through a full, (and therefore) “normal” year at Woodberry.

I’m pleased to report the boys and faculty were able to deliver on that programmatic renewal, with the resumption of critical pieces of our campus life such as seated meals and all-school chapel. We weathered the pandemic as well as we did thanks to the deep bonds of trust between students, faculty, staff, families, and alumni. We also benefited from the incredible generosity of each one of you. Whether you made a gift to the Amici Fund, pledged your support to the Campaign for the Boys, or joined the Walker Society to leave a lasting legacy at Woodberry, you have given us the resources needed to respond to the challenges of the pandemic. We have been able to resume our traditional programming, not just for the students, but also with the three wonderful Reunion gatherings we held in July 2021 and April 2022. And thanks to your generosity, we have been able to launch new initiatives for the boys, such as the all-school Expedition Week, held for the first time in September 2021.

As we reflect back on the past year, I am particularly grateful for the board of trustees and the former trustees who have challenged our entire community to finish the Campaign for the Boys and endow tuition assistance for the boys here now and those yet to come. We made outstanding progress during the past fiscal year and are ready to finish strong.

Woodberry is a special community, one that knits together students, faculty, staff, alumni, and families. Once you have joined the Tiger Nation, you are a part of our community for life. The enduring power of Woodberry Forest has been revealed through the way we have banded together and delivered the best possible education for our students through some of the most challenging times in American education.

Thank you again for your support of Woodberry Forest this past year, and Go Tigers!

2021–22 Annual Report Table of Contents

From the Headmaster: Philanthropy Focused on the Boys Philanthropic Support

From the Assistant Headmaster for External Affairs: A Campaign Kickoff to Remember Operating Budget Summary

From the Dean of Students: Caring for the Boys Here Now

Forwarding the Woodberry Experience

Continuing Our Quest to Endow Tuition Assistance

Fred Lummis ’71: Giving Back to a Place that Shaped Him

The Power of the Endowment: How Decades of Gifts Support Boys Here Now Fiftieth Reunion Brings Three Classes Together

The Walker Society: An Enduring Investment

Ty Tysinger ’62: Sixty Years of Tiger Service

Our Physical Place

Debbie Barden: Keeping Woodberry Running Behind the Scenes

Smoot Carter ’04: A Gift to Help All Students Find Academic Success

Why We Are Strong: Community & Volunteers

Introduction

Why We Are Strong

Amici Fund Tops $4.3 Million in Support of Campaign for the Boys

Our Volunteers

Board of Trustees

Advisory Council

Regional Chapter Volunteers

Class Volunteers

Parent Committees

Contributing writers:

Philanthropic Support

$11,542,562

From the Assistant Headmaster for External Affairs: A Campaign Kickoff to Remember

What a joy it was to publicly launch the Campaign for the Boys in November 2021. It was a gathering we’d long awaited — the quiet phase of this campaign began in 2016, shortly after the board adopted a new strategic plan. With the restoration of the Walker Building complete and substantial commitments already made to supporting Woodberry’s tremendous faculty and staff, the remainder of the campaign is focused on endowing tuition assistance to preserve the Woodberry experience.

As you’ll see in the pages of this Annual Report, we’ve made excellent progress, thanks in large part to the challenge gifts made by current and former trustees to support tuition assistance. We’ve also enjoyed another outstanding year for the Amici Fund because of the work of our wonderful network of alumni and parent volunteers. Woodberry continues to benefit from an alumni giving rate higher than that of any other independent school or university, a tremendous testament to the power of the student experience and the lifelong connections that are forged here.

Woodberry parents, both of current students and of alumni, are important stalwarts of support, recognizing the way the school has shaped their sons. We benefit tremendously from their gifts to the Amici Fund, to the Sixth-Form Parents’ and Grandparents’ Gift, and to new endowed scholarships for tuition assistance. As the mother of two Woodberry boys who have now finished college and are making their way in the world, I love seeing the way my sons and their classmates continue to care for one another.

As I reflect back on the year, a final highlight was the chance to once again see so many of you in person, whether at Reunion Weekends or during an event in your hometown. Connecting once again after so many Zoom calls was a wonderful gift. I look forward to many more gatherings to come, both on campus and around the world, as we build on the work of the past year and charge toward the goals of the Campaign for the Boys.

Sincerely yours,

Operating Budget Summary

$4,143,100

$23,963,000

$16,993,579

$2,153,479

From the Dean of Students: Caring for the Boys

Here Now

Dear Tigers,

Traditionally the Annual Report showcases how the school is stewarding its resources, especially the gifts you so generously share with us. This year we also wanted to share a bit about how we are stewarding the four hundred boys in our care, a task that is my core responsibility as dean of students.

Over the past several years, we’ve been implementing the Wholeness Initiative. The initiative is now well established, though still growing, combining a variety of interactive programs, guest speakers, and special events to help boys explore topics that fall outside the traditional academic curriculum. These include developing and maintaining sound social and emotional health, building healthy relationships in a diverse world, serving our community, and establishing good habits with technology and social media. We’ve committed to three wholeness days each year that focus on these topics and developed partnerships with organizations such as the One Love Foundation to help inform and guide programming. These wholeness days often involve a guest speaker for the entire school and a series of workshops, generally with different curricula for boys in different grades. The events also offer a break from our traditional routine and include time for advisory groups to meet and reflect on the topic at hand. This year, we extended our wholeness efforts to our parent community, designing and offering a series of webinars focused on topics such as substance use and misuse and social media and digital citizenship.

I’m excited to report that this year marked the launch of our all-school Expedition Week. Many of you may know we’ve held a fourth-form expedition in the mountains of Virginia or North Carolina for more than twenty years. In 2019, we added a third-form

expedition to a camp in the Shenandoah Valley. This year, we held our first expedition for the two upper forms. Fifth formers chose from many intensive classes designed and led by faculty members, while sixth formers traveled to southwest Virginia to work with the Appalachia Service Project. This all-school Expedition Week gives boys a chance to connect with one another, the faculty, and the world around them through service leadership and learning. After its very successful debut, we are eager for Expedition Week to become a key fall tradition.

Your gifts make the Woodberry experience possible for boys, supporting everything from student clubs like WFSPN and the International Forum to the onand off-campus activities we organize each weekend. And, of course, your support makes it possible for us to deliver the Wholeness Initiative and Expedition Week. We’ve strategically designed the student experience to move from structure to autonomy. As a Woodberry boy moves from the third form through the sixth form, gradually increasing responsibility better prepares him for life after his time at the Forest. Thank you for your care of the boys here now and for helping each one of them have an outstanding and unique high school experience.

Sincerely,

Woodberry EXPERIENCE

Continuing Our Quest to Endow Tuition Assistance

For ninety years, a key belief at Woodberry has been that boys with the potential and will to succeed should be able to come to school here regardless of their family’s ability to pay. The first tuition assistance program grew out of the financial turmoil caused by the Great Depression, when J. Carter Walker, the school’s first headmaster, did everything in his power to ensure boys would not be forced to leave the school because of the economic downturn. Faculty members took two pay cuts during the 1930s, with the savings used to offset tuition payments that families could no longer make.

The Campaign for the Boys honors the legacy of those who came before us and shaped Woodberry into the institution it is today. It supports the boys here now, delivering an all-boys, all-boarding experience to prepare them for lives as learners, leaders, and citizens. And the campaign prepares the way for boys yet to come by making sure an education here remains accessible to a wide range of students.

Endowing tuition assistance is Woodberry’s greatest opportunity to secure its future for decades to come. It also ensures that the school will be financially sustainable for the future. The Campaign for the Boys set a goal of $80 million in new endowed scholarships, the largest component of the campaign. At the end of the past school year, alumni and parents had made more than $60 million in commitments toward this goal. Endowing tuition assistance ensures boys who want a Woodberry education can seize that opportunity. This enables the school’s leaders to target the Amici Fund toward the most pressing priorities or opportunities each school year. Increasing endowed support for tuition assistance helps the school moderate the pace of tuition increases for all students; the tuition increase this past year, 2 percent, was the lowest in fifty years.

Tuition assistance is an investment in the school’s future, just as the recently completed restoration of the Walker Building was an investment in the experience of boys here now and in the years to come. Strengthening the school’s financial resources will preserve and enhance the Woodberry experience, guaranteeing that a residential community of boys and faculty will long endure on this special campus.

CAMPAIGN PROGRESS

Fred Lummis: Giving Back to a Place that Shaped Him

When Fred Lummis ’71 arrived at Woodberry as a new boy, he was thirteen years old and had never been east of Texas, his home state.

“It was a major moment of growing up and figuring things out on your own,” Fred said of his time as a student. “It was an experience that prepared me for the rest of my life.”

After attending Vanderbilt University, where he met his wife, Claudia, Fred returned to Texas, earning a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Texas at Austin and settling in Houston. The distance, his business career in private equity, and a busy family life meant he didn’t have many chances to stay connected with Woodberry or his fellow alumni. That began to change when his own sons approached high school age. Though they didn’t attend Woodberry, the experience of taking them to visit campus got Fred thinking.

“I realized that Woodberry meant a lot to me, and that reconnecting with the school and my classmates was important,” he said.

Fred and Claudia joined the Advisory Council, and in 2012 he joined the board of trustees. Not long after becoming a trustee, Fred became chair of the finance committee, a role he held until his board term ended in November 2021. He helped the school chart its recovery from the Great Recession, transition from the headmastership of Dennis Campbell to that of Byron Hulsey ’86, and respond to the economic challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The day-to-day financial management of Woodberry is fantastic, and the school’s financial discipline and oversight stack up favorably with any company I’ve worked with,” Fred said. “There’s a focus on keeping costs down so that we can control the growth of tuition.”

Fred said he and other members of the finance committee carefully track how the school’s tuition compares to that of its peers; last year only three of the top forty boarding schools had a lower tuition than Woodberry. The keys to Woodberry’s success include

both expense discipline and the durable, generous support given by alumni, parents, and others to the Amici Fund.

“The Amici Fund is all about what we do together; we control it.” Fred said. He contrasts that fund with endowment funds. “The endowment’s earnings are driven in part by the market, though our investment committee is an outstanding group of experts. The incredible alumni participation in Amici is a huge part of providing resources to the students and controlling the tuition cost.”

Though his time as a trustee recently concluded, Fred continues to serve as a member of the executive committee of the Campaign for the Boys. He led a challenge gift to current and former trustees, which in turn inspired a $20 million matching challenge to the entire Woodberry community from those trustees.

“COVID had delayed us a bit, and I felt like we needed a kick start to reinvigorate the campaign,” Fred says of his challenge gift, which will expand the Lummis Family Scholarship Fund and support the Walker Building renovation. “Giving to support tuition assistance spoke to me because I know the commitment families have to make to attend Woodberry. I want to make sure we are supporting the sons and grandsons of alumni and ensuring they can be Tigers.”

Fred, who recently co-chaired his fiftieth reunion committee, continues to serve as chairman of Platform Partners, a private equity company he co-founded. He is on the board of several of Platform’s portfolio companies and is part of the Houston Astros ownership group. He also serves on several other nonprofit boards and previously served as chairman of the board of Baylor College of Medicine.

Despite all of the calls on his time, Fred prioritizes his commitment to Woodberry for two reasons. “One is because I believe so much in the mission of the school and appreciate what it did for me,” he said. “The other is because of the incredible quality of the educators and staff, as well as my fellow trustees. From top to bottom, it is an enjoyable and meaningful volunteer experience that you just want to be a part of.”

The Power of the Endowment:

How Decades of Gifts Support

Boys Here Now

Woodberry’s endowment — built over the past century by gifts and stewarded by the Investment Committee for the school’s perpetual benefit — provides more than 40 percent of the annual budget.

A key priority of the Campaign for the Boys is growing the endowment, especially in the area of tuition assistance, so the school can raise tuition more slowly, making the Woodberry experience more affordable for everyone.

Here’s a look at how the endowment, and the Triple R Fund, which guarantees Woodberry’s long-term debt and pays for the renovations and replacements of buildings, support the Woodberry experience.

Arthur Latham Chair

Camp Family Chair

Frank H. Kenan ‘31 and Lawrence Lewis Jr. ‘37 Teacher Internship Program

General Scholarship Fund

64% of tuition assistance comes from the endowment. Completing the Campaign for the Boys, especially our goal of raising $80 million in new endowed funds for tuition assistance, will secure Woodberry’s financial future and ensure we have a sustainable source of funding to support boys long into the future.

Total number of endowed funds: 425 Capital Projects (includes Triple R Fund)

$87.4 million

General (Unrestricted) $48.4 million

and Staff $106.2 million

Jessie Ball duPont Scholarship Fund

Jessie Ball duPont Teaching Endowment

Harry and William Frazier Chair Independence Foundation Chair J. Carter Walker 1894 Chair J. Carter Walker Fine Arts Center Maintenance Fund

69 New funds established to date during the Campaign for the Boys: 58 for Tuition Assistance 6 for Faculty and Staff Support 5 for Program Support

William R. Kenan Jr. Fund Total value of the endowment and managed funds as of June 30, 2022: $406.4 million

Manning Science Building Initiative Endowment

Margaret W. and Thornton H. Brooks ‘29 Teaching Fund

Peter Browne Ruffin ‘24 Scholarship Fund

Randall B. Terry Jr. ‘53 Headmaster Scholarship Fund

S. Blount Mason Jr. Class of 1901 Memorial Scholarship Fund

New Endowment Funds

Howard and Stephanie Bissell Scholarship Fund

William K. Caler Jr. ‘63 Scholarship Fund

Christian Family Scholarship Fund

Class of 1972 Scholarship Fund

Class of 2021 Scholarship Fund

Commonwealth of Virginia Scholarship Fund

R. T. Dooley Family Scholarship Fund

Geiger Family Scholarship Fund

F. Borden Hanes Jr. ‘63 Scholarship Fund

Nathaniel “Nat” Jobe Scholarship Fund

Thomas R. Smith Jr. ‘56 Scholarship Fund

DeWitt Stewart Worrell Scholarship Fund

Total value of endowment and managed funds as of June 30, 2022

$406,392,000

Fiftieth Reunion Brings Three Classes Together

In April the classes of 1970 and 1971, whose reunion had been delayed by the pandemic, joined the class of 1972 to celebrate their fiftieth reunions during the first of two back-to-back Reunion Weekends. The school rolled out the red carpet, but alumni provided the fellowship, laughs, memories, and fun that made the weekend memorable.

A highlight was the opportunity for alumni to hear from a group of sixth formers about today’s Woodberry experience and for the reunion class to enlighten the boys about what it was like to be a Tiger fifty years ago. Following a special luncheon in the Oval Garden, English teacher and varsity cross country coach Ben Hale led the lively session. Funny stories were shared from both eras, and there were smiles all around.

“It was an honor and a privilege to work with the reunion committees of 1970, 1971, and 1972 during the lead-up to Reunion Weekend,” said Dodie Chavez ’85, director of planned and capital gifts. “I joke with the class of 1970 that they now hold the record for the longest-running reunion committee in school history!”

Each fiftieth reunion class marks its legacy with a gift to the school. The three classes elected to establish scholarship funds to support tuition assistance, ensuring boys yet to come enjoy the same experience they did. The co-chairs of each reunion committee formally presented Headmaster Byron Hulsey ’86 with their class gifts at a Friday night dinner held in the Baker Gallery.

The class of 1970 honored longtime Spanish teacher and Woodberry legend Bob Vasquez by establishing the Class of 1970 Robert F. Vasquez Scholarship Fund. Bob attended the reunion dinner.

The Class of 1971 Andrew C. M. Keenan Jr. Scholarship Fund honors Andy Keenan for his long-standing and incredibly loyal service to the class. The class surprised Andy at the dinner when they announced the fund is named in his honor. The 1971 class also raised funds to support community service work by current and future Woodberry students.

The Class of 1972 Scholarship Fund is already valued at more than $1 million through a mix of current contributions and planned gifts by class members who joined the Walker Society.

“In the end, considering all of the delays to reunion weekend, the fact that all three classes celebrated together was the best possible outcome,” said Dodie.”What a special weekend for three very memorable classes.”

Kathy a nd AndyKeenan ’71
Class of 1970
Class of 1971
Class of 1972

The Walker Society: An Enduring Investment

Woodberry’s financial strength is built in large part on the estate gifts of alumni, parents, and friends. Most estate gifts support the school’s endowment, providing perpetual support to the boys, faculty, and staff. In 1992 the trustees of Woodberry Forest established the Joseph G. and Violet N. Walker Society to recognize the special generosity of alumni, parents, and friends who have included the school in their estate plans through a provision in their will or as a beneficiary of a retirement plan, life insurance policy, trust, or annuity. The society has more than 584 members, of whom more than 400 are still living.

NEW WALKER SOCIETY MEMBERS

Anonymous ’72

Mr. James P. Baker III ’02

Mr. and Mrs. David P. Broughton ’86

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver “Crom” Carmichael ’67

Mr. and Mrs. Breaux Castleman ’58

Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Dobbins

Mr. and Mrs. Sumner S. Finch ’75

Mr. and Mrs. William B. Fletcher ’06

Mr. and Mrs. John P. Funkhouser ’72

Mr. and Mrs. Steven P. Geiger

Mr. and Mrs. Stevens N. Gentil ’70

Mr. and Mrs. Howell K. Hallett ’72

Mr. John V. E. Hardy ’34*

Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Meurlin

Mr. Harry B. Mills ’60

Mrs. Caroline Reutter*

Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Smart ’72

Mr. and Mrs. William A. Stokes ’73

Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Thompson “Topper” Webb ’72

Mr. and Mrs. Landon R. Wyatt IV ’09 *deceased

Ty Tysinger ’62: Sixty Years of Tiger Service

Travis “Ty” Tysinger ’62 has seen Woodberry from a variety of perspectives. While plenty of alumni have become teachers or watched their sons and grandsons attend the school, few can say that they’ve been a student, three-sport varsity letterman, teacher, parent, development officer, volunteer, and grandparent. Ty, however, has done all those things in his sixty years of knowing the school.

A Culpeper native, he first came to Woodberry for two postgraduate years, during which he lettered in football, soccer, and baseball. He quarterbacked the varsity squad during the legendary Red Caughron’s first two seasons as head coach of the Tigers. While Ty’s tenure as a student was brief, it would play a significant role in shaping his future.

“The school embraced me in a way that I had never felt before,” Ty said. “They saw more in me than I had ever seen in myself. It just turned out to be a magical time.”

Throughout his time at Hampden-Sydney College, that fond feeling about Woodberry stayed with him. After his graduation, Ty began an eight-year stint at Woodberry as a teacher and a coach. The Woodberry he returned to felt different.

“I first came to Woodberry at a time when Mr. Walker’s old masters were still a presence and a strength of the institution. But that cadre of wonderful teachers was heading out the door,” he said. “Woodberry needed a little shaking

John Stillwell ’45, who also influenced the young Tysinger.

“He and Coach Caughron were the two men who most influenced me when I was there,” Ty said. “But lots of people helped me round out and round up my thinking and my direction.”

Ty and his wife Dottie spent their newlywed years in a growing community of young faculty couples brought in during the Duncan era. Their sons Andy ’86 and Mike ’88 were born during Ty’s first stint as a faculty member. Soon thereafter, they would move to Covington to run an Episcopal boys’ home.

Ten years later, the Tysingers moved to Stuart Hall School in Staunton, where Ty worked as an assistant headmaster under another longtime Woodberry faculty member, Pat Bassett. The two had become friends when they were colleagues at Woodberry in the late 1960s and early 1970s. However, Ty had become more focused on alumni relations and less so on teaching by that stage in his career.

“By that time I had moved into the area of institutional advancement,” he said. “I had come to a point where I was somewhat of a spokesperson for the institutions that I represented. Raising money for quality institutions became my driving force.”

In 1994 Ty returned to Woodberry as a senior development officer and director of planned giving. In that role, he and former Headmaster Dennis Campbell collaborated on some of Woodberry’s most successful fundraising efforts.

“John Grinalds hired me but moved on before very long. The core of my years back there were with Dennis. He was a big picture guy, so he became very

Johnson Stadium, Terry Hall, the Manning Family Science Building, and Kenan Hall, among other projects.

“That was an exciting time in the life of the school, and I think he turned over to his successor a school that was in great shape,” Ty said.

Now Ty and Dottie are making sure their support of Woodberry will continue in perpetuity. Ty is a dedicated class volunteer, and the two have joined the Walker Society by establishing a charitable remainder unitrust, or CRUT. The trust provides income to the Tysingers throughout their life. After their death, the remaining funds in the CRUT become part of the Woodberry endowment funding the Tysinger Family Scholarship Fund.

“When you hit a certain time in your life, you begin to look back on the institutions and the people that have added the greatest amount of quality to your life. And Woodberry is at the head of the pack,” Ty said. “I’ve had the great fortune to work with a number of fine organizations, but Woodberry had me at some really pivotal, formative times. It continued to support me, cultivate my skills, and encourage me in ways that made me very happy about giving back to a place that had meant so much to me.”

OUR PHYSICAL Place

Debbie Barden: Keeping Woodberry Running Behind the Scenes

Debbie Barden is one of the people who keeps Woodberry running. As daily operations manager, a title she’s held for five years, one of her jobs is to make sure all eighty faculty houses and apartments are in working order. Debbie is one of the first faces new faculty see the day they move onto campus as she welcomes them and helps them get settled and comfortable in the community.

Once on campus, faculty get to know Debbie as the engine behind the work order system used to report maintenance needs. There are a lot of moving parts behind every work order and house inspection, but Debbie manages to keep it all straight while humbly refusing to take sole credit. “I’m not an I person; it’s a we,” Debbie said. “It’s really the people who I work with. If it wasn’t for the good group of housekeeping and maintenance workers, we wouldn’t get the stuff done that we do.”

Debbie lives in Orange with her husband, Elby. She enjoys gardening, reading, vacationing at the beach, volunteering at her church, and spending time with her two children, Christy and Eric, and her four grandchildren.

Former housekeeping supervisor Janet Cooper hired Debbie in 1986 to work alongside and support

a grieving member of her staff, a demonstration of one of the values — caring for each other — that Debbie believes makes Woodberry special. She helps make Woodberry special for other people, too.

“When I first arrived, I knew no one,” said Woodberry’s mailroom supervisor, Emily Henshaw. “Debbie took me under her wing and instantly made me feel welcome. She has a way about her that puts many people at ease.”

After Debbie’s start in housekeeping, she worked in the mailroom before stepping into her current position. Working in the mail room was outside of her comfort zone in the beginning, but she and Wendy Moubray, now a housekeeping manager, made the best of it. “We probably called the Orange post office every day to ask what to do with something,” Debbie said. “But you push through it.”

One thing Debbie enjoys about working as operations manager is the job’s variety and how it challenges her problem-solving skills. And others recognize her talents — Debbie is often the first point of contact when anyone on campus is trying to solve a tricky problem. “Most people go to her first before they go to anyone else,” Emily said. “They know she’ll know exactly what to do or who they need to talk to. She is well known and well liked by so many.”

At graduation, Debbie received the Frank S. Walker Award, presented to the staff member who “has given most unselfishly in performance of his or her duties.” Debbie exemplifies this ideal, eager to help out in other departments when they need a hand, whether by helping with an influx of holiday packages in the post office or planting flowers alongside grounds crew members.

Gene Lewis, the director of facilities who has worked closely with Debbie throughout her time at Woodberry, said, “There are few employees that care about the Woodberry community as she has. She always volunteers for any task and lends a helping hand to coworkers, faculty, students, and parents.”

No matter how many people tell Debbie that Woodberry would fall apart without her, she refuses to believe it. “You couldn’t do it without everyone else who backs you up, who helps you,” she said. “No one person can do it all on their own.”

A Gift to Help All Students Find Academic Success

For Smoot Carter III ’04, confidence and self-belief — both derived from the support of caring teachers and mentors — have been key to his success.

To recognize those who supported him, both as a student and in his business career, Smoot and his wife, Meagan, have made a significant gift to support the restoration of the Walker Building and the Academic Development Center, located in the Dunnington Reading Room on the B Dorm level. In September, the ADC was dedicated as the Smoot Center for Academic Development with boys, his family, and the board of trustees in attendance.

“When I was in college, I felt like the Center for Student Athletes was really helpful for me with mentoring and coaching, and at Woodberry it was the Academic Development Center,” he said.

“Sometimes you can’t achieve academic excellence on your own, so helping boys get help on the path to college is my goal.”

Smoot came to Woodberry from Northern Virginia. He attended Louisiana State University, where he was a decathlete on the track and field team. Smoot then earned a master’s degree from Yale Divinity School. His father, Smoot Carter, Jr., is a 1974 Woodberry graduate and his brother, Ryan, is a member of the class of 2002.

Smoot Jr.’s father, Smoot Carter, Sr., died of a heart attack when Smoot Jr. was thirteen years old, shortly before he started at Woodberry. The family credits faculty members like Travis Tysinger ’62, Smoot Jr.’s advisor, with providing stability during a difficult time. “Woodberry really raised my dad after my grandfather died,” Smoot said.

Today Smoot and Meagan live in Dallas, where he serves as head of private markets for Elevation Securities. He works with founders and other employees of startups who are looking to sell shares of their company before it has completed an initial public offering and begun trading on a stock exchange. As startups have raised more venture capital funding in recent years and remained privately held for longer periods of time, the business has grown. Today Smoot leads a team with offices in Dallas, San Francisco, and Charlotte.

He was introduced to the world of startups while working with Atlantic Bridge, an organization that hosts financial roundtable discussions for British and American business leaders. Many of the participants he met became future clients, including some, he ruefully admits, who attended Episcopal High School. He also connected with Woodberry alumni who are active in the startup or venture capital community, including Charlie Lucas ’80, Joe Lucas ’81, Kevin Phillips ’06, and Trace Smith ’06.

He also continues to value the mentorship he received from Woodberry faculty, both as a student and afterward. Smoot forged a close relationship with Dennis Campbell, who served as Woodberry’s headmaster from 1997 to 2014.

“Every time I talk to Dennis, he has a thoughtful message for me,” Smoot said. “I really value the way he combines his faith with his work in education and the long-term connection we’ve had.”

Smoot’s success in business has enabled him and Meagan to start a donor-advised fund and give back to Woodberry, a community he feels did much for him, his brother, and his father. He hopes his gift to support the ADC and the Walker Building restoration will enable other Woodberry boys to benefit from the same support he received.

“I care about students gaining confidence along their journey through life,” Smoot said. “Personal growth is not achieved alone.”

WHY WE ARE STRONG: Community & Volunteers

Woodberry’s alumni and parent engagement is unparalleled among independent schools, and even stands alone when compared to colleges and universities across the nation. The time and talent of countless volunteers bring energy to campus and extend well beyond Woodberry’s 1,200 acres. These volunteers work as a cohesive collective within the community to advance Woodberry’s mission.

The value of the Woodberry experience becomes immeasurable over time. “Woodberry is a great place to be, but an even better place to be from,” reflects Martin Stephenson ‘99 on why he volunteers time to Woodberry. The sense of belonging and common bond enjoyed by students deepens with time and distance among alumni, parents, and friends of the school. This sense of community inspires many to continue to connect with Woodberry and to give back in a variety of ways.

Woodberry’s 134-year history is a reflection of community as a core value and the volunteer contributions of many each year. Its board of trustees works alongside the headmaster to set a long-term vision for the school and support the faculty. Class volunteers form an expansive web rallying over seven thousand alumni to connect through reunions and to support Woodberry’s future through participation in the Amici Fund. Regional chapters expand Woodberry’s presence across the country with events that introduce new families to Woodberry, and keep alumni, parents, students, and friends united in Tiger spirit. Parent class leaders engage fellow families in critical ways that create community during their Woodberry experience.

It is with deep appreciation that Woodberry celebrates the spirit of

Why We Are Strong

Board of Trustees

Nelson Fitts ‘93

Nelson Fitts appreciates Woodberry for its academic rigor and the deep relationships with friends and faculty that transformed his life. Bob Smethurst, Doc Straley, Jim Reid, and Chuck McArver are among the many faculty members etched in his memory as major influences. “I feel a lot of gratitude for the education I received, and want to help others access that opportunity.” Nelson served as Advisory Council co-chair with his wife, Elizabeth, and is a current member of the board of trustees. Nelson is excited about work on the next strategic plan for Woodberry that “gets beyond the physical — new buildings and amenities — and focuses on the boys’ experience and faculty support for the important work they do.” Nelson admires the board’s leadership and approach — “the trustees are very thoughtful, not reactive, and long-term thinkers.” As for the time and energy the board devotes to its work, he shares that “each of us has taken something invaluable from his or her relationship with Woodberry, and we share a common desire to help the school thrive.”

The Atlanta Regional Chapter, with its fifteen-year history and pioneering spirit of founders Talbott Nunnally ’76, Lee Burrows ’78, and Richard Spencer ’84, has a recipe for success. Pierce Lancaster ’02 and Eli Green ’94, current and past presidents respectively, believe its streamlined board structure, core events, and being a bit “rogue” have produced legendary events like the Ottley Oyster Roast and strong participation by local Tigers. The group is united with a shared sense that Woodberry changed the trajectory of their lives. Some still connect regularly with former faculty members like John Reimers, while others are thankful to Coach Dick Glover ’61 for his transformation of “husky boys” into wrestlers. With a successful Braves game as a highlight from the summer, the chapter has its sights on the return of the oyster roast, a service day, and building Woodberry’s presence with prospective families. All seem to echo Pierce’s sentiments: “It’s just natural to be involved with Woodberry . . . it played a big role in my life.”

Regional Chapter Leadership
Pierce Lancaster ’02
Hunter Morhous ’99
Martin Stephenson ’99
Eli Green ’94

Career

Gunnar

Gregory ’07 and D.

French Slaughter

’04

Career Networking Chairs | New York City and Charlottesville Regional Chapters

As a college student, Gunnar Gregory ’07 recalls mustering the nerve to reach out to former all-star athlete Ed Testerman ’02 for career advice. Surprised to receive Ed’s immediate response, the guidance that followed has greatly influenced Gunnar’s career. Similarly, D. French Slaughter ’04 has tapped fellow Tigers for insight and expertise in his career and values the ability to connect more personally — it’s more than business. As national career networking co-chairs, they are a dynamic team with a vision of developing Woodberry’s career network into a digital community. Surveying alumni to gauge interests, features, communication preferences, and more, they have distilled key findings to offer Woodberry’s alumni relations team strategic recommendations. “This is much more than a career network — it is the network for Woodberry,” shares D. French, his enthusiasm evident. Watch the WFS LinkedIn Group for new features, including alumni news, talent spotlights, and internships.

Jojo Beal ‘21

Jojo Beal recalls living in Turner as if it were yesterday, naming his closest friends in room order, and by roommate, mixed with a few stories of those early days. During this year’s OneWoodberry, Jojo volunteered to rally his classmates. “It was a lot of video calls with classmates and group chat . . . what we do anyway,” he said. The class of 2021 made its Amici Fund debut with an impressive 91 percent of the class participating. As a young alumnus in college, giving back to Woodberry is important to Jojo. He recalls being a third former at an alumni event and meeting Broderick Dunn ’00, who joined the school’s board of trustees last fall. “Mr. Dunn shared his phone number and often texted me and other local students to invite us to dinner . . . he always wanted to make sure I was OK.” A job shadow at Broderick’s law firm has influenced Jojo’s intended path in law. “I want to pay this back. Woodberry is brotherhood. It is a learned experience, and it is love.”

“As parents, we had an amazing Woodberry experience just like our son. I want other parents to have the same,” shares Kim Collie. Kim and her husband, Mac, the parents of Hugh Collie ’22, have dedicated their energy in the last four years shepherding new families through the heartfelt moments of leaving sons on campus and sharing in parents’ joy about their boys and their growth. They’ve also worked to deepen parent connections within the class of 2022 and participation in the Sixth-Form Parents’ and Grandparents’ Gift. Supporting the admission office, they have been incredible Woodberry ambassadors as hosts for welcome receptions for new boys. While their current parent role has come to an end, their continued involvement with Woodberry has not. As evidence was their divide-and-conquer strategy that included Mac’s attendance at Woodberry’s class of 2026 welcome reception in Raleigh while Kim tended to college move-in day for Hugh. When asked about volunteering for Woodberry, Kim shared, “As I tell my children, any time you open your circle, good things come from it.”

Kim and Mac Collie
Networking
Amici Class Volunteer
Parent Volunteers
Gunnar Gregory ’07

Amici Fund Tops $4.3 Million in Support of Campaign for the Boys

The public launch of the Campaign for the Boys this past year coincided with a record-setting year for the Amici Fund, which for the first time in Woodberry history topped $4 million. The fund closed the year with $4,353,350 donated by alumni, parents, and friends of the school, an increase of nearly $500,000 from last year’s previous record, which was almost $3.9 million.

Gifts to the Amici Fund go immediately to work enhancing the experience of the boys here now. Amici gifts also support the faculty and staff who make the Woodberry experience possible for the boys. Special programs like the all-school Expedition Week or everyday activities such as arts, athletics, and extracurriculars are made possible by Amici.

During the past year, nearly 65 percent of alumni made a gift, as did more than 92 percent of current parents. Impressive performances were found across the alumni community, but one particularly noteworthy effort came from the class of 2021. In that group’s first year as alumni, 91 percent of the class made a gift.

Continuing the fund’s recent success was OneWoodberry held this year on February 24. As always with OneWoodberry, the hundreds of dedicated alumni and parent volunteers worked to rally each class to make the day a success. The class of 1948 with 100 percent participation, the class of 1975 with 95 percent participation, the class of 1963 with $179,714, and the class of 2000 with ninety-five gifts led the way as Woodberry received more than 3,500 gifts to Amici by the end of February 24. Gifts came from forty-eight states and a dozen countries.

This year’s results, with a record-setting dollar amount and outstanding participation, place the Amici Fund as one of the outstanding annual fundraising efforts at any school, college, or university. No other institution boasts such a high level of alumni support. This was the sixth consecutive year with alumni giving above 60 percent. Only a few other institutions top 50 percent in alumni support, and none can match the unwavering loyalty that the Tiger Nation shows through its gifts to the Amici Fund.

A Five-Year Look at the Amici Fund

$4,353,350

Alumni Amici Participation & Dollars Raised by Class

Total Raised by Alumni

$3,016,237

Total Alumni Donors

Our Volunteers

We are thankful to all of our volunteers who give so much of their time. The number of volunteers has doubled in the past five years, and this growth has been key to our overall success.

Edward L. Baker II ‘96

Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

Patrick F. Bassett

Gainesville, Virginia

John R. Belk ‘77 (P ‘08) Charlotte, North Carolina

Hope H. Bryant (P ‘12, ‘14, ‘17) Raleigh, North Carolina

William K. Caler, Jr. ‘63 West Palm Beach, Florida

Thomas H. Claiborne ‘83 (P ‘14, ‘16, ‘20) Richmond, Virginia

Benjamin H. Davis ‘89 (P ‘24) Dallas, Texas

Edward M. Deal ‘84 (P ‘12, ‘18) Hickory, North Carolina

P = Parent

2021–22 Board of Trustees

Broderick C. Dunn ‘00 Fairfax Station, Virginia

Damien R. Dwin ‘93 New York, New York

Franklin S. Edmonds, Jr. ‘87 Charlottesville, Virginia

Sumner S. Finch ‘75 (P ‘11), Chair High Point, North Carolina

Nelson O. Fitts ‘93 Greenwich, Connecticut

Ragan Folan (P ‘10, ‘13) Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Harley S. Garrison ‘87 Greensboro, North Carolina

E. Hooper Hardison, Jr. ’79 (p ’10, ’12), Vice-Chair Charlotte, North Carolina

William M. James ‘80 (P ‘15) New York, New York

Robert E. Long ’75 Brookhaven, Georgia

Frederick R. Lummis II ’71 Houston, Texas

Dorothy A. Matz (P ‘15, ‘18, ‘21) Coatesville, Pennsylvania

D. Matthew Middelthon ‘88 Atlanta, Georgia

Rita W. Ross (P ‘05, ‘09) Washington, District of Columbia

Robert H. Spilman, Jr. ‘74 (P ‘10) Martinsville, Virginia

Owen D. Thomas ‘79, Chair-Elect Bronxville, New York

Giles Tucker ‘85 (P ‘13, ‘19) Manakin-Sabot, Virginia

Benjamin R. Wall II ‘94 Spartanburg, South Carolina

TRUSTEES EMERITUS

Sion A. Boney III ‘74 (P ‘16) Hillsdale, New York

Haynes G. Griffin ’65 (P ’87, ’92, ’98) Greensboro, North Carolina

2021–22 Advisory Council

Chris ’90 and Donna Aldredge Lillington, North Carolina

Howard and Stephanie Bissell (P ’18, ’20, ’23) Charlotte, North Carolina

Mac and Kim Collie (P ’22) Raleigh, North Carolina

Jim ’99 and Meagan Davis Greenwich, Connecticut

Barry and Kathleen Dunn (P ’22) Wilmette, Illinois

Chip Farrar ’04 and Emily Eichenberger Atlanta, Georgia

Andrew ’01 and Brooke Grabato Austin, Texas

P = Parent

Eli ’94 and Julia Green (P ’24) Chairs Atlanta, Georgia

David ’94 and Susan Harker Charlotte, North Carolina

Brad and Allison Hill (P ’22) Easton, Maryland

Thorpe and Sarah McKenzie (P ’18, ’22) Lookout Mountain, Tennessee

Brad and Reed Roberts (P ’23) Atlanta, Georgia

Tony Sfreddo ’86 Warrenton, Virginia

David ’94 and Elizabeth Shuford Charlotte, North Carolina

2021–22 Regional Chapter Volunteers

Atlanta

W. Bonneau Ansley III ‘95

Elijah T. Green ‘94 (P ’24)

Kerry M. Izard (P ’19)

Henry M. T. Jones ‘90

W. Pierce Lancaster ‘02

J. Alexander McArthur ‘02

L. Hunter Morhous ‘99

Parker T. Mothershead ‘05

Parker T. Nance ‘13

C. Talbot Nunnally III ‘76

Bradley E. Roberts (P ’23)

G. Kinsey Roper III ‘73

W. Martin Stephenson ‘99

Joseph G. Vicars, Jr. ‘05

James J. B. Willis ‘13

Austin

Andrew R. Grabato ‘01

George S. Hillhouse ‘84 (P ’16)

T. Frederick C. Kennedy ‘85

Ware ’99 and Alison Smith Beaufort, North Carolina

Ben ’02 and Monica Stolbach Brooklyn, New York

Jamie Turner ’14 and Chelsea Colvin Culpeper, Virginia

Doug ’87 and Grey Vaughn (P ’21) Raleigh, North Carolina

Richard ’96 and Caroline Wright Richmond, Virginia

D. Coles Merrick ‘07

Bryan B. Plater ‘83

Jesse Y. Womack III ‘96

Capitol

Arthur H. Bryant III ‘09

Barrett W. Deacon ‘09

Michael K. Dean ‘93

Broderick C. Dunn ‘00

Camden P. Geiger ‘08

John B. Gogos ‘98

M. Anthony Gould ‘60

Malcolm Marshall III ‘92

Jarrett M. Morrell ‘91

John C. Raffetto ‘02

Philip J. Rogers ‘10

J. Harry M. Stephens ‘07

C. Stewart Verdery, Jr. ‘85

Charleston

Walter D. Blessing, Jr. ‘90

Bowen G. Chapman ‘04

Jesse S. Claypoole IV ‘94

J. Berkeley D’Alton ‘97

Charlton deSaussure III ‘04

Theodore M. Malinowski ‘09

C. Whitten Meares III ‘97

Isaac J. Morton ‘94

Andrew F. Parker ‘94

Telfair H. Parker, Jr. ‘92

John G. Powell ‘97

Andrew R. Tew ‘05

Neil D. Thomson ‘93

Charlotte

John R. Belk ‘77 (P ’08)

Andrew C. Burns, Jr. ‘04

Alexander K. Butler ‘06

David B. Harker ‘94

Minor T. Hinson ‘80

Frederick E. Hopkins III ‘87

Paul F. Liles ‘08

John B. Lipe ‘98

Kendrick W. Mattox III ‘89

Robert L. McMillan ‘84

(P ’16)

Marion W. Peebles IV ‘05

John S. Petrone ‘06

Robert W. Sappenfield, Jr. ‘85

James H. Smith III ‘06

Christian H. Staples ‘01

J. William Thompson, Jr. ‘89 (P ’19)

Clarence E. Williams III ‘77 (P ’10, ’13)

Landon R. Wyatt IV ‘09

Charlottesville H. Wilson Craig ‘12

Brooks D. Hathaway ‘91 (P ’23)

Robert H. Jiranek, Jr. ‘81 (P ’17)

Jonathan P. Kauffmann ‘95

Keven J. Lindemann ‘87 (P ’22)

Thomas J. Ronayne III ‘97

D. French Slaughter IV ‘04

Edward R. Testerman III ‘02

John B. Updike ‘77

Katherine Walmsley (P ’17, ’19)

Dallas

Carter J. Butler ‘93

Cyril S. Frazier ‘07

R. William Reynolds ‘90

Edward M. Slater ‘88

Houston

Samuel T. Chambers ‘77

Stuart H. Coleman ‘04

D. Walters Hughes ‘07

James E. Maloney ‘69 (P ’25)

Lee H. Staley ‘92

W. Perrin Van Allen ‘06

New York City

A. Christian Burke ‘72

James W. Davis ‘99

Nelson O. Fitts ‘93

Holden D. Fockler ‘16

James N. Gardiner ‘05

Gunnar G. Gregory ‘07

Robert G. Harper IV ‘96

J. Mitchell Hull ‘77 (P ’04, ’08)

F. Claiborne Johnston III ‘96

W. Fort Parker II ‘01

J. Mead Rust, Jr. ‘97

Todd G. Sears ‘94

Sean B. Spector ‘12

Benjamin K. Stolbach ‘02

F. Stuart Swann ‘02

Peter B. Wilson ‘06

Richmond

Read M. Butler ‘91

Barbour T. Farinholt ‘80 (P ’09)

= President P = Parent

2021–22 Class Volunteers

1946

A. Colquitt Shackelford, Jr.

1948

Joseph G. Fiveash, Jr.

1949

James C. Eller

John L. S. Northrop

Edward R. Slaughter, Jr.

1950

Russell M. Robinson II

1951

Charles R. Bourland, Jr.

Edward H. Hardison

Walton K. Joyner

Frank F. Mountcastle, Jr.

Richard N. Taliaferro, Jr.

1952

Theodore K. Woods, Jr.

1953

Herbert F. Kincey, Jr.

1954

John G. P. Boatwright

David D. Plater

Robert K. Yowell

1955

Robert H. Borden

Henry H. Brown

L. Richardson King

L. Bagley Reid

G. Joseph Vining

1956

William A. Wallace

1957

John P. Castleman, Jr.

J. Carter Fox

Albert C. Monk III

Robert N. H. Poole

Gregory S. Prince, Jr.

C. Hunton Tiffany

John H. Wright III

1958

Peter S. Gilchrist III

J. Ward Purrington

Charles K. Scott

1959

James L. Coker IV

Joseph L. Farmer ‘04

Tyler S. Finney ‘08

Muscoe R. H. Garnett III ‘94

Brantley D. Hathaway ‘80 (P ’14, ’16, ’18)

W. Massie Meredith, Jr. ‘75

J. Eric Miller ‘94

Frederick T. Moore (P ’13)

Richard H. Wright IV ‘96

Triad

David P. Broughton ‘86

F. Lee Bryan IV ‘98

Sandlin M. Douglas ‘97

Sumner S. Finch ‘75 (P ’11)

William T. Goodson ‘01

I. Bates Grainger IV ‘92

C. Christian Green ‘88

G. William Joyner III ‘88

James C. King ‘87 (P ’16)

Britt Lytle (P ’17, ’22)

Richard H. Ramsey ‘97

Triangle

Powell K. Baggett ‘00

Martin M. Boney ‘85

Martin W. Borden ‘83 (P ’12, ’15)

Samuel T. Bratton ‘82 (P ’23)

Carter M. Brenneman ‘99

Robert B. Brown ‘87 (P ’23, ’24)

Issac A. Brown ‘08

Richard C. Bue ‘86 (P ’21)

Kimberly N. Collie (P ’22)

Robert E. Long III ‘02

John B. Maddison ‘97

John F. Nash, Jr. ‘08

John F. Nash ‘72 (P ’08)

George B. Purrington ‘04

John V. Purrington ‘86 (P ’17)

John W. Taylor ‘02

Douglas A. Vaughn ‘87 (P ’21)

Heather C. Warren (P ’17, ’21)

John N. Gulick, Jr.

William L. St. Clair

G. McNeir Tilman*

1960

M. Anthony Gould

William D. King

John S. May, Jr.

Harry B. Mills

J. Quentin Roemer

Marion M. Wall

1961

John S. Curry

Charles L. Dibble

C. H. Randolph Lyon

R. Hunter Morin

Lewis S. Morris, Jr.

J. Rutledge Young, Jr.

1962

Ray E. Burger, Jr.

Charles A. Carr, Jr.

Robert J. Feller

Douglas W. Kincaid, Jr.

Charles B. Mayer

Lloyd L. Thompson III

Travis J. Tysinger

Peter A. Wilson

1963

William K. Caler, Jr.

Joseph A. Lipe

Peter B. Lyon

James H. Price III

Robert C. Randolph IV

Cleveland A. Wright

1964

Charles C. Coddington

Lucien B. Crosland

Isaac B. Grainger III

Edmund W. Perrow

Robert P. Roper, Jr.

1965

Benjamin A. Carey

Edward H. Covington

R. Michael Daniel

William A. Daniel, Jr.

J. Haywood Davis

William E. Deegans III

Frederick B. Dent, Jr.

Harold F. Gallivan III

R. Spencer Garrard

Haynes G. Griffin

Douglas S. Holladay, Jr.

Thomas B. Jahncke

R. Walter Jones IV

Lawrence W. Krieger, Jr.

John L. MacCorkle

Edgar M. Norris, Jr.

Richard B. Payne, Jr.

Robert B. Phelps

Simon C. Sitterson III

James M. Tallman

Edgar N. Weaver, Jr.

Harold E. Young, Jr.

1966

John D. Baker II

Richard F. Barnhardt

James R. Bird

R. Jeffrey Board

F. Cooper Brantley

William B. DePass, Jr.

John K. Hollan

L. Richardson Preyer, Jr.

1967

R. Lawrence Brown III

Robert H. Edmunds, Jr.

James H. Grantham

John A. Hammerschmidt

Robert F. Hine

W. Deberniere Mebane

Charles W. Robinson, Jr.

David G. Sutton

Ben D. Thomas, Jr.

J. Edward Watson III

O. Beechmond Watson III

Charles S. Wilson II

1968

Francis C. Bagbey

William C. Cleveland III

G. Ware Cornell, Jr.

John B. Demere

Paul S. Huber III

William C. Hudgins

C. Crowell Little, Jr.

Phillip Sasser, Jr.

A. Wilson Somerville, Jr.

G. Jackson Tankersley, Jr.

1969

William B. Judkins

Charles Lee Smith III

C. Whitley Vick III

1970

Wilson M. Brown III

Samuel B. Rankin

1971

Andrew C. M. Keenan, Jr.

1972

John F. Nash

1973

Herbert A. Claiborne III

Robert C. Hudson

B. Sykes Sturdivant

1974

John K. Cohen

Dean G. Norman

G. Scott Rayson

John Zimmermann

1975

George A. F. Berry

Marvin P. Bush

E. Biery Davis, Jr.

R. Thomas Edwards, Jr.

Sumner S. Finch

Vernon M. Geddy III

Richard King IV

Robert E. Long

Henry W. Maclin III

W. Massie Meredith, Jr.

Peter R. Minor

James E. Moyler III

James H. Murray

William C. Nixon, Sr.

C. Beale Payne

Walter L. Smith

E. Massie Valentine, Jr.

Timothy S. Wilkins

1976

Albert L. Butler III

Alexander W. Evans

John G. Fox II

Carleton B. Gibson IV

Douglas J. Gill

James G. Harrison III

Michael B. Herrmann

W. McDowell Hoak

Hayes R. Holderness

Allen M. Laws

William S. McMaster

James B. Moon

David P. Roberts

T. Jefferson Smith IV

William L. Steele IV

1977

Cyrus P. Barger, Jr.

John R. Belk

William J. Blair III

James E. Clement, Jr.

J. Mitchell Hull

Patrick F. Nash

1978

Diggs S. Bishop

R. Lee Burrows, Jr.

1979

William W. Hadley

1980

Jordan R. Bain

James B. Bell

Robert A. Bristow

Frederick C. Butler III

Alexander G. Campbell III

B. Grimes W. Creasy

Barbour T. Farinholt

G. Stuart Grattan

William N. Harris

Brantley D. Hathaway

John D. Hendrix, Jr.

Minor T. Hinson

Charles C. Lucas III

Douglas W. Maclay, Jr.

Will D. Magruder, Jr.

John C. Moylan III

John J. Norman, Jr.

Geoffrey A. Rilling

David K. Robb

William L. Spencer

Hal V. Worth IV

1981

Charles W. Biggs II

Joseph C. Bossong, Jr.

Donnell B. Carr

Jay J. D’Lugin

Moss W. Davis

Quentin K. S. Falconer

Lee A. Folger IV

Patrick M. Gilbert

Joseph H. Hardison III

Christopher H. Holden

Thomas W. Jamison, Jr.

Robert H. Jiranek, Jr.

James C. Lloyd

Josiah C. T. Lucas

C. Knox Massey III

Fidelma B. Rigby

Cliona B. Robb

Bleecker P. Seaman III

Gregory M. Somerville

Thomas N. Spong

Scott M. Stephens

Charles M. Stillwell

Joseph J. Thomas

Jonathan E. Walker

1982

Samuel T. Bratton

Arthur H. Bryant, Jr.

Mark F. Bryant

James D. Cross

Thomas F. P. Enochs

Harry Frazier IV

H. Todd Geddes

W. Edward Glattly

David G. Grattan

Winston R. Griffin

William B. Hardison

Jonathan C. Hinson

Tyson D. Janney

Joseph W. Milby, Jr.

William C. Monk, Jr.

G. Preston Nowlin III

M. Bagley Reid

Col. John S. Scott

William R. Slicer

Stafford M. Swearingen

J. Stuart White III

1983

Martin W. Borden

F. Huntley Bossong

Catesby B. Jones

R. Brandt Swindell, Jr.

Edward W. Valentine

1984

B. Manly Boyd III

James T. Duckworth III

George S. Hillhouse

Robert L. McMillan

A. Nicholas Purrington

Richard P. Spencer II

1985

John W. Black III

J. Miles Boldrick

William P. Bray

T. Frederick C. Kennedy

David R. Lawson

Steele E. McGonegal

Kevin W. Tydings

C. Stewart Verdery, Jr.

1986

David P. Broughton

Fanning M. Hearon III

C. Andrew Tysinger

1987

Frederick E. Hopkins III

Christian G. Schnabel

1988

Robert M. Daniel, Jr.

1989

Luke M. Babcock

Philip J. Bartlett

Coburn R. Beck

Charles H. G. Honey

David K. Maynard

Bradley H. McGetrick

John D. Osteen

F. Reid Warder, Jr.

John S. Willim III

1990

Walter E. Daniel IV

Francis S. Gristina

Alexander M. Neuman

Jason M. Slade

Edward C. Stone

1991

Mark B. Copen

Gunby J. Garrard

W. Scott Gillespie

Brooks D. Hathaway

John C. Matthews

Jarrett M. Morrell

1992

John G. Beam III

William K. Brawley III

Carter H. Burwell

J. Roger Edwards III

Charles P. Fulford III

W. Schley Gordy, Jr.

I. Bates Grainger IV

Malcolm Marshall III

J. Harris Morrison III

Telfair H. Parker, Jr.

Lee H. Staley

J. Graham Underhill

John W. Ward IV

Robert K. Yarbrough

1993

Michael K. Dean

Joshua B. Heiskell

J. Giles Ward

1994

T. Winfrey O. Bear

Lawrence H. Dempsey III

Elijah T. Green

Carter M. Little

R. Blake Lovelace

J. Eric Miller

Isaac J. Morton

Todd G. Sears

1995

Stuart L. Brown

Jonathan P. Kauffmann

John M. Lowry

J. McIntyre Ward

1996

Edward L. Baker II

F. Baily Dent III

F. Claiborne Johnston III

Jesse Y. Womack III

1997

William D. King, Jr.

C. Whitten Meares III

Corbin P. Miller

Porter H. Nolan

John G. Powell

Thomas S. Ragsdale IV

1998

John W. Barton III

Colin R. Brooks

Benjamin C. Bruner

F. Lee Bryan IV

Jonathan L. Drew

P. Tate Forrester

William F. Grace III

Thomas B. W. Hall

John L. Hallett II

M. Camp Kilcollin, Jr.

Gordon H. Kolb, Jr.

John B. Lipe

Harrison Stuart

Matthew E. L. Tornabene

Andrew S. Wright

1999

Carter M. Brenneman

M. Brian Burchette

Charles Collier III

Paul H. Dent

Hynson H. Marvel III

Webb B. Milward

T. Dyllan Rankin

F. Bradford Swann, Jr.

John E. Voissem

Frayser F. White IV

2000

Donald R. Anselmi

Broderick C. Dunn

Edward C. Frackelton

Adam J. Geist

James Taliaferro M. Oates

F. Marshall Rabil, Jr.

Richard R. Reutter

W. Ansel Sanders

C. McDonald Steele

2001

Caldwell M. B. Bailey

George R. Bassett, Jr.

Robert W. Chen

William T. Goodson

Andrew R. Grabato

Lloyd F. Moss III

Frank D. Nelms III

Benjamin K. Noland

John H. Scott

Philip D. Sterling

F. Taylor Sutton V

2002

William C. Collier

Jorge P. Ibarra

Emmett D. Nelms

F. Stuart Swann

2003

Cameron A. Arnett

John D. Baker III

J. A. Stuart Bonner, Jr.

T. Dubose Bratton

J. Michael Day, Jr.

Andrew S. Ellison

Conner G. Gentil

F. Stafford Kelly

Adlai T. Mast IV

Whidbee S. Perrin

Gregory R. Schwartz

Samuel A. Slater

Alexander R. Strange

Patrick H. Van Meter

Philip W. Vann

2004

James S. Boswell

Andrew C. Burns, Jr.

Bowen G. Chapman

Stuart H. Coleman

Charlton deSaussure III

Joseph L. Farmer

Sydney D. F. Farrar II

Graham B. Gardiner

P. Howard Glenn

G. Grey Littlewood

J. J. Caylor Mark III

Trevor S. Slaven

Boyd R. Steinhoff

James K. Woolford, Jr.

2005

W. Thomas L. Avery

Wilson M. Bonner

W. Haynes David

Paul Funkhouser

Galen P. Green

Christopher T. W. Gresham

Peter A. S. Hansen

Lawrence O. B. Kluttz

Robert E. Mason V

Parker T. Mothershead

R. Louis Smart IV

Ross P. Smith

Andrew R. Tew

W. Myles Wynn

2006

Roddey Dowd III

Bratton W. DuBose

John R. Grey IV

D. Ross Howard, Jr.

Patrick S. Kelly

Benjamin F. Matthews III

John S. Petrone

Peter B. Wilson

2007

John D. Ainsworth

Joseph L. Arnold III

Gordon R. Crenshaw

Cyril S. Frazier

Gunnar G. Gregory

Buckley G. Smith

J. Harry M. Stephens

John S. Whaley III

2008

J. Robert Belk, Jr.

Douglas V. Gabbert

William D. Lawson V

Richardson G. Seabrook

G. Coleman Wright

2009

Arthur H. Bryant III

Barrett W. Deacon

James F. Frazier

William D. Sutherland

Landon R. Wyatt IV

2010

Elliott L. Brewer

B. Alexander Hagood

W. Chase Spong

Patrick M. Szyperski

Clarence E. Williams IV

2011

Kevin W. Bennert

William L. Borden, Jr.

E. Ragland Coxe, Jr.

J. Buckley Davis III

W. Austin Finch

Craig R. Fuller

Cary D. D. Jones

Matthew A. Laws

J. Brian Pecheles

2012

Charles B. Blaydes

Edwin B. Borden II

William B. Choate III

H. Collier Connell

H. Wilson Craig

Marshall W. Deal

Henry W. Dyke

Mark E. Petrone

Caswell C. Prewitt

Charles L. D. Setzer

2013

J. Edward D. Archer

Christopher C. Broughton

Nicholas W. Cirillo

Feixiang Han

Faulkner W. Hereford

F. Trice Moore

Peter C. Shelton

MacLean S. Trainor

William G. Tucker

James J. B. Willis

L. Haynes Zaytoun

2014

Spencer A. Bibb

Thomas H. Claiborne, Jr.

T. Lester Coleman

John Patrick H. Connell

D. Maybank Hagood, Jr.

D. Whitehead Hobbs, Jr.

Samuel M. Hodges

2021–2022 Parent Committees

Sixth-Form Parents’ and Grandparents’ Gift Committee

Brandon and Karen

Perry, Chairs

Mike and Sarah Innes

Mitch and Sylvia Leverette

Thorpe and Sarah

McKenzie

Chase and Jennifer

Monroe

Robert and Gaylen

Reynolds

Bryan and Molly Willis

Class of 2023

Brad and Reed

Roberts, Chairs

Don and Nicole Barnes

Sam ’82 and Cooper

Bratton

Will ’82 and Kate Hardison

Brooks ’91 and Kristen Hathaway

Joe ’91 and Britt Parrish

Bob and Marie Shuford

George A. Ives IV

J. Hines Liles

William J. Osterman

2015

Charles R. Borden

Eduardo Corona

Nathan J. Ingram

Christopher K. Nance

William N. Peak

T. Talfourd Wharton, Jr.

Alexander C. Whittemore

2016

Wyatt S. Beazley V

Jaquelin T. R. Claiborne

J. Walker Comer

Graham H. Goldstein

Daniel R. Japhet III

Robert L. McMillan III

J. Garnett Reid, Jr.

John A. Sari

2017

B. Lee Caffey

Scott D. Gullquist, Jr.

R. Parker Jacobs

Christopher H. Oldham, Jr.

Michael O. Warren, Jr.

Tilden Q. Winston

J. Roch Zaytoun

2018

R. McDonald Boney

Max G. Bozymski

R. Dean Browning

Samuel E. Deal

Lee P. Dudley III

T. Crawford Humphreys

Dong Woo Kwon

Robert L. Neill II

Class of 2024

Eli ’94 and Julia

Green, Chairs

Harry and Carrie Bell

Fleet Dillard ’89

David and Cameron Ellerbe

Mark and Stephanie Osada

Zol and Cora Rainey

Chris and Walker Wilson

J. Scott H. Pittman

William W. Rich

Jack E. Stone

Khalid Thomas

2019

Walker J. Antonio

J. Benjamin Burgess

Mackenzie L. Daniels

John D. Harris

William E. Huger IV

Luke E. Hutchinson

W. McMahon Izard

Robert R. Jolly III

Wilkinson S. Rogers

John B. Ryan

R. Ashby Shores, Jr.

R. Taylor Tucker

T. Dylan Walmsley

2020

Julius E. Banzet V

Elijah d. Drake

Alexander L. Forward

A. Taft Gantt

Miller R. King

Colin J. Kovacs

Walker R. Owens

C. Hawkins Schnabel

Luke W. Stone

2021

Joseph D. Beal

Gia Khanh H. Do

Graham M. Godwin

J. Ben A. Haggin II

Walker C. Simmons, Jr.

L. Clark Warren

Class of 2025

Tad and Whitney

Melton, Chairs

Justin and Donyal

Andrews

John and Eliza Blackwell

Greg and Erin Lanuti

Colin and Lexi McKay

Marshall ’00 and Bonnie Rabil

Danny and Anna Van Clief

Woodberry Forest School

Woodberry Forest, Virginia 22989

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