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THE CHESAPEAKE LOG FALL 2016 1 lifelines FALL 2016 PLUS! 2015-2016 AnnualReport, page 28

PLUS! 2015-2016 Annual Report, page 28

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Page 1: PLUS! 2015-2016 Annual Report, page 28

THE CHESAPEAKE LOG FALL 2016 1

lifelines

FALL 2016

PLUS!2015-2016 Annual Report, page 28

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Mission StatementThe Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum is dedicated to preserving and exploring the history, environment, and people of the Chesapeake Bay.

Museum ValuesRelevance. We provide meaningful and accessible experiences to everyone who cares about our Mission—all of our communities and constituencies.

Authenticity. We seek genuinely to represent the people and cultures whose stories we preserve and tell.

Stewardship. We value the priceless assets entrusted to us and accept their preserva-tion and enhancement as our paramount responsibility—our collections, our campus and facilities, our financial resources, and the volunteers and staff who perform our Mission and make CBMM the rich enterprise it is.

Sign up to receive Navy Point News, featuring announcements and news about our programs, festivals, exhibitions, and more.

Email [email protected] to be added to our mailing list, or sign up online at cbmm.org.

Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum

213 North Talbot StreetSt. Michaels, MD 21663410-745-2916 | cbmm.org

HOURS:May to October, 9am-5pmNovember to April, 10am-4pm

On the cover:Washington College students crabbing on the Miles River after an overnight in CBMM’s Hooper Strait Lighthouse. Photo by Brian Palmer.

Editors: Marie Thomas & Tracey JohnsCreative Director: Marie ThomasCopy Editor: Jodie Littleton

Contributing Writers: Dick Cooper, Kristen Greenaway, James Harris, Pete Lesher, Kate Livie, Tracey Johns, Marie Thomas, Tatum Welsh.

This publication is printed and mailed by CBMM Partner Pixel, Print & Post of St. Michaels, MD.

The Chesapeake Log is a publication of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.

CONNECT WITH US:

CBMM StaffPresident’s OfficeKristen L. Greenaway, President, 4951

Kathi Ferguson, Executive Assistant, 4955

Boatyard Michael Gorman, Boatyard Manager, 4968

Jennifer Kuhn, Boatyard Program Manager, 4980

Matt Engel, Shipwright Educator, 4967

Joe Connor, Shipwright, 4967

Communications & Special Events, Venue RentalsTracey Johns, Vice President of Communications, 4960

Marie Thomas, Communications & Art Director, 4953

Bethany Ziegler, Content Creator & Strategist, 4995

Melissa Spielman, Director of Events, 4956

Development & MembershipJen Matthews, Development Manager, 4959

Liza Ledford, Sponsorship & Events Coordinator, 4978

Nancy Wells, Membership Coordinator, 4991

Finance, Administration, Guest Services, Marina, & Museum StoreJean Brooks, Vice President of Finance & Administration, 4958

Howard Parks, Controller, 4957

Patti Miller, Staff Accountant, 4954

Trish See, Staff Accountant & Human Resources Manager, 4985

Ed Rowe, Guest Services Manager, 4981

Douglas Reedy, Dockmaster, 4946, VHF Channel 16

Sara McCafferty, Museum Store Manager, 4963

Leigh Peek, Assistant Museum Store Manager, 4982

Operations, Boat Donation & Sales ProgramBill Gilmore, Vice President of Operations, 4949

John Ford, Facilities Manager, 4970

Lad Mills, Boat Donation Program Director, 4942

Todd Taylor, Boat Donation Program Manager, 4990

Sam Fairbank, Facilities Maintenance Assistant, 4969

Joseph Redman, Facilities Maintenance Assistant, 4969

Preservation & Interpretation (Exhibitions, Curatorial, Education, & Volunteer)

Pete Lesher, Chief Curator, 4971

Richard Scofield, Assistant Curator of Watercraft, 4966

Kate Livie, Director of Education & Associate Curator, 4947

Jillian Ferris, School Programs Manager

Allison Speight, Education & Volunteer Coordinator, 4941

Lynne Phillips, Collections Manager, 4972

To contact any staff listed above, dial 410-745, and

the number listed. To email, use first initial and full

last [email protected].

2016-2017 Board of Governors

2016-2017 Friends BoardMartha AustinKathy BosinMarc CastelliMike CottinghamRobbie GillLauren GreerJay HudsonSherri Marsh Johns

Pat JonesBill LaneMary Lou McAllister Lin MoellerLibby MooseTrish PayneMatthew PetersEstela Vianey Ramirez

Sparrow RogersSpence StovallCassandra VanhooserJaime WindonBrenda Wooden

PRESIDENT’S LETTERby Kristen L. Greenaway

CURRENTSSchooner America at CBMM; New Board Members; In Memoriam; Pumpout Boat Launches.

LIFELINESVolunteer Profile: Don Boehlby Tatum Welsh

CURATOR’S CORNERA Single Goal: The Art of Trumpy

Yacht Building by Pete Lesher

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FEATURESChesapeake Culture Goes to College: Chesapeake Semester and CBMM

by Kate Livie

Good Fortune Keeps a Chesapeake Treasure Afloat

by Dick Cooper

ON THE RAILEdna E. Lockwood on the hard for restoration; update on our AFAD boat, Pintail.

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CALENDARUpcoming member nights, boatyard programs, education and on-the-water programs, festivals, and more.

ANNUAL REPORTA message from the Chair of the Board, the Honor Roll of Donors, and FY15-16 financial statements.

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contents fall 2016

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James P. Harris, Chair

Diane Staley, Vice Chair

Richard W. Snowdon, Treasurer

Richard J. Bodorff, Secretary

Schuyler BensonWilliam S. DudleyDagmar D. P. GipeLeeds HackettChristopher A. HavenerRobert N. Hockaday, Jr.Francis Hopkinson, Jr.Richard J. JohnsonAlice KreindlerDeborah LawrenceKathleen LinehanFrank C. MarshallDonald L. Martin

Patrice MillerTalli OxnamCharles A. RobertsonBruce RogersLelde SchmitzAlfred Tyler, 2ndCarolyn H. Williams

EmeritiRichard T. AllenCG ApplebyHoward S. FreedlanderAlan R. GriffithMargaret D. KellerRichard H. KimberlyCharles L. Lea, Jr.D. Ted Lewers, MDFred C. Meendsen

John C. North IISumner ParkerRobert A. PerkinsJoseph E. PetersNorman H. PlummerJohn J. RobertsTom D. SeipHenry H. SpireHenry H. StansburyBenjamin Tilghman, Jr.Joan Darby WestDonald G. Whitcomb

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President’s Letterby Kristen L. Greenaway

By the time you read this letter, my tenure at CBMM will have passed its two-year anniversary. Where did those two years go?! In a flash! Perhaps that’s why I’m still just as excited as I was when I started in July 2014. The time may feel like it’s sped by, but we all—members, guests, staff, volunteers, and boards— can be proud of what we have achieved working together. The partnerships we’ve built with local, regional, and national organizations are driving the vision of CBMM to one of social responsibility.

We can never forget our mission—our dedication to preserving and exploring the history, environment, and people of the Chesapeake Bay. But we can also never forget that we’re a set of intersecting cultural communities—a center for communication, not just exhibition—and thus much more than a set of buildings. As a 21st-century museum—nay, a 21st-century education institution—we’re about enabling audiences to access and explore the creative process. It’s a two-way conversation—not just about showing the final object. Our audiences are interested in the story and how they can engage with it, through whatever device is available to them.

Salman Rushdie says it so well: “How do you make people see that every-one’s story is now a part of everyone else’s?”

We have many stories to tell our audiences. We are extremely proud of our growing Rising Tide After-School Program, which teaches regional middle

schoolers to build boats, helps them to develop a sense of self-confidence and pride, and facilitates mentorships that provide guidance and support during these crucial years of development. The Community Block Party held on May 22 opened our campus free of charge to the community. Many of our guests had never set foot on campus before, or even been out on the water. Our K–12 education programming is growing, and we are beginning what could be the most historic restoration of a Chesapeake Bay watercraft, the 1889-built Edna E. Lockwood, the last sailing historic bugeye in the world.

A number of exhibitions are on the horizon to expand our knowledge of the Chesapeake Bay and its history, environment, and people—and tell wonderful stories. A Single Goal: The Art of Trumpy Yacht Building opens August 6. The Trumpy Yard left behind a rich legacy of beautiful boats, John H. Trumpy’s exquisite draftsmanship, and a team of highly skilled workers; A Single Goal will provide the most comprehensive look at this legacy. In 2017, we will open the very first Bay-focused retrospective of the late photographer Robert De Gast. All from CBMM’s collection, De Gast’s haunting black-and-white photographs of watermen, lighthouses, and rivers cemented his reputation as one of the premier chroniclers of the Chesapeake Bay.

All of these wonderful experiences are made possible by your generous donations to our Annual Fund, your annual membership, your attendance at our festivals, and your participation in our programs. Your support for CBMM allows us to engage and inspire the next generation of Chesapeake stewards. Thank you for your continued support, and I encourage you to visit cbmm.org/donate to participate in this year’s Annual Fund.

Come and share our stories, and find the place to share your own—at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum!

currents

The 139-foot yacht America will be at CBMM during Labor Day weekend, September 5 and 6, and again Saturday, September 10 and Sunday, September 11. America is a replica of the schooner that launched the America’s Cup tradition in 1851 by defeating the best the British could offer to win the Royal Yacht Squadron’s

“100 Pound Cup.” While in St. Michaels, America will

offer dockside tours to CBMM guests along with private and public cruises during select times. As the official ambassador of the America’s Cup, the replica schooner began its North American tour in San Diego in 2015, with its East Coast leg navigated in 2016 from the Gulf of Mexico up the Eastern Seaboard to Maine, before tacking south through the Caribbean and on to Bermuda in 2017 for the America’s Cup.

The sailing ship’s visit in St. Michaels is also anticipated to include multimedia programs covering the past, present, and future of the America’s Cup in CBMM’s Van Lennep Auditorium, along with special junior sailing talks and tours that delve into the principles of sailing and the benefits of junior sailing, including self-reliance and confidence.  

It will also enable CBMM guests to understand how the sport of sailing has evolved from 19th-century sailing ships to the high-tech vessels participating in today’s America’s Cup.

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, and America’s visit touches deeply our mission of preserving and exploring maritime heritage,” said CBMM President Kristen Greenaway. “We’re very keen to give our guests the opportunity to climb and sail aboard her, and especially our youth the opportunity to explore the science and technology that are behind America’s Cup racing.”

The schedule for dockside tours, programs, and public cruises will be announced at cbmm.org, with more information about the schooner America  at bit.ly/SchoonerAmerica.

Schooner America at CBMM this September

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, and America’s

visit touches deeply our mission of preserving and exploring

maritime heritage,” said CBMM President Kristen Greenaway.

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currents

CBMM’s Board of Governors elected its 2016–2017 slate of governors at its recent annual meeting, including four newly elected officers, four executive committee members, three new governors, four second-term governors, and an emeritus member. The Board also elected its committee chairs and recognized six retiring governors.

Board officers for 2016–2017 are Chair James Harris, Vice Chair Diane Staley, Treasurer Richard Snowdon, and Secretary Richard Bodorff. Elected as Governor Emeritus was Henry Stansbury. Joining the officers on the Executive Committee are William Dudley, Frank Hopkinson, and Deborah Lawrence. Newly elected to a three-year Board term are Governors Alice Kreindler, Kathleen (Buffy) Linehan, and Talli Oxnam. Elected to a second term are Richard Johnson, Patrice Miller, Lelde Schmitz, and Diane Staley.

“I’m excited about the prospects for the Museum as we begin our next 50 years; we have a wonderful staff and a dedicated Board of Governors,” said Harris. “CBMM has plans to rebuild the historic Edna Lockwood, expand the scope of our education outreach, and launch new exhibi-tions. I look forward to working with our Board, the staff, and our volunteer corps to continue CBMM’s world-class impact on our members, visitors, and community.”

At the annual meeting, the Board also recognized retiring governors Harry Burton, William Carter, David Dunn, Peter Kreindler, Geoffrey Oxnam, Bruce Ragsdale, and Past Chair Richard Tilghman. Each was presented with a memento made from the original wood of skipjack Rosie Parks, which recently underwent a historic restoration at CBMM.

New Board member Alice Kreindler has made a difference as a community leader for a number of years, including serving as president of the board of the Morris-town Community Soup Kitchen in Morristown, N.J., a member of the board of the Morris Museum in Morris-town, and a research assistant at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. She earned a bachelor’s degree in art history from Wellesley College. She and her husband, Peter, have three children and ten grandchildren, and share their time between Philadelphia and St. Michaels, Md.

CBMM Welcomes New Board Members and Officers

Pictured, front row, from left: Treasurer Richard Snowdon, Emeritus Fred Meendsen, Kathleen (Buffy) Linehan, Dagmar Gipe, Carolyn Williams, Secretary Richard Bodorff, Emeritus Howard Freedlander, Alice Kreindler, Emeritus and Past Chair Robert Perkins, and William Dudley. Pictured, back row, from left: Donald Martin, Emeritus CG Appleby, Frank Hopkinson, Jr., Lelde Schmitz, Richard Johnson, Talli Oxnam, Vice Chair Diane Staley, Chair James Harris, President Kristen Greenaway, Alfred (Allie) Tyler 2nd, Patrice Miller, and Richard Kimberly. Board members not shown include Schuyler Benson, Leeds Hackett, Christopher Havener, Jr., Robert Hockaday, Jr., Deborah Lawrence, Frank Marshall, Charles Robertson, and Bruce Rogers.

Kathleen (Buffy) Linehan has spent more than 25 years

as a business executive in Europe and Washington, D.C., managing legislative, regulatory, and communication issues for Fortune 10 companies. As a corporate officer of the Altria Group, Inc., she served as vice president of govern-ment affairs, overseeing Washington-relations activities for Kraft Foods, Miller Brewing Company, and Philip Morris. As vice president of corporate affairs at Altria’s international headquarters in Switzerland, she managed government relations and communications in Central and Eastern Europe, Central Asia, Turkey, the Middle East and Africa. Prior to joining the Altria Group, Linehan, an attorney, was a senior lobbyist for the Gulf Oil Corporation. She has also worked on Capitol Hill and with the federal government, including as special assistant to the deputy secretary of energy. Linehan serves as board treasurer of the Humane Society of the United States and was governance

chair for the Board of the International Foundation for Election Systems. She is on the board of trustees for the Academy Art Museum, acting as 2015 gala chair, and is an active supporter of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science’s Horn Point Laboratory, a volunteer for the Chesapeake Music Jazz Festival and the Master Gardener program of Talbot County. Linehan and her husband, Ed Gabriel, live in Washington, D.C., and Royal Oak, Md.

Talli Oxnam is senior vice president and manager of Wye Financial & Trust, a division of CNB and a member of Shore Bancshares community of companies. Oxnam is responsible for managing the business operations as well as the business development of the brokerage and trust busi-ness. Oxnam earned a bachelor’s degree in communication and media studies from University of Puget Sound in 1994. She is a 2015 graduate of Leadership Maryland and the American Bankers Association Trust School Graduate Program I. Prior to joining Wye Financial & Trust, Oxnam led Ilex Construction, Inc. for 20 years, ultimately serving as chief operations officer. She is an active board member of Junior Achievement of Talbot County, Women & Girls Fund, and Talbot Country Club, and serves on the finance committee at Christ Church in Easton. She resides in Easton, Md., with her husband, Geoff, and their children.

The 2016-2017 CBMM Board Officers are, from left: Treasurer Richard Snowdon, Secretary Richard Bodorff, Vice Chair Diane Staley, and Chair James Harris.

In Memoriam

CBMM mourns the loss of our good friend and volunteer Bob Traynelis, shown here with his wife and CBMM volunteer Mary Sue. Bob passed away in June. He was very active with CBMM and the St. Michaels Volunteer Fire Department. Fair winds and following seas, Bob. We miss you.

In loving memory of Helen Van Fleet, a dedicated CBMM employee of 29 years, who passed away in March of this year. “Helen had many different titles over the years—visitor’s assistant, volunteer co-coordinator, and program registrar—but regardless of what her formal title was, she was always ‘The Museum Mom,’” says CBMM Curator Pete Lesher.

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lifelinescurrents

Volunteer Profile: Don Boehlby Tatum Welsh

Born in Baltimore, CBMM volunteer Don Boehl has deep roots on the Eastern Shore, with his long line of heritage calling Talbot County home since 1686. For Boehl, the birth of his grandmother, Ethel Carrol Ball, in 1894 in Neavitt, Md., marks the beginning of his relation-ship with and appreciation for the Chesapeake Bay.

Boehl’s first memories of the Chesapeake began with summer visits to the home of his grandmother’s brother, Greely Ball, and his wife, Emma, in Neavitt. He spent his summer afternoons alongside his brother and cousins, fishing with periwinkles, wading in search of soft crabs, and crabbing with hand lines.

Following his retirement, Boehl settled in St. Michaels in June 2015. After 40 years in printing equipment sales, four years as a high school educator, and teaching career technology courses in printing at Edmondson-Westside High School in Baltimore, he fell in love with woodwork-ing and boat construction at CBMM.

As he spent more time at CBMM, Boehl was asked by President Kristen Greenaway to help with the Rising Tide After-School Program and other youth education initiatives.

“It’s just rewarding to see the different interests and skill levels of the children. Hopefully, we are helping cultivate the future stewards of the Chesapeake Bay,” says Boehl.

The most memorable experience CBMM has given Boehl is the annual Mid-Atlantic Small Craft Festival, specifically the 2012 event.

Volunteer Don Boehl in the Boatyard.

Midshore Riverkeeper Conservancy Launches Pumpout Boat at CBMMOn March 31, the Midshore Riverkeeper Conservancy and Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum unveiled the first-ever pumpout boat on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Built by Bay Sails Marine in Wellfleet, Mass., the boat is 22’ long with a center console. Its cargo tank sits below the water-line, a design specific to pumpout boats.

The boat will serve boaters with holding tanks, making pumping out easier for boaters near the busy St. Michaels harbor and expanding service to the Miles and Wye rivers, where there are no pumpout stations. The Alcar Environ-mental craft was christened at CBMM’s annual Blessing of the Fleet on April 14.

Over the past two years, MRC and CBMM worked in concert to bring this valuable service to the hundreds of boaters who frequent local ports, scenic anchorages, and piers. MRC worked with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources to obtain a grant that funded 75 per-cent of the purchase price; that same grant will partially cover the ongoing annual operation and maintenance costs. Twenty-five percent of the funds needed were raised through MRC supporters.

The harbor in St. Michaels is so crowded on weekends that it discourages boaters and frequently prevents boats from reaching a land-based pumpout facility. CBMM is donating free dockage, storage, and use of its land-based pumpout station to off-load waste from the pumpout boat. The waste removed from boats goes directly to the recently updated St. Michaels Wastewater Treatment Plant, which provides high-quality sewage treatment.

It is illegal to discharge raw sewage, but many people are surprised to discover that it is legal to discharge marine sewage overboard with very limited treatment. According to an MRC news release, legal marine sanitation devices simply macerate the waste and reduce bacteria. They do nothing to remove polluting nutrients—nitrogen and phosphorus—from the waste. Providing pumpout services to boaters on the Miles and Wye rivers means that nutrient pollution and harmful bacteria introduced by recreational boaters can be significantly reduced. The pumpout boat began operating Fridays through Sundays on the Miles and Wye rivers this summer season and will continue through October 16.

Typical service hours are noon-5pm on Fridays and 10am-5pm on Saturdays and Sundays. Hours will be extended for long weekends, including Labor Day.

All residents on the Miles and Wye rivers are eligible to sign up for regular pumpouts from their piers during the summer season. Cruisers will be able to hail the pumpout boat via VHF radio or cell phone. Since the service is free, no boater is discouraged from pumping out.

To sign up for regular pumpouts at your slip, mooring, or dock, contact the Midshore Riverkeeper Conservancy’s Ann Frock with your name, address, email, and phone number at 443-385-0511 or [email protected].

Based on the studies, surveys, and analysis of other pumpout boats, it is estimated the boat will pump between 15,000 and 25,000 gallons of concentrated marine waste. You can help. Call or sign up for regular pumpouts this boating season, and pass the word: Please Pump, Don’t Dump.

Keep up with our progress at: cbmm.org/clean-bay-poop-meter

Shop at the Museum Store

and receive a FREE GIFT!

Find books, apparel, jewelry, housewares, burgees, keepsakes, and specialized CBMM merchandise, only available in the Museum Store. Become a CBMM member and receive a discount!

Shop online: shop.cbmm.org or call 410-745-4962

• Spend $25 and receive a commemorative magnet

• Spend $50 and receive commemorative playing cards

• Spend $150 and receive a copy of the exhibition catalogue forA Broad Reach: Celebrating 50 Years on the Bay

“As co-director of the Chesapeake Wooden Boat Builders, we would bring a large faction of the school’s members to the Mid-Atlantic Small Craft Festival,” recalls Boehl.

“Our ongoing project was to build a genuine Chesapeake Bay flat iron skiff.” The skiff, only constructed at maritime festivals, was dubbed the showboat for the event and named Ginny-Rea, in honor of Boehl’s mother and aunt.

“If you like being active, like water activities, and like meeting new friends, be a volunteer,” Boehl encourages.

Interested in learning more about volunteering at CBMM? Contact Allison Speight at 410-745-4941 or [email protected].

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curator’s corner

Norwegian immigrant John Trumpy founded one of the most admired and renowned yacht building yards in America. Born to a shipbuilding family, Trumpy trained at a technical school in Berlin, apprenticed at a shipyard in Kiel, arrived in New York in 1902, and found work as a naval architect with New York Shipbuilding near Camden, N.J. In 1910, he became a founding partner of the Mathis Yacht Building Company in Camden. Trumpy focused on designing and building what were then called houseboat yachts—well-appointed motor vessels with accommodations for living aboard and cruising. Bright white hulls with a subtle sheer and a gold scrollwork “T” at the bow were the company’s hallmarks.

Among the yard’s best-known products is Sequoia, a 104-foot houseboat that served as a presidential yacht from 1933 to 1977. Over the years, Trumpy built a number of houseboat yachts for his own use, each of them named Aurora. Details varied by size, but the main deck of a Trumpy houseboat typically featured a pilot house forward, a long, attached deck house with a wood-paneled salon for entertaining, and a covered deck at the stern. Below deck were engines and staterooms, with the owner’s stateroom often at the stern.

Larger boats included crew quarters, typically forward. Staterooms would be appointed with built-in furniture custom fitted by the yard’s cabinetmakers. To meet high standards, the yard produced its own patterns and castings for virtually every fitting—from chocks and cleats to small hardware. Like every other boat builder, Trumpy supported the war effort during World War I by taking military contracts to construct submarine chasers and more, a pattern repeated during World War II. He rose to president of the company after the death of John Mathis in 1939 and changed the

A Single Goal: The Art of Trumpy Yacht Building

by Pete Lesher

name to John Trumpy & Sons in 1943. In 1947, disgusted by the water pollution that stained the white hulls of his new yachts, Trumpy moved the yard to Spa Creek in Annapolis, site of the former Annapolis Yacht Yard. John Trumpy Sr. passed the company leadership to the next generation, John Jr. and Donald, in 1952, and in later years his grandsons worked for the yard as well. John Sr. remained active with the yard until his death in 1963.

The yard recovered from a devastating fire, but the 1960s brought new pressures. Other boatbuilders transi-tioned to fiberglass, particularly for smaller boats, and to aluminum for larger ones. Trumpy stuck with wood, but skilled craftsmen who built reputable boats were becoming harder to find. When labor unrest over the yard’s wage scale culminated in a strike, Trumpy lost more key personnel, and the yard closed for good in 1973.

In addition to members of the Trumpy family, the yard employed a number of well-remembered people engaged in Chesapeake boatbuilding in the mid-20th century, including cabinetmaker Harold Argue, boat carpenter and foreman Frizzie Atwell, yard superintendent Lyle Gaither, and draftsman Ernie Tucker.

On August 6, 2016, CBMM will open a special exhibition titled A Single Goal: The Art of Trumpy Yacht Building. Originated by the Maryland Hall for the Creative Arts in Annapolis, the exhibition will be expanded for its installation in St. Michaels. Through models, paintings, photographs, artifacts such as wooden patterns and vintage

(top left) Trumpy’s printed envelopes provided a waterfront view of the yard in Annapolis’ location after World War II. Photo by Marion Warren, courtesy of M.E. Warren Photography, LLC.

(bottom left) The 79-foot cruiser Rumak III was dressed in nautical signal flags for her launch at the John Trumpy & Sons yard in 1955. Photo by Marion Warren, courtesy of M. E. Warren Photography, LLC.

(right) The wheelhouse of the 90-foot houseboat Consort IV, built in 1936, shows the brightly finished woodwork typical of John H. Trumpy’s designs. Photo by Morris Rosenfeld, courtesy of the Rosenfeld Collection, Mystic Seaport Museum.

signage, a full-size 14-foot Trumpy-designed lapstrake yacht tender, and original drawings by naval architect and yacht designer John Trumpy Sr., the exhibition explores the detailed process of wooden boatbuilding as an art form. Visitors will follow the boatbuilding process from the first small, hand-carved wooden model to detailed drawings, lofting, framing, and planking. The exhibition runs through November 27, 2016 in CBMM’s Steamboat Building. A catalogue complements the exhibition and is available for purchase in the Museum Store.

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On a sunny afternoon at the Pamunkey Indian reservation in Virginia, 12 students and two instructors sit at long tables, covered to their elbows in a fine, slippery film of clay. The students are learning the traditional Pamunkey art of making pinch pots, and they are tackling the task with messy aplomb. Their Pamunkey pottery teacher, Debra Martin, explains the significance of this simple task. “For thousands of years, our men have been harvesting clay from a bank on the Pamunkey and using it to make pots like this. We burnish them with stones and fire them in a pit today the same way my mother did, and her mother, and so on, for hundreds of generations.”

Though the products of this workshop are not the glowing, delicate orbs produced by master Pamunkey craftsmen, all are beautiful examples of immersive instruction. The students are enrolled in Chesapeake Semester, and this visit to Pamunkey provides a hands-on connection with the contemporary environmental ethics of Chesapeake native people. In just one stop on a two-week “ journey” focusing on the Chesapeake’s pre- industrial past, the students are headed to Annapolis next for an archaeologist-led tour of what remains of that town’s 18th-century maritime heyday.

Created by Washington College’s Center for Environment and Society, Chesapeake Semester immerses students in the complex history, ecology, and culture of the Chesapeake Bay. During their fall semester, Chesapeake Semester students explore the tributaries of the watershed—visiting working maritime communities, environmental scientists, historic sites, archaeologists and anthropologists, farms, forests, and fishermen—all to gain an understanding of the challenges confronting the Chesapeake and coastal communities around the world. The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum has been an active partner in Chesapeake Semester programming since 2009.

Originally a Chesapeake Semester orientation site, CBMM has expanded its role significantly over the last eight years. Today, CBMM staff tailor educational experiences throughout the semester to complement the Chesapeake Semester curriculum— experiences like Pamunkey pottery workshops, visits to oyster farms on Hooper’s Island, or conversations with working watermen. Each fall, CBMM staff instructors travel around the Bay with the students, delivering programs that emphasize the importance of the Chesapeake’s unique culture and sense of place.

“The idea of Chesapeake Semester was inspired by a collaboration between Mystic Seaport and Williams College,” ref lects John Seidel, director of the Center for Environment and Society at Washington College.

“The Mystic program created a college course with a maritime focus, teaching students on the water, including maritime history and sailing. And we thought, we’ve got a great place to do that—plus we’ve got a world-class museum, the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum—right down the road.”

Seidel’s ambition, through challenging humanities coursework and the partnership with CBMM, was to greatly expand on the Mystic model. Ultimately, this resulted in Chesapeake Semester. For Seidel, it was a no-brainer. “Really, how could you find a better laboratory than the Chesapeake Bay?” he muses.

“It introduces a level of political, social, and environmental complexity that is difficult to find anywhere else in the whole world, literally outside our back door.”

“The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum initially provided a thorough orientation to the Chesapeake Bay, an introduction to local watermen like Captain Wade Murphy, and a chance to get out on the water,” Seidel continues.

by Kate Livie

Photos provided by Washington College’s Center for Environment and Society

Chesapeake Culture Goes to CollegeChesapeake Semester and CBMM

PHOTO BY BRIAN PALMER

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“Over the ensuing years, we have been able to capitalize on resources and staff at the Museum. CBMM Director of Education Kate Livie has been very active in helping us develop our program, opening doors to us in other parts of the community, like the Pamunkey Indian Reservation. Through our partnership, we’ve been able to select really powerful experiences, develop them, and enhance our curriculum more fully.”

Today, Chesapeake Semester stands as a national model for experiential, interdisciplinary college learning. Since 2009, more than 60 students have participated in the innovative program. Graduating with varied majors, from psychology and business to environmental science and education, Chesapeake Semester alumni use the real- world experiences, connections with diverse Chesapeake people, and environmental and societal questions posed by the program to enhance their understanding of the larger world. Kirstin A. Webb, Washington College Class of 2018, participated in the 2015 Chesapeake Semester session. An anthropology major, Webb feels that the course work's emphasis on stakeholder interactions and experiences across the humanities was a major takeaway from the program.

“I’ve grown up on the Chesapeake, but I gained a much deeper perspective of the anthropological importance of the Bay, and its environmental and biological aspects, too. It made me a much better learner—asking multidisciplinary questions in class and in the field—and gave me confidence to pursue other independent research.”

Webb’s classmate Emily Castle ’18, an environmental studies major, agrees. “I hadn’t declared my major before Chesapeake Semester, and I thought it would be a great opportunity to focus my interests. There was the adventure of it, but also the networking and internships that made it a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

That opportunity provided direction for Castle, whose major was made clear after a semester spent exploring the Bay’s environment, people, and resources. Along the way, she also learned some life lessons. “Chesapeake Semester improved my adaptability and mental agility, making connections across disciplines, but taught me to focus and ask the right questions. I learned that stepping out of my comfort zone can be fun and painful, and you grow because of it.” The challenges of Chesapeake Semester are rich and meaningful: pushing the boundaries of comfort zones while meeting Bay stakeholders; foraging and sleep-ing in a tidewater woods; synthesizing history, literature, science, and biology in one final project; hiking in the jungle during a comparison study trip to Central America.

The experiences shape every student who participates in the program. Graduates have interned with NOAA,

the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, the Wyoming Fish and Game Department, the Chesapeake Bay Environmental Center, the Midshore Riverkeepers Conservancy, and CBMM. Many of those internships have led to careers. In 2014, after an internship with CBMM’s education department, Allison Speight, a 2014 Washington College graduate and 2012 Chesapeake Semester alumna, joined the CBMM staff. As the current volunteer and education coordinator, Speight puts lessons learned in the field with Chesapeake Semester into practice at CBMM.

“Chesapeake Semester includes all different facets of the Bay—economics, politics, biology, art—and I think they have really translated into my professional life,” she says. “I’m able to incorporate these different elements in my job here at CBMM, whether I’m leading education programs or using the people skills I learned in Chesapeake Semes-ter. I work with the public every day, and I rely on that confidence and ability to connect with our visitors and volunteers that I gained in the program.”

For Speight and the many other graduates of Chesapeake Semester, it’s a journey from students in the Bay’s brackish ‘classroom’ to professionals whose work shapes the future of the Chesapeake’s science, education, policy, and fisher-ies in myriad meaningful ways—a journey that CBMM is proud to assist. Although, like Allison Speight, many of these newly minted stewards don’t see it quite that way. For Speight, it’s much simpler. “I love what I’m doing, and I think Chesapeake Semester was a big part of that.”

(from top left, clockwise) CBMM Director of Education Kate Livie (L) at the site of Powhatan’s grave on the Pamunkey Reservation, with Chesapeake Semester students (L-R) Emily Castle

‚18, Kirstin Webb

‚18,

Hannah Schmidt ‚17, Brady Bosworth

‚17, Danny Furman

‚17, Amanda

Ault ‚18, Emily Cross-Barnet

‚17, Julia Bresnan

‚17, Jack Christ

‚16,

Tom Heffernan ‚17. Photo by Benjamin Ford.

Pottery in progress during an immersive Chesapeake Semester workshop at the Pamunkey reservation. (L-R) Kirstin Webb

‚18,

Amanda Ault ‚18, Hannah Schmidt

‚17, Julia Bresnan

‚17, and CBMM

Director of Education Kate Livie. Photo by Benjamin Ford.

Tori Alpaugh ‚16 and Riley O’Brien

‚16 explore CBMM’s collections

with Chief Curator Pete Lesher on a behind-the-scenes tour. Photo by Benjamin Ford.

Allison Speight ‚14, a Chesapeake Semester alumna and current CBMM

Volunteer & Education Coordinator, gets a closer look at a juvenile blue crab during a field experience. Photo by Michael Hardesty.

Chesapeake Semester students kayak at the base of the Conowingo Dam—just one experience that helps them to better understand the environmental impact of man-made structures around the Bay. Photo by Michael Hardesty.

Tom Heffernan ‚17 uses a dipnet to snag a crab off a trotline during

Chesapeake Semester’s annual crabbing trip on the Miles River. Photo by Brian Palmer.

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by Dick Cooper

There are many reasons why the log-bottomed bugeye Edna E. Lockwood has survived well into her second century while all other boats of similar design and construction either were run up a creek to rot or simply vanished from the public record. She was built on Tilghman Island in 1889 by the famous boatbuilder John B. Harrison of massive, hand-hewn local pine logs and was well cared for most of her hard working life. But, then again, so were many of the hundreds of vessels of her era.

So why has Edna endured?When plans to replace Edna’s log hull were discussed

in a public forum this spring, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum Curator Pete Lesher shared his theory on her longevity with a room full of wooden boat experts and enthusiasts.

“Edna is just lucky.”

Good Fortune (and hard work) Keeps a Chesapeake Treasure Afloat

Time after time, when critical decisions were being made about the future of traditional Chesapeake sailing craft and workboats, Edna drew the long straw.

Her ownership had passed frequently within the tight fraternity of Eastern Shore oystermen for almost eight decades when John R. Kimberly, an early CBMM supporter, took a shine to the old girl and bought her in 1966. Kimberly, a Wisconsin native who owned Carmichael Farm on the upper reaches of the Wye River, was chairman and CEO of the Kimberly-Clark Corporation and grandson of the founder of the international paper company. He used Edna to dredge for a few years and sailed her as a private yacht. He frequently loaned her to the fledgling maritime museum to be displayed alongside its flagship, the 1882 oyster sloop J. T. Leonard.

Newspaper society columnists of the day often made mention of Kimberly’s loan. In October 1968, an Annapolis Capital writer noted, “The dinner committee at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum finds itself in the enviable position of having to refuse reservations for tomorrow evening, the date of the first social event ever held in the museum in St. Michaels. Over 200 people from Annapolis, Philadelphia, Wilmington, New York, Baltimore, Washington and the Eastern Shore will converge on the historic town on the bay to enjoy cocktails in the museum buildings and dinner and dancing to the music of Peter Duchin and his orchestra under a harbor-side tent.”

The reporter went on to write that several dignitaries would arrive by yacht: “John Kimberly, whose Edna E. Lockwood, a fully rigged sailable bugeye, is on temporary loan to the museum, will also be on hand.”

Still, Edna was just a visitor at CBMM’s bulkhead; J. T. Leonard was the main showboat. She had arrived at CBMM even before the Hooper Strait Lighthouse was transported to its new home at the end of Navy Point. The round-bottomed topsail sloop, built in 1882 on James Island in southern Dorchester County by Moses H. Geoghegan, was the oldest of her kind still afloat. She attracted gifts and grants from wealthy donors and, in those early years, gave CBMM cachet with more established institutions. Plus, she was pretty. Her rounded,

“apple-cheeked” bows gave her a gentler look than did the sharp angles of the more common skipjacks and bugeyes.

Her looks also drew the admiration of one of CBMM’s founding powerhouses, Vida Van Lennep. In a 1967 note of thanks to a donor who had sent an additional $50 holiday check for the care of Leonard, she wrote, “What a nice New Year present for the ‘LEONARD’! As she is my particular love, I am very happy to add your contribution

(opposite page) Edna E. Lockwood (center) and J.T. Leonard (right) were among the museum’s first floating exhibits. Photography by C.C. Harris, 1968, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.

(top) J.T. Leonard was the last gaff-rigged oyster sloop to dredge for oysters on the Chesapeake Bay. Photograph by Don Edwards, 1960, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.

(bottom) Edna E. Lockwood dredging for oysters under sail. Photograph by Don Edwards, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.

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to her upkeep fund, where it is very much appreciated.” A keg placed strategically to attract spontaneous donations to Leonard routinely filled with the loose change and spare dollar bills of early visitors. Local school kids raised money to help maintain her.

Leonard had a lineage equally as fine as Edna’s. She was a plank-on-frame boat with lines that had been carried to the New World by skilled European craftsmen centuries before. Geoghegan built several similar vessels, including Rebecca T. Ruark, which still sails out of Dogwood Harbor on Tilghman. Leonard ’s sloop rig even predated the simpler skipjack rig. Its bigger main and topsail, while harder to handle than a skipjack’s, gave the boat more power while towing oyster dredges. They also supplied the captain with more speed and maneuverability in light air.

In the 1880s, there were a dozen homes and a general store on James Island. The storekeeper, James T. Leonard, was one of three local men who commissioned Geoghegan to build their sloop. The island was abandoned and is now little more than a few clumps of trees clinging to what is left of the high ground. The houses and store have long faded from memory. Geoghegan himself died in 1920 and is buried in Bethlehem Churchyard on Taylors Island.

J. T. Leonard oystered right up to the time CBMM acquired her for $8,000 in 1966. According to records, she was in “fair” shape then, but it is clear that despite all the love she received in those early years, her design intricacies worked against her toward the end. She was rotting everywhere, and the small CBMM staff worried constantly that she would sink at the dock if

her pumps failed. In the early 1970s, CBMM’s first director, R. J. Holt, began hearing from his crew that Leonard was failing and began his efforts to convince Jack Kimberly to donate his Edna to the floating fleet. In 1973, Kimberly signed her over for $2 and, once again, the old bugeye’s luck kicked into high gear.

Richard Scofield, CBMM’s assistant curator for watercraft, says Joe Liener, the retired general superintendent of the Philadelphia Navy Yard’s Small Boat Shop, was a volunteer and consultant at CBMM back in those days.

“He was the one who talked to Mr. Holt at the time. We had both the J. T. Leonard and the Edna Lockwood, and both were historically significant, but Edna was the only log-hulled sailing bugeye still in existence, and she was in better shape. The J. T. Leonard was really dry, so the deci-sion was made that CBMM would put its limited resources to restoring the Lockwood.”

Holt looked at the finances and knew Liener was right. One estimate stated that Edna could be repaired and ready to sail for about $30,000, but it would cost more than $100,000 to rebuild Leonard. Holt was known as a man who got things done—as long as they were in the budget and CBMM did not incur debt. He also knew he worked for the Board and did not want to make an executive decision on such an emotional issue.

Correspondence and minutes of Board meetings show that he worked behind the scenes to set the stage for switching allegiances from Leonard to Edna. At Holt’s suggestion, the Board decided to get outside opinions on the viability of the two vessels. Liener and Dick Howell, who was then managing the early floating

fleet, conducted a survey of Leonard. They deter-mined that the sloop could not be saved, short of a total rebuild. Nationally recognized experts from other maritime museums, including Mystic Seaport and the Smithsonian Institution, weighed in and supported their findings.

“From your description of the old hooker, you might as well consider jacking up her mast caps and running a new vessel under them,” wrote Melvin H. Jackson, the Smithsonian’s curator of marine transportation. Captain Jim Richardson, a renowned Dorchester County boatbuilder, concurred: “The Leonard’s condition has been known for years. If she had been safe to work, she would have done so. A new replica of the Leonard would be much cheaper than any other approach.”

Oxford marine engineer and CBMM supporter Ralph Wiley was even more forceful in his evaluation of Leonard ’s future: “Haul her out, salvage as much of her gear as may be useful, and have a nice formal cremation ceremony on the museum grounds. The sooner you adopt this policy, the sooner you will be rid of this headache. As to the Edna Lockwood, every effort should be made to save this vessel, for she is a pure native Chesapeake type.”

The loss of Leonard, however, was not an easy sell to Vida Van Lennep and her equally influential husband, Gus. At a July 1974 Board meeting, “Mrs. Van Lennep expressed the importance of the Leonard to the museum. Mrs. Van Lennep stated the Leonard is to CBMM as the historic whaling ship Charles W. Morgan is to Mystic. She read from a publication for Mystic concerning the rebuild-ing of the Morgan.” Her husband introduced a motion at the meeting to find a new home where Leonard would be rebuilt. Both Vida’s plea and Gus’ suggestion were voted down, and Leonard ’s fate was sealed.

In March 1976, Holt wrote that a Maryland Depart-ment of Natural Resources official had finally agreed to the demolition of Leonard “just as soon as he gets the permit to deposit the remains of the Leonard in the county or town landfill.” Later that year, work began to rebuild Edna E. Lockwood from her nine logs up.

Forty years later, Edna herself was sinking at the dock and had to be pulled onto the marine railway before she went down. Her original logs, the ones taken from a Tilghman Island forest in 1889, were finally giving out.

But Edna has continued her lucky streak. After a lengthy search, a stand of 130-year-old loblolly pines was discovered on private land near Machipongo on Virginia’s Eastern Shore. They were large enough to be formed into replacements, and the logs’ owner, Paul M. Jones Lumber Company of Snow Hill, Md., donated them to CBMM.

Starting this fall, CBMM shipwrights, headed by Michael Gorman and Joe Connor, will begin shaping those logs into Edna’s new bottom in a two-year rebuilding project that will keep her sailing for another generation.

CBMM President Kristen Greenaway says the project will be completed in late 2018, and then Edna will begin a six-month cruise as a floating heritage classroom. She will sail into ports large and small as the queen of CBMM’s floating fleet. And, with some luck, everyone who sees her crisp new sails drawing nicely on the wind will glimpse the rich history and wonders of the Chesapeake Bay.

As for J. T. Leonard, her memory survives on CBMM’s campus. Her trailboards are mounted in the Bay History Exhibit, her spars hang from the Boatshop beams, and her anchor has come to rest not far from the construction site where her arch rival, Edna E. Lockwood, is still showing off her good fortune.

(top) Retired boat builder Joe Liener advised the boat carpenters throughout the Edna E. Lockwood project. Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum photo.

(bottom) Museum director R. J. Holt spoke at the launch of the newly restored bugeye Edna E. Lockwood on July 21, 1979. Photograph by Carrol Hebbel, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.

The last oyster sloop J.T. Leonard sank in her slip several times, forcing a decision to either restore or dispose of the vessel. Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum photo.

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20 FALL 2016 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG FALL 2016 21

On Wednesday, May 4, 2016, the historic 1889 log bottom bugeye Edna E. Lockwood was removed from the marine railway by Aerial Crane Inc. and placed on the hard in preparation of the historic restoration of her nine-log hull. Come see the queen of the fleet and the logs that will replace her hull at CBMM. Learn more at ednalockwood.org.

on the rail

Boatyard Program Manager Jenn Kuhn reports the stern hoops on CBMM’s 25’ Hooper Island Draketail Pintail took the boatshop’s Apprentice for a Day program longer than anticipated.

Pintail’s reverse raked round transom presenting some challenges, taking participants a bit longer to figure exactly how all the components and bevels were to be aligned. She has a white oak keel and framing with Atlantic white cedar planking. Her stern has traditional barrel staving and bead-and-cove strip-planked top sides. She is glued with G-flex, fastened with silicone bronze screws, and has a cross-planked herringbone bottom.

Pintail’s expected date of completion is at the end of summer, with the installation of the four-stroke, vertical cooled Yanmar diesel to follow. She will have a wet exhaust with traditional push-pull rope cable steering. See more photos of the project at bit.ly/CBMMPintail.

“We love the Chesapeake Bay region, and want to help preserve its best aspects. That is what CBMM is doing, and we are very excited

for its future.

A planned gift says that we believe in the future of

CBMM, and the region. Our planned gift allows us to invest in that future, and the opportunities

and challenges that come with it. It gives us stakes in the ground for

ensuring a viable future for CBMM, with a gift that will remain

long after we’re gone.”

- Liz & Howard Freedlander

Over the past 50 years, the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum has created a lasting legacy: we are the world's leading institution dedicated to exploring and preserving the history, environment, and people of the Chesapeake Bay through authentic, hands-on experiences.

Making a planned gift is a wonderful way to show your support and appreciation for CBMM and its mission while accom-modating your own personal, financial, estate planning, and philanthropic goals. With smart planning, you may acutally increase the size of your estate and/or reduce the tax burden on your heirs. Just as important, you will know that you have made a meaningful contribution to CBMM.

Please contact us for assistance or to discuss your personal situation and objectives.

Jennifer MatthewsDevelopment [email protected]

Your planned gift to CBMM fortifies our foundation and builds your Chesapeake legacy.

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calendar

august | september | october | november | save-the-dates programs • member nights • special events • festivals • exhibition openings

MEMBER NIGHTS

The Art of Trumpy Yacht Building Exhibition Tuesday, August 23, 5-7pm in Van Lennep AuditoriumRSVP required to 410-745-4991 or [email protected]

A special exhibition highlighting the luxurious boats of the Trumpy Yacht Yard opens in August and will continue until November. Pete Lesher will lead a gallery talk for members high-lighting exhibition objects ranging from exquisite ink drawings and yacht china to a full-size Trumpy-designed yacht tender.

Boatyard Program Overview Rising Tide and Apprentice for a Day Programs Tuesday, September 20, 5-7pm in CBMM Boat ShopRSVP required to 410-745-4991 or [email protected]

Join Shipwright Educator Matt Engel for an overview of CBMM’s Rising Tide, a boatbuilding program that facilitates mentorships that provide guidance and support during these critical years of development. Boatyard Program Manager Jenn Kuhn will also be on hand to give an update on the 25’ Draketail Chesapeake Bay fishing launch, part of the Apprentice for a Day program.

Edna E. Lockwood Restoration Update & Brew Tasting Thursday, October 13, 5-7pm in CBMM BoatyardRSVP required to 410-745-4991 or [email protected]

Boatyard Manager Michael Gorman describes how ship-wrights and apprentices are shaping and carving the new hull for Edna, as they did 127 years ago.

Oyster Books & Wines for Thanksgiving Thursday, November 10, 5-7pm in Van Lennep AuditoriumRSVP required to 410-745-4991 or [email protected]

Join Hair O' the Dog to select the perfect wine pairing for Thanksgiving oysters, and find that perfect book about oysters for a Christmas gift. CBMM Director of Education and Associate Curator Kate Livie will sign copies of her book Chesapeake Oysters: The Bay’s Foundation and Future.

Celebrate the Holiday Season at CBMM Thursday, December 8, 5-7pm in Museum StoreNo RSVP required.

Join us for the annual lighting and hoisting of the tree on one of CBMM’s historic floating fleet, shopping, and caroling.

BOATYARD PROGRAMS

Rising Tide After-School Program Tuesdays & Thursdays, September 6 through May 2017 Boatshop, 3:30-5:30pm. Free, but class size is limited. For Talbot County students in grades 6-9. Registration required to Matt Engel at 410-745-4974 or [email protected].

Rising Tide teaches students basic boatbuilding skills in a welcoming, relaxed environment. Students will apply the principles they learn in math and science while using hand and power woodworking tools. When the weather allows, students will learn boat handling, navigation, and other skills while paddling, rowing, sailing, power-boating, and fishing on the Miles River.

Free Fishing on Fridays Beginning Fridays in September as long as weather allows 3-5pm. Free. Children under age 8 must be accompanied by an adult. Drop-ins welcome.

Enjoy fishing and crabbing on CBMM’s waterfront. Equipment and bait will be provided. Please note, if participants are age 16 or older, they must bring a fishing license in order to keep their catch.

Skin-on-Frame Sea Kayak Workshop Saturday, September 24 through Saturday, October 1 Nine-day workshop, 9am-4pm in the Boatshop $1,600 CBMM members and non-members. Reservations required. For more information and to register, please visit seawolfkayak.com/sb-workshops.

In this nine-day workshop, participants will join Kiliii Fish, a builder of indigenous skin-on-frame kayaks and a photographer of wildlife, places, and things, in building their own skin-on-frame kayak and Greenland paddle. At just 28 pounds, these kayaks are extremely lightweight and durable. The framing will be locally sourced Atlantic white cedar with the skin a covering of 8.5 oz ballistic nylon, originally used for military flak vests. The skins are coated in a special two-part polyurethane that resists UV and abrasions.

Wednesday Open Boatshop October 19, November 9 & 16, December 7 5-8pm. $30 CBMM members and $40 non-members. Registration required to 410-745-4980 or [email protected]

Have an idea for a woodworking project but just don’t know where to start or perhaps don’t have the tools you need? Come to the Boatshop to work on these projects under the guidance of one of CBMM’s experienced shipwrights.

EDUCATION PROGRAMS

Apprentice For a Day Boatbuilding Program Saturdays & Sundays, 10am-4pm in the Boatshop $45 CBMM members and $55 non-members, or save money and sign up for the “Journeyman’s Special” (4 classes) for $150 CBMM members and $200 non-members. Drop-ins welcome, though advance reservations are encouraged. Contact Jenn Kuhn at 410-745-4980 or [email protected].

Learn traditional boatbuilding under the direction of a CBMM shipwright. Be part of the entire 6- to 8-month process, or just sign up for those aspects you want to learn. Must be 16 or older unless accompanied by an adult. Projects vary year to year, ranging from 8’ to 25’, row, paddle, sail, and power.

Fall Speaker SeriesCost per program for each session is $6 for CBMM members or $8 non-members. Register for all sessions and save: $25 for CBMM members, $35 non-members. Registration is required; sign up online at cbmm.org. Questions? Contact Allison Speight at [email protected] or 410-745-4941.

Trumpy and Yacht Building on the Chesapeake Wednesday, October 5 at 10am in Van Lennep Auditorium

CBMM Chief Curator Pete Lesher will provide an illustrated over-view of the development of yacht design and yacht building on the Chesapeake Bay as a background for the work of the John Trumpy & Sons yard in Annapolis, the subject of A Single Goal: The Art of Trumpy Yacht Building, an exhibition in CBMM’s Steamboat Building opening August 6.

The Story of Trumpy from Norway to Spa Creek: Five Generations with Donald Trumpy Thursday, October 20 at 10am in Van Lennep Auditorium

Donald Trumpy, former employee and grandson of the yacht designer who established the John Trumpy & Sons yard, will outline the history of the family business that constructed some of the finest wooden motor cruisers and houseboats of the 20th century.

“Tilghman Tales” Filming, Filmmaker Talk & Watermen PanelWednesday, October 26 at 5pm in the Van Lennep Auditorium

“Tilghman Tales” shares the stories of a few of the island’s notables, recounted by colorful storytellers, local experts, self-taught historians, innovative boatbuilders, “jacks-of-all-trades,” self-reliant women, and indefatigable octogenarians. Join “Tilghman Tales” filmmaker Jennifer Shea and some of the Tilghman residents featured in the film as they share their island life experiences.

“Working the Water” Book Event with Jay FlemingWednesday, November 9 at 5:30pm in the Van Lennep Auditorium

Jay Fleming’s first book, Working the Water, is a visual narrative of the lives of those individuals whose livelihood is directly

dependent upon the Chesapeake Bay—America’s largest estuary. The book comprises photographs of seasoned water-men, scenic seascapes, weathered workboats, and Bay bounty

—a true and complete depiction of Chesapeake Bay life. Equal parts informative and aesthetically pleasing, Working the Water appeals to the seafood enthusiast, history buff, biologist, photography fan, and Chesapeake Bay lover alike. Book sales and signings will follow the event.

Boater’s SafetyWednesday, August 17 & Thursday, August 18, 6-10pm Van Lennep Auditorium. $25 per person. Registration is required; sign up online at cbmm.org.

Individuals and families with children ages 12 and over are welcome to learn the basics needed to operate a vessel on Maryland waterways. Maryland boaters born after July 1, 1972 are required to have a Certificate of Boating Safety Education. Graduates of our two-day Department of Natural Resources-approved course are awarded a certificate that is good for life.

Model Skipjack RacesSunday, August 21 and Sunday, October 16, 11am-2pm Fogg’s Cove. Free with paid admission.

The radio-controlled (RC) sailing races are organized by CBMM’s Model Sailing Club. The club races RC models of two-sailed bateaux, which at full size can vary from 38 to 48 feet in length. The 48-inch skipjack models are built from scratch from plans sold by the club at the Museum Store.

Half-Hull Model Workshop: Tug DelawareSaturday, October 15 & Sunday, October 16, 9am-5pm Bay History Building. For adults and children 12 years and older. Tools and materials supplied. $80 CBMM members and $110 for non-members. Registration is required; sign up online at cbmm.org

The weekend workshop includes instruction on carving a solid half model of the historic Chesapeake Bay tugboat Delaware. This model is band-sawed from a two-tone wood block and carved to the rounded shape of Delaware’s hull. The pieces are then shaped and sanded to a fine finish and mounted on a baseboard to form a wall display piece.

EXHIBITION OPENS A Single Goal: The Art of Trumpy Yacht BuildingSaturday, August 6 from 9am-5pm. Free with paid admission Steamboat Building

A Single Goal traces the design and construction of the distinctive Trumpy wooden yachts, focusing its attention from 1909 through 1973, when the Trumpy Yacht Yard in Annapolis, Md., produced its last boat. Using models, paintings, historic photographs, artifacts such as wooden patterns and vintage signage, and original drawings by John Trumpy, Sr., A Single Goal explores the detailed process of wooden boatbuilding as an art form and highlights these distinctive yachts and their furnishings and finishings. Read more on page 10.

NEW! Register and pay for programs online PLUS buy advance festival tickets at CBMM.ORG

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calendar

On Saturday, October 29, CBMM will host OysterFest, a celebration of the Chesapeake’s favorite bivalve. The annual favorite features live music on two stages, an oyster stew competition, boat rides, retriever demonstrations, oysters and other local fare, cooking demonstrations, children’s activities, oystering demonstrations, harvesting displays, and more. The Swamp Donkeys, a high-energy newgrass band with a twist of rock, will return to this year’s Oyster-Fest, playing live from the Tolchester Beach Bandstand. Performing on a second stage along Fogg’s Cove will be the melodic Kent Island-based trio Key Lime Pie, performing

“barefoot-guitar” pop from 10am-4pm.In addition to CBMM’s floating fleet of historic vessels,

several commercial watermen and their boats will be dock-side to share the Bay’s oyster dredging and hand tonging traditions. Limited boat rides with Chesapeake watermen with oyster tonging demonstrations will also be offered. Local watermen will serve freshly caught and shucked Chesapeake Bay wild oysters, served steamed or raw on the half shell. Aquaculture raw oysters, oyster fritters, and fried oyster sandwiches will also be available.

For those who celebrate oysters rather than eat them, pit beef, hot dogs, hamburgers, and other seafood selections, along with cold beer, warm apple cider, and more will be offered. Fordham Brewing Company’s Rosie Parks Oyster Stout—made in honor of CBMM’s 1955 skipjack Rosie Parks—will be served along with Budweiser and other craft beers. Local restaurants will perform cooking demonstrations of signature oyster dishes throughout the day, and oyster slurping contests offered each hour from 1-3pm will award bragging rights and prizes to the winners.

Beginning at 11am along Fogg’s Cove, festival-goers can vote for their favorite oyster stew in a competition among local restaurants and chefs. Participation is limited to a first-come, first-served basis while supplies last, with a commemorative OysterFest mug and tastings offered for $10. The blind taste test awards bragging rights to the chef with the most votes, with the People’s Choice winner announced at the festival and later to the public.

OysterFest will offer family activities aplenty, with river cruises aboard Winnie Estelle, an oversized oyster puzzle game, an oyster nursery, net-making and knot-tying demonstrations, a scavenger hunt, and face painting. Children can also build a take-home model boat for $3.

OysterFest is October 29 at CBMM

discounted admission for two adult guests. Food, drinks, and boat rides are an additional cost, with carry-on alcohol prohibited.

For safety reasons, non-service dogs should be kept home during CBMM festivals, as leashed dogs are permitted only during regular operating hours. Proceeds from the event support CBMM’s education, restoration, and exhibition programs. Visit cbmm.org/oysterfest or call 410-745-2916 for more information.

ON-THE-WATER PROGRAMS

Small Craft Rentals Open Wednesday-Sunday through August 28, 10am-4pm Rentals located on Fogg’s Cove. Days and time subject to change. Drop-ins welcome, though advance reservations are encouraged. Contact 410-745-4941 or [email protected].

Members of the public are invited to get out on the water in one of our small crafts built through our Apprentice for a Day Boatbuilding Program. Small wooden sailing skiffs, kayaks, and rowboats are available for daily or hourly rentals.

Sailing Vessels:

$20 per hour for CBMM members or $30 per hour for non-membersDaily rates of $100 per day for CBMM members or $160 for non-members

Rowing Vessels:

$10 per hour for CBMM members or $20 per hour for non-membersDaily rates of $50 per day for CBMM members or $100 for non-members

Friday Special: 2 rental hours for the price of one!

Please note, CBMM admission is not required to rent a small craft.

Watch Log Canoe Races Aboard Winnie Estelle Saturday, September 17, 9:30am & 1:30pm $25 CBMM members and $35 non-members. Registration is required to 410-745-4941 or [email protected].

Enjoy a river cruise to watch the log canoe races on the Miles River from our buyboat, Winnie Estelle. Log canoe races are a quintessential Chesapeake pastime, and from a shady spot on board Winnie’s deck you’ll get an up-close and exciting look at the action. Amateur photographers, sailing aficionados, or wooden boat enthusiasts will all find something to enjoy on CBMM’s log canoe cruises.

NEW! Register and pay for programs online PLUS

buy advance festival tickets at

CBMM.ORG

A Few Details About CBMM’s Festivals

• With the exception of certified service dogs, dogs are not permitted on CBMM grounds during festivals and special events. Leashed dogs are permitted on CBMM grounds during regular business hours.

• Carry-on alcohol on our campus and docks is strictly prohibited at all events where alcohol is available for purchase.

• Credit cards are accepted at the door for admission, with festival-goers encouraged to bring cash for use inside the gates. Please note, the nearest ATM is about a five-minute walk from CBMM.

The Chesapeake Bay Retriever Relief & Rescue club will present retriever demonstrations on Navy Point. Phillips Wharf Environmental Center’s Fishmobile will offer the opportunity to see live sturgeon, diamondback terrapins, horseshoe crabs, and other native creatures, and other conservation organizations will be on hand to discuss efforts to clean and preserve the Bay.

Festival-goers may also explore CBMM’s exhibitions, including Oystering on the Chesapeake and Waterman’s Wharf, where guests can try tonging or nippering for oysters. Several boats historically used in the oystering industry will be displayed, including CBMM’s 1889 log-bottomed bugeye and registered National Historic Landmark Edna E. Lockwood, the 1955 skipjack Rosie Parks, and 1920 buyboat Winnie Estelle, among other Chesapeake Bay buyboats visiting for the festival.

Admission to OysterFest is $5 per person for CBMM members, or $18 for adults, $15 for seniors and students with ID, and $6 for children 6–17. CBMM members at the Family & Friends level and above also receive $5

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26 FALL 2016 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG FALL 2016 27

calendar

FESTIVALS & SPECIAL EVENTS

Watermen’s Appreciation Day Sunday, August 14 10am-5pm. $18 adults, $10 CBMM member adult and licensed waterman adult*, $8 children 6-17, $6 CBMM member child and licensed waterman child*, free for children ages 5 & under.

*Must show valid MD commercial Fisherman’s license.

Featuring a “watermen’s rodeo” boat docking contest, steamed crabs and other local fare, live music, children’s and family activities, boat rides, celebrity guest appearances, silent auction, and more. Steamed crab prices to be announced the week before.

12th Annual Chesapeake Bay Buyboat Reunion Thursday, August 11 through Sunday, August 14 9am-5pm. Free with paid CBMM admission and free with purchase of tickets to Watermen’s Day on August 14.

Don’t miss this rare opportunity to see and board a collection of historic buyboats from around the Mid-Atlantic region along CBMM’s docks and waterways. The 12th annual reunion tour will start in Tangier Island at Parks Marina on August 3, 2016.

These unique craft were used to haul seafood and cargo along the Chesapeake Bay’s waterways before many of the peninsulas were connected by bridges. As the seafood harvest declined and highways became the mode of travel the large graceful buyboats faded from local waters. Today, no more than 30 of the oyster buyboats remain on the Bay.

Buyboats scheduled to be at CBMM include F.D Crockett, Nellie Crockett, Thomas J., Prop Wash, East Hampton, 55th Virginia, Iva W., Old Point, and Winnie Estelle. The Chesapeake Bay Buyboat Association comprises of owners and people who share the love of these big boats. They maintain and operate the remaining buyboats at their own expense, and the owners bring their boats to ports around the Bay each summer so that the public can stand on their decks, touch them, and understand their importance in history.

CBBA is made up of the Northern and Southern Fleets. The Northern Fleet is under the command of Captain Kevin Flynn, with the Southern Fleet under the command of Captain John England. The Fleet currently covers New Jersey to Florida. For more information about the buyboat reunion, visit oysterbuyboats.com/CBBAreuncruise2016.html.

19th Annual Charity Boat Auction Labor Day Weekend, Saturday, September 3 Gates open 8am; Tag Sale 9am; Beer and BBQ 10:30am; Auction 11am. Free for members and children ages 5 & under. General admission is $5 per person until 11am. Afterward, regular admission rates apply.

PREVIEW HOURS:Thursday, September 1, 9am-5pm & Friday, September 2, 9am-5pm

ADVANCE BIDS DEADLINE: Friday, September 2, 2pm. 410-745-4992

DONATE A BOAT OR TAG SALE ITEM DEADLINE:Thursday, September 1, 5pm. Call 410-745-4992.

Proceeds from the Boat Auction benefit the children and adults served by CBMM. The live auction begins at 11am, where more than 100 boats—ranging in size and performance from sailing dinghies to cabin cruisers, and everything in between—will be auctioned off to the highest bidder. The event also includes a flea market-style tag sale from 9-11am, when visitors can purchase a variety of used boating gear, including ground tackle, electrical equipment, hardware, rope or chain, ladders, fishing tackle, motors, and more.

Boat sales are ongoing throughout the year, with all auction boats subject to sale prior to the auction. Auction boats will be available for inspection at CBMM several days prior to the auction.

Boating Party Fundraising Gala Saturday, September 10 5:30-10pm. $250 per person. For tickets, contact Liza Ledford at 410-745-4978 or [email protected].

Join us for an around-the-world experience in the company of friends while celebrating CBMM. This year, special guest schooner America joins the Boating Party. America is a replica of the vessel that started the America’s Cup tradition in 1851 by defeating the best the British could offer to win the Royal Yacht Squadron’s “100 Pound Cup.” Boating Party guests will be invited to tour the ship and speak with the Captain and crew. See page 2 for more information about the schooner America’s visit.

St. Michaels Concours d’Elegance Sunday, September 25 10am-4pm. $50 day-of tickets, $40 online tickets. VIP tickets $100. Tickets and information online at smcde.org.

Celebrate the 10th anniversary of the St. Michaels Concours d’Elegance. See award-winning classic automobiles and enjoy food and refreshment. All proceeds benefit the new Classic Car Museum of St. Michaels.

33rd Mid-Atlantic Small Craft Festival & 12th Maritime Model Expo Saturday and Sunday, October 1 & 2 10am-5pm. Free for CBMM members and children ages 5 & under. Otherwise, admission is good for two consecutive days and is $15 adults, $12 seniors, $6 children ages 6-17.

Hundreds of amateur and professional boatbuilders, model boatbuilders, and enthusiasts come from all over the nation to display their one-of-a-kind kayaks, canoes, and other traditional small craft, along with a variety of maritime models also on display and underway in a man-made pond.

During the festival, CBMM guests can marvel at the crafts-manship and innovation used in maritime model making and traditional and contemporary small craft while enjoying CBMM’s waterfront campus and hands-on exhibitions.

OysterFest Saturday, October 29 10am-4pm. $5 CBMM members and member guests, $18 adults, $15 seniors (62+), $6 for children ages 6 to 17, free for children ages 5 & under and for CBMM Members ages 17 and under.

This celebration of the Chesapeake's favorite bivalve features live music on two stages, an oyster stew competition, boat rides, retriever demonstrations, oysters and other local fare, and cooking demonstrations, along with children’s activities, oystering demonstrations, harvesting displays, and more. See page 24 for more information.

YOU’RE INVITED!Fall Semester Preview PartyThursday, September 15, 2016

4-6pm in the Steamboat Building, CBMM

Join us for hors d’oeuvres, entertainment, and an introduction to the Academy for Lifelong Learning’s

Fall 2016 Programs running September 19 through November 18, 2016.

Shakespeare’s Roman Trilogy • Islam in AmericaAmazing Grace, Slave Ships, Captains & Cargo

Self-Defense for Seniors • The Paul Berry Story Newspaper Coverage of Presidential Elections

How to Stage Your Home • Memoir WritingHistory of Women in Western Music

Birding in Talbot County • Great Decisions • SkypeTales of a Semester at Sea • Business Ethics

Climate Change Issues and Non-Issues Growing Older & Loving it • Cooking Class

Square Dancing • MathPLUS! Field trips and tours, local authors,conversations on hot topics, and more!

Call 410-745-4941 or visitcbmm.org/all to learn more.

ALL at CBMM is a volunteer-run, non-profitorganization dedicated to exploring ideas,

exchanging knowledge, and sharing experiences.

ALL courses are open to the public. Discount rates apply for

ALL and CBMM members.

NEW! Register and pay for programs online PLUS buy advance festival tickets at CBMM.ORG

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28 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 29

Annual Report2015 -2016

A Message from the Boardby James P. Harris, 2016-2017 Chair

Board of Governors2015-2016

Richard C. Tilghman, Jr., ChairHenry H. Stansbury, Vice Chair

James P. Harris, TreasurerRichard J. Bodorff, Secretary

Diane J. Staley, Officer-At-Large

Schuyler BensonPaul Berry

Harry W. BurtonWilliam B. CarterWilliam S. Dudley

David E. DunnDagmar D. P. Gipe

Leeds HackettE. Brooke Harwood, Jr.Christopher A. HavenerRobert N. Hockaday, Jr.Francis Hopkinson, Jr.

Fred IsraelRichard J. JohnsonPeter M. KreindlerDeborah LawrenceElizabeth S. LokerFrank C. Marshall

Patrice MillerGeoffrey F. OxnamBruce A. Ragsdale

Charles A. RobertsonBruce Rogers

Steven S. SandsLelde Schmitz

Richard W. SnowdonAlfred Tyler, 2nd

Carolyn H. Williams

EMERITI

Richard T. AllenCG Appleby

Howard S. FreedlanderAlan R. Griffith

Margaret D. KellerBreene M. Kerr

Richard H. KimberlyCharles L. Lea, Jr.D. Ted Lewers, MDFred C. MeendsenJohn C. North IISumner Parker

Robert A. PerkinsJoseph E. Peters

James K. PetersonNorman H. Plummer

John J. RobertsHenry H. Spire

James E. ThomasJoan Darby West

Donald G. Whitcomb

The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum’s new fiscal year is off to a great start. Let me pause to thank Richard Tilghman, who served as chairman for the past two years. During that time, we’ve seen enthusiasm for CBMM grow tremendously with Kristen Greenaway at the helm. Richard’s lasting contribution is the skillful mentoring of our new president as she assumed her role at a pivotal time in CBMM’s 50-year history.

One cannot miss the heightened activity on campus over the past two years. Much-needed painting and facilities refurbishment have made CBMM sparkle, with a prioritized list of improvements still to be addressed. We celebrated our 50th anniversary last May, have rolled out new exhibitions, and begun restoration of the historic Edna E. Lockwood.

Approved in early 2014, the Strategic Plan has charted our course and continues to provide a strong foundation to secure CBMM’s future. New emphasis has been placed on revenue enhancements. This, coupled with vigilance regarding expenses, resulted in the seventh straight year of positive operating results in FY15–16. Our operating fund’s cumulative account is now positive, resulting in a stronger endowment and the establishment of operating reserves.

As we look to the future, CBMM is focused on selective capital investments and grow-ing our endowment. We must fully fund the exciting restoration of Edna, creating the same kind of “buzz” and appeal as Rosie Parks’ restoration did. Several important building investment projects are being considered that could help make a visit to CBMM more meaningful; moving forward, of course, is contingent on successful fundraising. We must also double the size of CBMM’s endowment. While traditional fundraising is one way to do this, a new emphasis is being placed on planned giving to encourage including CBMM in a family’s estate plan. Look for more information about how we will implement this new program.

One of the most exciting areas of growth is the commitment to educating our youth. As noted in the Strategic Plan: “…the museum creates experiences that physically, intellectually and emotionally connect visitors to the Chesapeake Bay.” Annually, 3,500 students visit CBMM as part of their K–12 school programs. They learn about the economics of the crabbing industry, the ecology of the Bay, wooden boatbuilding, and how to preserve the rich heritage of the Bay. We seek to expand our impact by doubling this to 7,000 students and have invested in curriculum improvement and outreach to other school districts. CBMM has partnered with the YMCA of the Chesapeake to launch the Rising Tide After-School Program, which provides middle school students in Talbot County the opportunity to learn woodworking and boatbuilding. These students also have the opportunity for real on-the-water experiences. Expanded education programming is fun-damental to securing CBMM’s future and fulfilling our mission. None of this would be possible without your support. On behalf of our board and staff, let me thank you—whether you are members, sponsors, donors, and/or volunteers—for being such an important part of CBMM’s impact on our guests, students, and community.

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30 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 31

We extend our deepest gratitude to our donors for gifts received between March 1, 2015 and February 29, 2016. It is only through the generosity of our friends and supporters that CBMM can fulfill its mission and impact lives by igniting a spark of interest and passion for the Chesapeake Bay and its heritage and culture. Gifts of $101 or more are listed below. Please see our Annual Report online at cbmm.org for donors of $100 or less. Every gift, no matter the size, is greatly appreciated! Thank you!

Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum’s

HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

Admiral of the Sea($100,000 and above)AnonymousPam & Jim HarrisAlice & Peter KreindlerPatrice & Herb Miller

Beverly & Richard Tilghman

Admiral of the Chesapeake($50,000 to $99,999)

Ann & Bruce BedfordLaurie & Richard JohnsonKaren & Dick KimberlyElizabeth MooseBeth LokerAlice & Bruce RogersJudy & Henry Stansbury

Admiral of the Miles($25,000 to $49,999)

Ellen & Richard BodorffJocelyn & George EysymonttRobert A. LonerganEllen & Norman PlummerAlexa & Tom SeipCatharine & Richard SnowdonDiane & Jeff Staley

Admiral of the Fleet($10,000 to $24,999)

Nancy & CG ApplebyAnnette & Ted BautzDagmar & Al GipePenny & Alan GriffithVictoria McAndrews & Leeds HackettPeter R. HallJulie Moriarty-Hockaday & Bob Hockaday

Wayne T. HockmeyerJane & Frank HopkinsonCynthia & Peter KelloggDeborah & Thomas LawrenceFlorence Auld & Frank MarshallNancy & Fred MeendsenMaxine & Bill MillarPemmy & Jack NobleMolly Nusear & Mitchell OwensMary Lou & Joe PetersCarol & Charlie RobertsonLinda & Hank SpireNancy & William StaffordCleo Braver & Allie TylerCarolyn Williams & Colin Walsh

Admiral($5,000 to $9,999)

Amy & Paul BerrySandy & Omer BrownElizabeth & Harry BurtonAmb. Amy Bondurant & David DunnDouglas W. FluhartyMonty FowlerLiz & Howard FreedlanderShirley GoochDarby & Donald HewesKathy & Arthur HutchinsLesley & Fred IsraelBette S. KenzieSherry & Charles ManningChristine & Donald MartinJoan MurrayNancy Noyes & Stephen VoorhisFrances & Sumner ParkerKay & Robert PerkinsRichard Scobey & Bruce RagsdaleRené & Tom StevensonSharon & Richard Struthers

Commodore($2,500 to $4,999)

Anonymous Cecil BackusMalcolm BahrenburgMeta & William BoydGayle & John BremerShirley & George CrowderDiane & Robert CrowderSonja & Lawrence DeBaughPatrisha & Al Del NegroMarsie & John HawkinsonBob HewesDavid HillMargaret D. KellerMariana & Pete LesherBuffy Linehan & Ed GabrielCharlotte & George MeyerDoris & Bill NielsenCecilia & Robert NobelJeffrey Parker & Chance NegriCarol & Earl RavenalJoseph C. RobillardKrista & David RossMary L. SachsLelde & Heinrich SchmitzKaren & Langley ShookCarol & Scott SmallwoodSally & Roger StobbartJoan & Clifton WestAnn & Charles YonkersCarol Wheeler

Captain($1,000 to $2,499)Penny & John AlbertineHannah & Tom AlnuttPatricia & Michael BatzaJean Marie & Duane BeckhornHolly & Walter BeckwithSusan Heyn Billipp & Andrew BillippJuli & Eugene BitchkoAnne Marie & John BornemanElizabeth & John BreyerWilliam H. BrodyAudrey BrownKatie & David BurkittNancy & James BurriRebecca Rimel & Patrick CaldwellRick CarrionCharley & Bill CarterPhyllis & Marc CastelliLynne & Dick CheneyCynthia & Marty ChomiakLarry ClarkPatricia E. CornishJoan CoxBruno de SchaetzenElaine DickinsonKim & Valerie DoolittleDonna & William DudleyTeresa & Dixon DuffettCharlene & J. Orin EdsonMary & Collins EgeCharlotte & Gary EhligRobert O. EisingerSharon & Duane EkedahlJanice & Gary EnrightMaxine & James FarrellLinda & Allan FieldChristina & Earl FurmanDeborah M. GeffkenGloria & James GibsonCatherine Joyce & Charles Paul Goebel

Nancy & Randle GoetzeWendy & Fred GoldbergSusan & Richard GranvilleSusan & Ronald GrudzieckiSusan & Paul HansonJudith & Jack HarraldMark E. HasslingerCathy & Tom HillMichele & Michael HillsNorma & Tom HoffAnn B. HolladayLaura & Thomas HollingsheadJayne & Dave HornerElizabeth & Gordon HughesDiane HumphreyJan & Richard Hynson

Marilynn Katatsky & Rick KaufmannNancy & John KendallClaire & Quentin KindermanDaniele & David LeesMarguerite & Gerry LenfestKenneth A. LubinJulie & Martin MaddenCarla MassoniHarriett & Mac McConnellGretchen & Robert MessickMirna & Conrad NelsonThelma Gretzinger & John NielsenEthel & John NorthMarie Martin & Gary NylanderMaureen & James O’ConnellGwen & Carl OppenheimElaine & Glenn OrmeChristine & Hamish OsborneMargaret & David OwensCourtney & R. Scott PastrickLaura Brank & William PeaseMelissa & John PfliegerDonna Cantor & John PinneyDeborah & Don PuseyDaniel L. Ridout IIIRoselee & Art RobertsPat & Timothy RocheMarian Brown & Douglas RollowJoyce & Donald RumsfeldAlice RyanPaul RybonMary & John SensenbrennerBernadette Benik & Dennis SeymourLisa & John SherwoodMartha & Alfred SikesJo Sue & Rem SimpsonSusan duPont & Howard SnyderJill Kent & Mark SolomonsPeggy & Guy SteuartPeter B. StifelMary Ann & William StockmanKristen & Spence StovallJefferson StriderPhyllis & Tony SymeJoel W. TexterSusan & Bill ThomasFrances ThoringtonMuriel & Enos ThroopJulie & Scott TompkinsMary Sue & Bob TraynelisRosemary & Samuel TrippeKimberley Fritts & Francis TurnerSandra & Clinton VinceJudith & George WeckelSusan & Andrew WeisburgerMarie & John WellsTerry & William WitowskyLisa & Tim Wyman

Commander($500 to $999)

Joanne & Peter AckermanLucy AlexanderLinda Passantino & Drew AllowayMolly & Peirce AndersonNancy & William BakerKathryn & Paul BarentsElaine & Edward BednarzGinger & Marion BevardMarsa & Allen BintzAlison & Arthur BirneyBonnie & John BoothAnna & Richard BoykinElla & Michael BracySue & Joe BredekampHarold C. BrittVictoria & Thomas BroadieJennifer & Paul BrooksFranz BurdaAndrea Santa & Brian ButzKathy & Daniel CanzonieroRobert CerboneAshley & Sam ChamberlainDearest & Stuart ChandlerHeather & William ChapmanPamela & David ClantonLinda & Stephen ClineburgPat & Dick CooperIsabelle Rogers & Joshua CooperMarie & William CooperSandra & Keith CourshonLeslie & Ed CroninJames CurranKay King & Charlie DaleBettie & Thomas DeenJane & Joseph DuffyHenry B. duPontJennifer & David DurkinSarah & Jay EastmanLeslie Steen & Robert EbelCatherine O. EckbrethRosemary & Joseph FasoloStephen FaustCathy & Reed FawellAnna & Charles FichtnerEleuthera & Frederick FiechterMary Kay & Tom FinanHolly & Paul FineKathleen & James FloodAnn Marie & James FloodHilary & Robert FoleyGregory FosterTom FountainJanellen & Robert FrantzMartha Coven & Paul FrickMarcia & Peter FriedmanJennifer & Michael FrielBetsey & Joseph GalliRobin & Charles GarberSusan & Edward GlynnMaureen & Neil GoldenMichele & Robert GoodsonCharlotte & William GordonKatherine & Donald GrayHenry GreenewaltFrederick C. HaabSusan & Paul HaddawayLana HardingSally HeckmanAda & Martin HeilmanJoanne & Robert HermanSusan & Andrew Hess

Susan & Robert HillenbrandElizabeth & Thomas HippTracy & John HockmeyerLaura & Keith HoffmanJacqueline Smith & Jerry HookGail & Jerry HowellKathleen & Howard HughesNorma & Charles IrishPam & Jerry JanaMaggie & Merton JarboeRaymond JenningsTimothy JohnsonHonor & John JohnsonJoyce & James KerridgeMarcia & Fred KieserJoan & Frank KittredgeBarbara & William LaneSusan Fuller & Wayland LinscottMary & Eugene LopezRobin & John MarrahBillie Jane & Warren MartonChristina Young & Glenn MarvinRuth & Max MattesonMary Lou & Mac McAllisterJulie McCahillLaura & James McGrathCathy & Thomas MendenhallCarol MerrittJill Clark & Stephen MorrisSuzanne & John MulkeyAbigail & Mark NestlehuttRose & John NorthropMargaret & Douglass OellerKristen & Nels OlsonCamille & Tony PassarellaSara & Randolph PerryAlice & Robert PetizonBetsy & Chuck PettyJanet & James ReadingNorma Redele’Gina & Lee RenoPatricia & Thomas ReynoldsDennis G. RobbMaria & Jose RodriguezBarbara & Bill RoseAdrienne RudgeDiana SableTricia & Frank SaulJeanette Scherr & Robert WaldronA.G. SchmitzRebecca & Jan ScruggsCharlotte & Phillip SechlerTrish & Wayne SeeSandra & John SeifarthDavid SharpKathleen & David SharpTheodora ShelorPeter SilviaMary Tydings & J.T. SmithMarianne & Daniel SpiegelGerould R. StangeBarbara & Warren StevensGlenna StewartMary & John StrangfeldConstance & Neal SullivanMary Beth & Kevin SullivanAnn & Mike SweeneySusan & Bill SweeneyDodie & Donald TheuneMargaret TomlinsonGary B. TownsendSandra & Michael TwiggEllen & John VillaGinny & Bill Voorhees

Susan WalkerSara & Myron WalkerBuck Waller & Michael HashLaura & Richard WardLily & John WaterstonIrmy & Phil WebsterCharlotte & George WestNancy O’Connell & Ray WiacekFrancis Wiegmann & Nancy McColganMargaret & Robert WilliamsPat & John WilsonDenise & Davis WoodChristina & Harold WursterJulia YoungLinda & Richard Zecher

Sailing Master($250 to $499)

Donna & James AlpiEdward AlvaradoTodd AnderberyBlenda & Bruce ArmisteadLisa & Steven AsplundhOrrin BairdDonna BarkerThomas BarrancoJanis & Jay BeachBarbara & Gerald BechtleCorinne & Douglas BennettNorma & Donald BerlinDianna & Philip BetschPattie and George BetzHeather Penney & Douglas BirkeyIrene & Bernard BiseVirginia & Ronald BlackwellBrad BlissMax BlumenthalMary BollingerDelores BowensKatharine & Stanley BrownHilary & Rainer BrunsAndrew BurgerJoAnne & Kitridge BuritschVirginia & George BurkeJanet & John CaldwellNancie & Don CameronLeslie Hill & Dennis CarrollSusan & Joseph CassonCarol & Creston CathcartAnn Marie & Duane CespedesDurrie & Manson ChisholmEleanore & Brian ChristiansenElizabeth & Galen ClagettKatherine L. ClovisKatherine & David CockeyHolly Tompkins & Brad ColePierre ColletDebbie & Doug CollisonMary & Mike CottinghamWink & Dan CoweeBetty & James CrothersJanet & Jim CrowleMary Ellen & Clyde CulpDebbie & Dink DaffinDorothy & Paul DaleCarolyn & Gordon DanielsDale DavenportMargaret & Andrew DavisAnn & John DavisJulie DawsonCarolyn DeckerMonica Otte & Ralph DeMarcoJacqueline & James Demerest

Linda & John DerrickBethany & Laurence DriggsAlice & David DunhamPeggy & Frank EmmetVera & John EnglandLynn & Wilson EverhartP.F.N. FanningElinor FarquharNancy & Robert FarrellRebecca & Douglas FirthElizabeth O. FiskKathy O’Connell & Jelles FondaKathy & Glenn FongKaren & Benjamin FranaDiana & Mark FraserMyra & Stephen FuguetKathy Bosin & Kevin GarberSonia & Pedro GarciaHarley GatesCarol & William GayLinda & Edward GernerSheila & David GierischBeverly & George GlatfelterKathryn & John GorskiNancy GrahamRosemary & John GrayKristen Greenaway & Lori RamseyCarroll & Robert GreveSusan & Peter HaleJane & Stephen HalpinThurman HarperCarolyn & Joseph HarrisSteven HartyMary Ann & David HazenSylvia & Ralph HeidelbachCatherine & Carl HelwigJoan & Hunt HendricksonDolores & Frederick HiehleShelley & Jeffrey HilberHoward HillAllison & Brad HillMary & Stephen HiltabidleHanna & Bryan HinesWinifred H. HobronKim & T.J. HollandTeri & Thomas HollenshadeJack HoltRuth & Richard HoltMartie & Nelson HoltjePatti & Porter HopkinsMartha HornerBarbara & Donald HoskinsNina R. HoughtonCarter & Dixie HughlettStephanie Stockman & Frank IretonMary & Joseph IrrDiane & Joseph JackinsSherry & David JefferyTracey & Curtis JohnsPaula Johnson & Carl FleischhauerBruce JonesCyrus JonesBeverly & Richard JonesBeverly & Peter JostCindy & Doug JurriusDiane & Gene KatzJulie & Charles KernanLaura & Steven KeyMary & Charles KilbourneDianne Miller & Shawn KimbroSarah Miller & Michael KingMary & Jerome KinneyKay & Donald KniffenNancy & Robert Knowles

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32 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 33

Gabrielle & William KorabKarl KriegerDeborah N. KudnerKaren & Michael LaccheoPamela & Richard LaffertyByron H. LaMotte, Jr.Bozena LamparskaDelia & Marvin LangLinda LangleyLinda LaramyTulinda & Carl LarsenRebecca & Edward LawsonAnnabel & Ron LesherSara Imershein & Mark LevinePat & Ted LewersLois & Larry LindsleyKatherine LordiPatricia & Harry LoweBarbara & Benjamin LucasWilliam Idler & Joan LunneyJames LyonsRobert T. MantellBetty & Frederick MarcellNed McCallAlexandra & Franklin McCannCarol & Lawrence McCannaBillie & Keith McCloskeySue McCoy & Ann YoungJoAnn & Charles McFarlandDorie & Jeffrey McGuinessClaire Watts & Jeff McKahanKaren & Charles McKellyLawrence G. McMichaelJill & Jack MeyerhoffMary Jo & Harry MeyerhoffBart & Carol MichelsonMary & Thomas MilanClaire & Richard MillerCharles MillerTina & Lad MillsCandace Chiaruttini & Paul MilneLyn & Peter MisiaszekSuzanne & Edward MitchellMaggi & Bob MooneyCarolyn & Tucker MoorsheadDonna & Terry MoranJon MullarkyLeah & Edward MurnShannan & Thomas MyersDiana & Steve MysliwiecStephen NicholsCarol & John NylandLauren Cosgrove & Thomas O’BrienDiane & Kevin O’ConnorKaren & Stephen O’NeillBarbara & Ernest Oskin Barbara PacaJulia & Richard PalmMargaret & James PasquarelliCarole & John PassarottiJohn B. PiersonChloe & David PitardJay PlagerDiane & William PooleBev & Glenn PorterLaura & John PorterBev & Laurie PrattKathleen & Gary PritchardLaura & John QuandtMary RestifoMary & Fritz RiedlinMargaret & John RiehlMarilyn Di Paolo & Warren RinglerJane & Jack Ritchie

Charlene & Philip RobbinsCarey & James RobertsonMarjorie & James RobfogelKellee & William RombergerBarbara & Charles RossottiAlfred F. RotelleKaren & Bill RutherfordTeresa & Keith RutterCarly Sargent & Ken PielLouise & Bassirou SarrMarjorie & John SasseHelena & Robert SavageBeverly & John SchantzAnne & Peter SchellieElizabeth & Gary SchenkPatricia & Richard SchrammOliver SchwabCarol & Ronald SekuraFaye & Jack ShannahanVirginia & John SheaTerrence SheehyRita & David SirignanoEleanor Dallam & Albert SmithRenee & Barry SterlingKaren & Thomas StraehleCarol & Cliff StretmaterCharles B. StuartNoreen Marcus & Jay SushelskyAmy & David SutterChristopher SvehlaJanis & Hobart SwanVictoria & Emory TateMary Ann & Donald ThompsonRosemary ThomsonPaige & Ben TilghmanNancy & August TolzmanCatherine & Stephen ToppingCarolyn & William TownsendSuellen Ferguson & James UlwickLorraine & Robert ValentiHelen Van FleetJean & Frank WagnerRear Admiral Edward K. Walker Jr.Victoria & Mike WallaceJoan & Joseph WarrenPenelope & Thomas WatkinsMichele & John WelchKatelin WellesDave WheelanHugh WhitakerDoris & Thacher WhiteDale Macon & Ed WhitleyGail & Robert WilenskyCindy & Seth WinnickVictoria & William WintererMargaret & Sanford YoungLinda & Artur Zimmer

Boatswain($101 to $249)

Anonymous Kathy & Bruce AbbottCourtney & Wes AbellCarolyn & Samuel AbernethyJames AdamsMissy & Ross AdamsDebbie & Stan AdamsKim Adams & Pam FellPatricia & Mark AdamsCatherine & Allan AdelmanTim AdelmanLottie & Theodore Aepli

Marguerite & Ernest AgnesEvelyn & Michael AherneRonald B. AhlersCynthia & John AigeltingerNancy Aldrich & Wilson GarnerRosemary & George AldrichLeah & Ted AlfriendSandra & Richard AllenJoyce & Mark AllenSusan & William AllenWilliam AllenJudith & Robert AmdurJudith & Richard AndelaJoyce & Charles AndersonKathy & Ward AndersonPamela & Wilhelm AndersonRebecca Symmes & David AndersonDella & Herbert AndrewJohn AndrewDavid T. AndrilRomy & John AniunasNancy & Bernard AnthonyJudy & Chuck AnwayTeresa & Thomas ArcherLori & Mitchell ArdenCaroline & William ArmsSusan & Neil ArmstrongLee ArnoldSandy & John AshworthChris & Mark AtkinsonGloria Paul & Bob AtlasAnne & Daniel AttridgeMartha & Jack AustinBrett AustinJennie & Howard AustinSuzanne & Gordon AveryDebbie & Lawrence AwaltNancy Donavich & Michael BacherHolly Bryan & Mark BackusPhyllis & Lee BaileyCarol & Monty BakerClaudia & Robert BakerCarol & Charles BakerGail & Dean BakerAnn & Robert BakerJonathan BakerGina & Michael BaldwinEsther & Burton BalkinThomas BarbaCarolina & Andrew BarksdaleThe Barnabee FamilyJulie & Sam BarnettMarilyn & Kaye BarrettRoxanne BassettLorraine & Richard BatdorfScott BattonRobin & William BaxterHeidiMarie & Daniel BaySusan & Glenn BeachElena Messina & Richard BeagleRobert BeallKaren & Mike BeckmannRandy Holofcener & Jay BednarskiMary Ann & Thomas BedwellMargaret & Harry BeggLinda & Mark BehmSharon & John BeisserLacey Baradel & Randolph BellBarbara & Alan BellackJill BemisFrancie & Michael BennettSonya & Fred BennettSusan & Harry BensingerAnn & Colin Bentley

Lois & Carville BentonChristian BergEdwin BerkMargaret & Stanley BerkowitzEllen & Dick BernsteinDawn & William BeveridgeLora & David BevirtBetsy & David BeyerGwendolin BeynMargie BickingWilliam BickleyDiane & Paul BidezRegina & Terrence BidnickJeanne-Marie Varga & T.J. BiekerEllen & Edward BilinskiKim & Brian BillickDiane BisanarCarole BishopMargaret BjarnoMaggie & David BlackLouise & David BlackCarole & Marvin BlackWilliam J. BlackCheryl & Roy BladesMary & Joseph BlairRachel & Luke BlankenheimDavid BlankenshipRobert J. BlaschkeRobert BlaseDavid F. BleilPenny & Jim BlockAnn & Jamie BlomeierNicola Kamper & Marc BodianSylvia & Kenneth BoehmerSandra & Norm BogardeGeorge BoggsKeith BoivinElizabeth & Paul BollingerAurelia & Perry BoltonPatricia & James BonanKevin BonderudSuitichai BoonyuenNancy & William BoothSusan & Joe BotkinMary & David BourdonJoyce & John BowdenCynthia & Carl BowerArlene & Stephen BowesKimberly & James BowmasterAlbert BoyceBarbara & Bruce BoydElizabeth BoydLydia & David BoyerJean & John BoyerAngela & Andrew BoyerGrace & Michael BoylanJulie & David BradsherLucas J. BraggDavid BrannanSharon & Bernard BrattonJane & Ira BrecherGeorge BreedenJoyce & Donald BreezeDonald BreimhurstCatherine & Daniel BreitenbachAnn & John BrinkerJacqueline & Samuel BrintonDottie BrittinghamCynthia & Stephen BrockSteve BrookmanJean & David BrooksPat & Howard BrooksJoy Rowe & Mark BroomerMarty & Larry Brosnan

Mary & Stephen BrownNorman BrownChristine Fox & Alan C. BrownKaren & Rodney BrownAnn & David BrownleeRichard BrumbackAnne & David BrunsonJanet & John BrysonVeronica & John BuckReid & Charles BuckleySharon & Joseph BudgeSusannah & Jon BudingtonAlexandra & Richard BuekAndrea & Larry BuelE. Maurice BullDiane Phillips & Gary BullisCharles D. BullockJeanette Rush & Franklin BurchFlorence & Leslie BurdettMary Sue & Philip BurgessKathy & Joseph BurkeAllan R. BurkePamelyn & Raymond BurkeRichard BurkhardLynne & Donald BurkloFrancis BurrowsKathryn & Raymond BusenKristi & Randall BussellJohn ButlerMary & Barclay ButlerJeanette & William BuzzardDale & Steven ByrnesCarol & Paul CaggianoAndrew J. CalandroLarraine & Craig CaldwellNancy & Ronald CallahanBonnie CamarataRobert M. CampbellLisa Marie & Kurt CampbellKathy & Nicholas CanzonaCarolyn & Steven CapalboAlicia CarberryDanuta & Reno CarbonettaElizabeth & Robert CaretCathy & David CareyRoberta & John CareyCarolyn & William CarletonLeila & Bruce CarlsonGeorge M. CarlsonLori Lofts & Bill CarneyMichael CarneyDonna & Terry CarpenterPeggy & Roger CarpenterPatricia & Michael CarperKate & Richard CarraherSusan & Paul CarrollJohn CartyDonna & Robert CasconeKathleen & Skip CasePatricia & Ralph CasePatricia & Joseph CaseyThomas CaseyLynn & Robert CassadyLaura & Steve CassardEdward CassidyMary & Joe CastleberryGail & Frank CavanaughShelly CermakPriscilla & Donald ChamleeCarol & Eric ChandlerMike CharnoskyMaryalice Cheney & Scott GoldmanBruce ChernowJane Dionne & Erick Chiang

Eny & Eric ChristiansonMarie-Noelle & Keith ClampetRuth & Peter ClarkCristina & Brian ClarkRichard ClarkeWilliam ClarkeIris ClarkeWendy & William ClarkeAnn & Robert CleaverCharles ClevelandSamantha & Joe CleverdonElise Butler & Brett Clifford Pru Clendenning & Robert CloppViola & Robert ClumTimothy Cober Jr.Janet & James CobeyJ. William CoferJudi & Steven CohnRos McKenna & Pat ColbertRod ColemanCherie & Frank ColemanMartine & James ColemanCarol & Richard CollierCaprice & Rick ColuccioDebbie & Kenneth ComerJill & Roger ComptonRosemary Sheehan & John ConloguePaige & Kevin ConnellyElaine & Rick ConradJohn ConsalvoCandi Cook & Scott KippJohn CookJane & James CookeRita & John CookeJustine & James CooneyDeborah & Kenelm CoonsNewbie CooperBarbara & Doug CooperDenise & Bill CooperNicole & Jason CopelandStacy & Charles CorbinBarbara & Thomas CorboyEunice & Laurence CordreyCynthia & Vernon CormierJanet & Frank CorneliusMartha & James CosgroveJeff CostantinTom CostelloRonald CouncilAlexis Covey-BrandtBarbara & William CowieSophia & Rob CoxMary & William CoxChris CraftonMary & Robert CraftonBecky & Jasper CraigJulie Kay Thomas & Will CramerLisa & Sean CreamerElizabeth & David CrenshawDonna & Brian CrescenzoSusan & Stephen CreykeKathleen & Charles CricksJon CrislerJane & Fred CrossKathleen & Edwin CrowellCatherine & Thomas CrowleyJoan & Richard CrowleyWilliam CrumpBarbara & Wilbur CrutchleyRon CuffeKevin CummingsClaudia & Curtis CunninghamGretchen & Howard CupplesDiane Garling & Robert Curley

Delores & Richard CurtisGretchen & Timothy CusackJean Baum & Joe CutlerGary CzapskiDaniel DailyRobert DaleyGenevieve & Thomas DalrympleLolli Sherry & Craig DamonThomas D’AngeloJoan & James DarbyJoAnn & Russell DashiellKathy & Richard DautelCatherine & John DavieSandra & Keith DavisElizabeth Petersilia & Mike DavisPeggy Daw & Rick MoodRachel & David DawsonJames W. DayPatricia & Robert DeanMary & J.S. DeanElizabeth Wescott & Michael DeaneKenneth L. DebordeNancy & James DeCarloRuth & Edwin DeckerJacob DeeganKaren & Carey DeeleyJune & Dan DeHartSusan Ferschmann & Ira DeichesCarla & Harry DelanoyEileen Powers & Fred DelavanDeanna & Roger DellLinda & Bob DeLostLois & Robert DeMoyerDelia DennyDavid DensmoreGary DensonMelissa & Michael DescoteauxElyse & Mark DeVriesMargaret Di GiorgioRaymond DicklerAngelina & Pasquale DiDonatoPatricia & Paul DillinghamDebra & James DillonMaureen & Edward DiluchioJanet & Michael DiNapoliDeborah & H.K. DisharoonHelen & Ray DisneyJoanna & Dan DiStasiTellie & George DixonDonald DobsonMarla Keith & Chuck DodgenArlene & William DodsonMary & Jack DoetzerCharles DolbeyJudy & Charles DollJohn DombachThomas DonlanAndreana & George DonohueJohn DoranMarshall A. DotyLinda Szeboo & Paul DoughtyRobert C. DouglasGregory P. DowdPaul DowlingEvelyn & Bernie DoyleBrooke & Jim DrakeDawne & Lawrence DrakeDavid DrautSusan DrexlerBob DrydenSandra Richardson & Hugo DrylandJames DuffElizabeth & Michael DuganAnn & James Dugan

Lynne & Buck DuncanJean & James DuncanShobha & William DuncanJudi & T.P. DunnHenry DunningGussie & Woody DunstanDebbie & Thomas DurelBrian DurfyBeverley & J. Richard DurhamJudith & David DutraJames & Claire D’WolfJane Hruska & Ed DwornikBarbara & Walter DyerBob DymondSteve EarleyJay EberlySusan & Michael EckhartCheryl & Gregory EckmanLinda Foreaker & Lester EckmanRobert EdgellEugenie EdmondsSteven EdrisRichard EdwardsJulie & James EgbertPaula & Ross EichbergRona & Stuart EisenLisa & Steven ElineJennifer & Stephen EllerKathleen & Cary EllisBrandon EllisHelene & David EmsellemAnnette & Craig EnglishDavid EnnisJulie & Anthony EnnisSarah Eno & Ernest BuchananGail & Robert EntwistleBonnie & Eric EpsteinKristin & David ErnstCarol & Donald EschLinda & Maris EshlemanGeorgiana EvansJanet & William EvansMyrical & Bryson EvansSusan & James EvansParry EvansMae & Randy EwellCarole & Richard FalkGeraldine & William FalkSusan & Paul FeildPeter A. FeldmanRoger & Cynthia FeldmanJonathon FenstermacherDorothy & Colin FerenbachJeanne Applegate & Gordon FerrariJohn B. FerruggiaroMarjorie & Joseph FickNancy & Henry FieldLynn Fields & Steve WhiteWilliam H. FieldsJulie & Douglas FieryKaren & Tom FilbertDiana & Carey FillingPatrick FinchamVanessa & Rodger FindiesenRegina Novotny & Charles FindleyGwen & Jay FinkLois & John FinleyCarolyn & Russell FinnPeter FischerTina & Ben FishelPamela & Thomas FisherPatty & John FitzgeraldDawn & John FitzsimmonsJames Fleischer

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34 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 35

Charlotte & Ralph FleischmanBeth & Steve FlickingerBarbara & John FloodRonald FolandRobert W. FoleyThomas FordPeggy & John FordSusan Forlifer & Robert MiddletonReamy Ancarrow & Michael ForsceyLynne ForsmanDarlene & James ForteJohnson FortenbaughElizabeth FouldsBarbara Fox & Ron RolandDiane & R.J. FoxThomas FreedmanMary & Clark FrenchMary & Kevin FretzSusan & Gerald FriedelHerbert Friedman Sr.Andrew FrielDonna & Frank FrohnJoyce & Bradley FrostJohn FrostTim FryJeannie & Gary FryerCarolyn & Larry FunkDorothy & Albert FunkeMary Bee & Myrt GainesBonnie & Hamilton GaleLuisa & Brendan GallagherMatt GambrillTracy Gammell & Sharon O’ConnellJoanna & William GandyCate Fagan & David GantzWilliam J. Ganz IIITracey & Juan GarciaJohn Garland & Steven ChesbroLance GarmsNancy & Allan GarnerElizabeth & Spencer GarrettDavid GastBonnie & Gary GateauWendy & William GauntAllison Gay & Jack McKimJill Khadduri & Thomas GearyBarbara & John GehrigFred C. Geiger, Jr.Debra & James GeigerRui & Martin GeisslerSara GencoPeter H. GenrichCynthia & Dale GentherDenise Zecca George & Steven George

Doreen GetsingerRuth GibbensJennifer & Justin GibbonsJody & Jeffrey GibbsWendy & Kenneth GibsonBrian GibsonRebecca Hammer & Kevin GileadErin & James GillespieRandolph S. GilliesTerri & Bill GilmoreK.C. GimbertChurch GimbertJackie & David GinsburgDonna & Charles GiuffraCharles GlennKelli Hart & Bil GoebellAmanda & Nick GoetzeStacey Whitney & Todd GoetzeLinda & Glenn Goldburn

Peggy & Bradley GoldenMyra S. GoldgeierBethanne & Howard GoldmanSarah Jane & James GollmerAlice & Bob GoodallKatherine & Charles GoodellDonald J. GoodliffeJennifer King & Todd GorskiBarbara & Allan GottschalkBrenda & William GourgeyMartha & Jack GrahamCara & Jay GrahamYvonne & Christopher GrantLisa & Steve GrantConnie & Calvin GrayLinda & Edward GrayMargaret & Richard GreenKathy GreenawayKathryn & Ernest GreeneRichard GreeneKelly & Eric GreensmithMary Elizabeth & Gerald GreenwoodPernille & Nils GreirKathleen & Kenneth GriffinKristin & Richard GrinerMichael GrostCarol & Bernard GroveSharon & Daniel GroveWilliam GuentherHarry GuetermanMargaret & Peter GulottaLaura GwinnPatricia & Robert HaaseChristopher HackmanBeth & Bill HadleyLuciana & Philip HagerMarjorie & Glenn HagganSusan HaggertySusan & Andrew HaitPamela & Joseph HaleTwila & Lane HaleyCarie & Stan HalleAnne & Frederick HallettRobin & John HalsteadBeverly & Martin HalvorsenArnold HammannGlenda & Robert HammellKevin HannaJune & George HansellJane & Walter HansenMary West & Michael HarePamela & Richard HarmanLinda & Kirke HarperLeigh HarringtonMark HarrisAdrienne & Robby HarrisJean HarrisSophie & Mike HarrisonTodd A. HarrisonIngrid & Robert HarveyDenise & Darin HaselhorstPamela & David HassonChrista Haskett & James HaudeBarbara Best & Tim HauseSandra & James HaviceLinda & Paul HeapsJacqueline & Glenn HeathLen HeckwolfMichael D. HeilmanLiliane & Harry HeimpleJohn HeinzDouglas W. HeislerStephanie & Brian HellerCindy & John Heller

Caroline & Jack HelmlyDavid HelselCynthia & Don HemenwayJeannie & Harry HenkelHilary HenryVictoria & George HenzelPam & Mark HerganShelby & Arthur HermanCheryl & Frank HermanceDarcie & Michael HerronSharon & James HertzJoan & Joseph HickeyRobert HigginbothamRuth Higgins & Tim SchwaningerWilliam HildCarol & Richard HillNancy & David HillPaula & Earl HillMarie & King HillDavid H. HillmanBarbara & Richard HillmanPaul HinkleCarole & Richard HiresVirginia & Stephen HladkiPatricia & Peter HodgsonWilliam HoffmeyerDeborah & David HofmannClaudia HogleMark HohenwarterTerrie & Craig HolbergerKaren HolcombMargaret HolderGary HoldredgeJacqueline & Clifford HollandLisa & William HolmesDianne & Duncan HoodLinda & John HooverFrank HopkinsPrudence & Thomas HoppinVirginia Road & Bridge Supply, Inc.Diane Wright-Horowitz & Mitchell Horowitz

Beth & Jeffrey HorstmanLogan & Willard HottleSusan & Ray HoughErin & Chris HouptLucinda & Ardell HoveskelandCarla & Peter HowellAmelia & Grant HowertonJohn HubbardMargaret & Charles HudlerAmanda & Richard HudsonBarbara & James HuffDuff HughesMary Ann Schindler & Martin Hughes

Marilyn & David HughesEffie & Eric HughesValerie & John HughesMelissa & Charles HulihanJanice & Michael HullKatie & John HunnicuttMary Fisher & Gerald HunterAlicia HuttersEllen & Jeffrey HuvelleJonathan H. HydeVince IatestaJohn IhnatConnie & Bill IlerNancy & James IrvineSusan & James IrwinGail & Dennis JackmanFlorence & Clifton JacksonCarol & John Jackson

Keith JacksonLaura JacobsenKathryn JacobsonBonnie & Edwin JamesDonald R. James, Sr.Kristine & Michael JampelMartha & Joe JanneyDebi & Dennis JansmaBenjamin A. JatlowDonna & Marc JaySarah & Bud JenkinsKim & Rob JeromeAnn & Alex JervisJoanne & Charles JesilionisByron JohnSusan & Charles JohnsonKaren & Clark JohnsonDiane & Mike JohnsonHolly & Bruce JohnsonAntrium JonesToni & Glenn JonesEmilie & Maulik JoshiChris KadyszewskiJay KalinMary & William KalisMary & Thomas KaltzCynthia & David KammannSusan KaneBeth & John KaplanPaul KaplanShawn KaplanPaula & James KarrMichelle & Dan KastorSharon & Douglas KatzKevin KavanaghFern & Daniel KecmanFred KeerRosemary Tripp & Peter KellerJoe KelleyMary & Hall KelloggHelen & Mark KelloggMichele & Robert KellyChris & Victor KellyKimberly & Randolph KellyJoseph & Mary KempfErin & Scott KenleySally & Stephen KentDebra & James KerinsKatrina & Anthony KernNicole Sarett & Al KettellPaige & John KevillSusan & Stuart KiehneCarol KilbournNancy & John KimberlyLloyd KinchEloise & Lee KingSandra & Clarence KingEdward Kingman, Jr.Mary & Irwin KirschLori & Robert KirshnerMargit & Maurice KleinHerman KlingCyndy & Harold KlingerJacqueline & Edward KnightTeresa & Martin KnottEmilie Knud-HansenKathleen & Daniel KochJohn KocherJoseph KoehlerBill KoernerDiane & William KoffenbergerSusan & Barry KohJeremy KohlerChristine & Charles Kohls

Linda & Gary KohutBluette Blinoff & Laurie KolbeinsThomas KonopkaLinda Sue & Peter KooleCarol & George KoolhofBarbara & Marty KoomanSusan & Michael KopenLaurel & Carl KoziolJulia & Brian KozyPatricia & Carl KramerStuart KramerKaren & William KranzerJulia & Hans KrebsGeorge KreshockMichael R. KrissoffFreda & Jay KrosnickGeorge KrumbhaarNaomi & Turner KurzwegSharan & Melvin KushnerLauren & Thomas LaBrieMichael LagoeyJack L. LahrKay & William LambertJudy & Thomas LampleyPatricia & George LancasterLeslie & Jack LandersShirley & Ray LandonDeirdre & Wes LangDiane & Howard LappAnne & Curtis LargeRobert LaszewskiJennifer & Joe LaunBarbara & William LaVeckKaren & Thomas LawlerEllen Maldonado & Robert LawrenceMargaret & Trevor LayneAudrey & Gerald LazarusJacqueline & Robert LeachShirley Leaf-BealefeldCatherine & Robert LearyTracy & Maurice LeBlonMargot & Robert LeCompteCheryl & John LecourtDarren LeemanJean & Dale LegalInge & Jack LeggRollin & Thomas LeitchSusan & Charles LenfestKatherine Swanson & Phil LepantolTed LepichRose & Thomas LessBarbara & Robert LevinsLucie & John LevyFrancine & Paul LevyLaurie & John LewisMarcia & Thomas LewisCarol & Richard LichtySimma & Ronald LiebmanJoanne & William LinaberrySherry & Bob LinkousRoland & DianeJohn LockeSudler LoflandAngie Waseilewski & Gordon LongGermaine & Thomas LouisCharles & Dorothy LowKristina & Gregory LowellChristine & Kurt LowellHelena & Horace LowmanStacey & Greg LubarHeather & Andrew LubellDiane & Marshall LucasPamela & Gary LucasJoan Horn & Frank Lundin

Marina & George LupinacciDiane & Brendon LusbyShirley & James LustekNancy & Steve LustigPamela & Dave LutzFrances & Thomas LydonJohn LynchAmy Hale & Jack LynnVicki & David LyonDeborah & Edward LyonsVelma & Earl MacBrideCynthia & Duncan MacDonaldMatt MadairyJoan Sisk & Boyd MadaryMidge & Michael MaddenHugh MahaffyMichael MahlchicKenneth MaidenNorah & Russ MailVernon MalinMary V. MalkusMark MaloneyAndrea & Joseph ManchesterDebi & Joel ManessKenneth ManganoDebra & Christopher ManginDebra Kennedy & Jamey MangusVicki & Joseph ManningKate MansfieldSally & Andrew MarchbankGail & Michael MarcusPatty Bennett & Mark MarinoLeslie & Gregory MarshBeverley & Stanley MartinBrenda & Sperling MartinElizabeth & Dennis MartinJackie & John MartinLouis MartinKirsten & David MartinLenore & Donald MartinNoreen & Anthony MartinPatricia & Charles MartinMarie & Peter MartinezAntonio MartinezSandra & John MastermanJennifer & Sean MatthewsKyle MatthewsGary MatthewsCarolyn & Robert MattinglyKathryn & Richard MattisonClaire & Thomas MatzzieJames H. MaughamLinda & Raymond MauleCourtney & Scott MauryCynthia & Robert MaxErnest MayMahal & John MayCarrie & Will McAteerLisa McCarthyLindsay & Sean McCarthyCaron & Ross McCauslandLynn McClaskeyDavid M. McClatchyMichael McCluskeyCindy Moran & Scott McDonaldKenneth McDonaldMargaret McDonald & Russell SchuhJean & Donald McDougallMichelle & Louis McFaddenPatrice & Eamonn McGeadyFrank McGowanJohn & Kathleen McGrathBonnie & Michael McGurnHala & Mark McIver

Deborah & James McKeeFrancis McKeeRichard McKenzieMeg & James MclaneLinda & John McMullenLiz Yamashita & Ed McNiffPamela & Charles McPhersonDenise & Michael McSheaMary & John McWilliamsJoanne & Robert MeadBob MeadowsTina & Michael MeeganJudy MeehanRosemary & Jon MeekCatherine & David MeloyAlvin MeltzerJohn E. MenardSandra & Milton MencheyBarbara & Stephen MerchantLiz & Barry MeredithCaren & Phillip MerrickNancy MerrillJane & Henry MerrittJohn MerrymanDiane & Edmund MiareckiSue & Paul MikulskiBarbara & William MillarSharon & Charles MillerCorina & Donald MillerAlexis & Eric MillerDenise Miller & Allison MillerJoan & Alfred MillerJohn MillerLynette & Richard MillerMia & David MillerMr. & Mrs. Edward M. MillerTim MillerPaulette & Manny MillerElliott MilsteinGeri Nicholson & Doug MinionMaryann & Michael MitchellSandra & Martin MitchellDr. & Mrs. Stephen R. MitchellLiz & Richard MontanerMike MooreLaura Strychalski & David MorenoCarol & James MorrisonColleen & Chad MorrisonBruce MorseClaudine & Geren MortensenKeith MortensenLeslye & Frank MosierWesley MoyKellie & Kevin MuellerMartha & Robert MuellerJill & Bruce MulfordRobert MullarkyGrigg Mullen & Brian RichardsonIrene Valliant & Bobby MullerJoan Weston-Muller & James MullerTed MundyCynthia & Westbrook MurphyJohn MurrayChris & John MurrayKerry MuseNancy & Jeff MyersJoshua NaleLois & David NanceKathleen & John NashMitch NathansonKatherine & John NeateSusan & John NeelyPaul NelsonSallie Findlay & Gene Nelson

Sandy & John NesbittBetty Levine & Alan NeustadtlEugenia & Mark NewbergAndy NewmanWilliam NicholsNancy & Fred NicholsPaula NicolaiMaury NieburWendy & Dale NielsonAnna & Robbin NighswanderElaine Remmers & Mark NisongerKathryn & Allan NobleJoan & David NorthLaura & John NorthropJohn NovakAlfred NunanDouglas O’BrienMichelle & John O’ConnorStefani & David O’DeaJudith Grass & Michael O’DellAndrea & Mike OglineMary & Thomas OkersonJimmie & William OldNancy & John OrzechowskiMichael O’SheaMichael OsmanColleen & Robert OstergaardLou OswaldJulia & Stephen OuthwaiteLynn Klappich & Jim OvertonHannah & William OwenJanet & George OwensJaye & Marshall OwingsGail & Dorsey OwingsMaryAlice & Mark PaciousRocco PalaiaBrian PalmerJohn ParisDorothy & Fred ParkerVicky & Jim ParkinNancy & William ParnellNancy & John ParsonsJohn PasleyTerry & William PassanoRobert PastranaMarlene & John PatmoreBarbara & Arthur PattersonBylle & Arthur PattersonCharlotte & Craig PattersonJennifer & Donald PaulCalvin PayneSharon & Larry PazCarole & John PeacockJohn W. PecicRonald Peck, Jr.John C. PeircePage & Richard PelliconiVerna & Robert PelrineRobin PenderSuzy & Nuno PereiraBetty & Stephen PerloffShirley & Kenneth PerrinCarmen PerryBecky & Andreas PeterGretchen & Ray PetersLee PhillipsDonald PhillipsKathleen & Clyde PhillipsKim & Ed PiaseckiRichard PiattMargaret & Roger PickallJoanne & Thomas PietrociniAlan PikeJanice & Claude Pinkerton

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36 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 37

Laura & Jack PintoBetsey & Richard PisciottaSue & Mike PitchfordPam & Dennis PittClaire & Charles PittmanLois & Robert PlankJanet & Steven PlewesDonna & Thomas PoindexterDiane & Bruce PollockSusan & Benjamin PontanoAnn & William PootNeven PopovicDana & Jim PospisilJoseph PottsPatricia & John PotvinLaurel & Charles PowersHelen & John PratherDana PrattKerry & Jeff ProbstMichael ProffittCatherine ProuseSarah & John PughMarilyn & Ronald PughDonna & Robert PulloMaureen & James RadtkeStephanie Hoffman & Ben RainarEllen RajacichDaniel RamiaTraci & Peter RamseyMalcolm RandolphBarbara & Donovan RankinCarole R. RatcliffeMartha ReadRita & Robert ReavesJudith RedlawskJane & Charles ReedGena & Christopher ReedDaphne & Philip ReeseLinda & Don RegenhardtAnnalee & Rick RegensburgDavid ReichardtWilliam ReichmanJeannie & Daryl ReinkePenelope & David RenollLisa & Rhone ReschNancy & William ReyboldCarol & Don ReynoldsMichael RhodesLucy & George RichardsRuss RichardsonKathryn & William RichardsonKaren & Ron RickettsKelly & Rob RidgewayWilliam RidgwayJoAnn Kulesza & Bill RiggsShelly & Tom RileyJoyce & Kenneth RinehartTim RingHarriett & Charles RiterBirgit & Albert RobbertAnne RobsonErik RochardSheila & Charles RockholtChris Kraft & Milton RodriguezMark H. RoesnerLaurie & Ken RoggNancy & Randolph RoggeSusan & Paul RohrkemperMeg & Peter RosanTanner & Ross RoseKimberly & Anthony RoseEileen & Richard RosenthalHoward Roskosky Jr.Beth & Scott Ross

Evelyn Rossbach & Allen AultAnn & Kimber RossworkSarah & Daniel RothermelAaron RouhiSarah & Mike RovezziCarolyn Rugg & Larry RovinEllen Moore & Richard RoweGerald RueSteve RunalsMr. & Mrs. Clarence J. Ruppert IVMarcia & Robert RussellNancy RybickiMr. & Mrs. Joseph SabolEllen & Carl SalsburyIan SandersonSue & David SandowichLyn & Jerry SandsMichelle & Richard SangerJustina & George SapnaNancy & George SarochSusan & Murray SarubinCourtney & James SasseMolly & Brett SausePatricia & George SavaniJim SaxtonJim & Lisa ScaggsJack SchaferJean & Michael SchendelEllen & Thomas SchillerAnn & Walter SchlemmerWilliam SchmidtCharles SchneiderJoyce & Philip SchneiderSusan & Philip SchneringCarol & Frederick SchoberMarietta SchreiberBetsy & Alan SchreitmuellerPatricia & Rodney SchroederBeth SchuckerTom SchuergerLinda & Robert SchuerholzBetsy & Dale SchulzJeff SchumackSusan & John SchumpertMargaret & Richard SchusterKatharine & Charles SchuttRobin & Richard ScofieldAmy & Robert SeamanCarol & Leigh SeaverWilliam SeemannSusan & Earl SegalRichard L. SegermarkMary & David SegermarkElizabeth & John SeidelJohn SeidelLisa & David SembrotVivian Stahl & Robert SenseneyNorma & William ServiceLinda Settle & Frank ElwardKathleen & Eugene SeverensCynthia & Steve ShaferShirlyn Shafer & Keith GouldJosephine & Wayne ShanerCarolyn & Donald ShanksJoyce & Duke ShannahanGita Maitra & Patrick ShannonSusan & Robert ShapiroLinda & Harry ShapiroMary & Robert SharpStephen SharpeJo & Richard ShawLouise & Herbert ShearinSusan & John SheldrakeJohn Shields

David R. ShinkfieldChristine & Robert ShippenNancy ShookSue ShortallMargot ShriverSherrye & Michael ShuppThor SigvaldasonJulie & Joe SilerLinda & William SilvaColleen Moran & Eric SilvaLatrisha & Steven SimmingerMrs. Katherine R. SimpsonKim & Shaye SimsThelma & Ellwood SinskyJulia & Tom SitzmannBeverly & Robert SkalkowskiKathleen & Richard SkinnerWilliam SlaterPeggy & T.C. SlatteryRobert SlawsonKelly & Scott SlocumEileen & David SmackAndy & Ed SmithMyrna & Eugene SmithMarie & Barry SmithCarolyn & John SmithDel SmithNancy & Stewart SmithValerie & Joseph SmithDouglas SmithSusan & Kurt SmithIrina & Angus SmithCary & Richard SmithsonMary & Richard SnowSusan & Jim SnyderElaine & Peter SoltaniKyle SolteszNancy & Bill SomersAnn & Marc SonnenfeldCourtney & Tom SpanglerFran & Henry SpectorKaran & Jeffrey SpeicherMary & Guy SpurryRonald StainesKarl StambaughC. William StammLisa & Lee StanleyBrenda & James StansburyTed StaplesGretchen & William StarlingMary & Frank StaussSusan & Marshall SteeleRachelle & Kevin StefanikMarianne & John StefanoDarlene & Thomas StegMaureen & Joseph StehrRobin Allison & Mark SteinleinSharon & Donald SteinwachsSharon & Robert StelmaszekCynthia & Robert StevensonMargaretta & Joseph StewartSigrid & William StilesAudrey & Christopher StinePenny & Peter StockettAmy Stone & Billy DunnJo Ann StoreyMargaret & William StottHelene StrassmanMarian & Thomas StrattonAntoinette & Gregory StrauchStacey & David StrayerHarold K. StreetLouise & John StrokeJosephine & John Stumpf

Debra Leitch & William SuchorskyAntoinette & Mark SullivanRay Sullivan & Vijay RamrajDavid SunJulia Susman & Owen WormserGail Cunningham & David SutphenJoyce & Martin SuydamJill & John SvahnJohn SvehlaRobbie & Gregory SvobodaRobert M. SwarmMarjorie & Kenneth SwiecickiRoxane Henke & Ronald SymenskiLori Burkhart & Mario TaischKaren & James TalbottRussell TalleyMarla & Robert TanenbaumNancy & Carl TankersleyCarolyn & William TaylorBarbara & David TaylorHeidi & Bryan TeagueLarry TepperGail & John TerzanoPatricia & Andrew TerzesDeborah & Matthew TessierShirley & Peter ThatcherRobert ThomasJennifer Thompson & Andrew Slavinkas

Ann & Peter ThorntonJill & Merle ThorpePatricia & Richard ThorpeElizabeth & Ferdinand ThunClarence TignorChristy TinnesMarilyn D. TitleRichard TobeyByron TobinJohn ToddSuzanne & Robert ToddPolly & Fred TogniAnn & Richard TomlinsonMary Walrath & Edward TooleMaureen & William TorgersonSara & Stig TorstensonPatricia & Robert TowsleyMartha & Lee TrammellAndrea & Robert TraylorJohn TreselerDavid TrostleMary Louise Troy & Frederick KaiserCordelia & Luther TuckerNadine & Richard TullMaureen & Richard TurmanMark TurnerNani & David TurnerTerry & Jeff TurnerHoratio TurnerSallie & Tim TwinamIngrid & Stephen TylerSheila & Lawrence TylerPatricia Hanlon & Bill TylorJohn UelmenVeronique Bugnion & Andy UlakTherese & James UlmerApril & Gregory UmlaufMary & John UnkovicJanet & Michael UptonKimberly & Anthony ValerioJoann & James ValliantIrene & Robert ValliantPaul Van CleveMary & Judson Van DervortBettie & Klaas van Esselstyn

Mary & Bobby Van FossanSara & Yann van GeertruydenRosamond & Louis Van HoutenMaria & Lambertus Van ZelstAmy & Glenn VanceBeth & Peter VandeGeijnPierre Viger & Michael RussellLiv & Mike ViolettePatti & Frank VisichPaula & Dennis VitoJohn von SendenJean & Steve WaagboRhonda & Michael WadeSandra & Thomas WadsworthLeslie & Ryan WagnerGinny & Rich WagnerDavid C. WagnerJean & Don WagnerMartha WagnerRandy Wagner & Victor MalanowskiDarlene & Donald WakefieldTheresa & Michael WaldenCarol Hanson & Dennis WallaceThe Waller FamilySarah & Ben WalrathLynn & Joe WalshMargot Pemberton & William WaltherGuy WaltonLynda & Greg WanamakerMissy & Seth WarfieldBryan Warman, Jr.Sandy & Paul WarnerMichelle Taylor& Travis WarrenMichael WashJim WashburnCece & Robert WatersMeredith & John WattersDavid WaughRussell D. WeaverAnn & Charles WebbMary Ellen & Steve WeberBruce WeddleLauren & Dale WeemsReneé & Kevin WeilerMarilyn & Hal WeinerGinger & Jeff WeingartenKelly Reed & Howard WeissArlene & Ronald WeitzmanPeter WellingMelinda & Kendall WellmanGary L. WellsPhyllis WellsGina & Michael WernerNancy & Robin WesstromWendy & Timothy WestTeresa & Kent WestbrookJonathan WestbrookJane & John WetlauferSusan & Gregory WhalenKate WhalenSharon & Richard WheedenMargaret & William WheelerSandra & Steve WhelanDorothy & Donald WhitcombPam & Jan WhiteKelly & Christopher WhiteheadPatricia & Michael WhitehillSuzanne & William WhitneyJean Mercer & Mike WickKarol & David WickerJeff WightmanJ. Peter WildeGuenther WilhelmLinda & Bob Wilkens

Frances & Scott WilliamsJohn WilliamsLiz & Ian WilliamsAlicia & John WilmotElaine & Victor WilrekerMary & Robert WilsonDavid WilsonPam & Ernie WilsonGeorge WilsonDenise & Thomas WiltshireValerie Wimer-Tudan & Richard Tudan

Deborah & Bertram WinchesterMarcia & Carlyle WindleyBeverly & Joseph WinterscheidShirley & Walt WiseFrancesca & Douglas WisemanSusan & William WissmanLilyan & Robert WittmanCort WizorekMary & John WolfeFran & John WolfeAndrea & Todd WoltersAnn & Lawrence WoodRoo WoodKristin & Todd WoodenMargaret & Samuel WoodsideLindsay & Michael WoodwardChuck WoodworthVal & Al WoodworthJean & Jim WortmanSally Lohman & Thomas WoyLinda & Willie WrightWilliam WrightEverette WrotenBarbara & Lane WrothArlene & George YaffeJon E. YankeMarie & Michael YatesSabrenia & Craig YohnElizabeth & Timothy YostCindy & Mike YoungKay & Michael YoungNancy & Larry YoungArlene & George ZachmannSheryl & Russell ZappalaJoanne & Michael ZenkerJanet & Henry ZerhusenCatherine & Greg ZimmermanCaroline ZnaniecSharon & Ed ZondagHoward A. Zwemer

Corporate, Foundation & Government SupportAcademy for Lifelong

Learning at CBMMAir Products FoundationAmerican Cruise Lines, Inc.Annapolis Sailing SchoolAntique & Classic Boat Society,

Chesapeake Bay ChapterApplied Computer SystemsAvon-Dixon Agency, Inc.Awful Arthur’s Seafood CompanyThe Benevity Community Impact FundBessemer TrustBetterton Community Development Corporation

BJ’s Wholesale ClubBryan Brothers Foundation

The Ann & Frank Cahouet FoundationCarla Massoni GalleryCarpenter Street SaloonCasey Family FoundationChesapeake MediaChesapeake Supply & Equipment Co.Choptank Community Health System, Inc.Chubb & SonC-JAM Yacht SalesClassic Yacht Restoration Guild, Inc.Coastal Brewing Co. LLCComfort KeepersCrab Claw Restaurant, Inc.Cruising Club of AmericaCrystal TrustDelaware River Chapter Traditional Small Craft AssociationDiscovery Tours, LLCDock Street FoundationDover Rent-AllEastern Shore Heritage, Inc.Eastern Shore Tents & EventsEaston Optical, LLCEaston UtilitiesEwing Dietz Fountain & Kaludis, PAExelon/Constellation Energy United Way Campaign

ExxonMobil Foundation, Inc.Fairfield Inn & Suites EastonFarvue FoundationFidelity Charitable Gift FundFirst Media Radio WCEI WINXFoxy’s Marina BarGarden & Garnish, Inc.GE FoundationGoetze’s Candy Co., Inc.Gourmet by the BayGraul’s MarketGuilford & CompanyGuyette & DeeterHair O' the Dog Wine & SpiritsHambleton InnHartge Yacht Yard, Inc.Higgins & Spencer, Inc.Holly Hill FarmsIBM CorporationJean McHale DesignJohnson & Johnson Matching Gifts Program

Johnson Logging CompanyJustGiveKowa Pharmaceutical AmericaLaurel Creek Womens Golf Assoc.Llandaff Family FoundationThe Lumber YardLyon Distilling CompanyMacy’s/Bloomingdale’s FoundationMarcia Brady Tucker FoundationMaryland Heritage Areas AuthorityMaryland State Arts CouncilMaryland State Department ofEducation-SAI

McDonald’s, Inc.McHale & McHale LandscapeDesign, Inc.

Mears Point MarinaMerriewold Trust of the Mid-ShoreCommunity Foundation

Merrill Family Foundation, Inc.Mid-Shore Community FoundationMiles River Yacht Club FoundationModel Guild at CBMMModel Sailing Club of the CBMMMorgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley Smith BarneyNational Philanthropic TrustNetwork For GoodNM Morris Family FoundationNor’ Easter FoundationNorman & Florence Brody Family Foundation

Norman G. Owens FoundationOcean Cruising Club of

the ChesapeakePaul M. Jones Lumber Co.Paulsboro Education Assn.PeachBlossoms EventsPerfection Properties, Inc.The Pew Charitable TrustsPNC Institutional Investments Fund for Charitable GivingPoint Lookout Lighthouse Preservation Society

Ravenal FoundationRaymond James Charitable Endowment Fund

Richard and Virginia DonohoePooled Income Fund

The Frederick W. Richmond Foundation, Inc.

Ride Entertainment SystemsRings and ThingsRising TideRobb & Elizabeth Tyler FoundationRobert Morris InnRobert Wood Johnson FoundationRoland Enterprises LLCThe Ross FoundationSailing Club of the ChesapeakeSan Domingo Fair Trade/SinfulSchwab Charitable FundSchluderberg Foundation, Inc.Sherwood of SalisburySt. Michaels Art LeagueStar DemocratThe Struthers Family FoundationT. Rowe Price Foundation, Inc.

Matching Gift ProgramThe Talbot BankTalbot County Arts Council, Inc.Talbot County Free LibraryTalbot Watermen’s AssociationTexas Instruments FoundationTheo B. Bean Foundation, Inc.Thomas H. Hamilton Foundation, Inc.Tidewater InnTidewater Vacations, Inc.Town Dock RestaurantTri-Gas & Oil Co., Inc.Union United Methodist ChurchVan Strum FoundationVanguard Charitable

Endowment ProgramWallace Genetic FoundationWhat’s Up? MediaWiley Rein LLPWindjammers of the ChesapeakeWRNR RadioWye Financial & Trust

YourCause LLC

Bequests & TrustsThe Estate of C. Thomas Clagett, Jr.The Estate of Derek WeatherlyThe Estate of Ellen L. Solum

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38 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 39

Deeds of GiftSalutation 5Marla & Charles AbellChristopher C. AckersChris Agharabi & Jennifer GibsonPeter D. AlbertsenThomas AleLarry & Kathryn AllenRoss ArnettDawn AtwaterRobert & Juanita BakerJames BaldwinChris BarnhartDaniel BeckerWilliam BiggsEdward T. BluntKathy & David BodeySusan & Herbert BohakerRichard BowdersKathleen & Michael BradishTaffy & Bob BrightSigne BrousseauJoanne BrownTimothy BrownNancy Brown BurkheimerWalter BurmeisterBetty Jane & Peter CarrollJenny & Bunky ChanceAnn & Richard ClaytonBryan CoeWilliam CooperJanet CreeFamily of Mark CustisKaren Ann DavisTrudy & William DayRobert de GastRuth & Walt DominickRobin & Andrew DonaldDavid DonorSteve EisenacherJohn EllisonConstance ElsbergHerman C. Engel, Jr.Margo EppardRichard J. Ewing Jr.Beth FeathermanKathi FergusonRob FinninKaren & Michael FisherJan FlahertySusan & Ron FortucciVickie & Chuck GartsideDagmar & Albert GipeNiko V. GjajaRandy K. GlantzJames M. GoschaJanet & Russ GrangerConsuelo GrasEdwin J. HaackPaul D. HainesConnie Hare & Gary GreenblattLinda Miller & Michael HayesGeorge HeffnerParmalle C. HersheyNadine & Duane HilghmanPat & Robert HinkelPaul S. HlavinkaMari Arias & Roger HommelSamuel G. HopkinsWade F. HornFamily of Jason Blades HrynkoNancy J. HubbellEric P. Jabs

James B. JohnstonPat & Larry JonesWalter E. JonesCandy & Barney KastelMichael KehehanWilliam KellyJames KellyIrvin J. KennerKenneth KentBreene M. KerrMarcia P. KirbyBasia & James KoserRobert LarsenMark E. LeesRichard LenskeMelvin LessingDavid J. LewisRoger & Cynthia LopataKira LuedersLisa & Barry LundyJames & Peggy LylesElizabeth C. LymanDonald L. LynamDee & Keith LyonEric Paul MarshMichael MarshallRobert E. MartinStan MatheyPhilip MatroneValerie MazurDavy McCallBette & John McCarronSonia R. McCarthyLoke McConnellSamuel McGuireCol. John D. McKayeJohn P. McKimRichard MichaelFamily of Kohnyae Leichelle MilesThomas MilkeMichael F. MillerFamily of Aviod T. MooreMichael MoranLesley & Bill MoyerBruce D. MulveyStephen P. MurphyJoAnn & Roy MyersB.J. NorwoodRobin Nuskind & Steven Oder Oliver Conney TrustRobert & Edna OwenPatrick M. PageBarbara J. ParkJerome PengellyGeorge PhillipsChristopher PlayerFamily of Trey PotterRaymond V. ProsserKenny PuseyRichard RawlingsDebbie RenshawNathan E. ReyboldJohn RichmanBrooke RickettsFrancis J. RuzickaBarbara & James RybackiJohn G. SampsonMary Pat & Robert SauerkampRichard SchaufflerSteven L. SchievelbeinRussell A. SchillingKellee & Jason SchmidtThomas P. SchmidtPaul D. Schweizer

Pat & Kirby ScottBertel SebergCheryle & Brent ShafferAndrea ShoenerJay ShoreJames SimonsonFerdinand H. Sinclair, 3rdJeffrey SisitskyBarbara & Sidney SmithDavid & Cynthia SmithKevin G. SmithRobert SmithDarlene & Jeffrey SpenceRosemary & Lloyd StackhouseRobert L. Stallings, Jr.Linda & Tim StanbaughFamily of Jonathon StorchDennis A. StueckerThomas H. SwanBill and Elizabeth SwartzNancy M. SweetWilliam SwiftAnthony J. ThomasFamily of Kasai ThompsonRichard H. TolbertFamily of Trinity Zya TurnageFrank TylerWilliam E. Vance Jr.Cassandra VanhooserSusan WasilewskiW. PerryJack WennerstenTamara & Frank WilkinsonArlen F. WinterbottomLinda & William WolfRoxanne & William WoodVeronica Haggart & Charles WorkSharon & Lance YatemanRobert YoungEd ZadjuraHarold Zahl

Honoring GiftsWe congratulate the honorees listed in bold and thank our donors for their thoughtful tribute gifts:

In Honor of Robert S. BarrettTheo B. Bean Foundation, Inc.

Memorial GiftsWe express our deepest sympathy and sincere appreciation for the gifts made in memory of the loved ones indicated in bold:

In Memory of Jerry PeekGuilford & CompanyLaurel Creek Womens Golf Assoc.Paulsboro Education Assoc.

In Memory of William PriceThe Model Guild at CBMM

New Life MembersGeorge E. CrowderArthur A. HutchinsFrank C. MarshallMichael D. ParrellHelen M. VanFleet

Sustaining MembersDrew AllowayH. Lawrence ClarkAlan R. GriffithConrad NelsonGlenn D. OrmeMark E. Solomons

Benefactor MembersRide Entertainment SystemsJ. M. BahrenburgMarion W. BevardJohn A. BoothMichael B. BracyJoseph E. CassonSam ChamberlainDeborah L. DaffinThomas B. DeenDixon L. DuffettGary EnrightFrederick C. FiechterBenjamin T. FranaPaul E. FrickPeter H. FriedmanCharles S. GarberHarley GatesRandle GoetzeRobert D. HillenbrandGordon A. HughesDiane S. HumphreyM. F. IretonJoseph IrrJohn P. JohnsonRichard MillerNels OlsonWilliam D. PeaseDonald A. PuseyJohn C. QuandtLee P. RenoJohn A. SeifarthTheodora ShelorWilliam StockmanJames A. SymeC. E. TateGeorge F. WestEd WhitleyRaymond J. WiacekRobert T. WilliamsDavis H. WoodArtur Zimmer

CBMM works hard to be as accurate as possible in compiling information for the Annual Report. If there are any errors or missing information, please contact Development Manager Jen Matthews at 410-745-4949 or [email protected].

Gifts to the Collection

CBMM's impressive collection of Bay-related artifacts and archival material depends in large part on the generosity of individuals. This past year we received 111 objects, 1,453 photographs, five manuscript collections, two oral histories, and 88 volumes for the Library. We are enormously grateful to the donors who contributed to CBMM's collection during the past year. Highlights include:

Original wheel, 34” diameter, with eight spokes and a drum for rope steering, from the 1920 buyboat Winnie Estelle. Gift of Sherri & Garrison Johns.

Chesapeake Bay sailing log canoe Flying Cloud, built in 1932 by John B. Harrison on Tilghman Island. Flying Cloud is maintained in sailing condition and continues to compete, under CBMM's burgee in log canoe races. Also given were an early crew photograph and a banner bearing the boat’s name. Gift of Alan A. Noble and John Noble.

Trailboards from the skipjack Laura M. Evans, made by crew member R. Doerflein, c. 1970, and other tools, licenses, photographs, and equipment from the skipjacks Laura M. Evans and Minnie V., boats formerly owned by the donor. Also records of the Evans Boat Yard in Grasonville, formerly owned by the donor’s family. Gift of Irvin O. Drummer

"Map of the Baltimore, Chesapeake and Atlantic Railway Company and Maryland, Delaware and Virginia Railway Company,” lithograph printed by D.P. Barnett, 1911. Gift of Peter D. Albertson

182 color 35mm slides of Chesapeake Bay vessels and harbors taken by pro-fessional photographer David Q. Scott, whose work was published in Skipper, Wooden Boat, Yachting, Small Boat Journal. Gift of Joanne S. Scott

Yacht racing trophy: Silver Revere bowl on double base, “Richard Randall Perpetual Memorial Trophy awarded to the Windjammers of the Chesapeake” along with a burgee, publications, and other items from Windjammers of the Chesapeake, a sailing association that once sponsored skipjack races at the Chesapeake Appreciation Days. Gift of Windjammers of the Chesapeake, Leah Alfriend, P/C.

Recorded oral history with photojournalist and writer Robert de Gast, known for his books The Oystermen of the Chesapeake and Lighthouses of the Chesapeake.

CBMM is grateful to the following friends who donated a variety of items in the past year, including artifacts, maps, tools, watercraft, photographs, books, manuscripts, oral history, and other Chesapeake Bay-related items:

Peter D. AlbertsonWilliam BiggsEd BluntNancy Brown BurkheimerMarc CastelliCrawford’s Nautical BooksRobert de GastWalter F. Dominick, Jr.Irvin O. Drummer, Jr.Florence Margo EppardDavid W. GuthDavid C. Hazen

Sherri & Garrison JohnsIrvin John KennerBreene M. KerrMarcia KirbyMariana LesherDavy McCallJeffrey MessingAlan A. NobleJohn NobleDouglas “Turkle” NorthBarbara Younkin Jump ParkKay & Robert Perkins

Ellen & Norman PlummerLeslie PriceJoanne S. ScottEric Silva & Colleen MoranSteamship Historical Society of AmericaRené & Tom StevensonPaul WarnerJack WennerstenWindjammers of the Chesapeake, Leah Alfriend, P/C

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40 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 41

Glory AikenJohn AikenBrooke AlexanderRalph AlexanderEd AlvaradoMolly AndersonCarol ArmstrongJack AustinMartha AustinSam BarnettCharlie BarrancoDavid BodeyDan BoehlPaul BollingerKathy Bosin Barbara BoydBruce BoydMarti BremerDave BrooksAudrey BrownHarry BurtonIrene CancioTom CarlsonPaul CarrollSusan CarrollPatti CaseRalph CaseCreston CathcartRoger ClarkGary ClarkeLucy ClarkeRuss CochranDoug CollisonMike CorlissGene DankewiczJack DavisBill DayRalph DeMarcoAnn DeMartWill DennehyLloyd DevigneElaine DickinsonJennifer DindingerPaula DoyleDavid DrautJames DraytonJennifer DurkinSteve ElgersmaMorris EllisonRichard FoaPeggy FordRon FortucciGloria FreihageJerry FriedmanRoger GalvinKathy GambrillKurt GantFrank Garahan

Gary GeffkenLorraine GlassNancy GoodingDon GoodliffeRobin GordonJack GrayNick GreenDenis GreeneLauren GreerBernie GroveJim HarveyNancy HarveyJohn HawkinsonJohn HendersonNancy HendersonMary Beth HernandezIrv HetheringtonBob HinkelTom HollingsheadBruce HollyJane HollyGeoff HolmesBill HoughLeslie HowellsTom HuddlestonAnne HughesJoe IrrFlorence JacksonJohn JalladeMert JarboeCurtis JohnsCarol KilbournMarcia KirbyRick KubaAl KubeluisBozena LamparskaMike LandauPam LandryRon LawAnnabel LesherRon LesherBob LonerganGene LopezDot LowDuane LundahlMichael MabeBoyd MadaryKate MansfieldJohn MarrahJohnny MarrahDonald MartinMarie MartinBob MasonRaymond MauleJulie McCahillMac McConnellJeff MessingBart Michelson

Carol MichelsonCheryl MillerLyn MisiaszekPeter MisiaszekLin MoellerDonna MoranBridget MossDanny MossEleanor MurphySteve MurphyGary NylanderDon ParksMarshall PattersonCarl PerglerRandolph PerryBob PetizonJane PhelanJay PhillipsEllen PlummerNorman PlummerCraig PostlewaitMary Ann RayPaul RayBarbara ReisertTom RodgersNeil RossStephanie RossLarry RovinLorraine RoweJerry RueWilliam RyallEd SantelmannLelde SchmitzKirby ScottPat ScottEugene SeverensRick ShaverRichard ShawPat ShehanAlan SilbertJudy SilbertElizabeth SimonciniSalvatore SimonciniAnne SmythFred SmythBob StelmaszekCliff StretmaterJody StumpfJohn StumpfTed SumanBarrie SvensonAnn SweeneyMike SweeneyPeter ThatcherShirley ThatcherEd ThielerBob TraynelisMary Sue Traynelis

Mike ValabekHelen Van FleetBonnie Wager Robert WalmsleyMary Beth WebbPaul WeberSam WebsterMike WernerPam WhiteHelen WomackWinslow WomackJean WortmanLane Wroth

2015-2016 BOARD OF GOVERNORS

Richard C. TilghmanHenry H. StansburyJames P. HarrisRichard J. BodorffDiane J. StaleySchuyler BensonPaul BerryHarry W. BurtonWilliam B. CarterWilliam S. DudleyDavid E. DunnDagmar D. P. GipeLeeds HackettE. Brooke Harwood, Jr.Christopher A. HavenerRobert N. Hockaday, Jr.Francis Hopkinson, Jr.Fred IsraelRichard J. JohnsonPeter M. KreindlerDeborah LawrenceElizabeth S. LokerFrank C. MarshallPatrice MillerGeoffrey F. OxnamBruce A. RagsdaleCharles A. RobertsonBruce RogersStevens S. SandsLelde SchmitzRichard W. SnowdonAlfred Tyler, 2nd Carolyn H. Williams

EMERITI

Richard T. AllenCG ApplebyHoward S. FreedlanderAlan R. GriffithMargaret D. Keller

Breene M. KerrRichard H. KimberlyCharles L. Lea, Jr.D. Ted Lewers, MDFred C. MeendsenJohn C. North IISumner ParkerRobert A. PerkinsJoseph E. PetersJames K. PetersonNorman H. PlummerJohn J. RobertsHenry H. SpireJames E. ThomasJoan Darby WestDonald G. Whitcomb

2015 FRIENDS BOARD

Martha AustinKathy BosinMarc CastelliMike CottinghamLloyd DevignePeggy FordRobbie GillLauren GreerJay HudsonSherri Marsh JohnsBill LaneMary Lou McAllisterLibby MooseTrish PayneMatthew PetersSparrow RogersSpence StovalCassandra VanhooserJaime WindonBrenda Wooden

CBMM VOLUNTEERS

On June 16, 2016, CBMM recognized a dedicated team of more than 300 volunteers aboard the Patriot for their combined 27,027 hours of service over the last year. Several volunteers were recognized by CBMM for their work in boat restoration and maintenance, boat donations, build-ings and grounds, education, exhibitions, Museum Store, and volunteer programming. The river cruise reception was generously sponsored by Patriot Cruises of St. Michaels, Md., and Garden & Garnish of Trappe, Md.

Special recognition was given to volunteers with the highest hours of cumulative service, including John Hawkinson with 9,000 hours; Paul Ray and Mary Sue Traynelis with 6,000 hours; Ann Sweeney and Roger Galvin with 4,000 hours; Sam Barnett and Mike Corliss with 3,000 hours; and Bob Traynelis and Audrey Brown with 2,000 hours.

Many other volunteers were recognized for reaching milestones of 100 hours and above in their volunteer service for CBMM.

“The engagement and service from our volunteers is such an extraordinary part of what makes CBMM a very special place to visit,” says CBMM President Kristen Greenaway. “The effort our volunteers put forth each and every day to ensure a great experience for our guests is quite remarkable.”

CBMM is always looking for volunteers to help throughout various areas of its operations, including front desk assistants, interpretive educators, festival helpers, buildings and grounds assistants, and more. For more information, contact CBMM Volunteer & Education Coordinator Allison Speight at [email protected] or 410-745-4941.

Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum volunteers gathered in front of the Patriot in St. Michaels, Md. for a June 16, 2016 river cruise and reception honoring their service and dedication in bringing people closer to the Chesapeake Bay through their volunteer work. More than 300 volunteers collectively contributed 27,027 hours of service to the non-profit, helping with all aspects of CBMM’s operations. Volunteers reaching milestones in hours of service were also recognized at the reception, generously sponsored by Patriot Cruises in St. Michaels, Md., and Garden & Garnish of Trappe, Md.

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42 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 ANNUAL REPORT, 2015-2016 43

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION YEAR ENDED FEBRUARY 29, 2016

ASSETS

Cash and Cash EquivalentsAccounts and Grants ReceivableSplit-Interest ReceivableContributions ReceivableInventories at Lower of Cost or Fair ValuePre-Paid ExpensesPlanned Gifts Investments at Fair ValueLong Term Investments at Fair ValueLand, Buildings and Equipment (Net of Depreciation)

TOTAL ASSETS

2016

$2,146,184137,413522,417

1,867,67475,46347,1715,478

9,354,8649,432,334

$23,588,998

LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETSAccounts Payable and Accrued Expenses

Deferred Income and Deposits

TOTAL LIABILITIES

$189,868

172,913

$362,781

NET ASSETSUnrestricted, UndesignatedUnrestricted–Board Designated for EndowmentTemporarily RestrictedPermanently Restricted

TOTAL NET ASSETS

TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS

$8,252,9521,531,3003,136,732

10,305,233

$23,226,217

$23,588,998

OPERATING INCOME OPERATING EXPENSES

STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES YEAR ENDED FEBRUARY 29,2016

REVENUES UNRESTRICTED

$1,046,533485,121

TEMPORARILYRESTRICTED

$2,243,643–

PERMANENTLY RESTRICTED

––

ContributionsMembership

TOTAL

Special EventsAdmissionsGrantsGround RentalsEducation ProgramsChange in Value of Split-Interest AgreementsInvestment IncomeRealized Gain on InvestmentsUnrealized Loss on InvestmentsMuseum Store Gross Profit (Net of Costs of Goods Sold of $126,984)

Rental IncomeSales of Donated BoatsOther IncomeAssets Released from Restrictions

TOTAL REVENUE

240,367606,375160,197162,314104,64731,0464,002

-(998)

140,45220,247

587,10312,848

1,529,144

$5,129,398

––––––

259,394324,004

(1,324,155)–

–––

(1,524,588)

($21,702)

––––––––––

–––

(4,556)

($4,556)

EXPENSESProgram ExpensesAdministration ExpensesFundraising Expenses

TOTAL EXPENSES

$3,285,210664,988473,970

$4,424,168

–––

0

–––

0

$3,285,210664,988473,970

$4,424,168

CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

NET ASSETS, BEGINNING OF YEAR

NET ASSETS, END OF YEAR

$705,230

$9,079,022

$9,784,252

($21,702)

$3,158,434

$3,136,732

($4,556)

$10,309,789

$10,305,233

$678,972

$22,547,245

$23,226,217

FUNCTIONAL EXPENDITURES, ALL FUNDS

2016

$3,290,176485,121160,197240,367606,375162,314104,64731,046

263,396324,004

(1,325,153)

140,45220,247

587,10312,848

$5,103,140

Programs

Administration

Fundraising

Membership

Annual Fund

Admissions& Special Events

Facilities Rentals & Other Income Education

Store Gross Profit

Sales of Donated Boats

Contributions & Grants

EndowmentDistribution

HEX #05668D

RGB 5,102,141

HSV 197,96,55

CMYK 96,28,0,45

HEX #028090

RGB 2,128,144

HSV 187,99,56

CMYK 99,11,0,44

HEX #00A896

RGB 0,168,150

HSV 174,100,66

CMYK 100,0,11,34

HEX #02C39A

RGB 2,195,154

HSV 167,99,76

CMYK 99,0,21,24

HEX #F0F3BD

RGB 240,243,189

HSV 63,22,95

CMYK 1,0,22,5

coolors.co/05668d-028090-00a896-02c39a-f0f3bd

HEX #247BA0

RGB 36,123,160

HSV 198,78,63

CMYK 78,23,0,37

HEX #70C1B3

RGB 112,193,179

HSV 170,42,76

CMYK 42,0,7,24

HEX #B2DBBF

RGB 178,219,191

HSV 139,19,86

CMYK 19,0,13,14

HEX #F3FFBD

RGB 243,255,189

HSV 71,26,100

CMYK 5,0,26,0

HEX #FF1654

RGB 255,22,84

HSV 344,91,100

CMYK 0,91,67,0

coolors.co/247ba0-70c1b3-b2dbbf-f3ffbd-ff1654

20%

4%

13%

14%3%

5%

15%

17%

10%

Fundraising & Membership

Guest Services

Special Events& Rentals

Education& VolunteerPrograms

Curatorial& Exhibitions

Boatyard

Museum Store

Campus Maintenance & Operations

Communications & Marketing

Administrative Expenses

HEX #05668D

RGB 5,102,141

HSV 197,96,55

CMYK 96,28,0,45

HEX #028090

RGB 2,128,144

HSV 187,99,56

CMYK 99,11,0,44

HEX #00A896

RGB 0,168,150

HSV 174,100,66

CMYK 100,0,11,34

HEX #02C39A

RGB 2,195,154

HSV 167,99,76

CMYK 99,0,21,24

HEX #F0F3BD

RGB 240,243,189

HSV 63,22,95

CMYK 1,0,22,5

coolors.co/05668d-028090-00a896-02c39a-f0f3bd

HEX #247BA0

RGB 36,123,160

HSV 198,78,63

CMYK 78,23,0,37

HEX #70C1B3

RGB 112,193,179

HSV 170,42,76

CMYK 42,0,7,24

HEX #B2DBBF

RGB 178,219,191

HSV 139,19,86

CMYK 19,0,13,14

HEX #F3FFBD

RGB 243,255,189

HSV 71,26,100

CMYK 5,0,26,0

HEX #FF1654

RGB 255,22,84

HSV 344,91,100

CMYK 0,91,67,0

coolors.co/247ba0-70c1b3-b2dbbf-f3ffbd-ff1654

18%

22%

11%8%

7%

11%

9%

5%

4%5%

74%

15%

11%

Page 23: PLUS! 2015-2016 Annual Report, page 28

Non-Profit Org.US Postage

PAID - Easton, MDPermit # 72

213 North Talbot StreetCharity Boat AuctionLabor Day Weekend – Saturday, September 3, 2016 | Auction begins at 11am

Fogg’s Landing, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels, MD

More than 100 boats for sale, ranging in size and performance from sailing dinghies to cabin cruisers, and everything in between. This is an absolute auction, no reserves and everything must go!

Preview hours: Sept. 1-2, 9am-5pm. Advance bid deadline: Sept. 2 at 2pm. Donate a boat or item for the tag sale by Sept. 1 at 5pm. For donations or advanced bids, call 410-745-4992.

Gates open 8am; Tag sale 9am; Beer & BBQ 10:30am; Auction 11amPreview boats at cbmm.org/auctionboats