Showing posts with label churches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label churches. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Southern Baptist Convention President joins 170 Memphis clergy asking asking to remove Confederate statue.

This is revolutionary.

This is the article online at Baptist News Global.

https://baptistnews.com/article/sbc-president-cbf-pastors-join-call-remove-confederate-statue/#.WcD0VsiGOiM

Steve Gaines, the president of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) joined in with 170 local clergy in asking that a Confederate monument, Confederate General Nathan B. Forrest to be removed from its present location. About 100 leaders of other congregations and religious institutions were also signers.

The letter is here.

https://medium.com/@MayorMemphis/clergyletter-b1e5ae3513aa


The Southern Baptist Conference has steadily marched away from the Lost Cause interpretation of history. They have done very well, whereas the liberal mainstream denominations have been poor on this. The Episcopal Church has moved fairly well away from the Lost Cause also, but there have been no pronouncements from their national leadership.

The SBC is sending a very important message to other evangelical groups.

In 2016 the SBC adopted a resolution on the Confederate Battle Flag.

https://erlc.com/resource-library/articles/resolution-7-on-sensitivity-and-unity-regarding-the-confederate-battle-flag

In the early 1990s they had an apology for slavery.

This is an earlier blog on the topic and the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) denunciation of them.

http://newtknight.blogspot.com/2016/06/sons-of-confederate-veterans-launch.html#.WcD-rMiGOiM

The center of the Christian faith is moving to out of the Western world. The SBC realizes this.

The mainstream liberal denominations on the other hand haven't come to grasp with the issues of the Confederacy. They have their vanities about being so good on race. This web page is available for further reading. http://www.templeofdemocracy.com/churches-of-the-confederacy.html


The actions of these 170 clergy, black and white, has a seismic impact on the landscape for Confederate monuments. The fact that the Baptist News Global has sent this out will be an inspiration for other churches elsewhere to take a stand and an influence on others not to support Confederate monuments.

We wake up this morning with the politics of this issue revolutionized.

Monday, August 21, 2017

My speech at the Saturday Rally

This isn't the actual text of my speech. I decided to further simplify it. However, it is what I talked about to a cheering audience. After the monuments there are other things to which we need to attend.

I think with the monuments being down, some of these things will happen without  anyone asking.

I do however, plan a mass mailing to churches where a church has hosted the United Daughters of the Confederacy or the Sons of Confederate Veterans. I do plan to write all the denominations which have lent their facilities to a national neo-Confederate convention. I think it will help that they know that someone is tracking this. The U.S. Military, the National Park Service, and the textbook publishers will be more of a challenge but I have some ideas.

I think after the monuments go down, they will be less willing to retain practices that enable neo-Confederacy and the Lost Cause.

As monuments start coming down, people will expect that their city follow suit. Chamber of Commerce groups will not want their city to have a Confederate monument. It will be a marker of backwardness and make their city an object of ridicule.

I am planning on making a video about what I saw at the Gettysburg National Park.

So with yesterdays speech I launched these topics.

I have been researching and leading a small resistance against the neo-Confederate movement for 25 years.

In 2015 after the Charleston massacre my co-author called and pointed out that not until peopled died did the state of South Carolina do the right thing and take down the Confederate flag.

After Heather Heyer was killed last Saturday the nation is flooded with calls to remove Confederate monuments, plaques, flags across the nation.

This leads me to ask.

How many will have to die before the National Park Service stops accommodating the Confederacy?

How many will have to die before the U.S. Military academies stop letting the United Daughters of the Confederacy give Confederate awards to cadets?

How many will have to die before the U.S. Military High School Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps program stop allowing the Sons of Confederate Veterans to give awards to cadets?

How many will have to die before American History textbooks, particularly in Texas, stop being Lost Causes, stop pandering to pro-Confederates?

How many church massacres will there have to be before American churches, mainstream churches, stop lending their facilities to the Sons of Confederate Veterans and the United Daughters of the Confederacy?

People shouldn’t have to die before we do the right thing.


In closing, I ask the United States military, I ask the textbook publishers, I ask the churches, I ask the National Park Service, I ask our city, our state, our nation, let us do the right thing, give up the Confederacy. 

Thursday, August 17, 2017

I wonder if Robert E. Lee Episcopal Church is re-thinking keeping their name.

With current events I have been swamped with keeping track of what is happening. However, I want to share this from my 7/25/2017 trip to Lexington, Virginia where I visited the Robert E. Lee Episcopal Church next to the Washington & Lee University campus.

They have a Confederate Christ. The staffer there was annoyed by people being concerned about it.

Notice that the banner with Robert E. Lee is up on the church stage. I think it is time that the Episcopal Church deal with the Confederacy. I would emphasize that they are not as bad as the United Methodist Church. St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond, Virginia has dealt with the Confederacy and were really great. However, they are hoping to reach an urban demographic, whereas Lexington, Virginia is very white.

My web page on mainstream denominations and the Confederacy.


http://www.templeofdemocracy.com/churches-of-the-confederacy.html





Wednesday, April 06, 2016

Religious Scholar gives his assessment of the meaning of Confederate iconography at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond

http://openfriendshipinaclosedsociety.blogspot.com/2015/08/signs-of-crimes-and-forgiving-victim.html


The above is the link. The reassessment of church's connections to the Confederacy is happening.

St. Paul's Episcopal Church is the church I wrote back in 2014. They first decided to disinvite the United Daughters of the Confederacy, then they decided to assess their Confederate imagery in the Church.


The correspondence and news articles can be read at this link.

http://www.templeofdemocracy.com/richmond-2014-2015.html



Wednesday, March 09, 2016

Which Church is hosting the Sons of Confederate Veterans Confederate service in Richardson, Texas?

The counter-campaign against the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) 2016 Reunion is started. There is a Facebook page,

https://www.facebook.com/events/412080045663443/

There you can find out what is happening in the counter campaign against the SCV.

The SCV is planning on meeting in Richardson, Texas, a suburb of Dallas, TX July 13-16, 2015  http://scv2016.org/

This is an article about the racism of the SCV.

http://www.blackcommentator.com/526/526_confederacy_sebesta_guest_share.html

What the counter campaign is going to focus on is against churches hosting the SCV.

There is a web page about the whole issue of churches hosting neo-Confederate groups.

http://www.templeofdemocracy.com/churches-of-the-confederacy.html

And specifically the reunion in Dallas. Richardson is a suburb next to Dallas.

http://www.templeofdemocracy.com/richardson-texas-2016.html

WHAT YOU CAN DO.

1. Ask your denomination about their stand on hosting neo-Confederate groups. The five leading denominations to do so are: Episcopalian, Roman Catholic, United Methodist Church, Presbyterian USA, and Southern Baptists. Don't presume your denomination wouldn't because unless it is a historically African American denomination it has likely already done so.

2. Join the Facebook counter campaign page.

3. If you are in the Dallas area and a member of a religious group check that it isn't your church. DON'T PRESUME it isn't.

4. Let others know about the campaign.


Saturday, February 28, 2015

Updated Churches of the Confederacy campaign on www.templeofdemocracy.com website

The website www.templeofdemocracy.com has been updated with the 2015 correspondence to church leaders in Richmond about them hosting neo-Confederate groups. I will continue  to update the pages as more information comes in and more letters are written.

Letter to the Historic Richmond Foundation

The Historic Richmond Foundation unfortunately lent their Monumental Church to the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) in 2014. The Richmond Free Press ran an article on the story.

http://richmondfreepress.com/news/2014/nov/07/confederates-hold-service-downtown-church/

This is my certified letter in 2015 asking them not to lend the church to the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV). I also discuss their lending their facilities to the UDC and the irresponsibility of doing so.

I copied it extensively using proof of mailing.. I think that they won't lend their facilities to the SCV for the reason is that it is bad publicity.


     January 26, 2015

                                                                   Edward H. Sebesta

                                                                   edwardsebesta@gmail.com
Mary Jane Massad Hogue
Executive Director
Historic Richmond Foundation
4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C
Richmond, VA 23219

Dear Ms. Hogue:

Please find enclosed a copy of the Richmond Free Press article about your allowing the neo-Confederate group, the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), to Monumental Church at their annual national convention in 2014 and your responses. [Matthews, Joey, “Confederates to hold service at Downtown church,” Richmond Free Press, Vol. 23, No. 45, Nov. 6-8, 2014, pages A1, A14.] It is available online at:


Also, please find enclosed an article published in Black Commentator about the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) which I think to any reasonable person documents their racism and extremism. It is also available online at:


I am an investigative researcher regarding the neo-Confederate movement. I have had two books published by university presses and articles in peer-reviewed academic journals. I enclose a copy of my online curriculum vitae which is also online at http://templeofdemocracy.com/curriculum-vitae.html. Additionally there have been other articles published at Black Commentator also accessible from my online curriculum vitae.

In addition to my research I am also an activist. My recent concern is the enabling of neo-Confederate organizations by mainstream institutions. In 2013 I got major corporations to stop donating to the SCV through the We Care website. After learning that they were supporting the SCV major corporations started contacting We Care and in a matter of days We Care dropped the SCV. You can read about this campaign at Black Commentator at this URL:


After getting major corporations to stop supporting neo-Confederate groups I have been writing churches asking them not to enable neo-Confederate groups. It hasn’t been entirely unsuccessful so far, but I have found that the temples of Mammon were much more willing than the churches of Christ not to support neo-Confederate organizations.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans are planning to have their 2015 national convention in Richmond, Virginia.  You can read about it at this website: http://www.jebstuartcamp.org/jebstuartcamp.org/2015reunion/.

I am writing you to make two requests:

1)   Do not allow the Sons of Confederate Veterans to use any of your facilities for their 2015 national convention or for any other activity either now or in the future.

2)   Do not allow any other neo-Confederate organization, including the United Daughters of the Confederacy, to use your facilities for their activities either now or in the future.

The United Daughters of the Confederacy has a lengthy history of supporting white supremacy going back to the early 20th century shortly after they had finished organizing. You can see many primary historical documents regarding their racial attitudes at www.confederatepastpresent.org and use the search term “daughters.”

However, I think documentation shows that these racial attitudes are not confined to the past. This is an organization that currently runs a Red Shirt Shrine to glorify a violent white supremacist group in 19th century South Carolina and of which they are proud of as documented in the June/July 2001 UDC Magazine article, pages 23, 24, and the cover of their magazine. In an article in the Dec. 2012 UDC Magazine, pages 11-14, is an appalling racist article in which the infamous post-Civil War Black Codes of the former Confederate states are defended, African American men are represented as having been potential rapists, the 14th Amendment to the Constitution is argued to be misguided, freed African Americans are asserted to have been incompetent to be citizens. The article asserts, “Newly liberated Negroes were not prepared for their freedom…” These are but two contemporary examples of the UDC’s attitudes towards race. Documentation enclosed.

In allowing neo-Confederate groups you make yourself an enabler of their agenda which in regarding race is clearly documented by their own record.

Another question raised by your allowing the UDC to use Monumental Church in 2014 is whether the Historic Richmond Foundation’s purpose is to construct a racialized landscape, or more precisely a white racial landscape.

The question is whether your efforts serve to construct Richmond, Virginia as a Confederate theme park, a Confederate capitol of the imagination, or otherwise stated a sacred place of a metaphysical Confederacy with your buildings are points of pilgrimage by neo-Confederates and others would are perhaps “Gone With the Wind,” who dream of the Confederacy. It doesn’t really matter whether the Historic Richmond Foundation does this on purpose, ignorance or with reckless indifference.

In the August 2014 issue of UDC Magazine, page 19 there is the following section on the use of Monumental Church for their national convention in Richmond (documentation enclosed):

Newly-restored Monumental Church, designed by Robert Mills and opened in 1814, almost pre-dates Richmond’s founding. Newly restored to its original appearance, this was the church of Chief Justice Marshall. Many events of Confederate history passed its doors during the War years. [Bold face added.]

As you can see the UDC saw the use of this church as an opportunity to imagine the Confederacy. You did allow the work of the Historic Richmond Foundation to be used in the imagining of Richmond as the capitol of the Confederacy, to be a Confederate theme park, a Confederate fantasyland. I think that it would be obvious that they would do this, it is not like their purpose is secret. Their purpose is clearly in their name.

Jonathan Leib in his chapter “The Witting Autobiography of Richmond Virginia: Arthur Ashe, the Civil War, and Monument Avenue’s Racialized Landscape,” in the book, points out that:

As a former capital of the Confederate States of America, Richmond’s landscape has the densest concentration of memorials to the Confederacy of any large Southern city, ranging from a sixty-foot-tall monument to Robert E. Lee to a downtown street named after his horse Traveller. [From page 188, Chapter 10, “Landscape and Race in the United States,” edited by Richard H. Schein, publisher Routledge, 2006 (New York)]

The chapter discusses how the landscape through monuments and other efforts worked to construct the Richmond landscape as a white landscape and support values of white supremacy and how the controversy over the Arthur Ashe monument made this explicit and obvious.

An organization which hoped to contribute to a modern American city, the type of city which strives to value all members of society regardless of race and to be an inclusive multi-racial democracy, would certainly not support neo-Confederate groups or identifying with the pro-slavery and pro-white supremacist Confederacy.

Any restoration work in such a Confederate saturated landscape as is Richmond’s would seem to require care by any organization concerned with not perpetuating a white landscape. Yet your comments in the Richmond Free Press article reveal a total indifference to the issues of landscape and race and an arrogant refusal to recognize that you are aiding neo-Confederates and a racial agenda.

The president of the Historic Richmond Foundation, Andrew K. Clark, is a donor to the Museum of the Confederacy. This raises the question as to whether the Historic Richmond Foundation really has any real concerns not to embrace Richmond’s Confederate past as an ideal.  

In particular I wish point out one of your statements. “I don’t know much about their organization,” in reference to the United Daughters of the Confederacy. They have a substantial building as their national headquarters in Richmond, Virginia. As I stated earlier, their purpose is clearly stated in their name, United Daughters of the Confederacy, they exist to honor an attempt to form a state to defend slavery from emancipation and to preserve white supremacy.

If the Historic Richmond Foundation is irresponsible regarding race and the landscape and neo-Confederate groups, then I think that it is obvious that the Historic Richmond Foundation works towards ill for the city of Richmond and works to restore more than buildings from the past, but also racial attitudes form the past.

Further for those who choose to support the Historic Richmond Foundation if the Foundation’s practice continues to preserve racial attitudes from the past and enable neo-Confederate groups they reveal their real racial attitudes and are pernicious undermining civil rights. Businesses who support the Historical Richmond Foundation, when the foundation practice is such, certainly bring into question any personnel policies they have for the work place regarding non-discrimination.

I ask you to avoid preserving past racial attitudes when you preserve buildings and to not support neo-Confederate groups by allowing them the use of your facilities for their activities.

                                                          Sincerely Yours,

                                                          Edward H. Sebesta

[NOTE: I sent copies of this letter to the staff of the Historic Richmond Foundation, NOT the staff of the Museum of the Confederacy as indicated in this CC. See following table.] Cc: This letter was copied to the staff of the Museum of the Confederacy; the trustees of the Historic Richmond Foundation; the President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer and Immediate Past-President of the Historic Richmond Foundation, the Junior Board of the Historic Richmond Foundation; the Board of Advisors of the Historic Richmond Foundation; Active Members of the Council of Historic Richmond; Sustaining Members of the Council of Historic Richmond; Mayor of Richmond; Richmond City Council; corporate donors for the restoration of the Monumental Church. The detailed list follows and will be sent in the original letter to the Executive Director of the Historic Richmond Foundation, however, those who have received copies are referred to www.templeofdemocracy.com in the interest of conserving paper where the entire letter will be online.



No.
Name
Title
Affiliation
Address
1
Mary Jane Massad Hogue
Executive Director, Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond
Historic Richmond Foundation
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
2
Andrew K. Clark
President
LeClairRyan
LeClairRyan, Riverfront Plaza, East Tower, 951 East Byrd Street, Eighth Floor, Richmond, VA 23219
3
Coleen A. Butler Rodriquez
First Vice-President
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
4
David I. Meyers
Secretary
Troutman Sanders
Troutman Sanders, Troutman Sanders Bldg., 1001 Haxall Point, Richmond, VA 23219
5
Daniel P. Healy
CPA, Treasurer
Manager and Partner at the Guggenheim Partners Genworth Financials
Genworth Financial Inc., 6620 West Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23230
6
Hunter A. Applewhite
Trustee
President Dominion Foundation
Dominion Foundation, 120 Tredegar St., Richmond, VA 23219
7
G. William Beale
Trustee
Union Market Bank
Union Market Bank, 1051 East Cary St., Suite 1200, Richmond, VA 23219
8
Michael J. Bogese, Jr.
Trustee
The Bogese Companies
The Bogese Companies, 113 South 12th Street, Richmond, VA 23219
9
Robert E. Comet
Trustee
BCWH Architects
BCWH Architects, 1840 West Broad St., Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23220
10
Tracy Scott Doherty
Trustee
MeadWestvaco
501 South 5th St., Richmond, VA 23219-0501
11
Betty M. Fahed
Trustee
Wills Financial Group
Wills Financial Group Inc., P.O. Box 18338, Richmond, VA 23226
12
Susan S. Fisher
Trustee
Long & Foster
Long & Foster Companies, 14501 George Carter Way, Chantilly, VA, 20151.
13
Todd R. Flowers
Trustee, Member Junior Board of Historic Richmond
Dominion Resources
Dominion Resources, 120 Tredegar St., Richmond, VA 23219
14
Roy B. Goodman
Trustee
Luck Stone Corporation
Luck Stone Corporation, P.O. Box 29682, Richmond, VA 23242
15
Mark A. Herzog
Trustee
Health Diagnostic Laboratory Inc.
 Mark A. Herzog, 737 N. 5th Street, Suite 103, Richmond, VA 23219
16
C.N. Jenkins, Jr.
Trustee
Virginia Circuit Court
400 North Ninth Street, John Marshall Courts Bldg., Richmond, VA 23219
17
Kathy Ashby Merry
Trustee
The Harmonia Group
The Harmonia Group, 2020 Kraft Drive, Blacksburg, VA 24060
18
Robert S. Mills
Trustee
Commonwealth Architects
101 Shockoe Slip, 3rd Floor, Richmond, VA 23219
19
Gregory H. Ray
Trustee
Altria
Altria, 6601 West Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23230
20
Carol L. Robbins
Trustee
Suntrust
SunTrust Bank, P.O. Box 85024, Richmond, VA 23285-5024
21
R. Scott Ukrop
Trustee
3north
201 West 7th Street, Richmond, VA 23224
22
Robert A. Vallejo
Trustee
PricewaterhouseCoopers
PricewaterhouseCoopers 1021 E Cary St Richmond, VA 23219
23
Harold J. Williams III
Trustee
Dickinson Williams & Co.
1209 East Cary Street, Richmond, VA 23219
24
Steven R. William
Immediate Past President
McGuire Woods
McGuireWoods, One James Center, 901 Est Cary Street, Richmond, VA 23219-4030
25
Elise H. Wright
Life Trustee
Curator Valentine Richmond History Center
1015 East Clay Street, Richmond, VA 23219
26
Jane H. Armfield
Member Board of Advisors
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
27
Jonathan Bliley
Member Board of Advisors
Williams Mullen
Williams Mullen Center, 200 South 10th St., Suite 1600, Richmond, VA 23219
28
Nancy N. Cheely
Member Board of Advisors, Sustaining Council Member Council of Historic Richmond
Joyner Fine Properties
2727 Enterprise Pkwy,  Richmond VA 23294
29
Lilliboo Rawles Cronly
Member Board of Advisors
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
30
Karen S. Emroch
Member Board of Advisors, Sustaining Council Member Council of Historic Richmond
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
31
Thomas E. Fahed
Member Board of Advisors
Realtor Small and Associates
5413 Patterson Avenue, Suite 200; Richmond, VA 23226
32
John Owen Gwathmey
Member Board of Advisors
Troutman Sanders
Troutman Sanders, Troutman Sanders Bldg., 1001 Haxall Point, Richmond, VA 23219
33
Douglas J. Hanson
Member Board of Advisors
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
34
Kenneth D. McArthur, Jr.
Member Board of Advisors
DurretteCrump
1111 East Main Street #16, Richmond, VA 23219
35
Alice Reed McGuire
Member Board of Advisors
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
36
Robert W. Miller, Jr.
Member Board of Advisors
Miller & Associates
116 East Franklin Street #103a, Richmond, VA 23219
37
Kevin B. Osborne
Member Board of Advisors
Altria
Altria, 6601 West Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23230
38
Burt Pinnock
Member Board of Advisors
BAM Architects
101 South 15th Street #200, Richmond, VA 23219
39
J. Sargeant Reynolds, Jr.
Member Board of Advisors
Reynolds Development
6641 West Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23230
40
Mary Harding Sadler
Member Board of Advisors
Sadler & Whitehead
726 West 33rd Street, Richmond, VA 23225
41
Elizabeth Carrington Shuff
Member Board of Advisors, Sustaining Council Member Council of Historic Richmond
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
42
William S. Tate
Member Board of Advisors
Attorney
2100 East Cary Street, Richmond, VA 23223
43
Lynn C. Purdy
Member Board of Advisors, Sustaining Council Member Council of Historic Richmond

Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
44
Barbara B. Ukrop
Member Board of Advisors
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
45
Harry J. Warthen, III
Member Board of Advisors
Hunton & Williams, LLP
951 East Byrd Street Richmond, VA 23219
46
Martha A. Warthen
Member Board of Advisors
Hunton & Williams, LLP
951 East Byrd Street Richmond, VA 23219
47
Catharine Whitham
Member Board of Advisors
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
48
Lorna Wyckoff
Member Board of Advisors
Community Volunteer
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
49
James W. Klaus
Additional Board Member
Children's Wear Digest, Inc.
3607 Mayland Court, Richmond, VA 23233
50
Paige C. Anderson
Secretary, Junior Board of Historic Richmond
Hunton & Williams, LLP
951 East Byrd Street Richmond, VA 23219
51
Ms. Taylor R. Boyle
Treasurer, Junior Board of Historic Richmond
MeadWestvaco
501 South 5th St., Richmond, VA 23219-0501
52
Zachary D. Cohen
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
ThompsonMcMullen
100 Shockoe Slip, Richmond, VA 23219
53
Charles A. Coulomb
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Virginia Holocaust Museum
2000 East Cary Street, Richmond, VA 23223
54
Trevor S. Cox
President Elect, Junior Board of Historic Richmond
Hunton & Williams, LLP
951 East Byrd Street Richmond, VA 23219
55
Franklin Cragle
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Hirschler Fleischer
Post Office Box 500, Richmond, VA 23218-0500
56
Anna S. Curran
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond

Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
57
Nancy Hull Davidson
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond

Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
58
Danielle Dick
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Virginia Commonweath University
Department of Psychology, 806 West Franklin St., P.O. Box 842018, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23284-2018
59
Kate Fraser-Orr
Co-Special Events Chair, Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Retail Merchants Association
5101 Monument Avenue, Richmond, VA 23230
60
Juellisa Gadd
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
VCU Massey Cancer Center
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
61
David S. Galeski
Co-Special Events Chair Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond

Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
62
Meghan Gehr Hubbard
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
McGuire Woods
McGuireWoods, One James Center, 901 Est Cary Street, Richmond, VA 23219-4030
63
Chelsea Jeffries
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Chesterfield County
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
64
Elizabeth Kennan
Co-Membership Chair Junior Board of Historic Richmond
Capitol One
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
65
Rebecca R. Lupesco
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Release The Hounds
315 West Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23220
66
Katharine F. McDonald
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
American Red Cross
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
67
Zachary Means
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Divaris Real Estate
1111 East Main Street #801, Richmond, VA 23219
68
Keith Murphy
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
3north
201 West 7th Street, Richmond, VA 23224
69
Ronald A. Page, Jr.
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond

Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
70
Michael Phillips
President, Junior Board of Historic Richmond
Virginia Clean Cities
Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
71
Kristin P. Richardson
Immediate Past President, Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Williams Mullen
Williams Mullen Center, 200 South 10th St., Suite 1600, Richmond, VA 23219
72
Leslie A. Rudzinski
Junior Board Member of Historic Richmond
Kaplan & Frank, PLC
P.O. Box 2470, Richmond, VA 23224
73
Adam Trusner
Co-Membership Chair Junior Board of Historic Richmond
Morgan Stanley
 For the rest of the entries in this table, Historic Richmond Foundation, 4 E. Main Street, Suite 1-C, Richmond, VA 23219
74
Danielle Worthing
Quoit Club Chair Junior Board of Historic Richmond
Dutton & Associates
75
Madeleine Bennett
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

76
Buffy Bickford
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

77
Laura Bland
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

78
Susie Bogese
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

79
Betsy Booth
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

80
MacKay Boyer
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

81
Debbie Brooks
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

82
Lisa Caperton
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

83
Betsy Coffield
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

84
Kim Condyles
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

85
Christine Corbin
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

86
Stacie Cornett
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

87
Susan Dameron
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

88
Joan Debiasi
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

89
Jennifer Fergusson
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

90
Barbara Flatin
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

91
Deborah Fulk
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

92
Sara Garza
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

93
Page George
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

94
Mary Anne Griffin
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

95
Jeanine Hinson
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

96
Victoria Hoskins
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

97
Patricia Hunter
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

98
Sarah Hurst
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

99
Eucharia Jackson
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

100
Lally Jennings
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

101
Molly Johnson
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

102
Maureen Leipertz
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

103
Beth Ludden
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

104
Sheila Macfarlane
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

105
Mary Beth Metcalf
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

106
Carol McKnight
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

107
Katherine Meyers
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

108
Cheryl Miller
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

109
Joni Moncure
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

110
Victoria Morahan
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

111
Maryann Moulton
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

112
Darcie Nelsen
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

113
Shirley Parker
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

114
Trudy Porter
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

115
Cara Rogers
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

116
Debbie Scott
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

117
Stacy Smith
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

118
Kerry Svoboda
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

119
Allison Woodward
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

120
Lucie Yudkin
Active Members Council of Historic Richmond

121
Margaret Bacigal
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

122
Karen Berkness
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

123
Anne Boeve
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

124
Pat Campbell
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

125
Janis Carrell
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

126
Joan Clement
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

127
Anne Dawson
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

128
Kathy DeLoyht
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

129
Cheryl Fockler
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

130
Deb Galeski
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

131
Debbie Gibbs
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

132
Susan Gibson
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

133
Ann McLean
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

134
Libby Marth
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

135
Anita Purcell
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

136
Martha Rhodes
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

137
Mary Roach
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

138
Gaye Steinmetz
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

139
Dee Dee Sutton
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

140
Lizzie Wallace
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

141
Del Warthen
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

142
Cabell West
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

143
Mary Wick
Sustaining Member Council of Historic Richmond

144
Sarah Matheson
Development Assistant Historic Richmond Foundation
Historic Richmond Foundation
145
Sally Mooney
Development Assistant Historic Richmond Foundation
Historic Richmond Foundation
146
Emily Davis
Director of Marketing & Communications
Historic Richmond Foundation
147
Catherine Dameron
Wedding Coordinator
Historic Richmond Foundation
148
Ceil Baxter
Office Manager
Historic Richmond Foundation


No.
Name
Title
Affiliation
Address
1
Dwight C. Jones
Mayor
City of Richmond
Mayor's Office, City of Richmond, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 201, Richmond, VA 23219
2
Charles R. Samuels
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
3
Ellen F. Robertson
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
4
Jonathan T. Balilies
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
5
Chris A. Hilbert
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
6
Kathy C. Graziano
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
7
Parker C. Agelasto
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
8
Cynthia I. Newbille
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
9
Reva M. Trammell
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
10
Michelle R. Mosby
Member City Council
Member City Council
Richmond City Council, 900 E. Broad St., Suite 305 Richmond, VA 23219
11
Terry McAuliffe
Governor
Virginia
P.O. Box 1475, Richmond, VA 23218

No.
Name
Title
Affiliation
Address
1
Thomas F. Farrell
Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer
Dominion Resources Inc.
120 Tredegar St., Richmond, VA 23219
2
Afton & Melissa Johnson
Owners
West View Companies
P.O. Box 21, Oilville, VA 23129
3

Will address to "Director"
Universal Leaf Foundation
P.O. Box 25099, Richmond, VA 23260
4

Will address to "Director"
Bon Secours Health System
1505 Marriotsville Rd., Marriotsville, MD 21104
5
Luca Paschina
Winemaker
Barboursville Vineyards
P.O. Box 136, Barboursville, VA 22923
6
Alex Wotring, Vince Riggi, Brian Marks
Founders
Belle Isle Craft Spirits
615 Maury St., Richmond, VA 23224
7
Louis R. Rogers
President and CEO
Capital Square Holdings
10900 Nuckols Rd., Suite 200, Glen Allen, VA 23060
8
Mitch Haddon
President and CEO
ColonialWebb
2820 Ackley Ave., Richmond, VA 23228
9
Martin J. Barrington
Chairman & CEO
Altria Group Inc.
6601 West Broad St., Richmond, VA 23230
10
H. Randolph Holmes Jr.
Senior Principle & President
Glave' & Holmes Architecture
2101 East Main St., Richmond, VA 23223
11
Eric McKay & Patrick Murtaugh
Founders
Hardywood Park Craft Brewery
2408 Ownby Lane, Richmond, VA 23220
12
Joe Sparatta, Emilia Sparatta, Matthias Hagglund
Co-owners
Heritage
1627 W. Main St., Richmond, VA 23220
13
Matt Brophy, Kristi Croxton, Jonathan Staples
Partners
James River Distillery
2700 Hardy St., Richmond, VA 23220
14
Robert E. Moritz
US Chairman and Senior Partner
Pricewaterhousecooper LLP
300 Madison Ave., 24th Floor, New York, NY 10017
15
Dr. R.P. Sowers
Founder and Chairman
Patient First Corp.
5000 Cox Rd., Suite 100, Glen Allen, VA 23060
16
Craig R. Smith
Executive Chairman of the Board
Owens & Minor, Inc.
9120 Lockwood Blvd., Mechanicsville, VA 23116
17
John Mason L. Antrim
President & CEO
Middleburg Trust
111 West Washington St., Middleburg, VA 20117
18
Albert R. Counselman
Chairman & CEO
RCM&D
4200 Innstake Dr., Suite 303, Glen Allen, VA 23060
19
Michael Sparks

Michael Sparks Design
205 Hull St., Richmond, VA 23224
20
George Keith Martin
Managing Partner
McGuireWoods
One James Center, 901 East Clay St., Richmond, VA 23219
21
Michael L. Hern
President and CEO
LeClairRyan
Riverfront Plaza, East Tower, 951 East Byrd St., Eighth Floor, Richmond, VA 23219
22
John S. West
Managing Partner
Troutman Sanders
Troutman Sanders Bldg., 1001 Haxall Point, Richmond, VA 23219
23
G. William Beale
CEO
Union First Market
Union Market Bank, 1051 East Cary St., Suite 1200, Richmond, VA 23219



Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Popular Posts Last 30 days

Popular Posts All Time