Class of 1959 reunion gifts matched by classmate

Class of 1959 reunion gifts matched by classmate

Don Cookson ’59, Blaine Moores ’59

Blaine Moores of the University of Maine class of 1959 wanted to do something special to honor the class’s landmark 60th class reunion. He decided that the best way to do this would be to not only give back to the University, but also to make an education there a reality for more Maine students. Blaine set a challenge for his classmates to increase the Class of 1959 Scholarship as much as possible by the time their 60th reunion came around. At the time, in June 2016, the principal of the scholarship was $31,777.30.

Blaine generously offered to match all gifts to the Class of 1959 Scholarship dollar for dollar up to a maximum of $50,000. Not to be outshined, Class of 1959 alumni rose to the challenge: many classmates have donated to the fund since July 1, 2016. Class of 1959 President Don Cookson has been instrumental in the fundraising effort, giving generously himself as well as supporting and encouraging his fellow class members. Thanks to the gifts from classmates and the matching gift from Blaine, the scholarship principal now exceeds $130,000.

The Class of 1959 Scholarship gives first preference to descendants of the Class of 1959 until 2030. After 2030, or if no descendants of the Class of 1959 apply, a second preference shall be given to nontraditional students who demonstrate financial need.

The Foundation offers sincere gratitude to Blaine, Don, and everyone from the class of 1959 for meeting the challenge and for their commitment to making a University of Maine education achievable for generations to come.

None of the information on this website should be considered legal or financial advice. We encourage you to consult with your own legal counsel or financial/tax advisor before deciding whether or not to proceed with a gift or change to your estate plan.

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One hundred year legacy at UMaine

One hundred year legacy at UMaine

Dana Smith ’79, 2019

 

Dana Smith’s family ties to the University of Maine began 100 years ago when his maternal grandfather, Dr. John Hoge Ashworth, came to the university to teach economics and sociology.

John Ashworth earned his Ph.D from Johns Hopkins University in 1914. After graduation, Dr. Ashworth was a professor at Pennsylvania College (now known as Gettysburg College) until 1918. When he arrived at UMaine in 1919, Dr. Ashworth’s salary was $2,700. An announcement of Dr. Ashworth’s appointment read, “Dr. John H. Ashworth of Ohio Wesleyan has been appointed Professor of Economics and Sociology to succeed Dr. George Ware Stephens . . . He is a man of fine personal appearance, pleasing manners, and a most successful teacher. It is believed that the University is particularly fortunate in securing him.”

Dr. John Hoge Ashworth

Until his retirement in 1941, Dr. Ashworth served as a valued member of the university faculty. Upon hearing of Dr. Ashworth’s passing in 1966, UMaine President Hauck issued this statement: “The university learns of the death of Dr. Ashworth with deepest regret. During his long period of service to the university and the State of Maine, he was widely known and admired by hundreds of students who were in his classes. He served from 1919 until his retirement in 1941, as professor of economics. His contributions to the university and the state will be remembered, and his teaching ability and personal interest in each student have given him a place in their affections that will long remain. He had the pleasure of seeing two sons and three daughters graduate from the University of Maine.”

As noted by President Hauck, the five children of Dr. Ashworth and his wife Mabel attended the University of Maine: Jessie Ellen (Ashworth) Miller ’29, James Peery Ashworth ’30, W. Bruce Ashworth ’33, Mabelle Elizabeth (Ashworth) Smith ’37, and Barbara Rose (Ashworth) Harris ’41. Jessie earned a doctorate from Clark University in 1940, then followed in her father’s footsteps by becoming a professor of anthropology and sociology. James earned a B.A. in history at UMaine, where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, Scabbard & Blade, Senior Skull Society member, and R.O.T.C. Bruce enjoyed a 40-year career at Travelers Insurance Company after graduating from UMaine with a degree in mechanical engineering. Barbara earned a degree in English at UMaine, where she participated in many activities and earned praise for her high marks, making the Dean’s List many times over. Dana’s mother, Mabelle Ashworth Smith, majored in history at UMaine, where she met her future husband, Roger Smith. Mabelle participated on the All-Maine Basketball Team and the All-Maine Field Hockey Team. Roger majored in zoology, joined the Phi Eta Kappa fraternity, and played intramural basketball. They both graduated in 1937.

Mabelle (Ashworth) Smith ’37

Roger, who grew up on a farm in Aroostook County, also had strong family ties to UMaine. Two of his siblings graduated from the university. His older brother, Irving Kitchen Smith, earned a B.S. degree in education in 1934, and in agronomy in 1941. Irving participated in J.V. Football, was inducted into Kappa Phi Kappa, and joined Phi Eta Kappa. Roger’s younger sister, Mary Elizabeth Smith, graduated from UMaine with both a bachelor’s degree (1946) and master’s degree (1950) in zoology. In 1958, she graduated from Michigan State University with a D.V.M.—one of very few women to do so at that time.

These two strong UMaine families joined when Mabelle Ashworth and Roger Smith married in the summer of 1938, one year after their graduation. They raised three sons, Larry, Bruce, and Dana, on the family farm in Presque Isle.

Their youngest son, Dana Smith, carried on the family’s UMaine legacy. Dana graduated from UMaine with a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemical Engineering in 1979. During his time at UMaine, Dana was a member of Senior Skulls and participated in Senior Challenge, was a member of Tau Beta Pi engineering honor society, served as president of the UMaine chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineering, was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, and participated in fundraising events to benefit the Pine Tree Society for people living with disabilities. After graduating from UMaine, Dana Smith moved to Minnesota where he met his wife Sheila. They have two sons, Eric and Darren.

Roger William Smith ’37

Although she was born in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Mabelle lived more than ninety years in Maine. She loved skiing, the Maine coast, playing piano, berry picking, the family camp on St. Froid Lake, and her grandchildren. Mabelle firmly believed in the importance of education. After Roger’s death, she initiated two scholarships at the University of Maine Foundation. The first was named in honor of her parents John and Mabel Ashworth. The second, the Roger W. and Mabelle Ashworth Smith Scholarship, was created in memory of Roger. Both scholarships benefit UMaine students from Aroostook County.

Dana Smith, 1970s

 

Dana and his brothers continue the family’s legacy by supporting the scholarship funds started by their mother. These scholarships provide substantial financial assistance to UMaine students from Aroostook County. Like the generations-deep legacy of the Ashworth/Smith families at UMaine, these two scholarship funds will continue to provide real and lasting support to UMaine students for generations to come.

 

 

 

 

 Thank you to the donors, Dana and Sheila Smith for contributing this story and for sharing their family legacy with us.

None of the information on this website should be considered legal or financial advice. We encourage you to consult with your own legal counsel or financial/tax advisor before deciding whether or not to proceed with a gift or change to your estate plan.

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UMaine receives $1 million pledge from Pratt & Whitney for engineering center

UMaine receives $1 million pledge from Pratt & Whitney for engineering center

A $1 million pledge from Pratt & Whitney for the E. James and Eileen P. Ferland Engineering Education and Design Center (Ferland EEDC) was announced on Friday, Oct. 25, as part of University of Maine Homecoming Weekend by College of Engineering Dean Dana Humphrey and University of Maine Foundation President Jeff Mills.

Pratt & Whitney will name the center’s Machine Tool Suite, featuring more functional, updated space for mechanical engineering technology students to develop production and manufacturing skills. It will feature open workspace, computer-controlled milling machines and lathes, tool crib, applied research lab, and a computer-aided drafting/computer-aided manufacturing classroom.

“This gift will allow our mechanical engineering technology students to gain the hands-on experience that they need to be effective from day one in their careers. It is so appropriate that Pratt & Whitney named this space since they hire so many of our engineering graduates. I am deeply grateful for the strong and long-standing relationship between UMaine engineering and Pratt & Whitney,” says Dana Humphrey, dean of the College of Engineering. 

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None of the information on this website should be considered legal or financial advice. We encourage you to consult with your own legal counsel or financial/tax advisor before deciding whether or not to proceed with a gift or change to your estate plan.

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Quimby Family Foundation supports UMaine’s Outdoor Leadership Program

Quimby Family Foundation supports UMaine’s Outdoor Leadership Program

Students in UMaine’s Outdoor Leadership program test drive new mountain bikes provided through a grant from the Quimby Family Foundation.

The Quimby Family Foundation recently awarded a $15,000 Movement grant to support the purchase of a mountain bike fleet for the University of Maine’s new 4-year Outdoor Leadership program, according to University of Maine Foundation President/CEO Jeffrey Mills.

Hannah Quimby of the Quimby Family Foundation (QFF) announced that the University of Maine Foundation, on behalf of the UMaine Outdoor Leadership program, was selected to receive funding because they share with QFF a vision to grow more meaningful, reciprocal relationships with nature. The Quimby Foundation was inspired by UMaine’s approach to human wholeness and its efforts to foster stronger relationships between people and the woods, and waters of Maine. 

The University of Maine’s College of Education and Human Development (COEHD) created the Outdoor Leadership academic program to develop students’ leadership skills, provide intensive training in both contemporary and traditional outdoor activities, and explore the interdisciplinary knowledge-base necessary to be safe and responsible outdoor leaders. The program will prepare students for careers in related businesses, nonprofits, and education. The minor began in January of 2019 and the 4-year program began this fall. 

The grant will provide the program with a mountain bike fleet, and bikes for outreach programs to K-12 students, helmets and maintenance equipment. 

Mountain biking is a key part of the Outdoor Leadership program. The fleet will serve as a “learning lab”. Students will be taught how to develop programs for local K-12 students where they will practice their mountain biking instructional skills and engage more young people in the outdoors. 

“Mountain biking is an important human-powered trail sport that can build individual and community health,” says program leader Lauren Jacobs. “UMaine students will use the equipment to explore how trail building and mountain biking are being used to strengthen communities around Maine. By exposing these future outdoor leaders to various trail systems and teaching them how to instruct and create successful recreation programs, we will be ‘teaching the teachers’ how to get more people recreating in the outdoors.”

The Quimby Family Foundation was formed in 2004 by Roxanne Quimby, an entrepreneur, environmentalist, and philanthropist. The competitive Movement grant funds projects to create and support opportunities for people to consistently choose, and meaningfully experience, nearby nature and wilderness through movement and activity.

Funding from this grant is part of UMaine’s current $200 million Vision for Tomorrow comprehensive campaign, led by the University of Maine Foundation. 

The University of Maine Foundation works to seek private gifts primarily on behalf of the University of Maine.

None of the information on this website should be considered legal or financial advice. We encourage you to consult with your own legal counsel or financial/tax advisor before deciding whether or not to proceed with a gift or change to your estate plan.

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Donors celebrating 55th UMaine Class Reunion to name engineering building

Donors celebrating 55th UMaine Class Reunion to name engineering building

Skowhegan natives E. James “Jim” Ferland and Eileen P. Ferland are the anonymous donors whose $10 million investment will help construct the Engineering Education and Design Center at the University of Maine.

The new facility will be named in honor of the couple.

The announcement was made by University of Maine Foundation president and CEO Jeffery Mills at the UMaine Alumni Association 2019 Reunion dinner Sept. 12 on campus, where Jim Ferland was celebrating his 55th class reunion.

The E. James and Eileen P. Ferland Engineering Education and Design Center (EEDC) will house the Biomedical Engineering Program and Department of Mechanical Engineering, as well as teaching laboratories for mechanical engineering technology, and provide space for all UMaine engineering majors to complete their senior capstone projects.

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None of the information on this website should be considered legal or financial advice. We encourage you to consult with your own legal counsel or financial/tax advisor before deciding whether or not to proceed with a gift or change to your estate plan.

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Longtime UMaine Employee Gives Back

Longtime UMaine employee gives back

 L-R: Tony and Sue Randall receive their Stillwater Society giving society recognition from UMaine Director of Athletics Ken Ralph.

Long-time friends of UMaine athletics, Susan G. Randall ’89 and Tony Randall, have established the first-ever endowment for UMaine’s field hockey team, benefitting one of the University’s most successful athletic programs for years to come.
 
After working in UMaine’s central administration for 25 years, Sue Randall made the jump to work in the athletic department as an athletic business manager in 1995. Despite thinking she would only be working in athletics for a couple of years, she grew to love working in finance for the department.
 
“When I came down to athletics, I didn’t think I would be staying,” said Sue Randall. “I thought maybe a couple of years. I really loved what I was I doing. I wanted to get more involved with the sports programs. That was an important piece for me.”
 
Sue would be promoted to the role of Assistant Athletic Director for Business, serving in that position until her retirement in 2015. When field hockey head coach Josette Babineau was hired in 2007, Randall was an athletic administrator for field hockey. Working in finance for the athletic department for 20 years, while having a strong relationship with the field hockey program, showed Sue and Tony the need to create an endowment.
 
“We are grateful to Sue and Tony for their generous support of our field hockey program,” said Senior Associate Athletic Director for Development Seth Woodcock. “It is especially humbling to see a gift come from a long-time athletic department employee, who has a firm understanding of the importance of endowment building for our programs.
 
“The Randall’s are true and loyal fans,” Woodcock continued. “It is common to see them at games cheering on our Black Bears. The creation of their endowed fund in support of field hockey is forward thinking, as it is a meaningful gift that will impact one of our most successful programs immediately and well into the future.”
 
The endowment will help the program with operations costs, and donations to the fund will benefit the program for the long-term. Babineau and her lone assistant, associate head coach Michelle Simpson often have to hold clinics and camps on nights and weekends to help offset program costs.

“Our program is so fortunate to have great friends like Sue and Tony,” said Babineau. “They have formed great relationships with our players and their families. Sue and Tony understand the work that goes into creating a great team culture and a competitive program. Their friendship and support enhance our players’ experience in our program. This incredibly generous gift will continue to benefit our program for years to come. Thank you very much to Sue and Tony for their commitment to field hockey and women’s athletics.”
 
The endowed fund will grow with the help of donations. The field hockey team had a very successful season in 2018, finishing with a 16-5 overall record, advancing to the America East Championship game for the second time in the last four seasons. The high-octane Maine offense ranked fifth in the nation in goals per game (3.57 goals per game) and 13th in the country in goals allowed per game (1.38 GAA). Maine was nationally ranked the entire campaign, finishing at No. 19 in the final Penn Monto/NFHCA Coaches Poll of the season. 2018 marked the fifth time in the last eight seasons that the Black Bears ended the season nationally ranked.
 
“This is a way to really invest in the future success of field hockey,” continued Randall. “Working with the foundation, the endowment will go a long way with the help of the operations cost with the program. Every little bit counts and will add up.”
 

 

None of the information on this website should be considered legal or financial advice. We encourage you to consult with your own legal counsel or financial/tax advisor before deciding whether or not to proceed with a gift or change to your estate plan.

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