Daily Progress Distinguished Dozen

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Every year, the Daily Progress selects 12 individuals from the community as its distinguished dozen.

1995

  • Fletcher Arnitt Jr., FUMA teacher and coach
  • Linda Bowen, youth baseball booster
  • Margaret McLeod Cain, attorney
  • Thomas J. Calloway, CHS basketball coach
  • Deborah DiCroce, PVCC president
  • Nancy Gercke, Charlottesville’s preschool education coordinator;
  • Edward W. Hook Jr., doctor and teacher at UVa
  • A.E. Dick Howard, constitutional scholar at UVa
  • Alicia Lugo, Teensight director
  • Fran Sackett, Live Arts artistic director
  • Charles Stickle, UVa hospital volunteer
  • Richard Wellbeloved-Stone, teacher at Living Education Center for Ecology and the Arts

1996

  • Sonny Beale, Boy Scout leader
  • Rev. Bruce Aaron Beard, pastor of First Baptist Church
  • Lelia Brown, community leader
  • Eddie Dean, Madison County High School math teacher and football coach
  • Rae Ely, attorney and founder of Historic Green Springs
  • Vicky Generelly, Nelson County Rural Health Outreach Program nurse
  • Michael A. Mallory, UVa’s director of minority recruitment
  • Marion Nolan, president of Charlottesville/Albemarle Foundation for the Encouragement of the Arts
  • Bert Roby, chief of Orange County VFD
  • Donna Selle, regional library director
  • Gabe Silverman, developer and arts booster
  • Vince Tornello, CHS band director

1997

  • Dequeta Anderson, Abundant Life Family Center manager
  • Jasper Bell, Charlottesville fire educator
  • Fred Boyce, Prism Coffeehouse’s booking agent
  • Shirley Cox, volunteer organizer
  • Judy Goetz, volunteer
  • Gary Greenwood, youth sports booster
  • Dr. Sharon Hostler, pediatrician
  • Mark Lorenzoni, businessman and fitness advocate
  • Tim Murphy, Orange County K-9 officer
  • Ginny Smith, leader of Compassionate Friends
  • Mack Tate, Yancey Elementary School principal
  • John Thomasson, Louisa businessman and community activist

1998

  • Patricia Bottom-Delany, Venable Elementary School special-education teacher
  • Carl Brown, juvenile probation officer
  • Annette Grimm, director of the Sexual Assault Resource Agency
  • Robert V. Heffern, principal of Madison Primary School
  • Joy Johnson, public housing advocate
  • Heinz Kramp, founder of Innisfree Village, a home for brain-injured adults
  • Anna Mirra, Greene County Primary School volunteer
  • Dr. Mohan Nadkarni, Charlottesville Free Clinic co-founder
  • Martin Schulman, veterinarian
  • James W. Simmons, Charlottesville Municipal Band director
  • Julie Trueblood, interpreter for the deaf at UVa Medical Center
  • Albert Weed II, Nelson County community activist

1998-1999

  • Ken Ackerman, executive director of Monticello Area Community Action Agency
  • Agnes Cross-White, publisher of Charlottesville/Albemarle Tribune
  • Joseph Frisina, Habitat for Humanity volunteer
  • Marcia Invernizzi, program director at UVa’s McGuffey Reading Center
  • William Lewis, businessman and community leader
  • Janet Murphy, cancer survivor
  • Dr. Vito Perriello, pediatrician
  • Paul Rittenhouse, volunteer soccer coach and rescue worker
  • Jessamy Rouson, founder of Animal Haven
  • Betty Simon, volunteer at Runaway Emergency Shelter Program and Shelter for Help in Emergency
  • Edith Wheeler, enrichment teacher at Venable Elementary School and co-founder of Imani Project
  • Rev. James E. Woods, founder of First Bible Baptist Church and United Christian Academy

1999-2000 (Distinguished dozen of the 20th century)

  • Raymond C. Bice Jr., UVa professor and administrator
  • Drewary J. Brown, civil rights advocate
  • Bernard Chamberlain, attorney and historian
  • Nan Crow, Charlottesville’s recreation director
  • Dr. Halstead S. Hedges, founder of Martha Jefferson Hospital
  • Thomas Staples Martin, U.S. senator
  • Rebecca Fuller McGinness, teacher and community leader
  • Paul Goodloe McIntire, philanthropist
  • Rev. Frederick W. Neve, Episcopal priest and educator
  • Randolph H. “Pete” Perry, businessman and politician
  • Edgar F. Shannon Jr., president of UVa
  • A. Darden Towe, civic leader

2000-2001

  • Mozell H. Booker, Burnley-Moran Elementary School principal
  • Elain Carlton, volunteer at elder-care facility
  • Stephen H. Helvin, district court judge
  • Greg Howard, musician and literacy advocate
  • Linda Krongaard-DeMong, nurse practitioner and patient advocate
  • Harry Porter, landscape architect at UVa
  • Mary Reese, director of Barrett Day Care Center
  • Sterling Robinson II, chef and community activist
  • Patricia L. Smith, director of Offender Aid and Restoration of Charlottesville-Albemarle
  • Lou Southard, state chief of forest protection
  • George Welsh, UVa football coach
  • Jim Wootton, local historian

2001-2002

  • Suzanne Brower, founder of Pathway Volunteers, a program for Alzheimer’s patients
  • Luvelle Brown, assistant principal and founder of Walker Academy for black male students
  • Robert Covert, diversity educator
  • Dave Matthews Band, community benefactors
  • Mary Lee Embrey, Nelson County volunteer
  • Dr. Greg Gelburd, Downtown Family Health Care founder and physician serving low-income people
  • Robert Hammond, retired veterinarian and Ivy Creek Natural Area volunteer
  • Anthony Iachetta, engineering professor emeritus and civic activist
  • Robert S. Pace Jr., Fluvanna County animal care advocate
  • Deborah Pettit, Louisa County educator
  • Dr. Jo Ann Pinkerton, women’s midlife health and menopause center founder and director
  • Debbie Ryan, UVa women’s basketball coach and cancer research advocate

2002-2003

  • Franklin Bacon, community volunteer
  • Dan Bieker, conservationist, Ivy Creek Natural Area volunteer
  • Juanita Wilson Duquette, owner of Wilson School of Dance
  • Gary Eisenhuth, science teacher at Western Albemarle High School
  • Miriam Green, nurse at Our Lady of Peace
  • Jim Hingeley, chief public defender for Charlottesville-Albemarle
  • Barbara Lachance, “soup lady” at Church of the Holy Comforter
  • Beth McPhee, Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA shelter manager
  • Alberto Ojeda, advocate for area’s Hispanic community
  • Ivan Orr, executive director of the Music Resource Center
  • Helen “Sandy” Snook, community activist
  • Lillie Taylor, longtime cook at Nathanael Greene Elementary School

2003-2004

  • Harold Boyd, Boys and Girls Club leader
  • Ray Caddell, real estate broker, community helper
  • Holly Edwards, parish nurse at Westhaven Clinic and Holy Comforter Catholic Church’s soup kitchen
  • Dr. Raymond Ford, pediatrician, leads medical missions to Haiti
  • Sandra Levine, community volunteer
  • Marshall Pryor, community and civic service work
  • Ann Rooker, community volunteer
  • Barbara Shifflett, executive director of the Albemarle County Fair
  • Deirdre “Dede” Smith, director, Ivy Creek Foundation
  • Gordan and Mary Beth Smyth, funders of Nelson County students’ education
  • Phillip Stinnie, CEO and president, Charlottesville-Albemarle Youth Club, basketball coach
  • Ruth Stone, executive director, Piedmont CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates)

2004-2005

2005-2006

  • Lee and Paulette Albright, state agency watchdogs
  • Sonny and Debra Beale, Somali refugee helpers
  • James Taylor Beard, anti-poverty, civil rights activist
  • Judy Hunt, hospice volunteer
  • Cornelia Johnson, Charlottesville sheriff
  • Eric and Marcia Johnson, volunteer tutors
  • Oliver Kuttner and David New, Katrina relief organizers
  • Dave Norris, housing, low-income advocate
  • Cindy Payne, guidance counselor
  • David Strider, nurse manager; swim program volunteer
  • Carlos Teran, Hispanic community advocate
  • Karen Waters, Quality Community Council executive director

2006-2007 (teen edition)

2007-2008

  • Mary Birkholz, animal sanctuary operator
  • Jim Carpenter, photographer, volunteer
  • Janet Herman, Women’s Four Miler volunteer
  • Jeanne McCusker, senior citizen helper
  • William Moors, Spanish-speaking physician
  • Steve Murray, provider of running trails for local teams
  • Rydell Payne, Prospect-area community worker
  • Rick Richmond, JABA board member, community volunteer, lawyer
  • Ed Russell, volunteer for local Alzheimer’s Association
  • Eben Smith, Rivanna Trails Foundation volunteer
  • Josephine Whitsett, retired school guidance counselor
  • William “Whit” Whitten, musician/teacher

2008-2009

  • Mary P. Anderson, administrator, nurse and therapist at the Lafayette School & Treatment Center
  • Suzanne Jessup Brooks, serves on numerous community boards
  • Maureen Burkhill, works with at-risk youths, most recently with Teensight
  • Janet Centini, co-founder of Jeffrey’s Gifts
  • Dr. Alan Dalkin, Central Little League leader
  • Harold B. Folley, community organizer; coordinator of the Westhaven Afterschool Program
  • Del Horan, founder of quilting group; community service
  • ElizaBeth McCay, principal of Jackson-Via Elementary School
  • Mary T. Miller, community and therapeutic arts volunteer
  • Fahy “Skip” Mullaney, co-founder of People and Congregations Engaged in Ministry
  • Carolyn Ohle, executive director, Innisfree Village
  • Tom Payne, volunteer reserve sheriff’s deputy; oversees the Project Lifesaver program

2009-2010

Daily Progress Distinguished Dozen for 2009-2010

2010-2011

Daily Progress Distinguished Dozen for 2010-2011

2011-2012

Daily Progress Distinguished Dozen for 2011-2012