“Appendix 1. Dramatis Personae” in “A National Park for Women’s Rights”
Appendix 1
Dramatis Personae
Presidents of the United States
- Jimmy Earl Carter
- Ronald Reagan
US Congress
- Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D–NY)
- Representative Jonathan Brewster Bingham (D–NY)
- Representative Frank J. Horton (R–NY)
- Representative Gary A. Lee (R–NY)
National Park Service Headquarters in Washington, DC
- William Joseph Whalen, Russell E. Dickenson, William Penn Mott Jr., directors
- Denis Galvin, deputy director; formerly manager, Denver Service Center
- Ross Holland, associate director, cultural affairs
- Mike Lambe, chief, Office of Legislation
- Peggy Lipson (now Peggy Halderman), legislative specialist
National Park Service North Atlantic Regional Office, Boston
- Herbert Cables Jr., regional director
- Charles Clapper, associate director for planning and cultural affairs
- Terry Savage, chief of planning
- Judy Hart, chief ranger for legislation
- Shary Berg, Carol Tanski, landscape architects
- Holly Bundock, public affairs
Women’s Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls and Waterloo, 1982
- Judy Hart, superintendent
- Judith Wellman, Nancy Hewitt, historians
- Pat Haines-Gooding, history conference manager
- Janice Friebaum, Connie Hasto, Ann Ritter, Debbie Wolfe, rangers
- Dorothy Duke, chair, advisory commission
Alan Alda, Actor and Benefactor
- Alan Alda, speaker and ribbon cutter to open the park in 1982
- Arlene Alda, wife of Alan Alda
- Ann Mazzaro, assistant to Alan Alda
National Park Service Preservation Center, Boston
- Blaine Cliver, chief
- Barbara Yocum, architectural conservator
National Park Service, Denver Service Center
- Gerald Patten, manager
- Sharon Brown, Sandy Weber, historians
- Bonnie Campbell, Linda Hugie, Elayne Anderson, Mark Malik, general management plan team
Design Competition for Wesleyan Chapel
- Adele Chatfield-Taylor, design director, National Endowment for the Arts
- Peter Smith, competition manager
- Kathy Christie, public affairs
- Reese Fayde, chair of jury
- Theodore Liebman, competition adviser
- Ray Kinoshita (now Ray Kinoshita Mann), design competition winner
- Ann Wills Marshall, design competition winner
New York State in Albany
- Nancy Dubner, assistant commissioner, Department of Transportation
- Charles Breule, director, Urban Cultural Park program
- Rad Anderson, senior staff, Urban Cultural Park program
Seneca Falls
- Robert Freeland, village mayor
- E. Barry Bradshaw, village deputy mayor
- August Sinicropi, director, Urban Cultural Park
- Bert Fortner, Phil Prigmore, planners and principals, Whole Duck Catalogue
- Jon Lane, Lane-Frenchman Associates, management plan submitted for UCP
- Francis X. Mahady, Economic Research Associates (ERA), economic research and analysis
- Anne Ackerson, Ann Hermann, directors, Seneca Falls Historical Society
- Hanns Kuttner, park activist and supporter and ranger in second summer
- George Souhan, village and park benefactor
- Audie Malone, real estate agent
- Frank and Julie Ludovico, owners Seneca Falls Laundromat
- Mary Curry, Sue Sauvageau, park activists
- Tania Werbizky, preservationist
Waterloo
- Kenneth Lee Pachen Jr., mayor
Stanton Foundation
- Ralph Peters (Seattle), Stanton house owner
- Lucille Povero, Corinne Guntzel, Suzanne Cusick, presidents
National Women’s Hall of Fame
- Marilyn Bero, Betsy Shultis, presidents
Press Corps
- Doug Auer, manager, radio station WSFW
- Greg Cotterill, reporter, WSFW
- Carol Ritter (now Carol Ritter Wright), reporter, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
- Jack Rosenberry, reporter, Finger Lakes Times
- Dave Shaw, reporter, Syracuse Post-Standard
- Martin Toombs, reporter, Auburn Citizen until June 1983, then Finger Lakes Times
- Howard Van Kirk, publisher, the Reveille
- Doris Wolf, reporter, Finger Lakes Times
Stanton Family Descendents
- Coline Jenkins, great-great-grandaughter
- Rhoda Jenkins, great-grandaughter
- John Barney, great-grandson