
Welcome Campers!
Spring and
Summer
Surprises
in Store
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by
Russell R. Grundke, Executive Director |
Spring is finally here again!
While most of you kept warm and dry
during the long weeks of snow and sub-zero
temperatures, Hiram House has been busy
preparing for the spring school camps and
summer programs.
Several improvements will be evident
now that spring has arrived. The newest
residential log cabin will be ready for our
guests and campers. This cabin is more
than 375 square feet larger than the
previous two. It incorporates both storm and
screen windows on the porch, making it
more usable in poor weather. Additional
improvements were made so community
living is more comfortable and safer.
Higbee Cabin West is being converted
into the Heifer Project classroom for school
camp and summer camp use. This classroom
will provide additional space for groups plus
a unique agricultural learning environment.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank
students of Hiram College and particularly
Jason Bricker-Thompson for making this
Heifer classroom a reality.
The summer camp program is forging
ahead. New programs will be introduced
and old ones are being refined. Hiram
House Camp has some great “surprises” in
store for its summer campers.
As the temperatures rise, so does the
excitement for the coming camping season
at Hiram House!
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Hiram House
Happenings - 2007
Pre-Camp (Staff only)
June 10-15
Summer Resident Camp
June 17 - August 3
Summer Day & Jr. Day Camp
June 18 - August 3
Hiram House Benefit 2007
“Horse Around” at Hiram House Saturday, July 21 5 to 9 p.m.
Summer Horseback Riding & Adventure Camp
August 6-10 & August 13-17
Pumpkin Festival
36th Annual at Hiram House
Sunday, October 14
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Annual Board Meeting
Hiram House Board of Trustees
December 1 - 9 a.m.
(other meeting dates will be announced)
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Help a Child in Need!
Support the Hiram House "Campership Fund"
Help give children of all backgrounds
a life enriching summer camp experience
with a donation to the Hiram House
"Campership Fund."
Each year we provide financial aid to
hundreds of area youth and families who
could otherwise not enjoy the benefits of
camp, thanks to the generous support of
individuals, businesses and organizations.
Please join them this year by clicking here to donate. The Hiram House is a
non-profit 501 (c) (3) organization. Charitable
contributions may be tax-deductible. Thank You!
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Hiram House & New Life Community Partnership Benefits the Region’s Children
in Need
Hiram House works closely with many local social service organizations each year
to help youth and families in Northeast Ohio. Below is one example of this successful cooperation.
New Life Community, a transitional housing, employment and life skills program for homeless families, offers its graduate families the opportunity to have their children attend Residential Summer Camp at Hiram House. Dozens of children from the New Life Community attend the camp annually.
Hiram House provides partial funding for each child for the week-long stay at camp through its annual “Campership Fund” and New Life Community raises the balance of the remaining funds from the community. Both organizations rely on private donations, as well as support from the United Way, to make it possible for these children in need to have a life-enriching summer camp experience.
According to Donna Asnani, Executive Director, of New Life Community, benefits their children receive from their summer camp experience at Hiram House are “amazing”.
They benefit not only by being away from their normal inner city environment, but by spending quality time amid nature. “Their visit to Hiram House is an absolutely out in the wilderness adventure for most of these children,” she explained, “They get a totally different view of the world than they are used to - it’s outdoors, quiet, peaceful - they do not generally have access to this type of setting.”
Some of the New Life children have attended Hiram House every summer for several years and really look forward to camp. She and her staff see how eager they are to return each year and know how much the experience means to them. Some even talk of the day when they might come back and become camp counselors themselves.
“The love the children have for Hiram House Camp is a tremendous testament to the individual interest the counselors and staff show in these children,” Asnani explained. She added, “This does not happen by accident, but it reflects the great responsibility and motivation the counselors have toward the children in their care. In all, this is one New Life program that is always very well attended.”
Overall, she said it is a wonderful set of experiences and activities for campers. They especially love the riding program and really relate to the horses, as well as swimming, games and the variety of outdoor activities that Hiram House offers.
Self-esteem is one of the many lasting benefits Asnani sees the children come away with from camp. “This is a very significant achievement for them because they have been away from home and are very proud of themselves and all the things they have learned.”
Russell Grundke, Executive Director, of Hiram House Camp, said he and his staff strive to work closely with the New Life staff and are “very gratified to see how the children blossom during their time at camp.” He is most grateful to have such a positive working relationship with the New Life Community and looks forward to continuing their strong partnership to further benefit the children they both serve for many more years to come.
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Hiram House Today
| VOL. 8 NO. 1 |
Spring/Summer 2007 |
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New Heifer Classroom to Greet Hiram House Campers in 2007
Summer Campers
learned to groom and
care for pygmy goats
and other small farm
animals last summer
as part of the new
Farmstead program.
This season a new
Heifer Classroom will
be added at the camp
with the support of
Hiram College.
Hiram House looks forward to
welcoming new and returning Summer
Campers and School Camp Groups for
the 2007 season!
Among the many exciting outdoor
activities awaiting them this year will be
the addition of a new Heifer Classroom
as part of the camp’s recently expanded
Farmstead program, thanks to the efforts
of Hiram College students, faculty and
staff, led by Associate Chaplain Jason
Bricker-Thompson.
Working together with Hiram House
staff, they helped convert one side of the
Higbee Log Cabin in Pioneer Circle to
be used for camper instruction, displays
about conservation, animal husbandry,
sustainable agriculture, other cultures and
countries.
A former Hiram House program staff
member and Hiram College graduate
himself, Bricker-Thompson and his
fellow students and faculty, along with
camp staff, were also instrumental in the
development of the camp’s popular
Environmental Center & Weather
Station at Hiram House several years
ago. Hiram College is now donating a
portion of proceeds from campus
fundraisers to support the newly
converted facility.
The new Heifer Classroom, a
previously added vegetable and flower
garden in the meadow, and an assortment
of small domestic farm animals
are all part of the camp’s Farmstead
program. Last summer two pygmy
goats joined rabbits and guinea pigs at
the barnyard and were a big hit with
campers and staff alike.
The program is patterned after the
worldwide Heifer Project, with the
support of Heifer International and the
Garfield Memorial United Methodist
Church in Pepper Pike.
Hiram House was established in
1896 by George Bellamy and six fellow
divinity students from Hiram College.
Although two independent organizations,
the camp and college have forged many
positive cooperative efforts over the
years in honor of this proud legacy.
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Hiram House Elects New President, Officers for 2007-‘08
- Five New Members Named to Board of Trustees -
Past-President Recognized for Years of Service
Newly-elected Hiram House Board of Trustees Officers, President John D. Barrett, (far left)
Susan Walter Cargile, Vice President-Development & Chair of Hiram House Campaign,
(center left) David B. Moore, Vice President-Finance & Treasurer (far right) and
Executive Director & Secretary Russell R. Grundke (not pictured) presented a plaque to Immediate
Past President John M. Fulton, (center right) “in recognition of his years of service and dedication
to Hiram House and the children it serves.” Fulton has served as the Board’s President for
several terms as well as Vice President-Finance and has been a Hiram House Trustee since 1983.
The Hiram House Board of Trustees elected new leadership for the 2007-‘08 term as well as five new members at its recent annual meeting.
Newly-elected officers were John D. Barrett, President, and David B. Moore, Vice President-Finance and Treasurer. Re-elected were officers Susan Walter Cargile, Vice President-Development, and Russell R. Grundke, Secretary. Outgoing President, John M. Fulton, will remain on the Board and also serve on the Finance Committee.
Newly-elected trustees were Dr. Daniel M. Neides, Lawrence A. Kopittke, Jr., Kristy Kopittke, Dr. Laura Gillespie, and Dr. Michael Martinez.
John D. Barrett is Senior Vice President and Division Head for Commercial Banking at LaSalle Bank in Cleveland. Barrett previously served as Vice President-Finance and Treasurer of the Hiram House Board, as a member of the Finance Committee, and has been a trustee since 1993. Barrett is a graduate of Georgetown University. He and his family reside in Hudson.
Barrett, whose term began in January, said he looks forward to “continuing the great work done at Hiram House on behalf of the area’s youth.”
“We have an outstanding staff and a very supportive group of donors and volunteers,” he added. Barrett also indicated Hiram House will continue to “focus on capital improvements to maintain a great camp for the children of this region.”
David B. Moore recently retired after a career in real estate with Prudential Select Properties in Pepper Pike. He is a resident of Shaker Heights. He previously served in the position of Vice President-Finance and has been a Board member since the 1970’s.
Susan Walter Cargile is Chair of the Hiram House Capital Campaign and has been a Board member since 1978. She is a graduate of Laurel School and Denison University and a resident of Beachwood.
Russell R. Grundke is Executive Director of Hiram House, the non-profit organization operating Hiram House Camp. The 111-year-old youth camp was founded in 1896 as Ohio’s first “Settlement House.”
Outgoing President John M. Fulton, a South Russell resident, who has served several terms as President and Vice President-Finance and has been a trustee since 1983, was presented with a plaque from the Board “in recognition of his years of service and dedication to Hiram House and the children it serves”.
Fulton, whose tenure saw the completion of a new residential log cabin and the launch of another one as part of a multiyear, five-million dollar capital campaign to revitalize the camp, its programs and facilities, said he was pleased with the progress made. He recently retired after a career in banking and finance in which he was Senior Vice President of the Commercial Real Estate Division of Charter One Bank, in Cleveland.
In addition to electing new officers, five new members were elected to the Hiram House Board of Trustees. Dr. Daniel Neides is Associate Medical Director of the Cleveland Clinic Solon.
Dr. Neides has been recognized as Outstanding Educator by the Cleveland Clinic Foundation and inducted into Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society for his teaching at Ohio State University College of Medicine. A Cleveland native, he received his medical degree from Ohio State University. He and his family live in Pepper Pike.
Lawrence A. Kopittke, Jr., and Kristy Kopittke, are also residents of Pepper Pike. Mr. Koppittke is President of Lawrence Industries in Cleveland. He received a Bachelor of Science degree from Miami University. Mrs. Koppittke is Sales Manager of Ryan Homes, in Solon. She is a graduate of Laurel School and received a Bachelor of Science degree from Boston University.
Dr. Laura Gillespie is an Associate Staff member of the Pediatrics Department at the Cleveland Clinic. She is a graduate of Laurel School, holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Bucknell University and earned her medical degree from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine.
Dr. Michael Martinez is a radiologist in the Radiology Department at South Pointe Hospital. He received his undergraduate degree from Yale University and his medical degree from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. Both Dr. Martinez and Dr. Gillespie are Cleveland natives and live in Shaker Heights.
In other business, the Board announced construction is in progress on the third of four new residential log cabins to be built as part of the Hiram House master plan and capital campaign. The cabin is due to open in the spring and will be available for School Camp, Summer Camp, and Retreat Groups.
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Hiram House School Camp Gets High Marks from Kidder Elementary
Kidder Elementary students learned new skills on the Low Ropes Challenge Course at School Camp
Take eighty inquisitive children, an enthusiastic faculty and staff, mix in dozens of exciting, interactive daily activities, 172 acres of scenic outdoor classrooms and you have the makings of a “fabulous educational experience.”
Just ask Principal Mark Mabry and 5th grade students, teachers and parent chaperones from Walter Kidder Elementary School, in the Brunswick City School District, who visited Hiram House School Camp last spring.
The school incorporated the camp’s 4-day educational program as part of its regular curriculum to tie into the students’ science and environmental studies. This was Kidder’s first time at Hiram House School Camp, although other schools in the Brunswick District, such as Towslee Elementary, have been coming for the past several years. They chose Hiram House School Camp because they wanted to be directly involved in the teaching program and found they were delighted with the results.
According to Principal Mabry, Hiram House “designed the School Camp curriculum to fit our needs and we really relished that aspect of the program.” Executive Director Russell Grundke and Program Director Rachel Fredrick were “more than accommodating.” He observed that Grundke has done an outstanding job in building “great new facilities at the camp, such as a new Climbing Wall, Environmental Center, Log Cabins and much more.”
Mabry said Fredrick did “a wonderful job working with the school to plan its schedule and activities at School Camp. She and her program staff were very good to us. They even came to Kidder Elementary to do an advance presentation for our faculty and parents to show them what to expect and put everyone at ease prior to our visit.”
During their stay at Hiram House School Camp, students enjoyed a variety of academic and recreational activities each day, such as: stream, pond and swamp studies, orienteering, survival skills, pioneering skills like candle and butter making, nature hikes, low ropes challenge course, climbing wall, archery, canoeing, sensory awareness, camp arts & crafts, even learning how to build a birdhouse. “The kids loved it – they could take part in so many things you just can’t do anywhere else,” Mabry said.
Students were broken into small groups of 10-12 for more individualized attention. Each child rotated through the one-hour and twenty-minute daily periods so that everyone got to experience every activity scheduled during the course of the week. Hiram House School Camp Outdoor Education Instructors and Kidder Elementary teachers shared the instructional program. Even the downtime and evening programs were “structured recreation” such as campfires, skits and games with the children, staff and parent chaperones.
Many of these activities and the group dynamics they provide offered the added benefit of developing the students’ selfesteem, confidence, leadership, and communications skills. “This was also a great bonding experience,” said Mabry, “not only for the children but for the adults as well.”
An educator for some 27 years, Mabry was a former teacher himself and has been the principal at Kidder for the past 14 years. He was actively involved in the School Camp program at Hiram House, on site, not as the principal, but as just another staff member, very hands-on. “It was really great to be able to relax and be at ease with the students, staff and parents,” he said, “whether singing songs over the campfire or talking about our day in the residential log cabins at night – it was a very good environment for team building.”
Mabry cited many other benefits, including Hiram House’s policy of exclusive use by one group at a time. “We loved having the whole camp and its facilities to ourselves with no other distractions or scheduling conflicts, we used everything,” he said. “The rustic, year-round lodging and dining accommodations were great and the food was good too.”
Also, because Hiram House is centrally located in Moreland Hills in the Greater Cleveland area, near major highway routes, it is easily accessible for school districts throughout Northeast Ohio. That proximity saves transportation time and costs, according to Mabry, and leaves more room and funding to devote to the program itself. Not only is the camp easy to reach, but it is also close to medical and other vital facilities. Yet, while you are there it seems like you are “completely surrounded by nature’s serenity, amid its lush woods, meadows, streams, ponds, and wildlife.”
Overall, Hiram House School Camp was a resounding success, Mabry said. It received ringing endorsements from Kidder ’s staff, parents and students too. The school surveyed them all and each group said they “absolutely loved it and were completely satisfied”. Asked what might be changed to make it better for the future, their uniform response was “don’t change a thing.”
In fact, in their year-end survey, over half of the 5th graders cited Hiram House School Camp as their “favorite thing of the entire school year.” It had the highest participation among all of the school’s annual programs.
“The kids had a great time and learned a lot in the process, “ Mabry said, adding he and everyone at the school were very pleased, “We tried something new and different. It all came together and worked out very well. We can’t wait to go back to Hiram House School Camp again next spring!”
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“Horse Around” at Hiram House this Summer
- Annual Benefit to be Held on July 21 -
Families of All Ages Welcome!
Hiram House will host a fun-filled
“Horse Around” evening at camp for
families of all ages, on Saturday, July 21,
from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m., to benefit its
Horseback Riding Program and annual
Campership Fund for youth in need.
The event’s festivities will feature a
barbeque dinner buffet by the Winking
Lizard and cocktails, as well as a Silent
Auction with many fabulous items for
guests to bid on, donated by area
businesses and individuals.
New this year, will be an exciting
“Gold Rush” game with great prizes.
Back by popular demand will be the
amazing Zap Entertainment with “The
Bubble Lady” and Magic by “Zap the
Wonder Chap.”
Children can also make an arts and
crafts project to take home, which will
be supervised by the camp’s staff.
Reservations are required and space
is limited. Tickets are $35 for adults and
$15 for children. Sponsor tables are also
available. For more information, please
contact Hiram House at (216) 831-5045. Casual attire.
Click here to learn more about “Horse Around”!
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Hiram
House Today - Spring/Summer
2007 Vol. 8 No. 1
Editor: K.M. Bourland Communications
Web Design: ColorBar |
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| For previous news issues, visit our archive page. |
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