September 21, 2017

Providence College celebrates close of record $187 million fundraising campaign

The transformation of campus includes the greening of the former Huxley Avenue looking toward Eaton Street. At left is the new Arthur F. and Patricia Ryan Center for Business Studies, on the site of the former Dore Hall.
The transformation of campus — a major outcome of the “Our Moment” campaign — includes the greening of the former Huxley Avenue looking toward Eaton Street. At left is the new Arthur F. and Patricia Ryan Center for Business Studies, on the site of the former Dore Hall. At right is Raymond Hall.

Providence College celebrated the close of its record-breaking fundraising campaign, Our Moment: The Next Century Campaign for Providence College, during St. Dominic Weekend, Sept. 15-16.

The most successful campaign in College history raised $187 million, shattering the target of $140 million announced at its public launch in October 2014. It featured gifts from more than 35,500 donors, including alumni, parents, faculty, staff, corporations, and foundations. Forty-two percent of the College’s 56,000 alumni made a gift during the campaign, and 41 donors made commitments of $1 million or more.

The seven-year Our Moment campaign transformed campus, enabling the construction of the Ruane Center for the Humanities, the Arthur F. and Patricia Ryan Center for Business Studies, the Ray Treacy Track and Field, and Chapey Field at Anderson Stadium. It established five endowed professorships and three endowed lectureships. The amount of financial aid and scholarships awarded to students increased by 45 percent, to more than $70 million annually, and 120 endowed scholarships were created.

Gifts to the campaign enhanced research and study abroad opportunities, bolstered the implementation of a new core curriculum, and supported diversity initiatives and new programs, such as The Humanities Forum.

The successful close was announced at a celebration on Saturday night in the Peterson Recreation Center that drew alumni, trustees, students, administrators, faculty, and staff. St. Dominic Weekend is an annual event during which the College thanks its most generous benefactors.

At the event, College President Rev. Brian J. Shanley, O.P. ’80 said visitors frequently tell him, “I can’t believe what you have done” in transforming the campus. But most significant, Father Shanley said, is the campaign’s impact on students.

“For me, the most important part of this campaign is that we’ve been able to increase financial need-based aid to our students as a result of philanthropy,” Father Shanley said. “I love our buildings, but I’m more interested in investing in our students, who can be transformed in their hearts, souls, and minds in beautiful academic spaces.”

The campaign also made possible the replacement of Huxley Avenue, a city street that bisected campus, with a landscaped walkway and a new entrance off Admiral Street. A softball field was built, and Schneider Arena and Mullaney Gym in Alumni Hall were renovated.

Ongoing projects include an expansion and renovation of the Science Complex and the multiphase construction of the Ruane Friar Development Center, which will include a basketball practice facility, a new Center for Career Education & Professional Development, and an expanded and a renovated Slavin Center ’64 Hall.

“Providence College is at an incredible point in our history,” said Gregory T. Waldron, senior vice president for institutional advancement. “We are experiencing unprecedented momentum academically, athletically, and with admissions. The philanthropic support of the Friar faithful has been critical to our success thus far and will be just as critical to our future success.”

Adam Hanna '18 performs a ballad he wrote for Providence College, "100 Years."
Adam Hanna ’18 performs a ballad he wrote for Providence College, “100 Years.”

At the campaign celebration, Adam Hanna ’18 (Lakeville, Mass.), a singer and songwriter, played and sang a ballad, “100 Years,” that he composed for the occasion.

“This is in honor of the last 100 years, it’s looking forward to the next 100, and it’s knowing that in some way, we’re all a part of both,” said Hanna.

“One hundred years ago, no one we know was here,” Hanna sang. “Poor people, of simple means, 100 years ago, accomplished things they never could have dreamed. … Time is a tiny plot of land we worked so hard to clear. We have a lease that says 100 years.”

Students Quess-Symphonee Johnson '21, left, and Tori Baggio '18 thanked donors for their support.
Students Quess-Symphonee Johnson ’21, left, and Tori Baggio ’18 thanked donors for their support.

Two students spoke about how generosity affected their experiences.

Quess-Symphonee Johnson ’21 (Central Falls, R.I.) participated in the five-week Friar Foundations Program during the summer. With other students, most from low-income and first-generation families, she lived on campus and took four courses for credit. Friar Foundations is made possible by gifts from the Angell Foundation, the Salah Foundation, and individual supporters.

“Though academics were very important, the bond in the family that we created over the summer was just as important,” said Johnson. “When we returned in the fall, it had been two weeks since we were last together, and there wasn’t a single day that we weren’t all texting each other. Being able to have that security on campus is an incredible opportunity. We thank you so much for gifting us with this chance.”

Tori Baggio ’20 (Wilton, Conn.) said that on her second night on campus, she heard Kristine C. Goodwin, vice president for student affairs, describe the “Friar family, and how, as a family, it’s absolutely imperative that we have each other’s backs.”

Baggio said she didn’t understand the importance of those words until three hours later, when she was wheeled off on a stretcher, bound for the hospital with complications of bronchitis.

“It was extremely comforting when Ms. Goodwin came over to me and said, ‘Don’t worry, Tori, I’ll meet you at the hospital. I’ve got your back.’ Tonight, I’d like to thank all of you for having my back,” said Baggio. “Your support for financial aid, for the Angel Fund, and for scholarships, is why I’m here at Providence College, and I could not be more blessed and more thankful.”

During a visit to the Arthur F. and Patricia Ryan Center for Business Students, guests were able to view the new finance lab.
During a visit to the Arthur F. and Patricia Ryan Center for Business Studies, guests were able to view the new finance lab.

Earlier on Saturday, guests sampled the student experience at PC. In the Ruane Center for the Humanities, they viewed the new stained-glass windows in the Fiondella Great Room, learned about student research in the humanities and sciences, and took part in a Development of Western Civilization lesson.

In the Arthur F. and Patricia Ryan Center for Business Studies, Chris Riccobono ’01 discussed his apparel company, UNTUCKit, while in Schneider Arena, there were behind-the-scenes tours of new resources available to the men’s and women’s ice hockey teams and the lacrosse team.

Co-chairs of the Our Moment campaign were Hon. William C. Leary ’60 & ’10Hon., retired probate judge for the district of Windsor Locks, Conn.; and Kevin C. Phelan ’66 & ’15Hon., co-chair of the Boston office of Colliers International, a commercial real estate firm. Both are members of the PC Board of Trustees.