Norman Rockwell Museum Appoints Chief Philanthropy Officer

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STOCKBRIDGE, Mass. — The Norman Rockwell Museum has appointed Ellen Spear, currently president and CEO of Heritage Museums & Gardens in Sandwich, Mass., as the museum's new chief philanthropy officer.

Spear will officially join Norman Rockwell Museum over the summer, assuming a newly created senior-level position to lead the museum's development efforts at a pivotal time of growth. Spear succeeds chief advancement officer Michelle Clarkin, who joined the development staff of Fordham University in Manhattan.

Norman Rockwell Museum recently announced plans to assess the feasibility of adapting the Old Stockbridge Town Hall as a National Center for Illustration Education and Research. As a member of the museum's strategic leadership team, Spear will lead the museum's overall fundraising efforts, including preparing for a campaign and the museum's 50th anniversary.

"We are delighted to have Ellen Spear's expertise and proven talents join our museum team to champion our path forward in this essential role. Ellen is a highly respected and accomplished leader who brings her nearly three decades of experience to this task and to a museum and community she knows and loves. We welcome her back to the Berkshires," said Laurie Norton Moffatt, director/CEO of Norman Rockwell Museum.

Spear said she is "thrilled" to be joining Norman Rockwell Museum.

"I'm eager to help the museum achieve its exciting goals. Now is a critical time for the institution, as it announces its expansion plans for the new National Center for Illustration Education and Research, advancing historic preservation and adaptive reuse of an important historical building in Stockbridge," she said.


 
As president and CEO of Heritage Museums & Gardens, Spear directed a successful effort to create sustainable change. Over the last seven years she has led the development and implementation of dynamic new strategic plans, increased earned revenue, including significant fundraising, refreshed and reinstalled permanent exhibitions, and increased audience engagement.

Previously Spear served as president and CEO of Hancock Shaker Village in the Berkshires, where she led a re-invention of the organization that was recognized by the Kresge Foundation with a $1 million Sector Leader grant to support their transition to a new business model.

She has also served as executive director of the USS Constitution Museum in Boston, as the director of advancement at the American Textile History Museum in Lowell, Mass., and as program director of WGBH Radio, Boston.

Norton Moffatt and Spear together were co-founders of the Berkshire Creative Economy Council, which became a model for the statewide Massachusetts Creative Economy Council. Spear's former experience includes expertise with planning and funding historic preservation, and serving as program manager of one of four branch offices of the New York-based Nonprofit Facilities Fund, providing advisory, consulting and financial services (grants and loans) to cultural organizations statewide for capital projects.

She and her husband Brad Spear will relocate to the Berkshires over the summer.


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Pittsfield Firefighters Rescue Woman From Burning Home

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A woman was saved from the second floor of a structure fire on Marlboro Drive on Friday evening. 
 
Two search teams had to work through a hoarding situation inside the single-family home at 1 Marlboro after the blaze was called in at about 6:45 p.m. 
 
The woman was found by the Tower 1 team at the top of the stairs about 15 minutes after the first unit arrived on scene. She was taken to Berkshire Medical Center by County Ambulance. 
 
Neighbors first reported smoke coming from the house with fire alarms sounding. Engine 6 confirmed smoke coming from the house and were met with serious hoarding conditions making access inside the house difficult. Engine 2 was requested to respond as well and eight off-duty firefighters were called in to man an engine and ladder truck at headquarters to cover the city. 
 
Multiple companies worked to overcome the hoarding condition behind the entry door to get inside and locate a spreading fire in the kitchen on the first floor. At this time, neighbors informed firefighters there was a woman still inside the house and that she usually stays on the second floor. T1 crew worked to gain access the second story from the front while Engine 3 went to a rear second-floor window. Both companies were tasked with a "Vent Enter Search" tactic that focuses on getting directly to the victim, which can be extremely dangerous with active fire on the floor below. 
 
E6 located and began extinguishing the majority of the fire in the kitchen while T1 made entry under extreme smoke conditions. Minutes later they located the woman and worked to get her out a rear window to the E3 team. 
 
Once water supply had been established, primary and secondary searches were conducted of all floors of the home and the fire was completely extinguished. 
 
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