Frank H. Ferguson Jr., 82, of Kennett Township, died Friday, June 6, at Brandywine Living at Longwood in Kennett Square. Born in Wilmington, he was the son of the late Frank Ferguson and the late Velma Milligan Ferguson.
Frank Ferguson Jr.
Frank lived in the Balmoral neighborhood for 30 years and was a lifelong employee of the DuPont Company, retiring in 2001. Following his retirement, he continued to volunteer his time with the Wilmington & Western Railroad in Wilmington. He was passionate about trains and loved spending time on them.
In addition, Frank was a car enthusiast, especially when it came to Corvettes, Camaros, and Chevelles. He was known to get a new car every 2 years because he would get bored with the one he was driving. He also collected model cars and was an avid NASCAR fan.
Frank was known for his love of Guinness beer and craft breweries and took a trip to Colorado every year.
He will be missed for his smile and sense of humor.
Frank is survived by his close friends, Amanda Carey, Constance Penn “CP” Wilson, Diane Wright, and a number of other good friends from both Two Stones Pub in Kennet Square and Dew Point Brewery in Yorklyn.
A celebration of Frank’s life will be announced at a future date.
Arrangements are by Grieco Funeral Home & Crematory, Inc. (484-734-8100) of Kennett Square. To view Frank’s online obituary and share a memory of him, please visit www.griecofunerals.com.
There are more administrative moves coming to the Unionville-Chadds Ford School District. Tim Hoffman was already named the new superintendent of schools, beginning Aug. 1, the day after current Superintendent John Sanville retires. And now it’s time for more moves.
In two separate emails, Hoffman announced that two people are up for promotions pending a school board vote on Monday, June 16.
Michael Audevard
Michael Audevard, the current director of curriculum and instruction, will be considered for the position of assistant superintendent to replace Hoffman, who was named last month as the new superintendent to replace Sanville, and current Unionville High School Principal Amy Jenkins is being considered for the position of director of curriculum and instruction, replacing Audevard in that position.
Hoffman said Jenkins “will play an active role in ensuring the launch of our K-2 literacy work, including full-day kindergarten, implementing effective math interventions at all grade levels, and expanding on college and career pathway initiatives she started at the high school this past year.”
Audevard is a former principal at Hillendale Elementary and also taught at Chadds Ford Elementary School.
Amy Jenkins
“During [Audevard’s] tenure,” Hofman said, “he has demonstrated a deep commitment to student success, innovative educational practices, and strong collaborative leadership.”
The school board will vote on the promotions Monday, along with voting on next year’s school budget and on accepting Breslin Architects’ bid on designing a new middle school.
It is expected that the promotions for Jenkins and Audevard will be approved, and that the board will have to look for a new principal for Unionville High School.
Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.
David Mark Haradon, 72, of Southern Chester County, died Thursday, June 5. Dave was the loving husband of Peggy Lee Haradon (Murphy), with whom he shared 51 years of marriage. Dave was born on Oct. 23, 1952, in Nashville, Tenn., to Myron Ralph and Sara Claire Burke Haradon (Burke).
David Haradon
Dave fell in love with his wife, Peggy, in the Purdue University Marching Band, where Dave played trumpet while studying as a chemical engineering major with a minor in marketing, and Peggy was studying to be a child life specialist while tossing a baton as a beautiful sequined majorette. After college, Dave began a 20-plus year career with the DuPont company in senior management sales, marketing, product management and strategic planning roles. This caused his family to live in many areas of the country: Seaford, Del.; Waynesboro, Va.; Wilmington; Chicago, Ill.; Dallas, Texas and Kennett Square. After leaving DuPont, Dave started his own webinar production company in 2001.
Dave’s pride and joy was being called Papa by those who love him. He is remembered for eating Papa-Oh’s and Krispy Kreme donuts (especially when the hot sign is on), and of course, there’s always Papa-Tea! His grandchildren will miss Papa playing monster at the playground and soccer and ping pong in the basement, going on long walks at the beach, finding horseshoe crabs, and treating them to Starbucks! Papa loved hosting popcorn movie nights and going to the movies. He played many rounds of frisbee golf with his grandchildren. Papa always had time for a conversation and loved to both teach and learn new things.
Dave cherished traveling with Peggy and his family, whether it be their annual trips to Massanutten, going to their beach house in Bethany, Delaware, visiting the family farm in Indiana where he could jump on a tractor to mow the lawn, exploring the National Parks, or adventuring to far-away places like Australia. He enjoyed music of all kinds – concerts, musicals, performing with his trumpet, or playing his banjo and guitar late into the evening hours. Dave was also always ready for a good prank (like the great toilet paper caper), good jokes, bad jokes, and even inappropriate jokes – cue an eyeroll from Peggy. He loved his family, pickleball, skiing, golfing, playing games, and most importantly, “happiness.”
Dave leaves behind this legacy of happiness and love for his family, and is also well known for leaving the world a better place through service to his community. Dave’s community service efforts started in his high school Key Club (Kiwanis) and continued during his early career with senior leadership roles in Jaycee International. In those early years, he was recognized as the Young Virginia Man of the Year in the late 1970s.
After their children went off to college, Dave began serving with countless organizations in his Southern Chester County community. Dave joined the Longwood Rotary Club in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, in May 1999, “just because someone asked him to.” As a second-generation Rotarian and Paul Harris Fellow (Dave’s Father: Club President-Clinton, Iowa) he was Longwood Rotary Club’s President from 2008-2009, District 7450 Conference Chair in 2011, Rotary Leadership Institute (RLI) instructor, District 7450 Corporate Board of Director member, District Treasurer, and Rotary District 7450 Governor from 2016-2017. Dave’s passion for both individual and organizational leadership was manifested in many white papers, articles, and even a course on transformational leadership through the Rotary Leadership Institute, “Transforming Your Rotary Club: How to Create an EXTRAORDINARY Rotary Club for your Members, Your Community and the World.” He instructed thousands of people in hundreds of organizations about creating extraordinary lives and showing how this relates to leading extraordinary organizations. One of Dave’s favorite quotes that reinforces Rotary’s “Service Above Self” motto is: “The best way to find your own self is to lose yourself in the service of others.” — Mahatma Gandhi
In addition to his work with the Rotary Club, Dave was the founding Board President of Family Promise – an interfaith model to serve the homeless children and their families in Southern Chester County. He served as the Kennett Square Memorial Day Parade Committee chairman, served for two years on the Historic Kennett Square Board of Directors, and spent a year as the Oxford Main Street Executive Director. He was on the Board of Directors of the Oxford Area Civic Association and served as co-facilitator/leader with the bi-monthly Kennett Square “Bridging the Community” organization that brings people together to help meet the needs of the Kennett Square area and provides community service volunteer opportunities for residents. Together with Dansko, Inc., Dave helped “bridge” Project Cure, the largest provider of donated medical supplies and equipment to developing countries, resulting in the establishment of a new Project Cure refurbishment and distribution center in the former Dansko headquarters facility in West Grove.
Dave was also actively involved with local YMCAs, including serving as a technical producer for numerous Kennett YMCA and Jennersville YMCA Good Kids fundraising dinners. He also served on the Kennett YMCA Golf Fundraising Committee and on the Jennersville YMCA’s Togetherhood community service program committee. Dave also volunteered with or served with the Episcopal Church of the Advent, the Kennett Food Cupboard, LaComunidad Hispana, the Kennett Senior Center, and the United Way of Southern Chester County.
Dave was honored as Outstanding Citizen of the Year by the Southern Chester County Chamber of Commerce in 2015. Dave once said, “You can change someone’s life forever in a 5-minute conversation along with the life of their friends, the life of the family and the lives of people that you will never know. That’s the game we are in. The game of “service above self.” The game of making a difference in someone’s life. Not by using a selfie stick but using a selfless stick to build a better world.”
Dave will forever be remembered by his son, Jonathon Mark Haradon, and wife Sarah; his daughter, Marcia Lynne Preston, and husband Darrin; his grandchildren, Marlowe Lee Haradon, Mason Burke Haradon, Braydon David Preston, Madelyn Lee Preston, Destiny Alexis Preston, and Cody Sean Preston; and several great-grandchildren. He is preceded in death by his sister, Vera Lynne Haradon.
A funeral service to celebrate Dave’s life will be held Monday, June 16th at 2 p.m. at the Episcopal Church of the Advent, 401 North Union Street, in Kennett Square, with viewing at 1 p.m. Please wear colorful attire to help celebrate Dave’s happy life.
In lieu of flowers, contributions in Dave’s memory may be made to the Longwood Rotary Foundation https://longwoodrotary.com/page/rotary-foundation. The family also encourages everyone to pick up trash, sign up for a community service event, or do something nice for someone in Dave’s memory. In Dave’s words: “Consider the possibility of simply doing something for someone else, simply because you can.”
Arrangements are by Grieco Funeral Home & Crematory, Inc. (484-734-8100) of Kennett Square. To view Dave’s online obituary and share a memory of Dave with the family, please visit www.griecofunerals.com.
A 22-year-old woman, an employee at Home Depot in Concord Township for stealing. The suspect was not identified by name in the report, but police said an Asset Protection employee reported that the woman in question had been stealing from the register for about a month. The report said the suspect finally admitted to stealing.
Avondale Barracks
•Police said they arrested a 44-year-old man from Coatesville for DUI on June 8. The arrest came after a traffic stop on Street Road in West Marlborough Township at 2:15 a.m. on June 8. The driver was not identified in the report. The stop was made because of an unspecified traffic violation.
•Charles Cornelius, 65, of West Chester, was arrested for DUI in Kennett Township on June 7, a police report said. According to that report, police attempted a traffic stop on a black, 2009 Lincoln Continental Town car at 10:28 p.m. in the 1000 block of E. Baltimore Pike for multiple traffic violations. The driver began to pull over but then continued driving for another mile, the report said. Once stopped and contacted, police said they observed indications of impairment.
•Police said they’re investigating the reported theft of approximately $6,800 worth of jewelry from the Chadds Ford Antiques mall on May 24. The unknown suspect fled in a red Honda Pilot with Delaware tag PC406937.
•Caroline A. McManus, 32, of Bryn Mawr, was arrested on DUI charges following a two-car crash in East Marlborough Township on May 1, police said. The accident happened a little after 5 p.m. on E. Baltimore Pike near Village Lane. According to the report, McManus was driving south on Route 1 behind another car, but rear-ended that lead car when it stopped for a red light.
•State police said they arrested two Delaware men, Christopher Trexler, 28, of Newark, and Tierece Garvin, 38, of Wilmington, on theft charges. Details of the theft were not released, but the two are accused of stealing shoes from Famous Footwear on May 25.
•Police said speeding was the cause of a two-car crash in Pennsbury Township on May 22, and cited Johnathan R. Sandoval, 18, of Oxford. The accident happened on Route 1 near Parkerville Road at 11:39 p.m. during a period of rain. According to the police report, Sandoval was westbound in the right lane of Route 1 but moved into the left lane to pass another vehicle. That second car swerved to the left and braked hard, which forced Sandoval to also brake hard. He then swerved, but lost control of the car because of the excess speed, swerved back into the right lane, and struck a berm. The car went airborne, rotated, and rolled, striking a wooden fence. The car came to rest on its roof roadside. The report also said Sandoval was able to extricate himself from the overturned car. Minor injuries were reported, but he refused transport.
•Police from the Avondale barracks are handling a case in which a 55-year-old Pocopson Township woman went to the Birmingham Township Police Department to report a sexual assault. The report said the woman told police she had been sexually assaulted years earlier and that she was now getting threatening messages carved in her barn underneath her bedroom. She also reportedly said there are drones outside her window every night.