Current WLF Angels
Sue Ackert
Honored by her husband, Richard Ackert
Sue Ackert is a graduate of the University of Tampa and retired from a successful career in banking in 1999. Sue is past President of the Zonta Club of Fort Myers; member of the Advisory Board of Royal Palm Ministries Christian Counseling. She is a member of the Board of Directors of Lee Mental Health, the current Corresponding Secretary for the Green Thumb Garden Club, and a member of Town and Gown for FGCU.
Maureen Bashaw
Honored by Rusty Brown
Maureen Bashaw led a prominent role in Fort Myers theatre for three decades. She also prodded the community and the school system to meet the needs of autistic children. For these reasons, she was nominated as a Women’s Legacy Fund Angel.
Alexandra Bremner
Honored by Bernese Barfield DavisOn July 6, 1958, my sister Eunice and her husband Alex brought into the family their baby girl, Alexandra Ross Bremner. Sidney and I had no children, so we were looking forward to a baby in our family. Eunice immediately encouraged Sidney and me to enjoy and participate in Alexandra's life and afforded us the status of "add on" parents.
As we have gone through life's cycles, Eunice and I have lost our husbands. Our years have continued together. We've traveled together, cried and laughed together, and celebrated most holidays and birthdays together.
Eunice Bremner
Honored by Bernice Barfield Davis Eunice Barfield Bremner: my sister, an angel!
We spent our very young days growing up in a North Fort Myers community known as Slater. Eunice was my little sister, so I was always assigned to look out after her.
We moved across the river to Fort Myers when Eunice was about five. As we became young adults, Eunice became quite a proficient legal secretary. Eunice was office manager for a law firm. She worked hard, and even with her arthritis progressing, she rarely missed a day of work. She retired long after customary retirement age.
Rusty Brown
Honored by Kathy & Gary Bernardo, Carolyn & Herbert Conant, Honey Costa, Dawn-Marie Driscoll & Norman Marcus, and Gayle & Jim Sheets Rusty Brown turned to acting and playwriting after a distinguished career as a prize-winning journalist and nationally syndicated columnist.
A feminist historian, she brings outstanding women to life on stage. When she plays Mina Edison, audiences are transported to Mina’s garden in the early 20th century. As Anne Morrow Lindbergh, audiences are with Rusty on Captiva, writing “Gift From The Sea” and agonizing over life’s challenges. Listeners are rapt when she portrays Katharine Hepburn talking about Spencer Tracy or Clara Barton tending the wounded by candlelight on a Civil War battlefield. Her viewers are moved to tears when, as the President’s beloved companion, she witnesses his sudden death in “The Four Loves of FDR.”
Maureen Cull
Honored by her daughter, Carolyn Rogers
Today I honor my mother.
The one who has always been there for me--through the joyful times, and the times of sorrow. She’s always been there with encouragement, a listening ear, a shoulder, a hand.
Berne Davis
Honored by Julia East and Tammy Surratt Marino
Berne’s time, and hard work serving on the boards of several charitable organizations over the years, and her generous contributions to so many worthy causes has been an integral part of her long and amazing life. (96 years!)
Jane de Lisser
Honored by Brenda Tate, Ann Smoot, Lalai Hamric, Kathy Sturgis, Carl Barraco, Arlene Knox, Julia East, and Johnny Sheppard
Jane de Lisser settled in Fort Myers in 1990, but was born and raised in England. As an active independent appraiser of fine arts and antiques, she has spent much of her career specializing in appraisals of entire homes to valuations of single articles of fine and decorative merit.
Dawn-Marie Driscoll
Honored by Rusty Brown, Carolyn Conant, Julia East, Amy Gravina, Faith Leavitt, Gail Markham, and Ginny Yates
A number of friends of Dawn Marie Driscoll--Rusty Brown, Gail Markham, Faith Leavitt, Julia East, Amy Gravina, and myself, Carolyn Conant -- decided to honor her as an Angel, because as the refrain in a song by Alabama that goes…
Marcella Joy Driscoll
Honored by Dawn-Marie Driscoll
Marcella Joy Driscoll -- wonderful daughter, sister, aunt, cousin, friend, is honored by her sister Dawn-Marie Driscoll and her family. Marcella is generous and kind, always remembering others with exactly the right sentiments. She is a powerful role model for everyone who comes in contact with her, demonstrating by her own life her deep belief and trust in God, prayer and spirituality. Marcella is smart, funny and a joy, and her family loves her very much.
Beth Drouin
Honored by Michael McNally
Beth Drouin began her quest for “angelhood” very early in her life. At a tender age she began to identify challenges in the world and pointed out angels who flew on their way to handle them… she was viewed as an “eccentric” child!
Julia East
Julia East came to Southwest Florida in 2003 with a personal background including such diverse interests as ballet, skiing, Rotary, and the DAR, and a corporate involvement associated with the banking, specialty steel, non-profit and educational fields. When asked, she will tell you that she has been particularly proud of her international teaching trips where she lectured MBA students.
Cynthia Fetterhoff
Honored by Curt and Lalai Hamric
My daughter, Cynthia Fetterhoff is my special Angel. I admire her very much. She is a good daughter, a good mother, a good wife, a good teacher, and a good community volunteer, following the trails blazed by her grandparents.
Aline Flynn
Honored by Johnny and Ellen Sheppard
Aline was born and raised in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Aline married Paul B. Flynn on February 11, 1961 and they had four children: Bonnie Flynn Lombardi, Laureen Flynn Smith, Elizabeth Flynn Namm, and Bernadette Flynn McFarland. Paul and Aline made a number of moves over their married life, following Paul's career in newspaper and publishing. Paul was Publisher of the Fort Myers News-Press newspaper, and rose to President of USA TODAY. Aline felt her first calling was that of wife of Paul, mother of her children, and grandmother of her grandchildren, who are 12 in number.
Barbara “Dena” Geraghty
Honored by Susan Bennett, Kay Holloway, Kathy Adams, Donna Caruso, Christin Collins, Kathy Hoffay, Alice Brunner, Kathy Galloway, Pat Geraghty, the Geraghty Family, Anne Rose, Gail Markham, Patricia Bell, Melissa Simontis, Gay Thompson, Margaret Depew, Nancy Humphrey, Eleanore Kleist, Amy Sanford, and Cora Molloy
Barbara “Dena” Geraghty is a loving mother, wife, friend, confidant, and grandmother. “Binky” as she is known to her grandchildren, has dedicated her career to helping others recover from addiction. She was born and raised in Jacksonville, where she married her high school sweetheart, Patrick, in 1961. Dena and Patrick moved to Fort Myers in 1968. While raising her four children, Dena earned her registered nursing degree from Edison Community College in 1985.
Nahid Ghashghai
Honored by Gholi and Georgia Darehshori
The first Nahid Ghashghai truly earned her wings. Nahid grew up halfway around the world as the very privileged daughter of the head of the Ghashghai tribe. As heads of state, the family was once revered in the country of Iran. She lacked nothing materially. However, Nahid recognized innately that material things were temporal and that only love and human relationships endured. Her life story proved that.
Beulah Gustafson
Honored by cousins Grace Carlson & Family and friend Belle DeKoff Beulah Lettie Gustafson was born on June 21, 1928 in New Haven, Kentucky. Raised in America’s heartland, Beulah followed her stepfather into business, working with him at the country clubs he managed in Indiana and Illinois. It was while working at one of the these clubs that Beulah met the lover of her life, Carl Gustafson. Beulah and Carl married in 1962, and, when Carl retired, the couple moved to Cape Coral, Florida where he could play golf year round.
Beulah was a friendly, vital, active woman. She loved entertaining, music, and shopping, and she loved spending time with friends and family. Although she never had children of her own, Beulah enjoyed being around young people. In her final home, Beulah adopted the four young children of her caregivers, serving as their surrogate grandmother. Beulah died in 2010, but, as a WLF Angel, Beulah will live on, giving to others through the Women’s Legacy Fund.
LaLai Hamric
Honored by Family Health Centers
Lalai S. Hamric’s service to Lee County and Southwest Florida spans over 42 years. From 1970 - 2009, she served as Executive Director and President/CEO of Family Health Centers of Southwest Florida. Upon her retirement on September 30, 2009, she was named President CEO Emeritus. Family Health Centers provides primary and preventive medical and dental care to Southwest Florida’s most vulnerable and needy residents.
Anne Harper
Honored by Sharon Thompson and Danah Harper Cooper
Anne Harper was born in Mansfield, Arkansas in December of 1926 to Lloyd and Ora Presson. She graduated from Baylor University in 1947. She married Daniel Harper in 1948 and they moved to Fort Myers in 1951 where they lived together for 59 years.
Virginia Hartshorne
Honored by Marty Howard
My mother would be shocked to be called an angel because she often commented that she was “just an ordinary person.” However, her friends and family knew that she was anything but ordinary. Instead of being misguided by a difficult childhood, she purposefully chose a positive path. She went to school, had a happy marriage, three children, and surprisingly began a great career in her fifties.
Myrtle Robinson Hearn
Honored by Dewey and Brenda Tate, Brandi Hammond, and Jennifer MacLean
Go Granny Go--“She’s the little old lady from Acworth, Georgia. She drives real fast and she drives real hard. She’s the terror of Interstate 75”. That’s the song my sister and I used to sing about our grandmother, Myrtle Hearn. She turned 80 this year and is by far the youngest 80-year-old I have ever known.
Sister Therese Higgins
Honored by Norman Marcus and Dawn-Marie Driscoll
Sister Thérèse Higgins, CSJ, Ph.D, President of Regis College in Weston MA for 18 years, was an inspiration, a leader, and a persuader. Committed to social justice, she devoted her life to making the accomplishments of women possible by educating and encouraging thousands of students and friends.
Margaret Hoorneman
Honored by Gholi and Georgia Darehshori
Margaret Hoorneman, mother-in-law of Gholi Darehshori, was a member of the greatest generation (strong, proud, and wonderfully witty) and in many ways well ahead of her time. Her light was her intellect, her grace, and her humor.
Khanom “Kay” Kanaan
Honored by Samira Beckwith
Khanom “Kay” Kanaan was proud to be a United States citizen for 49 years before passing on to heaven on April 13, 2004. As an immigrant, she understood the value of hard work and education, which she instilled in all of her children. She also remembered her beautiful town of birth, B’int Ishbail, Lebanon, whose town’s name translates as “daughter of the mountains” and shared her proud legacy with her children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and many friends. Kay was a beloved mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother. We thank her for her unconditional love, comforting ways, spirit, and total devotion to all.
Eleanore Kleist
Honored by Kathryn Kleist-Derheimer
Eleanore Ann Pottman Kleist was born of German immigrants who arrived in America at the end of the first World War. She witnessed ethnic intolerance, which taught her respect for all people. She opened her home to exchange students and adults, offering to sponsor any race or religion.
Pat Limegrover
Honored by her husband, Max FurbringerPat came to Fort Myers August of 1979 and made an immediate impact on our community. The Burdines Department Store had appointed her not only the youngest, but also the first female store manager. She was tasked with getting the store up and running by early September.
For the store opening, she was “requested” to make it a big bang event. She and the event coordinator from the store made the mistake of running into Barbara Mann. There was no stopping the three of them. The opening was a great success.
Peggy MacDonald
Honored by Gail Markham
Peggy MacDonald is a role model for her four children, raising them as a single parent with courage, strength and dedication despite desperate circumstances. She worked at many jobs in order to make ends meet, yet always encouraged her children to reach for their dreams and to be true to themselves. She nurtured her son after he suffered a severe head injury at seventeen and, thanks to her, he now lives independently.
Barbara B. Mann
Honored by Deirdre Mann, Mary Lee, Jena, Michelle, Christina, Janene, Shelby, Haley, Melanie, Jessica, Savanna, Hailey, Kennedy, Natalie, Karlie, and Marylee Grace
Barbara B. Mann, born Barbara Kingsbury Balch, spent her early years in Topsfield, MA and moved to Fort Myers, FL as a young child. Something fun to note is that she received her 1929 Fort Myers High School diploma from Thomas Edison. She has remained here in paradise ever since.
Lorraine Miller
Honored by Louise and Stu Senneff
Lorraine Miller is a native Southwest Floridian who has lived in this area the majority of her ninety years. During that time, she has shown what a truly generous and caring person she is through her constant caring for others. While she also gives to many charities, it is through her actions that people fondly think of her. Not a birthday, a new baby, an illness, a hospital stay, or life in a nursing home passes without Lorraine reaching out to celebrate or comfort. She drives her many friends to church, to birthday parties, and to doctor appointments and shares her love of life with them. She keeps up with all the family news.
Mavis Miller
Honored by T. Wayne Miller
Mavis Miller, a native of Lakeland, FL, moved to Fort Myers in 1956 with her husband, Wayne Miller, when he accepted a job with an embryo mosquito control program for Lee County. Her first local affiliation, the first Sunday she was in Fort Myers, was to join the First Baptist Church of Fort Myers. She has been a worker and dedicated supporter of First Baptist for fifty-four years.
Melvin Morgan
Though she has retired as an educator in the Lee County School District, Melvin continues to give of her time and talents to help others and spends time involved with her church, Mt. Olive African Methodist Episcopal Church, and as a Trustee on the Board of the Southwest Florida Community Foundation. Melvin joined the Board in 1992 and has held positions as Secretary-Treasurer and Vice Chair while serving on various committees. As a teacher, she has been most involved with the Scholarship Committee in awarding scholarships to deserving students.
Lou Pontius
Honored by Steve Pontius
A Texan born and raised, Lou attended TCU where she studied mathematics and where we met and were married in 1973. After graduating, she went on to teach high school math in Texas and St. Louis for 13 years as she and I moved in the broadcast business, ending up in Fort Myers in 1985. That’s when Lou decided to take some time off to do some volunteer work in the community.
Eva Reynolds
Honored by Ginny Yates, Susan Johnson, and Rick Reynolds
We, the children and family of Eva M. Reynolds, celebrate her life and her legacy of love she so openly shared. Born and raised in the small town of Edgemoor, South Carolina, a cherished family home, Eva spent the next 60 years in Miami Springs, Florida as a devoted wife, mother, and family caregiver. She married the love of her life, “Dick,” and they happily shared over 56 years together.
Carolyn Rogers

Honored by her husband, Bill Rogers, and by John W. and Ellen Sheppard
Carolyn is a devoted and loving daughter, wife, and mother and is a trusted friend to many. She is a senior advisory trustee of the Southwest Florida Community Foundation and a founder of the Women's Legacy Fund, having committed hundreds of hours of her professional time and advice to the work of the Foundation.
Ellen Sheppard
Honored by her husband, Johnny Sheppard
Ellen Sheppard--committed wife, loving mother, wise grandma, teacher of young children, art teacher of ill children and elderly, award winning artist, counselor to those in grief and trials, church and charity involved, community leader... Living Angel!
Belle DeKoff Shouse
Honored by Radford and Kathy Sturgis
Community service is a learned behavior. For our Mom, the idea of helping others was learned at the knees of her mother and grandmother whose dedication to assisting those in need was as much a part of their make up as breathing. Her civic involvement likely started before we were born, but we saw it in action. We remember our mother with three toddlers and a seven-year-old in tow, walking the neighborhood to raise money and awareness for mental health.
Ann Smoot
Honored by her children, Tom Smoot, III and Susy Mertz We adore our Mother, Ann Kinsey Smoot. She is hard-working, perceptive, encouraging, humorous, and compassionate. Mom is a fourth or fifth generation Floridian, depending on how you count. Born in Fort Myers, she graduated from Fort Myers High School and Florida Southern College. She taught reading to elementary students in Atlanta, Fort Lauderdale, and Fort Myers prior to marrying Tom Smoot, Jr.
Vera Stephens
Honored by Lalai and Curt Hamric and Cynthia Fetterhoff An angel she is! Halo Shining and always on straight!
Vera and I have known of one another since we were little girls. Her mom worked as housekeeper for Dr. Whisnett, who was the first Lee County Health Officer. Sometimes Vera would come to work with her Mom. That was in his big house on Linwood Avenue and I lived in a little house on Cordova Avenue. The streets were a block apart. She was about 13 and I was about 3.
We met again when I was 27. I worked in a special program in the Lee County Health Department and she was a school nurse. Having that experience with Dr. Whisnett influenced her life's educational choice. There were not many African American RNs around the state in those days. She might have been one of two in Lee County. About two years later, she and I worked in the same program and from then on we were together most of our work lives.
Kathy Sturgis
Honored by Radford Sturgis, Sandra Weintraub, Julie Corbett, Karen Benson, and Andy Sturgis
If you ever wondered why a light shines out from Kathy, it is because she has the heart of Christ: Loving, Patient, Kind, Humble and Forgiving. For 21 years we have walked, talked, dined, designed, danced, played and prayed together. She is diligent and thorough in her duties as a Judge, is patient and loving as a daughter, as a mother and as a wife. As a friend, she is trustworthy, thoughtful, forgiving and generous. Her faith has molded her to be this Angel that she is and has given her a servants heart; Christ's heart. That's why Kathy shines! -- Karen Benson
Madeleine Taeni

Madeleine Taeni is an "angel" for her friendship and generosity. I met Madeleine along with Berne & Barbara B. when I began sponsoring the S.W. Florida Symphony Children’s Chorus almost ten years ago. I have been delighted and blessed to enjoy this friendship.
Brenda Tate
Honored by her husband, Dewey Tate
Brenda grew up in the Atlanta area, attended local schools there, and excelled in a number of areas. Such as, she entered a local sewing contest, won that, then a statewide contest, then the national contest. She received a trip to Rome (Italy that is, not Georgia) where she won again. This is typical of this remarkable woman--an over-achiever all her life.
Mozelle Tate
Honored by Dewey and Brenda Tate
Mozelle Tate is an extraordinary woman. After marrying at 14, she raised four children and several grandchildren. Though not formally educated, she was one of the smartest and most ambitious people we’ve ever known. An avid reader and a quick study, she did whatever was necessary to support her family. “Never say can’t,” wasn’t just something she said, it was something she lived.
Pamela Templeton
Honored by Bruce Bauman
An Angel for our family, friends, and community, Pamela’s energy and passion for life are captivating. My wife’s deep love for the visual and performing arts as well as her heart for those who are disadvantaged, particularly the youth in our community, is an inspiration. In the 20+ years I have known Pamela, she has taken on many challenges, meeting them with determination, intelligence, and more often than not an amazing sense of humor. Her approach, while businesslike, is also combined with her sense of fun and joy.
Gay Rebel Thompson
Honored by Bob Beville
Gay Rebel Thompson was born in the fifties in Tampa when the west coast of Florida was just beginning to take off. In 1953, Gay’s father, William Brown Thompson, recognized this and moved the family to Fort Myers and along with his partner Harvey Woodruff Bamman started Cement Industries.
Stephanie Webb
Honored by Webb's Fort Myers Prescription Shop, Inc. (Ross Webb, Richard and Lisa Lawrence)
Words that come to mind when describing Stephanie are: advocate, relentless volunteer, leader, learner, mentor, friend. Growing up in Indiana, she was surrounded by a family involved in their community – politics and music played major roles in her youth. She received her undergraduate and post-graduate degrees from the University of Miami. An honor graduate in the field of education, she would further her studies with two post-graduate degrees in curriculum and leadership while teaching with the Lee County School system. Early in her career, Stephanie collaborated with local children’s theater, youth orchestra, and children’s choirs.
Margareta E. West
Honored by Carolyn & Herb Conant, Jim West & family, and Nancy West & family
Margaret E. West looked at life as the glass half-full, never half-empty! She was raised in Germany by her grandmother with the help of aunts and uncles. She arrived in America at age eighteen, speaking little English.
Isabelle Barbara Haznar Wojnar
Honored by Dawn-Marie Driscoll, Catherine Farrell,
Isabelle died on April 5, 2008 after a courageous battle with heart disease. "Aunt Isy," as she is known by her numerous nieces and nephews, leaves behind a rich legacy of instilling love and practicality throughout her large family and the thousands of students she empowered as a professional educator.




