Glenn Blumhorst: This Is About So Much More Than Building a Park

December 31, 2023

Glenn Blumhorst: This Is About So Much More Than Building a Park

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Dear Supporters,


Growing up as a farm kid in Missouri, there was no way I could even imagine the places my life would take me. But from the very beginning, my parents taught me the values that continue to fuel me today. My dad used to tell me that, for every dollar I earn, I should save some, spend some, and give some away.


My father was also a Marine. He believed in the importance of serving your country and that same commitment to service was always expected of me. When I took my first trip to Washington, D.C. in high school, I was impressed and inspired by the American story and the monuments to the heroism and sacrifice of those who died serving the cause of freedom. 


But I knew that military service was not the best fit for me. While I later discovered the Peace Corps in college, I know that if I had seen anything during that formative trip to D.C. that promoted the ideals of peace and partnership it would have resonated with me deeply as a different route from the military.


This is the unique opportunity of the Peace Corps Park project – to tell a different side of our story as a nation than anything else you’ll encounter in our nation's capital – and I hope you will help bring it to life with a generous contribution.

An image of Glenn Blumhorst during his Peace Corps service in Guatemala

Peace Corps service dramatically changed my worldview. My wife and I served together in Guatemala – our son was later born there – and when we got back to the U.S. I knew that my life would not be the same. I was bilingual, bicultural, and driven to continue applying everything I knew in service of others.


I had a meaningful and rewarding 19-year career with ACDI/VOCA, which included 10 years in Bolivia, before I was asked to lead the National Peace Corps Association (NPCA) as its president and CEO. It was at NPCA that I first learned of the initiative to build Peace Corps Park, and while I helped mobilize the advocacy effort to secure congressional authorization, it wasn’t until I recognized the educational potential of the project that I became so deeply committed to helping it become a reality.


It was a privilege to lead NPCA for those 10 years, and I am even more honored to now have a major leadership role in bringing Peace Corps Park to fruition. But it is the lasting educational impact that the project will have that has inspired me to put so much enthusiasm and energy into this flagship Peace Corps community initiative. 


Building the park is the first step. Building the educational components of the digital visitor experience will truly have a snowball effect by forever inspiring generations of people who come to the site. There they will understand the enduring values and ideals of the Peace Corps and the importance of service and community partnership both at home and around the world.


We seek broad community participation. Your generosity in supporting the project with a contribution in your year-end giving plans will allow us to get started sooner on the timeless storytelling that will mobilize and motivate all those who experience Peace Corps Park either online or during an in-person visit to Washington, D.C.


Thank you for your support and partnership; we literally cannot do this without you.


Yours in service,

An image of Glenn Blumhorst's handwritten signature

Glenn A. Blumhorst
Chief Advancement Officer
Peace Corps Commemorative Foundation


President and CEO, National Peace Corps Association (2013-22)
RPCV Guatemala (1988-91)


GBlumhorst@PeaceCorpsCommemorative.org


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PEACE CORPS COMMEMORATIVE FOUNDATION
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December 3, 2024
Invest in the future with Peace Corps Park on Giving Tuesday Dear Supporters, Every year, the season of thanks encourages us to reflect on the things we are grateful for, but also to think about the future and the world we want to see. For Peace Corps Park, we are so grateful for the achievements of the past year–both in inspiring major donors like Jacqueline Mars and Ces Butner and in securing design approval from the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts–and profoundly excited about the future. With more than $5 million already raised, the only real hurdle in this journey toward groundbreaking is raising the remaining funds for this meaningful project. On this Giving Tuesday, we invite everyone to make Peace Corps Park a central part of your giving plans with a tax deductible donation . There are many ways to give , and all of them will help bring Peace Corps Park to life in our nation’s capital. Most of all, your generosity will help us match Ces Butner's $500,000 gift before the end of the year and show how this community can rise to meet his challenge. At its most impactful, your charitable giving is an investment in the future: A way of saying “the world would be a better place if more people lived these values.” And while Peace Corps Park will commemorate the bold vision that JFK laid out when creating the Peace Corps almost 65 years ago, our mission is decidedly forward-looking. We believe the world is a better place when people from different walks of life partner with each other in service of a shared future, and that creating a permanent beacon to these ideals in our nation’s capital is a critical part of telling America’s story to the more than 25 million people who visit the National Mall every year.
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September Newsletter: Peace Corps Community Leading the Way
October 21, 2024
It is with great pleasure that we announce a major step forward in the timeline of Peace Corps Park, with final design approval by the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts at its last meeting on October 17. The Foundation has been working tirelessly with the CFA since the site selection process in 2014 to refine our design approach, using creative problem solving to address feedback around the symbolic representation of the world map in the Park’s central plaza, the granite benches encircling it, the inscriptions carved into the stone, and many other aspects of the Park’s concept. Our expert design and landscaping team, led by Larry Kirkland and Michael Vergason, made countless refinements to the plan to ensure the best possible artistic and practical expression, some of which we have shared in our recent newsletters . We are thrilled to see the fruits of this collaboration, and are looking forward to finalizing the engineering plan to make the design a reality. Another critical stakeholder in this process is the National Park Service, which will maintain the Park in perpetuity once built. On Friday, October 18, the NPS issued a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) for Peace Corps Park, a precursor to obtaining final approval from the National Capital Planning Commission, which is expected to review the plan in its December meeting. With the Park’s design process in its final stages, we turn our attention to raising the $5 million needed to put shovels in the ground, and look to our generous and dedicated community to get us to groundbreaking and make Peace Corps Park a reality!
October 4, 2024
Dear Friends and Supporters,  It is with a heavy heart that the Peace Corps Commemorative Foundation announces the passing of our President, Roger K. Lewis, who died on Wednesday at his home in Washington, D.C. after undergoing a medical procedure. He was 83, and is survived by his wife Ellen, their son Kevin and his wife, and four granddaughters.
September 27, 2024
September Newsletter: Peace Corps Community Leading the Way
August 30, 2024
August Newsletter: A beacon of hope for Peace Corps values
July 26, 2024
July Newsletter: Now is the time for this critical symbol of unity and partnership
June 27, 2024
June Newsletter: Into the home stretch of Peace Corps Park’s design
May 28, 2024
May Newsletter: Finding inspiration from all sides
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