Tag Archive

LightHouse Gala 2023

An Enchanted Evening Indeed – A LightHouse Gala Recap

An Enchanted Evening Indeed – A LightHouse Gala Recap

It was a star-studded evening at the LightHouse Gala on Saturday, August 19. Our gala attendees showed up dressed to the nines ready to raise funds (and paddles!) for the rebuild and re-imagination of Enchanted Hills Camp.

As guests arrived, they were greeted with champagne and our signature gala cocktail, an Enchantini, as they perused the Silent Auction and caught surprise glimpses of framed legacy Enchanted Hills Camp photos, some dating back to the Rose Resnick days of the 1950s, sprinkled throughout the cocktail reception area in delicate gold frames.

When the doors to the Grand Ballroom opened, our guests were dazzled with twinkling bistro lights, fresh pine garlands adorning the tables and entry ways, and the rejuvenating scent of lush trees and crisp air that instantly transports your senses back to Enchanted Hills Camp. That night, the Westin St. Francis Hotel was the place to be!

LightHouse Gala Committee Co-chairs Kathryn Webster and Laura Allen, and LightHouse CEO Sharon (and dapper guide dog Pilot, dressed in a doggy-tuxedo) began the evening with a warm welcome, thanking our guests and gala sponsors for their time and generosity as we kicked off the evening’s program.

When keynote speaker Rebecca Alexander took the stage, she joyfully led our gala guests in a camp song, bringing the whimsy and silliness of summer camp to 350 audience members as they echoed her back with, “I said a boom-chicka-boom!” Rebecca told her story growing up with Usher Syndrome, her love for summer camp and passion for inclusive and accessible experiences for the blind, low vision, and deafblind community.

EHC Camp Director Tony Fletcher speaks into the microphone on stage

“Summer camps are a place where anyone, regardless of ability, can experience the power of community in nature. But I’m especially delighted to support LightHouse’s efforts to create a world-class facility to serve campers who might otherwise not have access to the confidence-building activities and opportunities Enchanted Hills offers,” says Rebecca.

As Tony Fletcher, EHC Camp Director, took the stage, he told the story of camp—about our start with Rose Resnick in 1950, our strength, and of our deeply-rooted community, then he spoke of the destruction from the 2017 Napa wildfires. A video played on the screen above the stage, and as images of a burnt and devastated redwood forest were shown, Tony told a story of resilience, of courage, and of determination.

As the moving and heartfelt words from Tony Fletcher hung in the air, we kicked off the live auction, led by auctioneer extraordinaire Greg Quiroga. The air became electric as the friendly (although at times, perhaps a bit fierce!) competition brewed in the room and auction paddles shot to the sky! As paddles raised, so did the funds to rebuild a beautiful, accessible, inclusive dream retreat for the blind community!

The evening ended with a beautiful musical performance by visually impaired singer-songwriter, Meghan Downing. As Meghan strummed her guitar, her angelic voice sang melodies reminiscent of the comfort and ease like the end of a perfect Enchanted Hills Camp day, warm and cozy around the campfire.

In total, the gala raised $680,000 for Enchanted Hills Camp! We are overwhelmed with gratitude for the incredible love and support that was shown to EHC and the blind community. We’d like to specially thank Ben Jai for his unbelievably generous donation of $100,000 and a second significant donor who  gave an additional $90,000 to the building of the Redwood Grove Theatre! Accompanied by other special Gold and Silver donors, over $300,000 was raised for the rebuild of the theatre.

The construction of Redwood Grove will begin in mid-fall of this year! As construction of the theatre and other dream projects are underway, we will keep all of our friends, supporters, and campers updated!

As Enchanted Hills Camp approaches our 75th anniversary in 2025, we invite you to imagine the beautiful new space we are creating for generations of blind, low vision and deafblind campers to come. And who knows? The next gala just might take place in the heart of EHC as we celebrate growth, resilience, aspiration, and three quarters of a century of excellence in Summer 2025!

 

Meghan Downing’s Musical Journey: Our Gala Performer Shares Her Story

Meghan Downing’s Musical Journey: Our Gala Performer Shares Her Story

We recently announced Meghan Downing, a low vision singer/songwriter, is our LightHouse Gala Musical Guest Performer. We asked Meghan to share more with us about her music journey so far, and we invite you to learn more of her story.
 
Can you tell us a little about how you came to be a musician?
 
I’ve been a musician pretty much my whole life. My mom encouraged me to play the violin at age four, and I played classical violin and fiddle through high school. I always thought that guitar and ukulele were really cool, so I picked them up, too. With that came singing, and I got into this rock band that said they needed a lead singer. I sang lead in the band from eighth grade until I was a senior in high school, and then started getting into singing and songwriting.
 
What made you shift into wanting to express yourself through your own songs?
 
I go to Berklee College of Music in Boston and before going there, a lot of my friends were writing songs, but every time I tried to write, I got discouraged and thought “this doesn’t sound very good.” I’m kind of a perfectionist, which is a blessing and a curse. But finally, during my first or second year at Berklee, I sat down one day and started humming and playing a chord progression that I’d been working on. I thought, “You know what this is? We’re going to write a song. We’re going to see how it comes out.” I started doing that every day and didn’t let my brain tell me to stop if it didn’t sound exactly like how I wanted it to sound. Ever since then, songwriting has been a thing that I do.
 
How does the music style of the rock band you were in compare to your individual music style?
 
The music I’m writing is country folk. My mom really likes how country music tells a story, so I was raised listening to old-time country songs. My current band, which I formed in college with friends from Santa Barbara, started off playing pop and rock, but now we’re morphing into a country-folk sound.
 
Who are your biggest musical influences right now?
 
I love Bonnie Raitt, Kacey Musgraves, James Taylor and Carole King. But I would say my biggest influence right now, and currently kind of my idol, is Kelsea Ballerini.
 
Are there any sort of unique experiences you draw on when writing songs?
 
Santa Barbara is where I’m from. I’m totally in love with being a California girl, but a big part of my life has been the switch between moving back and forth between Boston and California and living kind of two different lives. In country music, you hear a lot about hometowns, but you don’t really hear a lot about a California hometown. I’ve been writing about leaving home and what that feels like. I think that’s an experience that a lot of people can relate to.
 
How has your visual impairment affected your music?
 
I have Stargardt disease. I’ve been losing my vision since I was nine. It was actually playing the violin that made me, my family and my violin teacher realize that something was going on with my vision because I stopped sight reading music. We first thought that maybe my interests were changing, but there were other hints pointing to something being up with my vision, so I went to the eye doctor and they diagnosed me. I started learning music by ear and started playing the fiddle, because you can learn to play fiddle by ear. I’m blessed as far as my ability to hear music and to put that music into my fingers or and my singing. I just have to trust my ears and trust my fingers, trust that muscle memory and my connection to music. I’m able to connect with my audience a lot more because I’m not thinking about reading sheet music.
 
What can people expect from your performance at One Enchanted Evening?
 
I got so excited when I heard the theme of the gala was an evening at camp. I went to an all-girls’ camp from ages 5 to 15. At night we would sit around a campfire and there would be 400 girls singing together with guitars.
 
A lot of my country folk influences come from camp and I’m excited to bring that to the gala. I also get the opportunity to play with an alumna of Enchanted Hills Camp, and I’m really looking forward to that.
 
What are you hoping the gala audience takes away from your performance?
 
I want it to be a unifying experience. At an event like this, people may not know each other, but they might hear a song and say to each other “Oh, I love this song.” I want to make it a group experience where everyone connects through music.

Want to get a taste of Meghan’s music before the gala? Listen to her new single, Any Luck. And if you purchase a ticket to An Enchanted Evening, you can hear her perform live! Gala ticket sales close at 12:00 pm Pacific on Monday, August 14.

Purchase LightHouse Gala Tickets

Thanking our LightHouse Gala Sponsors

Thanking our LightHouse Gala Sponsors

We’re just two weeks away from the LightHouse Gala! We cannot wait to share our vision for the future of Enchanted Hills Camp with all our gala guests. The funds we raise at An Enchanted Evening will go to supporting our mission to rebuild and re-imagine Enchanted Hills Camp after the destruction caused by the 2017 Napa Valley wildfires. We’d like to thank some of our very special gala sponsors who have already given so generously to EHC.
 
Thank you to our Gold Sponsors: Comerica BankWaymoPerkins&WillSensPoint, Sharon and Richard Sacks, The Bunt Family, and Michael and Leslye Dellar.
 
Thank you to our Silver Sponsors: LinkedInMetaGoogleUberCruiseRainbow SandalsFeeding the Blind, Sharon Giovinazzo, Jerry Kuns, Jennison Asuncion, Chris Yoon, Laura Allen, Janette Barrios and Chris Heckler, Charles D. and Frances K. Field Fund, and Cherry Garcia Family Foundation.
 
We would also like to thank the Bay Area online publications 7×7 for supporting us by featuring the LightHouse gala on their website. You can read the article, A Starlit Gala to Support Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind here.
 
Every ticket purchased, every auction bid, and every story shared will help build a brighter, more accessible future for our beloved camp and all our campers for generations to come! To all of our sponsors and to 7×7, we thank you!
 
So, join us and our wonderfully generous sponsors on Saturday, August 19, as we bring the sights, sounds, smells, and magic of camp to the Westin St. Francis. Support EHC by raising your paddles at the gala auction, sip an Enchantini (EHC’s new signature cocktail!) while listening to Gala Keynote Speaker, Rebecca Alexander, and end the evening swaying to the musical stylings of Meghan Downing. It will be an evening you won’t want to miss!

Purchase LightHouse Gala Tickets

The Power of Camp to Build Confidence: A Conversation with Rebecca Alexander, Laura Allen, and Kathryn Webster

The Power of Camp to Build Confidence: A Conversation with Rebecca Alexander, Laura Allen, and Kathryn Webster

In 2017, the Nuns fire ripped through Napa and Sonoma Counties, and devastated the Enchanted Hills Camp property. It was a tragic moment, but we turned the challenge into opportunity: We’re building a reimagined, year-round home for blind and low-vision community members to grow, explore, and learn. 

On Saturday, August 19 from 6 to 11:30 pm at the Westin St. Francis in San Francisco’s historic Union Square, we’ll gather the Lighthouse community and its supporters to benefit that effort at An Enchanted Evening. Rebecca Alexander, an Oakland-born disability rights advocate and award-winning author, is headlining the event. She is a psychotherapist, group fitness instructor, extreme athlete, and disability rights advocate whose mission is to inspire others to live deeply meaningful lives. Born with a rare genetic disorder called Usher syndrome (type 3A), she has been simultaneously losing both her vision and hearing since she was an adolescent. 

Recently, Rebecca and our gala committee chairs, Kathryn Webster and Laura Allen, sat down to talk about the importance of camp experiences in the lives of kids who are blind, low vision, or deafblind.

Rebecca helps facilitate camps in New York and New Jersey for kids with Usher syndrome, and talks about how much kids who attend expand their confidence. “The transition from meeting these kids on the day they come and the day they leave – there is no more fulfilling feeling than to see the evolution of these kids in just a week,” Rebecca said. “They’re surrounded by other kids who are just like them.” 

Kathryn described how a lack of blind and low vision peers as she grew up left her feeling very different. “If I knew about Enchanted Hills, about camps that gave me that exposure, I’d have been set up in a much different position when I was going to college,” Kathryn said. “But that’s the power of telling our story.” 

This event will celebrate Enchanted Hills’ unique stories, while ensuring it has lasting impact well into the future. 

“It’s so important for us to stop and celebrate the experience we can help create for children as well as their families at these camps,” Laura said. “Creating a place for children to play and be free, have adventures, be creative, play music, learn new skills, make friends, and, most importantly, have that sense of belonging.” 

“By supporting LightHouse and supporting this cause, you are affecting people’s lives for a lifetime,” Rebecca said. “You’re changing the trajectory of the confidence they will be able to build. That is something that Laura, Kathryn, and I all wish we had had access to growing up. We can’t change that, but we can change what children and their families have now.” 

Check out the full conversation in the video below. There are still tickets available for An Enchanted Evening, which will feature keynote speaker Rebecca Alexander and musical guest Meghan Downing

Learn More About Keynote Speaker Rebecca Alexander

Purchase LightHouse Gala Tickets

Announcing LightHouse Gala Keynote Speaker, Rebecca Alexander

Announcing LightHouse Gala Keynote Speaker, Rebecca Alexander

Rebecca Alexander is a woman with dark brown shoulder length hair and is wearing a white blouse under a black blazer.

With our Gala to celebrate Enchanted Hills Camp swiftly approaching, we are delighted to announce the keynote speaker for An Enchanted Evening (drumroll, please…) This year’s guest speaker will be renowned author and advocate for the Deafblind community, Rebecca Alexander!
 
Rebecca Alexander is also a psychotherapist, group fitness instructor, extreme athlete, and disability rights advocate whose mission is to inspire others to live deeply meaningful lives. Born with a rare genetic disorder called Usher syndrome (type 3A), she has been simultaneously losing both her sight and hearing since she was an adolescent. She is almost completely blind and deaf, and approaches life’s challenges with infectious curiosity and enthusiasm.
 
On August 19, Bay Area native, Rebecca, will return home to headline our gala at the Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco’s iconic and historic Union Square Plaza. The gala’s goal to raise funds for rebuilding and re-imagining our beloved Enchanted Hills Camp is a goal that reignites deeply with Rebecca.
 
“I have such fond memories of going to camp every summer from my childhood through my teenage years in Northern California,” said Rebecca. “Summer camps are a place where anyone, regardless of ability, can experience the power of community in nature. But I’m especially delighted to support LightHouse’s efforts to create a world-class facility to serve campers who might otherwise not have access to the confidence-building activities and opportunities Enchanted Hills offers.”
 
Learn more about Rebecca Alexander by visiting the Usher Syndrome Society website.
 
Tickets to An Enchanted Evening can be purchased for $500 and are selling fast. Those who purchase tickets before May 31 will receive a $100 discount per ticket with the use of promo code GALATIX at checkout. Please note, this cost includes your entry, dinner, drinks, as well as a generous donation to Enchanted Hills Camp.

Purchase LightHouse Gala tickets.

Gala Committee Chairs Share Why They Are So Passionate about EHC and the Gala’s Success

Gala Committee Chairs Share Why They Are So Passionate about EHC and the Gala’s Success

Spring has sprung, Enchanted Hills Summer Camp season is just around the corner, and the LightHouse Gala: An Enchanted Evening is just four months away! Our gala committee has been busy working out every detail to bring all the beauty and wonder of Enchanted Hills Camp (EHC) to the grand ballroom of the Westin St. Francis Hotel this August. With all these exciting plans in motion, we decided to sit down with LightHouse board members and gala committee chairs, Laura Allen and Kathryn Webster, to give our Lately readers the inside scoop and share why they are so dedicated to making this year’s gala a truly incredible experience for all our attendees.
 
Why have you volunteered to be on the LightHouse Gala Committee?
 
Kathryn: “The short answer? I absolutely love galas and I love event planning. But to me, of course the gala is a fundraiser, but it’s really more about broadening awareness of the work that we’re doing, so every person in their seat during the event is learning something new. It’ll be so great having the opportunity to see people really react to the impact that LightHouse is making. I think that’s what gets me super excited, and being in the co-chair seat with Laura, we get to structure it in a way where we’re making an experience for folks more so than just a fundraiser. That’s what got me really excited to be in this leadership role.”
 
Laura: “In my role at Google, I’ve done a lot of different things over the years. A few years ago, I was one of the people who helped to put on our different events for Google Accessibility – the  big conferences and whatnot. I think there’s just something really special about the ability to bring the community together in a physical place and celebrate. Especially as we’ve gone through the pandemic, so much has been virtual and many of us are remote, I think that this gala will be a really special moment for LightHouse. Being able to bring the community back together in person to celebrate this incredible cause [Enchanted Hills Camp] and have a wonderful time as one community is what made me want to be part of the gala committee.”
 
What is your connection to Enchanted Hills Camp?
 
Kathryn: “I think a really unique thing about Enchanted Hills Camp is how it brings the community in, whether they are from other blindness organizations or are folks who are new to blindness and low vision; it gives people that experience of camping and walking around in a beautiful area in California, and interacting in some of the extracurricular activities that they may not have been exposed to in the world outside of EHC. To me, that’s the biggest draw. It sounds cliché, but it is absolutely a beautiful place where so many memories can be built. It’s very special, and I think the community bonds and the conversations that happen there are really what drew me to being so passionate about, of course, rebuilding camp [after the 2017 Napa wildfires] but also making sure that we’re bringing new people in to experience the beauty and opportunity that we’ve built as LightHouse at Enchanted Hills Camp.”
 
Laura: “I wish that I had had a camp like EHC to go to when I was younger. I grew up in New Jersey. I didn’t really have anybody in my circle who could relate to losing vision. I am low vision; I have a rare visual condition that impacts my central vision. I lost central vision in both eyes very abruptly when I was young, and I navigated that journey very alone. It’s incredible the way that EHC brings blind children and their families and blind adults together to learn from each other and share their experiences. It’s something so many blind people can benefit from – just feeling that sense of belonging. It’s something I wish I had when I was younger.”
 
If you had the opportunity to have attended EHC as a child, how do you think that would have affected you?
 
Laura: It would have given me a lot more confidence as a preteen and a teenager. I didn’t know anybody who experienced a similar sort of vision loss, or more vision loss than me until I got to Google. I didn’t have anybody in my circle who was blind or had low vision. If I had that sense of community when I was younger, I think it would have been very life-changing. I think it would have given me confidence in how to navigate vision loss and would have taught me how to be proud of my disability. Having pride in one’s disability is a journey, and it’s a spectrum. I’ve gotten to the point now, where I can absolutely say, ‘Yes, I am so proud to have my visual condition. I’m proud to be in the disability community. I am proud to work on accessibility at Google, and level the playing fields for people with disabilities through the use of technology,’ but I was not always that way. Experiencing the empowerment campers feel at EHC as a child, to find friends who were navigating something similar, that would have been so valuable.
 
Kathryn: “I completely agree. For me, I lost my vision fully when I was 22, but prior to that, I had a ton of residual vision, and then less and less and less. I also was the only visually impaired or blind person in my high school and throughout college. I didn’t have a blind person to look to and think, ‘I can do this!’ I never knew what opportunities I could have. I didn’t grow up seeing representation of folks who are blind, let alone have the experience of going to camp for blind people! Even just, you know, going kayaking, swimming, running around like ‘normal kids,’ all that kind of stuff. I wish I would have had exposure to blindness early on and built those connections and friendships and have had those shared feelings rather than the internal struggle. And that’s always my goal with the EHC – that we can spread the word and get as many people as possible to experience what EHC has to offer, for both kids and their families. I think the family experience is a big piece, too.”
 
What are your goals for this gala?
 
Laura: “Yes, raising funds is a big piece of this because camp was jeopardized. Camp was hugely harmed by the fires, and some of the rebuild has started, of course. But what we really hope the gala does is bring camp back to better than ever. We want to be able to help the most people we possibly can in the years to come. I feel like the impact of EHC on campers’ lives is a story that needs to be told.” 
 
Kathryn: “I love the concept of having campers in the seats of the gala along with our donors, board members and staff members, and then brand-new people that have never heard of us. Letting gala guests hear from the campers directly and building those connections is so important. Telling the story of who we are and everything else LightHouse does, and how every piece of the gala will be centered around blindness – having a blind musician, having a keynote speaker who has vision loss, etc. I think seeing all those pieces put together will be really remarkable to watch. For others to see the power and hear the voices of so many blind people within one room will be so, so special.”
 
Aside from the community building, storytelling, and fundraising we hope to achieve at An Enchanted Evening on August 19, 2023, what else are you most excited for?
 
Kathryn: “Dancing! I’m also really excited for the giant wooden tactile art piece that is being made for the gala. I can’t wait to run my fingers over the EHC landscape they are re-creating – it’s going to be incredible! I think everyone, blind and sighted, is really going to love it!”
 
Laura: “I’m just so excited to see everyone together in one room, and meeting people in person – some for the first time!”
 
You can purchase tickets to An Enchanted Evening on August 19, 2023, on the LightHouse Gala website. For information about sponsorship tiers, donations, or in kind auction item donations, or general gala information, visit LightHouse gala website.

We Celebrate Enchanted Hills Camp at the LightHouse Gala, August 19

We Celebrate Enchanted Hills Camp at the LightHouse Gala, August 19

Members of the LightHouse Gala team walk the trails of EHC, surrounded by redwood treesThe snow from two weeks ago has melted, and while more rainstorms are brewing once again, our LightHouse Gala team made their way up to Enchanted Hills Camp on a beautiful sunny day this week. The gala will be held in August, and with just five and a half months left to go, our team of organizers traveled up Mt. Veeder to take in all the sights and sounds of camp, to draw inspiration and creativity for our Enchanted Evening Gala.

View of the bridge behind Legacy Camp. The bridge crosses over a babbling brook surrounded by redwood trees
 
Together, the team walked the trails of EHC and toured the grounds. The wet winter months have brought new growth and greenery among the burnt trees and remaining remanence of past wildfires. The camp’s beauty and resilience is evident throughout its entire 311 acres. As construction continues on and ideas for future blueprints are being dreamt of, the foundation for a beautiful, accessible and nurturing oasis of empowerment and independence for blind, low vision, and deafblind campers is being built.

The sun shining through the branches of the redwood trees, a bright blue sky can be seen through the treesOur team can’t wait to recreate the camp experience for our gala guests at the historic Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco’s Union Square Plaza. We cannot wait to share with our community the history of camp, the vision Rose Resnick had when the camp was acquired, and the dreams we aspire to bring to reality. If you would like to be part of this incredible journey, join us for An Enchanted Evening on August 19, 2023. Early-bird discounted tickets are now available on the LightHouse Gala website. You may also contribute to the future of camp by sponsoring the event or by donating auction items. We look forward to sharing a truly enchanting evening together with dinner, dancing, auctions and entertainment, all for the benefit of our beloved Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind.

Save the Date: August 19, 2023 – LightHouse Gala

Save the Date: August 19, 2023 – LightHouse Gala

This August, LightHouse invites you to attend our gala, An Enchanted Evening, to benefit the rebuilding of Enchanted Hills Camp (EHC). Held at the historic and beautiful Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco’s Union Square, our gala will be an elegant evening celebrating the blind community and raising funds for camp by sponsorships and both a silent and live auction.
 
Enchanted Hills is the heart and soul of LightHouse’s mission to promote the independence, equality and self-reliance of people who are blind or visually impaired. Camp is a safe place where blind, low vision, and deafblind campers of all ages can find community in a fun, educational and nurturing blind-positive environment. And, after the devastation from the 2017 Napa wildfires, we have made rebuilding and re-imagining EHC our top priority.
 
The proceeds raised at the gala will assist in the current and ongoing camp construction projects and future endeavors to enhance our enchanted redwood retreat to become an accessible, blind-positive oasis for generations of blind, low vision, and deafblind campers to come.
 
Stay tuned for more gala details and updates in the coming weeks! For now, you can learn more about sponsorship tiers, donating auction items, and purchasing tickets to the 2023 LightHouse Gala: An Enchanted Evening by visiting the LightHouse Gala website.

Read additional blog posts about the LightHouse Gala

We Celebrate Enchanted Hills Camp at the LightHouse Gala, August 19