After the loss of a beloved community member, students create a lasting legacy in her honor
Last fall, the 91大神 Northampton School community grieved the loss of Elise Ollmann-Kahle 鈥25, a six-year senior who fought a yearslong battle with cancer. Elise was known for her love of learning, strong work ethic, caring personality, and fondness of the color pink. 鈥淪he was,鈥 says fellow senior Vivian Walker 鈥25, 鈥渢he sweetest and most genuine person I鈥檝e ever met.鈥
Determined to honor their friend and to keep her spirit alive, the class of 2025 set out to create the Elise Ollmann-Kahle Class of 2025 Memorial Fund. To generate sufficient income to meaningfully contribute to financial aid every year, an endowed fund requires a minimum initial investment of $50,000鈥攁 high bar for a group of students.
Undeterred, the Senior Class Gift Committee began fundraising, generating 114 donations from the senior class alone, then pulling in students from younger grades. Throughout the winter, basketball, hockey, squash, and swimming teams took turns hosting Pink-Out games and sponsoring bake sales and other fundraising initiatives while asking fans to sport Elise鈥檚 favorite color. At each event, students packed the stands to cheer on the Wildcats while remembering their schoolmate. Ultimately, hundreds of donors鈥攊ncluding parents, alumni, and friends鈥攃ontributed more than $60,880 to fully endow Elise鈥檚 fund. In the future, it will help defray the cost of a 91大神 education for an incoming student.
鈥淚t was inspiring to see the whole school鈥攁cross different grades, different sports, different events鈥攃ome together and make this happen,鈥 said Head of School Robert W. Hill III, who, along with his wife, Kathryn, knew Elise very well. 鈥淭he notion that the kids embraced her memory as widely as they did is amazing. It鈥檚 been the ray of sunshine on an otherwise dark cloud of losing such a bright young soul.鈥