

Dear Camp Pemi Community, The Fauver and Reed families, together with Camp Pemigewassett’s Director, Kenny Moore, are excited to share that, in full partnership with Pemi’s Board of Directors and Senior Management team, we have resolved to transition Pemi to nonprofit status. The Fauvers and Reeds intend to establish the nonprofit, gift the campus and camp operations, and take steps to ensure that the forested lands surrounding Pemi remain permanently undeveloped. For nearly 120 years, Pemi has thrived as a privately owned summer camp for boys, with the Fauver and Reed families stewarding the campus and surrounding lands while helping make camp financially accessible to boys who otherwise would not have the opportunity to attend. This decision is the result of a thoughtful, multi-year process guided by a singular goal: securing Pemi’s mission and future for the next hundred years. This is a watershed moment in Pemi’s history, and one we approach with excitement and confidence. The campers, staff, families, and generations of alumni who make up the Pemi community are Pemi’s true legacy. That community has long demonstrated extraordinary commitment—helping campers attend, rallying to rebuild the Mess Hall in 1965, and stepping forward again in 2020 to help complete the Staff Lodge during COVID. In recent years, many alumni have expressed a desire to play an even greater role in ensuring the camp’s future. We believe this transition comes at exactly the right moment. Two generations of Reeds and Fauvers are united in the conviction that the best path forward preserves meaningful founding-family involvement while moving beyond founding-family ownership. Our Board is strong and deeply committed, and our Senior Management team will continue the day-to-day leadership that makes Pemi summers so special. Kenny Moore and key members of leadership have been central to these conversations. Pemi’s enrollment is robust, its financial position is healthy, and its reputation as one of the country’s great camps has never been stronger. We are far removed from that fabled summer of 1908, when Edgar and Edwin Fauver and Dudley Reed welcomed fifteen trusting boys to eight weeks of adventure in the wilds of New Hampshire. Yet we imagine they would recognize the exhilaration of this moment: opening a new chapter in the Pemi story while holding fast to all that makes Pemi, Pemi—forming lifelong friendships, swimming in a crystal-clear lake, meeting boys from across the country and around the world, growing in confidence
Dear Camp Pemi Community, The Fauver and Reed families, together with Camp Pemigewassett’s Director, Kenny Moore, are excited to share that, in full partnership with Pemi’s Board of Directors and Senior Management team, we have resolved to transition Pemi to nonprofit status. The Fauvers and Reeds intend to establish the nonprofit, gift the campus and camp operations, and take steps to ensure that the forested lands surrounding Pemi remain permanently undeveloped. For nearly 120 years, Pemi has thrived as a privately owned summer camp for boys, with the Fauver and Reed families stewarding the campus and surrounding lands while helping make camp financially accessible to boys who otherwise would not have the opportunity to attend. This decision is the result of a thoughtful, multi-year process guided by a singular goal: securing Pemi’s mission and future for the next hundred years. This is a watershed moment in Pemi’s history, and one we approach with excitement and confidence. The campers, staff, families, and generations of alumni who make up the Pemi community are Pemi’s true legacy. That community has long demonstrated extraordinary commitment—helping campers attend, rallying to rebuild the Mess Hall in 1965, and stepping forward again in 2020 to help complete the Staff Lodge during COVID. In recent years, many alumni have expressed a desire to play an even greater role in ensuring the camp’s future. We believe this transition comes at exactly the right moment. Two generations of Reeds and Fauvers are united in the conviction that the best path forward preserves meaningful founding-family involvement while moving beyond founding-family ownership. Our Board is strong and deeply committed, and our Senior Management team will continue the day-to-day leadership that makes Pemi summers so special. Kenny Moore and key members of leadership have been central to these conversations. Pemi’s enrollment is robust, its financial position is healthy, and its reputation as one of the country’s great camps has never been stronger. We are far removed from that fabled summer of 1908, when Edgar and Edwin Fauver and Dudley Reed welcomed fifteen trusting boys to eight weeks of adventure in the wilds of New Hampshire. Yet we imagine they would recognize the exhilaration of this moment: opening a new chapter in the Pemi story while holding fast to all that makes Pemi, Pemi—forming lifelong friendships, swimming in a crystal-clear lake, meeting boys from across the country and around the world, growing in confidence

Summer 2015: Newsletter # 2 As we scribble away at this on Sunday, July 5th,

Summer 2015: Newsletter #1 A warm hello from our cool (and breezy) valley, where the

Each pre-season we ask our staff members to submit a short bio for this first
Welcome to the first quarterly installment of the Pemi Alumni Newsletter. Our aim is to

Greetings one and all for a special, limited-release serving of Bean Soup, sponsored by the

For the past three years, Evan Jewett served as Director of the Pemi West Program,

Death, taxes, and Bean Soup. There’s such comfort in certainty. Yes, it’s that time of
Driving north on I-91 and just past the Hanover exit, I caught one of my
The application for 2015 is set to launch: October 17, for returning campers, their siblings,
Summer 2014: Final Newsletter of the Season It’s Sunday morning, August 17th, and a gentle