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Lynn Hopewell can be contacted
in various
ways:
Mailing Address:
7590 Cannoneer Court
Warrenton, VA, 20186-9720
Telephone & Fax: 540-349-2488
E-mails: lynn@hopewell.org; if
that doesn't
work, try hopewell@post.harvard.edu
An Autobiographical Sketch of
Harry Lynn Hopewell, Jr.
of
Portsmouth and Fauquier County, Virginia
(Subtitle: More Than You Want to Know About Lynn)
Harry Lynn Hopewell, Jr. was born Dec. 19, 1937 in
Portsmouth, Virginia at Kings Daughters Hospital in Park View (now Portsmouth
General). His father was Harry Lynn Hopewell, a native of Bridgeton, N.C., son
of Spanish American War veteran William Robert Hopewell and Rachel Ann Parson.
His mother was Charlotte Ross Mathews, daughter of Mathew Stewart Mathews and
Jessie Ross Pedigo.
His late father was an entrepreneur, co-founding the Circle
Restaurant, a Portsmouth institution. His mother was a teacher and before
retiring, spent eleven years as principal of John Tyler elementary school. Her
90th birthday was 6 September, 2004. His brother Stewart is a retired Navy
aviator who lives in Norfolk. His sister Nina Lodge is a deputy clerk of Portsmouth’s Circuit Court.
His sister Lou Ross "Candy" is founder and Headmistress of a private high school
in Powhatan County, Virginia –Blessed Sacrament-Huguenot Academy.
He attended Park View Methodist Church. He was active in
Scouting, entering the Cub Scouts at nine, and advanced to the Eagle rank at age
thirteen, one of the youngest to do so in Tidewater. He was a member of Troop
220, Otis D. “Dan” Vick, Scoutmaster, James A. Cates, Sr., Assistant. He served
as Senior Patrol Leader. He was also a member of Explorer Post 220 and served as
Senior Crew Leader. He was elected to the Order of the Arrow, Brotherhood rank,
a scouting honorary fraternity. He attended the 1950 National Jamboree in Valley
Forge, Pa.
At the age of 13, he discovered "ham radio," and under the
tutelage of W. L. Brown (W4SIY and K5FL)—a Western Electric engineer working in
the Norfolk Naval Shipyard and across-the-street neighbor of Lynn's grandparents
in Waterview—he began studying radio engineering. In June, 1952, aged 14, he
passed the examination for the "Novice" license and received the call sign
W4WDZ.
During high school, he worked two summers as a radio
engineer for Portsmouth station WLOW, owned by Jack Seigle. The summer after his
senior year, he worked as a radio operator for the U. S. Coast and Geodetic
Survey Ship "Cowie." The 100 foot ship was berthed at Little Creek. Every Monday
morning the ship sailed up the Chesapeake Bay and began surveying the bay and
rivers near the Potomac. The ship returned to port in time to arrive Friday
evening.
At Woodrow Wilson High School, (graduating in 1955) he was
stage manager for the school and the dramatic club his junior and senior years.
He received an Honor Thespian award for dramatic achievement. Working behind the
scenes, his only acting role was March 4, 1955 in a senior class one-act
play—“Campaign for Two,” where he had the male lead "Chuck Norton." Bonnie
Coleman had the female lead, "Joyce Adams." He was President of his homeroom and
Senior Class Boys' Treasurer.
He played football, and was a first-team defensive end his
junior year, the season of 1953. In the season of 1954 he played first-team on
both offense and defense and scored five touchdowns. Wilson won the Virginia
Group I state championship. Lynn was elected to the following honor first-teams:
All-Portsmouth City, All-Tidewater, All-Eastern District, All-State,
All-Southern. He was the second highest vote getter on the All-State team and
was the youngest player elected. Only five Virginia football players made the
All Southern team that year. Although he had several football scholarship
opportunities, he decided not to play college football because it might
interfere with his academic goals as an engineering student. His newspaper
clipping collection of the team was published in 2005.
In 1955 he married Carolyn Jean Lawrence of Norfolk County,
daughter of Frank Dudley Lawrence, Jr., (son of Portsmouth banker and baseball
team owner, Frank D. (for “Battling”) Lawrence) and Charlotte Ernestine
Crawford, by whom he had Harry Lynn, III (b. May 20, 1956) and Frank Mathew (b.
Dec. 19, 1958), both born in Portsmouth.
He received his undergraduate degrees from William and
Mary (A. A., 1958) (now Old Dominion University) and Virginia Polytechnic
Institute, (B.S., Physics, 1961). He attended college on the cooperative
engineering work-study program, working at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. At Va.
Tech, he was an engineer for the student radio station, WUVT, and was Business
Manager for the yearbook, the 1960 Bugle. He was Chairman of the Publications
Board. He was elected to Who's Who in the Civilian Student Body. He also worked
part time for local radio station WBCR.
After graduating from Va. Tech in the summer of 1960, he
returned to Portsmouth and was President of Norcom Communications, Inc., a small
two-way radio service and sales business. After one year, he accepted a position
with the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency in Washington, D.C. He and his family
moved to Vienna, Va. in the summer of 1961. He was a resident of Vienna until he
moved to Fauquier County in December, 1986.
From 1961 until 1969, he was a communications engineer with
“Commo,” the CIA's Office of Communications. Before he was twenty-seven years
old, he had traveled to over 40 countries in Africa, South America, the
Mediterranean, and South East Asia. He served a two-year tour of duty in the
Philippines, living in Manila. He traveled widely in South East Asia, visiting
most countries of the region. He made many visits to Viet Nam during the early
stages of the war there.
In 1966 he entered Harvard Business School, and received
his MBA degree in 1968. While in graduate school, he lived in Lexington, Mass.
During the summer of 1967 he was an intern at Arthur D. Little, Inc., a
consulting firm.
From 1969 to 1980, he held various positions in the
telecommunications and computer systems industry in the Northern Virginia area.
He was an engineer at Telcom, Inc. and a Vice President of Network Analysis
Corporation (NAC). NAC was one of the contractors who originally developed the
Internet for the Advanced Research Projects Agency. In his last position he was
an Operations Director at Computer Sciences Corporation, managing a group of
over 120 scientists and engineers. In the mid-1970s, he was an Associate
Professorial Lecturer in the graduate school of electrical engineering and
computer science at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., a member
of the adjunct faculty.
In 1980 he went into private practice as a personal
financial and investment advisor. He was chairman of The Monitor Group, Inc., in
Fairfax, Virginia. He was a Certified Financial Planner. He has been a financial
author and was a Contributing Writer for Financial Planning Magazine. In
1992-1995 he was editor of the Journal of Financial Planning, a national
professional publication. He was often quoted in national publications including
the Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post. He received
national recognition for his pioneering work in retirement planning modeling. In
1996, he was selected as one of the country's top 60 financial advisors by
Worth Magazine. He was the subject of extensive interviews about his
investment philosophy in Newsweek and The Wall Street Journal.
(Some of these may still come up if you Google Lynn.)
In 1975 he ran for the office of County Supervisor for the
Centreville District of Fairfax County, Va. opposing incumbent Martha Penino.
He lost, but garnered a respectable 45% of the vote. In the 1976 session of the
Virginia General Assembly, he served as a legislative aide to Delegate Wyatt B.
Durrette, Jr. In 1979, he was appointed by Governor John Dalton to the Virginia
Board of Commerce where he served a three-year term as Vice Chairman. He spoke
and published widely on regulatory policy matters. He was active in the
gubernatorial campaign of Wyatt B. Durrette, Jr. who was the Republican
candidate for governor in 1985.
In 1976 he married Leslie Ann Lindsay, of Arlington, Va.,
daughter of Felix Hubert Irving Lindsay of Lafayette and Helen Marie
Hyckembottom, of Winnfield, Louisiana, by whom he had Stewart Lindsay, (b. Sept.
28, 1979, in Falls Church, Virginia).
In December, 1986, after living for 18 years in Vienna, he moved to
Fauquier County, the home of his great-grandmother, Susan Payne Jones, of “Mt.
Airy,” (on Carter's Run near Dudie.) His family lines go back over 300 years in
Fauquier and Culpeper counties. He lives in the Waterloo North subdivision near
Warrenton.
In 1990, he was appointed to the Town of Warrenton's
Architectural Review Board and served a four-year term. He is a member of St.
James Episcopal Church and has served as a member of the vestry from 1988-1990.
He was elected Junior Warden in 1989 and Senior Warden in 1990. He was again
elected to the vestry in 1994 and was elected Senior Warden again, the only
person to serve twice in that position in the last thirty years. He is a former
director of the Fauquier Historical Society. From 1990 to 1991, he was Chairman
of the Board of Trustees of Wakefield School, The Plains, Va., a private
elementary and high school emphasizing a classical education curriculum.
From 1992 to 1994 he wrote a column of opinion (A Fauquier
Point of View) for a local newspaper, The Fauquier Citizen. In January,
2002, he began writing this column again. He writes about local history and was
a Contributing Writer for Fauquier Magazine. He is writing a book, The
Bravest of the Brave, a history of Fauquier's renowned Black Horse Cavalry,
the Civil War Confederate cavalry unit, of which his great-great grandfather,
Strother Seth Jones, was a member. He is also writing a book, The Bravest Man
in Lee’s Army, a history of Fauquier’s Martin family, and their son Robert
who was awarded a rifle for his heroism. He has authored a number of pamphlets
on his family's genealogy.
In 1994 he was appointed by Governor George Allen to a
“Champion Schools” Commission, charged to recommend improvements to Virginia’s
public school system. He was very active on a Commission committee that studied
charter schools.
In 1994 he was elected to the board of governors of the
Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards and served a two-year term. The
CFP Board is the national certifying body that controls and administers the
Certified Financial Planner professional designation.
From 1996-1999, appointed by Governor George Allen, he
served as a member of the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, the
state body that coordinates Virginia’s institutions of higher learning. He
served as chairman of the planning committee, as a member of the executive
committee and was elected Vice Chairman of SCHEV.
In 2000 he was appointed by the Fauquier County Board of
Supervisors to its Historic Resources Committee, established to recommend
ways of better preserving Fauquier County history. He served as chairman. In
2001, he also served on the Redistricting Committee of the Town of Warrenton
having also served in 1991.
He has been listed in Who's Who in the South and
Southeast, and Who's Who in Finance and Industry. He is a member of
The John Randolph Club. He is a member of the board of directors of the Virginia
Institute for Public Policy. He is a member of Fauquier's John Marshall Club and
Fauquier Club. He helped found The Fauquier Institute, a public policy
non-profit organization focusing on local issues.
In October, 2004 he was given a
Distinguished Alumni award
from Old Dominion University for his professional and community accomplishments.
In September, 2005 he published
Sprinting Past Our Lives as Boys: Woodrow Wilson High School 1954 Virginia
Group I State Football Champions. The story of Wilson's championship team,
told largely by a collection of newspaper clippings.
In December 2005, shortly before his 68th birthday, Lynn received a
Lifetime
Achievement Award from the Financial Planning Association, honoring his
professional contributions over a 20-year career.
Lynn retired in 1999 and now spends his time working on his
books, newspaper column, researching family genealogy and digitizing his family
photographs.
He is currently
working on two books
about his great-great-grandfather's Confederate Cavalry Company, the famous
"Black Horse Cavalry.
His wife Leslie is a homemaker and a lay reader
at St. James Episcopal Church.
His son Harry is a staff officer at the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency, and lives in Manassas, Virginia.
His son Mathew is a stained glass artist and lives in Washington,
D.C.
His step-son, Todd Kamber, operates a catering service and lives in
Arlington, Virginia in his mother's childhood home, with his wife Jennifer
and daughter Olivia.
His step-daughter, Erin Kamber, supervises an accounting department,
and lives in Herndon, Virginia.
Their son Stewart is a 2001 graduate of the College of William and Mary
(B.A. Computer Science) and in 2003, graduated from the Graduate School of
Motion Picture, Television and Recording Arts at Florida State University,
in Tallahassee, with an M.F.A. degree. He now works in HOLLYWOOD, looking
for that big BREAK.
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