Dunlop, Quigg capture top major gift honors.
David R. Dunlop and H. Gerald Quigg have won the 1996 Major Gift Laureate Awards for lifetime achievement in major gifts. The awards were presented at a luncheon at the Major Gifts Roundtable in Boston, MA. The awards are co-sponsored by the Institute for Charitable Giving and Fund Raising Management magazine.
Three other awards were also presented: David F. Fleming, senior vp for the Jewish Hospital HealthCare Services, Louisville, KY, won the Fund Raiser of Distinction Award for organizations in the $1 million to $5 million revenue category; John McDonagh, chief development officer for the Detroit Institute of Arts, won in the $5 million to $10 million class; and Gordon M. Caswell, president of the Baylor Health Care System Foundation, took top honors in the $10 million and above category.
Dunlop is the director of capital projects for Cornell University's development office. He directs fund raising for gifts of $5 million and up and has been part of senior management for Cornell's recently completed $1.5 billion capital campaign. In his 37 years at Cornell, Dunlop has had a wide range of experience in annual, capital, campaign and major gift fund raising. In 1987 he was named the first recipient of the James L. Fisher Award for Professional Achievement for exceptional achievement, leadership and innovative management. He earned the CASE Steuben Apple for excellence in teaching in 1991.
Quigg is vp for development and university relations at the University of Richmond. He is responsible for the direction and management of 22 professionals and 22 support staff in development, alumni affairs, public relations and publications, and foundation and government relations. He was responsible for directing a $151 million capital campaign, which was completed 18 months ahead of schedule, raising $164 million. Since Quigg joined the university, in excess of $400 million has been raised.
Fleming orchestrated the creation of a five-year $10 million "Visions of Tomorrow" campaign that produced $16.1 million, with individual campaign efforts directed to foundations, corporate management, employees, medical staff and major donors. Fleming manages a budget exceeding $6 million with 45 professional and support staff. The Jewish Hospital HealthCare Services is a $300 million regional network of 26 health care companies.

