From left: Hon. Jon Baliles, son of Gov. Gerald L. Baliles; Hon. Anthony Troy, former attorney general; Rector Pia Trigiani; Gov. Ralph Northam; President W. Taylor Reveley IV; Hon. John Daniel II, former secretary of natural resources under Gov. Baliles.
From left: Hon. Jon Baliles, son of Gov. Gerald L. Baliles; Hon. Anthony Troy, former attorney general; Rector Pia Trigiani; Gov. Ralph Northam; President W. Taylor Reveley IV; Hon. John Daniel II, former secretary of natural resources under Gov. Baliles.

As a cool wind blew fresh air off the nearby Chesapeake Bay on Wednesday afternoon, state and local dignitaries gathered to honor the legacy of a visionary governor whose “gentle yet persuasive” focus on environmental issues set in motion a 40-year process of improving that consequential body of water.

Gov. Ralph Northam joined Longwood President W. Taylor Reveley IV in dedicating The Gerald L. Baliles Center for Environmental Education at Hull Springs—a 662-acre historic property on the Northern Neck that is the home for ongoing research and education projects for Longwood students.

I cannot imagine a more fitting tribute to Gov. Jerry Baliles than to name this facility after his legacy. When I visit the Bay, I can see that the efforts started by Jerry are paying off. This is another great day for Virginia.

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“The Baliles Center for Environmental Education,” said Hon. John Daniel II, who served as the commonwealth’s first secretary of natural resources under Baliles and is now the chair of the Longwood University Real Estate Foundation, “is an opportunity for scholarship, exploration, and the growth and maturation of students as they become the citizen leaders of tomorrow.”

The property, which was bequeathed to Longwood in 1999 by alumna Mary Farley Ames Lee ’38, has for more than two decades been a center of environmental research and activity. Today, that research was boosted with the opening of a new $1.2 million research lab on the Westmoreland County property.

“I cannot imagine a more fitting tribute to Gov. Jerry Baliles than to name this facility after his legacy,” said Northam. “When I visit the Bay, I can see that the efforts started by Jerry are paying off. This is another great day for Virginia.”

A sometimes tearful, sometimes joyous ceremony was punctuated by memories of the former governor, who served from 1986-90.

The family of Gov. Jerry Baliles joins Gov. Ralph Northam, President W. Taylor Reveley IV, and other dignitaries around a plaque dedicating the Gerald L. Baliles Center for Environmental Education at Hull Springs.
The family of Gov. Jerry Baliles joins Gov. Ralph Northam, President W. Taylor Reveley IV, and other dignitaries around a plaque dedicating the Gerald L. Baliles Center for Environmental Education at Hull Springs.

“Like Joan of Arc, the patron hero of Longwood, Jerry Baliles was bold and fearless,” said Longwood Rector Pia Trigiani, who read the resolution adopted by the Board of Visitors to name the property for the former governor. “He was focused on his three E’s: education, the environment and economic development. This place is a testament to those ideas.”

Reveley, who counted Baliles as a mentor and worked closely with him at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, recognized members of the governor’s family who were in attendance, quoting a phrase Baliles often used: “This feels like old home week.”

“It was the shores and waters of the Chesapeake that gave him freedom and ease,” said Reveley. “May we bear his name well here.”

After the ceremony, visitors toured the pristine $1.2 million research laboratory. Encompassing 3,000 square feet of space at the Baliles Center, it will serve as the home for long-term research projects like the Longwood Environmental Observatory, a network of air, water and ground sensors that provides critical data for multidisciplinary student research. Dr. Dina Leech, a limnologist and biology professor at Longwood, answered questions about ongoing water-quality research that brings her students to the Baliles Center monthly for sampling and testing. That work, she said, will expand with the capabilities of the new environmental research facility and infrastructure at the property.

Photo GallerySneak Peek at the Research Lab

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