In June, the office of Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell named three new members to the University of Mary Washington Board of Visitors. The recent appointees are Tara C. Corrigall ’82 of Virginia Beach, Theresa Young Crawley ’77 of Fredericksburg, and Mark S. Ingrao ’81 of Falls Church, Va.
Corrigall, a financial adviser and certified investment management analyst, is director of advisory and brokerage services at the Virginia Beach branch of the global firm UBS. She is a member of the boards of directors of the Central Business District Association of Virginia Beach and the YWCA of South Hampton Roads. A longtime UMW President’s Council donor, Corrigall is on the President’s Council Committee, having served as the group’s first chair. She was a member of the UMW Alumni Association Board of Directors beginning in 1992 and served as president from 1998 through the end of her tenure in 2000. She also is a class news agent for UMW Magazine.
Crawley, a dentist and avid community volunteer, is sole proprietor of her thriving Fredericksburg practice and secretary to the UMW Foundation Board. She preceded Corrigall as president of the UMW Alumni Board, filling that role from 1996 to 1998, during which time she was instrumental in establishing the Washington Scholars and Distinguished Graduate in Residence programs. She and husband William B. Crawley Jr., professor emeritus of history, served as national co-chairs for the successful $75 million UMW Centennial Capital Campaign. They were awarded the exclusive Washington Medallion for their extraordinary service to Mary Washington and sponsored a UMW student through the Initiative to Educate Afghan Women.
Ingrao, president and CEO of the Greater Reston Chamber of Commerce, has held leadership roles at such organizations as the National Apartment Association, the National Business Development Practice of Arthur Andersen, LLP, and Washington Gas. A member and past chairman of the Board of Regents for Leadership Arlington, Ingrao also formerly chaired the Arlington Chamber of Commerce. Additional boards on which he has served include the Northern Virginia Transportation Alliance, the Initiative for Public Art Reston, and the Arlington Free Clinic. A certified compensation professional and association executive, Ingrao helped to coordinate the 25- and 30-year reunions for his UMW graduating class. He also holds a coveted after-hours position handed down by his father of moving the chains that signify downs at Washington Redskins home games.
The new members of the Board of Visitors will serve four-year terms, expiring on June 30, 2016. They succeed Randall R. Eley, Martha Kearns Leighty ’75, and Patricia Branstetter Revere ’63.