Established in 1912, we have been serving the Waynesboro, PA area for over well over 100 years.

 
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We hold dear the rich relationships we have developed with our community.

For more than a century, an unseen hand has helped guide the destiny of our community. A generosity of spirit, coupled with resourceful application of charitable intent, with large hearts to create an ongoing tradition of giving that has made the Waynesboro-area a better place to live.

When community leader serving on the Waynesboro Board of Trade met in the spring of 1912 – they identified a pressing need for 12 community institutions. In accessing the requirements for the growing town of Waynesboro, the board’s visionary leaders inventoried the community’s needs.

High on the list was a hospital, an American Legion Memorial, a library, playgrounds, a public park, and a swimming pool. A Young Men’s Christian Association completed the ambitious wish list. The very pulse-points of our community’s life have their origins in the aspirations of an earlier era.

Today, nearly all of the community needs identified in the first decade of the last century have been met. Institutions and facilities we rely upon in our daily life have been made possible, impart, through the continued support of those who have remembered the Waynesboro Beneficial Fund Association in their wills, planned giving, and estate planning.

Funds entrusted to the Waynesboro Beneficial Fund Association have also help sustain organizations. The fund can also act as a trusted conduit for special funds. Income generated through investment in property holdings has provided a far-reaching benevolence that has been a mainstay of the community’s institutions.

  • As reported in the Waynesboro Record on May 26, 1904, a citizens' meeting was addressed by Dr. Thos. S. Cullen and other interested people: what a hospital should be and best means to secure it for this town.

    A committee of representative citizens was appointed at this meeting.

    The movement of a public hospital in Waynesboro was inaugurated in the Academy of Music in town. A well-attended meeting was held there under the auspices of the Waynesboro Academy of Medicine, earnest and practical addresses were made, and the appointment of a committee formed to solicit funds for the proposed institution.

    The push for the permanent hospital in Waynesboro actually began in earnest years later in 1918 as an influenza pandemic spread across the world. The hospital was established by a group of volunteers in response to the Spanish flu, which killed more than 20 million people worldwide — including 40 Waynesboro residents.

    In Waynesboro, schools and churches closed, along with “moving picture houses” and other entertainment venues. Physicians in the Waynesboro area set up makeshift hospitals inside the firehall and YMCA.

    In January 1919, the committee running the emergency hospitals met to discuss establishing a permanent hospital in Waynesboro. Dr. J. B. Amberson and others cited lessons learned from the influenza pandemic.

    The following month, members of the public and religious, civic, fraternal, and industrial organizations met at the Waynesboro YMCA , and led by local businessman J. H. Stoner, the community began laying the groundwork for a permanent hospital.

    On June 1, 1920, the public campaign officially launched with a goal of raising $300,000. The campaign started with more than $170,000 already pledged.

    Newspapers kept tallies of individual pledges and support from businesses and civic groups. Citizens National Bank set up a special fund for community members to contribute. Civic clubs and the Waynesboro Chamber of Commerce donated time and money to the cause.

    The Arcade theater on Main Street hosted a benefit recital with renowned mezzo-soprano Barbara Maurel and violinist Sascha Jacobsen. The Lutheran Church organized a play at the high school auditorium with all proceeds benefiting the campaign.

    At the end of the drive on June 7, the community had exceeded its goal, raising more than $327,000 – or roughly $4.2 million in today’s money. More than 3,000 local residents had subscribed to support the hospital fund.

    The 35-bed Waynesboro Hospital was dedicated on October 2, 1922 , with thousands touring the new hospital building.

    Community support did not end there. The hospital held a Donation Day on Nov. 2, 1922, when residents dropped off fresh fruit and vegetables, as well as towels, clothing and other supplies.

    The hospital was built at its current location, 501 E. Main St., and originally had 35 beds.

  • On January 5, 1914, a meeting was held in the Wayne building by a committee composed of J.J. Oller, J.G. Benedict, Dr. D.B. Snively, W.J.C. Jacobs and J.H. Stoner, committee chairman. Eventually a fund-raising goal of $100,000 was set. The subsequent campaign was given a tremendous lift when Mr. D.M. Wertz, who was then in Jerusalem, cabled a fifty-thousand-dollar pledge to the committee. His cable challenged the committe to raise a matching amount. Almost $170,000 was eventually raised. A decision was then reached to build a four-story brick building on North Potomac Street. It was to include a basement billiard and poolroom, shower and locker rooms, bowling alleys, a lobby, swimming pool, gymnasium, kitchen, running track over the gym, and thirty-eight rental rooms.

    On Wednesday, May 5, 1915, Carl R. Gray, President of the Western Maryland Railway Company, laid the corner stone in the presence of a large crowd. Pennsylvania Governor Brumbaugh delivered the dedicatory address. The newspaper, 1915 mint coins, and a list of directors and supporters were placed in the corner stone. Waynesboro’s schools were closed for the occasion in order that the boys could march with the Wayne Band. The building was completed six months later.

  • Five years after Waynesboro's American Legion post formed, its 16 or so members were searching for a headquarters when they settled on an East Main Street home owned by Dr. Rush and Jeanne Benedict.

    The purchase price in 1924 was $10,000 that had been raised by the community, according to historical books published by Carl V. Besore and Robert L. Ringer.

    The Waynesboro Beneficial Fund Association originally owned the structure, transferring ownership of the property for $1 to the Legion.

    The post is named for Joe Stickell, one of the first local service members killed in France in 1918. He was 28.

    The active American Legion post, which today has more than 900 veterans as members, bought adjacent property in 1947 to add what became a social hall.