Home | Two generous alumni to be honored with the FarmHouse Foundation’s Philanthropy Laureate Award
Two generous alumni to be honored with the FarmHouse Foundation’s Philanthropy Laureate Award
Two alumni will be honored during the 52nd Biennial Conclave with the FarmHouse Foundation’s most prestigious honor, the Philanthropy Laureate Award. Larry Hageman (Ohio State 94), will be recognized as the 2023 Laureate, and Donald Ferguson (Kansas State 63), has been chosen as the 2024 Laureate.
Established in 1999, recipient(s) must have exhibited great philanthropic intent throughout his/her life, be a member of the Fraternity or have some connection with a FarmHouse brother, spouse, parent or relative. Often, the recipient is an individual who has made financial and service contributions of significant dimension to the Foundation, individual FarmHouse chapters and/or its society. Since its inception, 27 individuals (including the two newest honorees) have received the award.
“Larry and Don are leading examples of the type of person we want to recognize through this award,” said Allison Rickels, CEO of the FarmHouse Foundation. “They continue to be exceptionally generous as outstanding volunteers and donors and have deep care and admiration for FarmHouse. They are most deserving of this honor.”
Larry Hageman, Ph.D. (Ohio State 94)
Larry is a fourth-generation farmer and manages the Hageman/Jackson Trust Farms of Northern Illinois. He is a leader in the agribusiness industry known for his exceptional volunteerism and generosity in his community, alma mater and FarmHouse.
Larry received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Illinois in 1971, then earned a master’s (1980) and Ph.D (1982) in agronomy/weed science from the University of Minnesota. He has earned honorary FFA degrees at the local, state and American levels.
Larry spent 40 years in various roles including research biologist, manager of the Rochelle Field Station and territory manager for development crop projection for DuPont, then FMC Corporation. Larry’s extensive work received multiple distinctions, including writing more than 30 publications and peer-reviewed articles and earning a U.S. patent.
Larry played an instrumental role in creating several well-known herbicides, insecticides and fungicides. He assisted with the development of safer and environmentally sound crop protection practices. He was well-known for his internship program at the Rochelle Field Station. Larry retired in December 2022.
In 1994, Larry was initiated into Alpha Tau Zeta (ATZ) Fraternity at The Ohio State University. In 2010, Larry strongly advocated for the ATZ and FarmHouse merger, having mentored many FH men during his career.
Larry was named a Master Builder recipient in 2020. He has endowed several scholarships with the Foundation, sponsors and coordinates the Ohio State chapter’s annual scholarship banquet, and serves on the chapter’s Foundation Council. He was a sponsor and mentor of the 2024 Power of 7 Seminar. He is a member of the Cornerstone Society, the Foundation’s highest giving level, and has generously included the Foundation in his estate plans.
Larry resides in Rochelle, Illinois.
Don Ferguson, Ph.D. (Kansas State 63)
Don spent his career in engineering and management consulting fields for the nuclear industry for more than 44 years. In his first 32 years, he consulted in the defense and nuclear industries, primarily with the Department of Energy’s cleanup of the Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site and with Fluor Hanford, Inc. and CH2M HILL Hanford Group.
Don spent five years in leadership roles to complete the construction and startup of the Comanche Peak power station in central Texas. For 12 years, he was a staff member with Argonne National Laboratory, leading the research and development plan for advanced reactor safety technology for the Department of Energy.
He then served as executive vice president and CFO for EnergX, which he founded in 1997 along with two partners. A part of his work was assisting as a senior management consultant to firms in the defense and commercial nuclear industries.
Finally, through his firm Ferguson Associates, Don spent the next six years as a technology consultant for cyber security, network design and database application development.
Don has his bachelor’s degree from Kansas State University, a master’s degree from the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom, a PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an executive MBA from the University of Chicago.
He served as chair of the Kansas State FH capital campaign committee, helping to raise more than $2.8 million for their house expansion and renovation. From 2005-11, Don served as a Foundation Trustee. He continues to serve on the Foundation’s Audit Committee. He has attended eight Power of 7 Seminars, is a member of the Foundation’s Cornerstone Society, and has included the Foundation in his estate plan.
Don and his wife, Signe, have homes in Denver, Colorado, and Chicago, Illinois.