Beth Harper Briglia to be Honored with the 18th Annual Rebecca Lukens Award
Coatesville, PA – April 3, 2024, Revised April 24, 2024 – Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (CLF) is pleased to announce, together with the National Iron & Steel Heritage Museum (NISHM) in Coatesville, the 18th annual Rebecca Lukens Award to a longtime philanthropic advisor and community volunteer in Chester County. Beth Harper Briglia will be presented with the award at a special buffet breaksfast from 8:30 to 10 a.m. May 16, 2024 at the Graystone Mansion in the Lukens Historic District.
The awards ceremony is supported by several other lead sponsors including the Gunard Berry Carlson Memorial Foundation, PECO and The Stewart Huston Charitable Trust.
Established by the Graystone Society, the museum’s nonprofit arm, the award is named for the owner of the former Lukens Steel Co. who is also known as the nation's first female industrialist.
Briglia, the former Executive Vice-President of Philanthropic Services at the Chester County Community Foundation (CCCF) in West Chester, was identified and selected by a community-based awards committee. She will be honored in a special awards ceremony scheduled to be held at Graystone, one of NISHM’s historic mansions in Coatesville, later this month. The awards ceremony is supported by several lead sponsors including the Gunard Berry Carlson Memorial Foundation, PECO and The Stewart Huston Charitable Trust.
According to Scott G. Huston, a direct descendent of Rebecca Lukens and NISHM’s board president, honorees demonstrate the leadership qualities of the early Quaker ironmaster. “Beth’s list of accomplishments and accolades is impressive,” Huston said, “There was no such thing as the non-profit or philanthropic sector in Rebecca’s time, of course, but the three core values we always mention – Rebecca as a visionary, a doer, and a strategic leader – are qualities that Beth Briglia has also brought to her work in guiding others in philanthropy.”
In citing other traits shared with Rebecca, Huston said that many past recipients including last year’s honoree, Mary Holleran of Downingtown, were honored for their work as community-builders. Briglia is no exception, although her work strengthening communities could be described as people-driven. It’s part of her longtime work as a philanthropic advisor, especially at CCCF where she frequently worked with generations of family members who established nonprofit legacy funds there.
At the time, Briglia was just beginning her work at CCCF and understanding how one’s values are connected to philanthropy in making life better for others. “I was inspired by her story and what she did,” Briglia said of Rebecca, “I was especially taken with the fact that she wanted to have her father’s legacy as founder of the steel mill to live on and she worked to ensure that the mill workers were well served.”
Briglia was able to make the transition to nonprofit work when she became a volunteer with Community Accountants (CA) and became intrigued with Arts administration by helping the Philadelphia-based Clay Studio, now the nation’s oldest ceramic studio. Briglia eventually joined the studio’s Board of Directors and served as board president.
Briglia’s 20-plus years at CCCF has drawn on her many skills including her training as a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) and a Chartered Advisor in Philanthropy (CAP). However, she especially enjoys helping individuals, families, and local business owners engage with and improve their own communities by guiding them through what she calls “intentional philanthropy.” The process enables donors to consider their time, talents, and values to determine their charitable objectives and philanthropic strategies.
Beth, the mother of three adult children who lives with her husband Michael Briglia in the Kimberton area, now works as an independent philanthropic advisor. She frequently drives to Coatesville to advise the Newlin Foundation, a charitable scholarship fund started in 2010 at the Chester County Community Foundation by a Chester County philanthropic couple.
Briglia works closely with Newlin’s professional staff, the board chair, Regina Horton Lewis (a 2013 RLA recipient) as well as with a community-based board of trustees who carry out Newlin’s mission: to provide guidance and scholarship opportunities for high school students living in the Coatesville Area School District. Each year, a select group of “Newlin scholars” not only receive scholarship help, but according to Beth, are given educational, mentoring, and financial support from the college admission’s process through the final goal of attaining and optimizing their post-secondary degree.
Briglia is also involved in numerous volunteer activities focused on education, including those promoting the field of philanthropy. She actively works with those seeking nonprofit career and management advice; professional advisors looking to deepen their understanding of the philanthropic sector for themselves and their clients; and individuals and families who are crafting their current and legacy philanthropic strategies.
Examples of her volunteer work in education include serving as chair of Bishop Shanahan High School’s Board of Directors and as former president of La Salle University’s Alumni Board. She is also a co-facilitator of the Delaware/Greater Philadelphia CAP Study Group for the American College of Financial Services. She has also served as vice chair of the Board of Catholic Social Services in Philadelphia and as a board member of Junior Achievement in Chicago.
Briglia currently volunteers her time with the University of Delaware’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute where she teaches a course called “Intentional Philanthropy: Making Your Gifts of Time, Talent, and Treasure Count.”