About WLI

Mission

Wildacres Leadership Initiative cultivates a network of courageous leaders who connect across differences in identity and ideas to develop new solutions to the complex challenges facing the people and communities of North Carolina.

Our Model of Leadership

Wildacres advances the principles and practices of integrity, intention, and inclusion in leadership.

  • Integrity — acting in alignment with one’s well-discerned and publicly stated values;
  • Intention — acting with purpose in accordance with one’s passions and abilities;
  • Inclusion — engaging authentically across deep differences in identity, experience, and perspective.
These qualities evoke the reflection, transparency, creativity, collaboration, and risk-taking needed for courageous leadership in today’s complex times.

Goals

WLI has three goals:

  1. To promote leadership practices of integrity, intention, and inclusion as the foundation for improved human relations.
  2. To develop these leadership practices in emerging leaders across the state of North Carolina.
  3. To support a diverse network of leaders who use difference as a resource in the development of workable solutions to community and state challenges

Three Core Programs

WLI fulfills its mission and goals through three core programs:

  • William C. Friday Fellowship for Human Relations is a two-year Fellowship for emerging leaders in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors who are able to directly affect issues facing our communities.
  • Fellows Action Network connects leaders who have the common experience of the Friday Fellowship with each other and to other statewide and community leaders.
  • Center for Excellence in Leadership promotes the value of the principles and practices of leading with integrity, intention, and inclusion through products and services such as a speakers’ bureau and leadership curriculum, publications, and articles.

Our History

For a half century, Wildacres Retreat was the beloved Blue Ridge mountain sanctuary where people gathered to improve themselves and the human race. Justice, fairness and diversity were programmatic hallmarks for hundreds of conferences.

Herman Blumenthal wanted to commemorate those achievements in a special 50th year anniversary. In late 1993, he gathered son Philip Blumenthal; attorney Mark Bernstein; Charlotte Observer Publisher Rolfe Neill; attorney Jim Preston; and Queens University President Billy Wireman. The group sought retired UNC President Bill Friday’s advice. He suggested involving W. Robert Connor, director of the National Humanities Center in the Research Triangle Park.

They discarded ideas of international speakers, a celebratory conference and numerous other ideas. Bob Connor offered a concept and a construct: “At a time in which knowledge and information are rapidly expanding, traditional structures of belief and conduct are eroding, when the feeling of entitlement is accelerating, and racial, regional, and class animosities are intensifying, how can this society stay together?

“Is it possible at Wildacres we might be able not just to talk about such an issue but actually take a step toward doing something?”

Bob Connor galvanized the group. Wildacres’ celebration wouldn’t be a party, but a gift. That gift would be a unique North Carolina program for younger emerging leaders, infused with human values that would be coupled to solving state problems. Members would be known as Friday Fellows, honoring Dr. Friday, one of the state’s greatest humanitarians. Connor was the strategic contributor and Jim Preston tirelessly built the new organization. Clay Thorp was hired as first executive director and was key to getting the enterprise energized and funded. The Bumenthals’ Radiator Specialty Co. was the most generous financial benefactor.

Today, Friday Fellows constitute a cadre of 148 unique individuals trained in leading North Carolina to a better life for all 8 million citizens.From the mountaintops to the sandy shores, Friday Fellows are leaving footprints of progress in the Old North State.

Written by Rolfe Neill, WLI Founder and Former Publisher of the Charlotte Observer