advocacy

Melvin Grier and Jim Wellinghoff Named Trustees Emeriti of Cincinnati Memorial Hall Society

CMHS & LAS Chair Maggie Brennan with Trustees Emeriti Jim Wellinghoff & Melvin Grier and Cori Wolff, Executive Director of the CMHS and LAS

Memorial Hall was built to honor service and strengthen community—so it’s especially fitting to recognize two individuals whose dedication has helped secure its future. After more than a decade of steady guidance and hands-on leadership, Melvin Grier and Jim Wellinghoff are transitioning from active board service to the honorary advisory role of Trustee Emeritus.

Their contributions helped shape Cincinnati Memorial Hall Society (CMHS)’s long-term direction and strengthen our foundation of preservation, programming, and partnerships today.

Jim Wellinghoff

Jim’s connection to Memorial Hall is deeply aligned with the building’s purpose. A Vietnam War veteran, he has brought a perspective rooted in service, responsibility, and commitment.

Throughout his tenure with CMHS, Jim offered strategic guidance informed by decades of civic involvement, including his presidency of the Mercantile Library. Within CMHS, he served as Treasurer and drew on his background in investment management to support financial stewardship and long-range planning.

A defining part of Jim’s legacy is preservation. He helped shape the vision behind Memorial Hall’s Second Century Fund, ensuring long-term care of this treasured venue for generations to come. He contributed to major preservation milestones, including advancing the $1-million Annie W. and Elizabeth M. Anderson Foundation gift tied to the 2015 renovation and naming of the Longworth Anderson Stage. Jim also helped create the philanthropic backbone of the Longworth-Anderson Series, leveraging key relationships such as The George and Margaret McLane Foundation annual matching grant.

Melvin Grier

Melvin has served CMHS with a distinctive Cincinnati lens—one rooted in a career dedicated to documenting the city. A U.S. Air Force veteran, his experience naturally aligns with Memorial Hall’s mission and history.

Over nearly ten years on the board, Melvin became a key voice in shaping CMHS as both a preservation organization and cultural institution. A Greater Cincinnati Journalism Hall of Fame inductee and respected photojournalist, he offered invaluable insight into how Memorial Hall communicates, builds trust, and represents itself to the broader community. His nonprofit work with arts organizations such as FotoFocus helped connect CMHS to Cincinnati’s creative ecosystem.

Melvin’s impact is especially visible in programming. His advocacy helped sustain a vibrant jazz thread within the Longworth-Anderson Series, reflecting Cincinnati’s musical history while welcoming world-class artists. He also encouraged thoughtful board growth and leadership that better reflects the full diversity of our city.

Honoring the past, strengthening the future

Trustee Emeritus is a recognition of service that has meaningfully shaped an organization’s trajectory. We are grateful for Melvin Grier and Jim Wellinghoff—their leadership, their belief in Memorial Hall, and the lasting impact of their work.

Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Linda Heldman Greenberg

Honorary Co-Chairs of the Longworth-Anderson Series: Linda Heldman Greenberg, Jerry Kathman, and Amy Goodwin

The Cincinnati Memorial Hall Society (CMHS) mourns the loss of Linda Heldman Greenberg, a cherished friend, passionate arts advocate, and foundational force behind the creation of our Longworth-Anderson Series (LAS). Linda passed away peacefully on June 18, 2025, at the age of 71, leaving behind a legacy of service, vision, and generosity that will long be remembered.

A native Cincinnatian raised in Bond Hill and a longtime resident of Hyde Park, Linda brought grace, warmth, and insight to every role she embraced—whether as a mother, grandmother, counselor, volunteer, or arts leader. After earning her master’s degree in mental health counseling from Wright State University, she worked as a behavioral specialist at Jewish Hospital, where she was known for her empathy and dedication to others. Her philanthropic impact reached across the city, supporting institutions such as Playhouse in the Park, the Cincinnati Ballet, and the Jewish Federation of Cincinnati.

In 2017, Linda joined the CMHS board of trustees, serving with distinction, including a term as vice president. But her involvement began well before then. Linda was instrumental in the founding and early growth of the LAS. Her deep love of music—especially Americana, folk, bluegrass, and country—made her a trusted voice in artist selection and series direction.

She also helped form the LAS’s essential support group, the “Founders of the Longworth-Anderson Series,” serving as one of its honorary co-chairs for eight seasons. Her leadership helped shape not only the music we present, but the community we’ve built.

“Memorial Hall, the CMHS, and the LAS all benefited greatly from Linda’s valuable advice, service, and generosity,” said Bill Baumann, Chair Emeritus of the CMHS and Chair of the LAS. “It was a distinct pleasure to work alongside her for the betterment of these organizations.”

Linda will be remembered not only for what she gave, but for how she gave it: with heart, elegance, and joy.

—Kyle Fugate