1867 Society reception toasts a renowned “fan club”

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Beneath the glowing chandeliers and soaring ceilings of the Mediterranean-style King Mansion, more than 65 members of the 1867 Society gathered together, forming a life-sized tableau of the values that inspired the formation of the precursor to Homeland Center 158 years ago: compassion and trust.

As guests dined on fine hors d’oeuvres from JDK Catering, sipped chilled drinks, admired the Mansion’s elegant architectural handiwork, and conversed with friends, the larger message of the gathering soon became evident: Homeland could never have thrived for 158 years without the members of the Society and their generous support.

After an hour of mingling, with the soft sounds of Aaron Gainer, Homeland Hospice’s music therapist, playing softly in the background, the gathering moved to the expansive ballroom for brief remarks from five speakers who all echoed common themes.

Much like the 18 women from nine churches who founded the “Home for the Friendless” 158 years ago in post-Civil War Harrisburg, these guests took action to show the true heart of Harrisburg.

Barry Ramper II, Homeland’s CEO, noted, “Trust and care are the hallmarks of our history. We cannot maintain this goal without you.”

Director of Development Troy Beaver noted that he joined Homeland’s leadership team last summer, and Homeland instantly felt like home, just as it rapidly does for its residents. He also mentioned Homeland’s national recognition of excellence from U.S. News and World Report.

Bob Light of Securewire Technologies, the sponsor of the appreciation reception, said his company and Homeland are built upon and operate on a “foundation of trust.”

“It’s a huge honor to be part of this,” Light affirmed. “Customer service is what we do.”

Rev. Karin Pejack of Zion Lutheran Church noted that local historic icons, Mrs. Cameron and Mrs. Dock, rented a pew in her church decades ago. Her 19th-century church had included a box for contributions for the Home for the Friendless when Zion was located at 4th and Market Streets.

Rev. Pejack applauded the four chaplains now serving at Homeland and the church cooperation that allowed the Home for the Friendless to “serve neighbors in the city with love and compassion.”

“Many of our supporters have had a friend or relative who was cared for either by the staff at Homeland Center or by someone who worked for one of the Homeland at Home service lines,” Beaver said. “These people have experienced firsthand the caring and passion that each staff member brings to the job every day, and this is what makes Homeland the top provider of quality care.”

Dr. Charlie Fetterhoff, Chair of Homeland’s Board of Trustees, said he was a charter member of the Society thanks to the outstanding leadership of Betty Hungerford, Homeland’s well-known retired Director of Development, and now a Homeland resident and member of the Board of Managers.

“For those who had never heard of Homeland, I would ask them, ‘How many institutions have lasted 158 years and excelled at the highest level that long?’ There is a total commitment to the residents,’’ Fetterhoff said. “You can feel what sets Homeland apart as soon as you walk through the doors.”

He recalled how his mom spent her last three years at Homeland, first in Personal Care and then Skilled Care. His sister also spent her last seven years in Skilled Care.

Fetterhoff and the other members of the 1867 Society at the gathering reflected on quality care and compassion the organization’s efforts help make possible.

“In my hundreds of visits there over those years, I only encountered staff rendering loving care of the highest quality.” Fetterhoff said. “They are all great and caring people.”

Homeland Center (www.homelandcenter.org) offers levels of care including personal care, memory care, skilled nursing and rehabilitation. Homeland also provides hospice, home care, home health and palliative care services to serve the diverse and changing needs of families throughout central Pennsylvania. For more information or to arrange a tour, please call 717-221-7900.

From pot pie to Homeland comforts: Shirley Jones reflects on a life of care and community

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As Shirley Jones wheels through the Homeland corridors, she greets the many friends she made in only four months.

“I do have friendships here,” she said. “I like all the activities. Everything they have, I go to.”

Shirley’s outgoing nature comes from growing up as the second child and eldest girl of 15 siblings. In the summer, the boys – 10 of them – slept on the porch. In the colder months, there were three kids to a bunk.

By the time Shirley was 11, she was helping care for the younger kids.

“Back in those days, when you were 11 years old, you worked,” she recalls. “I changed diapers. I did housework.”

With that many kids in the house, she learned to put everything away so that things wouldn’t get lost or clutter the place.

“I’m like that today,” she said. “If I get something out today, it doesn’t lay there until tomorrow.”

Shirley grew up in the countryside outside of Mt. Holly Springs, where her father worked in construction.

“There were many times we didn’t have bread,’’ she said, “but my mother made a lot of pot pie.”

Following a move, Shirley attended high school in Boiling Springs, where she met her first husband, who worked at the Frog, Switch, & Manufacturing Co. in Carlisle. Together, they had a boy and a girl, but he died suddenly from a heart attack at age 45.

People helped her through that time, and she went to work to support her family. Family friends owned Pennsylvania Dutch Candies in Mt. Holly Springs, and Shirley started as a candymaker before rising to an office job.

One day, one of her brothers mentioned Tom Jones, a friend and coworker at Milton Hershey School. He thought Shirley should meet him. His name?

Shirley’s kids loved Tom, and they were soon married.

She laughs at both of them sharing names with famous celebrities: “I wasn’t even familiar with her as an actress until I married Tom and people started telling me about her.”

The kids at Milton Hershey school also loved Tom. He was an alumnus who enrolled at age 5 after his father died. After graduation, he served in the U.S. Marines. One day, he stopped by his alma mater, which led to the job he held for 30 years as a plumber.

“He was a jokester,” Shirley said of her late husband. “That’s why he was so well-loved at the school. He made people laugh. After we got married, he came to my church, and he started making people there laugh as well.’’

Through Tom, Shirley got a job in the Milton Hershey School office. She loved getting involved in the students’ activities, including music and games. She worked there for five years before retiring.

Shirley was also active in her church, singing soprano in the choir. Ask what her favorite hymn is, and she immediately said, “How Great Thou Art.”

She receives phone calls and cards from friends and family, and she attends family birthday parties. She loves being free from paying bills.

“Everything’s paid for,” she said. “You don’t have to worry.”

She gets her beautiful white hair done in the Homeland beauty shop every two weeks. Homeland staff provide manicures – a regular offering every Friday for residents.

“There’s lots to like,’’ Shirley said of Homeland. “They take very good care of us.”

And one more thing, she adds.

“They do feed you well,” she said. “They give you plenty here to eat.”

Homeland Center (www.homelandcenter.org) offers levels of care including personal care, memory care, skilled nursing and rehabilitation. Homeland also provides hospice, home care, home health and palliative care services to serve the diverse and changing needs of families throughout central Pennsylvania. For more information or to arrange a tour, please call 717-221-7900.

Pastor Karin Pejack: Ministering to the city in the “spirit of Homeland”

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The Rev. Dr. Karin Pejack cherishes the shared history between Homeland and the historic church she shepherds – Zion Lutheran Church, one of Homeland’s founders.

“We’ve been impressed with the care residents receive at Homeland and the caring community,” Pejack said. “You’re so lucky to have a chapel and chaplains. It’s a wonderful place. I’ve found the staff here consistently very friendly and welcoming.”

The dynamic reverend was the featured speaker for The 1867 Society of Homeland’s member appreciation event in May. In her remarks, she explored the meaning behind the ties between two of Harrisburg’s most historical institutions — Homeland Center, founded in 1867 as the “Home for the Friendless,” and Zion Lutheran Church, where in 1839, the Whig Party nominated William Henry Harrison as its candidate for president.

Pejack grew up in the Reading-area town of Robesonia. Her father worked at a printing business, and her mother, a one-time high school German teacher, was a community volunteer. Her busy mother served on the local school board and continues to be active in her local church, including support of their outreach efforts.

“You want to give back to the community where you live,” Pejack said while sitting in the Homeland Diner. “You want to make a difference.”

Pejack graduated from Smith College in Northampton, MA, with bachelor’s degrees in German and World Religions. During her junior year and after graduation, she spent time in Germany. Overseas study and work could be challenging, but country-hopping by rail throughout Europe offered “a wonderful adventure.”

After realizing that her conversations often turned to religion, Pejack enrolled in the Lancaster Theological Seminary and, following her graduation was ordained through the United Church of Christ before finding her theological fit in the Lutheran church.

Today, her congregation is affiliated with the Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary.

“Christ is our center, our anchor, our rock, and that has never been more powerfully needed than in the quicksand of the world today,” she said. “We also practice grace and mercy. When we acknowledge that we need that and have been so blessed to receive it unmerited from Christ, who’s paid the penalty for us, how can we deny being forgiving, gracious, and merciful to others?”

She joined Zion in 2009 as a part-time assistant pastor while caring for her school-age son, who is deaf and on the autism spectrum. A few years later, she became head pastor for the downtown Harrisburg church.

“We are in the middle of a mission field,” Pejack said. “The church acts as a beacon for downtown residents, ministering to their spiritual needs while partnering with providers and church collaboratives to help feed and house the homeless.

Pejack met her husband of 24 years, Todd Pejack, in seminary, although he built his career as a recycling specialist with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. Now retired, he serves as Zion Lutheran’s part-time office administrator and handyman — a welcome value-add for a building that dates to 1839. He also helps conduct Zion’s outreach ministry and leads a monthly Bible study at Bethesda Mission, a Harrisburg homeless shelter.

“I’m very blessed,” Pejack said. “He has a wonderful, loving personality and is very skilled. I don’t know what I’d do without him.”

The Pejack family – Karin, Todd, their son, and Todd’s two adult children – feel fortunate to enjoy frequent visits with Karin’s parents in Wyomissing and Todd’s mother in Bedford. They enjoy movies, reading, sometimes competitive game nights, and laughing in the spirit of Karin’s favorite Bible verse, “The joy of the Lord is your strength.”

Pejack was amazed to learn about Homeland’s history and the role of her church in its founding. Zion Lutheran was one of nine Harrisburg churches, and each elected two women members to help create a home that would care for the city’s women and children widowed and orphaned by the Civil War.

Those women “chose to serve” amid extraordinary need in their midst, Pejack said.

“They didn’t need to do it necessarily, but it was on their hearts,” she said. “That’s what it means to live out our faith – to love God and serve our neighbor.”

Their legacy continues today in The 1867 Society of Homeland, founded in 2011. Through The 1867 Society, generous community members commit to donating $5,000 or more toward benevolent care – the funds that allow Homeland to continue its tradition of never asking a resident to leave due to inability to pay for care.

Members of The 1867 Society have the satisfaction of leaving a legacy that sustains exceptional care for years to come, plus the opportunity to enhance their gifts through the “Uplift Your Legacy” initiative that invites additional donations.

Pejack sees parallels between Zion Lutheran and Homeland because both provide services and love in the city.

Even today, Harrisburg’s churches still collaborate for the betterment of the community in the spirit of Homeland.

“Homeland’s founding women clearly had the gifts and talents that were right for the time, the place, and the need,” Pejack said. “God blesses us in many ways and calls us to serve.”

Board of Managers member Sandee O’Hara: Focusing on quality of life

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Sandra O'HaraSince joining Homeland’s Board of Managers in October 2024, Sandee O’Hara has been deeply impressed by the power that 18 committed women can generate.

“The board’s focus is on how to make Homeland truly home,” she said. “I’ve heard that so many times since I started. These women are caring, giving, creative, and not stopping. The sky is the limit, and they focus on making this home.”

O’Hara is one of the newer members of the Board of Managers, the unique, all-women volunteer group devoted to maintaining Homeland’s renowned homelike feel. As O’Hara discovered, the board takes its responsibility seriously, never letting up on the ideas and energy that fill Homeland with music, laughter, and grace.

Among its activities, the Board of Managers leads redecoration projects, decks the halls for the holidays, and installs planters.

To help keep residents entertained and engaged, the board hosts themed parties, from a dazzling casino night to a “Sound of Music” party with a singer performing songs from the classic musical.

The “Sound of Music” party also featured movie-inspired décor, from brown paper packages tied up with string to goat marionettes. O’Hara marveled that those marionettes were hand-crafted by board members from toilet paper rolls.

One crafty-genius board member designed the project. The rest contributed the materials and got together to recraft them into goats. Some members and former members mailed saved toilet paper rolls from out of state. O’Hara’s daughter even brought some when she visited from California.

“We all played with toilet paper rolls,” she said. “It became a different object. It was pretty funny.”

O’Hara learned about the Board of Managers from two friends, Board Treasurer Janet Young and former Chair Susan Batista.

“They’d been on the board for years and years, and when we went out, they would always chitter-chatter about it,” she said. “I always felt like the odd man out.”

She also knew of Homeland’s reputation as a respected continuing care retirement community, which treats residents with dignity and provides an excellent quality of life.

The timing was right when Young asked if she would be interested in joining the board. O’Hara had just retired after 27 years in law — almost 20 years as a prosecutor in the Dauphin County juvenile division and seven as a hearing officer for children and youth.

O’Hara entered the law mid-career. She initially enrolled in a Washington, DC, paralegal training program, but then felt a pull toward becoming an attorney. She earned her bachelor’s degree at age 55 and her law degree at 58, bringing her passion for children to the Dauphin County courthouse.

“If you think about famous people, they say they remember how Mrs. Jones in fourth grade influenced their life, but Mrs. Jones never knew about it,” she said. “I think if I helped one child, it’s a pretty good contribution.”

Since retiring, O’Hara spends time with her son and twin granddaughters in California, and her daughter and grandson in West Chester.

“They’re special,” she said. “My world revolves around my grandchildren.”

After a career helping children grow, O’Hara agreed to join the Homeland Board of Managers and serve the elderly because she wanted to keep contributing.

She is especially honored to uphold the legacy of the 18 women who founded Homeland in 1867. Representing nine Harrisburg churches, they collaborated to create the “Home for the Friendless” as a refuge for destitute children and women left orphaned and widowed by the Civil War.

O’Hara said that history is amazing, including the fact that the original home the women were determined to build remains part of Homeland, complete with a “Home for the Friendless” plaque.

Their creation adapted with the times, transforming to provide respectful, loving care for older adults. In their honor, today’s Board of Managers includes 18 women following in their footsteps.

“I can’t believe I’m now part of the Board of Managers,” said O’Hara. “It’s an honor. I have never seen such a devoted, caring, kind group of women.”

Homeland Center (www.homelandcenter.org) offers levels of care including personal care, memory care, skilled nursing and rehabilitation. Homeland also provides hospice, home care, home health and palliative care services to serve the diverse and changing needs of families throughout central Pennsylvania. For more information or to arrange a tour, please call 717-221-7900.

Resident Joyce Muniz: Fortitude leads to a life in nursing

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Joyce MunizJoyce Muniz was a little girl going through a magazine when her mother explained that the picture of a woman in a white dress and cap was of a nurse.

“I said, ‘I’m going to be a nurse when I grow up,’” Muniz recalled. “Of course, my mother just looked at me because I was about 7, and she didn’t say anything. From then on, I had it in my heart that I would be a nurse.”

Now, Muniz is a resident of Homeland, where many of the nursing and administrative staff are former colleagues from a career in nursing and teaching. They include Director of Nursing Jennifer Tate-DeFrietas.

“She tells people that I used to be her boss, and now, she’s mine,” Muniz said with a laugh.

Muniz’ care at Homeland has been exceptional, helping her through a crisis with a rare and debilitating neurological condition.

“I want to give the praise to God,” Muniz said. “I went from a point when I came in barely able to walk to where I do everything myself. I do everything independently.”

Muniz grew up in York County and lived in foster homes for many years. At one home, she told her foster mother that she always wanted to be a nurse, and the woman responded, “You’ll never be a nurse.”

From then on, that voice stayed in the back of her mind, driving her forward even when she felt like quitting.

“So consequently, I got my LPN from York County Vo-Tech, got my RN from HACC (Harrisburg Area Community College), graduated cum laude from Thomas Jefferson University with my BSN, and graduated from the University of St. Francis with my master’s in health services administration,” she said. “What she said was like a knife. I always remembered that and thought, ‘I’ll show you.’ And I did.”

She shares that experience with Homeland staff as they pursue their career goals.

“I love to talk to them and tell them never to give up,” she said. “If you fail a class, take it over and see where you’re going.”

After the breakup of her first marriage, Muniz was a single mother, raising two boys who were born in the same year. She worked in hospitals in New Jersey and Florida before returning to Pennsylvania, where she served as assistant head nurse in a demanding cardiac care unit and as director of staff development at a Harrisburg-area nursing home.

She retired to take care of her second husband, a good man whom she married in the early 1980s and who died in 2010 after a series of strokes.

One morning, she settled into a recliner with her newspaper, cup of coffee, and her Pomeranian in her lap. When she stayed there until 5 p.m., she realized that a typical retirement would not suit her go-getter self.

She jumpstarted a new career, teaching medical assistants in schools and a rehab center. About three years ago, mysterious symptoms started plaguing her, including a loss of balance and frequent falls.

Doctors attributed her symptoms to aging until she was finally diagnosed with MSA-C, or multiple system atrophy – cerebellar subtype. She openly volunteers the details of her rare condition, which typically causes patients to lose their equilibrium and their voices.

“I want to educate people,” Muniz said. “Nurses have not heard of what I have. Most doctors haven’t either, unless they’re a neurologist.”

As her symptoms worsened, she knew Homeland was where she needed to be.

“I knew the standards that they require in the care of residents, and I know where their hearts are,” she said. “There are a lot of good people here.”

Muniz arrived unable even to get into a wheelchair by herself, but with regular therapy from Homeland rehabilitation services, her condition improved dramatically. Today, standing still feels like swaying on a boat, but she takes assisted walks daily, goes out for occasions with family, and uses her feet to pedal around in the wheelchair that her son calls her “Flintstone car.”

“God is so good,” she said. “There is no other explanation for how I went from that bad to this good.”

Recently, friends escorted her from lunch to the Homeland chapel, where the Central Pennsylvania Nurses Honor Guard surprised her with a ceremony recognizing her lifetime of service.

“They gave me roses,” Muniz. “They gave me a hand-knit Afghan and a Florence Nightingale lamp. Nursing is about doing for others.”

The severe symptoms of her MSA-C could return, she knows, but no matter what comes, she has confidence in the care she is receiving at Homeland.

“My hopes here are just to continue getting the wonderful care I’m getting, doing what I can, and enjoying life as much as I can.”

Homeland Center (www.homelandcenter.org) offers levels of care including personal care, memory care, skilled nursing and rehabilitation. Homeland also provides hospice, home care, home health and palliative care services to serve the diverse and changing needs of families throughout central Pennsylvania. For more information or to arrange a tour, please call 717-221-7900.

Administrative Assistant Sharria Floyd: New role, same caring heart

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Sharria Floyd has changed her daily outfits from scrubs to business casual, but she still feels like the caregiver she has always been.

“It doesn’t make me feel any less or more confident,” said Floyd, the former Homeland CNA who stepped into the administrative assistant role for Homeland CEO Barry Ramper II. “It lets me know that I’m doing a different line of work. It made the new position of reality for me, but of course, I still go and see the residents.”

Floyd fills the shoes of Ramper’s longtime assistant Esther Burnside, who retired in spring 2025. In typical Homeland fashion, it was not a job she saw herself doing, but Ramper saw her potential and invited her to grow into a new role.

Floyd joined Homeland in August 2000. After time as a CNA floating through Homeland’s three continuing-care units — Personal Care, Skilled Living, and Memory Care –– she joined the Ellenberger Memory Care Unit.

“I absolutely loved the interaction with the residents, whether they were thinking about some moment in their past or had that moment when they were able to be in the present,” she said. “I felt that – and still do – there’s so much to learn. The job isn’t about giving care, although that’s fundamental. It’s also about being a friend. It’s about being a good listener. It’s being a helping hand.”

Over the years, Floyd rose to Quality Assurance, where she helped ensure the implementation of residents’ care plans.

She loved her job but had been praying for a challenge when, one day, Ramper asked if she had a moment to talk. She was “in complete shock” when he asked if she would take Burnside’s position.

“He said he prayed about it, and God said to ask me,” she said. “I prayed, fasted, and thought about it.”

She knew it meant spending less time with the colleagues she had grown close to, but she said yes when she concluded that Ramper must have confidence in her.

“I thought about what I prayed for, and it seemed to match,” she said. “I asked for a challenge. I didn’t know exactly how it would come forth, but it answered a prayer.”

Growing up in Lancaster as the oldest of five siblings, plus a stepbrother, Floyd always had a caregiving heart. Her parents taught her the values of treating others with respect and dignity. She would visit her mother, a nursing-home CNA, during lunch breaks and thought it was fun to help with the residents.

When she moved to Harrisburg, she interviewed with the nursing home where she earned her CNA, but the experience was abrupt and clinical.

She interviewed at Homeland on the same day and was greeted with smiles and warmth. When Homeland offered her a position, she knew it was the place for her.

Taking her direct care experience into administration, Floyd understands the forms and terminology crossing her desk, knowing what they mean to the residents.

She can also help her colleagues understand the reasons behind Homeland’s procedures and rules.

“I feel like because I’ve remained the same person through-and-through throughout these 20 years, people trust my word,” she said. “I don’t have to go into deep detail, but I can give reassurance and let them know that things will work out. Most people want to know that you’re listening, that they are being heard.”

Her new duties include taking minutes for Board of Trustees and Resident Council meetings and ordering flowers for the families of residents who have passed away.

“It’s such a nice gesture,” she said. “Time passes, and it might be a day when they’re thinking of their mother or their loved one, and here are some flowers to cheer them up and let them know that their loved one isn’t forgotten. They haven’t forgotten them, and neither have we.”

Outside of work, Floyd is busy with her church and her three children, ages 18, 12, and 7.

At Homeland, Floyd believes she is part of a team that cares for residents as family members want them to be treated.

In her new role, she hopes to keep praying with and for the residents, contribute to solutions when they’re needed, and continue to grow. She is inspired by Homeland’s history, which began in 1867 with the founding of 18 women who put aside any differences they might have had and “decided to be a helping hand” to Civil War widows and orphans.

“That’s why Homeland is special,” she said. “That’s what still makes Homeland special. The spirit of their love never dies.”

Homeland Center (www.homelandcenter.org) offers levels of care including personal care, memory care, skilled nursing and rehabilitation. Homeland also provides hospice, home care, home health and palliative care services to serve the diverse and changing needs of families throughout central Pennsylvania. For more information or to arrange a tour, please call 717-221-7900.