| Winner of Chamber's inaugural George Pringle award is ... George
Pringle
02/05/02 By
JASON DEHART Daily Commercial Staff Writer
Real estate and building tycoon George Pringle received the Leesburg
Chamber of Commerce’s first-ever lifetime achievement award during the
chamber’s 65th annual officer installation banquet Friday.
“I didn’t have a clue. It was a complete surprise,” Pringle, 78, said.
“I appreciate the sentiment behind it, though I’m not completely sure I
deserve it. But it was a great honor. I feel highly honored.”
If that wasn’t enough of an honor, the next time the award is given
it’ll have his name on it.
“It will be called the George Pringle Lifetime Achievement Award,” said
Bill Deese, executive director of the Leesburg Chamber of Commerce. “The
Ambassador Committee recommended we give him a lifetime achievement award,
and then every year after this year we should give it to someone in the
community.”
That also came as a surprise to the man of the hour.
“That is what you call being doubly honored,” Pringle said. “I can
hardly believe that. But I guess if you stay around and keep pitching its
appreciated in some quarters.”
Deese said Pringle — who is working to create a performing arts center
at Lake-Sumter Community College and who paid for the Town Square fountain
— was a natural choice for the award.
“George is such a huge supporter of the community and the chamber, not
only through his volunteer time but his financial support as well,” Deese
said. “He’s helped bring the chamber through some rough times and stuck
his neck out for it and done so many other things for the community.”
Pringle said he was especially proud of his role in getting a Civil Air
Patrol headquarters building constructed at the Leesburg airport. That
happened about 10 years ago, he said, when he was commander of the local
CAP group.
“I’m also proud of the local communities we’ve built,” he said. “I
guess around here locally those are a couple things I’m proud of.”
Pringle said being honored by the chamber of commerce places him in
some fine company.
“We’ve had a lot of fine people in this area. There have been a large
number through the years,” he said. “So I guess I joined the club, so to
speak.” |