Doc Hendley

Dickson Beattie "Doc" Hendley (born March 19, 1979) is the founder of Wine to Water, an American charitable organization devoted to providing clean water and sanitation to people around the world.

Dickson Beattie "Doc" Hendley
Doc pumping water from a well in Trujillo, Peru, 2009
Born(1979-03-19)March 19, 1979
NationalityAmerican
Other namesDoc
OccupationAuthor, Speaker, Philanthropist
Known forWine to Water
Spouse(s)Amber Hendley
Children2

Biography

Hendley was born to Jeff and Libbi Hendley. He is the second of four children, with one older sister and two younger brothers. Doc currently resides in Boone, North Carolina with his wife Amber and 2 sons. Amber is well known in the Boone area for the Clogging studio she owns and operates in downtown Boone. Doc and Amber are expecting their first daughter in October 2014.

After graduating from Gans High School in [Gans, Oklahoma] in 1997, he later received a bachelor's degree in Communications from North Carolina State University in 2004.

Wine to Water

Hendley is the founder and current president of Wine to Water, a 501 (c)(3) non-profit aid organization focused on providing clean water to needy people around the world.[1] Wine to Water has worked in Sudan, India, Cambodia, Uganda, Ethiopia, Peru, South Africa, and Kenya.[2] The organization responded to the 2010 Haiti earthquake by bringing a water purification system to be implemented within disaster areas.[3]

Hendley first envisioned the concept of Wine to Water in 2003 while bartending and playing music in nightclubs around Raleigh, North Carolina.[4] In January 2004, the first fundraiser was held at a local bar in Raleigh. With the money raised during the event, Hendley traveled to Darfur, Sudan, and began installing water systems for victims of government-supported genocide.[4] He then lived in Sudan for about a year. Upon his return to the United States, he began to focus his energy on developing Wine to Water programs in other countries and received local and national media attention as a result.

CNN Heroes Selection

In May 2009, Hendley was selected as one of the CNN Heroes of the 2009 year out of nearly 9,000 submissions.[5] In October 2009, a panel of judges — including Gen. Colin Powell, Whoopi Goldberg, Ted Turner, and Elton John[6] — announced that Hendley was a "Top 10 Finalist for CNN’s Hero of Year."[7] In 2009, Wine to Water had implemented sustainable drinking water initiatives in half a dozen countries and over 25,000 individuals, by 2014 those numbers have rocketed to 18 countries and over 300,000 people. [8]

Book

Hendley published his first book in 2012 titled "Wine to Water; A Bartender's Quest to Bring Clean Water to the World." The book has received very positive reviews, and has been picked up by several universities as required reading. The book was left a little "open ended" so a follow-up is expected.

The following quote was taken from the book jacket:

Whether he is describing being shot at by the Janjaweed militia or children's excitement when a well starts pumping out water, he illuminates the facts of the crisis in a very human way. Hendley's humanitarian work is inspiring. --Publishers Weekly

Speaking

Doc does public speaking engagements across the United States and has spoken at several international venues including South Africa, Spain, Turkey and several others. Doc gives talks to a wide range of venues including non-profits, global conferences, corporate retreats and universities. He also appeared on the TedX Stage in Asheboro in 2010.

gollark: I'm not looking at any fingers. Except possibly my own, since they are in front of me when I use a keyboard. Unless you count the kermit's in the thumbnail.
gollark: > the idea that we need to do better than someone else at what they did to get more recognition or money than themI mean, you don't, you can do... different things, if people prefer them.
gollark: Although I only ever ended up writing something like one nontrivial Rust program.
gollark: I mostly end up thinking the same thing, which is why my complex stuff is primarily done in TypeScript, but for things when performance matters I do use Rust.
gollark: For some stuff, probably.

References

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