Tracy Madigan, director of the Henderson-Vance Downtown Development Commission, is the newest recipient of the Sam Watkins Visionary Award presented by the United Way.
Madigan said she was among the 40 or so in attendance at the United Way’s annual breakfast when her name was called.
“I was very honored and very humbled,” Madigan said in a telephone interview Thursday with WIZS. “It hit me from left field – I was blindsided,” she said, never expecting that she would follow in the footsteps of previous recipients like Vance County Commissioner Col. Archie Taylor, George Watkins, Donald Seifert and others who have been honored since the award was established after Watkins’s death in February 2014.
But if anyone deserves an award for being a visionary, it’s the person in charge of reimagining downtown Henderson.
The ever-modest Madigan said that when she accepted the award, she said she was most appreciative, but reminded those gathered that “it’s all about partnership – all of us working together to make things happen.”
Sam Watkins, a driving force in the revitalization effort that produced McGregor Hall, is remembered for the vision he had for Henderson and Vance County through the award.
Madigan said the mission statement of the downtown development commission centers around McGregor Hall, which she called a cultural hub for the five-county area.
In addition to McGregor Hall, Henderson’s downtown is going to be in the spotlight as plans for the S-Line passenger and commuter rail take shape. Having a depot – mobility hub – on Garnett Street is in the works and Madigan said she looks forward to continuing the city’s initial efforts to make the downtown area more physically attractive as well as a spot for future businesses to locate.
N.C. Rep. Frank Sossamon has partnered with N.C. Sen. Lisa Barnes to bring more dollars to the area.
“We’re going to be asking for more, too,” Madigan noted.
Right now, she would like to see more development in and around the downtown area, especially near McGregor Hall and the Police Department. She wants to make Garnett Street more pedestrian-friendly and attract more businesses to the downtown.
She said a carefully placed deli and/or bakery would attract more people to want to come and live in or near the downtown area.
She’s got the vision, and she said downtown Henderson is just one or two projects and a little more initial investment away from taking off. “There’s a lot going one, it just doesn’t happen overnight.”