A group of adults and children stand indoors holding a banner that reads "Ron & Shirley Squire AIDS Walk." A baby in a car seat is positioned in front of the group.
Shirley Squires, 94, of Guilford (second from right) poses with four generations of descendants and a banner for the newly renamed Ron and Shirley Squires AIDS Walk. Photo by Kevin O’Connor/VTDigger

BRATTLEBORO — Great-great-grandmother Shirley Squires is also a great, great fundraiser.

The 94-year-old Guilford resident arrived at Saturday’s AIDS Project of Southern Vermont charity walk with four generations of family, including the newest member born just two weeks ago.

Though rain forced organizers to cancel the annual outdoor stroll, Squires still shined, raising $22,291 in contributions this year to reach a lifetime fundraising milestone of $500,298.

“Your unwavering commitment is nothing short of extraordinary,” U.S. Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vermont, wrote to Squires in a letter read at Brattleboro’s Centre Congregational Church.

Squires first learned of the AIDS walk in 1992 when her son — state Rep. Ronald Squires, the first Vermont lawmaker to reveal his homosexuality — spoke at it shortly after winning passage of a statute prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation.

“We can teach our children how to prevent AIDS or we can sit and watch them die,” the Democratic legislator told the Town Crier at the time.

The 41-year-old died of the disease in January 1993. Five months later, his mother joined the walk to raise money in his memory.

An elderly woman with gray hair holds a sleeping baby in pink pajamas while sitting on a wooden bench beside other adults on a gymnasium floor.
Shirley Squires, 94, of Guilford holds the latest of her four generations of descendants, 2-week-old Grace. Photo by Kevin O’Connor/VTDigger

“After the painful loss of my brother, a tragedy that would have broken many, my mom chose to turn grief into action,” Diana Squires recalled Saturday alongside many of her mother’s 74 children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren.

Since starting in 1993, the matriarch has yet to miss a year of fundraising — continuing even this winter, when she broke her shoulder before she was set to handwrite 500 solicitation letters.

AIDS, once considered a death sentence, is now a treatable condition that about 750 Vermonters are living with through help from the Brattleboro-based service organization, along with Vermont CARES and the Upper Valley’s HIV/HCV Resource Center, according to the state.

To honor Squires’ half-million-dollar milestone, the AIDS Project is renaming its annual fundraiser the Ron and Shirley Squires AIDS Walk. Its top finisher promised to be back next year after celebrating her 95th birthday in August.

“I will keep doing this until I’m not here anymore,” she said.

VTDigger's southern Vermont and features reporter.