ARTICLE
In each issue, we profile a Lehigh Valley businesswoman who has made an impact in the community. This issue's Valley girl has made quite a splash - literally - in the region. Jane Wells Schooley has always sought to help people, a trait she attributes to her Dad's influence growing up. Her father owned and operated a corner grocery store. He routinely sought out people to help, even delivering packages on Christmas Eve to needy customers who didn't have the money to celebrate the holiday. While serving as the national vice president of the National Organization for Women, she settled in the Lehigh Valley with her husband, Stuart Schooley, when they became part owners in Dutch Springs scuba diving quarry and took complete ownership in 1980. Click here to read the article.
In each issue, we profile a Lehigh Valley businesswoman who has made an impact in the community. This issue's Valley girl has made quite a splash - literally - in the region.
Jane Wells Schooley has always sought to help people, a trait she attributes to her Dad's influence growing up. Her father owned and operated a corner grocery store. He routinely sought out people to help, even delivering packages on Christmas Eve to needy customers who didn't have the money to celebrate the holiday.
While serving as the national vice president of the National Organization for Women, she settled in the Lehigh Valley with her husband, Stuart Schooley, when they became part owners in Dutch Springs scuba diving quarry and took complete ownership in 1980. Click here to read the article.