In 2004, Handy was named a recipient of an Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award, which recognizes two graduating students and one non-student member of the University community each year for excellence of character and service to humanity.
鈥淎ll of us who had the privilege of working with Alice Handy and knowing her,鈥 Casteen said, 鈥渁re better people for those experiences with her.鈥
Kristina Alimard, UVIMCO鈥檚 current chief operating officer, was hired by Handy to join her team in 2003. Like others who shared memories, Alimard emphasized Handy鈥檚 personal touch, describing her as 鈥渁 champion for everyone in her orbit.鈥
鈥淪he invested in people, and was always quick to provide advice and mentorship to colleagues at UVIMCO and beyond,鈥 Alimard said. 鈥淭he long-term, relationship-based nature of endowment investing marries well with Alice鈥檚 natural ability to form strong and lasting connections with people. Alice would put people into situations where they could excel and achieve and had faith in others, even when they didn鈥檛 have faith in themselves.鈥
Handy spent three decades at the University of Virginia, but in reality, it was an opening act in her remarkable professional career. Her next step would elevate her as a prominent national figure in nonprofit institutional investing.
After departing UVA, Handy founded Charlottesville-based Investure, which provides outsourced investment services for nonprofit organizations that desired to partner with proven professionals to manage their endowments and foundations. Among its clients are private institutions such as Dickinson College and the University of Denver, the Henry Luce Foundation and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
In a Bloomberg article about her retirement from Investure in 2018, one of Handy鈥檚 nonprofit investment management peers said she 鈥渃reated a whole industry at some level.鈥
About a decade ago, the magazine produced by her alma mater, Connecticut College, published a profile of its widely emulated and deeply respected alumna. Aside from recounting her career success, the author asked Handy what advice she might have for individual investors at that time.
Her response seemed to offer a synopsis of her investment philosophy and personality all at once.
鈥淲e all need to keep a long-term focus,鈥 Handy told the magazine, 鈥渂e disciplined about keeping our portfolios simple and understandable, and then go along for the ride.鈥
Handy is survived by her husband, Peter Stoudt, and her three children, Nick, Jenny and Abby.