Dana Elizabeth Hagar was married Sept. 28 to Rutherfurd Stuyvesant Pierrepont IV. William T. Nolan, a friend of the groom’s family who was ordained through Open Ministry, performed the ceremony at the Adirondack League Club in Old Forge, N.Y.
Mrs. Pierrepont, 30, is the lead recruiter at Social Tables, a hospitality software company in Washington. She graduated from Virginia Commonwealth University.
She is a daughter of Julia Perine Orts of Philadelphia and William H. Hagar of Chester Springs, Pa. The bride’s father retired as a manufacturer’s representative, and is now a volunteer guitar teacher for veterans being treated for combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Coatesville, Pa. Her mother is a senior business systems analyst at the University of Pennsylvania.
The bride is also a stepdaughter of Sara Snable Hagar, a partner in Chester Springs in Chartwell Partners, an executive recruiting firm, and of Eric W. Orts, a professor of legal studies and business ethics at Penn’s Wharton School, also in Philadelphia.
Mr. Pierrepont, 30, is known as Stuyve. He is the client development adviser in the Washington office at RMB Capital, a wealth management advisory firm. He is also a director of Potomac Riverkeeper Network, an environmental group in Washington. He graduated from Regis University in Denver.
He is a son of Virginia Crawford Pierrepont and Mr. Pierrepont III of Locust Valley, N.Y. The groom’s mother is a plein-air and portrait artist and is also a photographer. His father is a managing director for private equity mergers and acquisitions services at Marsh, the insurance brokerage and risk management company in New York.
The couple met in 2014 in Washington, when Mr. Pierrepont introduced himself to Ms. Hagar in the elevator of the office building where both worked, and then neglected to push the button for his own floor. So the two rode to the top floor, where she worked, in an awkward silence. “We were both blushing the whole way — it was a whole little thing,” Ms. Hagar said.