Please join us in welcoming Molly Fetters to the Willow Street team.
Molly serves as a primary point of contact for Willow Street clients, working closely with families and their advisors, including legal, tax/accounting, investment, and banking leads. She is responsible for trust administration, financial reporting and analysis, cash flow management, and special projects. She combines technical expertise with thought partnership and a client-focused perspective in her role.
Molly brings over 10 years of trust and fiduciary experience, primarily in client services and operations roles at CAPC Services and a Wyoming-based family’s private family trust company. She holds the Certified Trust and Fiduciary Advisor (CTFA) designation from the American Bankers Association, a course of study that hones the technical skills and competencies required to perform complex trust administration responsibilities.
Molly earned her BA in Art History from Virginia Commonwealth University and her MA in Arts Management from George Mason University. She has lived in Jackson for over twenty years and enjoys trail running, traveling, gardening, and exploring Wyoming with her husband and two daughters.
Before joining Willow Street, what was the most unusual or interesting job you’ve ever had?
In graduate school, I worked for a fine art shipping company in Washington, DC. We worked with many museums and institutions to safely transport high-value art and artifacts, and staff were often asked to accompany shipments. One I accompanied that stood out was a collection of the Dead Sea Scrolls — religious texts that are over 2,000 years old — which was an incredibly meaningful experience.
What’s the best book you’ve read recently?
“The Emperor of Gladness” by Ocean Vuong captivated me — not just with its beautiful writing, but also with the way it drew me into each moment, making me feel as though I was inhabiting the story rather than observing it. The friendships at the heart of the book are incredibly vulnerable but earned through shared silences, mutual recognition, and small acts of care formed in a most unexpected place. The story left a tenderness that lingered well after I finished reading.