Chuck Brueggemann serves as Managing Director, Family Office Services at Archford, where he leads the firm’s work with multigenerational families whose financial lives, businesses, and relationships have grown increasingly complex. He oversees an integrated Family Office platform that unifies wealth management, tax strategy, estate design, governance, family education, and ongoing counsel into a cohesive, highly coordinated experience. His focus is to help families preserve what they have built, strengthen relationships, and prepare the next generation for both responsibility and opportunity.
Chuck brings a unique perspective forged in leadership. He served 25 years with the Illinois State Police, retiring as First Deputy Director, the highest rank attainable by a sworn officer. In that capacity, he led large organizations, managed crisis environments, and made high-stakes decisions. His training in negotiation and crisis intervention sharpened skills that now prove invaluable in navigating succession planning, governance dynamics, liquidity events, and generational transitions.
Following his public service, Chuck held executive leadership roles within privately held enterprises, where he gained firsthand insight into ownership strategy and long-term value creation. He later served as Director of Intercollegiate Athletics and Special Advisor to the President at McKendree University, guiding strategic initiatives at the executive level. For more than two decades, he has advised closely held companies and served as a trustee for family trusts, deepening his understanding of fiduciary responsibility and stewardship.
Chuck holds a degree in Business and Social Justice from McKendree University and a Master of Arts in Homeland Defense and Security from the Naval Postgraduate School. He further refined his executive education through advanced studies focused on Family Business Leadership at Cornell University, Family Mediation at Northwestern University, and crisis management at Harvard University.
His approach to Family Office leadership is both strategic and relational. He believes legacy is ultimately about people—how wisdom is transferred, how leadership is modeled, and how families remain aligned across generations. Clients value his discretion, steady counsel, and commitment to safeguarding both wealth and family harmony.
Raised in the Midwest as the youngest of six siblings, Chuck maintains close family ties that inform his belief that legacy is ultimately relational as well as financial. He and his wife, Susan, have two grown daughters and remain active in their community.