Main Street Lincoln to celebrate Historic Preservation Week

Citizens in Lincoln will join thousands of individuals around the country as part of the National Trust’s Historic Preservation Week celebration. "Taking the Past Into the Future" is the theme of the week, with events scheduled May 7-14.

Citizens in Lincoln will join thousands of individuals around the country as part of the National Trust’s Historic Preservation Week celebration. "Taking the Past Into the Future" is the theme of the week, with events scheduled May 7-14.

"The millennium is a time to reflect on where we’ve been and where we’re going," said Richard Moe, president of the National Trust. "This year’s theme celebrates that link between past and future, challenging us to plan for the issues that will confront us in the years to come. It is essential that we be vigilant, flexible and well-informed in order to deal with the rapid changes that are sure to have an impact on our irreplaceable historic treasures."

Students in grades four through eight are encouraged to write a one-page paper on the "Most Historically Influential Lincoln Resident." One winning entry from each grade will win an entertainment package and be recognized on May 7 at the Taste of Lincoln. Entries must be submitted by May 1 to the Main Street Lincoln Office on the second floor of the Union Planters Bank building, 303 S. Kickapoo in Lincoln.

As a prelude to Historic Preservation Week, the "Lincoln Legacy Quiz" will begin in The Courier May 1 and run daily through May 6. Readers can answer the five questions posted each day and send the results to the Main Street Lincoln office. The participant with the highest number of correct responses will win dinner for two at a local restaurant and will be recognized May 7 at the Taste of Lincoln.

A May 3-14 drive by tour of architecturally significant homes, sponsored by the Logan County Board of Realtors and The Courier, will be featured in a special insert on May 3. The insert will include a brief description of the homes and a numbered map so the public can enjoy a leisurely look at all of Lincoln’s treasures.

Mayor Joan Ritter will present the annual awards for Historic Preservation at 11:45 a.m. Sunday, May 7, on the north lawn of the Logan County Courthouse during the Taste of Lincoln. Awards are available in both residential and non-residential categories for preservation, exterior rehabilitation and sympathetic addition. For more information or to make a nomination, call the Main Street Lincoln office. Homes included in the drive by tour are not automatically nominated for an award.

 

 

 


[Lincoln City Hall --
The LaFrance fire truck shown was purchased
by the city in 1924 and retired in 1970.]

 

Historic displays will be in the windows of many downtown businesses May 6-14 for Historic Preservation Week. Some windows will feature Western Illinois Regional History Fair entries by junior high students from Zion Lutheran School and New Holland/Middletown.

"More Love Than Money Restoration" will be the theme of a workshop to be held Wednesday, May 10, at 7 p.m. in the Union Planter's Bank Conference Room on the second floor at 303 S. Kickapoo. Mike Fak will share low-cost tips on how to renovate your home and give examples. There is no fee and pre-registration is not necessary.

 

 

Also that evening, Ruth Sloot from Lincoln Community High School will showcase the project on historic homes compiled by civics classes this year. This will be the first opportunity for residents whose homes were included in the project to see the results.

Another historically based event, the Elkhart Chatauqua, will be May 21 on Elkhart Hill from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information on the Chatauqua, call 217/947-2323.

Historic Preservation Week is based on the 29-year-old tradition of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and is sponsored locally by the city of Lincoln and Main Street Lincoln with financial support from Beans ’N Such and the Blue Dog Inn. For more information on the activities, people can call the Main Street Lincoln office at 732-2929.

[LDN ed.]

 


Free dance lessons begin April 27 in Mason City

The Mason City Historical Society is sponsoring free dance lessons for the next four weeks so that people can  learn to "strut their stuff" for the Civil War ball and band performance at the park pavilion Saturday, May 27, for Mason City's Living History Weekend . The society feels that more people will enjoy themselves at the ball if they are familiar with a few period dance steps.

The free dance lessons will begin Thursday, April 27, at 7:30 p.m. at the Mason City Civic Center, 120 N. Main St. People of all skill levels with or without a partner are invited to sign up.


Baby-sitting clinic scheduled for April 29

A free baby-sitting clinic will be offered Saturday, April 29, from 9 to 11:30 a.m. at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital. Young people in sixth, seventh and eighth grades who are interested in learning how to be safe and successful baby sitters are invited to attend.

The clinic, sponsored by the Lincoln Junior Woman’s Club and Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital, will cover numerous topics such as basic and emergency first aid, safety while baby-sitting, and basic child care for young children. Participants will also learn about the business of baby-sitting and how to do a professional job. Speakers will include professional paramedics, nurses, police officers and parents.

The clinic will be held in the basement Conference Room A at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital, 315 Eighth St. Registration is required, and the clinic is limited to the first 40 who sign up. Registration can be made by calling 217-732-3118 or by writing to the Lincoln Junior Woman’s Club, Box 152, Lincoln, IL 62656.

 


Celebrate spring and Earth Day week at old city landfill

Recycle with landscape waste such as wood chips and compost from the old city landfill on Broadwell Drive. Bring containers and help yourself. An attendant will be on hand to provide direction from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. through Saturday, April 22. For more information, contact Kenneth Schwab, coordinator for the Logan County Joint Solid Waste Agency, at 732-9636.

 


Special services at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church

    Good Friday Tenebrae services at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 1140 N. State St. in Lincoln, will be at 7:30 p.m. Friday evening, April 21. Easter services with Holy Communion will be at 8 a.m. Sunday, April 23. AAL will serve a light breakfast following the Easter service. There will be no Sunday School, but the children will have an Easter egg hunt.


Relay for Life raises money for cancer research

It is said that love makes the world go around. And with love, comes service. This past weekend the Logan County Unit of the American Cancer Society held its third annual Relay for Life at the Lincoln Park District facility. About 55 teams participated in the local event. Kathy Blaum and Mary Ellen Martin, co-chairs, spent countless hours planning, preparing and participating in this year’s walk-a-thon, which raises money for cancer research. Both women are cancer survivors.

The funds raised are divided in this way: research, 22%; detection and treatment, 13.6%; prevention, 18.5%; information and patient services, 17.8%; fundraising, 22%; administrative expense, 6.5%.

Last year's Relay netted over $51,000.00, used specifically for an updated Cancer Information Database; Reach to Recovery, a support program for newly diagnosed women; Tell-a-Friend, a phone-tree program to help women get baseline mammograms; and other programs and services to encourage early detection and prevention.

"Being a cancer survivor, I wanted more people to understand how early detection saves lives.  By raising money for research–soon we will find a cure.  Until then we need to support the best programs," says Kathy Blaum.

Local volunteers like Kathy Blaum and Mary Ellen Martin join people such as Dr. Gordon Klatt, who in 1985 took the first step of his 24-hour marathon in a Relay for Life and raised $27,000.00 for the American Cancer Society.

The community can help support the Relay for Life next year by volunteering their time in the walk-a-thon or by donating items for the silent auction.

Mary Ellen Martin, the event co-chair, says, "The community benefits from the money raised at  ‘Relay for Life’ because it is an investment in their future."

[Jeaneen Ray]

[LDN ed.]

 


[Kathy Blaum at the microphone]

 


Atlanta 4-H club invites youth from town to join

The members of the Atlanta Town and Country 4-H club invite eligible youth from town to join. Jeff Jones, the club reporter, says, "4-H isn’t just for people who live in the country. There are lots of things for a guy or a girl from town to do." Activities include cooking, growing flowers, woodworking, small engines, arts, crafts and herb gardening. For more information, people can call 217-648-2973.

 


Red Cross offers CPR and first aid classes

A Community First Aid and Safety Class will be offered at the Logan County Red Cross office on April 17 and 18. Hours for the class are 6 to 10 p.m. the first evening and 5 to 10 p.m. the second evening. This class covers adult CPR, infant and child CPR, and first aid. Both evenings are required for certification.

A Challenge class for Community CPR and First Aid will be offered on Saturday, April 22, from 9 a.m. to noon. On the same day, there will be a Challenge class for CPR for the Professional Rescuer, but the hours will be 8 a.m. to noon.

For further information, call 732-2134 between 12 and 4 p.m. any weekday

 


Panel tells impact of drunk driving

    “Drunk driving is not an accident.  It is 100 percent avoidable.  My daughter was killed by a drunk driver,” George Murphy of Jacksonville told a group of about 40 Tuesday night at a Victim Impact Panel at the Lincoln Recreation Center.

    The panel of four, all members of MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving), told their stories, three from the point of view of victims and one from the other side of the issue, the experience of a young man convicted of drunk driving.

They also told those present, especially the dozen young people, not to drink and drive, and urged them to let their state and local representatives know how they feel about drunk drivers being allowed on the road.  The panel was sponsored by the Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drug Task Force of the Healthy Communities Partnership of Logan County in recognition of Alcohol Awareness Month and Victims Rights Week, April 9 through 15.

 “Don’t think it can’t happen to you,” Murphy told the audience.  His daughter, Kellie, died on July 4, 1984, after being struck by a drunk driver.

Kellie and her husband and 14-month-old son had gone out for a bicycle ride.  The young mother had gotten off her bicycle to attend to her son when the “town drunk” came around a corner and ran over her as she was standing by the side of the road.  The driver didn’t stop.

“He didn’t know he had hit a human being,” Murphy said.

In the emergency room, Murphy was thinking of the time 12 years ago when his daughter had ridden her bicycle into a car and sustained a broken leg.  He was expecting to hear the same kind of news.  When the family priest walked in, he learned that his daughter was dead.

He spoke of his frustration trying to sue the tavern that sold the driver liquor when he was already drunk.  An appellate court ruled that his daughter’s life was of no monetary value under the dram shop law because she was not a wage earner.  Thirteen years later, he said, a bill named for his daughter, the Kellie Wheatley Bill, changed the law so that even if the deceased person did not earn a paycheck, the family could sue for damages.

Murphy, the only paid staff member of MADD on the panel, whose job is to help victims through the criminal justice system, told the audience that drunk drivers kill 44 persons per day.

“When I see a drunk driver, I dial 911.  I want you to do the same.  I want you to take the keys away from your friends if they have been drinking and want to drive.  We are not opposed to those of you who are of age consuming alcohol, we just don’t want you to do it and drive.”

“I will never have grandchildren,” Cheryl Beard of Rochester told the group.  On March 7, 1990, she and her husband had breakfast with their 17-year-old son Jeff, their only child.  That evening they were called to a Springfield hospital emergency room because they were told their son had “totaled” his car.

A chaplain was waiting for them at the hospital, and they learned that their son had serious injuries.  He died before they could see him.  Only the next day, when she read the newspaper, did Beard learn that another car had been involved.

“The driver ran a stop sign and hit Jeff.  Because he was drunk, his reaction time was slower.  He said he never saw the stop sign or Jeff’s car.  If his reaction time had been faster by even one second, he might not have killed my son.”

She remembers what she thought when she and her husband went to the funeral home to pick out their son’s coffin.  “You think of all the things you buy for your children.  Now the only thing left to buy him was a coffin.”

Jim Jones of Middletown, a convicted drunk driver, told the group he started drinking when he was 14 years old and thought it was “real cool.  Nothing bad ever happened.”

When he was 17 he was picked up for having beer in his car and lost his license for 30 days.  “It should have been longer,” he said.

When he was 21 he thought, “It’s okay to stop at a bar and have some drinks, because nothing bad happens.”  Then he woke up three days later in a Springfield hospital.  The doctors told him he was lucky to be alive.

He is now 28 and has not driven since that time.  “I’m glad I was taken off the road.  I very easily could have killed somebody.  When you’re drinking, you don’t think at all.”

Because he can’t drive, he said, he has a “low-paying job,” but he does not feel he is ready yet to reapply for a driver’s license.

Steve Zimmerman of Mason City was hit by a drunken driver and lived to tell about it, but he has lost his trucking business, suffered a great deal of pain, still walks with a cane and faces at least another three surgeries.

“On May 29 last year we came to Lincoln High School for my niece’s graduation.  On the way home a driver came around a curve in the road at 85 or 90 miles an hour and hit our van.  It took two or three hours to get me out.”

He said it was the fourth time the driver who hit him had been arrested for drunk driving.  “I thought, ‘What is this guy doing on the road?  Why isn’t he in jail?’”

He said he believed the police, the state’s attorney of Logan County and the judge who gave the man the maximum sentence did a good job, but he pointed out that the 12-year sentence would probably be reduced to six, or possibly less.

“If a man gets six years, every day he serves of good time he gets a day off.  That’s the way it works in Illinois.  Then, because the Safe Neighborhoods act was recently overturned in that rigmarole about gun control, this guy can appeal the sentence and may serve only three years.  I’m real aggravated at everybody.”

Still, he says, he can forgive the driver who hit him.

The driver wrote him a letter of apology, which Zimmerman read to the audience.  “I’m writing to tell you I’m really sorry.  I’ve been wanting to do this ever since the day of the wreck.  I know that saying I’m sorry won’t take away the pain and suffering.  I’m sorry you and your family had to pay for my mistake.”

“At first, I thought this guy was looking for some kind of reprieve,” Zimmerman said, “but right now if I could walk up to the man I would probably forgive him.

“This is a two-sided tragedy,” he added.  “Nobody wins.  The driver, even if he walks away, still has to live with it.”

In closing, Zimmerman told the audience that every year 1,600,000 people are arrested for drunk driving.  “How many are on the road that are not arrested?  If you’re not scared when you get on the road of meeting a drunk driver, you’re not the sharpest tool in the shed.”

Kristi Simpson, chairperson of the education subcommittee of the Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs Task Force, said that some of the young people who attended the meeting were students at Lincoln Junior High School earning extra credit for writing a paper about the experience.  At least one other person attended because of a court order.  Lincoln Police Chief Rich Ludolph and two officers also attended, “to hear the panel and support the program,” Chief Ludolph said.

                                                             [Joan Crabb]

MS “Walk for Life” raises $10,000

Sunday, April 9, more than 100 people came together for a common cause—to raise awareness and money for multiple sclerosis research. Lincoln’s first “Walk for Life,” sponsored by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, took place at Kickapoo Creek Park, raising approximately $10,000 through pledges and donations.

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic disease that affects the central nervous system, causing interruptions in the electrical impulses sent from the brain to other areas of the body. According to the NMSS, one out of 1000 people are diagnosed each year. Currently there is no cure for MS; however, treatments are being used to slow the progression of the disease.

The Lincoln committee for the MS walk was comprised of Brenda Centers, Jim and Nancy Ireland, Gene and Toni McDonald, and Jeanne Handlin. Committee member Toni McDonald says the reason she wants to raise awareness about MS is because it touches so many lives, including her 39-year-old son, Rob. “When someone in your family has a disease, you want to help them,” she explains, adding, “We need to raise money for research for a cure or better treatment.” 

McDonald says she appreciates the many walkers, sponsors and volunteers that contributed to the event’s success. “They were very valuable,” she says. And, due to its success, the Lincoln committee is planning another Walk for Life next year. For more information, call the National Multiple Sclerosis Society at 1-800-344-4867.

 

 


Health department presents "Goodwill" and "Partnership" awards
    In honor of Public Health Week, the Logan County Health Department presents awards to individuals, organizations or businesses that have promoted the mission of the health department in the continuation or advancement of its services or programs. The recipients have supported the health department by collaborating with or assisting with existing or new programs, projects or services.

The "Goodwill Award" is a certificate that is presented to an individual, organization or business. This year, two certificates were awarded. Kristin Simpson of Logan Mason Mental Health and Officer Rich Montcalm of the Lincoln Police Department received certificates for their continued support of public health and the mission of the Logan County Health Department. The "Partnership Award" was presented to Logan County ESDA and the Department of Human Services for their collaboration with Logan County Health Department on projects and programs throughout the past year.

 


"School's Out Fun Days"

YMCA's "School’s Out Fun Days" will be held from Friday, April 14, through Monday, April 24, from 6:45 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Lincoln Park District Sports Complex. There are theme days, guest speakers and many special activities planned. Call 735-3915 for more information or to request a registration form.

 


Jolly Seniors group plans April 25 meeting

The Jolly Seniors group from Lincoln Christian Church invites those 55-plus to attend our monthly meeting on Tuesday, April 25, at 10 a.m. You will experience a warm fellowship with people who care for one another, an enjoyable time filled with great food, fun, interesting programs and a spiritual lift to encourage you in your life. This month’s Easter program will feature Rick Roy on the keyboard and singing. Dean Hill will lead our devotion. We will also enjoy a turkey dinner, catered by Guzzardo’s. Suggested cost for the meal is $4. For free transportation, please contact the church office at 732-7618. The meeting will be held at the church Fellowship Center, 205 N. Hamilton St.test

 


National Honor Society seeks donations for Plant-A-Tree Project

The National Honor Society of Lincoln Community High School has scheduled their annual Earth Day projects for April 26 and 28. On April 26, NHS students will help first graders plant memorial trees and teach the children how to plant their own trees. On April 28, several high school groups will plant trees along the interstate entrances to Lincoln and along Lincoln Parkway in front of the Logan County Fairgrounds and Lincoln Developmental Center. The National Honor Society invites businesses and organizations to donate funds to help the NHS, the bio-chemistry ecology class and the landscaping class purchase the trees.

If you are interested in helping on one of the planting days, the NHS would appreciate your enthusiasm and expertise to help them organize or plant. If you would like to see the visible results of the students’ work, you can check the locations on the southern cloverleaf entrance to Lincoln and in front of the fairgrounds and LDC.

The NHS thanks the community for all the continued support of this project.

Donations, with checks payable to Plant-A-Tree Project, may be sent to the National Honor Society, Attn: Judy Dopp and Laura Horton, 1000 Primm Road, Lincoln, IL 62656.

 


Civil War ball and band performance set for Memorial Day weekend

The Mason City Historical Society is bringing the Civil War to Mason City on Memorial Day weekend. Living history events in the city parks will include an educational, entertaining appearance by the 33rd Illinois Volunteer Regiment Band on Saturday, May 27, at 7:30 p.m. at the tourist park pavilion. The band is an authentic reenactment of the actual Civil War era band that was mustered at State Normal University in 1861. The band members wear reproductions of the original wool uniforms worn by the Union Army, and each member plays music of the era on period instruments dating as early as 1848. A Civil War military ball will be the main feature during their performance. Children as well as adults will dance to the Virginia reel, broom dance and other musical steps of that era. The public is invited to this full-family affair for an evening of dancing or just plain listening. Those in attendance are encouraged, but not required, to wear attire of the Civil War period. Proceeds from this military ball and band performance fundraiser will go to the restoration of Mason City's Soldiers Monument erected in 1867 in Memorial Park. Events are sponsored in cooperation with the local historical society, churches, school, clubs and organizations, as well as parks and city government.

 


Heritage In Flight museum

The Heritage In Flight Museum at the Logan County Airport is open every weekend from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. It is open during the week by special arrangement by calling 732-3333. The museum contains historical aviation exhibits from as far back as World War I. Donations to the museum have come from Logan County residents who served in the flying branches of the United States military and from military and civilian sources throughout the U.S. Heritage In Flight holds its regular meetings on the first Saturday of the month at 1 p.m. in the commons room of the airport terminal building. We are always interested in new members who have an interest in helping to maintain the museum and the important and fascinating historical records that it contains. The Heritage In Flight Museum is a non-profit organization.

 

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