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			 The names of the deceased will be read from the courthouse steps 
			at 7 p.m. on Dec. 31. After each name, the bell on the historic 
			site’s lawn will toll a single time. 
			 
			This is the sixth year for the remembrance ceremony. 
			 
			“Each year, as the names are read, we know that those people were 
			not only moms, dads, grandparents, aunts, uncles, brothers and 
			sisters, but they were also our friends and neighbors,” said Tom 
			Martin, chairman of the Mount Pulaski Courthouse Foundation. “All of 
			them were integral to our community and part of what makes our 
			hometown special.” 
			
			  After the ceremony, everyone is invited to warm up with coffee, hot 
			chocolate and cookies at the foundation office, across the street 
			from the courthouse. 
			 
			The list of about 75 names which will be read is posted at
			www.mtpulaskiil.com.  
			 
			Built in 1848, the Mount Pulaski Courthouse is one of two remaining 
			sites where Abraham Lincoln practiced as a lawyer traveling the 8th 
			Judicial Circuit. It is now operated by the Illinois Historic 
			Preservation Agency. 
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Mount Pulaski Courthouse Foundation was established in 2011 to care for the 
building and plan special events. For more information, visit
www.mtpulaskihistoriccourthouse.org.  
 
The site is open noon-4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. There is no charge for 
admission. 
				 
			[Illinois Historic Preservation 
			Agency] 
			
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