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			 Volunteers have provided vital services to the presidential 
			library since it opened 11 years ago. They greet visitors, supervise 
			children’s activities, assist historians, take photos and much more. 
 They reached the $10 million threshold just in time for National 
			Volunteer Week, April 10-16.
 
 “The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum simply would 
			not be the same wonderful institution without the hard work of our 
			volunteers,” said Nadine O’Leary, the ALPLM’s acting executive 
			director. “Their dedication is a testament to how much the people of 
			Illinois support our mission of honoring President Lincoln.”
 
 Volunteers contribute an average of 40,000 hours of service each 
			year to the Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. Most of that 
			involves assisting guests at the museum, but volunteers contribute 
			in many other ways, too.
 
			
			 Last year, they worked 3,400 hours at the Papers of Abraham Lincoln 
			project, 2,400 hours with the Oral History Program and 560 hours in 
			the library’s Manuscripts Department.
 The ALPLM’s amazing volunteers include:
 
				Carolyn Berning, who in 2007 became the first volunteer to 
				work in the Oral History Department. Her work helped set the 
				standards and format for those who followed. Now approximately 
				30 volunteers help with interviewing, transcribing and editing 
				each month. Dorothea Thrasher and Rick Thrasher, a mother and son who 
				have volunteered since 2005. At 95, Dorothea is the presidential 
				library’s oldest volunteer and was recently nominated for the 
				Governor’s Volunteer Service Award. Her son is a retired school 
				principal.Brian Replogle, whose volunteer work at the ALPLM led him to 
				a career in volunteer management. His networking at the 
				presidential library and volunteer conferences afforded him the 
				opportunity to become director of volunteers and charity 
				operations at the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central 
				Illinois.Amy Henrikson, one of the first volunteers assigned to the 
				Papers of Abraham Lincoln. She has transcribed over 1,000 
				Lincoln documents since 2011. Tom Rozanski, a Champaign resident who drives to Springfield 
				several times a month to volunteer at the Lincoln Presidential 
				Library and Museum.  
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			 “Millions of people have visited the museum, conducted research at the library 
or used our online resources. All of them, whether they knew it or not, 
benefited from the time and talents of our volunteers,” said Heidi Brown-McCreery, 
director of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.
 The value of the volunteers’ time is based on annual rates agreed upon by 
national non-profit and volunteer organizations such as Points of Light. The 
rate used in calculations at the ALPLM is $22.77 an hour.
 
 The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, a division of the Illinois 
Historic Preservation Agency, is dedicated to telling the story of America’s 
16th president through old-fashioned scholarship and modern technology.
 
 The library holds an unparalleled collection of Lincoln books, documents, 
photographs, artifacts and art, including the Gettysburg Address, Emancipation 
Proclamation, 13th Amendment and Abraham Lincoln’s stovepipe hat. It also serves 
as the state’s historical library, with some 12 million items pertaining to 
Illinois history.
 
 The museum is open seven days a week. The library portion of the ALPLM is open 
free of charge Monday through Friday for research. For details, visit 
www.PresidentLincoln.illinois.gov.
 
				 
			[Shanta Thoele, Communications and 
			Public Affairs, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency] 
			
			 
			
			 
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