Jefferson
School Log Cabin to relocate to Creekside Environmental Center
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[June 11, 2016]
LINCOLN
- The miniature log cabin located behind Jefferson Elementary School
in the Children’s Garden on 6th Street will move to a new home on
Tuesday, June 14. Lincoln Elementary School District 27 has donated
the structure to Lincoln College for use at the Creekside Outdoor
Center for Environmental Education located north of Lincoln.
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Matthews Construction in Lincoln is overseeing the move. According
to Brad Matthews, crews will be on-site by 8:30 Tuesday morning to
prepare and lift the cabin. They anticipate that it will be loaded
on a lowboy trailer and transported through Lincoln to the Creekside
center between 10 and 11 a.m.
The cabin was built by retired Lincoln business owner Pete
Fredericks and donated to the school district in 2001. Fredericks
has built several log cabins in and around Lincoln, including the
small log chapel which is located on 5th Street. District 27 sold
the Jefferson School building and property earlier this year;
members of the Railsplitter Festival Committee recommended that the
cabin be donated to Creekside.
After it is installed at Creekside, the cabin will be a focal point
for the Center’s Pioneer Area along its “Peoples of the Past”
boardwalk.
“This cabin was a marvelous educational gift by Pete Fredericks to
the students and community of Lincoln back in 2001, and it will
continue that same mission out at Creekside,” said Creekside
Director Dr. Dennis Campbell. A proper rededication of the one room
log cabin will be celebrated out at Creekside later this summer.
“Lincoln College is very appreciative of Kent Froebe and District 27
for this gift, and for our Board of Trustees whose financial support
is helping with the cost of transporting the cabin. Moving even a
small structure is a big undertaking, but we are thrilled to have it
become a part of the educational experience offered by Creekside,”
said Dr. David Gerlach, Lincoln College president.
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The Creekside Outdoor Center for Environmental Education is an innovative 4-acre
educational site recognized by the scientific community for its biological
diversity and geological and archeological significance. The Center features a
lecture pavilion, insectarium, greenhouse, restored tall grass prairie, native
gardens, demonstration pond, council ring fire pit, solar and wind energy
developments, storm water management and rain garden, nature trails and access
to Sugar Creek near the location that Illinois’ largest wooly mammoth fossil was
discovered in 2005.
Creekside is located approximately 4 miles due north of Lincoln, Illinois, off
County Road 2000N halfway between County Road 1100E and 1225th Ave; from Co Rd
2000N take the gravel road Small-Edwards Trace north to the center.
[Tracy Bergin, Lincoln College]
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