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			 That officer was Ulysses S. Grant, and he will 
			return along with Civil War re-enactors for special events on 
			Friday, September 23 at the Old State Capitol State Historic Site 
			and Edwards Place in Springfield. The Springfield activities are 
			part of a four day Mattoon’s General Grant Days event. 
 Grant's appearance is a good lead-in for the International Route 66 
			Festival that starts at 6 p.m. that evening in downtown Springfield. 
			Like many Route 66 fans Grant liked fast transportation – in his 
			case, horses – and as President was once pulled over for speeding 
			his carriage through Washington. In common with many motorists who 
			exceed the limit today, President Grant paid his fine.
 
			   “Like another famous Illinoisan, Ulysses S. Grant began his march 
			into the history books at the Old State Capitol,” said event 
			coordinator Steve Thompson. “The September 23 events will highlight 
			the lesser-known part of Grant's early career, when he was a 
			recruiter, and a good one at that, for the Union Army.” 
 Nationally-renowned presenter Kenneth J. Serfass will portray Grant 
			during the Springfield events. He will give a first-person 
			presentation from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the Old State Capitol's Hall 
			of Representatives, then from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. he will interact 
			with and review a contingent of Civil War soldier re-enactors on the 
			Old State Capitol grounds. The Old State Capitol events are free and 
			open to the public.
 
 General Grant and the re-enactors will then attend an Illinois State 
			Historical Society and Landmarks Illinois-sponsored private 
			reception at Edwards Place in Springfield from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
 
			
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			 The Old State Capitol State Historic Site, administered by the Illinois Historic 
Preservation Agency, includes the Adjutant General's Office where Captain 
Ulysses S. Grant came to work in May 1861 to help with the Union recruitment 
effort. His success helped him secure a colonel’s commission in the 21st 
Illinois Infantry Regiment, and in the summer of 1861 Colonel Grant and the 21st 
Illinois Infantry deployed west to Missouri, and began their rise to fame during 
the Civil War.
 The General Grant events are being held to encourage public support for and 
awareness of the Mattoon Civil War Memorial Ellipse and Camp Grant Municipal 
Park landscape architecture project in Mattoon, and coincide with activities 
September 22 – 25 in Coles County. Mattoon was the site of Camp Grant, a Union 
muster camp for Illinois infantry regiments from 1861-1865, which Grant visited 
in May of 1861 to enlist Illinois troops to fight in the Civil War.
 
				 
			[Steve Thompson] 
			
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