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             19th 
			Annual Conference on Illinois History 
			Oct. 5-6 event examines state history, 
			from outlaws to soldiers to immigrants 
			  
			
		 
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            [September 28, 2017]  
            SPRINGFIELD - 
			Outlaws getting quick justice from a mob. Enslaved people suffering 
			in a supposedly free state. Immigrants making new lives in small 
			towns and big cities. Lingering questions about Abraham Lincoln’s 
			coffin. 
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			 Those stories and many others will be told next month 
			at the 2017 Conference on Illinois History, which takes place Oct. 
			5-6 at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.  
			 
			For cost and to register, visit
			
			www.PresidentLincoln.illinois.gov  and click on “special 
			event reservations.” See the conference program at
			
			http://bit.ly/2017historyconference  
			 
			The conference includes a reception Thursday evening in the Lincoln 
			museum. 
			 
			Thursday lunch features Stuart Layne, executive director of the 
			Illinois Bicentennial Commission. A seasoned marketing and 
			communications executive, Layne will discuss bicentennial projects 
			underway now and coming in 2018. 
			 
			The speaker at Friday’s lunch session will be Louise Bernard, 
			director of the Museum of the Obama Presidential Center. Bernard, 
			formerly the director of exhibitions at the New York Public Library, 
			will discuss what is planned for the Obama Presidential Center in 
			Chicago. 
			
			
			  
			
			
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			Sessions on Thursday and Friday will discuss: 
Bandits who terrorized Ogle County in the 1830s until “The 
Regulators” formed to stop them 
 
Waves of immigration that shaped Lemont, and the experiences of Puerto Rican 
immigrants in Chicago 
The centennial of East St. Louis riots in which white mobs 
attacked African-Americans 
 
The FBI’s efforts to infiltrate groups on both the left and the right during the 
1960s 
 
Laws that allowed slavery in Illinois for decades after statehood 
 
The mystery of who made and paid for Lincoln’s coffin, and what materials were 
used. 
 
The conference also includes sessions designed specifically for teachers 
interested in learning new ways to explore history in the classroom. 
Participating teachers can earn professional-development credit. 
				 
			[Shanta Thoele 
			Executive Secretary 
			Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library]  |