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			 The Atlanta Library/Museum was selected in 2018 as 
			one of just six organizations in Illinois to host this new Museums 
			on Main Street exhibit produced by the Smithsonian Institution. The 
			exhibit will be open on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 
			10:00AM – 3:00PM, on Sundays from Noon – 3:00PM, and by appointment. 
			The exhibit will run from February 2 through March 16, 2019 at the 
			Atlanta Museum and the Loft at Union Hall. The Atlanta Museum will 
			also organize guided group outings upon request. More information is 
			available by calling the Atlanta Library 217-648-2112. 
 Gold Sponsors of the Crossroads exhibit in Atlanta include the 
			Smithsonian, Illinois Humanities, and the Illinois Prairie Community 
			Foundation. Lead sponsors are the Atlanta Betterment Fund, the 
			Atlanta National Bank, Gary Gemberling, and David Kindred. A number 
			of local donors have also provided funds for the project as well as 
			in-kind support for its development and creation.
 
			
			 
			 
 In conjunction with the Crossroads exhibit—which is coordinated by 
			Illinois Humanities in partnership with the Smithsonian—the Atlanta 
			Museum will unveil a brand new companion exhibit entitled 
			Classrooms and Community: Changes in Rural America’s Sense of 
			Community. This exhibit will examine how the development from 
			one-room rural schools through the centralized town-based school and 
			the larger consolidated school district has affected how communities 
			view themselves. Based on a series of oral interviews conducted in 
			2018, this exhibit is rooted in an exploration of how a sense of 
			place, common memories, and shared values combine to enliven the 
			school experience and shape a community’s perception of itself.
 
			Also, on February 2, the Library District will unveil 
			a new community mural in its Union Hall Visitor and Welcome Center 
			and mount an exhibit of art work by students of Olympia High School. 
			The mural, created by artist Regan King and painted by King and a 
			group of local volunteers, celebrates the rural community of 
			Atlanta—its history, dreams and visions for the future. The art show 
			is also designed to capture the themes of the Smithsonian exhibit. 
			Students have chosen from one of the following subjects: reflections 
			on rural life; reflections on community; or reflections on school 
			experience. 
			
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Museums on Main Street is a program conducted cooperatively by 
the Smithsonian Institution and state humanities councils nationwide that gives 
rural Americans opportunities to experience world-class exhibitions in their own 
communities and enables the organizations that host the exhibitions to enhance 
their capacities in a variety of ways. 
The Crossroads exhibit describes the views of various cultural 
communities regarding the use and management of land and examines the role of 
land in the formation of local economies. It also discusses the emergence of 
rural communities and the evolution of their economic and social structures, 
especially during the period of rapid change in the mid-20th century. 
Importantly, it will explore ways in which rural communities are responding 
effectively to challenges in the 21st century and invite communities to 
contemplate their own potential paths into the future.
 In addition to the Atlanta Museum, the Crossroads exhibit will travel to the 
Chester Public Library, Chester Illinois; the Old School Museum, Winchester 
Illinois; Lake Shelbyville Visitors Center, Shelbyville Illinois; the Marshall 
Public Library, Marshall Illinois; and the Sycamore History Museum, Sycamore 
Illinois.
 
 For more information about Illinois Humanities, the Museum on Main Street 
program, and/or the Atlanta Public Library & Museum contact Cathy Maciariello, 
Atlanta Public Library and Museum.
 
				 
			[Cathy Maciariello Atlanta Public Library and Museum]
 
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