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			 Every two years the Smithsonian creates a traveling 
			exhibit that brings major themes to small museums across the 
			country. The exhibit currently housed in the Atlanta Museum is 
			entitled “Crossroads: Change in Rural America.” 
 One aspect of being selected to receive the Smithsonian exhibit is 
			the requirement that the host community create a companion display 
			that intersects with the Smithsonian traveling display.
 
 Atlanta residents, museum and library personnel brainstormed for a 
			year and came up with a locally pertinent exhibit entitled 
			“Classroom and Community: Changes in Rural America’s Sense of 
			Community.”
 
 Atlanta did not know until recently what the theme of the 
			Smithsonian exhibit would be, but it seems the two parts of history 
			meld beautifully.
 
 Atlanta’s rural history and the flow of education from one room 
			rural schoolhouses that were a staple of Logan County education for 
			decades to a consolidated school system, Olympia Community Unit 
			School District 16, fits perfectly with the theme of change that the 
			Smithsonian exhibit stresses.
 “We have been planning for over ten years to host a Smithsonian 
			traveling museum. Our recent partnership with Illinois Humanities 
			and their contacts at the Smithsonian produced the perfect 
			opportunity to apply for a Museum on Main Street display,” said 
			Atlanta Museum Director Rachel Neisler.
 
 The Smithsonian has several exhibits touring the country, and the 
			selection of Illinois to host “Crossroads” could not have been 
			better.
 
			
			 
			 
 “With the Illinois Bicentennial and Atlanta’s rural history, we 
			could not have asked for a better theme for the Atlanta Museum. It 
			spoke to Atlanta’s history,” commented Rachel.
 
 The “Museum on Main Street” themes are changed approximately every 
			two years and one state is selected to host it. Within the state, 
			communities vie for the honor of hosting the exhibit. Within 
			Illinois, seventeen communities applied for this exhibit and six 
			finalists were selected. Atlanta was one of those.
 
			
			
			 
			Some heavy lifting was necessary to get the 
			“Crossroads” exhibit to Atlanta. Each community is required to 
			travel to the exhibit’s prior location, disassemble it, transport 
			and set it up in their own space. 
 Last Tuesday, Rachel Neisler and her volunteer team traveled to 
			Shelbyville and packed the exhibit in fifteen specially designed 
			cases, lifted them into a large truck, returned to Atlanta and set 
			up the display on the second floor of the Atlanta Museum.
 
 “Believe me, those cases were very heavy,” said Neisler with a 
			laugh.
 
 The display will be available for viewing until mid-March when 
			Marshall County has the task of taking the Smithsonian portion down 
			and moving it to their community.
 
			
			
			 
			The Smithsonian exhibit is fascinating. It is a 
			pictorial and audio/visual tour of early days America and how the 
			hardships and joys of rural life shaped the country. Its many themes 
			are displayed at numerous kiosks, each focusing on an aspect of 
			rural life. 
 Wandering through the exhibit and you will be transported back to 
			days when perseverance in the face of the harsh realities of rural 
			life created a community of hardy citizens.
 
			
			
			 
			Learn how the widely spread residents of rural 
			America, and of course Logan County, interacted with their far flung 
			neighbors.  
			
			 
			Peruse a small library where books from noted authors 
			describe the land and its people. 
 Gaze at an art exhibit that captures the soul of rural America.
 
 Hear and see interviews of those who lived the life of rural 
			America.
 
			
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 The exhibit is a creative and flowing history lesson that draws the 
			visitor in. Come get lost in the world of rural America.
 
 The Atlanta exhibit
 
 Volunteers from Atlanta created the companion exhibit “Classroom and 
			Community: Changes in Rural America’s Sense of Community.”
 
			
			
			 
			The display follows the arc of education in Atlanta 
			and surrounding townships. In the 1850’s one room schoolhouses were 
			built within two miles of every family with school age children. 
			Later students were sent to large magnet schools in surrounding 
			communities. The final iteration of educational journey is the 
			consolidated school district represented by present day Olympia 
			School District. 
 “It took a year of thinking about this theme to finally come up with 
			the mission statement of what we wanted to do,” said Atlanta Library 
			and Museum board member Bill Thomas.
 
 The transition from the Smithsonian exhibit designed by national 
			museum professionals to the Atlanta display, which was designed by 
			volunteers from Atlanta and the surrounding area, is seamless. The 
			Atlanta exhibit is every bit as informative and transfixing as the 
			Smithsonian exhibit.
 
 The Smithsonian exhibit is a macro view of rural American, while the 
			Atlanta presentation telescopes in for a micro view of life and 
			education in the history or our own small rural area.
 
 Volunteers for the Atlanta exhibit fanned out in town and rural 
			Logan County to interview those who lived the education passage in 
			rural America and collected mementos from school days that had been 
			stored away for decades.
 
 Each station focuses on an aspect of education in rural Atlanta that 
			formed the lives that created a community, and how that community 
			changed as the educational system changed.
 
 The two exhibits currently on display at the Atlanta Museum are 
			absolutely worth a visit. You’ll want to take the time to go there 
			and become immersed in our shared history.
 
			 
			 
 Another event occurred Friday evening during the initial viewing of 
			the exhibits. The first floor of the Union Building is being turned 
			into a visitor’s center for those traveling through Atlanta.
 
			Just minutes before the Friday evening event 
			commenced, a mural on the walls of the visitor center was unveiled. 
			It depicts the history of Atlanta and covers much of the wall space. 
			It is spectacular.  
			
			
			 
			Artist Regan King of Normal is responsible for the 
			new work. Ms. King was selected as the muralist after Atlanta 
			Library Director Cathy Maciariello reached out to a friend in the 
			Bloomington/Normal arts community for a recommendation. 
 King took to her commission with unbridled enthusiasm and presented 
			a volunteer committee from Atlanta with her idea. Thus began a 
			collaboration that resulted in six reformulations of King’s original 
			idea. The final design brought the artist together with the Atlanta 
			residents to create lasting friendships and a wonderful visual 
			history of their town.
 
 “We had a wonderful time working with Regan. She was open to our 
			suggestions of where we wanted the art to go,” said volunteer Susan 
			Hoblit. After sketching the finished work on the walls, a call went 
			out for volunteers to become artists themselves and fill in the 
			lines with paint. People who said they could not paint a wall in 
			their home gathered with Regan King and completed a true work of 
			art.
 
 The finished mural can be seen through the front window of the 
			visitor center as a person drives down old Route 66. Stop in and see 
			the colors and ribbons that convey a sense of community. And 
			remember, one artist and numerous amateurs created the work of art. 
			Volunteers who take pride in their community are the Atlanta way.
 
 The Smithsonian exhibit and Atlanta companion display is open 
			Thursday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., and Sunday from 
			noon to 3 p.m. through March 16.
 
 [Curtis Fox]
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