Obama returns to break ground on presidential center
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[September 29, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Former President Barack Obama
and former first lady Michelle Obama returned to their old neighborhood
on Chicago’s South Side on Tuesday to officially break ground on the
Obama Presidential Center, a project they hope will become a hub for the
development of new leadership and an economic boost to a long-neglected
part of the city.
“Chicago is where almost everything that is most precious to me began,”
the former president said. “It's where I found a home.”
The center is being developed on a 19.3-acre site in Chicago’s Jackson
Park, in a location just a few blocks from where the Obamas were married
and the hospital where their two daughters were born. It is also on a
site that once housed part of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition.
But it’s also an area that Michelle Obama remembered as being far away
from the city’s main cultural centers when she was growing up in the
neighborhood.
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“I remember that whenever me, my mom, dad, my brother wanted to do
something special – to see art, to hear music, take in a new museum
exhibit – we had to get my dad's Buick 225, take Jeffery Boulevard to
Lake Shore Drive and head north to downtown,” she said. “And even as a
child, I understood this disparity. I understood that whenever there was
a huge investment of resources in the city, a new park or infrastructure
improvements, or any other beautification effort, it just rarely
happened in our neighborhood.”
The Obamas were joined at the ceremony by Gov. JB Pritzker, who noted
that the center will be the second presidential museum in Illinois after
the Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield.
“Which means we are proudly now known as the Land of Lincoln and Obama,”
he said. “We need to check with Secretary of State Jesse White about
changing the license plates in the state, but we'll get there.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker, left, former President Barack
Obama, former First Lady Michelle Obama and Chicago Mayor Lori
Lightfoot officially break ground on the Obama Presidential Center
on the south side of Chicago. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
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The center will be operated separately from the Obama
Presidential Library, which is administered by the National Archives
and Records Administration, a federal agency. The center will be
operated privately by a nonprofit foundation.
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot noted that the city will also invest
some $200 million into improvements in Jackson Park as well as the
surrounding neighborhood to provide more amenities and rehabilitate
many of the homes in the area.
“This is the future of the South Side that we will be creating in
partnership with the community,” she said. “And this will not only
send a ripple effect of economic development through the area, but
really, our entire city will benefit from these investments.”
Unlike many presidential centers that serve primarily as static
museums to a former president, Obama said he wants it to be a
cultural and educational center that will help foster new leadership
for the community and the nation.
“It won't just be an exercise in nostalgia or looking backwards. We
want to look forward,” he said. “We want this to be a living,
thriving home for concerts, cultural events, lectures, trainings,
summits, topical dialogues and conversations. We want this to be a
hub for in-house fellows with real world experience to share what's
working and what's not in solving the big problems of the day.”
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The center is expected to open in 2025.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |