State’s high court opens new interactive learning center
Send a link to a friend
[September 23, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – In 1946, the Illinois Supreme Court heard a case that
would eventually become a landmark in American legal history.
The public school district in Champaign, like many other districts in
Illinois at the time, allowed a group of local religious leaders to use
their schools to teach elective classes in religion and openly
encouraged, and sometimes coerced, students to participate in them.
Vashti McCollum, an atheist and the mother of a Champaign student,
complained, saying her son was ostracized by other students for not
attending them. She eventually sued in state court claiming the use of
public schools to teach religion violated the establishment clause of
the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of religion.
The Illinois Supreme Court rejected her claim, but the U.S. Supreme
Court later reversed that decision, saying the practice violated the
separation of church and state.
That’s one of the cases that visitors to the Illinois Supreme Court
building in Springfield can learn about and discuss at the court’s new
learning center, which officially opened this week.
John Lupton, executive director of the Illinois Supreme Court Historic
Preservation Commission, said at the opening that the learning center
has hosted a few visitors, including a couple and their two children
earlier this summer.
“And after looking at the controversial case, they began to debate the
issue,” he said. “After their debate was over, one of the parents and
one of the children agreed with the (state court’s) judgment, while the
other parent and the other child disagreed with the judgment. This is
exactly what we're looking for.”
The building where the court now sits first opened in 1908 and it
underwent a major restoration project in 2014. Lupton said the idea of
the learning center had been discussed even before that restoration
project, but because of budget issues, the state’s bicentennial in 2018,
and later the COVID-19 pandemic, the project was delayed.
[to top of second column]
|
From left to right, Illinois Supreme Court Justices David K.
Overstreet, Mary Jane Theis, P. Scott Neville Jr. and Lisa Holder
White attend the opening of the court's new learning center.
(Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
Now open, the learning center is on the second floor of the building,
down the hall from the room where the court sits, in space that was once
used by the Fourth District Court of Appeals. It was completed at a cost
of about $130,000.
“We’re very excited about it,” Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis said in an
interview. “It tells the story about the Illinois court system from 1818
to today.”
Lupton said the purpose of the learning center is to improve civic
knowledge. One of the short-term goals, he said, will be to seek out
civic education grants and partner with the Governor’s Mansion and the
Capitol to provide tours for students visiting Springfield so they can
learn about all three branches of state government.
“Studies consistently show that civic education increases civic
engagement,” he said. “So during a tour of the Supreme Court building,
in addition to seeing the courtroom and learning about the court’s
important work, visitors will now end their tour at the learning center.
And there they will learn about the important work of the court, explore
the ways the court shapes our everyday lives and examine a few
significant cases.”
Theis noted that courts are perhaps the least understood institution of
government because most people have little or no contact with them. But
she said it’s important for people to understand them so they will have
trust in the court system.
“Alexander Hamilton said in Federalist 78, courts are the weakest branch
of government because they have neither the power of the purse nor the
power of the sword,” she said. “So where does the court’s power come
from? It comes from trust.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of
print and broadcast outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the
Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along
with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and
Southern Illinois Editorial Association. |