New
exhibit to open at the Mill on 66 Museum April 6th
Logan County native, composer, symphony
director Grant Flectcher to be honored at open house
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[March 11, 2024]
The Logan County Tourism Bureau, in conjunction
with Kickapoo Cognizors Chapter No. 645 of Questers International,
will open a new exhibit at The Mill on Route 66 highlighting the
life of Logan County native Horace Grant Fletcher.
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The
Mill, located at 738 S. Washington St., will begin the 2024 tourist
season with an open house, from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday, April 6.
A short program will be presented at 2 p.m., and light refreshments
will be available.
The Fletcher exhibit was mostly funded through monies raised by the
local Questers chapter, augmented by funds awarded from a grant from
the Illinois State Questers organization. Questers is a non-profit
organization dedicated to the study, dedication and preservation of
historical items.
”We Questers are looking forward to introducing local residents and
Mill visitors to Grant Fletcher,” said Lynn Spellman, president of
the local Questers chapter. “I, for one, did not know that Logan
County had produced a renowned composer until Nancy Saul shared her
research. Thanks go to the Tourism Bureau for displaying the
‘Coonhound Johnny’ score and allowing us display space in the Mill
and to Illinois Questers for awarding us the grant.”
Fletcher was born Oct. 25, 1913, in
Hartsburg, a son of Ulysses and Della Kief Fletcher. The family
later moved to Springfield. During the Great Depression, he and a
brother stayed for some time with a maternal aunt, Clara Kief, in
Hartsburg. Their maternal uncle, C. L. “Dutch” Kief, was a two-term
Logan County sheriff.
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Grant Fletcher became a world acclaimed, award
winning musical composer, director and teacher. Undoubtedly, during
his youth, he heard many stories about legendary Logan County
bootlegger Coonhound Johnny Schwenoha. In 1948, while Fletcher was
musical director and conductor for the Akron Symphony in Ohio, he
wrote a song for piano entitled “Coonhound Johnny.” A copy of his
original hand-written score, which he sent to his uncle, is a part
of the new exhibit.
Fletcher earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Composition from
the University of Rochester. He ended his teaching career at Arizona
State University and died in Tempe, Ariz, on May 4, 2002.
”The Logan County Tourism Bureau is very excited for the new
exhibit,” said Alice Roate, the Bureau’s executive director. “Grant
Fletcher is an important part of Logan County’s history, and we are
glad to see a light being shone on the subject. This display will be
a great addition for visitors and locals to enjoy.”
Nancy Rollings Saul of Bloomington served as researcher, grant
writer and committee chairperson for the project. Additional
Questers committee members who donated time and effort are Lynn
Spellman, Theresa Schieffer, Teresa Isbell and Scotty Hinman, all of
Lincoln.
[Nancy Saul] |