Dr. Debra A. Reid, Associate Professor of History from Eastern Illinois University, will be the guest speaker for the opening of Between Fences in Princeton.
Dr. Reid, one of the State Scholars for this Museum on Main Street project, will discuss Illinois’ history of fencing and land use, and will discuss these implications and ramifications for Princeton and the surrounding region.
Between Fences Exhibit:
We live between fences. We may hardly notice them, but they are dominant features in our lives and in our history. Built of hedge, concrete, wood and metal, the fence skirts our properties and is central to the American landscape. We use them to enclose our houses and neighborhoods. They are decorative structures that are as much part of the landscape as trees and flowers. Industry and agriculture without fences would be difficult to imagine. Private ownership of land would be an abstract concept.
But fences are more than functional objects. They are powerful symbols. The way we define ourselves as individuals and as a nation becomes concrete in how we build fences.
Through an examination of boundaries, place, and space, Between Fences will explore how neighbors and nations divide, protect, offend, and defend through the boundaries they build.
This exhibit runs from March 7, 2009 – April 19, 2009.
Library Hours:
- 10 AM – 9 PM: Mondays – Thursdays
- 10 AM – 6 PM: Fridays
- 9 AM – 2 PM: Saturdays
For more information, please contact Grant Lynch, Princeton Public Library at 815.875.1331.