Press Release

ILLINOIS HUMANITIES COUNCIL BRINGS “JOURNEY STORIES” TO LINCOLN SEPTEMBER 8 THROUGH OCTOBER 18

Smithsonian exhibition explores importance of journeys in U.S. history

CHICAGO – The Illinois Humanities Council announces the opening of “Journey Stories,” a traveling exhibition of the world-renowned Smithsonian Institution, at the Lincoln Heritage Museum of Lincoln College (300 Keokuk St., Lincoln). The exhibition will run from September 8, 2009 through October 18, 2009. Viewing hours are 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Monday-Friday and 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.    

This program will be free and open to the public. For more information please contact Ron Keller or Paul Gleason at 217.732.3155 x295.

ABOUT “JOURNEY STORIES”

“Journey Stories” tells how we and our ancestors came to America.  From Native Americans to new American citizens and regardless of our ethnic or racial background, everyone has a story to tell. Our history is filled with stories of people leaving behind everything – families and possessions – to reach a new life in another state, across the continent, or even across an ocean. Many chose to move, searching for something better in a new land. Others had no choice, like enslaved Africans captured and relocated to a strange land and bravely asserting their own cultures, or like Native Americans already here, who were often violently removed by newcomers.

 “Journey Stories” is part of the Illinois Humanities Council’s Museum on Main Street (MoMS) program, a partnership between the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service and state humanities councils nationwide. MoMS serves museums, libraries, and historical societies in towns of fewer than 30,000 residents by bringing them Smithsonian-quality exhibitions.  For more information about MoMS, call Ryan Lewis at 312.422.5585 x231 or visit www.prairie.org/moms.

 

  

The Illinois Humanities Council is a nonprofit educational organization [501 (c) 3] dedicated to fostering a culture in which the humanities are a vital part of the lives of individuals and communities. Organized in 1973 as the state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, the IHC creates programs and funds organizations that promote greater understanding of, appreciation for, and involvement in the humanities by all Illinoisans, regardless of their economic resources, cultural background, or geographic location. The IHC is supported by state, federal, and private funds.

D A R E T O K N O W
# # #