WEST BRANCH, IOWA– Visitors to West Branch can learn more about Herbert Hoover and other presidents this Presidents Day weekend. On Saturday, February 15 a park ranger discusses "Herbert Hoover's National Parks": special places like Arches, Isle Royale, George Washington Birthplace, Sunset Crater Volcano, and other national parks and monuments preserved by Herbert Hoover's administration. The presentation is free and begins at 2 p.m. in the visitor center.

Following "Herbert Hoover's National Parks" on February 15 will be the grand opening of the historic site's new permanent exhibits from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. The new exhibits tell the stories of President Hoover's childhood in West Branch and how he later helped develop the park which commemorates his life. The grand opening is free. Refreshments will be offered by the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library Association.

The new exhibits feature artifacts, archival photographs and documents, text panels, and audio-visual programs. Along with the park's map and guide, audio tour, and introductory film, they complement visitors' exploration of the restored buildings and commemorative landscape of the historic site and the extensive galleries of Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum.

On Monday, February 17  at Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, archivist Craig Wright will present "Presidential Parade",  a fun look at our presidents and the presidential library system. The presentation begins at 2 p.m. and is free with paid admission to the museum. It includes stories and images of presidents connections to both Herbert Hoover and fellow Iowan, Pulitzer Prize winning political cartoonist Jay "Ding" Darling. The Hidden Works of Jay N. "Ding" Darling, a temporary exhibit, is on display at the Presidential Library and Museum from until March, 23, 2014.

Herbert Hoover National Historic Site and Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum are in West Branch, Iowa at exit 254 off I-80. Both are open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Central Time. For more information go online at www.nps.gov/heho or call (319) 643-2541.

Herbert Hoover National Historic Site

110 Parkside Drive

PO Box 607

West Branch, Iowa 52358

 

319 643-2541 phone

319 643-7864 fax

www.nps.gov/heho


Twitter: @HooverNPS

Facebook: HerbertHooverNHS

First the Book then Turning Hearts and Minds

Miyoko Hikiji set out to help conquer Iraq ten years ago with the U.S. Army and today her sights are on the American homeland. She wrote of her Iraq experiences in her book All I Could Be: My Story as a Woman Warrior in Iraq published by Chronology Books, an imprint of History Publishing Company, and now she is telling her story to those who want to hear her tell of her exploits, what she did and experienced, and what she saw and would like to forget. She has been interviewed on several dozen radio and television programs and spoken in museums, bookstores and military installations since her book was published in May, 2013. Add the places below, the list is growing and more are pending. She has become a force of one.

  • Friday February 7th, 7:05pm being honored as the "Hero of the Game" Iowa Wild Hockey Team, Des Moines, IA
  • Wednesday, February 9th Noon Presentation and book signing at Griswold Public Library, Griswold, IA
  • Thursday, February 27th 6:30pm Presentation and book signing at Bertha Bartlett Library, Story City, IA
  • Tuesday, March 4th 6-9pm Book signing at Oakbrook Center Barnes and Noble, Oak Brook, IL
  • Wednesday, March 5th 730-9pm "Date with History" presentation at the First Division Museum at Catigny with book signing 30 minutes prior and after, Wheaton, IL
  • Friday, March 28th. Presentations at 10th Annual Diversity Conference, Indian Hill Community College, Ottumwa, IA
  • Friday, March 28th - Sunday, March 30th "Writing My Way Back Home" Workshop, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA
  • Saturday, April 12th 9am-noon Book signing at Ankeny Authors Fair, Kirkendall Public Library, Ankeny, IA
  • Saturday, April 19th 2-3pm Presentation and book signing at James Kennedy Public Library, Dyersville, IA
  • Tuesday, May 6th Time TBA Presentation at Patty Turner Community Center, Deerfield, IL

Miyoko Hikiji's book  All I Could Be: My Story as a Woman Warrior in Iraq is available at Barnes and Noble bookstores, fine independent bookstores and on Amazon.com. Review copies of her book are available to accredited members of the media. Contact: Don Bracken, djb@historypublishingco.com, 845-398-8161

Durant Economic Development Tour

WHO Congressman Dave Loebsack

WHAT Dave will tour various businesses and meet with employees

WHERE Tour begin at Heinsite Fitness

107 5th St.

Durant

TIME 10:00am

 

Tour 1105 Project

WHO Congressman Dave Loebsack

WHAT Dave will tour the facility and meet with the staff of the local social service agencies based there

WHERE 1105 Project

1105 S. Gilbert Court

Iowa City

TIME 1:00pm

 

Attend Make-a-Wish Gala

WHO Congressman Dave Loebsack

WHAT Dave will attend the annual event

WHERE Waterfront Convention Center

2021 State St.

Bettendorf

TIME Dave will arrive at 7:00pm

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4 Tips for Keeping Romance Alive

Award-winning singer-songwriter Gary Chapman and his wife, Nashville Wives star Cassie Piersol Chapman, say they're so in love, one wedding just wasn't enough.

"We got married Dec. 22, 2008 in a very small ceremony my father performed," says Gary, 56, a five-time Grammy-nominated, seven-time Dove Award-winning artist who recently released his first album in a decade, The Truth (www.garychapmanmusic.com).

"The next year, we had a mountaintop wedding with our friends in Breckenridge, Colo. Cassie's grandmother married us at a Renaissance fair, and last year, we tied the knot in Las Vegas. What can I say - we like getting married!"

It's just one of the ways the couple keeps the romance alive, says Cassie, 33, who stars in the new TNT show Private Lives of Nashville Wives, premiering Feb. 24.

"Weddings are a beautiful celebration of our love for each other and a reminder that this is serious!" she says. "So many people get married and they're divorced two years later. We don't plan to be among them!"

What are some of the Chapmans' other secrets for keeping their romance burning bright?

• Discover and embrace your partner's cultural perspective. Gary grew up with black-and-white TV and The Andy Griffith Show. He remembers the first time he heard The Beatles on the radio. Cassie watched Fraggle Rock and The Goonies, and played computer games on the family's Commodore 64.

"I've definitely been exposed to things I never would have experienced without Gary in my life, from music to great old movies," Cassie says.

Adds Gary: "A younger person can teach an old dog new tricks, too. I've got a window on pop culture that I would never have without Cassie. Next...she's gonna teach me to dance."

• Identify and enjoy your shared cultural experiences. Both Gary and Cassie grew up fans of Willie Nelson's music, so Gary was thrilled when he got the opportunity to introduce his wife to the country singing legend.

"He's a man who doesn't disappoint when you meet him, so Cassie was blown away. She loves him," Gary says. "I think if I weren't around, she'd marry him! We look for those shared memories - timeless Christmas music is another - because they add to the bond we have."

• Anticipate criticism -- and ignore it. "Simply put, there are going to be haters out there - a lot of people carry around stereotypes about relationships where there's a significant age difference, whether the man or the woman is older," says Cassie. "We're so happy together, it just doesn't bother us. I don't think either one of us even notices it anymore."

• Stay in shape! It's important for everyone to take care of themselves, but if you're the older partner, you owe it to the love of your life to stay fit and healthy, Gary says.

"I plan to be hiking, biking and singing - and more! -- with Cassie when I'm 100," Gary says. "So I exercise regularly and I don't abuse my body by drinking too much or eating a lot of junk. I'm careful because I love her, and that alone is a romantic thing to do."

The two also both see at least one more wedding in their future - not counting the times they quietly exchange rings and mouth "I do" while attending friends' and family weddings.

"We hope to have a real ceremony soon," Cassie says. "I want my dad to walk me down the aisle and mom to button me up."

About Gary & Cassie Piersol Chapman

Gary Chapman is a veteran musician in the contemporary pop, country, Christian and southern gospel genres. His Dove Awards include Male Vocalist of the Year and Songwriter of the Year, and he's written hits including I Prefer the Moonlight for Kenny Rogers and Finally for T.G. Sheppard along with songs for Alabama and Wynonna Judd. He was the host of TNN's hit show Prime Time Country for four years and founded the record label that launched current Disney music mainstays Everlife, among many top performers.

Cassie Piersol Chapman stars in TNT's new docudrama Private Lives of Nashville Wives (from the Real Housewives creators). She grew up on her family's West Virginia farm and was active in 4H and other agricultural activities. She also sang in a choir, modeled and became a star cheerleader in high school. She won two national cheerleading titles at Morehead State University in Kentucky. She has appeared in music videos, commercials and printed work. She works with her husband, Gary, on A Hymn a Week, a popular online devotional.

COMMENTARY: The year ended with the completion by Sherman and Associates of the Harrison Loft apartments, the completion by Hilltop Campus Village of the Parking lot at 15th and Ripley, and the institution of a new snow plowing and snow removal policy on Harrison Street. Each of these bode well for the area, but all will take some getting used to.

o   It is great that the apartments are filled; now we need to concentrate on helping to lease the commercial spaces.

o   It is great to have parking at 15th and Ripley so homeowners won't have vehicles parking in front of their house; now we will see just how many parking spaces are necessary for the Harrison Lofts.

o   It is great that there is parking on the west side of Harrison, and that the Dept. of Public Works is not only plowing the snow there, but also committed to its removal; we'll all have to get used to seeing that cars are moved off Harrison so the plow and trucks can do their work.

With every new development comes new responsibilities.

 

HCV actions and activities:

o   Nomination has been made by the HCV in three categories to the Main Street Iowa Annual Awards Ceremony, set for May 2 in Des Moines. We have nominated a Volunteer of the Year (from Organization work group, Image Building of the Year (from Promotion work group), and New Construction of the Year (from Design work group). This is a great event which last year recognized the HCV for attaining a major reinvestment milestone.

o   Camille Cooper, a junior from St. Ambrose University, started interning for the Hilltop Campus Village on January 10. She is majoring in psychology and was drawn to the HCV mission by its need for research on numerous elements. Camille is working primarily but not exclusively on updating lists of businesses in the HCV, and of property owners within the Hilltop Association, which is the SSMID within the Hilltop Campus Village.

 

o   A Main Street Iowa Business Innovation Challenge Grant is being worked on by the HCV Promotion work group and staff. The Board has okayed the project, and the deadline is Feb. 14, with award notification in March.

o   Street light installation and maintenance, the major elements of our streetscaping plan, are being co-advocated for with the Downtown Davenport Business Partnership, which is keen to extend their streetscaping to additional blocks. The idea is to emphasize to the city as their CIP budget is crafted our respective desire to have our streetlighting linked.

o   Landscaping for the Hilltop Plaza and Parking lot at 15th and Ripley (can anyone think of a name for the lot? Ideas welcome.) will be done in the spring, finally using funds from the Tri-City Garden Club and other resources in the design coffers.

 

o   A four-person team of MBA students nearing graduation from St. Ambrose are making a portion of the Hilltop into a special project, part of their Integrated Project course, taught by Professor Bill Lynn. They intend to use their skills in research and strategic planning to identify challenges and craft solutions.

 

o   Developers with an appetite for mid-sized redevelopment are being invited to meet with the Hilltop Campus Village Economic Restructuring work group to review an inventory of buildings and sites that are ripe for .... Well, redevelopment. Persons who know of potentially interested parties are invited to contact the office.

 

 

 

HAPPENINGS IN and near THE HILLTOP

 

o   Thursday January 30 marks an event vital to the interests of many residents in the Hilltop Campus Village and vicinity when Genesis Navigators opens their staffed offices at 114 W. 2nd Street. The navigators are there to assist individuals and families in accessing and signing up for healthcare coverage under the Affordable Healthcare Act. It is important that everyone accesses this informed decisions can be made to suit individual circumstances. Additional information may be had by contacting Austin Bird, Genesis Corporate Communications at 563 421 9276 or birda@genesishealth.com. 

o   A Valentine's Sweetheart Dinner is being offered on February 14 at the newly opened Greatest Grains Event Center at 1600 Harrison Street. Reservations are being taken for a multi-course goumet dinner, complete with live entertainment, the perfect way to celebrate with your sweetheart. The charge is $50 per couple, beverages of choice may be brought with you. Call 563 323 7521 or email eli@greatestgrains.com for reservations. Don't delay! 

o   On February 11 at 6pm the Weed and Seed program will have its meeting in the offices of the Hilltop Campus Village. It is an open meeting of persons whose aim is to bring about strengthened neighborhoods by "weeding" the undesirable elements out of an area and "cultivating" good things to grow in its place. 

o   The Valentine's Serenade is also available that day for those wishing to send a surprise singing Valentine to their loved one at home or work, anytime between 8am and 6pm that day. Quartets of the Chordbusters and the Bend of the River Chorus will be singing all day, surprising people with love songs from their special someone (or their secret admirer). The cost is only $39.95 and comes with a quartet singing 2 love songs, providing a red rose and a Photo of the Moment. Make the Hilltop sing out with love and affection by ordering today. To order call 563 505 5895.

 

o   The Hilltop Campus Village is pleased to have been part of the planning process for the Scott County Regional Economic Development Summit, to be held on February 13 at the Isle Conference Center, Isle of Capri in Bettendorf. The event is a half-day of panelists and speakers, covering topics related to rural and regional economic and community development and concludes with a luncheon and keynote address from Debi Durham, Director of the Iowa Economic Development Authority. The event is presented by Scott County, and the charge is only $15. Register by calling 563 823 2676 or going to QuadCitiesChamber.com

HILLTOPPORTUNITIES

o   A Request for Proposal was sent out to developers, seeking project designs and concepts for the city-owned land at 5th and Brady. Four submittals were received by the January 6 deadline, and are being ranked by a five member panel including a volunteer from the Hilltop Campus Village.

 

o   The Hilltop Campus Village is making application to Paint Iowa Beautiful, for paint that will go to specific projects. This annual program will provide colors of choice for one project per year. The due date is February 22.

o   Another RFP for residential development of land close to but not in the Hilltop Campus Village has also been sent out. Interested parties may contact this office for further information on it.

o   Business/Organization office space now available. Low cost office space within the Hilltop Campus Village office at 601 Brady Street for start ups, small businesses and not for profits. Five private enclosed and secure spaces are for lease at very reasonable rates, utilities included. Sizes range from 170 sq ft. to 625 sq ft. Interested parties may contact Ted Priester,  tpriester@priesterlaw.com, 563 322 5386.

 

o   Two commercial properties are now available for sale in the HCV, due to their owner's pending retirement. Both are highly visible commercial buildings, one with abundant parking, the other with an existing income stream of $1000/month. Contact the HCV for contact information on these and other properties.

 

 

 

 

WHAT'S NEXT?

o   Alex Iaccarino has been named to the City's Design Review Board to represent the Hilltop Campus Village on matters pertaining to signage and façade improvement. The HCV Design work group put his name forward, reasoning that relative youth and an artistic perspective were consistent with the HCV's focus. Welcome Alex! 

o   Robert G. Scott of the Davenport Community School Board is welcomed as a new HCV Board member. Robert is a former Central High School Principal, now charged with oversite for all the District's senior and intermediate schools. His background knowledge and familiarity with the area will be of great use to the board as it charts its course in redevelopment. Welcome Robert! 

o   The HCV is contacting developers who have a history of success and innovation in mid-sized redevelopment projects and may be interested in the Hilltop Campus Village. While we don't have huge projects available, there are sites and some mixed-use multi-story buildings, some of which qualify for federal and State Historic Tax Credits, that may be of  interest. If you know of anyone who might be interested, let the office know or have them inquire personally.  

 

KUDOS!

o   To the Design work group for their diligence in seeking out quality space for murals as public art. An excellent candidate wall has been found and a grant is being sought to cover the cost of materials.

 

o   To property owners in the HCV, large and small, who have undertaken to improve their holdings. The most recent economic impact report from the Main Street Iowa program showed that of the three Urban Neighborhood Districts, ours had the highest amount of private investment in rehabilitation - over $27 million since we started in 2009.

 

WORK GROUP SESSIONS: Meetings open to all

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

o   Meeting time: Second Wednesday of the month (February 12), 5:00pm, HCV office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301.

§  Grants submittal (Design and Economic Restructuring)

§  Consideration of Parking on Brady resolution

§  Report on Feb. 4 Winter Workshop in Cedar Rapids

ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Second Monday of the month (February 10), 4:00 pm., Hilltop Campus Village office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301

§  Annual meeting planning

§  RDA and SCRA grant cycle projects

DESIGN COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Third Thursday (February 20), 5:00pm, Hilltop Campus Village office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301  

§  Hilltop Plaza - Parking lot landscaping

§  Mural space identification and grant submittal

§  Street light acquisition, installation and maintenance project

PROMOTIONS COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Second Tuesday (February 11), 4:00pm, Hilltop Campus Village office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301

§  Plan for Business after Hours event - date, location, invitation

§  Altar Crawl update

§  Fall Festival

ECONOMIC RESTRUCTURING COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Third Wednesday, (February 19) noon, Hilltop Campus office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301

§  Developer outreach, marketing site and building inventory

§  MBA study of the Hilltop Campus Village

********

The Hilltop Campus Village is a not for profit organization dedicated to restoration, redevelopment and revitalization of this area.  Questions, comments and suggestions may be addressed by contacting the Hilltop Campus Village office at 563-322-8293 or  hcvscott@gmail.com or board members.

Brucemore announces the reopening of the 21-room mansion for guided tours on March 1, 2014. Explore over a century of Cedar Rapids history through the lives of the three families who called Brucemore home?the Sinclairs, the Douglases, and the Halls. They were business and community leaders during a century of evolution in the Midwest. An investigation of the mansion's Queen Anne architecture, 1925 Grant Wood Porch, 1929 Skinner pipe organ, and 1930s Grizzly Bar and Tahitian Room reflect the history of remarkable people. The changes they made to their estate, the impact they had on their community, and the stories they left behind shape our understanding of modern Cedar Rapids, eastern Iowa, and the American Midwest.

Mansion tours are offered March through December, Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 3:00 p.m. Tours begin on the hour and last approximately 50 minutes. Admission is free to Brucemore members, $7.00 for adults, and $3.00 for youth between the ages of 6 and 18. Purchase tickets fifteen minutes before the top of the hour in the Brucemore Store located in the Visitor Center.

Groups of ten or more are encouraged to schedule a private tour a minimum of two weeks in advance. In addition to the standard tour, Brucemore's tour menu features a range of tours and learning opportunities available for school and youth groups, scout troops, garden clubs, history buffs, architecture enthusiasts, and more. Visit www.brucemore.org or call (319) 362-7375 for more information or to schedule a group tour.

Experience Brucemore, an unparalleled blend of tradition and culture, located at 2160 Linden Drive SE, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. At the heart of the historic 26-acre estate stands a nineteenth-century mansion filled with the stories of three Cedar Rapids families.  Concerts, theater, programs, and tours enliven the site and celebrate the heritage of a community.  For more information, call (319) 362-7375 or visit www.brucemore.org.

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INDIANAPOLIS, IN (01/31/2014)(readMedia)-- The following local residents were among 763 students from Butler University who made the Dean's List for the fall semester of the 2013-2014 academic year:

Aaron Brenner of Sterling. Brenner is studying Chemistry.

Allison Shanks of Bettendorf. Shanks is studying Biology.

Tessa Sommers of Coal Valley. Sommers is studying Music Performance.

Butler is a nationally recognized comprehensive university encompassing six colleges: Arts, Business, Communication, Education, Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Pharmacy and Health Sciences. Together, these colleges offer more than 60 undergraduate areas of study, eight pre-professional programs, and 19 graduate programs. Around 4,700 students are enrolled at Butler, representing 45 states and 49 countries. Ninety-five percent of Butler students will have participated in some form of internship, student teaching, clinical rotation, research, or service learning by the time they graduate. This community-centered immersion is coupled with classroom learning that nurtures critical thinking, effective communication, cooperative teamwork, and ethical decision making to prepare students for both professional success and to have lasting impact in their communities. Butler's overall placement rate for the class of 2012 was 94 percent, including 19 percent who went on to graduate or professional school.

On March 4 in Rock Island, Charlie King will present a concert marking his 50th year as a folk singer and 40th as a song writer. The Massachusetts-based artist has released more than a dozen solo albums since 1976.  The late Pete Seeger called Charlie King "One of the greatest singers and songwriters of our time."
The Rock Island concert will be Tuesday, March 4, at 7 pm in Broadway Presbyterian Church, 710 23rd St., Rock Island.  Donations of $10 per person are requested. The concert will raise funds for three local organizations which serve people in need:  Centro Maya Project (www.centromayaproject.org/?), Oaks of Mamre Catholic Worker House (www.oakscatholicworker.com), and Palomares Social Justice Center (www.palomaressjc.org).
Charlie King has been inspired by the music of the civil rights movements in the U.S., the anti-war movement from the Viet Nam era to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, and the movements for the rights of working people and the indigenous peoples in Mexico and Central America.
He has received numerous national awards during his career, and his songs have been recorded and sung by some of the leading stars of the folk genre, such as Pete Seeger, Holly Near, Ronnie Gilbert, John McCutcheon, Arlo Guthrie, Peggy Seeger, Chad Michell and Judy Small.
For more information, contact Margaret Thomas at 309 786 6944.

This week negotiations on the farm bill came to a close.  After two years, the House of Representatives passed the bill on Wednesday by a vote of 251 to 166.  When the bill comes up for a vote in the Senate, I will be voting against it.

The country needs good farm policy that provides a limited safety net to ensure small and medium sized farms have the resources to weather the uncontrollable risks they face every year.  The farm program must also be defensible to the American taxpayer.  As a farmer, a citizen and a legislator, I believe it is wrong to expect or allow the government to give unlimited support to any farm.  The $17 trillion debt is real, and we need to treat it as such.

The individual Senate- and House- passed farm and nutrition bills included nearly identical provisions that I championed that would have placed a hard cap on farm payments and accurately define a farmer.  My efforts stem from a need to get the farm program back to its original intent.  Currently 10 percent of the wealthiest farmers receive 70 percent of the benefit from the farm program.  This puts those small- and medium-sized farms and young and beginning farmers at a disadvantage.  These are the very people the farm program is supposed to help.  The committee leaders negotiating the final bill struck my simple, common-sense and enforceable provisions from the final bill.  And, $387 million in savings are no longer realized.

Don't get me wrong, there are some positives in the bill.  The crop insurance program remains in place to help farmers manage their own risk and the dairy program ended up better than where we started. But, this bill is a missed opportunity for true reform.  A few people put parochial interests ahead of agriculture as a whole.  Voting yes on this bill would be an endorsement of the egregious manipulation of my payment limit reforms behind closed doors.  I cannot in good conscience do that.

New displays show service of African-American Soldiers in the Illinois National Guard

SPRINGFIELD, IL (01/31/2014)(readMedia)-- To recognize Black History Month, the Illinois State Military Museum has unveiled a new series of displays telling the story of the service of African American Soldiers in the Illinois National Guard in the Civil War and World War I.

"We've chosen to display artifacts from the Civil War and World War I to tell just a few of the stories of Illinois citizens that may not be well-known to the public or even our own National Guard personnel," said Bill Lear, Museum Curator. "African-Americans citizens have served in Illinois National Guard units throughout the state's history including the Civil War, Spanish-American War, both World Wars, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm and today's Global War on Terror. Displays like these help tell the complete story of the service of Illinois citizens and of the Illinois National Guard."

The centerpiece display in the museum lobby is the U.S. flag carried during the Civil War by the 29th U.S. Colored Troops (USCT), the only black regiment from Illinois. Originally called the First Regiment Illinois Volunteers (Colored), the unit designation changed to the 29th USCT when it mustered into federal service on April 24, 1864 in Quincy, Ill.

The 29th USCT Soldiers saw their first action during the Siege of Petersburg at the Battle of the Crater in July 1864. They also fought at the Battle of Globe Tavern (August 1864), the Battle of Poplar Grove Church (September 1864), the Battle of Boydton Plank Road (October 1864), and ended the war on the Appomattox Campaign (March-April 1865). The 29th lost three officers and 43 enlisted men killed in action and 188 enlisted men to disease.

The 29th USCT was one of 175 United States Colored Troop regiments. By the end of the war, African American Soldiers numbered nearly 179,000 and constituted 10 percent of the Union Army.

Other displays show equipment and personal items from the 8th Illinois Infantry was renamed the 370th Infantry for service in France during World War I. The 8th Illinois was an all-black unit whose history dates from 1878 and whose units ranged from Chicago to Metropolis, including companies in Springfield, Peoria, Quincy and Danville.

The displays feature 370th uniforms, collar brass showing the unit of assignment, and weapons a 370th Soldier would have used.

"These displays of ordinary items that average Soldiers used and wore can really help you feel a connection to them across the years," Lear said.

These temporary displays will be open through Feb. 28. In addition, the main exhibit gallery on the museum's second floor contains permanent displays that offer more information about the 8th Illinois' service in the Spanish-American War and World War II and the 8th Illinois descendent, the 178th Infantry Regiment.

Located two blocks north of the intersection of MacArthur Blvd. and North Grand Ave., the Illinois State Military Museum tells the story of the contributions of the Illinois National Guard to the state and the nation from 1723 to the 21st Century. The museum is open 1 to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Admission and parking are free. For more information call (217) 761-3910.

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