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Park Forest, IL–(ENEWSPF)–January 28, 2012.  Our February exhibit, "Step into a 1950s Valentines Day," is open Wednesdays 11 -2; Saturdays  from 10-3.  Read below about our February 26, 2012 program! Marshall Field's Bricks are on sale at the 1950s Park Forest House Museum during open hours, or by appointment, and can be purchased at the Park Forest Recreation and Parks counter in Village Hall.  Bricks may also be purchased from the online store at www.parkforesthistory.org.  Price:  1 for $15; 2 for $25.  shipping and handling are $12 for up to three bricks to one address.  Books, calendars and postcards, as well as memberships available at the museum! 

Now the museum has convenient street parking, right in front!!

During our annual January closing, some furniture was changed and added.  Stop by to see what is new.  The stove is back.  come "See Red" this February.  It is a real day-brightener!

"A Journey Into one African American Family History, from 1783-2011" by Viola Baecher will be our program Sunday February 26, 2012 in Park Forest Village Hall Baord Meeting Room at 2:30 p.m.  You don't want to miss this entertaining and informative program, free and open to the general public.

Hall of Fame April 15, 2012 Induction Ceremony.  3 p.m. 

 For possible small group tours of the museum, call Jane Nicoll at 708-481-4252, or Michael Gans at 708-305-3308, or email Jane Nicoll through the website for the society, www.parkforesthistory.org.            

The Society is seeking volunteers to help cover the 1950s PF House Museum hours which  will increase in March to ten hours per week.  Contact Museum Director, Jane Nicoll, via the website at www.parkforesthistory.org, or at 708-481-4252 to become a volunteer!  We need several more volunteers to make this possible. Please join our volunteers in keeping this gem open!  The 1950s Park Forest House Museum is operated by the Park Forest Historical Society and sponsored by Central Park Apartments.

Our most recent past programs:

November 19, 2011 program, Saturday at 2:30 p.m., Village Hall Board meeting Room.  Historian, Leslie Goddard will present her book, Remembering Marshall Field's, followed by a book signing. This new book published by Arcadia Press contains two pictures from the PF Archive.

Marshall Field's Park Forest Store bricks will also be available for sale at the program


Sunday September 25, 2011, Annual Meeting.  The program was a celebration of our volunteers, past and present. 

On June 26, 2011, at 2:30 p.m., the Society presented "The History of the Holiday Theater Part Two."

This program was held in the Holiday Star Theater!   Speakers were Willis Johnson, owner of the theater from 1981-1986 and 1989-2002, and Robert Matanky.The Matanky family  generously offered meeting space in the theater.  We heard about the changes they are making to keep the Holiday a great  Park Forest movie experience.

We put up the displays we used at Part One of the History of the Holiday Theater, held September 26, 2010.

Hall of Fame Induction was Sunday april 3, 2011.

2011 Inductees:  Helen Brunner, Florence Cunningham, Alvin and Adele Glassner, Dick Humbert, Celia-Ann Toll, Aunt Martha's Youth Service Center.

Sunday, January 30, 2011 the Park Forest Historical Society held a luncheon, program and reception to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of its founding.  The luncheon was held at 1:30 p.m. at Dining on the Green, 349 Main Street in Park Forest.  Donation to attend the event was $25.00.             

The program  included speakers Neal Ney, Administrative Librarian for the Park Forest Public Library in 1985; Jane Nicoll, co-founder and Archivist of the society; and Magne B. Olson, President Emeritus.  Beverly Myrow's Harp Angels played, and slides of photographs the society has helped preserve and of programs presented over 25 years were shown.  Photographs and documents from programs and projects of the society over its first 25 years were on display. 

Gregory Randall came November 13, 2010 with an updated edition of his now-classic book.  Signed copies of the book are for sale at the 1950s Park ForestHouseMuseum, 141 Forest Blvd on Saturdays from 1-3 p.m. for $25.00 per copy.   

The Society benefits from each purchase made at the Museum.   Randall is the author of other books, including fiction; and four books on the gardens of England and Scotland, co-authored with his wife, Bonnie. Randall's bibliography can be seen on his website, www.gregorycrandall.com.

Marshall Field's Brick Sale

The Society is selling bricks from the Park Forest Marshall Field's store. 

Price:  1 for $15; 2 for $25; limit 10 per person.  Shipping and handling $12 for up to three bricks to one address. Bricks will be available at the 1950s Park Forest House Museum during open hours.   Check our website, www.parkforesthistory.org for updates.

Contact Michael Gans, President, at parkforesthistory3  at yahoo.com for more information, and to reserve or order bricks.  Reserve so we have enough on hand for you!

Help the Society "make Lemonade" out of losing our Marshall Field's building!  Buy a brick and help us preserve Park Forest history.

Park Forest Historical Society--Saving our History for 26 Years.

Nominations for the Hall of Fame are accepted from the public between October 1 and December 15 each year.  Nominees are selected for consistent, beneficial service to the citizens of Park Forest over a long span of time.  The official nomination form must be used and nominations must include requested information to be accepted. Forms are made available through the mail to all members of the society, and can be picked up beginning in early October at Village Hall, the Park Forest Public Library, or the 1950s Park ForestHouseMuseum. A committee of the Park Forest Historical Society makes the final selelction.

Names of the members of the Hall of Fame are available on the historical society website at www.parkforesthistory.org, and aslo on two plaques which hang in the Ringering Room of the Park Forest Public Libray (not on dispaly during renovation).  Biographical information on the members previously inducted is available in the Adult Services area of the library, in the Hall of Fame albums and in the Park Forest files, under "Park Forest Hall of Fame."

 The Park Forest Historical Society is celebrating its 25th Anniversary in 2010-2011. It operates the 1950s Park Forest House Museum at 141 Forest Blvd. 

 Information on the museum, membership, and on the mission of the society can be seen at www.parkforesthistory.org.   

If you missed the book reading by Amy Peele, the Society has  copies of her book for sale at the museum.  They sell for $16.

Volunteer Opportunities

The society is also always looking for new volunteers who would enjoy sharing the museum with visitors.  Contact director, Jane Nicoll at 708-481-4252, if you would like to join our band of volunteers. 1950s Park ForestHouseMuseum Needs Volunteers

The Park Forest Historical Society needs many more volunteers to cover open hours of the museum and to be available to open the museum by appointment.The 1950s Park Forest House Museum, located at 141 Forest Blvd, is usually open Saturday from 1-3 p.m., or by appointment.The museum is located atthe corner of Forest and Fir, within a block of the police station. If we find interested volunteers, we can try to open one day during the week, as well as on Saturday.

Long-time residents enjoy reminiscing with visitors, newer residents enjoy learning the history of this unique village and people who have lived in nearby towns enjoy sharing what they have known about the village over the years.Contact Jane Nicoll at 708-481-4252, or the society can be contacted at parkforesthistory1atyahoo.com.

The society is seeking other volunteers for special projects including fundraising and work on the Park Forest Local History Collection and Archive.Part of the collection is in remote storage, but there are still projects to do, including clipping and photocopying articles, and updating the website.If you have a talent to offer or need toput in some public service time, please contact Jane Nicoll at the phone number above, or email her at parkforesthistory1 at yahoo.com.
12-28-07

Historical Society Urges Support Through Membership

The Park Forest Historical Society urges people to support the society by joining its membership. Membership is open to people living in Park Forest, those who have lived in Park Forest, or to those interested in the history of Park Forest even as it is being made. In other words anyone interested in the village any facet of it is urged to join. The society always accepts donations toward its mission, but at this seminal time, they really need the support of a large membership.

Archivist Jane Nicoll says, "As I rode in the Hall of Fame car in the 4th of July Parade, I saw whole families of long-time residents and enthusiastic faces of new residents. I know many of these people have never joined the society, even though they treasure Park Forest. Now is the time for everyone who loves Park Forest to show that support by joining the society."

The Park Forest Historical Society has faced many challenges in the past year.

The Archive which has been owned by and housed at the Park Forest Public Library since 1981 is to become the property of the historical society when they can secure a permanent home for the collection.

In January 2007, due to flooding of the library's basement, the Archive was packed and stored in two PODS units and put in remote storage. There is no access to this valuable collection of primary resources on Park Forest history.

In May 2007, the society lost its lease to the 1950s Park ForestHouseMuseum, formerly known as the 50th AnniversaryHouseMuseum. The museum collection is now in PODS storage. The society also lost use of the unit they were using since 2006 for rotating exhibits and office space. When the library collection was packed up, the society moved the Digital Lab equipment and the boxes containing the extensive photograph collection, and some of the most often consulted files to the office unit. Those boxes are now in PODS storage, but were packed in such a way that the society can gain access to most of them.

Moving the museum collection cost $3,000. Storage of the two society PODS costs more than $300 a month. The society needs the financial support that simple memberships can give them.

The Local History Collection which contains copies of a fraction of the materials in the Archive is still available to the public in the library. There are oral history transcripts which can be checked out, copies of early scrapbooks made by the developers and by District 163 personnel, and books written about Park Forest or about city planning in the mid-Twentieth Century. For people wanting an introduction to Park Forest history, there are two large boxes of things like articles and village anniversary commemorative issues of newspapers full of stories to get you started. There are 200+ files in the library on topics like, American Community Builders (the developers), Architecture, Churches, Biographies, Organizations, Schools, and the history of the Shopping Center and Downtown. One box of photographs is still at the library. You can sit in the reference area and browse the photos of the early days of Park Forest's development, including construction photos. If you are researching Park Forest, and the library staff can't find what you need, they will refer the question to the archivist or to another society board member.

The society now faces the task of not only finding a permanent home for the Local History Collection and Archive but also of finding a new space for the museum and an office space to headquarter the society.   We have found the nnew museum space at 141 Forest Blvd, but we now have to pay rent and utilities, and we still have to support one storage POD.  These are expenses we never had to support before.

If you lived in Park Forest in the early days, if you have just moved here and can tell it is a special place, if you study or teach Park Forest history, or you believe in what Park Forest stands for, JOIN. Your membership dollars will help the society preserve the history of this unique place. The society needs a much larger membership base to remain viable and to accomplish the tasks ahead.

If you have a talent or time to offer to the society, check out our website at www.parkforesthistory.org for volunteer projects. The society needs the second and third generation of Park Foresters to "get on board" to carry out its mission of making Park Forest history available for many generations to come. 12-07-2009

     On Sunday, June 27, 2010 at 2:30 p.m. the Society presented one in a series of 25th Anniversary events, "When Did Your Family Get Here?" Speakers and attendees shared stories of how some families arrived in the Park Forest area, either by horse and  wagon or by METRA.  PFHS has been in a year-long initiative with the SSGHS to find documents and photographs from pre-Park Forest families, but it is our mission to share the Park Forest story with Park Forest pioneers, and long-time and newer residents.

Our September 20, 2009 program was, "Exploring the Park Forest Area Farm History," discussing a year-long project with SSGHS to find original farm families from this area.

The Annual Meeting was followed by a discussion of a joint venture by the South Suburban Genealogical and Historical Society (SSGHS) and the Park Forest Historical Society (PFHS) to explore the Park Forest area farm history. Kathy Wellington-Nassios, President of SSGHS and Jane Nicoll, Archivist of PFHS discussed what progress has been made so far in gathering information on the farms and the families who owned them. Both societies have been contacted by members of the Weishaar families who owned farms on the land that became Park Forest. One family owned the land Rich East is built on. The other owned land at the present 26th and Western which may have extended down to the land now including Schubert Woods in the current Cook County Forest Preserve. This has sparked a desire to find out more about other families, including interest in finding photographs of the people and the farms.

Research already uncovered has sparked a broader interest in the history of the area now known as Park Forest. The South Suburban Genealogical and Historical Society (SSGHS) and the Park Forest Historical Society (PFHS) are combining efforts to collect genealogical records, photographs and oral histories of the earliest farmers who settled in southwestern BloomTownship, southeastern RichTownship and northeastern MoneeTownship. Surnames of early pioneer families include: Batchelder, Blattner, Caskey, Cole, Helman, Ledoux, Marker (Merker), Marthaler, Metzger, Newton, Reibl (Reihl), Roberty, Scheide, Smith, Stuenkel, Weishaar, Wolff, and Young. Names of the farm families can be found on the websites of the societies at www.ssghs.org, and www.parkforesthistory.org.

As an offshoot of the project, SSGHS is collecting information on the St. Anne Catholic Church, formerly at Sauk Trail and Westwood in Park Forest, IL. For over one hundred years St. Anne’s was counted as one of the oldest parishes belonging to the Archdiocese of Chicago. In 1901, lightning struck the building, resulting in a fire that destroyed the original church. Later that same year the chapel was rebuilt, albeit smaller, reflecting its dwindling numbers. From its rebirth until 1949, St. Anne’s was considered a mission station of St. Liborius in Steger. By 1920, its members numbered only 12 families, and by Christmas Day, 1951, the remaining parishioners were holding their first service in the new St. Irenaeus church at Orchard & Indianwood in Park Forest. By the early 1960s, St. Anne Catholic Church had become a memory. SSGHS has been researching what happened to the church building itself and is trying to locate the records of the church, passed on to St. Liborius. The records will shed light on the lives of the families of the area.

 Although the church is gone, the cemetery remains, next to the Park Forest Tennis and Racquet Club, across from RichEastHigh School. With internments dating back to the 1850s, St.AnneCemetery is one of the oldest burial grounds in the area and one of the last remaining landmarks of the region’s pioneer days.

Although we now have heard what happened to the building, we are still interested in stories about the church.  Come to the September 20 meeting to hear what we found out!

For more information on the project and to offer information on St. Anne’s, contact Kathy at 708-957-7958 or ssghskathy@aol.com. For information on the Park Forest Historical Society, contact Jane Nicoll at  parkforesthistory1 at yahoo.com.

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