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https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/6ca300ea2ec6d27f9cdeff8c2f35e22a.pdf
a5669fd050a86a64821f5e500ac1b94c
PDF Text
Text
Out
To: buxton@ciaccess.com
Subject: local historical research
Page 1 of 1
a. J (? jo 2, &Q. i. dC~
Can you please check your files to see if you can find any reference confirming the existence
of a "Andrew Jackson" from Mississippi who passed through Deerfield, Illinois on the
Underground
Railroad circa 1858-1860? We are trying to confirm a local story that says Deerfield
abolitionist Lyman Wilmot arranged for him to live with and work for the Lorenz Ott family one
winter until he could head north to Canada in the spring. That family received one letter saying
he had arrived safely, but that was the last they heard of him. Unfortunately, we do not know if
"Andrew Jackson" was his real name. There is a fugitive narrative by someone else with the
same name written earlier (1847) but that person was from Kentucky and the circumstances
do not seem to match our fugitive's, who was supposed to have been the son of a white
master and a black slave.
I tried to search the list of names on your web site, the one following the list of families, but
all I got was the message "not found" for the link to the "persons" - perhaps you can search
this a different way?
Also, if you have any other suggestions, we would appreciate it. Thank you.
Sincerely, C.H. Wargo, Reference Librarian
Printed for Deerfield Public Library Reference <dfrefdesk@nslsilus.org>
2/6/02
�http://www.ciaccess.com/~jdnewby/sumames_found.htm
urnames Found in BME Cemetery
*. .
buxton Thenational
historic site & museum
Buxton (Elgin) Settlement - A Cultural Landscape
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(5897-bytes)
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Buxton
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Surnames found in the
I British Methodist Episcopal Church Cemetery
Taken from transcriptions courtesy of Kent Genealogical Society and the Ccmctary Board
Print This Page?
Anderson
Banister
Bell
B inford
Black
Brooks
Brown
Burfit
Burke
Burse
Burton
Calendar
Carter
Chase
Chavis
Collins
Cooper
Cosby
Craig
Cronan
Cromwell
Cronan
Crosby
Crosswhight
Drake
Doo
Doston
Drys
Dyke
Ellezy
Enos
Evans
Freeman
Garel
Givens
Gray
Griffin
Griffith
Groce
Gunn
Harden
Harding
Harris
Harrison
Hawkins
Hicks
Hooper^
JacksorD
Johnson
Johnston
Jones
Kersey
Lawson
Lewis
Malone
Malott
Martin
Matthews
Middleton
Miller
Moore
Morris
Morton
Newby
Nuby
Owens
Park
Parker
Parsons
Patton
Peaker
Peker
Pierce
Poindexter
Prince
Redding
Rice
Richardson
Riddle
Robbins
Robinson
Ross
Sanders
Scott
Segee
Shadd
Short
Shreve
Simms
Smith
Steele
Thomas
Timbers
Toyer
Travis
Tyler
Vincent
Walker
Watts
Webb
White
Wilson
Zebbs
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2/6/02 2:42 PM
�background
http://www.ciacccss.com/~jdncwby/backgrou.htm
buxton national historic site & museum
The Buxton (Elgin) Settlement - A Cultural Landscape,
Background
jnfonnation
History
Events
Contributions
Interactive Pages
External Links
Newsletters Etc
Gifts Books Etc
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Search
‘•Hr ssmrnxi
Herrtege Tour
Send Mail to
Buxton
THIS MUSEUM, officially opened in 1967. was Raleigh Township’s Centennial Project as a memorial to the Elgin
Settlement, haven for the fugitives of the American system of slavery in the pre-Civil War years.
THE ELGIN SETTLEMENT, which was for many the last stop on the Underground Railroad, was founded in 1849. Under
the guidance and supervision of Rev. William King, litis historic Black settlement soon nourished, becoming a self sufficient
community of some 1200 to 2000 persons. Its first school, the Buxton Mission School, soon surpassed its neighbours in
academic achievements. The settlement built around an agricultural economy included many thriving businesses owned and
operated by the settlers, such a saw and grist mill, a potash and pearlash factors', a brick yard, hotel, blacksmith shop, and dry
goods store, among others. Part of the success of many of the early inhabitants was assisted by the fact that the employment
opportunities offered by the construction of the cross-Canada railway enabled them to purchase outright the land they had
settled. And their many achievements were enhanced by the emphasis they placed on quality education for themselves and
their children.
THE SECOND SCHOOL, set up in the northern end of the settlement now functions as part of the museum. The tlirce
churches built during the settlement’s early years still serve this community. The road and drainage systems built by the early
settlers still serve the widespread farming area.
FOLLOWING THE CIVIL WAR and during the period of reconstruction in the States, many of the settlers returned to their
homes in the south to help educate their recently emancipated friends and neighbours.
NOW KNOWN AS BUXTON, the Elgin Settlement is one of the few remaining Black Canadian settlements still in
existence since the pre-Civil War era. It is a community which has, to a large extent, preserved the co-operative way of life
with which it was begun.
THE OLD SCHOOL (1861) and cemetery (1S57) are on the grounds adjacent to the museum. Farm implements and tools of
the times, household good and furnishings, clothing, jewelry, personal belongings of some ofthe original settlers, and much
more, are all displayed to bring to life the era of the nourishing Elgin Settlement. A part of history gone but not forgotten.
Website by
JDNEWBY
The Museum is maintained through grants from the Municipality of Chatham - Kent, and the Ontario Ministry of Culture
and Communication, admission fees, and donations.
Facilities include a large picnic shelter and barbecue, washrooms, a wheelchair access ramp to the museum and plenty of free
parking Of special note is the Research Area which contains resource materials pertaining to local history and genealogy.
North Buxton Today is inhabited, for the most part, by descendants of those original settlers who elected to remain in
Canada. Though no longer the nourishing community it once was, it still remains a vital and active Black Canadian village,
which continues to remember and preserve its role, and its roots in North American Black history and in the history of
Canada. In 1964 these descendants petitioned the Raleigh Township Council to allow them to use the grants provided for
Centennial projects by the Federal and Provincial Governments. Raleigh's share of the money that had to be raised was raised
entirely within the village of North Buxton, through the efforts of the villagers.
THE MUSEUM'S PRIME CONCERN, is the preservation of material and artifacts of Raleigh, with special emphasis on the
history and accomplishments of the original settlers in the Elgin Settlement and their descendants. Among oilier things, it
houses the bed, dresser, diary and copies of'papers belonging to Rev. William King as well as many other articles and papers
of historical significance in this community.
SINCE 1972, RESEARCH has been carried out on the families of Buxton. Most of the people of the Elgin Settlement have
been identified and indexed and considerable other information is now available in the museum, in forms of records and
family trees. Although the research has been done mainly on Elgin Settlement people, it was inevitable that it would extend
into other areas as well. If you are looking for your "roots", we may have a piece of the puzzle.
THE BUXTON HISTORIC SITE & MUSEUM now includes a well-stocked research library, a cultural room where the
works of several Black artists of local origins are on display, and where video presentations detailing the area can be viewed
by appointment.
lofl
2/6/02 2:54 PM
�Research Mat
crials
life
Horny
Map lO HllVInn
Research Materials
Some Huxton Names
hltp://\wvw.ciacccss.com/~jdnc\vby/rescarch.htm
buxtort national historic site & museum
The Buxton (Elgin) Settlement - A Cultural Landscape
Reference Library
This list contains many but not all ofthe resources availablefor the visitor to the museum.
This list was compiled by a summer student n'orking at the museum in the summer of1996.
In addition to the materialsfound here are genealogical records ofmost Buxtonfamilies.
Search this site!
Use your browser's find or search function to see if we have the material you are looking for.
j Search
Tf+tysUf*.
cxm-wi
Heritage Tour
A
Abdull, Raoul, ed. The Magic of Black Poetry.
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African Cultural Heritage. Michigan 4-H Youth Programs. Cooperative Extension Service.
Send Mail to
Buxton
African Culture Series: Native Musical Instruments.
Detroit: Children's Museum, Detroit Public Schools. Children's Book.
Website by
JDXEIVBY
Albert, Frances Jacob, ed. Sod House Memories: A Treasury of Soddy Stories. 1972.
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Pathfinders of Liberty and Truth. 1940. 2 copies.
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August 1986. June 1991.
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Anderson, O.P. Harper's Ferry.
Apostle: British Methodist Episcopal Church.
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January 1977, Vol. 1, No.2
April 1977, Vol. 1, No. 2.
May 1978, Vol. 2, No. 2.
November 1978, Vol. 2, No. 3.
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December 1979, Vol. 3, No. 2.
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1981.
B
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Scott McGehee and Susan Watson, eds. December 1980.
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hotels would take you in.
But for the open road, you packed a Green Book." Subject: The Negro Traveler's Green Book.
In The Detroit News: Michigan. 9 October 1988.
On Black History: Nova Scotia - A Pictorial. Halifax: Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission.
The North American Black Historical Museum Celebrates the 150th Anniversary of the Abolition of
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Breon, Robin and Vera Cudjoe. The Story of Mary Ann Shadd.
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Cain, Allred E. Negro Heritage Reader for Young People.
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The Canadian Journal of Canadian Conservation Institute.
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Chavers-Wright, Madrue. The Guarantee - P.W. Chavers: Banker, Entrepreneur Philanthropist in
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Choquette, Robert. Ontario: An Informal History of Its Land and Its People.
Ministry of Education. 2 copies.
Ministry of Citizenship and Culture. An Enduring Heritage: Black Contributions to Early Ontario.
Text prepared by Roger Riendeau. Toronto: Dundum Press Limited, 1984.
Ministry of Citizenship and Culture. Heritage: Giving Our Past a Future.
Ontario Heritage Policy Review. April 1987.
Canot, Theodore (captain) Adventures of an African Slaver.
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Clemens, Samuel L. Huckleberry Finn.
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Coles, Robert. Dead End School. Illustrated by Norman Rockwell.
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The Crisis: A Record of the Darker Races.
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Curtis, James C. and Lewis L. Gould, eds.
The Black Experience in America: Selected Essays. 1970.
D
Davis, Russell H. Black Americans in Cleveland From George Peake to Carl B. Stokes. 1972.
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Detroit's Black Heritage., .a partial guide to people and places significant in the history of Detroit
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D'Oyley, Enid and Rella Braithvvaite, eds and comps. Women of Our Times.
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in Canada.
Boston: John P. Jewett and Company, 1856.
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Wallaceburg: Standard Press, 1975. 2 copies
E
Elgin Settlement: First Settler Records.
Emancipation Festivities and Program. 1 -3 August 1981. Windsor.
Epstein, Sam and Beryl. George Washington Carver, Negro Scientist: A Discovery Book.
Illustrated by William Moyers. Illinois: Garrard Publishing Co., 1960.
Essence. Magazine. April 1993.
F
Fast, Howard. Freedom Road. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce Publishers, 1944.
Chatham Welcomes Fergie Home. Subject: Fergie Jenkins.
Fitzhugh, Louise. Nobody's Family is Going to Change.
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Fraser, Anne. The Blacks of Niagara Falls 1850 - 1989. B.A. Thesis.
St. Catharines: Brock University, 1989.
French, Gary E. Men of Colour: An Historical Account of the Black Settlement on Wilberforce
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Orillia: Dyment-Slubley Printers, 1978. 2 copies.
From Slaveiy to Freedom...an essay in progress.
Information Booklet. University of Windsor: Hiram Walker and Sons, Ltd., 1965. 2 copies.
G
Gaines, Ernest J. The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.
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The Geneological Helper: Dedicated to Helping People Find More Genealogy.
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Goss, Linda and Marian E. Barnes, eds. Talk That Talk: An Anthology of African American
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Storytelling.
Toronto: Simon and Schuster/Touchstone, 1989.
Graham, Shirley. Booker T. Washington : Educator of Hand, Head, and Heart.
13th ed. New York: Julian Messner, 1969.
Greene, Robert Ewell. The Leary-Evans, Ohio's Free People of Colour.
Foreward by Dorothy Inborden Miller. Washington, D.C.: Hickman Printing Inc., 1989.
H
Hamil, Fred Coyne. The Valley of the Lower Thames 1640 - 1850 .
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Harding, Vincent. There Is a River: The Black Struggle for Freedom in America.
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Toronto.
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Henson, Josiah. The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave. Boston: Arthur D. Phelps, 1949.
Hill, Daniel G. Human Rights in Canada: A Focus on Racism.
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Hill, Lawrence. Women of Vision: The Story of the Canadian Negro Women's Association 1951 1976.
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Howe, S.G. Refugees From Slavery in Canada West: Report to the Freedmen's Inquiry Commission.
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I
International Library of Negro Life and History.
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"The History of the Negro in Medicine," by Herbert M. Morais.
" Negro Americans in the Civil War," by Charles Wesley and Patricia W. Romero.
"Anthology of the American Negro in the Theatre," by Lindsay Patterson.
"The Negro in Music and Art," by Lindsay Patterson.
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L
Ladd, Glen. Gleanings From the Glen. 1974.
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M
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s
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The Sporting News: Fifty-Second Hall of Fame Induction Ceremonies Annual Program.
Cooperstown: The Sporting News, 1991.
Stein, Sara Bonnelt.
That New Baby: An Open Family Book For Parents and Children Together. Photography by Dick
Frank.
New York: The Danbury Press, 1974.
Still, William. The Underground Railroad.
Chicago: Johnson Publishing Co. Inc., 1970.
Stowe, Harriet Beecher. Dred: A Tale of the Dismal Swamp. Vols 1 & 2.
New York: AMS Press, 1856.
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Square, Chester County, Pennsylvania, and the surrounding communily.o Pennsylvania: 1976.
They Chose Greatness: Women Who Shaped America and the World.
Michigan: Department of Education/OITice for Sex Equity, Fall 1980.
Thomas, Owen A. Niagara's Freedom Trail: A Guide to African-Canadian History on the Niagara
Peninsula.
Prepared & Published with the assistance of the Ontario Heritage Foundation. Niagara Falls: Region
Niagara Tourist Council, 1995.
Tolson, Arthur L. The Black Oklahomans, A History: 1541 -1972.
New Orleans: Edwards Printing Company, 1974.
Tolson, Melvin. A Gallery of Harlem Portraits.
Afterward by Robert M. Farnsworth, ed. Colombia: University of Missouri Press, 1979.
Turner, Elizabeth M. The Banks Legacy: The Chronicles of a Free, Negro Family.
Turner, Glennetts Tilley. Talk A Walk in Their Shoes.
Illustrated by Elton C. Fax. New York: Cobblehill Books, 1989.
u
ULL. Uliman, Victor. Look to the North Star.
Ullman, Victor. Martin A. Delany: The Beginnings of Black Nationalism.
Boston: Beacon Press, 1971.
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Denver: United Stales Department of the Interior/National Park Service, September 1995.
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Vass, George. Like Nobody Else: The Fergie Jenkins Story. As told by Ferguson Jenkins.
Chicago: Henry Regnery Company, 1973.
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Walker, James W. St. G. The Black Loyalists: The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and
Sierra Leone 1782 - 1870.
London: The Longman Group Limited, 1976.
Walls, Dr. Bryan E. The Road that Led to Somewhere: A documented novel about the underground
railroad.
Windsor: Olive Publishing Company Ltd., 1980.
Washington, Booker T. Up From Slavery.
New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1963.
Williams, Ora. American Black Women in the Arts and Sciences: A Bibliographic Survey.
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Wish, Harvey, ed. The Negro Since Emancipation.
Englewood Cliffs: Prentice- Hall, 1964.
Witherspoon, Reginald. An Epic of Heroism: The Underground Railroad in Michigan 1837 - 1870.
Detroit: The Museum of African American History, May 1988.
Witherspoon, William Roger. Martin Luther King, Jr...To The Mounlaintop.
New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1985.
Wright, Richard. Native Son. New York: The Modem Library, 1940.
Wright, Roberta Hughes. The Birth of the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Foreward by the Honorable L. Douglas Wilder, Governor of Virginia.
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Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, June 1994.
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�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Lyman Wilmot House
Description
An account of the resource
This collection consists of records related to the Deerfield Public Library's research into whether or not the Wilmot house could be proved to have been a stop on the Underground Railroad.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2002
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Local Historical Research
Description
An account of the resource
Printout of email from the Deerfield Public Library to the Buxton National Historic Site with an information request for Andrew Jackson; printouts from website for the Buxton National Historic Site with highlighting and handwritten notes related to Andrew Jackson.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Wargo, Cindy H.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Buxton National Historic Site
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
02/06/2002
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013.036
A Gallery of Harlem Portraits
A Heritage: A Congregational History Bleheim United Church
A History of Dresden
A Living History: Voices of the Past Speak to the Present
A Magazine of Negro Comment
A North-Side View of Slavery - The Refugee
A Pictoral History of the Negro in America
A Plea for Emigration: Notes on Canada West
A Rage for Order: Black-White Relations in the American South Since Emancipation
A Review of Contemporary Photography in Canada
A Traveler's Guide to Two Cities: Boston and New Orleans
A.C. Robbins
Abraham Lincoln
Adrienne Shadd
Adventures of an African Slaver
Africa Publications Trust
African American Genealogical Sourcebook
African Cultural Heritage
African Culture Series: Native Musical Instruments
African Journey
Agricultural Economy
Alex Haley
Alfred E. Cain
All Around the Square: Feliciana and East and West Feliciana Parishes
American Black Women in the Arts and Sciences: A Bibliographic Survey
American Civil War
American Reconstruction Era
American Visions: The Magazine of Afro-American Culture
Amherstburg Ontario Canada
Amherstburg Regular Missionary Baptist Association: Its Auxiliaries and Churches
Amos Fortune Free Man
AMS Press
An Enduring Heritage: Black Contributions to Early Ontario
An Epic of Heroism: The Underground Railroad in Michigan 1837-1870
Anderson
Andrew Jackson
Ann Grifalconi
Anne Fraser
Anne Straith Jamieson
Anthology of the American Nego in the Theatre
Archives of Ontario
Arno Press
Arthur D. Phelps
Arthur L. Tolson
Artis Lane
Autobiography of Rev. William King and Supplementary Papers
Baltimore Maryland
Banister
Bantam Books
Barbara McCall
Barbara Summers
Barnwell Mabel and Bernice Peacock Biographical Index
Basil Mathews
Beacon Press
Before the Mayflower: The History of the Negro in America 1619-1964
Bell
Benjamin Drew
Bernard Katz
Beryl Epstein
Bethany House Publishers
Bicentennial Collector's Issue
Bill Waddell
Binford
Black
Black Abolitionists in Canada West to 1960
Black Africa: Language and LIterature
Black Americans in Cleveland from George Peake to Carl B. Stokes
Black Heritage Discovery
Black Perspectives on the Bicentennial: Blacks and US Wars
Black Perspectives on the Bicentennial: Economic Progress of Blacks After 200 Years
Black Perspectives on the Bicentennial: The Black Press and the First Amendment
Black Presence in Multi-Ethnic Canada
Black Students in Urban Canada
Black Studies: A Resource Guide for Teachers
Blacks in Detroit: A Reprint of Articles from the Detroit Free Press
Blaine Ethridge Books
Booker T. Washington
Booker T. Washington: Educator of Hand Head and Heart
Boston Massachusetts
Brian Lanker
British Methodist Episcopal Church
Brock University
Brooks
Brown
Bryan E. Walls
Burfit
Burke
Burse
Burton
Buxton Cemetery
Buxton Churches
Buxton Mission School
Buxton National Historic Site
Buxton National Historic Site and Museum
Buxton National Historic Site Reference Library
Buxton National Historic Site Research Area
Buxton Old School
Buxton Settlement Canada
Buxton the Liberator
Calendar
Calvin W. Ruck
Canada
Canada Historic Sites and Monuments Board
Canadian Canaan: A History of Black Baptists in Ontario
Canadian Federal Government
Canadian Government
Canadian History
Canadian Medical Association Journal
Canadian Negro Women's Association
Canadian Negro Women's Association Incorporated
Canadian Provincial Government
Carib-Can Publishers
Carl B. Stokes
Carl E. James
Carl Owens
Carrie M. Best
Carter
Case Studies
Charles L. Blockson
Charles Wesley
Charlesbridge Publishing
Charlotte Bronte Perry
Charro Press Incorporated
Chase
Chatham Ontario Canada
Chatham Welcomes Fergie Home
Chatham-Kent Municipality
Chavis
Chester County Pennsylvania
Chicago Illinois
Cindy H. Wargo
Clarion Publishing Company
Clarke Irwin and Company
Cleveland Ohio
Cobblehill Books
Colin McFarquhar
Collins
Columbia Missouri
Community Action Programs
Connecticut
Cooper
Cooperative Extension Service
Cooperstown New York
Copp Clark Publishing Company
Cornan
Corners of Black History
Cosby
Craig
Cromwell
Cronan
Crosby
Crosswhight
Crown Publishers Incorporated
D. Reidel Publishing Company
Dane Burr
Daniel G. Hill
Dave Jackson
Dead End School
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Reference Desk
Dell Publishing Company Incorporated
Denver Colorado
Derrydale Books
Detroit Black Historic Sites
Detroit Children's Museum
Detroit Free Press
Detroit Historical Department
Detroit Historical Museum
Detroit Historical Museum Black Historic Sites Committee
Detroit Michigan
Detroit News
Detroit Public Schools
Detroit's Black Heritage
Diana L. Spencer
Dick Frank
Donald George Simpson
Doo
Dood Mead and Company
Doris Parkin Keil
Dorothy Inborden Miller
Dorothy Shadd Shreve
Doston
Doubleday and Company Incorporated
Down Our Road: Written for the Charing Cross Centennial 1973
Drake
Dred: A Tale of the Dismal Swamp
Dresden Ontario Canada
Dresden Times
Drys
Duell Sloan and Pearce Publishers
Dundurn Press Limited
Dyke
Dyment-Stubley Printers
Ebony Magazine
Edmonton Alberta Canada
Educational Heritage Incorporated
Edwards Printing Company
Elgin School
Elgin Settlement
Elgin Settlement Canada
Elizabeth M. Turner
Elizabeth Yates
Ellezy
Elton C. Fax
Email
Emancipation Festivities and Program
Englewood Cliffs
Enid D'Oyley
Enos
Ernest J. Gaines
Escape from Slavery: The Underground Railroad
Escape from the Slave Traders
Eslanda Goode Robeson
Essence Magazine
Evans
Eyewitness: The Negro in American History
F. Hubner and Company Incorporated
F.A. Robinson
Fergie Jenkins
Ferguson Jenkins
Fifty Mighty Men
First Settler Records
Folders of Articles about the Artist and Reproductions of Her Work
Frances Cloud Taylor
Frances Jacob Albert
Frank L. Morris
Frank W. Anderson
Fred Coyne Hamil
Freedmen's Inquiry Commission
Freedom Road
Freeman
Fritz Henle
Fritz Kredel
From Slavery to Freedom
Fund for New Priorities in America
G.C. Porter
Gale Genealogy and Local History Series
Gale Research Incorporated
Garden City Publishing Company Incorporated
Garel
Garrard Publishing Company
Gary E. French
Genealogical Reference Data
George H. Doran Company
George Peake
George Vass
George W. Pattison
George Washington Carver
George Washington Carver Negro Scientist: A Discovery Book
Ghana
Givens
Gleanings from the Glen
Glen Ladd
Glenette Tilley Turner
Grant MacEwan
Gray
Green Book
Griffin
Griffith
Groce
Gunn
Gwendolyn Robinson
Halifax Nova Scotia
Hamilton Ontario Canada
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich
Harden
Harding
Harlem New York City
Harper's Ferry
Harried Beecher Stowe
Harris
Harrison
Harvey Wish
Hastings House
Hawkins
Henry Regnery Company
Herbert M. Morais
Heritage: Giving Our Past a Future
Hickman Printing Incorporated
Hicks
Hilda Dungy
Hiram Walker and Sons Limited
Historical Negro Biographies
History of Public General Hospital School of Nursing
Hooper
Howard Fast
Huckleberry Finn
Human Relations: The Right to Live in Dignity
Human Rights in Canada: A Focus on Racism
Hutchison and Company Limited
I Dream a World: Portrais of Black Women Who Changed America
If This is the Time
Illinois
Impact Enterprises Incorporated
International Library of Negro Life and History
International Prince Hall Day
International Review of African American Art
Isidre Mones
J. Carlyle Parker
J. Earl Burr
J.A. Griffin
J.A. Mitton
J.A. Rogers
J.B. Pole Printing
Jackson
James C. Curtis
James W. Walker
Jane Pittman
Jennie Johnson
Jerry Blocker
Jesse Jackson
Jesse!? Jackson's Surprising Surge
Jet Magazine
Jim Bearden
Joel Williamson
John Brown
John Brown Forte
John Brown's Body
John Lutman
John Oliver Killens
John P. Jewett
John P. Jewett and Company
John W. Robinson
Johnson
Johnson Publishing Company Incorporated
Johnston
Jones
Jordan Station
Josiah Henson
Josten's Publications
Julian Messner
Karel F. Ruzicka
Karen L. Jefferson
Katherine Roundtree
Kennett Square Pennsylvania
Kent County Ontario
Kent County Ontario Marriage Registers
Kentucky
Kersey
L. Douglas Wilder
Langston Hughes
Laura Rosenthal
Lawrence Hill
Lawson
Legacy to Buxton
Legacy: Newsletter of the Archives of Ontario
Leon F. Litwack
Lerone Bennett Jr.
Levero Lee Carter
Lewis
Lewis L. Gould
Library Service for Genealogists
Like Nobody Else: The Fergie Jenkins Story
Lillie Patterson
Linda Goss
Linda Jean Butler
Lindsay Patterson
Local History
London England
Look to the North Star
Lorenz Ott
Lorraine Monk
Louise Fitzhugh
Lyman Wilmot
Macleans
Madrue Chavers-Wright
Makin' Free: African-Americans in the Northwest Territory
Malone
Malott
Mamie Austin Rouzan
Marian E. Barnes
Marion Matt
Mark Twain
Markham Illinois
Martin
Martin A. Delany
Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr. To The Mountaintop
Martin Luther King Jr.: Man of Peace
Marvelous Michael Jackson: An Unauthorized Biography
Mary A. Shadd
Mary Ann Shadd
Mary C. Mallory
Mary E. Hatter Quinn
Mary McLoughlin
Mary Shadd Cary
MAtthews
Maya Angelou
McMaster Divinity College
Melfort and District Golden Jubilee Committee
Melvin Tolson
Men of Colour: An Historical Account of the Black Settlement on Wilberforce Street and in Oro Township
Michael Semak
Michigan
Michigan 4-H Youth Programs
Michigan Department of Education
Michigan Department of Education Office for Sex Equity
Middleton
Miller
Milton Meltzer
Minneapolis Minnesota
Mississippi
Montreal Quebec Canada
Moore
Morris
Morton
Murder Clues from the Black Museum
Musical Buxton
My Life
My Search for Roots: A Black American's Story
Nat Brandt
National Geographic
National Museums of Canada
National Urban League
Native Son
NC Press Limited
Negro Americans in the Civil War
Negro Digest
Negro Heritage Reader for Young People
Negroes in Ontario From Early Times to 1870
Neta Jackson
New Jersey
New Orleans Louisiana
New York
New York Times
Newby
Niagara Falls Ontario Canada
Niagara Tourist Council
Niagara's Freedom Trail: A Guide to African-Canadian History on the Niagara Peninsula
Nimbus Publishing Limited
Nobody's Family is Going to Change
Nora S. Unwin
Norman McRae
Norman Rockwell
North American Black History
North Buxton Ontario Canada
North of Slavery: The Negro in the Free States 1790-1860
Nova Scotia Canada
Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission
Nuby
Nurses' Alumnae Association
O.P. Anderson
Oberlin Community History
Oberlin Ohio
Ohio
Oklahoma
Olive Publishing Company Limited
On Black History: Nova Scotia - A Pictoral
One Man's Journey: Roy Prince Edward Perry 1905-1972
Ontario Black History Society
Ontario Black History Society Annual Report
Ontario Genealogical Society
Ontario Genealogical Society Kent County Branch
Ontario Heritage Foundation
Ontario Heritage Policy Review
Ontario Human Rights Code and Age Discrimination Act
Ontario Human Rights Commission
Ontario Ministry of Citizenship and Culture
Ontario Ministry of Culture and Communication
Ontario Ministry of Culture and Communications
Ontario Ministry of Education
Ontario: An Informal History of Its Land and Its People
Ora WIlliams
Orillia Ontario Canada
Oro Township Canada
Our North Buxton Heritage: Mary E. Hatter Quinn Memorial
Owen A. Thomas
Owen Burey
Owens
Oxford University Press
P.W. Chavers
Paideia Press
Park
Parker
Parsons
Pathfinders of Liberty and Truth
Patricia W. Romero
Patton
Paul LeClair
Paula K. Byers
Peaker
Pearl Bailey
Pearl's Kitchen: An Extraordinary Cookbook
Peker
Pelican Books
Pennsylvania
People Magazine
Petr Zima
Pierce
Pitman Publishing Corporation
Planted by the Waters: A Genealogy of the Jones-Carter Family
Poindexter
Prentice-Hall
Prince
Printout
Prospective Sites Relating to Black History in Canada
R and S Publishers
R.H. Mottram
Raleigh Ontario Canada
Raleigh Township Canada
Raleigh Township Centennial Project
Raleigh Township Council
Raleigh Township Statute Labour 1838-1847
Raoul Abdull
Reader's Digest
Redbook
Redding
Refugees From Slavery in Canada West
Reginald Larrie
Reginald Witherspoon
Reidmore Books
Rella Braithwaite
Rice
Richard Wright
Richardson
Riddle
Robbins
Robert Brandon
Robert Choquette
Robert Coles
Robert Ewell Greene
Robert M. Farnsworth
Roberta Hughes Wright
Robin Breon
Robinson
Roger Riendeau
Romantic Kent: The Story of a County 1626-1952
Roots
Roots: Back to Africa with an Embattled Alex Haley
Roots: Part II
Ross
Ruby Zagoren
Russell H. Davis
S.G. Howe
Sam Epstein
Samella Lewis
Samuel L. Clemens
Sanders
Sara Bonnett Stein
Saskatoon Canada
Scott
Scott McGehee
Seek the Truth; A Story of Chatham's Black Community
Segee
Shadd
Shadd: The Life and Times of Mary Shadd Cary
Shirley Graham
Short
Shreve
Simcoe County Ontario Canada
Simms
Simon and Schuster
Smith
Sod House Memories: A Treasury of Soddy Stories
Sojourners
South Africa
South Africa: Implications for US Policy - A Congressional Conference
South Buxton First Baptist Church
Southern Africa
Sovenier Program: 65th Anniversary of Union United Church
St. Catharines Ontario Canada
Standard Press
Steele
Stephen Vincent Benet
Stewart Tabori and Chang
Sumner Press
Survivors
Susan Watson
Syracuse New York
Syracuse University Press
Talk a Walk in Their Shoes
Talk That Talk: An Anthology of African American Storytelling
Talking About Difference: Encounters in Culture Language and Identity
Thames Arts Centre
That Lonesome Road
That New Baby: An Open Family Book for Parents and Children Together
The AfriCanadian Church: A Stabilizer
The American Negro: A History in Biography and Pictures
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman
The Banks Legacy: The Chronicles of a Free Negro Family
The Beginnings of Black Nationalism
The Birth of the Montgomery Bus Boycott
The Birthplace of Our Conference: Souvenier Edition
The Black Battalion 1916-1920 Canada's Best Kept Military Secret
The Black Canadians: Their History and Contributions
The Black Experience
The Black Experience in America: Selected Essays
The Black Loyalists: The Search for a Promised Land in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone 1782-1870
The Black Oklahomans: A History
The Black Presence in the Canadian Mosaic
The Blacks of Niagara Falls 1850-1989
The Canadian Journal of Canadian Conservation Institute
The Clash of Colour: A Study in the Problem of Race
The Crisis: A Record of the Darker Races
The Danbury Press
The Dipper Stick: A History of Drainage in Kent County Ontario
The Everton Publishers
The Frank Slide Story
The Freedman's Story
The Genealogical Helper: Dedicated to Helping People Find More Genealogy
The Glenn Carrington Collection
The Guarantee-P.W. Chavers; Banker Entrepreneur Philanthropist in Chicago's Black Belt of the Twenties
The History of the Negro in Medicine
The International Year of the Child
The John Day Company
The Leary-Evans: Ohio's Free People of Colour
The Life of Josiah Henson Formerly a Slave
The Longman Group Limited
The Magic of Black Poetry
The Mercury Press
The Model Negro Colony in Kent County
The Modern Library
The Museum of African American History
The National Film Board of Canada
The Negro in Music and Art
The Negro Since Emancipation
The Negro Traveler's Green Book
The New Buxton Experiment
The New Buxton Experiment Internats Project
The North American Black Historical Museum Celebrates the 150th Anniversary of the Abolition of Slavery Act and Ontario's Bicentennial
The Ontario Register
The Ploughboy and the Nightingale
The Progress of a Race and Select Poems
The Road that Led to Somewhere: A Documented Novel About the Underground Railroad
The Saalfield Publishing Company
The Scarecrow Press
The Social Implications of Early Negro Music in the United States
The Sporting News
The Sporting News: Fifty-Second Hall of Fame Induction Ceremonies Annual Program
The Storied Land: Discovering the Heroes Villans Myths and Legends that Shape the Nation
The Story of Mary Ann Shadd
The Town that Started the Civil War
The Trackless Trail: The Story of the Underground Railroad in Kennett Square Chester County Pennsylvania and the Surrounding Community
The Underground Railroad
The Valley of the Lower Thames 1640-1850
Thelma Quinn Smith
Theodore Canot
There is a River: The Black Struggle for Freedom in America
They Chose Greatness: Women Who Shaped America and the World
They Stopped in Oberlin: Black Residents and Visitors of the Nineteenth Century
Thomas
Thomas B. Wilson
Timbers
Time Magazine
Timothy Ryan
Toronto Ontario Canada
Touchstone
Toyer
Traveling by the Book
Travis
Tyler
Umbrella Press
Uncle Tom's Cabin
Underground Railroad
Underground Railroad: Special Resource Study/Management Concepts
United Methodist Church
United Methodist Church Women's Division
United States Department of the Interior
United States National Park Service
University of Chicago
University of Chicago Press
University of Missouri Press
University of Toronto
University of Toronto Press
University of Western Ontario
University of Windsor
Up from Slavery
Uprooting a Nation: The Study of 3 Million Evictions in South Africa
Utah
Vancouver British Columbia Canada
Vancouver Centre for the Study of Curriculum and Instruction
Vancouver Centre for the Study of Curriculum and Instruction Faculty of Education
Vantage Press
Velma Carter
Venture for Freedom
Vera Cudjoe
Victor Lauriston
Victor Ullman
Vincent
Vincent Harding
Virgin Islands
Virginia Governor
Virginia Kroll
Vivian Robbins
Vivienne Tallal Winterry
Vladimir Klima
Voices of the Past: A History of Melfort and District
Walker
Wallaceburg Ontario Canada
Walter Shapiro
Warren Chappell
Washington D.C.
Watertown
Watts
Webb
Website
Weekly Reader Books
Wendy Lee Barry
Western Producer
White
Wilhelmena S. Robinson
William E. Bigglestone
William H. Jackson
William King
William King Letters
William King: Friend and Champion of the Slaves
William Loren Katz
William Moyers
William N.T. Wylie
William Parker
William Roger WItherspoon
William Still
Wilson
Wilson A. Head
Windsor Ontario Canada
Windsorite Reunion Fellowship Banquet Honoree Presentation
Women of Our Times
Women of Vision: The Story of the Canadian Negro Women's Association 1951-1976
Wood-Hoopoe Willie
World's Great Men of Color 3000 BC to 1946 AD
Wright and Potter Printers
Wright-Armstead Associates
Yonkers
Zebbs
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/2a1a18bce869b6f23a0b83718e0e571f.pdf
6ec330560d0de08e4ef8a0de194a0c6c
PDF Text
Text
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www.deerfieldlibrary.org
Plant the Seed.
Grow a Reader.
Details on page 2
^erfield Public Libra^
1,000 BooK5
w Before
kindergarten
�This is the time of year when
people want to reflect on the
year that was and give back to
their community. Deerfield
Public Library has accom
plished an array of amazing
things in the past year. We have
introduced a number of new
services, such as our Digital
Media Lab, and the ability to
print 3D objects. In addition,
we’ve created a new
space with the
Baby Garden,
1,000 Cooks
Before Kindergarten = FUN!
Reading to a child can never
begin too early. 1,000 Books
Before Kindergarten is a
program designed to help you
raise a reader. Reading aloud
to your child is the best way
you can get your child ready
to read.
• Any child from birth to
Pre-K may participate. Stop
by the Youth Services Desk
to register and get a free
tote bag, your child’s log,
and a list of recommended
books.
• For every book you read
together, your child can
color in a seed on the
log sheet.
• Any book counts, whether
your child listens to it in
storytime or preschool, at
home or in the car. The
books don’t have to come
from the Library.
generously sponsored by the
Friends of the Deerfield Public
Library. We increased our
collection by offering nontraditiona! items for checkout,
such as Discovery Kits, board
games, and Wifi hotspots. We
are so proud to serve the
Deerfield community and look
forward to another exciting
year to come.
If you are looking for a unique
way to honor someone who has
contributed to the Library in
some way, I’d like to suggest
that you consider nominating
that individual for our Giving
Tree. The Giving Tree is an
initiative of the Board
of Trustees to honor
people who have given their
time and service to the success
of the Library. The Giving Tree
debuted last spring, and it is
prominently displayed in the
Lobby. If you would like to
consider honoring someone
in this way, please visit
deerfieldlibrary.org/'giving-tree.
Enjoy a warm cup of hot
chocolate and a satisfying book
this winter. I’m looking forward
to a great 2018!
Amy Falasz-Peterson
Library Director
How long will it take you to
read 1,000 books?
• 1 book a day = 3 years
• 3 books a day = 1 year
• 5 books a day = 7 months!
1,000Books is a family affair at
the Sherman house. Emily (pic
tured with her mother, Rachel)
enjoys an average of four books
a day, including while she’s at
home, in preschool, and during
Storytime at the Library. Emily
also enjoys the task of coloring
the seeds on the log sheet.
Emily’s brother, Zach, is in 1st
grade and practices his reading
skills by reading to his sister.
Emily’s father, Dave, keeps
her engaged with his special
character voices. Looking
for some suggestions to get
started? Emily recommends
The Very Hungry Caterpillar,
Ten Little Ladybugs, and the
Pinkalicious series.
More information at the Youth Services
Desk and online at deerlieldlibrary.org/
kids/IODD-books-betore-kindergarten.
�Adult Programs
Booh and Film Discussions
Thursday Book Discussioos
Copies of the books will be available at the self-service holds shelfa
month before the discussion. Morning sessions are Drop4n.
For Film Butts
No registration required.
Your Favorite Reads of 2017
Thursday, December 14, 10:30-11:30am
Once again we’ll be wrapping up the year with our favorite reads.
Participants should come prepared to give a brief summary of
one or two books that they’ve read and enjoyed over the past year.
Share your favorites and get some good reading suggestions from
your friends!
Behold, the Dreamers by Imbolo Mbue
Thursday, January 11,10:30-11:30am
An immigrant working class couple from Cameroon and the upper
class American family for whom they work find their lives and
marriages shaped by financial circumstances, infidelities, secrets,
and the 2008 recession.
All the Ugly and Wonderful Things
by Bryn Greenwood
Thursday, February 8,10:30-11:30am
As the daughter of a drug dealer, Wavy knows not to trust people,
not even her own parents. Struggling to raise her little brother,
eight-year-old Wavy is the only responsible adult around. Obsessed
with the constellations, she finds peace in the stariy night sky, until
one night her star gazing causes an accident. After witnessing his
motorcycle wreck, she forms an unusual friendship with one of her
father’s thugs, a tattooed ex-con with a heart of gold.
Tuesday ‘New Movie’ Night
December 5,19, January 2,16, SO, February
13,27
TUESDAYFILMS BEGIN AT 6:30pm
Come to the Library for New Movie Night on
select Tuesdays this Winter, and preview the
hot new release of the week. As we get closer
to each date, you can check our website or
ask at the Multimedia desk for a listing of
upcoming showings.
Winter Movie Discussion Series:
Diversity
THURSDAYFILMSBEGIN
AT 2:00pm
Join us as we explore the difficult and complex
issues of race and diversity in America in each
of these films. There will be a brief discussion
both before and following each movie.
Thursday, December 7, The Butler,
Rated PG-13,132 minutes
Thursday, January \ \,Beatrize at Dinner,
Rated R, 82 minutes
Thursday, February 8, Dear White People,
Rated R, 108 minutes
Classics Book Discussion:
My ntonia by Willa Cather
Thursday, January 25, 7:00-8:00pm
In our new, quarterly book discussion we’ll
be selecting books you were supposed (!) to
read in school, and forgotten classics. We’ll
discuss what makes a work a classic, why we
still read it, and how it speaks to us today.
—
MY ANTONIA
m
Our first selection, originally published
100 years ago in 1918, tells the story of the
spirited ntonia Shimerda, who arrives on the
____________
Nebraska plains with her Bohemian immigrant
By WILLA CATHER
family. Her story is narrated by her neighbor,
English-teacher, and admirer, Jim Burden and features unforgettable
characters and beautiful, modern writing. Register in advance.
Books with a Twist
Program will be held at Boston Blackies, 405 Lake
Cook Road, Deerfield. Attendees are welcome to order
food and drinks offthe menu to enjoy during the
discussion. Copies are available on the holds shelfa
month prior. Drop-in.
The Book of Unknown Americans by
Cristina Henriquez
Monday, January 22, 7:30-8:30pm
Moving from Mexico to America when their daughter
suffers a near-fatal accident, the Riveras confront
cultural barriers, their daughter’s difficult recovery, and
her developing relationship with a Panamanian boy.
3
�Adult Programs
Please register in advance at the Library, by phone at 847-945-3311 or at
www.deerfieldlibrary.ory. Registration begins Wednesday, November 15.
January-December 2018
We know that reading is important for
children, but reading for adults is just
as important. Studies have shown that
reading is good for the brain, improving
memory and focus, and also increases
empathy and awareness. Join us for
our new year-long reading program
and chal lenge you rself to read without
boundaries! Each month we’ll focus on
a different theme, designed to chal
lenge you to try new autho rs, genres,
and topics. We will have suggessled
reading lists for each theme. Pa trons
All Aboard: The Model Trains Return!
Saturday, December 2, 9:00am-3:30pm
All Ages
A holiday treat for kids of ALL ages! The
North Central “0” Gaugers bring their
very popular Winter Wonderland model
train run to the Library for the Village
of Deerfield Winter Celebration. This
must-see model railroad exhibit includes
favorites like Thomas the Tank Engine
and beautiful snow villages. Drop-in.
Stop by the Adult Services desk beginning
November 15 for more information and
a sign-up bonus (while supplies last)!
Patrons can also sign up online at
deerfieldlibrary.beanstack.org/reader365.
Prizes will be awarded monthly and
those who complete all 12 months will
be entered into a grand prize drawing.
Adult Play lime
Adults Only. Register in advance
Thinks and Drinks Trivia
W3:
Pearl Harbor: A Day of Infamy
Thursday, December 7, 7:00-8:00pm
It was a day that would live in
infamy— December 7,1941, and
the event that propelled the United
States into the Second World War.
Robert Mueller returns with another
terrific history presentation, as we
revisit why and how the Japanese
almost wiped out the American
Pacific Fleet in one fell swoop. The
program ends with a review of the
surviving relics and, appropriately, a visual tour of the National Memorial
Cemetery of the Pacific. Q
Music Discussion: Magical Mystery Ibur
with Professor Moptop
Saturday, December 9, 1:004:00pm
Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the release of the Beatles’ album, Magical
Mystery Tour with Professor Moptop from WXRT’s Breakfast with the Beatles.
We’ll discuss the songs on the album and watch key parts of the film by the
same name. Professor Moptop is sure to teach you a few things you didn’t
know.Q
4
can choose a suggested title or another
title, as long as it fits the theme of the
month. In January, we will kick off the
challenge by reading a book written by an
immigrant or with an immigration story.
Wednesday January 10, 7:30-9:00pm
@Deerfield Golf Club, 1201 Saunders Rd.,
Deerfield
Think you know it all? Prove S.
it! The Library is hosting f »
another evening of its I if
popular trivia night at the V -r
Deerfield Golf Club. Play '
individually or team up in
groups of up to 4 people and test your
knowledge of world trivia. Refreshments
will be served and prizes awarded to the
biggest know-it-alls. O
5
Game Night @ Warehouse Eatery
Thursday, February 1, 7:00-9:00pm
(^Warehouse Eatery 833 Deerfield Rd.,
Deerfield
Join us at Warehouse Eatery
for an evening of fun and
food. Play one of the many
board or card games from
the Library’s collection.
Choose from classic games
like Monopoly or Clue, or
try one of our modern games like Catan or
Pandemic. Don’t know how to play? We’ll
be happy to teach you. Appetizers will be
served and prizes awarded. Q
�Please register in advance at the Library, by phone at 847-945-3311 or at
*** wmv.deerfieldlibraryorg. Registration begins Wednesday, November 15.
Holiday Music with the DHS
Chamber Orchestra
Saturday, December 16, 2:00-3:00pm
All Ages
Get into the spirit of the season by joining
us for this ‘return by popular demand’
concert by the outstanding Deerfield
High School Chamber Orchestra. Q
‘Guess The Grammys’ Contest
Monday January 8 - Saturday
January 27
Join us for one of our most popular con
tests of the year. Choose who you think
will win the Grammy in 11 categories.
First and second place winners will be
chosen from the entries with the most
correct answers. Entries will be accepted
until 5:00 p.m., Saturday, January 27. All
ages can participate; one entry
per person.
New Year’s Wellness
Resolutions
Thursday, January 11, 7:00-8:30pm
Every New Year brings new opportunities
for growth, so don’t let this year pass you
by! Jennie Michalik, Sachs Recreation
Center’s Wellness Coordinator, teaches us
how to set meaningful goals and achieve
them. ©
Great Decisions
Tuesdays, January 23-March 20,
7:15-8:45pm
Join us as Tom Jester coordinates
thoughtful discussions and stimulating
analyses of some of the great foreign
policy issues of our time. This year, the
Foreign Policy Association’s discussion
guidebooks will be made available at
thefirst meeting. There will be a charge
for the books and monies will be col
lected that evening. There will also be
a guidebook available in our Reference
materialsfor in-house use only. Ifyou
would like the book beforehand, please
contact the Adult Services desk or
f more
information at 847-580-8933. Q
Valentine Cards: A Painting
Workshop
Wednesday, January 24, 7:00-8:00pm
Adults and Teens
Create your own Valentine cards in this
fun art class. Choose from many designs
and quotes, draw with pencil, outline
with permanent marker, then paint with
watercolor pencils. Each final painting
can be glued onto paper and turned into
a card. Space is limited. ©
PLACE Program:
“Read, Discuss, Create!”
Saturday January 27, 1:30-3:30pm
PLACE (Public Library Access and
Community for Everyone) programs
welcome adults with intellectual and
developmental disabilities as well as their
parents and caregivers.
Staging to Stay...Or
Staging to Sell
Thursday January 18, 7:00-8:00pm
Whether you’re remodeling your home
or thinking about selling, find ideas and
inspirations to help with your interior
design choices. Sue Behringer of
©properties and Anna Macanowicz of
Designs in Context will bring samples of
products to see and touch! ©
If you love books and art, this program
is for you! Join us for an afternoon of
reading, conversation, and crafts, with
this literature-centered program. It will
include a short book reading, discussion,
and a craft inspired by the book. Light
refreshments will be served. Please
register in advance. ©
Adult Programs
Travel Talk with Barb
& Ron: French Polynesia—
Un Bon Voyage
Wednesday January 31, 7:00-8:00pm
Tbur the laid-back
islands of French
Polynesia with
visits to Tahiti,
Bora Bora, Moorea
and the Marquesas
— the islands of
Paul Gaugin and
Captain Bligh, black pearl farmers and
tiki sculptors. Barb Sugden & Ron
Vargason will be your travel guides with
lots of photos to share and information
to plan your own trip. ©
Blind Date with a Book
February 1-28
Is there such a thing as a no-risk blind
date? There is if you stop by the Library
during the month of February and take
a chance on meeting the literary love
of your life. Your date will be dressed in
pink or red paper and you won’t know its
identity until you take it home. Whether
your date is a match made in heaven or
a dud, fill out the “Rate Your Date” entry
form and return to the Adult Services
Desk by February 28 for a chance to win
a prize. Blind Dates count towards the
Read without Boundaries challenge.
‘Guess The Oscars’ Contest
Monday February 12 - Sunday, March 4
Think you know your movies? Choose
who you think will win the Oscars in
10 categories. First and second place
winners will be chosen from the entries
with the most correct answers. Entries
will be accepted until 5:00 p.m., Sunday,
March 4. All ages can participate; one
entry per person.
5
�Adult Programs
Chocolate Treats for
Valentine’s Day
Wednesday, February 7, 7:00-8:00pm
Join Chef Susan Maddox as she demon
strates three chocolate dessert treats for
Valentine’s Day: Bittersweet Chocolate &
Raspberry Pot au Creme, Orange
Milk Chocolate & Caramel Tart, and
Chocolate Almond Biscotti. Samples
and recipes will be provided. Q
Nutrition for a Healthy Heart
Thursday, February 15, 7:00-8:30pm
February is American Heart Month!
This is a great reminder to focus on our
hearts and find ways to be healthier.
Join registered dietitian, Kim Blum, MS,
RDN, LD to discuss how making small
changes can lead to a lifetime of heart
health. 0
Tech Connections
3-D Print Your Own
Snowflake
Tuesday, December 5, 7:00-8:00pm
Learn about the 3-D software Tinkercad
and how to create files that can be sent
to the library’s 3-D printer. We’ll create
our snowflakes together, and there
will be time for everyone to customize
their creations before submitting the
projects. Use as an ornament or just a
fun decoration. 3-D printingfees will
be waivedfor participants in this
class. Q
Digital Device Drop-in
Thursdays, December 14,28, January
11,25, February 8,22
3:004:00pm
Have questions about your Kindle or
iPad? Stop by the lobby, where staff will
be present to assist you with learning
6
Please register in advance at the Library, by phone at 847-945-3311 or at
www.decrjieldlibrary.org. Registration begins Wednesday, November 15.
7
CP'MC
<nME
series
A1 Capone and the 1933
World’s Fair
Wednesday February 14, 7:00-8:00pm
Considered the most
infamous gangster in
American history, A1
Capone rose to infamy
as the leader of the
Chicago Outfit during
the Prohibition era.
Author William Hazelgrove will take us
back to the darkest days of the Great
Depression when Chicago was desperate
to rid the city of organized crime —
including Capone—in order to host the
1933 World’s Fair. O
more about a variety of topics. Be ready
with any devices, usernames, and
passwords you’ll need to get the most
out of your time with us.
Putin’s Russia: Friend, Foe,
or Something Else?
Thursday, February 22, 7:00-8:00pm
Join Professor
Ben Whisenhunt
from the College
of DuPage as he
presents a brief
history of Russian-American
relations (18th
century to 1991), the biography
of Vladimir Putin (personal and
professional), including how he rose to
power and his developing relationship
with a series of American presidents
up to the current administration. Q
Make & Take Virtual
Reality Headset
Thursday February 8, 7:00-8:00pm
Put together and take home a
cardboard Virtual Reality headset, and
view this new, accessible technology
using your smartphone. We’ll give you
an overview of the science behind
Virtual Reality and the best free apps
to use to experience it. Bring your own
smartphone or take turns using ours.
Space is limited. 0
Meet Libby!
Google Apps
The One-Touch App for Downloading
eBooks and eAudiobooks
Thursday, December 14, 7:00-8:00pm
If you’re still using Overdrive to
download online books from the
Library, the process just got a lot easier.
Libby is the new, one-tap reading app
for borrowing eBooks and eAudiobooks.
Come learn about this easy-to-use app
which is available now at the Library. Q
Saturday February 24,10:00-11:00am
Learn how to use popular web-based
applications like Google Docs, Sheets,
and Slides that come free with your
Google account. These apps can
replace traditional word processing
and other applications, and are used by
many businesses and schools today. 0
�A Please register in advance at the Library, online at deeifieldlibraty.org under
t
“Programs”, or by calling 847-580-8962. Registration begins Wednesday, November 15.
NOTE: For Teen programs, Grades 6-12 are welcome. Note exceptions
with listings.
Finals Week @ the Library
The Library will be offering extended
hours the weekend before Finals begin.
If you’re a high school student looking
for a place to study, or if you’re just
eager to spend more time at the Library,
our special hours will be:
Saturday, January 13, 9:00am-9:00pm
Sunday, January 14, 1:00-9;00pm
iust tor i
Teen Winter Reading Program
Saturday December 2- Saturday
January 6
Warm up with a good book this winter
at the Library. Look for the entry slips
in the Teen Space. You’ll automatically
be entered into a drawing for awesome
prizes! P.S. For each Then program you
attend you get an extra entry into the
drawing.
Places to settle down for your studying
needs:
Create your own Gingerbread
House for the Holidays!
Group Study:
• 8 study rooms, seating 2-6
(Available first-come, first-served)
• Then Area, flexible seating
• Caf area, flexible seating
Quiet Study:
• Quiet Room, downstairs, east side
• Downstairs: Carrels by the Graphic
Novels, tables behind the info desk
and also outside of the study rooms
• Upstairs: Cozy chairs in front lobby
and in Magazine area
Monday, December 4, 5:00-8:00pm
All Ages
Hang out and have an awesome holiday
celebration with your own gingerbread
house creations! We’D provide aU of the
materials (and some snacks). 0
Also, check out the Relaxation Station
in the Iteen Space for coloring books
and quiet crafts to help you wind down
while studying.
Gotta Code lem All
Thursday December 7, 7:00-8:00pm
Hour of Code is an annual event where
people all over the globe dedicate time
to learning something new that involves
computer science and computer
programming. Come learn the Swift
coding language to create your own
Pok mongame.0
SAT Practice Itest
Saturday January 6, 9:30am-1:30pm 0
Looking for ways to be seen and heard at
the Library? As a TAB member you can
help Nina, the Teen Librarian, plan pro
grams, create content for our website, and
keep the Teen Space awesome! There are
plenty of snacks and drinks for aU AND
any hours you contribute to TAB meetings
and programs count as volunteer service
in the community.
ACT Practice Test
Saturday February 3, 9:30am-1:30pm 0
For more information contact Nina
Michael at nmichael@deerfieldlibrary org
Wednesday, January 24, 7:00-8:00pm
Teens and Adults
Details in program listing on page 5.
Space is limited. 0
Dungeons & Dragons
@ the Libraiy
Thursday January 25, 5:30-7:30pm
Calling all adventurers, it’s time to quest!
Immerse yourself in a vibrant fantasy
world with the role-playing game, Dun
geons & Dragons. You’ll fight monsters,
solve puzzles, eat pizza, and (hopefully)
save the day. No experience required. 0
Paint ‘n Sip: Teen Edition
Wednesday February 7, 7:00-8:30pm
Happy Valentine’s Day! Come in from the
cold and relax, while creating an acrylic
masterpiece to give to a friend or famUy
member for Valentine’s Day. No
experience needed. Dress for mess. 0
FREE ACT and SAT Practice
Tests @ the Library
Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Meeting
Upcoming meetings, Tuesdays @
5:00pm: Decem ber 5, January 9,
February 13
Valentine Cards: A Painting
Workshop
Pizza and Paperbacks
Monday, January 22, 7:00-8:00pm
Join the Ifeen Librarian
for a discussion of The
Disappearances by
Emily Murphy, while
munchin' on some
pizza. Please register
in advance, as free copies of the book
will be given to participants to keep. 0
Page to Screen Movie Night:
Valentine Edition
Monday, February 12, 6:30-8:30pm
Watch The Fault in Our Stars by John
Green come alive on the big screen.
Popcorn and drinks will be provided
(and maybe a few candy hearts), and a
copy of the book will be raffled off to one
lucky winner! 0
7
�Children’s Programs
O
All children’s activities, except those designated as “drop-in”, require registration.
Please register in advance in person, online at deerfieldlibrarg org under “Programs”,
or by calling 847-580-8962. Registrationfor all oftheprograms listed here begins on
Wednesday, November 15.
FF
Family Friendly programs with multi-age appeal and group registration option.
In addition to specific programs offered for children with special needs, we are also
happy to make reasonable accommodations so that your child can participate in all our
programs. For more information about programs and services for children with special
needs, please contact Julia Frederick atjfrederick@deerfieldlibrary.org.
Drop-In Activities
Family Time
Saturdays at 10:00am
December 2-February 24
Children with an adult
Come to the Youth Program Room
for a drop-in storytime the whole
family will ei\joy!
Drop-in Storytime
Wednesdays at 10:30am or 1:00pm
January 10,17,24,31, February
7,14
Children with an adult
Ei\joy stories, songs, and fingerplays
in this drop-in storytime for all ages!
Drop-in Crafts
All Aboard: Model Trains @ the Library
Saturday, December 2, 9:00am-3:30pm
All Ages
A treat for kids of ALL ages! This must-see model railroad exhibit includes favorites
like Thomas the Tank Engine and beautiful snow villages. Drop-in.
Create your own Gingerbread House for the Holidays!
Monday December 4, 5:00-8:00pm
All Ages
Bring the whole family, hang out, and have an awesome holiday celebration with your
own gingerbread house creations! We’ll provide all of the materials (and some snacks)
for your amazing culinary craft! Please let us know in advance about any food
allergies or dietary restrictions. Q ff
Monday, December 11 Sunday December 17
Monday, January 8Sunday January 14
Monday, February 12 Sunday, February 18
Stop by the Youth Services
department to make a fun craft!
3-D Design and Print
Wednesday December 6, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 4-6
Come learn all about our 3-D printer! You’ll
design something awesome in Tinkercad and
we’ll print it on our 3-D printer for you to keep
or give as a gift. Q
Kindness Rocks!
Saturday, December 9, 11:00am-12:00pm
Grades 3-6
Come join us as we have fun talking about what gratitude & kindness are and different
ways to show them. We’ll do some crafting, make kindness stones, and create thank you
cards to use in your everyday life! Q
8
LEGO Club
Wednesday, December 20,
3:30-5:30pm
Tuesday, January 30, 4:30-5:30pm
Tuesday, February 27, 4:30-5:30pm
All Ages
Join us for an hour of building and
show off your creativity at LEGO®
Club! Build your own design or
follow the monthly challenge, ff
�HI All children’s activities, except those designated as “drop-in”, require registration. Please register in advance in person, online at
deerfieldlibrary. org under “Programs”, or by calling 847-580-8962. Registration for all of the programs listed begins on
Wednesdag, November 15
Winter Wonderland Dance Jam
LEGO Stop-Motion
Monday, December 18,10:00-10-Mam
Children up to age 6 with an adult
Shake out your sillies and wiggle out
your waggles at this action-packed dance
program! Children will find their rhythm
with shakers while singing along to their
favorite songs, ff
Monday January 15, 2:00-3:30pm
Grades 3-5
Stop! Come learn all about stoiyboarding,
directing, and filmmaking through the
magic of LEGO® stop motion. You’ll work
in teams to create a short film you can
show off to your friends and family. 0
Cozy Crafts and Cocoa
Thursday, December21,1:30-2:30pm
Grades 1-4
As the temperature drops outside, join us
inside as we welcome the first day of win
ter with hot chocolate, crafts, and stories.
Please let us know in advance about any
food allergies or dietary restrictions. Q
True Facts Trivia
Wednesday January 10, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 3-5
Itest your nonfiction know-how and com
pete for prizes in a silly game-show style
competition inspired by informational
books found in the library. 0
Wendy and DB
Satu rday, January 20, 11:00am-12:00pm
All Ages
Wendy and DB are back at it again! Once
the music gets started you’ll be wiggling
out your waggles and shaking your sillies
to these melodic, interactive, and conta
gious songs. 0 FF
Wednesday, January 24, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 3-5
It’s time to escape the winter blues
and put your puzzle solving skills to the
test. You’ll only have one hour to escape
wacky, wicked ways of the wily Jack
Frost. Crack codes, solve ciphers, and
escape the room! 0
Little KiDLS:
Can You Hear That?
KiDLS: What’s That Smell?
Saturday, January 13, 1:00-2:00pm
Grades 1-4
Do you smell that? What’s that noise?
Should we touch it? Learn about the five
senses through experiments and games.
o
Registrationfor allprograms
listed here begins on Wednesday
November 15. Please register in
advance inperson, online at
deerfieldlibraryorg under “Programs”,
or by calling 847-580-8962.
Baby Lapsit Storytime
Escape the Room:
Wacky Winter
Saturday, January 13,11:00-11:45am
Ages 4-6
Can you hear that? Do you smell that?
Should we touch it? Let’s explore our
five senses in ways we never have before!
We’ll have fun identifying and using our
senses through experiments and crafts. 0
Storytimes
Thursdays at 11:00am
January 11,18,25; February 1, 8,15
Ages 0-12 months with an adult
It’s never too early to start reading to
your baby! Join us for stories, rhymes,
and songs for you and baby, plus
social time after the program. 0
Toddler Time
Mondays at 10:00am, 10:30am OR
11:00am
January 8,15,22,29; February 5,12
Ages 1-2 years with an adult
One and two-year-olds with their
caregivers are invited to a special
weekly storytime, including songs and
movement activities designed just
for them, plus social time after the
program. 0
Storytime after Dark
Tuesday, February 6, 6:30-7:00pm
Children up to age 6 with an adult
Join us for some glow-in-the-dark fun,
featuring stories, songs, a craft, and a
dance parly!© ff
Book Bites: What a Disaster!
Wednesday February 7, 4:00-5:00pm
Ages 7-10
Like to read stories about real-life
events? We’ll discuss the book about a
historical disaster, while munchin' on
snacks. Register early, as free copies of
the book will be given to participants.
Please let us know in advance about any
food allergies or restrictions. ©
Preschool Storytime
Tuesdays at 10:30am OR 1:00pm
January 9,16,23, 30; February 6,13
Ages 3-5 years
Three- to five-year-olds have a
program just for them! We’ll listen to
stories, sing songs, and have fun while
building early literacy skills. 0
More Drop-in Storytimes! See page 8
9
�Children’s Programs
K-9 Reading Buddies of the
North Shore
Sensory Programs
Monday, February 12, 6:00-7:00pm
Grades 1-5
Our furry, four-legged friends are back!
Register children for a 15-minute slot
to read to a trained therapy dog. Please
register inperson at the Youth Services
Desk or by calling 847-580-8962. Q
Sensory Stoiytime
Fridays, January 19, February 16
11:00am-12:00pm
All Ages
Join us for an inclusive and inter
active storytime filled with stories,
songs, sensory play, and socializa
tion! Children of all abilities with
their siblings and caregivers are
welcome. Please let us know if any
accommodations are required ff
Meet the Frog Lady
STEAMin’ Up Valentine’s Day
Saturday February 10,1:00-2:00pm
Children ages 5 and up with an adult
What’s the difference between a reptile
and an amphibian? Come find out as The
Frog Lady, Deb Krohn, lets you get up
close and personal with 20 live animals! Q
Wednesday, February 14, 3:304:30pm
Grades 24
There’s more to Valentine’s Day than
cutesy hearts! Learn about the science of
how your heart keeps you going and do
some fun STEAM activities. Q
-str
Sensory Friendly
Family Film
Wednesday January 10, 3:00pm
All Ages
Enjoy the film Sing with the whole
family at the Library! The Library
welcomes families and children of
all abilities to epjoy a movie with the
lights turned up, the sound turned
down, and the option to walk, dance,
and sing, during the movie! (PG, 1 hr.
48 min.) O FF
Registerfor all programs in advance.
Take a World Tour through Art
Two Tuesdays a Month
Ages 4-6: 2:00-2:45pm I Ages 7 and up: 3:004:00pm
Get your passport ready as we travel the world together! We’ll stop at six different
countries to learn about art and culture through projects and stories. You will leave
each program with a finished product. ©
December 5: United States of America
December 19: Mexico
January 9:
Japan
10
January 23: Russia
February 6: India
February 20: Ghana
�Friends of the Library
• Membership Drive: Membership dollars help fund items
for the Library. We can’t do it without your help. Please join
the Friends and help us achieve our goal of increasing our
members. The membership form is included below, and as
noted on the form, you can also join online.
• Treasurer/Board Member Wanted: The Friends are
seeking a resident from Deerfield, Bannockburn, or
Riverwoods with a math or accounting background to serve
on our Board as Treasurer All potential Board Members
will be asked to complete a Board Candidate application,
and attend two Board meetings, after which a vote will be
taken to be elected onto the Board. Treasurer Officer
election will be held in April 2018. This is a volunteer posi
tion. If interested, please leave a message at 847-945-3311,
ext 8895, and our Board President will return your call.
• Book Donations: We are always in need of books for the
Friends Book Store. We accept gently used books (no high
lighted or written-in books, encyclopedias, textbooks, VCR
or cassette tapes, please).
• Books for Holiday Gifts: The Friends’ Used Book Store
has children’s books, cookbooks, travel, etc. for your
holiday shopping. Also, 97% ofour sales go directly to
support programs at the library.
• Meetings: Our remaining meeting for 2017 is November
13. Meetings begin at 7:00pm and are held in the main floor
Board Room. Visitors welcome.
The Friends can be contacted at 847-945-3311 x8895 or at
friends@deerfieldlibraiy.org. Check for updates on our web
page or Facebook.
Thank you to our current members:
Good Friend
Anonymous
Joann Carbine
Ed & Dorothy Collins
Susan Cramer
Paul & Doe Daniels
Karen Grage
Fern Grauer
Barry & Susie Gray
HerbIssacs
Susan Karp
Michelle Kambich
Rita Lubeck
John & Rosemary
McManus
Mark & Lois Nagy
Kyle Nakazawa
Dorothy Parise
Susan Schloss
George & Ruth Zuurbier
Family Friend
Jonathan Burian
Robert Bloom
Amy Falasz-Peterson
Judy Geuder
Howard & Debbie
Handler
Shari & Harvey Herman
Larry & Joshua Krupp
David, Sarah & Molly
Mysel
Petrovic Gayle Family
Bunny & Rob Polovin
Barbara J. Reich
Seth Schriftman & Ashley
Plotnick
Kyle Stone
M.J. Turner, Jr.
Ellen G. Wolff
Dear Friend
Anonymous
Babs & Bob Benton
Lorraine & Barry Clark
Karen & Patrick Dessent
Luisa Ellenbogen &
David Gass
Jill Goldberg
Sue & Bob Gottlieb
Elaine & Frank Haney
Maxine & Larry Kane
Laura & Rick Kempf
Rich & Kathy Koomjian
Richard Kraines
Gerald Lasin
Kathy Johnson & Alex
Liberman
Dan & Diane Mazur
Mary & Richard Oppenheim
Jean Reuther
Jane Riffel
Neil & Lynne Samuels
Lisa & Brian Schurgin
Bill & Janie Seiden
Barbaras Randy Thomas
Merrilee & John Waldron
Maureen Wener
Marty Winn
Jan & John Zobus
Best Friend
Ken & Donna Abosch
Greta & Brian Davison
Dave Grimm
Glynis & David Hirsch
Claudia Katz
Garry & Tammy Katz
Dr. Sandra & Rabbi
Charles Levi
Jordan, Jennifer, Lucas
& Dylan Park
Susan & Richard Roman
Ron & Cheryl Simon
Dallas & Lars-Birger
Sponberg
Louis & Cecilia Stone
Larry & Katie Sullivan
Loyal Friend
Mary Kay (Emmi)
Costello
Partner
Susan Fried
Michael Goldberg
ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
%'i’abWS?
Your annual membership will enhance the materials and programs at our library so that it will better serve you and your family.
I would like to become a member of Friends of the Deerfield Public Library for a year at the following level:
_$15-$29
Good Friend
_$100—$249 Best Friend
_$30—$49 Family Friend
_$250—$499 Loyal Friend
NAME,
_$50—$99 Dear Friend
. $500 + Partner
.ADDRESS.
(List name(s) as should appear in our publications)
PHONE,
E-MAIL,
□ Please check this box if you do not want your name listed in any publication.
PAYMENT OPTIONS: 1) Credit card: deerfieldlibrary.org/friends-of-the-library 2) Checks payable to: Friends of the
Deerfield Public Library, 920 Waukegan Rd. Deerfield, IL 60015
The Friends are a 501(c) (3) nonprofit group. Contributions may be deductible under IRS regulations.
Does your company have a matching gift program?
11
�Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Important Library Numbers
• Telephone: 847-945-3311
• Library home page and catalog:
www.deerfleldlibraiy.org
• To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibrary.org
fen
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
Upcoming Holiday Closings and Late Openings
THE LIBRARY WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY:
Thursday, November23 -Thanksgiving
Sunday, December 24 - Christmas Eve
Monday, December 25 - Christmas Day
Sunday, December 31 - New Year's Eve
Monday, January 1
- New Year's Day
Monday, February 19 - President's Day
Deerfield Public library
Amy Falasz-Peterson, Library Director
847-580-8901
afalaszpeterson@deerfieldlibraiy.org
Library BoardMembers value
your opinions!
Maureen Wener, President
847-530-8408
wenerm@yahoo.com
Ken Abosch, Secretary
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Seth Schriftman.,Tre
847-770-2 530
sethschriftman@gmail.com
Luisa Ellenbogen
312-543-7258
rmgshgmom@yahoo. com
Mike Goldberg
847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Howard Handler
312-925-2597
hhandler@deerfieldlibraiy.org
Kyle Stone
248-762-1309
kyle.evan.stone@gmail.com
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs: 9:00am-9:00pm
Friday:
9:00am-6:00pm
Saturday:
9:00am-5:00pm
Sunday:
1:00pm-5:00pm
THE LIBRARY WILL CLOSE AT 3 PM:
Wednesday, November 22
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 10AM:
January 23
February 27
Couldn’t Have Done it
Without You!
A bounty of thanks to our new neighbor,
Mariano’s Bannockburn, for the generous
$1,000 contribution to the Library.
Thanks to the following publishers for
providing materials for our Homeschool
Parents’ Night Out: Lee & Low Books,
Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group,
Sourcebooks, and Disney/Hyperion.
Thank you to all of our STAR Volunteers
who assisted with Youth programs this fall;
your help was much appreciated!
Donate at the Library
Collection bins are located behind the
desk at the Library’s front entrance
through December 23.
Drop off new, unwrapped toys for this
initiative of the U.S. Marines and the
Deerfield Police. All types of toys for all
ages are accepted, and remember that
books make great gifts!
The Deerfield Rotary wants the “Coat Off
Your Back” for PADS Lake County and
other area organizations.
ALL ABOARD!
Model Trains @ the Library
Saturday, December 2, 9:00am -3:30pm
A treat for ALL ages!
H W © ® Yo»«
�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Winter 2017-18
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 34, No. 3
Volume numbers discontinued after this issue
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
12/2017
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.126
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
December 2017 - February 2018
@Properties
1933 World's Fair
3D Printers
3D Printing
Academy Awards
Al Capone
Alex Liberman
All the Ugly and Wonderful Things
Amazon Kindle eReaders
American College Test (ACT)
American Heart Month
Amy Falasz-Peterson
Anna Macanowicz
Ashley Plotnick
Babs Benton
Bannockburn Illinois
Barb Sugden
Barbara Reich
Barbara Thomas
Barry Clark
Barry Gray
Beatrize at Dinner
Behold the Dreamers
Ben Whisenhunt
Bob Benton
Bob Gottlieb
Bora Bora
Boston Blackies
Brian Davison
Brian Schurgin
Bryn Greenwood
Bunny Polovin
Captain Bligh
Cecelia Stone
Charles Levi
Cheryl Simon
Chicago Outfit
Claudia A. Katz
Clue
College of DuPage
Cristina Henriquez
Dallas Sponberg
Dan Mazur
Dave Grimm
Dave Sherman
David Gass
David Hirsch
David Mysel
Dear White People
Deb Krohn
Debbie Handler
Deerfield Golf Club
Deerfield High School
Deerfield High School Chamber Orchestra
Deerfield High School Finals Week
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library 1000 Books Before Kindergarten
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Baby Garden
Deerfield Public Library Blind Date with a Book
Deerfield Public Library Board Games
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Contests
Deerfield Public Library Digital Media Lab
Deerfield Public Library Discovery Kits
Deerfield Public Library Donations
Deerfield Public Library Dungeons and Dragons
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Extended Hours
Deerfield Public Library Giving Tree
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Kids in Deerfield Love Science (KiDLS)
Deerfield Public Library Library of Things
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Music Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Public Library Access and Community for Everyone (PLACE)
Deerfield Public Library Read Without Boundaries
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Sensory Friendly Programs
Deerfield Public Library Special Needs Programming
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Study Rooms
Deerfield Public Library Technology Classes
Deerfield Public Library Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Winter Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Rotary Club Coat Collection
Deerfield Winter Celebration
Designs in Context
Diane Mazur
Disney Hyperion
Doe Daniels
Donna Abosch
Dorothy Collins
Dorothy Parise
Dungeons and Dragons
Dylan Parker
Ed Collins
Elaine Haney
Ellen G. Wolf
Emily Murphy
Emily Sherman
Fern Grauer
Foreign Policy Association
Foreign Policy Association Great Decisions Program
Frank Haney
French Polynesia
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Board
Garry Katz
George W. Zuurbier
Gerald Lasin
Ghana
Glynis Hirsch
Google Apps
Google Docs
Google Sheets
Google Slides
Grammys
Great Depression
Greta Davison
Harvey Herman
Herb Isaacs
Hour of Code
Howard Handler
Imbolo Mbue
India
iPads
Jan Zobus
Jane Riffel
Jane Seiden
Japan
Jean Reuther
Jennie Michalik
Jennifer Parker
Jill Goldberg
Joann Carbine
John Green
John McManus
John Waldron
John Zobus
Jonathan Burian
Jordan Parker
Joshua Krupp
Judy Geuder
Julia Frederick
Karen Dessent
Karen Grage
Kathy Johnson
Kathy Koomjian
Katie Sullivan
Kenan Abosch
Kim Blum
Kyle Nakazawa
Kyle Stone
Lake County PADS Homeless Shelter
Larry Kane
Larry Krupp
Larry Sullivan
Lars Birger Sponberg
Laura Kempf
Lee and Low Books
LEGO
Libby by Overdrive
Lisa Schurgin
Lois Nagy
Lorraine Clark
Louis Stone
Lucas Parker
Luisa Ellenbogen
Lynne Samuels
M.J. Turner Jr.
Macmillan Children's Publishing Group
Magical Mystery Tour
Mariano's Bannockburn
Mark Nagy
Marty Winn
Mary Kay (Emmi) Costello
Mary Oppenheim
Maureen Wener
Maxine Kane
Merrilee Waldron
Mexico
Michael K. Goldberg
Michelle Kambich
Molly Mysel
Monopoly
Moorea
My Antonia
National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific
Neil Samuels
Nina Varma Michael
North Central O-Gaugers Model Railroad Club
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
Pandemic
Patrick Dessent
Paul Daniels
Paul Gaugin
Pearl Harbor Day
Petrovic Gayle
Pinkalicious Series
Prohibition Era
Rachel Sherman
Randy Thomas
Registered Dietician
Rich Koomjian
Richard Kraines
Richard Oppenheim
Richard Roman
Rick Kempf
Rita Lubeck
Riverwoods Illinois
Rob Polovin
Robert Bloom
Robert Mueller
Ron Vargason
Ronald Simon
Rosemary McManus
Russia
Russian American Relations
Ruth C. Zuurbier
Sachs Recreation Center
Sandra Levi
Sarah Mysel
Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
Seth Schriftman
Settlers of Catan
Shari Herman
Sourcebooks
Sue Behringer
Sue Gottlieb
Susan Cramer
Susan Fried
Susan Karp
Susan Maddox
Susan Roman
Susan Schloss
Susie Gray
Swift Coding Language
Tahiti
Tamara Katz
Ten Little Ladybugs
The Book of Unknown Americans
The Butler
The Disappearances
The Fault in Our Stars
The Frog Lady
The Marquesas
The Very Hungry Caterpillar
Thomas Jester
Thomas the Tank Engine
Tinkercad
United States Marine Corps Toys for Tots
United States of America
Virtual Reality Headsets
Vladimir Putin
Warehouse Eatery
Wendy and DB
Willa Cather
William Hazelgrove
William S. Seiden
World War II
WXRT
WXRT Breakfast with the Beatles
Zach Sherman
-
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A name given to the resource
Deerfield Integration Case Records
Subject
The topic of the resource
American Civil Rights Movement
Deerfield, Illinois
Integration in the North
Racial Integration
Racial Segregation
Description
An account of the resource
The records related to the Deerfield Integration Case of 1959 include books, DVDs, a VHS tape, newspaper clippings, correspondence, and meeting minutes.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Bulk Dates 1959-1968
Date Range 1955-2018
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Bob Gand Papers
Language
A language of the resource
English
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DPL.0001
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A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
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A name given to the resource
Overcoming Possible Objections Raised in Question C 1
Description
An account of the resource
FAQ
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
North Shore Summer Project
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
North Shore Summer Project
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0001.028.002
Africa
African Civilization
Blockbusting
Ghana
Human Rights
Interracial Marriage
Luigi Laurenti
Mali
North Shore
North Shore Summer Project
Property Rights
Property Values
Property Values and Race
Racial Restrictive Covenants
Restrictive Covenant
Songhai
United States Supreme Court
Zanabaluwa
Zulu
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The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
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A name given to the resource
Deerfield Integration Case Records
Subject
The topic of the resource
American Civil Rights Movement
Deerfield, Illinois
Integration in the North
Racial Integration
Racial Segregation
Description
An account of the resource
The records related to the Deerfield Integration Case of 1959 include books, DVDs, a VHS tape, newspaper clippings, correspondence, and meeting minutes.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
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A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
Bulk Dates 1959-1968
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Bob Gand Papers
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A language of the resource
English
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DPL.0001
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A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Some of My Best Neighbors are Negroes
Description
An account of the resource
Magazine Article
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Saunders, Frances W.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Presbyterian Life
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
04/01/1960
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Milwaukee Public Library
Library of Congress
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0001.021.003
Benjamin J. Anderson
Bill Robertson
Boy Scouts of America
Brotherly Love
Christianity
Concord Park Subdivision
Deerfield Integration
District of Columbia
English
Episcopal Church
Equal Opportunity in Housing
Ethical Culture
First Presbyterian Church
Frances W. Saunders
French
George E. Otto
Ghana
Greenbelt Knoll Subdivision
Human Relations
Human Rights
Integrated Neighborhoods and Developments
John R. Bodo
Judaism
Magazine Article
Maplecrest Subdivision
Methodist Church
Modern Community Developers Inc.
Modern Community Developers Inc. Board of Directors
Morris Milgram
Mrs. Benjamin J. Anderson
National Broadcasting Company (NBC)
Neighborhood Integration
Open Occupancy Housing
Open Occupancy Housing Policy
Operation Neighborliness
Panic Selling
Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Presbyterian Church in the United States of America
Presbyterian Life
Princeton New Jersey
Princeton New Jersey Housing Group
Property Values
Property Values and Race
Protestantism
Quakers
Religious Response to Integration
Resale Agreements
Roman Catholic Church
San Francisco California
San Francisco Seminary
The Housing Group
Unitarian Church
Witherspoon Presbyterian Church