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Midway Village Museum Leader David Byrnes To Retire

Midway Village Museum Leader David Byrnes To Retire
Midway Village Museum

Midway Village Museum

Posted On: January 31, 2020

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Following two decades of leading Midway Village Museum, David Byrnes is announcing his retirement from the history museum and will step down in December, 2020. Byrnes has had a long career of leadership at the museum.

 

“David’s contributions extend beyond managing a large campus institution,” said Karl Jacobs, a long-time Board Member, and former President of Rock Valley College. “He brought to us a deep understanding of what the past means to a community. With the rapidity of change today the need of a leader such as David Byrnes is more evident in defining our future.”

 

Byrnes, who started with Midway Village Museum in 1999, could see what Midway Village Museum could be and worked to create the best history museum in the area. He grew the World War II Days special event to become one of the largest military re-enactments of its kind in the country. The event relates the importance of World War II to Rockford history. During his 21-year tenure, he established other outstanding programs, but also kept up with the times and deleted programs that were not as successful.

 

Byrnes hired professional, competent staff who completely organized and cataloged the extensive collection of the museum and has begun the process of digitizing it. The museum has more than 150,000 artifacts all related to Rockford history and one of the largest and most comprehensive textile collections in the Northern Illinois region. Over time, Midway Village Museum has won more than 25 local, state and national awards for programs and services.

 

“All non-profit organizations have financial restrictions,” said Nancy Bloomstrand, who was on the board at the time David began his career at the museum and subsequently volunteered on the board for more than 25 years. “David has worked hard to make the museum as financially stable as possible with donations, grants, endowments as well as membership and fees for events.”

 

Byrnes also proposed an exhibit to build on the diversity of the community, called “Many People, One Community” that is an outstanding informative and interactive exhibit. With 21 buildings on the property, there are many different opportunities for a variety of organizations, families and businesses to learn about the Rockford area. He has created a large rental department for weddings and family and business events. He strategically moved the marketing and development areas forward creating formalized professionally-managed programs in those areas.

 

“We have been incredibly fortunate to have David Byrnes lead Midway Village Museum for the past 21 years,” said Britta Severin Peterson, Chair of the Board of Directors for the museum. “We wish David the best as he moves into his well-deserved retirement. Midway Village is actively searching for a new Executive Director who can fill his shoes.”

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Soar Awards reaches an even higher level

Soar Awards reaches an even higher level

It's not as if the Soar Awards are unknown in Rockford, it's more that perhaps the show is not celebrated enough.Started in 2016 in front of a few hundred people at the Tebala Event Center, the Soar Awards has amassed streams in the billions and is now the second biggest awards show in gospel music, annually drawing the biggest names in the genre to Rockford.As its reputation has grown so has the demand for space. After being held the past two years at the historic Coronado Performing Arts Center, this year's show on Feb. 3 beginning at 6 p.m. will be held at the Hard Rock Live at the Hard Rock Casino Rockford.Unlike most awards shows, the Soar Awards strive to honor specific artists each year for their impact on gospel music rather than focus on one-year achievements.On Monday the show will honor James Hall of New York, an international choirmaster and professor best known for his work in music and choir direction, and Percy Gray Jr., who organized the Praise II and Chicago Mass Choirs and has been nominated for three Grammy Awards in his career.The Monday night celebration also will have a heavy Rockford flavor. The Soar Awards also will celebrate Rockford natives Kimberla Lawson Roby, Fred VanVleet and Big Jim Wright. * Roby is perhaps Rockford's best selling author. She's published 28 books, the most recent in 2022, and her fans have bought more than 3 million copies.* VanVleet is perhaps Rockford's greatest athlete. He's played in the NBA since 2017, winning an NBA championship in 2019 with the Toronto Raptors and playing the NBA All-Star Game in 2022.* Big Jim Wright was an American musician, composer, songwriter, film score and record producer. A member of the vocal and instrumental ensemble Sounds of Blackness, Wright was a collaborator of production duo Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. Wright, who died in 2018, worked with some of the biggest names in entertainment, including Aretha Franklin, Usher, Mariah Carey and Mary J. Blige.The show is put on by Soar Radio (soarradio.com), which was launched in 2014 by James Francis as a 24-hour streaming Internet station featuring gospel and inspirational music. By 2017, Soar Radio was so well respected that it became the first gospel internet station added to the Nielsen Ratings.Now in its 11th year, Soar Radio continues to deliver great music to its audience as well as a growing roster of shows, including Francis himself doing a morning show Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

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Prolific Rockford writer drops new season on Netflix

Prolific Rockford writer drops new season on Netflix

Shawn Ryan has another hit on his hands.This week, season two of "The Night Agent" dropped on Netflix. It is an action thriller that was based on the 2019 New York Times bestseller by author Matthew Quirk. When it debuted in March 2023, it became the third-most-viewed debuting series on Netflix within its first four days and was renewed for a second season within a week.Ryan is the showrunner for "The Night Agent." A showrunner is the person who has overall creative authority and management responsibility for a television program.Ryan is a Keith School grad who moved to Hollywood in 1988 to pursue a writing career. He did odd jobs until first finding success as a writer with "Nash Bridges." He finally struck it big when he created "The Shield" from 2002-2008. Since then, he's created or produced "The Unit," "Lie To Me," "Timeless" and "S.W.A.T.," which launched in 2017 and is still on the air.All of these shows are top-notch. If you look at the Rotten Tomatoes review site, you will see that every one of these series has an audience score of 67 or higher. "The Shield" remains one of the highest-regarded series with an audience score of 96. Just this week, a poll by Watch and Listen magazine ranked "The Shield" as the No. 1 TV series of all time, topping shows such as "Seinfeld" (No. 2) and "Friends" (No. 4).The "Night Agent" has an audience score of 78 so far and Netflix already has picked it up for a third season. So Rockford's hitmaker will be busy for the foreseeable future. If you subscribe to Netflix, and more than 280 million do worldwide, check out the series.

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Well Done Rockford!

Well Done Rockford!

One of the great things about Rockford is how accepting the city and its residents are towards all people.That was illustrated at the end of November when Rockford earned a perfect 100/100 on the Human Rights Campaign's Municipal Equality Index scorecard, which grades cities on their policies towards gay and lesbian residents.It's not a new thing. This is the third year in a row that Rockford earned a perfect score.“The MEI Scorecard serves as a vital benchmark, offering cities a way to track their progress and ensure accountability,” Mayor Tom McNamara said in a news release. “I’m incredibly proud that we’ve once again achieved a perfect score. This accomplishment reflects our unwavering commitment to fostering inclusivity for our employees, residents and the entire community.”It's not just a number. The Human Rights Campaign pointed to concrete policies. The city has adopted a non-discrimination ordinance for city contractors, established a Community Relations Commission to address discrimination, equity and equality issues, created LGBTQIA+ liasons for both the city and Rockford Police Department, and included transgender-inclusive healthcare benefits.Rockford truly is a city for all.

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In 2025 I'm looking forward too...

In 2025 I'm looking forward too...

As we dive into the new year 🎉 we want to know: What are you most looking forward to in 2025? Vote below and let’s kick off the year with some local love! 💖

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What would you put in a Rockford 2024 Time Capsule?

What would you put in a Rockford 2024 Time Capsule?

A popular thing to do in the final week of the year is to try to put the past 12 months into some kind of perspective.You will see plenty of top 10 lists over the next several days. We’re proposing a different question. If you were burying a time capsule what items would you put in it that would tell the person opening it that it came from Rockford in 2024?I can think of three for sure.Hard Rock Casino Poker ChipsAt the end of August, the long-awaited Hard Rock Casino Rockford opened. The 175,000-square-foot venue features nearly 1,300 slot machines, 50 table games, a poker room with six tables, a retail sports book, seven restaurants, and a 1,600-seat Hard Rock Live entertainment venue. Joan Jett and the Blackhearts and country star Brad Paisley were among the first groups to perform in Rockford because of the new venue.Keys to a new houseIn April, the Wall Street Journal listed Rockford as the hottest housing market in the United States in a quarterly ranking. Rockford was the only Illinois city in the top 50. Peoria was next highest at No. 59.In 2023, the local real estate market set records for the highest annual average sale price and the highest average sale price for any month …. And the gains continued for most of 2024.The announcement was a remarkable turnaround for Rockford considering that in 2013 as much of the country was on its way to recovering from the Great Recession Rockford was No. 1 in the country in “underwater mortgages.” Just 11 years ago, Rockford had the highest percentage of homeowners who owed more on their mortgage than what their home was worth.A book from the Rockford Public LibraryWe’d have to buy the book - we wouldn’t want library investigator Joe Bookman to come after us - but something from the Rockford Public Library would have to be in the time capsule. In June, a new 66,000-square-foot, three-story library on the riverfront at 215 N. Wyman St. opened to the public for the first time.The $39 million project took nearly three years to complete.Of course, a time capsule isn’t limited to just three things. What else from 2024 would you put in a Rockford time capsule?

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Some good news to report in battle with opioid addiction

Some good news to report in battle with opioid addiction

The third annual Blue Christmas service will have a mix of emotions on Dec. 23.The 10 a.m. service at Brooke Road UMC & Community Center, 1404 Brooke Rd., gives families who lost loved ones to opioid overdose a chance to remember and grieve together. This Blue Christmas, though, will also have a message of hope. For the first time in decades, public health data shows that drug overdose deaths are declining. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, drug overdose deaths are expected to decline by more than 10% this year.The drop in Winnebago County is even more striking. There were 149 drug overdose deaths in 2023 and there have been just 63 so far this year with two weeks to go. That's a decline of more than 55%.Most experts agree that the widespread distribution of naloxone or Narcan is making a real difference. Narcan is an over-the-counter drug that treats opioid overdose by blocking opioid receptors in the body. It can be administered by injection or as a nasal spray.The Winnebago County Health Department offers free Narcan training and, since October 2022, Rockford has had several vending machines in the city give out free Narcan kits. On average, more than 200 kits are claimed monthly.While it's clear that overdose deaths are declining, it's not clear yet if drug use is falling. Still, it's a small victory worth celebrating.

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Ambrose Santa has made a few stops!

Ambrose Santa has made a few stops!

Much like the actual year that Santa Claus was born - or created - isn't really clear, the year that the fiberglass Santa that sits outside of Ambrose Christmas Store first started waving to Rockford is also unclear.Its original home was Goldblatt's Department Store at 616 Hollister Ave., in the Rockford Plaza Shopping Center, which is now home to the Stockholm Inn, among others. Goldblatt's was a department store chain that started in Chicago and by 1956, when it opened in Rockford, had more than 20 stores across several states.Sometime in the late 1950s, early 1960s, Goldblatt's bought the two-piece fiberglass Santa that it would mount on a roof facing its Charles Street parking lot. Unfortunately, by the time the Santa began appearing annually in Rockford, Goldblatt's was past its peak. Retailers such as Kmart and Sears were cutting into its profits. In 1981, Goldblatt's in Rockford closed when the company declared bankruptcy.That's when the Charles Street Santa became a traveling Santa. William Lidster of Pecatonica went to the liquidation and bought Santa. For the next 16 years, Santa would bounce around. Some years it was put on display at Lidster's business, Advanced Window Systems on Windsor Road in Loves Park, and other times sitting outside the Lidster's home on Illinois Route 70 west of Rockford. Occasionally, the Lidsters would display Santa as part of the Festival of Lights at Sinnissippi Park.In 1997, the Goldblatt's Santa found a permanent home. The Lidsters reached out to Ambrose Christmas Store in Loves Park to see if there was interest and a deal was quickly reached. Now, for many people in Rockford, Loves Park, and Machesney Park, the first real sign of Christmas is when the Ambrose Santa is brought out of storage and put on display.It's a perfect marriage because Ambrose is only slightly younger than Santa. Ambrose opened in 1969 and is on its second generation of family ownership. Once you pull into the parking lot, give Santa a wave and head inside, you find more than 150 Christmas trees on display, specialty and novelty Christmas lights, collectibles, custom-decorated wreaths, and thousands and thousands of ornaments.An annual trip to Ambrose is a family tradition all its own.

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Rockford Archaeologist Played a Role in King Tut’s Tomb Discovery

Rockford Archaeologist Played a Role in King Tut’s Tomb Discovery

On November 4th, 2024, the world celebrated the 102nd anniversary of the first archaeologists to enter King Tutankhamun’s tomb and Rockford native Dr. James Breasted was part of the party.British archaeologists Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon were the first two to enter King Tut’s tomb in more than 3,000 years, discovering a sealed burial chamber completely intact with a collection of several thousand priceless objects, including the gold coffin containing the mummy of the teenage king.Breasted, who was a nationally renowned archaeologist, was right behind them. He aided in the opening and translated the tomb’s runes.Breasted was born in Rockford in 1865 and went to local schools before graduating from North Central College, earning a master’s degree from Yale and a doctorate from the University of Berlin, where he became the first American to earn a PhD in Egyptology.His academic accomplishments are long, including becoming the first director of the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago, publishing dozens of articles and several books on archaeology, and being the first to compile a book on Egyptian hieroglyphics.He was so well regarded in his profession that in 1985 the American Historical Association created the James Henry Breasted Prize which is awarded annually to a book in English that covers any period of history prior to 1000 AD. Breasted died in 1935 and is buried at Greenwood Cemetery where his headstone simply has his name and the description “historian and archaeologist.”

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Best Hot Chocolate In the 815

Best Hot Chocolate In the 815

It's that time of year when nothing warms the soul quite like a rich, creamy cup of hot chocolate. We're on the hunt for the best hot chocolate in Rockford!Who’s got the most decadent, marshmallow-topped masterpiece in town? Vote for your favorite and let us know where you’re sipping on the ultimate hot chocolate this season!

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Seeds of Rockford Promise ready to bloom

Seeds of Rockford Promise ready to bloom

The City of Rockford this month sent a very strong message - it is investing long-term in the next generation of leaders. This month, the city announced that it would increase its annual $1.5 million commitment to Rockford Promise to $2.1 million going forward helping the non-profit organization expand the number of students it can help go to Rockford University. Rockford Promise is a scholarship program that has been helping Rockford Public Schools graduates with GPAs above 3.0 go to RU, Rock Valley College since 2015, Northern Illinois University since 2021 and, beginning this spring, Saint Anthony College of Nursing. The money is coming from a portion of the proceeds generated by the Hard Rock Casino. Whether you are for or against gambling, there's no denying that the money being generated by the casino for Rockford Promise is life changing for the students and eventually for the city of Rockford. Rockford Promise was born in 2006 after a group of locals learned about the Kalamazoo Promise. In that Michigan city, a group of wealthy families) pooled their resources to create a scholarship program that allowed every single graduate of Kalamazoo Public Schools to go to college in Michigan tuition free. There are now more than 400 Promise programs around the U.S. From 2007 to 2015, Rockford Promise raised money and gave partial scholarships to dozens of students. Feeling that that just wasn't moving the needle enough, the group reorganized to raise money to give students tuition until they got their degrees at Rockford University and Rock Valley College. Rockford Promise restarted small. In 2016-2017, the group started with two RU students and three RVC students. In 2017-2018, that grew to four at RU and 10 at RVC. By 2020-2021, the group was supporting 18 at RU and 61 at RVC. In 2021-2022, Rockford Mayor Tom McNamara kicked the effort into fifth gear by pledging to funnel $1.5 million of casino revenues annually for Rockford Promise students to go to NIU. This year, there are 451 students currently attending college on a Rockford Promise scholarship. About two-thirds of these are first-generation college students who would have been unlikely to have been able to afford college without the help. Already, Rockford Promise has 107 proud graduates to its credit and that list is going to grow rapidly. Two of the 98 students who were part of the first NIU cohort in 2021-2022 have graduated early, the rest are seniors this year. The addition of NIU was game-changing for Rockford Promise, but that choice is not for everyone. The Rockford Promise scholarship does not cover room and board and some students have extensive home responsibilities that make moving to DeKalb or commuting difficult or impossible. The additional money announced by the city this month will vastly increase the number of students who can stay close to home at RU. It's also a way to invest in the city by making sure RU has a steady stream of local students attending. RU has hundreds of local employees who live in Rockford. It's essentially doubling the impact. "Since 2016, we have welcomed Rockford Promise Scholars, who have demonstrated exceptional dedication and academic success, reflected in their 92% graduation rate, RU President Patricia Lynott said in the monthly Rockford Promise email newsletter. "Last year alone, we received over 90 applications from local students eager to pursue their studies at Rockford University through Rockford Promise. We are proud to deepen this relationship and look forward to seeing our community grow stronger through this initiative." It's also a politically savvy move by the mayor. Rockford Promise was founded specifically to help Rockford Public Schools students afford college and to make the district an attraction to families moving to the area or business owners looking to relocate here. College costs are a national concern. If you are trying to decide where to move, a district that has a Promise program that can help your child go to college tuition free is a pretty good recruiting tool. There were some detractors, though, who felt like Rockford Promise should be open to both public and private school students. The mayor listened. The additional $600,000 for Rockford University scholarships will be available to any outstanding high school graduate from the city of Rockford. RockfordBuzz likes to celebrate all things good about the city of Rockford. The city of Rockford helping kids go to college, many of which will return and be the leaders of the next few decades, is about as good as it gets. To learn more about Rockford Promise or to apply for a scholarship, go to https://rockfordpromise.org/apply-scholarship/.

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