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  • Hoopeston book club started in 1895

    Danville Commercial News, IL
    July 20 2008



    Hoopeston book club started in 1895

    Minutes record group's tumultuous meetings

    BY ANNA HERKAMP

    HOOPESTON ' The information below is taken from the Hoopeston Public
    Library archive's 1974 history of the Mary Hartwell Catherwood
    Club. It is compiled from histories written by Frances Trego,
    Elizabeth Bell and Dorothy Shuler.

    The idea for the Mary Hartwell Catherwood club came to its founding
    president, Frances Trego, one rainy afternoon in 1895. Trego was the
    wife of Hoopeston Mayor A.H. Trego.

    In her 1897 history of the club, she wrote, `One exceedingly stormy
    day as I sat sewing by a window, it broke upon my mind suddenly, like
    an inspiration, that a society which would call immediate neighbors
    together once a week for friendly visit and interchange of thought
    would be a good thing.'

    The club was founded with Catherwood, Trego and Anna Chace in January
    1895.

    Most of the members lived in the 300 and 400 blocks of East Penn and
    the 300 block of Fourth Street. Catherwood lived at 412 E. Penn and
    later 415 E. Penn. The gathering of friends and neighbors was meant to
    be casual.

    `I thought of it as an entirely informal affair, where we could bring
    our thimbles and work; fancy work, stocking-mending or whatever, while
    one could read to us part of the time as we kept our fingers busy,'
    Trego wrote.

    But the club grew in popularity ' and sometimes strife.

    The club organized and elected officers, naming the club after its
    `noted townswoman.' For a while the meetings, which took place every
    Monday afternoon, were pleasant.

    `Usually some member read to us from some interesting story while the
    most of us plied our needles,' Trego said.

    Eventually, the club began holding meetings to include the husbands of
    the club members every six weeks. The club also had its own `program
    committee' which supplied entertainment. Members or invited community
    sang or recited poetry or short essays. One essay written by one
    member's husband was called `Hoopeston in the Year 2000.'

    At one club meeting, members voted on names for one member's newborn
    child, Donald Hamilton.

    The club also took up charitable causes, including the Danville
    Children's Home and the `oppressed Armenians' ' for whom the club
    raised $10 one year.

    But the greatest contribution the club made was the Hoopeston library,
    whose original building is still in use today. The club began
    discussing the idea in January 1897. Concerts and various benefits
    were staged to raise funds for the free library, which began in a room
    of city hall and was then located at North and Seminary streets.

    A librarian was hired for a salary of $2 per week. Eventually, the
    committee, which included Catherwood, helped secure funds from Andrew
    Carnegie, who initially donated $3,000, but increased the sum to
    $12,000 in later years. The building, still open today, was opened
    Jan. 1, 1905.

    For all the good the club did, the members weren't without their own
    bouts of in-fighting. Sometimes people were late to meetings, and so
    business sessions couldn't begin at 2:30 p.m. sharp. A secretary wrote
    in anger, `Something must be done!'

    Business sessions were pushed back to 3 p.m., but tardiness
    persisted. The club began imposing fines for anyone who showed up
    late.

    According to the library's history archive, a major source of
    contention was the hostesses' choice refreshments.

    `One lady served not only crackers and tea, but coffee; another one
    provided doughnuts; still another went so far as to serve biscuits and
    butter. Then strawberries and cream were offered and the next hostess
    came up with strawberries and cream AND sandwiches AND cake,' the
    history documented.

    `At the next meeting it was voted that refreshments be limited to four
    solids. An amendment was passed that two kinds of cake be classed as
    one. It was then voted that the hostess should be fined 10 cents for
    each additional dish ¦'

    The food controversy didn't end there.

    The history also documents multiple-course meals catered by the
    husbands with 27 kinds of food including oyster cocktails, roast
    turkey, Roquefort cheese and blue fish pique.

    The minutes weren't without humorous commentary on the club's antics.

    `So many proposals about entertainment for the library were tabled
    that the table has our sympathy,' reads one entry.

    Another described the weariness members seemed to be experiencing
    about their complicated entertaining.

    `When the president announced her intention of appointing a committee
    for the next party, the ladies at once seemed to be enjoying the view
    out the window or looking for flies on the ceiling.'

    http://www.commercial-news.com/local/lo cal_story_201224246.html
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