ILLINOIS 4-H
2018-19 ANNUAL REPORT
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL, CONSUMER & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
4-H YOUTH AFFILIATIONS*
GROWTH MINORITY HISPANIC
-
grade K 2
grade 3 5
grade 6—8
grade 9 12
Post or Not in School
*YOUTH IN MULTIPLE PROGRAMS MAY BE COUNTED MORE THAN ONCE
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UNDER 10,000 10,00050,000 OVER 50,000
UNDER 10,000 10,000
50,000
FARM
FARM
4-H YOUTH PARTICIPANTS*
4-H CLUB MEMBERS*
4-H CLUB VOLUNTEERS
is empowering and preparing Illinois youth for success. I invite you to read this year’s stories of young people inspired to lead change and serve others in their communities.
. They are the foundations on which 4-H club, educational program, and outreach effort is based in Illinois 4-H. We rely on the generous support of our donors, volunteers, and partners. Thank you for answering the call to serve with your gifts, your time, and your talents.
University of Illinois Extension Assistant Dean and Director, Illinois 4-H
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TO TO
...........4 ..........................................10 .......................................................... 18 ..................22 ....28 ...................................................................32 ................ 38 .......................................... 42 ..................................... 46 ............................................ 48 .................................... 54 ............................. 66
4-H youth know their can make a big impact on and are doing their part to .
4-H YOUTH TO EXPAND LANDSCAPE BIODIVERSITY.
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ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP
There’s a buzz in Illinois 4-H, a buzz made by and the 4-H members trying to . At first thought, it might seem strange to want to save the creatures responsible for stinging us on a summer day, but through the
, youth now know one out of every three bites of food we take is only made possible through the work of pollinators. Without them, the produce aisle at the grocery store would be bare. More than 90% of all the world’s flowering plants require pollinators.
Jackie Joyner-Kersee (center, top photo) has joined Illinois 4-H and the National 4-H Council in promoting . She worked with 4-H participants from Champaign County schools at 4-H Memorial Camp to establish a pollinator-friendly garden.
Youth know how to manage landscapes to increase biodiversity that benefits monarchs, pollinators, and other wildlife.
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, our plates would be empty
| Olympic legend Jackie JoynerKersee joined Franklin Middle School youth to start pollinator-friendly plants at 4-H Memorial Camp. Photos: Judy Mae Bingman.
4-H projects focus on environmental stewardship.
With the help of Sinsinawa Mound and the Coffey Bee Ranch, 4-H members in Jo Daviess County are creating havens for bees. The youth check for mites, separate and purify honey, and keep hives healthy. Photo: Angela Miller.
Rock Island and Mercer County 4-H citizen scientists are making barred owl nest boxes. They are testing which box design (with or without a roof) owls prefer. The members built the boxes, then placed them about 20 meters apart in owl habitats. Illinois 4-H hopes to have 40 sets of boxes around the state to share with Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Photo: Becky Buckrop.
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Timmerman.
the right lure to use to catch bass.
how to handle fish if you’re just fishing for fun.
how to pinch the barb so it doesn’t hurt the fish when I’m releasing him.
how to help others catch fish alongside me.
100% of participants said they now know why it’s important to protect natural resources, such as fish and waterways.
85% of participants say they now want to do more to take care of the environment in their community.
Students from Champaign County are learning about aquatic ecosystems by using a pond-study net to scoop out aquatic organisms, such as dragonfly nymphs, water boatman, fairy shrimp, tadpoles, crawfish, and damselflies, from the bottom of the lake at 4-H Memorial Camp. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
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4-H youth grow food to help sustain the wildlife of the park while adding to the ecosystem of the garden.
4-H YOUTH
HABITATS AND INSPIRE OTHERS TO ENJOY NATURE.
WILDLIFE
Photo: Anita Wilkinson.
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while tending the 4-H Great Learning Garden
May Bach leads the where the 4-H members grow produce to feed . Their efforts last year yielded 350 pounds, which provided diverse diets for the wildlife. Produce includes sweet potatoes, pumpkins, grapes, herbs, strawberries, blueberries, flowers, zucchini, and gourds.
4-H members create art pieces for the garden to create a welcoming environment to park visitors. Bowling balls are painted to look like lady bugs, bricks are painted featuring the names of children’s books, and a butterfly bench allows visitors a place to enjoy the garden features.
In 2020, the club will apply the Hugelkulter method of planting in , then covering them with soil.
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4-H YOUTH TO FEED THE WORLD’S GROWING POPULATION.
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Photo: Emily Smith.
ANIMAL SCIENCE
at state dairy quiz bowl contest.
Whether doing chores or riding in the car, 11-year-old Drew Lueking of Centralia and his dad, Doug, rattle through dairy facts in preparation for the Illinois Doug, a Holstein breeder and ag teacher, serves as volunteer leader for Drew and other 4 members in Clinton and Bond counties.
. Drew was part of the winning team in the junior division. Although winning is good, Drew’s mother, Sheila, says it’s more important that young people are able to especially as financial struggles hit independent dairy farmers. “As farm numbers diminish, the people who are left have to be exceptional in their knowledge of the industry.”
Conner Erbsen, Carroll County 4-H alum, studies agronomy and technology at Iowa State. He knows the dairy industry is facing tough times,
Youth can address critical issues facing the ag industry and advocate for changes that improve farm economy.
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4-H projects focus on animal science.
| Tazewell County
Photo: Emily Smith. |
Illinois State Fair
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
Dave Fischer started working in Extension in 1971. Even after his retirement in 2010, he continued coordinating the 4-H dairy program and coaching national teams. With the 2019 season complete, Dave is handing off a program steeped in success and respect. His lifelong work was celebrated during the state fair dairy show, but the veteran dairyman insists the focus be on the growth of the dairy cattle program, including the four National Dairy Quiz Bowl championships and the $114,000 college scholarships awarded to youth in 4-H dairy projects.
The Illinois 4-H Foundation supports the animal science teams in national contests and the college scholarships.
4 National Championships
21 Top-5 Finishes / 30 years
19 Top-10 Finishes / 25 years
5 Top-5 Finishes / 25 years
$114,000 awarded to Illinois 4-H dairy project members. 570 participants with 114 winners.
| ILLINOIS
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ILLINOIS STATE FAIR DAIRY SHOW | Dave’s work in the Illinois 4program was celebrated at the 2019 Illinois State Fair. Mae Bingman.
STATE FAIR DAIRY SHOW. (left to right) Dave Fischer, Zachary Paul, Ainsley Kratochvil, Briley Lenkaitis, and Tony Graves, president of the Prairie Farms Dairy Board of Directors, sponsor. The contest was created in 1996 by Dave and is funded through the Illinois 4-H Foundation. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
35% work 16 or more hours a week
18% work 11 to 15 hours a week
27% work 6 to 10 hours a week
14% work 1 to 5 hours a week
The Illinois State 4-H Leadership Conference began an incredible journey for Lee County 4-H member Nicole Hill. “4-H has helped me and has given me the opportunities to do those things.”
She attended the conference, courtesy of Tractor Supply Company. Funds from the annual 4-H Paper Clover campaign are used by the Illinois 4-H
Foundation to promote leadership and camping in Illinois. “I learned how important teamwork and leadership are,” Nicole says.
Nicole earned a spot on the Illinois State 4-H Livestock Ambassador Team. “My work as a livestock ambassador has helped me realize what I love to do, and that’s
” Nicole says.
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LEE COUNTY 4-H
schools students hours
have taught this program 10 or more years have taught this program 5 to 10 years are teaching embryology for the first time of teachers want the program again
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26% 72% 43% 78% 27% 65% 31% 71% 23% 65% 59% 91% 56% 87% 37% 73% 31% 70% 34% 71% 34% 73%
“This is the best day of my life.”
For many urban youth, Extension’s 4-H embryology programs are their first, and sometimes only, exposure to the animal life cycle. And though the curriculum teaches scientific investigation and food production, the real lessons are often unexpected and life-changing. In the :
One egg took two full days to hatch. It was a great lesson on and
A lead to discussion on why he didn’t make it. Some believed he starved, while others tried to blame others. They finally understood he was .
Several children had never of any kind, so it was a great first-time experience for them.
Hatching chicks really helped with my
Nothing is more soothing to my students than the coming from our brooder box. It was heartwarming.
We had a chick that had trouble balancing and fell over when running. The kids named him ‘crash’ and . He improved when we took him to the farm, and the farmer wrote to tell us he was doing fine. How sweet!
Winning the National 4-H Livestock Judging Contest has its perks. In addition to the hardware, national champions compete in the World Livestock Judging Contest in Scotland.
“The room got really quiet as everyone realized the Illinois and Virginia teams were tied at the end of regular competition,” says Clay Sundberg. Illinois had a higher score in oral reasons, thus earning the national championship.
The team includes (left to right) Coach Gracia Ramp, Mason Engnell, Clay Sundberg, Nicole Haverback, and Jenna Wheeler. The Illinois 4-H Foundation supports the national livestock judging teams.
Photo left: Emily Smith.
between food producer and consumer.
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Donors of the Illinois 4-H Foundation provide to 4-H Illini Summer Academies.
hosts 35 academy students each year.
|
The beef barns at University of Illinois hold many for 4-H Illini Summer Academy participants, including a chance to stick your gloved arm through a cannula surgically inserted in the side of a steer. Since 70% of the digestion happens in a cow’s rumen, clearly seeing the process helps U of I researchers . We’re sure this young participant had a lot to tell her friends when she got home. The is a popular academy during the six-day .
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U OF I BEEF BARNS. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
The ACES
LIVINGSTON COUNTY 4-H ALUMNA
One group of alumni enjoy 4-H so much, they’re still meeting, 90 years after the oldest began her 4-H journey. At 98 years young, Cathryn Frisby and her fellow members still meet monthly for a meal and guest speaker on topics ranging from honeybees to exercise.
Cathryn was inducted into the during the 2019 Illinois State Fair, and the Country Couples weren’t going to miss this special occasion. The group rented a van and cheered on the induction of their lifelong friend.
In 1929, two teachers at a rural Avoca Township school formed a 4-H club where Cathryn learned, with the encouragement of her mother, to darn, patch, and sew.
“When we got to be teenagers, we still wanted to be together,” Cathryn says, “so we formed a rural youth club, .”
The teens enjoyed square dancing and competed at the universities. From those friendships, many marriages formed.
“People started to marry, and we didn’t want to lose track of each other,” Cathryn says.
“Some of my best friends started as 4-H friends,” said Ruth Wessels, a former member of the Fayette Fantastics 4-H Club. She says she uses the skills learned in 4-H daily.
Margery Pratt says the group has been through wonderful times and difficult times together. Once a month, they grab a bite to eat and learn something they didn’t know before, for as long as they can.
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Youth from military families gain support from teen mentors who understand the unique challenges facing military families.
4-H CAMP YOUTH AS THEY AND WHILE EXPLORING NATURE.
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Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
CAMPING AND OUTDOOR LIVING
find friends, understanding at 4-H Memorial Camp
You could hear it before you saw it. When the Blackhawk helicopter landed in the clearing at 4-H Memorial Camp, a roar went up from the 178 campers at Camp Corral. Sponsored by Golden Corral, the camp is open, at no cost, to youth of military families that have experienced loss or injury of a service member.
The three-person US Army helicopter crew, stationed in Decatur, inserts troops into Iraq and escorts VIPs. The 19-year-old pilot answered each question posed by the campers: the helicopter can fly up to 200 mph; the helicopter often flies at night with no lights allowing them to go undetected; and, the helicopter is valued at $10 million.
The campers buckled in to the seats and talked about adventures. Eric wants to work for NASA and likes to draw. Branden likes science and wants to be an archeologist. Zaina asks what each button of the helicopter does.
youth attend overnight 4-H camping programs across Illinois.
Youth in military families can participate in 4-H programs on base and learn with mentors who understand the unique challenges military families face.
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Camp Corral allows youth from military families to enjoy time with other children who have common experiences. Jamie doesn’t often see her dad who serves in Iraq. Chandler’s attending his fifth Camp Corral. His dad was injured in an explosion.
“My daughter lost her dad in 2011. This camp means so much to her and gives her a chance to connect with kids going through the same or similar situation,” shared Autumn Sharie. “Thank you, 4-H, for hosting such an amazing experience.”
Many of the counselors are 4-H alums who spend their summer working the five weeks of summer camp. Lucas wants campers to know they don’t have to face their struggles alone.
“This week is about helping people who have a different life experience than other kids.”
For Alice, the Camp Corral crew is special and allows her to be part of something bigger than herself. “It doesn’t take a lot of effort to be kind,” Alice says. “A smile brings joy to these kids.”
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WANDA | Military and Family Life Counselor
campers weeks
4-H CAMP COUNSELORS GAIN VALUABLE
and They grow life skills: patience, teamwork, cooperation, leadership, decision-making, responsibility, and empathy.
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SANGAMON COUNTY
4-H YOUTH
Who knew that 4-H would into the person I am today! Without 4-H I would not have built and found friendships I know will last me a lifetime. It has helped me realize that there is so much out there in the world and
Without 4-H, I would have
MAKE POSITIVE CHANGES IN THEIR COMMUNITIES.
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LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT
4-H projects focus on communication, leadership, and creative expression.
Youth plan and implement shows, camps, contests, service opportunities, and events. Youth have a voice in what H program.
Youth present a positive image of 4-H while they share their 4-H story with prospective members, donors, legislators,
Youth plan and lead a set of lessons for younger youth as they grow skills in making, communicating, and confidence.
Youth serve as a positive role model and encourage others to try new things as they grow in leadership and
Teens make up of 4-H club membership in Illinois, compared to only 17% in 4-H clubs nationwide. Why are we so successful? : teens are motivated by . They have . And, they . To keep teens engaged, we offer many ways to lead.
Youth use their skills in research, analysis, critical thinking, communicating, and teamwork to improve their community and world.
Youth add their voice to important discussions as they work with adults to make recommendations on boards and councils.
Illinois 4-H is the leader in teen development. Many states have now adopted our six leadership roles to engage new audiences and expand opportunities for greater independence and better representation of the youth voice in their 4-H programs.
Youth are motivated to influence others and are comfortable working in partnership with other teens and adults to complete important tasks.
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Teens embrace diverse roles.
There is no way to mark where 4-H ends and FFA begins for Taylor Hartke. The Effingham County 4-H alum just completed her final year on the Illinois 4-H Youth Leadership Team and her rein as state FFA officer.
“On the Youth Leadership Team, I met people who understood my passion for leadership and valued the skills and strengths I brought to the group.”
The 24-member Youth Leadership Team plans and conducts state events and teaches peers in public speaking and leadership. “I gained organizational skills and learned to see things from various perspectives.”
“4-H provided me with more than just a way to express myself and my interests,” Taylor says. “I want to serve the agriculture community by helping individuals share their stories and informing the public about what rests on producers’ shoulders.”
Taylor will transfer to Southern Illinois University or Murray State University after graduating from Lake Land College in 2020. She plans to study agricultural communications.
“With 4-H and FFA, there is a great opportunity to show a united front of youth in agricultural leadership,” Taylor says.
“No matter the task that must be completed or the goal I am striving to reach, every moment can be traced to the skills and relationships I developed from the 4-H organization,” Taylor says. “Youth leadership programs, such as 4-H and FFA, give students of all ages a way to express themselves, develop in-depth knowledge, and learn valuable soft skills they can use no matter where life takes them.”
-H FOUNDATION
EFFINGHAM
|
COUNTY 4-H | Illinois State 4-H Awards Celebration.
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
Together, we’re producing the youth leaders needed today and tomorrow.
| CHAMPAIGN COUNTY 4-H | National Prudential Spirit of Community $5,000 Award.Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
“I’m an example of the difference 4-H can make.”
Aja Capel, 16, is the national Prudential Spirit of Community Award winner for her work teaching robotics to minority youth in Champaign County. “My message to young people: seek significance over success,” says Aja. The teen is achieving both.
“I’m passionate about standing in the STEM gap and providing a bridge to new opportunities to kids who may never have considered a career in STEM,” Aja says. “As a teen, I found a place in 4-H where my passion for technology and engineering was celebrated and encouraged.”
Aja recently met national 4-H spokesman Jackie Joyner -Kersee. “The highlight of the evening was meeting someone so passionate about agriculture and STEM and what both offer communities of color.”
Camp counselors are responsible for the care and safety of campers, as well as making sure the experience is fun, inclusive, and enjoyable for all. Funding from the Illinois 4-H Foundation provided needed training for 24 teen counselors in northwest Illinois.
: “4-H camp made me a better person and strengthened my skills in communication and
| Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside counties. Photo: Johnna Jennings.
At 16, Elizabeth Weidner has faced more challenges than many will ever face. But if you think she’s letting cancer slow her down, you’d be wrong. This Effingham County 4-H member and pageant queen is using her 4-H speaking skills and her public platform to advocate for those affected by cancer.
“Cancer is one wild ride few of us expect, none of us want, and some will not survive,” Elizabeth says. “I have the ability, the power, and the drive to make changes that will benefit those in the future because of my cancer!”
Through her organization, Crowns Fight Cancer, she is telling her powerful story. She is featured in a national documentary, The Promise, and was awarded the Governor’s Volunteer Service Award in 2019 for her work providing more than 50,000 personal toiletry items to the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals in St. Louis.
As Elizabeth’s 4-year battle of stage IV high risk neuroblastoma continues, she is committed to helping where she can “to make the best better for my club, my community, my country, and my world.”
One may learn more about Elizabeth’s leadership on the Crowns Fight Cancer Facebook page.
H | 4-H FOUNDATION
changing the world, one rhinestone at a time.
Caleb Grover joined 4-H in 2011 so he could learn basic rules for running a meeting. Now, as a member of the Illinois State 4-H Youth Leadership Team and youth representative of the Illinois 4-H Foundation Board of Directors, he guides the direction of programs benefiting Illinois 4-H members through the meetings he attends.
“As youth in 4-H, we must be bold,” Caleb says, “bold enough to use our voice, listen to our hearts, and live life following our dreams.”
Caleb is planning a career in emergency medicine. He says 4-H allows him to pursue his interest in cancer research as a member of a special interest 4-H club at Milliken University in Decatur.
What they need, when they need it.
Junior high is a critical age in Illinois 4-H. It’s then that youth decide: do I stay or do I go? “The conference showcases all that comes next,” says new U of I 4-H leadership specialist Katie Duitsman. “Opportunities increase as youth get older. We want to be sure junior high youth get excited about new things they can do.”
“The conference changed my view of my future by showing me all the opportunities I can look forward to.”
“Sometimes the best leaders are ones that step back. This will help me see how I want to integrate 4-H into the rest of my life.”
“This experience taught me the true meaning of teamwork and how crucial it is to work together. Like the cliché states: together, we are one.”
Junior Leadership Conference is supported by the Illinois 4-H Foundation and its donors: Burrus Seed Farms, Country Financial, Elite Medical Transportation LLC, Legacy Grain Cooperative, Morgan County Commissioners & 4-H Foundation, Roegge Family, Scates Family, and Worrell Land Services.
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| CHRISTIAN COUNTY 4-H | Illini Summer Academies Team Member. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
BY STUDYING CAREERS RELATED TO THEIR 4-H PROJECT WORK.
4-H YOUTH
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MORGAN COUNTY 4-H
Ag Communications Academy.
Photo: Matt Wiley.
COLLEGE AND CAREER READINESS
projects focus on college and career readiness
It might be the most a teen can learn. Morgan County 4-H member Alex Dufelmeier says Illini Summer Academies taught him to The 14-year-old didn’t know what to expect from the , but a week on campus engaging with other teens and Ag Communication Instructor Heather Miller opened up all types of possibilities, including a career in communications.
Heather encourages the participants to go farther in their photography and story development by asking more questions so they
. For Alex, touring the beef barns allowed him to compare his family farm to the professional facility on campus.
“ Alex said. “To me, success is learning what you want to do in life and deciding what you can and will do to get it.”
Alex keeps in daily contact with the friends he made at Illini Summer Academies, including Heather. In a few years, should Alex choose U of I, he waiting.
Youth are aware of college majors related to their project areas and have the skills needed for future careers. 4-H creates pathways to successful careers by introducing youth to mentors who help guide their development.
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Teens learn how to think, not what to think.
4-H
| Champaign-Urbana Fab Lab | Illini Summer Academies. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
These departments provided an 18-hour learning experience at Illini Summer Academies.
Aerospace Engineering
Ag Communication
Ag Mechanization*
Animal Science
An Sci: Wild to Mild*
Applied Health
Crop Sciences*
Electrical & Computer Engineering
Beekeeping
Food Science & Human
Game Design
Human Development & Family Studies
Molecular and Cellular Biology
My PI Disaster Preparedness*
Natural Resources & Environmental Sciences*
Vet Medicine
*new in 2019
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FEMALE MINORITY HISPANIC 1ST TIME ATTEND NEW TO 4-H
YOUTH | COLLEGE EXPERIENCE
| Illini Summer Academies
Photo: Matt Wiley
Yes, UIUC stands for University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, but Agricultural and Biological Engineering professor Dr. Tony Grift believes it also stands for
develops robotics technologies that push production potential while minimizing the environmental impact. “The grand challenge is to set humanity on a trajectory where it can alone.”
The opportunity to study with renowned researchers, such as Grift, makes willing to listen, the life lessons are everywhere. Instead of showing the youth how to build, Grift lets them find solutions through trial and error. The hardest part, Grift says, is . “People need practice doing that.”
| Human Development
and Family Studies | Illini Summer Academies.
Photo: Matt Wiley.
U of I faculty teach more than bookwork; they teach life work.
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| Agricultural and Biological Engineering | Illini Summer Academies. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
4-H YOUTH USE TO AND IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF LIFE FOR OTHERS.
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MCLEAN COUNTY 4-H
STEM: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING , MATH
here and across the globe.
Dhruv Rebba believes we should always to the world. While others may think it, this 15-year-old McLean County 4-H member is living it daily.
Through his nonprofit, , Dhruv is solving challenging world problems one step at a time. He joined 4-H robotics in fourth grade and credits his membership in the Metal Cow Robotics 4-H Club with teaching him good technical skills. The club earned a trip to FIRST Robotics Worlds this year as winners of the Engineering Inspiration Award.
“I got into engineering because of 4-H, and ,” Dhruv says.
Dhruv has and provided and textbooks for families living in poverty in rural India. He collaborates with YWCA to create afterschool STEM programs in Bloomington-Normal.
4-H projects focus on STEM, such as robotics, computers, small engines, and welding.
He advocated in Washington D.C. for the which creates funding for 21st Century Learning Centers and met with representatives Darin LaHood, Rodney Davis, and Raja Krishnamoorthi, as well as Senator Dick Durbin and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos.
Dhruv’s interest in ham radio began at age 9. In 2017, he contacted astronaut Joe Acaba on the through ARISS, an organization that connects students with crew members using amateur radio technology. Dhruv received the Award from the Amateur Radio Newsline.
What’s Dhruv’s ? “One where everyone has basic human rights and a good quality of life.” 4-H members, such as Dhruv, are creating that world every day.
Youth know how to work cooperatively to innovate, build, solve problems, and imagine new possibilities in an ever-growing STEM world.
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Creating opportunities for underserved audiences.
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Photo: Judy Mae Bingman
Robotics participants learn to solve problems when the unexpected happens.
No matter how prepared you may think you are, the unexpected seems to happen at the Illinois 4-H State Robotics Challenge. 4-H clubs receive the contest guidelines in January and have four months to solve each challenge. The goal is to that can complete the most tasks from the challenge list. Each team has three minutes to showcase what their robot can do at the state competition.
Though robots may have performed perfectly in practice, there are many factors which can impact their day-of performance. Different lighting, a crease in the game mat, a low battery, or a drop on the way to the table may all create problems. Youth learn to to improve their score with each advancing run. The challenge is designed by youth, operated by youth, and judged by youth.
participants minority
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| These McDonough County 4-H Cloverbud members competed in the 2019 FIRST Robotics national competition. Since their appearance, four more Cloverbud robotics clubs have started. They may be itty bitty, but they’re mighty. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
| With the dedication of volunteer teachers and support from the Illinois 4-H Foundation, youth in robotics clubs incorporate what they learn from 4-H STEM projects into their everyday lives. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
Lake, McHenry, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Cook, Will, Grundy, and Kankakee counties
When the National 4-H Council came to Chicago, Illinois 4-H members Brianna Robinson and Aja Capel were invited guests, sharing their experiences in agriculture and STEM.
“I believe that hearing feedback from members can better aid the advancement of 4-H,” Brianna says. “Knowing that my opinion was being listened to and used to better an amazing program was inspiring.”
The 17-year-old is a three-year member of the Rafiki 4-H Club of Cook County. She says 4-H helped her develop leadership and speaking skills. Brianna spoke at the Afro-American Genealogy Conference in 2019. She advocates for addressing food insecurity in urban settings.
Brianna is using her final year in 4-H to encourage others to join 4-H. “I want 4-H to become something all children can be part of no matter where they are from. The bond you create with your fellow 4-H members is unbreakable as you all learn about the world of STEM and agriculture.”
Brianna is pursuing a bachelor of science in nursing degree from Spelman College to reach her dream of becoming a neonatal nurse.
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| National 4-H Council Board of Trustees meeting in Chicago. Photo: Mark Becker.
Illinois 4-H members shape national 4-H response to food access.
$20,000
With the Farm Progress Show as its backdrop, Compeer Financial renewed its commitment to Illinois Extension 4-H with a $20,000 gift to advance youth development opportunities.
“4-H creates an environment where the next generation of leaders can explore, learn, and grow,” said Karen Schieler, senior corporate giving specialist at Compeer Financial. “Creating these leaders and opportunities is essential for the future of Illinois and the rural communities served by Compeer.”
“We appreciate that Compeer sees value in investing in the development of today’s youth to become tomorrow’s leaders,” says Shelly Nickols-Richardson, associate dean and director of Illinois Extension. “The goal of providing a pipeline of leaders and professionals into enterprises like Compeer Financial depends upon the continued ability to grow youth through 4-H.”
Kim Kidwell, dean of the College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences at U of I adds, “Compeer’s commitment to Illinois 4-H supports opportunities for youth to explore their interests, build their leadership skills, and make connections with new friends, mentors, and future employers. This continued support advances our work in youth development to help develop young people into future leaders of a better world.”
Compeer Financial’s $20,000 investment in Illinois 4-H this year helps support core programs in food access, animal sciences, speaking, leadership, and environment.
STORY BY ACES WRITER STEPHANIE HENRY
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 37
Compeer gift will grow 4-H speaking and leadership programs.
| U of I Chancellor Robert Jones (left) accepts the Compeer gift with Dr. Lisa Diaz, 4-H director, and Angie Barnard, Foundation executive director, during the Farm Progress Show.
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
4-H YOUTH ARE IN A GLOBAL SOCIETY BY DEEPENING THEIR CULTURAL AWARENESS.
38 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
(left to right) Amareon Naudain, Rachel Wolff, Rep. Mike Murphy, and Jaelyn Logan.
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
GLOBAL CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
4-H projects focus on global citizenship and civic engagement.
4-H Legislative Connection brings 100 4-H members together with their state legislators at the state capitol. “We’re here to make sure they see our faces,” Caleb Grover says.
The goal is two-fold: teach youth how to and of Illinois 4-H members.
“I’m glad you’re involved in this,” says 99th District representative Mike Murphy. He speaks from experience, having worked summers at the Sangamon County 4-H Food Stand.
“You’re going to find things you’re passionate about. ,” Murphy says.
Youth receive training prior to their visit, including tips from legislative consultant Pam Weber. “Legislative Connection allows legislators to see proof of their in Extension,” Pam says.
“You lobby every day of your life, maybe, not here at the Capitol, but in influencing people to support you. If you can master these skills, life will be easier,” Pam says.
Youth are four times more likely to engage in their communities than their peers. 4-H grows confident kids who tackle the issues that matter most in their communities.
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 39
Teens show personal side of the state’s investment in Extension.
| 4-H members visit each legislative office during Legislative Connection. Pictured (left to right) are Ruthie Ruhl, 16th District Senator Jacqueline Y. Collins, Caleb Grover, and Anthony Joiner. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
INBOUND YOUTH
from and
OUTBOUND YOUTH to Costa Rica
Finland
Japan
South Korea
We learn about people different from us.
We learn about a different cultures.
We develop skills in adapting to difference in values & behaviors.
It was a life-changing experience for our family.
HOST YOUTH say they they can offer others now
HOST YOUTH say they about contributing to make the world a better place
I now want to travel and experience another culture.
I want to host another student.
I enjoy learning about people different from me.
I care more about contributing to make the world a better place.
The international organization recognized for 30 years of service. Additional Illinois volunteers include , , and
40 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
|
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
hosted by Illinois 4-H
In the earliest beginnings of 4-H, the children of were leading generations of youth through 4-H club work. Peter came to America from Germany in 1857 and married Anna. Their seven children, Jacob, Anna, Emmanuel, Maggie, William, Iva, and Elmer, were raised in McLean County.
The descendants of Peter and Anna were honored as the 2019
Leaf Let’s Go Girls 4-H Club in McLean County for 40 years. Jacob’s daughter-in-law, Alyce Mohr, also led a club for 15 years.
“We have learned, first hand, that 4-H teaches youth many valuable life skills and we all enjoy sharing our time and talent to help empower the next generation of youth by teaching them they can make the best better.”
Family Spokesperson
. The award recognizes Illinois families who have benefited from 4-H and continue to advocate for the Illinois 4-H program over multiple generations.
Jacob’s daughters, Laura and May Mohr, born in 1896 and 1906 respectively, served as leaders of the Silver
In total, with ties to Peter and Anna are affiliated with 4-H. Combined, they share to 4-H.
Funding from donors, Project Partners, companies, and Friends of 4-H help the foundation support programming initiatives, scholarships, and assistance to national events.
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 41
: Still empowering generations of youth.
4-H Foundation Family Spirit Award
Kids and adults should work together to make sure kids are safe. It’s important to tell a trusted adult when someone is being bullied.
I know things to do when I don’t feel safe and ways to shift my focus.
4-H YOUTH
BY REINFORCING GOOD CHOICES AND SUPPORTING THEIR PEERS.
42 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
Safe, Affirming, and Fair Environments
4-H projects focus on healthy living, food preparation and nutrition.
Justin Adams, Liberty High School counselor, knows students are . “At Liberty, we realize we are dealing with a mental health crisis.” With the help of Adams County Extension 4-H youth educator Sheri Merry, , was created.
Forty youth were trained. The first day was emotional. “Once one person started opening up, others began to share,” Zoe says. “Those who couldn’t share realized they could at least listen.”
“You never notice how much people are there for you until you realize they are,” Issie says. “It felt like a weight lifted off my shoulders.”
Justin is careful to remind the group they are mentors, not counselors. Teens also share with elementary school students, reassuring them will change over time.
| Eagle Cares | Adams County
“We aren’t the same people we were before we started Eagle Cares. There’s hope and there’s a future.”
Eagle Cares teen
“You’re going to change; it’s who we are,” Issie says. The program also involves improving parent communication.
“Students come to school feeling alone,” Justin says. Students who don’t have activity groups often feel left out. Eagle Cares members look for peers in the lunchroom who might need a friend and join them for lunch.
“This wouldn’t have happened without the Extension staff,” Justin says. “We had big ideas; they saw it through.”
LIVING ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 43
HEALTHY
Youth gain skills in dealing with peer pressure and stress, making good decisions, and improving their self-value and self-confidence.
create safe places for youth.
4-H is a place you can be a leader.
4-H is a place you are encouraged to plan for your future.
4-H is a place you get to teach others what you’ve learned.
4-H is a place where it’s okay to make mistakes.
4-H is a place you learn ways to help your community.
will exercise more
will drink more water
will eat less junk food
will eat more fruit
will eat more whole grains
will eat more vegetables
say because of 4-H, they know about healthy food choices
Source: 1,183 survey responses from Health Jam, Cooking 101, and Food Challenge participants
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Creating learning
strategies that support 4-H members of all abilities.
Learn by doing. No matter what type of learning style a youth has, the 4-H motto to learn through offers them an opportunity to initiate a spark and explore it through a variety of exciting, innovative project areas and programs.
The is just one way 4-H ensures all youth are supported and able to fully participate in these learning experiences. Each 4-H office in Illinois now has a kit that contains tools to engage a youth’s senses and help increase the ability to focus some of the excited energy that can accompany new experiences.
Some of the tools in the kit include silly putty, playdough, a visual-schedule mat, fidget spinner, a digital timer, and more. Each kit is customizable to meet the needs of the youth. Parents, leaders, and youth may communicate their needs for this resource.
The sensory tool kit is only one of the many new ways 4-H is working to provide a . Contact a local 4-H office to learn more about equitable programming and resources for all youth in the community.
Story: Emily Saddler
The babies are comforted by the mother’s smell.”
Alaina and her club led a service project during the Illinois State Fair. With the help of more than 200 4-H members, the group was able to donate more than 300 flannel hearts. Material may be donated at the Adams County Extension office.
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 45
4-H YOUTH LEARN TO HANDLE FIREARMS IN AND .
46 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
SHOOTING SPORTS
on the range and in life.
Youth in 4-H shooting sports programs learn the of firearms. All members are under the direct supervision of a who helps members feel welcomed in the program while they grow in leadership and independence.
“The project teaches
, which will transfer to other aspects of life,” said Robin Mizell, Extension 4-H program coordinator. His unit received $3,000 from the Illinois 4-H Foundation to expand the shooting sports program in southern Illinois.
Sometimes the real wins have nothing to do with how many bullseyes you hit; it’s what changes inside of you because you tried.
“That’s what 4-H is all about.” Mizell said. “Whether it’s shooting sports or public speaking or cooking or showing livestock, to achieve their own personal best is a core 4-H value.”
H projects focus on shooting sports.
Piatt County 4-H member Dakota Larimore-Lamb grew up hunting and fishing. At eight, he participated in archery and rifle with 4-H. Then, he discovered trap shooting, and his focus shifted to improving his shotgun skills as a member of the Midstates Marksman 4-H Club. He represented Illinois at the National 4-H Shooting Sports Championship and finished second in the state contest. His leader, Tom Bates, says Dakota has a natural ability and composure for the sport. “He doesn’t get rattled.”
| PIATT COUNTY
48 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
4-H YOUTH BY FINDING INNOVATIVE WAYS TO SOLVE LOCAL HUNGER ISSUES.
ST. CLAIR COUNTY | with Garden Manager Mark (left) and Olympian Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
FOOD SYSTEMS
4-H Hunger Ambassadors find innovative ways to ease burdens.
From community gardens to mobile food markets, Illinois 4-H members are finding issues for youth in their communities. They have found a new partner equally committed to achieving that goal. Olympian has joined 4-H on its quest to improve for families.
“The work I do in the community will be the I’m able to leave,” Jackie says of her work at her East St. Louis community center. She hopes the youth see that giving back doesn’t have to be about money. “When someone gives their time, that’s giving back. I hope they learn that.”
Jackie’s Winning in Life youth development curriculum, based on her autobiography, teaches youth center participants 14 principles, including
4-H projects focus on food access and gardening
“My hope is they’ll to handle whatever happens in their lives,” Jackie says. “We want society to dig deep, and our lessons align with what 4-H teaches.”
St. Clair County 4-H member spent the day with Jackie. Caleb’s story is as exceptional as the renowned athlete. Born in China, Caleb spent two years in an orphanage and seven years in foster care before being adopted by Russell and Angie Kinzinger seven years ago. despite multiple surgeries related to spina bifida.
“4-H has taught me that even though I am disabled, I can still do things other people can do,” Caleb says, including show pigs at the fair. “My parents help me find ways to reach in the show ring and life.”
A fan of cooking, Caleb prepared lunch with Jackie using greens from the garden.
Hunger Ambassadors determine best ways to alleviate hunger in their local communities and make action plans to address access to healthy food for families.
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 49
.
50 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
| Photo: Amy McCarty.
|
Photo: Rachel Hazen.
| HARP FAMILY | Photo: Anita Wilkinson.
It’s never too early to instill a love of gardening.
From the ground up.
Extension programs support five youth gardens where more than 200 youth met weekly over the summer. In addition, youth assist with gardens at the YMCA camp, a local teen center, and two daycare facilities. They also planted a raised-bed garden at the unit office.
Partnering with the Teen Reach afterschool in , 4-H members have built three raised-garden beds where tomatoes, peppers, herbs, and sunflowers were shared with the community. In addition, the Hunger Ambassadors in that county planted four raised -garden beds in Sesser, which produced despite floods and heat.
4-H members care for 24 raisedgarden beds, 50 plant mounds, a peach tree, pear tree, two apple trees, strawberries, and blackberry bushes. Their efforts provided food for 1,505 people. The 50 youth members racked up 1,487 volunteer hours. In addition to the gardening skills, the 40 youth attended weekly cooking classes where they learned to wash, cook, can, and freeze the locally-grown produce. The program is supported by the Illinois 4-H Foundation Innovation Grant program.
The Gift Garden ended its fourth year with a total of 12 beds and an abundance of strawberry and peanut plants. One hundred fifty milkweed plants were added along the fence line to help feed Monarch butterfly larvae. A greenhouse donated by First Bank of Carmi will allow for winter gardening. More than 1,500 pounds of produce has been donated to area senior centers, food pantries, and farmer markets, and 120 fourth graders and 80 pre-k students have assisted at the gardens.
When students at the Alhambra
Primary School arrive in the fall, they are greeted by a bountiful school garden. They help harvest the vegetables. During year, they learn the growing process, then plant the garden before leaving for summer. Many staff members and families from the school visit and care for the garden over summer. Youth discovered the tender care needed to keep a food source alive.
There’s no doubt where are the first Monday of each month; they’re helping distribute truckloads of food from the St. Louis Foodbank. In 2019, 1,234 families (with 1,155 youth) received over 101,000 pounds of food.
The food pantries in received more than 1,400 food items from 4-H food drives held on the National 4-H Day of Service in April. The clubs also serve meals at the Ronald McDonalds House and St. John’s Breadline, both in Springfield.
4-H members teamed up with the Farm Bureau Young Leaders’ “Harvest for All.” They collected 550 food and hygiene items.
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 51
4-H club awarded $25,000 to feed McLean County families.
The Olympia Pacesetters 4-H Club has been serving the Stanford community at its , a food pantry and clothing exchange, since 2008. Now, a to expand its other locations in the Olympia school district.
The clubs plans to build the sturdy, allHopedale, Minier, Armington, McLean, Waynesville, Atlanta, Danvers, Covell, and Stanford, as well as at the middle and high schools. The pantries are made from insulated truck tool boxes. They are in the community 24/7.
Most of the food is donated by the nearby Midwest Food Bank. The club has added the . The garden allows clubs members to learn about horticulture and environmental sustainability while providing produce to their community.
52 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
Photos: Mark Becker.
Blake Twenhafel had University of Illinois ACES Dean Kim Kidwell’s full attention as he explained his 4-H hydroponic system he exhibited at the Illinois State Fair. The system uses water instead of soil to grow plants. The plants sit in small cups with holes to allow fertilized water to flow through. The water must flow consistently at the right speed, Blake says.
The 14-year-old made the system himself using 4-inch pvc pipes, a 5-gallon bucket, and a 200-gallon bulk tank. He starts plants in soil until they’re large enough to transfer to the hydroponic system. Changing the water every two weeks keeps the acidic balance correct, Blake says. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
Rural areas have high incidents of food insecurity. Libby Larkin decided to do something to help those in need in Livingston County. With the help of her family and the Pontiac Power Rockets 4-H Club, Libby raised the funds to purchase the raw ingredients for a foodpackaging event. The chicken-flavored rice casserole packages feed a family of four. Volunteers measure the ingredients which are vacuum sealed and labeled for distribution.
“I want to help kids who don’t have enough money for food, especially over the weekend,” Libby says.
“Before 4-H, I had no idea how many kids deal with that.”
Libby and her club packaged 10,500 meals which were distributed to area food
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 53
pantries. Photo: Mark Becker.
The Illinois 4-H Foundation would like to thank the many individuals, businesses, trade associations, and organizations that provide financial support for our 4-H programs. Your financial support is the reason we can continue to fund outstanding 4-H opportunities in Illinois that give our youth opportunities to grow, learn, and succeed.
GIVING TO HELP YOUTH GROW
54 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
ILLINOIS 4-H FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT ON GIVING
No better way to leave your legacy for generations.
The results are clear: young people involved in 4-H are . They are inspired by learning as they master projects. They are inspired by the in their clubs. And they are inspired by the who share their knowledge. What happens next is amazing: . They are serving their clubs, serving their schools, serving their friends, serving their families, and serving their communities.
This year’s giving report showcases your commitment to lead and to serve. We highlight donors who have a cumulative record of giving for fifteen or more years, as well as our first-time donors.
Illinois 4-H Foundation Executive Director
JULY 1, 2018 TO JUNE 30, 2019
4-H ANNUAL FUND (30%)
4-H PROGRAM-SPECIFIC (45%)
COUNTY-SPECIFIC SUPPORT (13%)
ENDOWMENTS (12%)
DONORS GAVE GIFTS
Barriers to membership and program opportunities are removed so any Illinois youth who wants to participate in 4-H can.
FIRST-TIME DONORS
ENDOWMENTS VALUED AT WITH ANNUAL INTEREST OF
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 55
GIVING: CUMULATIVE DONORS
Gary & Ann Turner
Marvin & Muriel Watters
Robert & Karla Weldon
Larry & Elizabeth West
Lila Jeanne Eichelberger
R & D Walter Farm
Larry Wilson
Edward & Martha Gillespie
Thomas & Karen Klatt
Gary & Constance Stauffer
Illinois Farm Bureau
DeWayne & Verla Stevens
Anderson Foundation
Donald & Pamela Denby
Stanley Loretta Eden
Hartmann Farms, Inc.
George & Penny Hiler
Stanley Hoelzer
Illinois Pork Producers Association
Douglas & Kathleen A. Scott
Mary A. Taylor
Eldon & Betty Greenwood
Jack & Sally Widholm
Ann Hodgson
Eva Sloman
John Kustes
Glenn & Lorraine Lenschow
Walter & Lavonne Nelson
James & Sally Ramp
Carl Dumoulin
Linda Hiltabrand
Mary Hoffman
Sandra Lignell
John & Ruth McDaniel
Paul A. Funk Foundation
James & Nancy Roberts
Wilbert & Elizabeth Stevenson
Eleanor Eisfeller
Grace Haskins
John & Barbara Ibendahl
Illinois Department of Agriculture
Richard & Charlotte Myers
State Bank of Toulon
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
“I give to the Illinois 4-H Foundation because I know it can truly change the experience of one individual, whether that be through a club experience, a leadership development opportunity, or advancing someone’s education.”
Kevin Carey
Doris White
Robert & Mary Pritchard
Prospect Bank
Anne Sears
First National Bank of Brownstown
Francis Kamerer
William & Lisa Kuhn
Land of Lincoln Purebred Livestock Breeders Association
Phyllis Oschwald
Stacy & Cynthia Peterson
Ramsey Grain, Inc.
Southern Illinois Electric Cooperative
Donna Fortney
Virl Hallett & Connie Two
Harriett Lindstrom
Ned & Catherine Null
Daniel Reinhart
Rural Electric Convenience Cooperative Co.
Ronald & Maya Throneburg
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
Compeer Financial
Joan & Russell Davidson
John & Anne Huston
Ruth Johnson
Alvin Kobernus
Joan Lawson
Robert & Mary Muentnich
Joy & Charles Richey
Gordon & Jane Sissing
Charles & Bonnie Swatek
Charlotte Wax
Foundation
Leon & Linda Follmer
Eldon & Sandra Gould
Patricia Hodge
Clarence Holdiman
Illinois Landscape Contractors Association
Lucile Johnson
Charles & Gail Nolan
Charles & Carol Reiter
Jacquelyn Roll
John & Claire Sauntry
Melvin & Linda Thies
Tompkins State Bank
Forrest Van Orman
Vernon & Laura Veal
Archer Daniels Midland Company
First National Bank of Steeleville
Glenn Hillman
Robert Kline
Wilma Mende
Kenneth & Betty Moser
Wilbur & Marilyn Nelson
Roger & Kathleen Reum
Welsh Brothers
William & Emily Bane
Howard Carter
Jerry & Kristine Daws
Floyd & Louise Forcade
Jeannette Gardner
Harvey & Candy Harms
Illinois Pork Council
Kankakee County Association for Home and Community Education
Theresa Reeder
Duane & Kimberly Schallenberg
Lois Schmidt
Rodney & Karen Seuring
Darrell & Mary Andris
Burlington Resources
Alfred & Rosemary Vermiglio
Marjory Wahls
Margaret Bateman
Jane Casey
Ruth Clanin
Patricia Clickener
Clinton County Electric Cooperative, Inc.
David & Carol Close
Nancy Daigh
Donald & Virginia Durbin
Miriam Elliott
Harold & Barbara Ely
Robert & Mary Espeseth
Patricia Finch
Mark & Debra Forbes
Charles & Lois Frazee
Richard & Kim Grever
Carol Hadley
Peggy Harmon
William & Teresa Hart
Steven & Diana Herriott
Arthur & Esther Kane
William & Betty Kelch
Eugene & Joyce Knodle
Lloyd & Sue Leka
Randall & Diane Lloyd
56 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
“For me, 4-H creates a culture of hard work and fun. My work on the board allows me to collaborate with my peers who have the same passion I have to allow more youth have the same experience I was able to receive.”
Paul Hadden
Thomas & Patricia Loftus
Searoba Mascher
Michael & Vicki Massie
Kevin & Jenny Miller
Charles & Mary Pfingsten
Margaret P. Rathje
Steven & Mary Safford
Darryl & Ruth Sayre
Leon O. Shaw
Lionel & Rebecca Stirrett
Helen Thorp
Lloyd & Nita Wright
Philip & Sarah Alexander
Eldon & Virginia Aupperle
Burton & Marilyn Barr
Nelson & Kathryn Baumgartner
Roger Bengtson
Bergschneider, LLC
Eugene & Darlene Bergschneider
Belva Beyers
Carol Bork
Robert & Gail Briggs
Annabelle Burgland
Paul & Ellen Burton
John & Mary Church
Steven & Denita Clover
Covenant Animal Clinic
Crop-Tech Consulting, Inc.
Randy Maas & Laura DavisMaas
Samuel & Virginia Down
DuPage County Farm Bureau
David Ebert
Dale & Janet English
James Esworthy
William & Rita Francis
Eloise Fritschle
Thomas & Carol Gelwicks
Larry & Jenny Gibbs
Joan Glendenning
Ronald Going
Steven & Pamela Greenfield
Richard & Barbara Gregory
Glenda Harris
Peter Haselhorst
Alvin & Phyllis Hepner
Phyllis Hieronymus
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
Heather Hampton+Knodle
Mary West
Norman & Joy Wideburg
WM. Beck Auction & Realty
Kenneth & Linda Wyss
Norman & Martha Ehlers
Dorothy Emory
Scott & Rebecca Erickson
Cynthia Eustice
Farmers State Bank of Elmwood
Jack & Vicki Flammang
Michael & Beverly Friese
William & Lorraine Hacker
Libbie B. Aavang
Leonard & Pat Armstrong
Richard & Arla Ault
Ronald Aves
Dan & Deanna Hoge
Dean & Arlene Holmes
Gary & Marilyn Holt
Lloyd & Joyce Honegger
Roger & Ranelle Hubele
Donnell & Dorothea Hunt
Jo-Carroll Energy
Robert & Donna Johnson
Jean Johnston
Georgeann Jones
Carol Jones
Ronald Kuntzelman
Medanell Lawton
Craig & Gail Lithgow
Ted Lobello
Ronald & Carlene Maag
Enid Marshall
Amy & Virgil Martin
Michael & Lynn Martz
Alan & Joyce Merriman
William & Anita Million
Dean Nelson
Michael & Carol Olson
Judith Onken
Ralph & Margene Paarlberg
Paullin Farm
Randall & Betsy Pech
Keith & Heather Poppy
Shirley Rees
Mildred Renken
Foster & Jean Rinefort
Rochester State Bank
Michael & Theresa Roegge
Harold Sanders
David & Rose Sandstrom
Gordon & Carol Schroeder
Sandra J. Schrof
Kay Schwarting
Ruth Sparkman
Allen & Valerie Stabenow
State Farm Companies Foundation
Richard Steiner
Mark & Sue Sterr
Peter Streid
Allen Swegle
Peter & LaRae Walter
Henry & Janice Wassmann
Terry & Louise Weidner
Christine Bannister
John & Christine Baumann
Virginia Beckner-Rush
Brian Bend
Kenneth Betz
Douglas & Edith Block
Richard & Marilyn Bogner
Ross & Carolyn Brower
Jeff & Toni Brown
Althea Carls
David & Tami Carroll
Theodore & Jean Chase
Steven & Lyren Haney
Michael Hartman
Emery & Jeannine Hayes
Jerry & Jill Hicks
Bruce & Caroll Hortin
Scott & Michele Horton
Roger & Karen Houston
Illinois Lamb and Wool Producers, Inc.
James Jarboe
Joy State Bank
John & Marcia Kabat
Richard & Mary Killey
Knox County Farm Bureau Foundation
“I believe that what we are doing will enable a young person to try something new, and that they will be willing to serve others in the future.”
Photo: Anita Wilkinson.
GIVING: CUMULATIVE DONORS
Helen Medley
Franklin & Jane Mellert
Orlan & Carol Miller
Monroe County Farm Bureau
Leanna Mraz
Richard & Patricia Nelson
Eleanor Nolin
Delano & Wanda Ohaver
Margaret Pearse
Raritan State Bank
Virginia Rimington
Rossville Packing Company, Inc.
Maurice & Anita Roy
Duane & Pamela Runyon
Orion & Gloria Samuelson
Robert Seaver
Brock & Ruth Seney
Carole D. Shirely
Jeffrey & Janice Sibley
Kent Slater & Penny Lawyer
Maurice E. Sprout
Phyllis M. Staker
Iva Stamberger
Gregory & Mary Sullivan
Evelyn M. Thomas
Christopher & Cathy Thorp
Arlene E. Welsh
Randall & Janet Wesemann
Kevin & Kelly Winter
Robert & Diane Wolf
Rodney Worth
Harry & Helen Wright
Neval & Norma Yeates
Rosella Young
Helen Abbott
DeWayne Adams
Jule Allaman
Catherine Apel
Christina Barthel
Shirley Bennett
Mary & Eric Benson
John & Roberta Boarman
Patricia L. Boarman
Lois Boecker
Robert & Debra Book
Jeffrey & Mindy Brown
Todd & Deborah Burrus
Robert & Shirley Carroll
Roger & Martha Carson
Caterpillar Foundation
David & Carolyn Cattron
Betty Church
Clark County 4-H Leaders
Joseph & Callie Connor
Martin & Rosann Conroy
James & Nina Hubert
Lawrence & Mary Huseman
Illinois Holstein Association
Bernard Janecki
Jack Jennings
James & Joyce Jensen
John Deere Foundation
Daniel & Linda Johnson
Thomas & Sharon Johnson
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
“I like being constantly challenged and solving problems with out-of-the-box solutions. With my help, more children will have the opportunity to benefit their communities and achieve career success.”
Tanner Scherer
Joan Salzman
David & Sylvia Saunders
Richard D. Sawyer
DiAnne Schmitt
Thomas & Nancy Schneider
Jon & Joyce Scholl
Debra Seyller
Merilyn Shepherd
Deborah Sterett
O. J. & Susie Stoutner
Doug & Marsha Strom
Susan Taylor
The Northern Trust Company
Mary Thompson
Howard Tingley
Gary Unsicker
Larry & Jan Voigt
Richard & Carmen Walgrave
Ormand & Phyllis Webb
Michael & Janet Whitchurch
Robert Wilkinson
Donald & Irene Wilson
William & Jane Wyffels
Elnathan Anderson
Shirley Crisco
Larry & Mary Cutler
David Carroll, Inc.
Richard & Janice David
Jane Dierker
James & Sandra Donovan
Harold & Nancy Drake
Marion Eden
Eugene & Eilene Ehrhardt
Farmers Elevator Company of Sciota
Larry & Tamara Fischer
Alan & Sherry Flack
Stephen & Judy Francis
George & Julia Frock
Gerald & Nancy Gehlbach
Wayne Gleim
Marsha Gritton
William & Elaine Hall
Donald & Lorraine Hand
William & Harriet Hayden
Alan Henderson
Steven & Phyllis Hess
John & Janice Kellogg
Joel & Nancy Kelsey
Ronald Klein
Cleo Koch
Dan & Carol Koch
Norman & Barbara Larson
Jerome & Durlene Lawless
Walter & Nina Lembke
Gregory & Diane Lepper
Richard & Ruby Lingle
Virginia Malone
Mason City Community Chest
Michael McCully & Carolyn Gibbs
Leona Meyer
Monsanto Company
Daniel & Melissa Moore
Richard & Gladys Myers
Nelson Farm Service
Thomas & Jean Nolte
Nu-Deal Oil Company Division of Nu-Deal Corporation
Virginia Orcutt
Patricia Orr
Ronald & Tracey Ott
Ross & Connie Pauli
Mark & Carolyn Paullin
Russell & Elaine Peppers
David & Holly Peterson
Premier Cooperative, Inc.
Richard & Alice Rainville
Martha Rhoades
Donald Robertson
Shirley Saiter
Lee & Tamara Ator
Elmer & Beata Aupperle
John & Beatrice Bagby
Charles & Kathleen Bloomberg
Kenneth & Mary Bolen
David & Lynnellen Briggs
Wesley Broers
Billy & Sue Brooks
Maury & Kimberly Busboom
Dean & Doris Cates
Janet Chapman
John & Adrienne Chesnut
Katherine Cloonen
Kendall & Charlot Cole
Coon Creek Sod Farms
Shirley Davis
Richard & Jean Doub
Jane Fairchild
James & Carla Farley
Farm Credit Illinois
Ken & Janine Ferrie
First National Bank of Ava
Samuel & Judith Foster
Robert & Sharon Going
Donald & Elizabeth Greeley
Donald Hahn
Rita M. Hallett
Duane & Margaret Haney
James & Christine Hazen
Chris Hoelscher
William & Brigit Hollis
Margaret Hutchins
Hyland Farm Polands
58 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
“Investing in Illinois 4-H means I am reinvesting in my community, in the future of our state, and in the program that invested in me. Large or small, every gift matters.”
Melissa Wilson
GIVING: CUMULATIVE DONORS
William & Lois Stetzler
Elinor Stille
Sharalyn Borchers
Borgic Farms, Inc.
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
“The human ‘return on investment’ is huge. 4-H is the garden where young people begin their journey of growing up into strong, good adults. 4-H of today offers up the same valuable skills to young people that it did to me half a century ago.”
Roger Clark
Gerald & Joan Stoffregen
Carole Sullivan
Arthur & Sharon Tenhouse
The Gerber State Bank
Wayne Thurmond
Beverly Tucker
David Tuntland
William & Eleanor Uhlman
Anthony & Amy Ulrich
David Vandeburg
Robert & Lorraine
Phillip & Karen Borgic
Gerald & Norma Boston
Marilyn Bottorff
Darryl & Jean Brinkmann
Daniel & Darleen Brinkmann
William & Marina Britz
Donald & Sandra Brown
Claudia Builta
Gary & Shelly Bultemeier
Gary & Sherry Butler
Gregory & Brenda Close
Dorothy Isbell
J. B. & Ruthann Johnson
Robert & Lois Jornlin
Henry Kaiser
Robert Kenney
Kenneth & Lora Kesler
Edward & Kimberly King
Kenneth & Jeanette Knight
Martin & Rebecca Koster
Edward & Sharon Kramer
Elmer Lanz
Raymond & Carol Larson
Lorene Lay
Joseph & Diane Lecher
Gary & Mary Leonard
Mary Lubertozzi
Donald Mack
Stephen & Charmayne Mack
Marion M. Eden Insurance
Jerome & Carolyn Marley
Teresa Marshall
McLean County Farm Bureau
William & Jane McNamara
Jo A. Menacher
Daniel & Brenda Mills
Monsanto Fund
Donald Mosher
Ross & Nancy Muehling
Michael Murray
National 4-H Council
Robert & Ida Nuernberger
Howard & Angie Perry
Donald & Carol Poe
Ernest Potter
Robert & Gayla Potts
Delbert & Shirley Price
Kenneth & Amy Quinn
Kim & Lois Rees
Coy Reichert
Fern Rice
Donald & Mary Riedle
George & Ruby Roemer
Albert & Roberta Roth
John & Lois Rowe
William Runzel
John Rutledge
Winona Saathoff
Thomas & Pam Schahrer
Sharon Scherer
Donna Schumacher
Vormezeele
Jerry & Judy Waldron
John & Susan Wallace
Mary Walsh
Ronald & Melanie Warfield
Wayne & Martha Welch
Donald & Karen Wettstein
John & Mary Wilson
Robert & Joyce Wilson
Lawrence & Charlotte Wohler
Bonnie Woolley
Warren & Norma Zehr
Access Ag, Inc. DBA Mazon
Farmers Elevator Co.
Garret & Jill Apel
Barry & Karessa Aves
James Ayers
Sidney & Florence Banwart
Harold & Nancy Barnes
Everett & Pamela Bass
Beeler Farms
William Beeler & M. S. DielBeeler
Russell & Nancy Boe
Diana Bollin
Country Financial
Ray & Irene Denbesten
Jack & Carolyn Denny
Carl & Mary Dilling
Mary Edwards
William Eickhoff
Kevin & Lori Engel
Clarence & Norma Forth
G and E Roskamp, Inc.
C. E. & Joanne Gill
Ardell & Dorothy Goetting
Richard & Judy Goodwin
William & Nancy Gossett
Jerry & Linda Gourley
Nancy Haire
Brian Knodle & Heather
Hampton-Knodle
Richard & Cinda Hanes
Mary Harland
Gerald & Nancy Hartmann
Faiz & Linda Hasib
Peggy Hays
Heritage Farms Grain & Dairy, Inc.
Joseph & Nancy Hogan
Nestled in the overgrown brush near the University of Illinois
Pollinatarium, hives of bees work quietly (except for that buzzing) producing honey. U of I received “Bee Campus” status in 2018 for encouraging bee-healthy management practices. Noted entomologists May Berenbaum and Gene Robinson created the Pollinatarium, the first free-standing center in the nation devoted to flowering plants and pollinators. Each summer, 4-H participants at Illini Summer Academies work with the hives and learn stewardship practices from coordinator Leslie Deem. Gifts to the Foundation support scholarships for first-generation students to visit the U of I campus. Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 59
GIVING: CUMULATIVE DONORS
Leila Hulting
Merle Huntington
Illinois Valley Supply, LLC
David Jasper
Thomas Johnson
Donald & Virginia Johnson
John & Elizabeth Kelley
Kentland Farms
Ronald & Mary Kersten
Richard & Barbara Kiefer
John & Anastasia Killian
Susan Klehm
Ronald & Wanda Kloster
Mathias & Mary Kluemke
Janet Kolmer Grommet
Alan Kulczewski
Brian Schaumburg & Beth
Laakman-Schaumburg
Richard & Sharon Linden
Wilma Long
John & Sharon Lyons
Kevin & Linda Main
Marley Pork Farms, Inc.
John & Edith Massey
Massie & Quick, LLC
Michael & Shirley McElvain
Russ & Linda Monson
Charles & Doris Morehouse
Kathleen Morio
Bettina Morris
Ronald & Carmen Morthland
Ted & Janet Mottaz
Gregory & Linda Muehling
Mulch Farms, Inc.
Opal Parrott
Carl & Marilyn Payne
Roscoe & Annette Pershing
John & Tammy Poffenberger
Clifford & Carolyn Puzey
Lynn Rainey
Richard Ramsey
John & Bernadine Richter
William & Karen Robinson
Dennis & Phyllis Roby
Curtis & Beth Rocke
Fred Rodhouse
Richard Sauder
Gary & Theresa Schmalshof
Sharon Stierwalt
C. J. Stilwell
Collins & Barbara Stoll
Rodney Stoll
Irvin & Judith Story
Wanda Streitmatter
Philip & Frances Struble
W. L. Swope
Ken & Mary Tasset
Vivian Trone
Dale & Teresa Troyer
Kenneth & Charlotte Tyrrell
Tara & Marvin VanHoorn
Peter Viall
Larry Wachtel
Patricia Wakey
James & Sharon Walker
Richard & Sara Wendling
Roy & Christine Wendte
Westchester Group Investment Management, Inc.
Ronald Wilke
Leola Woodworth
Share the following language with your estateplanning attorney to add to your will or living trust.
“I leave (e.g. % of estate, $ amount, residue) to the University of Illinois 4-H Foundation, an Illinois nonprofit corporation (37-6006007), for the benefit of the Illinois 4-H Foundation supporting the Illinois 4-H Youth Development Program.”
| Grants from the Illinois 4-H Foundation are extending 4-H opportunities to first-generation audience, such as these youth in a new Latino initiative in Bureau County.
Gary & Michele Aavang
Sherry Anast
David Althaus & Angie
Anderson-Althaus
Harriet Badger
Brian & Leanne Barnhart
Bane & Angela Bates
Monsanto Fund
Walter Beatty
Boehle Consulting
Daryl & Verleen Bollmeier
Gene & Pamela Bork
Nancy Bower
Terry & Sherry Brakhane
Marilyn Brown
Gene Buhrow
Mary Carls
Betty Casper
Close Farms
Ted & Sheri Collins
Country Financial
Marcia Cox
Marilyn Coyne
Craig Culp
Dairy Farmers of America, Inc.
Dale & Linda Drendel
Lawrence & Mary Duewer
Shirley Dufelmeier
Rolland & Ardeanne Ekena
Jerry & Carolyn Endress
Peggy Etherton
Glenn & Mary Fesser
First National Bank of Nokomis
Jerry & Jeri Francis
John & Jane Francis
Elizabeth Franks
Cimeron & Rachel Frost
Jeff & Pat Galle
Alice Garwood
Joy Geddes
Donald & Lee Gibbons
Janet Goodell
Grain and Feed Association of Illinois
Michael & Alee Gunderson
Donald Gustafson
Doris Gvillo
Charles & Ethel Hagenbuch
Gary & Laura Hampton
Ronald & Patricia Hartmann
Nancy Heaton
Ann Hertz
Roger & Shirley Higgs
G. R. Hillman
Eldon Hoerbert
Allen & Pamela Jacobs
60 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
GIVING: CUMULATIVE DONORS
“My time on the board is just a return of the gift 4-H gave me as a child that greatly influence my life, both personally and professionally. My financial support is to help ensure all Illinois youth have the opportunities I had in 4-H.”
Jan Sibley
John Janssen
Eugene & Marjean Jiles
John Deere Foundation
Jason Johns
Rosemary Jones
Marvin & Barbara Juliar
Bill Kannberg
Marjorie Keane
Gordon Kelm
Robert & Judith Kemp
Dale & Jane Kiser
Knox County Home & Community Education
Edward & Karen Koch
William & Lois Lee
Steven & Beth Macke
Jeff & Jenna Maierhofer
Dale & Peggy Markwalder
Don & Barb Mathey
Philip & Karen McArdle
Betty McGillivray
David & Lisa McMurtry
Robert & Martha Mulch
Brenda & Michael Murphy
Willard Nelson
Stanley & Alice Nelson
Otter Creek Acres
Joel & Nancy Ottosen
Eugene & Shirley Overcash
Gerald & Ruth Poppe
Allen & Janet Poynter
Prairie Farms Dairy, Inc.
Walter & Sandra Rademaker
Rally Tree Farm
Norman & Mary Rhoades
Phillip & Jacqlin Richmond
E. L. Rogers
Ronald & Gail Romersberger
Norman & Mary Ross
Barbara Rossman
Alan & Phyllis Ruwe
David & Helen Schafer
Schoolman Farms II
John & Barbara Schrage
Jeffrey & Lynne Schroeder
Bettie Scott
Mark & Brenda Seboldt
Esther Shanks
Edward Sheehan
Linda Sheldon
Patsy Sherrard
F. E. & Jo Smalley
Helen Smith
Mary Snavely
State Bank of Saunemin
Melinda States
Roger Steimel
Virginia Stout
Vera Stutzke
Cheslea & Judith Taylor
Robert & Liana Terwilliger
Edwin & Melanie Teubel
Robert & Dolores Torsberg
Dennis & Cherie Van Daele
John & Betty Viano
Dorothy Vinson
Michael & Susan Weber
Richard & Marilyn Weller
Wilbert & Elaine Wernecke
Donald & Elsie Westerman
James & Joyce Wilcox
Helen Wilcoxon
Dorothy Willard
James & Cheryl Wormley
Daryle & Joan Wragge
Jim & Carla Zwicker
Country Financial invited Farm Progress Show visitors to cast their vote for their favorite ag leadership program: Illinois 4-H, Illinois FFA, and Farm Bureau Young Leaders. “COUNTRY has long been a supporter and advocate for programs focused on youth and young leaders in agriculture,” said Lindsey Rinkenberger, director of agribusiness at COUNTRY.
“We are proud to provide financial support to 4-H, FFA, and Farm Bureau Young Leaders. We believe that at their core, all three of these organizations help develop, and their members represent, the future of agriculture. We are thrilled that visitors agreed and were eager to vote for each organization at the Farm Progress Show.”
The Illinois 4-H Foundation Board of Directors accepted the $5,000 check. Pictured are (left to right)
Caleb Grover, Jerry Hicks, Lindsey Rinckenberger, Dr. Lisa Diaz, and Tanner Scherer.
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 61
Photo: Angie Barnard.
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
GIVING: FIRST-TIME DONORS IN 2018-19
Fink Farms
First Federal Savings Bank
First Financial Bank
First Savanna Savings Bank
Fisher Amvets Auxiliary Post
Kenneth & Jill Hartwig
Eric Henderson
William & Nancy Henning
Dennis & Joan Hermes
Chad & Heidi Hertz
Isaac Abramowitz
Todd &Melissa Adcock
Addieville Lumber Company, Inc.
Advantage One Credit Union
Mary Ann Akey
Mark & Kimberlee Alber
Randall & Janet Allen
Al's Quality Service, Inc.
Jeffrey & Linda Altheide
Craig Anderson
Joseph Anderson
Rikin Asher
Brent & Denise Augustin
Lawson & Martha Barclay
Jason & Jennifer Beard
Elizabeth Beck
Carl & Bonnie Becker
Douglas & Donna Behrens
Dean Bekas
James & Nancy Bell
Jeffrey & Susan Binkley
Kenneth & Marcia Blumer
Kathryn S. Boehle
Harvey & Judith Bradshaw
Bray Farms
Donald Bricker
Kara Brockamp
Pamela Brockman
Vicky Brockmann
Courtney Brooks Brothers Inn Family Restaurant
Brownfield Ag News
Buck's Decorating Center
Mark & Celia Buss
Merlin & Merla Bussan
Butler Land Co.
Jason & Mary Cabell
Jeremiah Cantlon
Eldon & Jerilyn Carroll
Allen & Marcia Carter
Clifford Cartwright
Central Illinois 4-H Club
Camp Association
CGH Medical Center
Chadwick Achievers 4-H Club
Chadwick Lamplighters HCE
Chadwick Oil & Ag
Ralph & Cathy Chapman
Jenna Choo
Citizens State Bank
Clark Carroll Insurance
Agency, Inc.
CME Group Inc.
Henry & Nancy Coan
Brandon Wilkening & Patricia Coil
Mark & Julie Cole
Roger & Ruth Cole
Shirley Cole
Lisa Cole
Community State Bank of Rock Falls
Compeer Financial
Dick & Lindsay Cooley
Ryan Cooper
Mervyn & Karen Correll
County Line Farms
Mary Jane Craft
Judy Cresap
David & Jane Crockett
Kim & Lynn Curry
Denise Dalton
Kimberly & Dana DannMessier
Jonathan Davis
Del Monte Foods, Inc.
Mary Dickman
Roger & Dianna Dickson
Dixon Area Garden Club
Peixian Dong
John & Louise Dorenbusch
Doven Ho Farms
Dun & Bradstreet Corporation
S. C. & Linda Dunphy
Duraclean Specialists, Inc.
Eastland Fabrication LLC
Eastland Feed & Grain Inc.
Eastwing Mfg., Co. Inc.
Scott & Jennifer Edgcomb
Roberta Edler
Harold & Martha Edwards
Charles & Mariellen Ehredt
Stanley & Marilyn Eisenstein
Roger & Sallie Ellingson
Gene & Loretta Elliott
Kent & Kelly Epplin
John Espinoza
Dennis Etnyre
Eureka Tractor Pull Committee
Express Scripts Foundation
Fair Meadow Farm, Ltd.
Ronald & Julie Fandel
Farmers National Bank
52
Melinda Flegel
Betty Fleming
Peter & Joan Flynn
Charles & Tricia Foran
Patsy Forbes
Harold & Debbie Force
Daniel & Sherry Frachey
Franklin Grove Township
James & Gwynne French
James Frisbie
David Frisse
Delbert & Noreen Frye
Dennis & Janice Fryer
Fulton Saddle Club
Garden Gems Greenhouse
Gateway FS, Inc.
Fred & Deborah Gatzke
Generations Electric & Service Company
Susan Geshwender
Bill & Doris Gettings
Nancy Gohlinghorst
Francisco Gonzalez
Google, Inc.
James & Deborah Goss
Brian Greene & Nicole BauerGreene
Edna Greenwood
David & Guylia Grigsby
Greg & Annette Gruhn
Caryl Guffey
Donald & Jill Gurke
Hahnaman Township Town Fund
Christine Hall
Kristin Hall
Robert & Claire Hamilton
Harris & Kay Hammer
Harrington Farms
William & Laura Harris
G. D. Hess
Doug & Beth Hileman
James & Marilee Hixson
Richard & Gayla Holmes
Edward & Marilyn Hopkey
Hopkins Township
Barbara Hopkins
Audrey Hubbard
Hugh F. Miller Insurance Agency, Inc.
Huston Farms
Illinois Association FFA
Illinois Humanities
Ward Haselhorst & Judy
Jacob-Haselhorst
Nalini Jayaraman
Pegram & Bonnie Johnson
Russell & Carol Johnson
Elizabeth Johnston
Jeffrey & Nancy Jones
Sandra Jones-Schauble
Mollie Kaplan
Chris & Reba Karr
Julie Kaufman
Thomas & Shelley Kelch
Matthew & Diane Kerekes
Wes & Ann Kimes
Catherine Kirby
Deborah Koehn
Kenneth & Janice Koelkebeck
Karen Kramer
Raymond Kreig
Frederick & Sally Kuhlmeier
Kevin & Kathryn Kuhnert
Stephen & Susan Jo Lafferty
Lake Carroll Women's Club
Allen & Patricia Lambert
Michael Larsen
Steven & Margaret Larson
Lee County Farm Bureau
Lee County HEA
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
“4-H transforms young lives in positive, incredible ways. 4-H puts youth into new situations in a safe environment with the tools to succeed. When they succeed, they develop confidence that lasts them the rest of their lives.”
Karl Barnhart
74 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS
| 4-H | 4-H
EXTENSION
FOUNDATION
62 | UNIVERSITY OF OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION
GIVING: FIRST-TIME DONORS IN 2018-19
Paul & Marsha Lee
Roger & Rosemary Lee
Leffelman & Associates Inc.
Marilyn Lesmeister
Kenneth Lindahl
Michael Linder
Joe & Cynthia Litchfield
Phillip & Patricia Livingston
Virginia Lowery
Morgan Lynch
Charles & Susan Maltese
Management Accounting Services
Marion County Savings Bank
Marley Pork Farms Inc.
Larry & Christy Martin
Ryan & Julie Masters
Jim & Mary Masterson
Karen McCollum
McCormick's Nursery & Landscaping
Julia McCutchan
James & Carolyn McGath
Paul & Lisa McHone
McLean County Association for Home & Community Education
Chad McQuade
Brad & Betsy Meisenheimer
Jay & Catherine Menacher
Mary Meusel
Milledgeville Veterinary Clinic
Jill Miller
Morrison Veterinary Clinic
Jeff Mosley
MSA Sales II Inc.
E. D. & M. L. Mulligan
Michael & Kathy Mullins
Laura Nadelhoffer
Joseph Nannini
John & Anne Nation
Darrin & Lanie Nelson
Lisa Nelson
Marshall & Julie Newhouse
Scott & Laura Niermann
Northern Illinois Diesel, Inc.
Dave & Cathy Oloffson
Carlos Ortiz
Arthur Paine
Palmyra Township
Allen Park
Mary Parker
Sidney Parks
Eric Pass
Peter & Laurie Pasteris
Bonnie Paszkiewicz
Thomas & Susannah Patten
Patti Group, Inc.
Illinois 4-H Foundation Board
“I serve the Illinois 4-H Foundation to help youth succeed. It’s rewarding to meet new members and watch them grow in the programs.”
Robert Perkins
Perry County HCE Board
Perry County Home and Community Education Association
Mark & Betty Peterson
Robert & Anita Petrich
Larry & Jan Pfeiffer
Prophetstown Farmers Mutual Insurance Company
Todd Pinkerton-Riegel
Eva Pino
Rex Piper
Place Insurance Agency
Plainwell Brass, Inc.
Steve Planson
Peg Planson
PPG Industries Matching Gift Program
Prairie Farms Dairy, Inc.
Stephen & Diann Priebe
Kim & Beverly Primmer
Gayl Pyatt
Vlada & Dragana Rajic
Randolph County Extension & Education Foundation
D. W. Rawson
RC Consulting, Inc.
Red Bud Masonic Lodge
#427
Renaissance Charitable Foundation, Inc.
Albert & Diane Renken
Joseph & Sandra Revell
Rock River Lumber and Grain Co.
Rockford Ball Screw Company
Jan Romenesko
Albert & Susan Roszczyk
Rotary Club of Keller
RSM US LLP Foundation
Lonnie & Melinda Ruppert
Robert Russell
Steven & Donna Russell
Nancy Rutledge
David & Ann Ryder
Daniel & Diana Saavedra
David & Carolyn Saidel
Debra Samuelson
George & Marilyn Satterwhite
Michael & Vicki Scharringhausen
Melvin & Ruth Schlueter
Johnny & Barbara Schmid
Donal & Loretta Schmidt
Kathleen Schmidt
Douglas & Stacy Schroeder
Lynn & Joanne Schwandt
Michelle Schwartz
Lewis & Louise Schweizer
Gary & Julie Seibold
David Seidel
John & Debra Shapland
Sherrard 4-H
Michael Shore
John Simonton
Richard Sinclair
William & Mary Sisler
Kathryn Slack
Krystina Slack
Ronald & Beth Slade
Charles & Patricia Smith
Robert & Marcia Smith
Grace Smith
Soaring Eagles 4-H Club
Terry & Melinda Spangler
Jerrold Spinhirne
Sterling Federal Bank
Rita Stewart
Dale & Virginia Stierwalt
Bradley & Kristi Stout
William & Ann Strawson
Sub-Let Indians 4-H Club
Colleen Sutton
Sue Swail
Lynann Swinda
Taurin Tan-atichat
Emily Tanner
Susan Tanner
Russell & Charlene Taylor
Ted's Greenhouse, Inc.
JoAnn Templeton
The Chicago Community Trust
The First National Bank In Amboy
The Iuka State Bank
The Joyce Nies and Peter Witt Foundation
The Machine Shop
Charles & Jane Thompson
Eric & Jessica Tjarks
Top Ag Cooperative, Inc.
Thomas & Joyce Tournear
Town of Lyndon
Dan Turcza
Mary Turnbull
Kirk & Carrie Ummel
United Hairlines
Kenneth & Sally Urban
Calvin & Kim Vandermyde
Richard & Susan VanDyke
Veterinary Clinic of Prophetstown PC
Kayla Villegas
Shwetha Vincy
John & Sheryl Wagner
Waibel Farmland Services Inc.
Pamela Wallace
Jennifer Webb
Christian Weber
Shirley Welsch
Tim & Kim Wernicke
Thomas & Alice Wetzel
Robert & Carol Wetzel
Carl & Donna Wetzel
Mike & Diane Wheeler
James & Elizabeth Whetstone
Danise White
Wilberton Mutual Insurance Company
H. D. Williams
Kevin & Katherine Williams
Kenneth & Myrna Williams
Willow Creek Hard to Beat
James & Stephanie Wilson
Gregory & Melissa Wilson
Joyce Winch
Winterhaven Farms
Don & Jan Wissman
Maggie Witzenburg
Wolf Lake Terminals, Inc.
William & Kathryn Wolters
Karen Woolfolk
Carolyn Workman
Donald Young
Paul & Brigitte Young
Martha Young
Shirley Zulke
ILLINOIS 4-H CLOVERSEED | ANNUAL REPORT | 63
George Obernagel
4-H Foundation awards $49,000 in scholarships
college scholarships and awards another $20,000 in national conference travel scholarships to 4-H members annually.
We thank these donors for their support of excellence in our 4-H members.
Veterinary Medicine Association.
Endowment, Farm Credit Illinois, Nann Armstrong, Patricia Clickener, Lila Jeanne Eichelberger, Nellie R. McCannon Trust, Keith and Lissa Parr, Dorsey Murray, George Obernagel, and the Illinois 4-H Foundation
Sponsor: Illinois Farm Bureau and Affiliates
Sponsor: Illinois 4-H Foundation
Sponsor: H. Richard and Sarah F. McFarland Endowed 4-H Youth Leadership and Character Development Support Fund
Sponsors: LA-CO Industries, Inc. and the Illinois 4-H Foundation
Sponsors: Illinois Farm Bureau, Peter Johnson, Susan Moore, Keith and Lissa Parr, Katherine Razim, Ryan and Elaine Ruwe, Marvin and Elizabeth Schnitzler, Gerald and Linda Thiele, Lindsay Young, and Lisa Mauney.
64 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
| In 4-H, youth learn skills that lead to possible careers. Their talent advances with each year. Look at the difference just one year made for McKenna Bleem of Mason County. The photo below was from 2018. By 2019, she created this magnificent horse. McKenna is a third-year 4-H Teen Teacher. The creative teen is a Federation member and recently won the Visionary Award sponsored by Blick. She plans to study art in college. Photos: Judy Mae Bingman.
| 4-H was everywhere at the Farm Progress Show, thanks to this small, white and green lapel pin. 4-H alums working company booths at the show proudly donned the pin and shared great memories of their years in 4-H.
66 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
ALUMNI ENGAGEMENT
We knew if we put out a request to our , the response would be great. We had no way of knowing just the response would be. Nearly 4-H alums were working their company’s booths at the Farm Progress Show and helped us tell the 4-H story by wearing a 4-H alumni lapel pin. There is no doubt;
Photos: Judy Mae Bingman.
Susan Kissick, Adams County
Dennis Lingley, Bond County
Cindee Robinson, Boone County
Monico Nunez, Bureau County
Jim Ruter, Carroll County
Diana Herriott, Champaign County
Kathy Bates, Christian County
Aaron & Mary Ann Crome, Clark County
Denise Sinclair, Clinton County
Juli Stelle, Coles County
Bonnie Weger, Crawford County
Connie Koester, Cumberland County
Lisa Govig, DeKalb County
Sherry Fulton, Dewitt County
Walt Wright, Douglas County
Bradley Cash, Edgar County
Neil Fearn, Edwards County
Cindy Mathis, Effingham County
Janet Willenborg, Effingham County
Kimberly Rahn, Ford County
Cathy Hewlett, Franklin County
Lee Roy Knuppel, Fulton County
Chris Delach, Grundy County
Jeff Rister, Hamilton County
Janetta Flener, Hardin County
Shellee Fecht, Hancock County
Ralph and Marilyn Torrance, Henderson County
Christina Fleming-Kidwel, Iroquois County
Sharon Swisher, Jackson County
Louis Ochs, Jasper County
Sandra Kabat, Jefferson County
Judy Benz, Jersey County
Jim Feuerborn, Kane County
Pat Farman, Kankakee County
Christina Heidrich, Kendall County
Randy Newell, Knox County
Karen Pillion, La Salle County
The late Allan Esgar, Lee County
Cathryn Frisby, Livingston County
Pamela Tibbs, Logan County
Kevin and Kim Albert of Macoupin County
Carleen Paul, Madison County
Kane Austin, Marion County
DiAnn Kuehn, Marshall County
Bill Bree, Mason County
Norma Korte, Massac County
Robert and Karen Chatterton, McDonough County
Dawn Bihlmaier, McHenry County
Mark Schreiner, Menard County
Krystal Jungmann, Mercer County
Dorothy Schilling, Monroe County
Peggy Hampton, Montgomery County
Earl Hagemeyer, Ogle County
The late Jason Coulter, Peoria County
Agnes Thurston, Pulaski County
Amie Callahan, Rock Island County
Terry Bohn, St. Clair County
David Morrison, Sangamon County
James Sparks, Shelby County
Ron and Karen Horsley, Stark County
Karen Wilhelms. Stephenson County
Joe Grove, Tazewell County
Keith Ellis, Union County
Paige Brown, Vermilion County
Amy Quinn. Warren County
Angie Bowman, Washington County
Debbie Webb, Wayne County
Holly Healy, White County
Darren Mosher, Whiteside County
David and Lisa McMurtry, Will County
Donald Elliott, Williamson County
Ralph Koning, Winnebago County
Paul and Theresa McHenry, Woodford County
66 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
|
ILLINOIS STATE FAIR
Photo: Judy Mae Bingman.
Throughout its 150-year history, the University of Illinois has been the grateful beneficiary of many gifts of farmland, and the College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences currently receives income from 6,100 acres of donated farmland held for its exclusive benefit. Income from the ongoing successful operation of a gifted farm serves as a perpetual funding source for the college’s land-grant mission.
“I think gifts like these are spectacular if you want to have a long-term commitment to making a difference,” ACES Dean Kim Kidwell said. “We can frame a gift agreement with anybody, in any way, that works for them. We can keep the ground and use the proceeds we get from leasing it to fund different types of activities, scholarships for students, operations for a farm, or for a faculty member.”
| Income from the Warren Farm helps attract new youth to 4-H, shares the 4-H brand, and helps youth to explore areas of interest. Recently, funds have specifically supported special interest club and club innovation grants. Photo: Mark Becker.
4-H TEEN TEACHER, FARMER CITY
“I have a lot of interaction with kids, and we get to learn a lot about food, science, and art through a bunch of different activities.”
Corissa Godbee, 15, Teen Teacher in agriculture, STEM, art, gardening, and cooking
WARREN FAMILY
“The Warrens were big believers in kids, in 4-H and in agriculture, and they believed this would be a good way to pass it on.”
The legacy of the Warren family started in 1955, when Elizabeth Warren gifted 40 acres of farmland to the University of Illinois as a memorial to her family. The intention of the gift was to support and promote Illinois 4-H and other youth agricultural programs, as well as long-term research. In 1996, an additional 80 acres were added to the gift from the estate of Milton W. and Claradine Warren, as a memorial to Milton and his sister, Anna May Warren.
ensuring new families grow from 4-H.
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Dwight Huffstutler, farm operator and great-grandson of Elizabeth Warden
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL, CONSUMER & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Donating appreciated securities, such as stock or mutual funds, can be a tax-wise way to support 4-H.
Avoid federal and state tax on the capital gain.
Receive an income tax deduction (federal and most states) for the full market value of the gift if you itemize deductions on your tax return and have held the assets one year or longer.
Once you turn 70.5 years of age, you are required to take annual minimum distributions from your traditional IRAs and employer-sponsored retirement plans, and it is considered taxable income. A charitable distribution from your IRA directly to the Illinois 4-H Foundation helps you avoid that increase in taxable income and makes a lasting difference in the lives of young people.
A will is the easiest and most effective means to ensure that you fully provide for your family and that your assets are distributed as you wish. Gifts by will or bequests, both large and small, are very important. For more information about leaving a legacy gift or naming Illinois 4-H as a beneficiary of your retirement accounts, please contact Angie Barnard, 217-333-9295.
The CloverSeed is the joint publication of the Illinois 4-H Foundation and University of Illinois Extension 4-H and serves to show statewide impact of the 4-H program, made possible, in part, by the support of Foundation donors.
This report recognizes donors who have generously supported the Illinois 4-H Foundation. Every effort has been made to ensure accuracy of information. Please forgive any errors or omissions that may have occurred. We ask that you notify the Illinois 4-H Foundation of any mistakes so that we may correct our records.
Illinois 4-H Youth Development
Lisa B. Diaz Ph.D.
Assistant Dean and 4-H Director
Office:
801 N. Country Fair Dr., Suite E., Champaign, IL 61821 illinois4H@illinois.edu
4-H.illinois.edu
217-333-0910
Illinois 4-H Foundation
Angie H. Barnard
Executive Director
Office:
203 Mumford Hall, 1301 W. Gregory Dr., Urbana, IL 61801 illinois4hfoundation@illinois.edu 4hfoundation.illinois.edu
217-333-9295
Editor/ Lead Writer: Judy Mae Bingman
Supporting information and photos: Angie Barnard, Mark Becker, Judy Mae Bingman, Becky Buckrop, Rachel Hazen, Patricia Huffer, Johnna Jennings, Amy McCarty, Angela Miller, Emily Smith, Cheryl Timmerman, Matt Wiley, Anita Wilkinson.
University of Illinois College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, Urbana-Champaign, Illinois © Copyright 2019, University of Illinois Board of Trustees
United States Department of Agriculture | Local Extension Councils Cooperating
Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension Work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Shelly Nickols-Richardson, Director, University of Illinois Extension. University of Illinois Extension provides equal opportunities in programs and employment.
Copy Editor: Samantha Koon
Designers: Judy Mae Bingman, Ben Arthur
70 | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | COLLEGE OF ACES | ILLINOIS EXTENSION | 4-H | 4-H FOUNDATION
ILLINOIS 4-H FOUNDATION PROJECT PARTNERS
Our are for youth to learns skills for living by supporting Illinois . Join the growing list of businesses and organizations making the .
The Illinois 4-H Foundation is joining forces with outstanding corporations, organizations, and trade associations that support 4-H programs, events, and members.
We gratefully recognize our Project Partners for collaborating with us as we engage young people in service and hands-on learning addressing current issues in Illinois.
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Cash | Securities | Real Estate & Farmland Personal Property | IRA Charitable Roller
your impact grow by combining a with a , through retirement plan assets, life insurance proceeds, bank or brokerage accounts, or wills and trusts.
your giving with a to Illinois 4-H lets you make a bigger impact. You have the to choose the that complement your financial situation and the future needs of you and those you love. 203 Mumford Hall, 1301 W. Gregory Dr. | Urbana, IL 61801 217-333-9295 | illinois4Hfoundation@illinois.edu
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