PEORIA MAGAZINE April 2023

LAUNCHING PAD

BE LIKE LINCOLN Sixteen Peoria County high schoolers have been honored as Lincoln Seniors

BY AMY EDGAR

E ach year, some of the top students from across Peoria County are recognized for exhibiting the traits of character, conduct and scholarship that were associated with America’s 16th president, Abraham Lincoln. The Lincoln Senior Award is given to one outstanding senior from each high school in Peoria County. The 20th annual Lincoln Senior Awards were announced Feb. 16. The awards were established after a group of Lincoln scholars banded together in 1999 to raise funds for a life-sized statue of Lincoln in commemoration of his historic 1854 speech near the site of what is now the Peoria County Courthouse. After the statue was erected in 2001, several thousand dollars in funds remained. The group forwarded the money to the Peoria Federation of Teachers to encourage young people to model Lincoln’s finest characteristics, and the first Lincoln Senior Award ceremony was held in 2003. According to the award criteria, Lincoln Seniors must:

• Be a good student who demonstrates diligence and preparation in school work; • Be passionate and deliberate in the desire to learn; • Show an appreciation for self learning, initiated independently; • Be selective and disciplined in reading; • Exhibit leadership and good organization; • Have ambition to succeed; • Demonstrate an ability to speak clearly and deliberately; • Be knowledgeable about history and politics; • Believe in the equality of individuals and traditional values; • Be courageous and exhibit persistent effort in the face of adversity; • Be honest and humble while displaying loyalty to family, friends, school and relationships; • Demonstrate good humor. “These students are the best and the brightest,” said David Poehls, director

of special projects at the Peoria County Regional Office of Education. For example, Mariah Cade has participated in track and volleyball at Richwoods High School for the past four years, as well as chorus and the Madrigal Program. She also has served as senior class president. She plans to study history and social sciences in college. Anthropology teacher Jason Clark nominated her for the award. “Mariah is one of the most articulate and intelligent students I have ever had,” he said. “She really considers what others have to say before expressing her own thoughts on something. She has the ability to disagree respectfully … This is an incredibly important skill, and Mariah’s mastery of it is beyond her years.” Ava Schramm of Illinois Valley Central High School in Chillicothe is involved in soccer, cross country, German Honor Society, and National Honor Society. She plans to attend Wartburg College and study economics or finance. “I would say ‘surprised’ isn’t a strong enough word,” Schramm said of her nomination by the school’s history

94 APRIL 2023 PEORIA MAGAZINE

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