Abilene Welcomes Association Meeting


This week Abilene welcomed the Kansas Association of County Planning and Zoning Officials. Thanks to the  Abilene & Smoky Valley Railroad  for the special trolley tour!
Store a "Gateway" for Abilene tourism


  Abilene's new 24/7 Travel Store opened Monday.

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26th Annual Abilene KS K78 Fly-In Breakfast & Open House



Save the Date - Tourism After Hours















Hors d'oeuvres provided by Amanda's Bakery & Bistro

Wine provided by Smoky Hills Vineyards & Winery

Beer provided by Kansas Territory Brewing Company

Awards ceremony at 6:00 p.m.
Inaugural Antique Fest in Downtown Abilene

 
Mother's Day Tea

 
The annual Mother's Day Tea will feature America's First Ladies Man Andrew Och. The program begins at 11 a.m. on Saturday, May 12 in the Library building courtyard. Tickets are $15 and may be purchased online at http://bit.ly/2mpUSEA before May 7.

First Ladies Man Andrew Och is an award-winning television producer and author. He returns to Abilene to present Volume Two of his book documenting the stories of our country's First Ladies titled "Unusual For Their Time." In 2012, he began a historical journey as he traversed America for over a year documenting the lives of every First Lady of the United States for the C-SPAN series "First Ladies: Influence And Image." 

Och has published two books from his research, "Unusual For Their Time: On the Road with America's First Ladies," Volumes One and Two. Both books are for sale in the Eisenhower Presidential Library gift shop or online at www.ILikeIkeStore.com.
Car & Truck Show

Join Holm Automotive Center for a fun-filled day celebrating their 35th Anniversary!

Saturday, May 19
10:00 a.m. - 
3:00 p.m.
Throwback Thursday: Travel Then & Now

Abilene has a longstanding history as a tourist community. The theme for the  U.S. Travel Association's 2018 National Travel & Tourism Week is Travel Then & Now.

Help us select the 2018 Abilene Convention & Visitors Bureau Fan Favorite! The attraction's photo with the most votes will receive a special award during the Abilene CVB's National Travel & Tourism Week Celebration Thursday, May 10.

Vote online at  http://woobox.com/n3od3w or by clicking the "Vote now!" tab on our Facebook page#NoPlaceLikeKS

5 Star Reviews - Abilene's Victorian Inn Bed & Breakfast

KANSAS! Magazine's Weekend Getaways Finalists

Abilene named one of the 20 finalists for KANSAS! Magazine's Favorite Weekend Getaway contest.

Sometimes you just have to get away. Maybe as a couple, family or just some friends needing to unplug and reconnect. What's your favorite destination in Kansas to take a weekend getaway?

Voting has begun, you can vote daily through March 16 and May 31. Winning "Weekend Getaways" will be announced in the winter 2018 issue.
Readers' Choice Guidelines
  • Vote daily between now and May 31st.
  • Winners will be determined by the total number of votes received.
  • Winners will be revealed in the winter 2018 edition of the KANSAS!.
Please vote daily for Abilene using:


"The proudest thing I can claim is that I am from Abilene."
Dwight D. Eisenhower
June 22, 1945

train
Abilene & Smoky Valley Railroad

Opening weekend Saturday, May 5 with train rides at 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Sunday, May 6 at 2:00 p.m. only. 1;45 narrated round trip from Abilene to Enterprise, KS. Cost is $15 for ages 12 and older, $7.50 ages 3-11 with the diesel engine. Steam will run May 26, 27 & 28, cost is $30 for 12 and older, $15 for ages 3-11. When the steam engine runs the diesel does not.

Operating each weekend through May.

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From ASVRR volunteer and K-State professor, Steve Smethers:

EXPERIENCE RAILROAD HISTORY IN ABILENE, KANSAS. The Abilene and Smoky Valley is a "heritage" railroad. Its mission is to preserve the history of the line and to teach passengers about the legacy of railroads as builders of our economy, our communities and our culture. Far-sighted railroad enthusiasts across the country, including people here in Abilene, have championed the heritage railroad movement, acquiring abandoned rail lines and turning them into traveling museums, f eaturing vintage equipment and preserving operational customs that were once so commonplace in moving trains across Kansas and the U.S.

The A&SV rails once belonged to the Rock Island Railroad, which established and maintained a 49-mile subdivision from the Rock's mainline through Kansas at Herington, to the rich agribusiness destination of Salina, Kansas. The line was taken over by the Missouri-Kansas-Texas (KATY) railroad when the Rock Island filed for bankruptcy in 1980, and was operated as the Oklahoma-Kansas-Texas (OKT) until the Union Pacific acquired the Katy in 1988.

A&SV passengers don't just ride the rails. They get to personally inspect the engine, the caboose, and the rest of the rolling stock, which includes a 1902 MKT wooden passenger car, a 1930s vintage Chicago and Northwestern passenger car, and a gondola car from the Missouri Pacific. Visitors can ask questions of volunteer engineers, conductors, brakemen, firemen and car hosts. They can even pay a special fee and ride in the Union Pacific caboose or the cab of the engines.

The 90-minute trip to and from Enterprise is a chance for passengers young and old to lose themselves in studying an important chapter of Kansas history. Come ride with us this weekend, as the A&SV begins its 24th season of operation! Excursion trains leave Abilene's historic Rock Island Depot at 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Saturday and at 2:00 p.m. Sunday. 
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Historic Home & Barn Tours
Hollinger House & Barn and Prospect Park
2nd Saturdays
May-October
Includes lunch
Reservations required.

Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum & Boyhood Home


Thursday, April 26
Noon - 1:00 p.m.
The United States and the Holocaust
Visitors Center Auditorium

Presentation by Mike R. Russell, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of History
Kansas Wesleyan University

Dr. Mike Russell will present "The United States and the Holocaust" on Thursday, April 26th, at noon in the Visitors Center Auditorium. The free program includes a light lunch.
 
The April Lunch & Learn program continues a month-long focus on Holocaust awareness. Dr. Russell's presentation will concentrate on two key areas: "What and when did the U.S. know?" and "The Holocaust in the American consciousness today." 
Great Plains Theatre -  Camelot Receives Great Reviews!


REVIEW: 'Camelot' brings magic to Old Creamery stage

AMANA, IOWA - The lusty month of May that Guenevere sings about got off to an early start this week, with a sparkling new adaptation of "Camelot."

The show, which opened Thursday and continues through May 20 at the Old Creamery Theatre, preserves the integrity of the story and the beauty of the music.
The sparkle originates with Emmy-winning writer David Lee, who spent the 1973-74 season with the Old Creamery acting troupe in Garrison, and flows through Meg Sharp, who shines as Queen Guenevere, caught in a heart-wrenching love triangle with King Arthur and the dashing Lancelot.

Lee, who returned to his native California after his stint in Garrison, helped create and shape some of television's most memorable sitcoms, including "The Jeffersons," "Cheers," "Wings" and "Frasier." So his award-winning imagination and sparkling dialogue find the essence of the 1960 Lerner and Loewe version that runs more than three hours, and strips it down to two hours, using seven men and one woman. The Old Creamery added a handmaiden for Guenevere to pump up the vocal balance and the female presence onstage.

It all works so beautifully.

The characters who were removed are not missed. Merlin still is mentioned several times, so his wisdom and wizardry continue to swirl around Arthur, especially at moments of crisis for the pacifist king.

Key knights are still there and the horrid Mordred continues to vex Arthur with his quest to destroy the Round Table and its king. Matthew Blake Johnson from New York is superb as the unctuous, morbid Mordred. He is so detestable, with no redeeming qualities.

At the other end of the spectrum, Matthew Aaron, also based in New York, brings such heart to Arthur. He's playful and awkward in a chance meeting with Guenevere before their arranged marriage, then grows tender and loving as their love blossoms. He has such a heart-melting moment when he sings "the way to handle a woman is to love her, simply love her, merely love her, love her, love her." And so my heart shattered with his growing realization that Lancelot was pulling his beloved Guenevere away.

Perry Sook of New York is daring, arrogant and brave as the handsome Lancelot, wrapping his booming, resonant voice around the cavalier "C'est Moi" and later, the romantic "If Ever I Would Leave You."

But it's Georgia native Sharp who imbues the show with such joy as Guenevere, with turns coquettish and sweet, wistful and wise. While it would be easy to be angry with her as she turns away from Arthur, her underlying devotion to him is palpable right up to the end.

All three leads have such magnificent voices, that every song they sing is a wonder and delight.

The rough-hewed unit set serves the show well, changing easily from bedroom to battlefield. Marquetta Senters' costumes also transform quickly as easily, with the addition of a cloak or vest or frill. The choreography by Keegan Christopher and Katie Colletta keeps the action moving and grounded in the Middle Ages, from percussive thumping and lighthearted frolics around a maypole to jousting and deadly swordplay.

Guest director Randy West from Great Plains Theatre in Abilene, Kan. - where the show will move after ending in Amana - conducts the action and characters in a most regal way. The show is definitely a  jewel in the Old Creamery's crown.

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Greyhound Hall of Fame Museum


 

On Wednesday the Greyhound Hall of Fame's greeter, Ginger, celebrated her birthday. Happy birthday, Ginger!


Upcoming events:
  • Fly-In Breakfast - May 5
  • Old Abilene Town opening weekend - May 5 & 6
  • Abilene CVB Tourism After Hours - May 10
  • Antique Fest - May 12
  • Home & Barn Tours @ Abilene & Smoky Valley Railroad- May 12
  • Mother's Day Tea @ Eisenhower Presidential Library - May 12
  • Car & Truck Show @ Holm Automotive Center - May 19
  • Symphony & Sunset @ Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum & Boyhood Home - Eisenhower Presidential Library lawn
  • Camelot @ Great Plains Theatre - June 8-10, 12-17
  • Independence Day Celebration - July 4
  • The Lion in Winter @ Great Plains Theatre - July 13-15, 17-22
  • Central Kansas Free Fair - August 1-6
  • Wild Bill Hickok Rodeo - August 2-4
  • National Cowboy Poetry Rodeo - August 2-4
  • Shrek the Musical @ Great Plains Theatre - August 10-12, 14-19
  • Not Another Christmas Letter @ Great Plains Theatre - November 30-December 2, 4-9
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