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1.5 Linear feet (3 Boxes) [Mixed materials]
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Administrative history
The Flute and Fiddle Club was primarily an orchestra. Its conductor and director was Everett L. Millard beginning in 1929. Occasionally, the orchestra would do programs in conjunction with the North Shore Choral Society.
The Flute and Fiddle Club began in 1929 under the guidance of Everett L. Millard. Millard was a well-trained music proficient who studied in both the United States and Germany. His home, a log cabin in Highland Park, Illinois, served the rehearsal space and often times the performance location for the orchestra. Millard led the Flute and Fiddle Club as conductor of until his retirement in 1953, conducting the full string and brass orchestra. Beginning in 1950, a group of board members also assisted the Club. The board helped design the year's set list, planned holiday parties, organized, and advertised the Club's performances. They gave suggestions for what should be played and kept track of who was volunteering to play and sing at the various events. They were an asset to Millard; and after his retirement, fully took over the preparation and direction of the Club.
Millard also led the Chamber Symphony Orchestra and the North Shore Musicians, who gave concerts at various locations twice a year, during his Flute and Fiddle Club tenure. Both music ensembles began in 1929, and lay claims be the oldest community orchestras in the Chicago area. Millard's home also doubled as a performance venue.
Before becoming conductor of Highland Parks' music groups, Millard actively participated on various boards and societies in Highland Park. He is originally from Highland Park, and attended grade school at the North Shore Country Day School after it opened up in 1919. He continued his education at Philips Academy Andover Massachusetts and then moved onto four years of Harvard University's chemistry program. During his studies at Harvard, Millard traveled to Vienna, Austria, to study music. Upon his return to the United States, Millard joined the Navy and was an officer in New York when he met his wife in 1945. Marry and Everett married in 1946 and had four children: "Skeets" Hyde, "Corky" Mary Cordelia, "Liza" Ann Eliza, and "Penny" Olivia Penniman. He raised his children in the same log cabin built by his grandfather in whiche grew. father. His home was not just the practice and occasional performance space for his orchestras but also his work place.
Millard was a publisher, writer, editor, general contractor, and licensed real estate broker with an outside office located in Chicago. He was also an active member of the Federalist movement, board member of the East Park Board, chairman of the City Beautification Committee, and an officer on the board of the Highland Park Hospital Foundation. In his spare time, Millard enjoyed being with his family and attending the high school's Glee Club events, where as a student, his long courtship with music began.
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Archival history
Possibly donated by Millard in the 1990s.
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Time period covered is 1929-1998.
Contents: Music Programs, correspondences, hand-written music, news clippings, notes, receipts, photos
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None.
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Fair.
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- English
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Archivist's note
Processed by Jennifer Klein.