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The Kitchen Sisters Present

223 - Losing Lincoln

The Kitchen Sisters Present

The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

Society & Culture

4.6 • 1.3K Ratings

🗓️ 3 October 2023

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Since the start of the pandemic, more than 90 colleges have merged or closed permanently. One of these schools, Lincoln College, closed its doors with only about one month’s notice in May of 2022 — after 157 years. Due to the pandemic and a ransomware attack, administrators say the school was unable to retain, recruit, or fundraise. Since then, students have been left scrambling and many have dropped out.

Alan Jinich and Max Strickberger, recent graduates of the University of Pennsylvania and producers of the Generation Pandemic Project about the impact of Covid on young people around the country, set out to follow this story last year.

Lincoln College was a small private college in central Illinois — the only school named after Abraham Lincoln in his lifetime. But instead of attracting local students, the school drew many from three hours north: Chicago’s south and west sides. More than 40% were first generation college students and, even though the town is 95% white, the university was a Predominantly Black Institution. Students, alumni, and faculty described the community as deeply close-knit and, for many, a “second chance.” For some, it was also a refuge from gun violence.

After the sudden closure announcement, dozens of students confronted President David Gerlach expressing grief, frustration, and concern over what might happen to those who didn’t have a safe home to return to. It was the start of a fundraising predicament that drove a wedge between students’ grassroots efforts and administrators. How much money is enough to stay open? What’s at stake for Lincoln’s brittle economy? We follow voices from across the community — professors, administrators, locals, students dispersed across the Midwest, and a member of Lincoln’s last graduating class. More than a year after closing, many continue to reel. The campus is still up for sale, but a new vision for Lincoln may soon be on the horizon.

Produced by Alan Jinich and Max Strickberger with soundtracks by Reed Rosenbluth and support from the Sachs Program for Arts Innovation. A special thank you to Pati and Danny Jinich for their endless support (and SUV), Deborah and Adam Strickberger for their lifelong role modeling, and for all those who helped along the way: Ron Keller, Tim Rivera, Ms. Linda, Aundrae Williams, Jaylah Bolden, Spencer Davis, David Gerlach, Scott Raper, Seth Goodman, Aaron Butler, David Upchurch, Julia Figueroa, Klaudia Blaszcyk, Dougie Barron, and the Rose family. Thanks also to Nikki Silva and The Kitchen Sisters (and The Kitchen Sisters thank these young producers!)

You can follow more of Alan and Max’s work at www.generationpandemicproject.com or on instagram @generationpandemic_

The Kitchen Sisters Present is produced by The Kitchen Sisters (Davia Nelson & Nikki Silva) with Brandi Howell and Nathan Dalton. We’re part of Radiotopia from PRX, a curated network of some of the best podcasts out there.

Visit kitchensisters.org for more stories and info about upcoming events — like our annual Bowling with Grace Party and fundraiser at Mission Bowling Club, San Francisco, October 28, 2023, with celebrity guest bowlers Boz Scaggs, Alice Waters, Samin Nostrat, Roman Mars, Roman Coppola, Wendy MacNaughton, Song Exploder’s Hrishikesh Hirway, KQED’s Alexis Madrigal, Ear Hustle’s Nigel Poor & Earlonne Woods, Rebecca Solnit… and so many more.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Radio to you.

0:02.2

Welcome to the Kitchen Sisters' present, P-R-X.

0:05.6

We are the Kitchen Sisters, Davie Annelson, and Nikki Silva.

0:10.2

I'm Mo'Raca, and I'm excited to announce season four of my podcast, Mo'Bitchuaries.

0:16.7

I've got a whole new bunch of stories to share with you about the most fascinating people

0:21.8

and things who are no longer with us, from famous figures who died on the very same day.

0:28.8

Such as the things I wish would die, like buffets, all that, and much more.

0:35.3

Listen to Mo'Bitchuaries with Mo'Raca, wherever you get your podcasts.

0:43.6

In 2021, in the heat of the pandemic, two college students, Alan Heenech and Max Strickberger

0:50.0

decided to take a semester off from the University of Pennsylvania.

0:54.3

They were cooped up and taking classes online, and they wanted to get out there and find

0:58.5

out how COVID was impacting other young people around the country.

1:02.5

They took off an Alan's mom's car from their hometown in Maryland to Chattanooga, Greensboro,

1:08.3

New Orleans, Dallas, Santa Fe, Circleville, Jackson, Omaha, Chicago, talking to a surprising

1:14.9

and diverse array of young Americans.

1:18.4

The result is a project called Generation Pandemic, a rich online gallery and archive of photographs

1:24.5

and stories, articles in the Washington Post, the Philadelphia Enquirer, and praise and

1:30.1

interviews with NPR and news outlets around the country.

1:34.7

Today, the kitchen sisters present a news story these two recent college graduates have been

1:39.3

following.

1:40.3

It's called Losing Lincoln, produced by Alan Heenech and Max Strickberger.

1:48.8

Over the past few years, Max and I have interviewed more than 80 young adults across the country.

...

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