Illinois Prepares for the
2024 Solar Eclipse

On April 8, 2024, Illinois will witness a near-total solar eclipse, an event where the moon aligns with the sun, casting Earth into a temporary twilight. In Champaign, viewers will see the sun 97.9% obscured, with the eclipse starting around 12:47 p.m. and peaking at 2:05 p.m.

For those looking to experience this with others, the Champaign Public Library and the Urbana Free Library are hosting viewing events complete with music, activities, and eclipse safety glasses. In Effingham, attendees can enjoy a tailgate party atmosphere at the Performance Center, equipped with viewing glasses, snacks, and access to indoor facilities. NASA EDGE will also be live-streaming telescope views and images from Saluki Stadium in Carbondale.

The Illinois Department of Transportation urges patience for travelers heading to southern Illinois for the eclipse.

Live Updates: 2024 Total Solar Eclipse In Illinois

Illinois Public Media Newsroom is covering the solar eclipse live, sharing updates and reactions from across the state to capture the excitement of this astronomical event.

Total eclipse captured by photographer Uriel Soberanes Uriel Soberanes

 

Michael E. Matheny, MD, MS, MPH Total eclipse on April 8, 2024 captured by Michael E. Matheny, MD, MS, MPH

Eclipse watchers in Indianapolis on April 8, 2024. (Moss Bresnahan/IPM)

Total eclipse captured by Michael E. Matheny, MD, MS, MPH Michael E. Matheny, MD, MS, MPH

 

Kelly Sopko and Michael Metheny drove in from Nashville, Tennessee to see the solar eclipse at Fort Defiance park, the southernmost point of Illinois at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)
Thousands gather at Saluki Stadium at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale on April 8, 2024 to see an eclipse. (Jose Zepeda/IPM News)
Christine Herman

 

Vicki Soltis drove in from Asheville, North Carolina to see the solar eclipse at Fort Defiance park, the southernmost point of Illinois at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)
Nature photographer Uriel Soberanes drove in from Asheville, North Carolina to see the solar eclipse at Fort Defiance park, the southernmost point of Illinois at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)
Tyrell Harris of Cairo grills meat to serve to hungry eclipse watchers on April 8, 2024. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)
Meat being grilled outdoors in Cairo, Illinois for hungry eclipse watchers on April 8, 2024. (Reginald Hardwick/IPM News)

Residents of southern Illinois’ McLeansboro are excited to welcome an influx of eclipse tourists

The town of McLeansboro, Illinois, has a population of less than 3,000 people. But it’s expecting hundreds of visitors for the solar eclipse, as the town is directly in the line of totality. 

To celebrate this historical event, the McLeansboro Kiwanis Club hosted a two-day festival with live music, food trucks and special guests, including a member of the NASA Solar Eclipse Taskforce. 

Beth Sandusky and Dylan Bowling, members of the Kiwanis Club, helped organize the festival. While McLeansboro was in the line of totality during the 2017 solar eclipse, Bowling said they didn’t have any events to celebrate it that year — something they later regretted.

“We thought we wouldn’t repeat history,” Bowling said. “We wanted to bring something for the community and for everyone coming in from different states.” 

Visitors from across the country gathered Sunday in McLeansboro, Illinois, for a festival to celebrate the solar eclipse. McLeansboro is a small town in Southern Illinois that has one of the longest durations of totality. Madison Holcomb/Illinois Student Newsroom

Some in attendance traveled long distances for the event. Sandusky said she knew of visitors coming from places like Washington, D.C., and California. 

Tomas Scace was one of those visitors. He traveled more than 1,000 miles from Philadelphia to McLeansboro with some of his friends to witness a total solar eclipse for the first time. Scace said he’s not only excited to see the eclipse, but he’s also looking forward to really experiencing a small town, also for the first time. 

“Seeing that sign that said 2,900 people live here, and comparing it to 1.6 million in Philadelphia, it’s definitely an eye-opening thing,” he said. “It’s just way different. It’s a culture shock.”

Scace said he’s hoping to feel a strong connection with the celestial event.

“I’ve heard it can be a changing moment in peoples’ lives,” he said. “It’s very awe-inspiring and could be a moment of conception and moving forward towards the future with a greater idea of what you’re going to do.” 

Russ Elrod, an Alabama resident, said he came across McLeansboro while looking into which towns along the solar eclipse’s path would experience the longest length of totality. 

“I think it’s interesting how people from all walks of life and all ages are showing interest in the eclipse,” Elrod said. “I think it’s something everyone can come together on, put our differences aside and enjoy the show.” 

Sandusky, who lives in McLeansboro, said she’s enjoyed welcoming people from all over the country to their community. 

“It’s really exciting that they picked our little town to visit,” she said.

How one southern Illinois town is preparing for its second total solar eclipse in 7 years

CARBONDALE, Ill. — Kevin Morefield has traveled the world chasing total solar eclipses.

The one he saw in Australia was a perfect day with clear skies. Chile’s mountainous backdrop created an iconic scene. Norway, near the North Pole, provided an eclipse just off the horizon that painted the snowy landscape in a beautiful pink hue.

But, the Portland-based astrophotographer didn’t have to go far from Murphysboro — the rural southern Illinois town he grew up in — to add an eighth eclipse to his book.

“This time, I’m going to be a little more relaxed about photography,” he said in a Carbondale art gallery where some of his eclipse photographs are displayed. “We’re going to do it in the backyard with 14 relatives, be able to experience it together with them and help them understand what’s happening.”

Kevin Morefield, of Portland, Oregon, on Friday, April 5, 2024, at Artspace 304 in Carbondale, Ill. Morefield is an astrophotographer and eclipse chaser who was raised in nearby Murphysboro, Ill.
Kevin Morefield, of Portland, Oregon, on Friday at Artspace 304 in Carbondale, Ill. Morefield is an astrophotographer and eclipse chaser who was raised in nearby Murphysboro, Ill. –Brian Munoz/St. Louis Public Radio

Officials at the City of Carbondale, approximately two hours southeast of St. Louis, anticipate approximately 50,000 people will descend on the college town to experience this year’s total solar eclipse, dwarfing their population of about 21,700. A local airport is even expecting more than 200 planes to fly in for the event.

This astronomical show will be the community’s second in seven years and this time, the community will get a little more than 4 minutes in the moon’s shadow — almost double the length of time than the prior.

“This area is special,” said Eva Fisher, the City of Carbondale’s spokeswoman. “It’s filled with a lot of quirky creative people. So, the energy of having this eclipse twice here, it just feels right for Carbondale.”

The influx of tourism is a much-welcomed boost in revenue for many smaller towns in rural parts of southern Illinois and Missouri. During the last total solar eclipse, the Illinois Office of Tourism estimates that 200-thousand people traveled to the southern part of the state which had a spending impact of as much as $18 million.

Leah Maciell, 46, decorates eclipse cookies on Thursday, April 4, 2024, at her bakery Cristaudo's in Carbondale, Ill. "We were not prepared for all the cookie orders that we had in 2017," she said, noting the small bakery along Carbondale's downtown has received orders for hundreds of cookies around this year’s celestial spectacle. "We basically had chefs [baking] cookies, 24/7, for the five days leading up to the eclipse."
Leah Maciell, 46, decorates eclipse cookies on Thursday at her bakery Cristaudo’s in Carbondale, Ill. “We were not prepared for all the cookie orders that we had in 2017,” she said, noting the small bakery along Carbondale’s downtown has received orders for more than 1,000 cookies around this year’s celestial spectacle. “We basically had chefs [baking] cookies, 24/7, for the five days leading up to the eclipse.” –Brian Munoz/St. Louis Public Radio
Solar eclipse-themed cookies are displayed on Thursday, April 4, 2024, at Cristaudo's Bakery in Carbondale, Ill.
Solar eclipse-themed cookies are displayed on Thursday at Cristaudo’s Bakery in Carbondale. – Brian Munoz/St. Louis Public Radio

Local business owners say they look forward to the regional economic boom after learning several lessons during the first go-around.

“We’re ready to host. We’re ready to show what southern hospitality is and we’re ready to go,” said Jason Buehner, owner of The Printing Plant — a small print shop nestled next to a college bar on Carbondale’s main drag. “We are very proud of what we do and we want to be able to showcase that to people that are visiting.”

Andrea Nelson thumbed through eclipse-themed apparel at The Printing Plant as she called out to her friend Anita. “Oh you have to see this one!” she exclaimed while holding a stack of black T-shirts with various eclipse-themed graphics on them.

The pair decided to ditch the idea of a cruise and instead celebrate Nelson’s 70th birthday by making a 12.5-hour trek to Carbondale from St. Paul, Minnesota, to experience their second eclipse. They watched the 2017 spectacle in a Chillicothe, Missouri schoolyard.

“We’re staying in a university dorm and most of us are not college-age,” she chuckled. “I definitely am investing in my life now and experiences instead of stuff, although I did buy a few T-shirts.”

Andrea Nelson, 70, of St. Paul, Minn., thumbs through a rack of eclipse-themed merchandise on Saturday, April 6, 2024, at The Printing Plant in Carbondale, Ill.
Andrea Nelson, 70, of St. Paul, Minn., thumbs through a rack of eclipse-themed merchandise on Saturday at The Printing Plant in Carbondale, Ill. – Brian Munoz/St. Louis Public Radio

Planning for tens of thousands of tourists, like Nelson, is no easy feat. But, it’s the endeavor that Sarah VanVooren is co-leading at Southern Illinois University alongside Bob Baer, the school’s physics professor and eclipse czar.

The college is planning to host a capacity crowd of 15,000 eclipse enthusiasts, researchers, staff and media at their football stadium for a guided presentation through the celestial spectacle. While the university’s 2017 stadium show was cursed with clouds, current predictions seem favorable.

As the forecasts change in the south, VanVooren’s office has seen an uptick in last-minute ticket sales. She expects them to sell out seating at Saluki Stadium.

“Weather in April is iffy and can change daily,” she said. “There are people who are eclipse chasers and they will change their plans last minute to really go where [good] weather is.”

Chris Mandrell, the project cooridnator for Southern Illinois University’s dynamic eclipse broadcast, focuses a telescope ahead of the total solar eclipse on Sunday, April 7, 2024, at Saluki Stadium in Carbondale, Ill.
Chris Mandrell, the project coordinator for Southern Illinois University’s dynamic eclipse broadcast, focuses a telescope ahead of the total solar eclipse on Sunday at Saluki Stadium in Carbondale. –Brian Munoz/St. Louis Public Radio
Elizabeth Cuthrell, 20, of Katy, Texas, and Van Leonard, 19, of Nashville, Tenn., roll around an oversized inflatable moon as part of an eclipse visual aid on Sunday, April 7, 2024, during a rehearsal of Southern Illinois University’s eclipse watch party at Saluki Stadium in Carbondale, Ill.
Elizabeth Cuthrell, 20, of Katy, Texas, and Van Leonard, 19, of Nashville, Tenn., roll around an oversized inflatable moon as part of an eclipse visual aid on Sunday during a rehearsal of Southern Illinois University’s eclipse watch event at Saluki Stadium in Carbondale. – Brian Munoz/St. Louis Public Radio

Morefield, the astrophotographer, said while weather can be unpredictable, he suggests staying optimistic while enjoying the company of the people you’re with.

“The beauty of the eclipses is that there’s no danger. It’s just beautiful. It’s wrong and it’s so right all at the same time,” he said. “You find people from around the world. Everyone is there for the same reason — and nobody’s unhappy.”

Nelson echoed Morefield’s sentiments, emphasizing the need for more unity than divisiveness in society.

“I wanted to experience [the eclipse] again because, in this chaotic time where we live, there are very few things that everyone pauses and experiences,” she said. “We need so much more of that in this world right now.”

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