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Residents Making History

April 21, 2021 By HS Board

Mount Prospect musician streamed in 80+ countries, dedicated “Royal March’ to Prince Philip

Mt. Prospect’s Robert Hurns second album Music From Imaginary Movies features the song “Royal March” he dedicated to Prince Philip.

By Diane Turner-Hurns

As the world mourns the April 9 death of Britain’s Prince Philip Mountbatten, married to Queen Elizabeth II for 73 years, Mt. Prospect musician Robert J. Hurns dedicates his instrumental song Royal March to his memory.

“Prince Philip led a long, extraordinary life. In many ways he was the embodiment of the concept of royalty,” said Hurns, who has been to Britain 11 times over the years and has attended Elizabeth II’s three Jubilees. “Royal March recalls the pomp and gravitas that must appear when royalty enters the room!”

Royal March, off Hurns second album “Music From Imaginary Movies,” is one of the most downloaded Hurns songs available off Spotify, Amazon, Tik Tok and music platforms worldwide. It can also be downloaded at the hearnow.com site https://bit.ly/2xoFIuM.

Hurns said songs off his four instrumental rock albums: 1) Crabby Road, 2) Music From Imaginary Movies, 3) Meet The Christ Stains! and 4) Castle of the Von Font Counters, may also help people get through the final days of this pandemic and the loss of a legendary figure.

“This instrumental rock takes you away, helps one think, makes one dance and brings a smile,” Hurns said.

Songs such as the top streamed Sonic Magazine, Winter, Battle Line and The Office from Crabby Road; Giant Monkey Island, Larry Blotter — Potions A’Poppin, Abbutt & Castello Meet Osama Bin Laden, Royal March, and Lunar Ocean from Music From Imaginary Movies; Twin Peeks, Last Day, Attack of the Giant Bumble Bee, and El Syd, from Meet The Christ Stains! and Dark Day Dance, Laudanum, The Inn Crowd and Message to Gort from Castle of the Von Font Counters are great, fans say.

The hearnow.com links for each album are Crabby Road — https://bit.ly/35ouKSH, Music From Imaginary Movies — https://bit.ly/2xoFIuM, Meet The Christ Stains! — https://bit.ly/3bQmcq2 and Castle of the Von Font Counters — https://bit.ly/3bVC7Ua. All are produced by Hurns’ Chicago-based Curio Cabinet Records.


CD.baby.com
 analytics show Hurns music has been downloaded by people in more than 80 countries. Fans are saying Hurns’ music is:

“A vast landscape punctuated with driving angular lines of sonic greatness”;

“Vampy industrial rock: (WZRD FM); “Makes you feel like you are free on a technicality — we bet you’ll plead insanity when you hear his latest” (The Entertainer); “Sly wiggly syncopated industrial pop performed on brightly toned synths and electric guitar by Hurns,” and; “Is a Kubrick-ish soundtrack for a mystical sci-fi flick; some songs are a metal cornucopia with raw, spare drumming, begs for dancing.”(local news reporter).

Hurns, also a lawyer, played in bands Radio Whip, the Texas Chainsaw Experience and the Tortfeasers. He created and performed Safety March, a theme for an international safety trade group’s 100th anniversary. A fifth album will be released later this year.

“We send our deep sympathy to Queen Elizabeth II and her family in the loss of Prince Philip,” Hurns said.

Copyright 2022 Daily Herald (www.dailyherald.com)

Filed Under: Residents Making History

October 5, 2020 By HS Board

Former Mount Prospect neighbors reunite at Wheeling senior living community

Submitted by Terri Tangney Fleming
Posted 10/5/2020

Barb Tangney, left, and Marie Pope are next-door neighbors again at Addolorata Villa Senior Living in Wheeling, continuing a circle of deep friendship that began 65 years ago on South Maple Street in Mount Prospect. Courtesy of Frank Tangney Jr.

Across the street was a field of tomatoes. On south Maple Street in 1955 Mount Prospect, there were two handsome brick farmhouses standing alone surrounded by farmland and promise.

The Chicago and Northwestern Railroad station was just a few blocks’ walk to the north. There was a new Catholic church and school just up the road. That tomato field was destined for a big town park. What better place to raise growing families?

That summer, Barb and Frank Tangney moved their three kids (and one on the way) out of Chicago’s Northwest Side to 404 S. Maple St., right next door to John and Marie Pope at 400 S. Maple.

The Popes had moved there a year earlier from Washington state. There was plenty of room in the new house for their own growing brood. In 1955, the Popes had five at home, and their sixth would come the following year.

Barb and Marie had a lot in common. Both devout Catholics, both can-do, self-reliant optimists with strong senses of right and wrong who believed in the powers of hard work and fresh air. Before marriage, Barb earned a degree in dietetics. Marie worked for Air Canada and moved from her native London, Ontario, to Chicago in 1946 to help open a branch office.

Every morning, the Tangney kids (eventually seven in all) and Pope kids — over the years joined by the Halas, Fisher and Mann kids as Maple Street filled in — would walk the five blocks to St. Raymond’s School.

After the kids were off, Barb often would sit in Marie’s kitchen for a cup of coffee or two. The two bargain hounds loved to shop together; coming home empty-handed was beside the point.

The families did nearly everything together. Once Lions Park was built, they swam there in summer and sledded (on Folgers Mountain) in the winter. The kids joined the Mount Prospect Speed Skating Club. Both families’ properties had an extra lot, which provided plenty of room to play endless games of kick the can, red rover, four square, baseball and a homegrown game they called ditch.

They watched Main Street Fourth of July parades as a group. The Tangneys had pear and apple trees. The Popes a big and fruitful mulberry tree.

As next-door neighbors in Mount Prospect, Barb Tangney, left, and Marie Pope, second from right, were devoted tennis players and kept a schedule of games at Lions Park with friends such as Sue Douglas, second from left, and Betty Alseits, right. – Courtesy of Terri Tangney Fleming

Even if it meant bringing the baby buggy to the courts — which it often did — Barb and Marie were devoted tennis players and had a schedule of regular games at Lions Park with other like-minded moms.

Dressed in their tennis whites, their shouts from the court (nothing saltier than “Oh, Barbara!” or “Oh, Marie!”) could be heard around the neighborhood.

The two women started a women’s jogging club — even went so far as having sweatshirts made — but were less devoted to actually running.

As the rest of South Maple Street filled in, 400 and 404 became the sites of block-party traditions. A favorite was the annual corn roast in late summer, taking advantage of the bounty of local fresh corn. Corn would be soaked then roasted on an old bed spring laid over a bed of coals in the Popes’ yard. On the Tangney driveway was the keg of beer and every flavor of Arlington Beverage Co. soda pop on ice.

Years went by. The kids grew, left for college and started their own families. The best friends’ shared history grew deeper. The couples and their network of friends had time for excursions, such as weekends in Wisconsin to cross-country ski or snowmobile.

With fewer responsibilities at home, Barb Tangney turned to volunteering at Holy Family Hospital. Marie Pope worked in the office at the Mount Prospect Fire Department, learning to use a computer. Tennis together was a mainstay.

Grandkids came into the picture and provided much joy. As of September 2020, Barb has 15 grandkids and 11 great-grandkids, while Marie has 17 grandkids and seven great-grands.

Sadly, Frank, who retired in 1982 as treasurer of Putman Publishing Co., died at age 76 in 1996. John, who retired as a pharmaceutical rep from E.R. Squibb, died at 90 in 2008.

Soon after Frank’s passing, Barb downsized and moved into an apartment in Arlington Heights. Marie and John had moved to Prospect Heights in 2002.

The women stayed in close touch despite time and distance. If Barb was at her vacation home in Colorado or Marie visiting her kids, they stayed in touch the old-fashioned way: by letter.

When they were both home, they carpooled to St. Raymond’s 7:30 a.m. Sunday Mass then dined together at Le Peep Cafe.

Fast forward to 2020. Sharp-as-a-tack Marie — now 104 — resides in an independent living apartment in Wheeling’s Addolorata Villa senior living community. Barb, who until the pandemic hit was a YMCA water-aerobics regular, celebrated her 95th birthday in June.

She found herself ready to make a similar move. When asked where she’d like to go, Barb recalled that Marie and other friends were happy at “A.V.” Why not there?

Call it luck, call it divine providence or call it a reward for lives well-spent, but when Barb moved into her A.V. apartment on Sept. 19, there was Marie, right next door again, continuing a circle that started 65 years ago.

Their first day back together, they attended 3 p.m. Mass then walked down the hall for dinner in the cafeteria.

Copyright 2020 Daily Herald (www.dailyherald.com)

Filed Under: pandemic-articles, Residents Making History

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Mount Prospect Historical Society
101 South Maple Street
Mount Prospect, IL 60056
847.392.9006
info@mtphistory.org

The Mount Prospect Historical Society is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that is committed to preserving the history of Mount Prospect, IL, through artifacts, photographs and both oral and written memories of current and former residents and businesspeople.  On its campus in the heart of the Village, the Society maintains the 1906 Dietrich Friedrichs house museum, the ADA-accessible Dolores Haugh Education Center and the 1896 one-room Central School, which was moved to the museum campus in 2008, renovated and opened to the public in 2017, the 100-year anniversary of the Village.

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