In
1996, Dolly Parton launched an exciting new effort to benefit
the children of her home county in east Tennessee. Dolly wanted
to foster a love of reading among her county’s preschool
children and their families. She wanted children to be excited
about books and to feel the magic that books can create. Moreover,
she could insure that every child would have books, regardless
of their family’s income.
So she decided to mail a brand new, age appropriate book
each month to every child under 5 in Sevier County. With
the arrival of every child’s first book, the classic
The Little Engine That Could ™,
every child could now experience the joy of finding their
very own book in their mail box. These moments continue
each month until the child turns 5—and in their
very last month in the program they receive Look Out Kindergarten
Here I Come.
Needless to say the experience has been a smashing success.
So much so that many other communities clamored to provide
the Imagination Library to their children. Dolly thought
long and hard about it and decided her Foundation should
develop a way for other communities to participate. The
Foundation asked a blue ribbon panel of experts to select
just the right books and secured Penguin Group USA to
be the exclusive publisher for the Imagination Library.
Moreover a database was built to keep track of the information.
Consequently, in March of 2000 she stood at the podium
of The National Press Club in Washington, D.C. and revealed
the plan for other communities to provide the Imagination
Library to their children. And as only Dolly can say it,
she wanted to “put her money where her mouth is
– and with such a big mouth that’s a pretty
large sum of money” and provide the books herself
to the children of Branson, Missouri and Myrtle Beach,
South Carolina – communities where her businesses
now operate. If other leaders in their communities were
willing to do the same, well something big might just
happen.
You know what? It did!!
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David Dotson, Executive Director of The Dollywood Foundation,
Dolly Parton, Lady Jackson, President of the Governor’s
Books from Birth Foundation, and Phil Bredesen,
Governor, State of Tennessee. |
Here’s how it works:
A community must make the program accessible to all preschool
children in their area. The community pays for the books and
mailing, promotes the program, registers the children, and enters
the information into the database.
From there The Dollywood Foundation takes over and manages the system to deliver the books to the home. You can find out more of the operational details on other pages in this website – so what are you waiting for! Hundreds of communities are providing books to hundreds of thousands of children. |