Make your year-end gift with us today!

Robert "Bob" Swenson

Robert Swenson Photo IHC reduced

Former Road Scholar and Museum on Main Street Waterways consultant, Robert "Bob" Swenson has returned to share with Illinois communities the importance of the Four Rivers Reach.

Join musician and author Bob Swenson as he shares the stories of those who traveled to and through the Reach and its continued relevance today and in the future. 

Available

River Confluences - The Four Rivers Reach of the Lower Ohio

Swenson will present his theory as to why and how the 60-mile long segment of the lower Ohio River bordering southernmost Illinois and western Kentucky is so important. At the center of our nation’s navigable interstate river system, the Four Rivers Reach consists of three confluences of four major rivers through which all vessels carrying Native Americans, explorers, hunters, the military, settlers, and others coming or going to the east, the deep south, west, or the northwest had to travel. These three confluences allowed navigation to the southern Appalachians, the Gulf of Mexico, the southwest, north to the Great Lakes and Canada, or westward as far as the Rocky Mountains.

Swenson will share stories of those who traveled to and through the Reach. Many stayed a short while. Others made their homes here. They created towns, conducted commerce, and developed shipyards for over 120 years, launching almost 300 steamboats that worked the entire lengths of most inland rivers. The Four Rivers Reach continues to be at the center of river, rail, and trucking transportation and energy production, storage, and transmission today and in the future.

If you would like to learn more about the Ohio River history and southernmost Illinois, you can visit SIU’s Morris Library’s Special Collections, where the research Swenson conducted with university students and community residents is housed. 

This presentation aligns with the Illinois America 250 Commission's theme, the Power of Place, that helps us explore how our natural and built environments have shaped the settlement, migration, and the development of our state. The Illinois America 250 Commission's goals are to uplift local stories, places, and programs; build pride; and showcase how Illinois brings the ideals of the Declaration of Independence to life.

Audience Recommendations

This presentation is for all age groups including younger people, especially high school and college age with strong interests in Illinois and regional history. Other groups who should be encouraged to attend are writing groups and book clubs; history, social studies, and business teachers; business and civic groups (Rotary, Lions, Kiwanis, Scouts, etc.), as well as senior care facilities that can provide transportation.

Program Logistics

The length of the program before Q&A is 60 minutes. The host should provide a digital projector and large screen or white wall for projection, a lectern with a surface for Bob Swenson's laptop (Microsoft), public address system (microphone, speakers, etc.), and access to several electrical outlets. Recording is allowed by the host only. 

Bio

Based in Carbondale, IL

Robert "Bob" Swenson, a retired architect; SIU Carbondale professor emeritus; historic preservation consultant; photographer; old-time musician; is now an author. Born at Rosiclare and raised at Metropolis along the lower Ohio River, he has degrees from SIU Carbondale and the Yale School of Architecture. While practicing architecture for 42-years, he taught at SIU Carbondale for 24-years. His unique multi-disciplinary summer course received a Richard H. Driehaus Preservation Award from Landmarks Illinois. His National Register of Historic Places nominations, Historic Structure Reports, and preservation/restoration projects required extensive museum, library, and photograph collections research. 

Swenson co-facilitated a Library of Congress grant to research and create museum and sculptural projects commemorating Lewis & Clark’s southernmost Illinois activities. He assisted SIU archaeology teams documenting historic sites, including an 1800s Ohio River flatboat discovered at America, Illinois. Swenson received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Illinois State Historical Society. 

In retirement, Swenson made river history presentations throughout Illinois (as an Illinois Humanities Road Scholar), western Kentucky, and Missouri, and an Illinois Humanities consultant for its Smithsonian Waterways exhibits. His recently completed a book about lower Ohio River shipyards and steamboats is scheduled to be released by the SIU Press in May 2026.

Learn More and Follow Bob

Book this Road Scholar

Follow the steps below to book a presentation.
  1. Contact Bob to schedule a date and time via email at robert.swenson41@gmail.com or phone at (618) 967-3016.
  2. Once you and Bob have agreed upon a date and time, complete the online Road Scholars Host Organization application.
Contact Us

Nicole Rodriguez
Senior Manager of Community Conversations

speakers@ilhumanities.org
(312) 374-1558