Streator's parks and events reflect its heritage and prairie locale. A number of its residents have distinguished themselves in the art world.
Arts The Community Players of Streator offer
summer stock theatre performances each year at the William C. Schiffbauer Center for the Performing Arts at Engle Lane Theatre. The Majestic Theatre, an
art deco style movie house, originally opened in 1907 as a
vaudeville house. It has gone through many changes, openings, and closings throughout its history, having most recently reopened in 2002. The Majestic shows recently released movies as well as hosting live musical acts. It has since closed due to deterioration. The Walldogs painted 17 murals in the summer of 2018. The downtown now is home to more than 20 murals.
Museums and historical buildings . . The Streatorland Historical Society Museum houses displays of Streator history and memorabilia of some of its famous citizens. One of the displays is a tribute to the Free Canteen. The Canteen was a group of local volunteers who served over 1.5 million soldiers during World War II who briefly stopped at the city's old Santa Fe Train Depot while traveling by troop trains. Other features include a homemade telescope used by astronomer
Clyde Tombaugh and a Burlington Northern caboose rail car. During World War II, the
Streator Santa Fe Train Depot was a busy way-station for millions of soldiers and sailors who passed through the town on the way to or from training for the war. Beginning in 1943, the Streator Parents Service Club, a group of parents of veterans of the war, created the Streator Free Canteen. The volunteers handed out sandwiches and coffee and presented a friendly face to the servicemen during their stopover in Streator. During the 2½ years that the canteen operated, volunteers hosted over 1.5 million servicemen and women. Thirty other service groups from Streator joined to assist the Parents Service Club as well as 43 other organizations throughout the central-Illinois region. On
Veterans Day, November 10, 2006, a bronze statue commemorating the "Coffee Pot Ladies" of Streator was dedicated at the Santa Fe Railroad Station. The
Streator Public Library was made possible with a $35,000 grant from
Andrew Carnegie. With its two-story high domed ceiling, Ionic columns and oak staircases, it was considered too extravagant by critics when it opened in 1903. The Library was added to the
National Register of Historic Places in 1996. The
Ruffin Drew Fletcher House located on East Broadway Street is an example of
Stick style architecture. It was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places in August 1991. The
Silas Williams House is a
Queen Anne style home built-in 1893. It was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places in June 1976. Founded in 1883, St. Stephens Catholic Church was the first Slovak Catholic church in the United States. In September 2010, the four Roman Catholic churches in Streator were consolidated into one new parish named St. Michael the Archangel. Currently, all masses are conducted at St. Stephen's Church and discussions are continuing to decide if a new church will be built or if one of the existing churches will be rebuilt. Among Streator's other notable buildings is the ornate
Bauhaus-inspired National Guard Armory near the Vermilion River and the town's turn-of-the-20th-century City Hall on Park Street (now a business). These facilities are accessible to the public, with some limitations. Streator is also home to many private residences of significant historical interest and value, including the Kennedy Home on Pleasant Avenue.
Events The Streator Food Truck Festival is held annually in May. Park Fest is held during the Memorial Day weekend through Sunday. Park Fest activities are held in City Park (the main public park in the downtown Streator area). A Memorial Day observance is held on the morning of Memorial Day at the Veterans Plaza at the southeast part of City Park. Streator is a designated stop each year in the annual "Heritage Tractor Adventure" along the
Illinois and Michigan Canal. This three-day tractor ride/rally attracts hundreds of antique tractor owners. The annual Fourth of July celebration runs for over four days with events throughout the city, with most of the events held in City Park; the park-based events include a carnival, 5K run and a talent contest. Other Fourth of July events include the annual parade which runs through downtown and the fireworks display which is held at Streator High School. "Roamer Cruise Night" is an annual cruise / car show held on Labor Day weekend in the downtown district that attracts over 600 cars and 18,000 attendees. Special features of the Cruise Night include a display of a
Roamer which was built at a factory in Streator in 1917. Cruise Night was rained out in 2011 and 2012, leaving Streatorites hungry for 2013. A Veterans Day observance is held on the morning of Veterans Day at Veterans Plaza. Streator also has an annual event called Light Up Streator held on the first Saturday after Thanksgiving. Light Up Streator is a group of volunteers who place holiday decorations throughout the Streator area, most notably in City Park. The Keeping Christmas Close to Home Parade of Lights is held the weekend after Thanksgiving in downtown Streator.
Media Streator has one daily newspaper,
The Times. The daily paper, published by the Small Newspaper Group Inc., in nearby
Ottawa, provides the local news for the
Ottawa, IL Micropolitan Statistical Area. Streator's original daily,
The Times-Press News, merged with the
Ottawa Daily Times in 2005. Television broadcasts are provided by stations in nearby
Bloomington and
Peoria. Local cable providers also air Chicago stations. Streator has three local radio stations:
WSPL 1250 AM, which has a
news/talk format,
WSTQ 97.7 FM, which has a
contemporary pop format and
WYYS 106.1 FM, which broadcasts a
classic hits format. The three stations are owned by the Mendota Broadcast Group, Inc. One of the longest-running programs on WSPL was "Polka Party", which was broadcast live on Saturday mornings for more than thirty years until its host Edward Nowotarski retired in 2001. ==Parks and recreation==