| 511 |
Illinois Central Railroad Links to Chicago, (
Map
) ...Illinois Central Railroad Links to Chicago...
...South generally followed water and rail routes. Chicago's popularity as a destination rested in part...
...Other railroad lines also offered access to Chicago from these and other parts of the South. Until...
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| 512 |
Ancient Indian Earthworks in the Chicago Region, (
Map
) ...Ancient Indian Earthworks in the Chicago Region...
...distribution of Indian earthworks in the Chicago region dating from ancient times. Many sites are...
...longer survive, such as the mound that was once near the 79th Street beach on Chicago's South Side....
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| 513 |
Chicago's Non-Judeo-Christian Congregations in 2002, (
Map
) ...Chicago's Non-Judeo-Christian Congregations in 2002...
...most significant development in metropolitan Chicago's religious landscape has been the appearance...
...two dimensions: strong concentrations on Chicago's North Side, which represents the latest "port of...
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| 514 |
Women's Garment Factories in Chicago in 1925, (
Map
) ...Women's Garment Factories in Chicago in 1925...
...Chicago once had a thriving women's garment manufacturing industry. In 1925, during its heyday, it...
...downtown and around Milwaukee Avenue between Chicago and North Avenues. The industry declined with...
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| 515 |
Railroads and Chicago's Loop, circa 1930, (
Map
) ...Railroads and Chicago's Loop, circa 1930...
...pivot between the East and the great West, Chicago developed an extraordinary concentration of...
...flank where Grant Park (white) was laid out between the Illinois Central tracks and Chicago Harbor....
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| 516 |
Southern Distribution of the Chicago Defender, 1919, (
Map
) ...Southern Distribution of the Chicago Defender, 1919...
...Southerners to northern cities. "I bought a Chicago Defender and after reading it and seeing the...
|
| 517 |
Chicago's Deep Tunnel System in 2003, (
Map
) ...Chicago's Deep Tunnel System in 2003...
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| 518 |
Development of Railroad Lines from Chicago, (
Table
) ...Development of Railroad Lines from Chicago...
...Pittsburgh — New York 1858 Premier carrier to East Coast; 1905 Broadway Limited reached New York in...
...Midwest farmers first with Canada then with Chicago after 1909 lease of Wisconsin Central line into...
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| 519 |
Classical Music, Mark Clague and J. Kimo Williams(
Authored Entry
) ...lived amateur performing groups began with the Old Settlers' Harmonic Society (1835–36, also called...
...The development of classical music in Chicago has followed the growth of the city, including its...
...and competitive needs, classical music has secured a place in Chicago's multifaceted cultural life....
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| 520 |
Work, David Moberg(
Authored Entry
) ...to motivate workers with more than the threats of the old drive system. Centralized management, used...
...furniture , and clothing for farmers and frontier towns. From 1870 to 1930, Chicago grew rapidly...
...Midwest's primary labor market for rural and small-town job seekers and immigrant workers—at first...
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| 521 |
Economic Origins of Metropolitan Chicago Communities, (
Map
) ...Economic Origins of Metropolitan Chicago Communities...
...of the metropolitan area, while recreational towns are more abundant to the north and northwest....
...Note the relationship between history and geography. Eight old industrial satellite cities ring the...
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| 522 |
Chicago's Prairie Avenue Elite in 1886, (
Map
) ...Chicago's Prairie Avenue Elite in 1886...
...departed for quieter climes, some moving to newer city neighborhoods such as Kenwood and the Gold...
...Coast, but most choosing the low-density suburban havens of the North Shore. In little more than 30...
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| 523 |
The Chicago Area's Iron and Steel Industry, (
Map
) ...The Chicago Area's Iron and Steel Industry...
...scattered along the region's railways. By 2000 most steel making in the City of Chicago had ceased....
...Chicago's earliest metal-working industries were small in scale, and located near the Chicago River...
|
| 524 |
Churches of the Presbyterian Church (USA) in the Chicago Area, (
Map
) ...Churches of the Presbyterian Church (USA) in the Chicago Area...
...in the region were located in the city of Chicago or in outlying satellite cities and the larger...
|
| 525 |
Chicago's Residential Patterns According to Census Racial Categories in 2000, (
Map
) ...Chicago's Residential Patterns According to Census Racial Categories in 2000...
...can be seen east of Midway Airport and in the northern neighborhoods of Chicago south of Evanston....
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| 526 |
Chicago's WorldWithin a Day's Travel, (
Map
) ...Chicago's WorldWithin a Day's Travel...
...joined railroads to extend 24-hour travel from Chicago (often in combination) to much of North and...
...road service, had effectively expanded Chicago's reach to much of the rest of the well-populated...
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| 527 |
Demography, Walter Nugent(
Authored Entry
) ...as they customarily did with sardines on the coast of Italy. This mini-epidemic was quickly stopped....
...rather than return to their homes on the West Coast; from only 400 before 1941, the area's Japanese...
...or Latinos could follow, except to certain factory towns like Gary or Joliet . In Chicago's history,...
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| 528 |
Commuting in Metropolitan Chicago in 1970, (
Map
) ...Commuting in Metropolitan Chicago in 1970...
...Automobiles have been used to commute to central Chicago since the early twentieth century, but...
...a pattern of vast proportions, drawing to Chicago over half of the resident workers of communities...
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| 529 |
Neighborhood Change: Chicago's Prairie Avenue, 1853-2003, (
Map
) ...Neighborhood Change: Chicago's Prairie Avenue, 1853-2003...
...development, being almost a mile beyond the southern edge of town. Just one grand villa had been...
...built. By 1877, following the Great Chicago Fire, the 11-block area had largely filled up with...
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| 530 |
Chicago: Commuting in the Walking City in 1854, (
Map
) ...Chicago: Commuting in the Walking City in 1854...
...of its residents. The town's small spatial extent and the wide scatter of job sites ensured that the...
...Chicago in 1854 was still a walking city for most...
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