Videos

ChicagoNow’s Best Posts of September 2021on October 8, 2021 at 1:04 pm

Margaret Serious

ChicagoNow’s Best Posts of September 2021

Read More

ChicagoNow’s Best Posts of September 2021on October 8, 2021 at 1:04 pm Read More »

Bowhunting deer in Illinois: As season opened, a COVID-19 question, usual updates and a historical noteDale Bowmanon October 8, 2021 at 11:59 am

A mature Bureau County buck in a field this fall. | Jim Snaidauf

Coming off a season with a record harvest, Illinois bowhunters are back with a question on COVID-19 and deer and the more usual questions and updates on deer season; plus a delightful historical note.

It’s not surprising, COVID-19 impacts even deer hunting. In mid-summer, the United States Department of Agriculture’s National Veterinary Services Laboratories “announced confirmation of SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) in wild white-tailed deer in Ohio.”

That came ahead of bowhunting for deer opening Oct. 1, as usual, in Illinois, where 2020-21 produced a record bow harvest of 75,544. With deer hunting underway, I checked in with Dan Skinner, forest wildlife program manager for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, on COVID-19 and other topics.

The USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) announced results of a research study and gave advice on what COVID-19 and means for deer hunters.

“The information provided by USDA states that `There is no evidence that animals, including deer, are playing a significant role in the spread of SARS-CoV-2 to people,’ ” Skinner emailed. ” ‘Based on the available information, the risk of animals spreading COVID-19 to people is low.

” ‘Regardless, hunters should continue to use normal recommended food safety measures when field dressing and cooking their deer.’ “

As in, don’t handle or eat animals that appear ill or act odd; use gloves when field dressing; clean, dry and cool the abdominal cavity until processed; wash hands thoroughly after handling; wash and disinfect any equipment used in handling; and cook until juice runs clear and meat is no longer pink.

Details are at aphis.usda.gov/aphis/newsroom/stakeholder-info/stakeholder-messages/wildlife-damage-news/deer-sars.

COVID-19 impacts life around the world. On a much smaller scale, the legalization in Illinois of general crossbow use in 2017 impacted deer hunting. That includes for me. I am not alone in crossbows opening up bowhunting and expanding my world outdoors. I also understand hardcore bowhunters who prefer compound or traditional bows over crossbows.

In the 2020-21 season, Illinois bowhunters virtually split between the use of compound bows (approximately 49.6 percent) and crossbows (49.3), with use of traditional bows at 1.2, according to Skinner.

Dale Bowman
A file photo of a crossbow in the field in 2018; bowhunters are evenly split on use of crossbows or compound bows in Illinois.

As to the deer herd, he emailed, “Generally speaking, populations will be similar to those we observed going into the last hunting season. The Department will likely be adding two counties to the late-winter antlerless-only hunt in an effort to decrease populations that have continued to grow despite increases in permit quotas. We will continue to monitor the archery harvest and may need to consider additional changes to Administrative Rules in future years, especially if antlerless archery harvests continue to increase.”

In recent weeks, more reports came of hemorrhagic disease, generally called EHD.

“As of [Wednesday], our biologists have received reports from approximately 24 counties in central and southern Illinois,” Skinner emailed. “The combined total reported mortality from all counties is approximately 80 deer.”

Skinner had an aside on the changes since white-tailed deer reestablished enough to reopen deer hunting in Illinois.

According to the history of management at deer.wildlifeillinois.org, “Many newspaper reports of the day cited John Force of Chandlerville as the first person to legally kill a deer since 1900 when he bagged a 200-pound male with bow and arrow at 7 a.m. on October 1, 1957.”

That sets this up from Skinner.

“Just some trivia from 60 years ago: I was going through some old files and found a paper copy of our 1961 deer hunting rule,” he emailed. “We reinstituted the deer hunt in 1957, so 1961 represented the fifth modern deer hunt in Illinois. The shotgun season ran from December 1st to December 3rd and was open from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Pike County’s 1961 deer harvest total? 39 deer.”

In the two firearm seasons in 2020, Pike County harvest was 1,871.

Jim Snaidauf
A mature Bureau County buck on a trail cam this fall.

Read More

Bowhunting deer in Illinois: As season opened, a COVID-19 question, usual updates and a historical noteDale Bowmanon October 8, 2021 at 11:59 am Read More »

‘Everything went wrong’ — the Great Chicago Fire at 150Neil Steinbergon October 8, 2021 at 12:42 pm

John R. Chapin’s engraving of Chicagoans fleeing across the Randolph Street Bridge during the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. | Associated Press

A century and a half after the fire that transformed Chicago and the people in it.

The summer of 1871 was terrible for Mary Todd Lincoln. Her adored younger son, Tad, 18, died in July, a month when no rain fell in Chicago, the city where the slain president’s immediate family moved after leaving the White House in 1865. Mrs. Lincoln, a woman heavily veiled in black who “suffered periods of mild insanity,” lived with her only surviving son, Robert, a lawyer, on South Wabash Avenue. By autumn, she sank even deeper into anguish.

“As grievous as other bereavements have been, not one great sorrow ever approached the agony of this,” she wrote to a friend on Oct. 4.

And then the city burned down around her.

One hundred and fifty years after the Great Chicago Fire, much about the epochal event that recast our city and its people is unfamiliar to current residents. Not one person in a hundred knows Abraham Lincoln’s widow lived here and endured the calamity, while the one thing many believe they do know about the fire, that it was started by Mrs. O’Leary’s cow kicking over a lantern, is a baseless ethnic slur, a scrap of mocking calumny preserved in amber like an insect’s leg, surviving all efforts to dislodge it. Even though universally agreed to be untrue, or at least unsupported by any evidence, the lie endures.

The most common causes of fires, the Chicago Fire Department had reported the previous March, were not cows or lanterns, but defective chimneys, carelessness with flame, and arson. There had been an average of four fires a day in Chicago the first week of October, started by tossed cigars, mischievous boys and oily rags bursting into flame.

This was a city heated by coal, lit by gaslight, strewn with hay. The sidewalks and even some fire hydrants were wooden. Blistered by drought, “the dust was almost intolerable, the ground became parched,” wrote Chicago Theological Seminary student William Gallagher. “A furious wind from the southwest had been blowing steadily all day Sunday.”

Whatever the cause, the fire certainly started in the barn behind the home of Patrick and Catherine O’Leary and their five children at what was then 137 DeKoven Street, on the city’s near Southwest Side. The hardworking O’Learys already had gone to bed. And they didn’t own a cow; they owned five, plus a horse and a calf. A drayman named Daniel Sullivan, out enjoying the evening, saw fire through the cracks between the boards of the O’Leary barn.

“Fire! Fire! Fire!” he shouted.

Sullivan went in the barn and untied the cows, thinking they would save themselves. They didn’t. He dragged the calf outside, badly singed.

A.H. AbbottPhotographer, via Wikimedia Commons
The O’Leary family home, at what was then 137 DeKoven Street. Though the Great Chicago Fire started in the barn behind their home, the winds blew the flames away from them, so their cottage survived the blaze. The Chicago Fire Department later built its training academy on the site.

Joseph Edgar Chamberlin, a 20-year-old reporter on the Chicago Evening Post, arrived almost immediately, about 9:30 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 8, 1871, to find himself in a part of town he had never visited before.

“I was at the scene in a few minutes,” he later recalled. “The land was thickly studded with one-story frame dwellings, cow stables, pigsties, corncribs, sheds innumerable; every wretched building within four feet of its neighbor, and everything of wood — not a brick or a stone in the whole area. The fire was under full headway in this combustible mass before the engines arrived, and what could be done?”

The fire engines — steam pumpers, drawn by teams of brawny horses — were delayed because the alarm was slow being turned in. A pharmacist refused the alarm box key to a resident who’d seen the fire. Mathias Shafer, the night watchman in the Cook County Courthouse tower, saw the orange glow but thought it was light from the gas works. When he did send an alarm, he sent the firemen to an address a mile and a half from the fire.

Later asked to describe what went wrong, one fireman would reply: “Everything went wrong.”

The alarm didn’t really matter, however. Firemen at a firehouse 11 blocks away saw the smoke and sent three pumpers, along with firemen who were already exhausted. The largest of 28 fires the previous week had been the night before, a huge blaze at the Lull and Holmes Planing Mill, 209 S. Canal St., that broke out about 11 p.m., burning up 7 million board feet of lumber and four blocks between Canal and the river.

It was 4 a.m. Sunday when that was finally gotten under control, and the firemen dragged themselves home to bed. Or didn’t. This being Chicago, they’d later be accused of celebrating their victory over the massive fire and arriving to the O’Leary home hung over or even still drunk.

Whatever their condition, they got busy. The strategy of firefighting then wasn’t so much saving burning buildings — a challenge with primitive equipment — but keeping fires from spreading from one building to another by soaking unburnt structures, or creating fire breaks, pulling down dwellings, or blowing up blocks in the fire’s path.

“Hang on to her, boys!” yelled Robert Williams, the chief fire marshal, as the head of the department was called. “She’s gaining on us.”

J. Paul Getty Museum
Clark Street, looking north from Harrison Street, after the fire.

‘Stand it as long as you can’

Chicago’s fire department had gone from volunteer to professional only 13 years earlier. Since then, Williams, who joined in 1848, had been begging the city for more resources, especially a fireboat. In vain. Also for more men; firefighting was hard, physical work.

“Marshal, I don’t believe we can stand it here,” one of the firemen said.

“Stand it as long as you can,” Williams replied.

But the fire leapt into the wind — strong enough to blow off a man’s hat — and flanked them. “Fire devils” — flaming vortexes — rose off the burning buildings, spun over the firemen’s heads and set fire to buildings a block away, on Taylor Street. The fire was so intense, it twisted their leather helmets out of shape.

“The heat was awful, ’twas like hell,” Williams testified later, insisting his men had not been drunk. “The fireman’s eyes were red with the dust and fire, so that many of them were most blind. The hair was scorched off their faces, and they stuck to their machines like bull dogs and worked until they couldn’t stand it any longer. Yes sir, and they did stagger, for they were clean beat . . . They were tired, too, from the fire the night before, and then to give the same men such a long pull again, why an iron man couldn’t have stood it.”

Residents of the area — called West Division, being west of the river’s southern branch — hurried toward the fire to watch. So many onlookers, they interfered with the work of the firefighters, who turned their hoses on the crowd, trying to disperse it. Add to that people in the path of the fire dragging their possessions into the street, trying to save them, and soon the area around the fire became blocked.

Across the river, in what is thought of now as the Loop, but then was South Division — south of the Chicago River’s main branch — residents were confident the river would protect them. Those who noticed a glow to the west shrugged and went to bed. Just another fire. But they didn’t sleep long. By midnight, the wind took a flaming board and flung it onto a building at Adams and Franklin.

Then, as now, this was the city’s commercial heart, home to hotels, banks, government offices, plus grand emporiums like Field, Leiter & Co., train depots, warehouses and grain silos. Employees tended to live nearby, and hurried to their workplaces. One bank clerk loaded $1.6 million into a trunk and headed for the lakefront. Another took $600,000 in a case and paid a wagon driver $1,000 to take him to the station.

The J. Paul Getty Museum
The ruins of Field, Leiter & Co.’s store, at State and Washington streets.

The night clerk at the seven-story Sherman House alerted five elderly women who lived there and got them on a cart. He thought. As it rolled away, he realized there were only four women on the cart. He raced back into the burning building, grabbed a fire axe and broke down the door of the last sleeping woman, soaked her dress with a bedside pitcher and conveyed her through the burning halls.

Three among thousands

At the Sheridan House, one guest who tried to sleep and failed was John R. Chapin, an artist for Harper’s Weekly, perhaps the most prominent publication in the country. He awoke to commotion in the hall.

“Listening for a few moments, and thinking it must be near morning, I composed myself to sleep again, but was restless, and my mind became gradually filled with a dread for which I could not account,” he later wrote in Harper’s. “At length, to assure myself, I rose and went to the window, threw open the blinds and gazed upon a sheet of flame towering 100 feet above the top of the hotel, and upon a shower of sparks as copious as drops in a thunder-storm. Niagara sinks into insignificance before that towering wall of whirling, seething, roaring flame, which swept on, on — devouring the most stately and massive stone buildings as though they had been the cardboard playthings of a child …”

Alongside the large institutions in South Division were smaller shops and private homes. At 119 Dearborn was the residence of John Jones. Let the flames illuminate a person who should be familiar to Chicagoans, but isn’t, a man declared “the most prominent” Black resident of Chicago by the Chicago Tribune.

Only about 1% of Chicago was Black in 1871. The Great Migration wouldn’t begin for 50 years. Jones had arrived in Chicago in 1845 with $3 in his pocket. He had been born free in North Carolina, but his white father died, and the man’s heirs conspired to enslave him. So Jones fled to Illinois, first to Alton, then Chicago, where he set up a tailoring business and thrived. He used his success to fight the Black Laws, Illinois codes restricting the rights of Black residents.

The J. Paul Getty Museum
Washington Street in downtown Chicago after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.

Jones’ home became a hub of the Underground Railroad. Stephen Douglass was a houseguest, as was the wild-eyed abolitionist John Brown. Both Jones’ house and his business were destroyed, though the Black section of town — 39 homes and four churches in the 1870 census — would be largely unscathed.

Another Jones, Mary Harris Jones — no relation — was a white dressmaker who ran a shop on Washington Street. She had lost her four children and husband to the yellow fever epidemic in Memphis in 1867 and come to Chicago to start anew. Now she fled with thousands of terrified Chicagoans — the city population was about 337,000, roughly an eighth of today’s.

What to leave, what to save

Many faced the agonizing decision of what to try to save, then where to flee with it. Those in West Division fled west, toward the open prairie. Those in South Division fled east, to the lakefront, or south, pursued by the fire.

“Everybody was going in the same direction. Men, women and children loaded with everything you can conceive were blocking up the sidewalks,” Gallagher, the divinity student, wrote, in a 40-page letter to his sister. “Two strings of teams loaded up several stories high were hurrying westward towards the open prairie, and we stopped to see what they were carrying. Here comes a woman with all her bed and bedding on her back. Here was a little girl with her arms full of cooking utensils . . . One man was hurrying along with nothing but a flatiron in his hand, another had two or three pieces of old board, and so they went, hurrying, pushing, scrambling, crowding, jostling, shouting and laughing even.”

That last sentence sounds two common themes in accounts of the fire. Chicago’s poor did not typically leave records of their thoughts and activities. But the upper class did. And after recounting their own difficult decisions over what to save from their fine homes — financial documents, a portrait of a child, one man saved a scrapbook of his letters to newspapers — they often would pause to smirk at the nonsensical trifles the poor thought to take, forgetting that the flatiron that man carried might have been his wife’s livelihood. Poor people were described again and again carrying odd junk, as well as becoming unhinged, hysterically jubilating the fire, while the well-off handled the crisis coolly.

“Among those rich people I didn’t see one woman rushing about screaming and [w]ringing her hands. There was no crying or bewailing,” Gallagher wrote.

J. Paul Getty Museum
The remains of the Grand Pacific Hotel, on the block bounded by Quincy, Clark, Jackson and LaSalle. The hotel was rebuilt after the fire.

Then there was sin.

South Division contained “two or three blocks of pine rookeries,” known as Conley’s Patch, a vice district, and many accounts include descriptions of the prostitutes, barflies and fancy men, driven from their lairs, staggering amidst a foretaste of their eternal damnation.

“Ill-omened and obscene birds of the night were they. Villainous, haggard with debauch and pinched with misery, flitting through the crowd, collarless, ragged, dirty, unkempt,” wrote Elias Colbert. “Women, hollow-eyed and brazen-faced, with foul drapery tied over their heads, their dresses half-torn from their skinny bosoms, and their feet thrust into trodden-down slippers, moved here and there, stealing, scolding shrilly and laughing with one another at some particularly ‘splendid’ gush of flame or ‘beautiful’ falling in of a roof.”

Don’t believe everything they say they saw

You don’t need a master’s degree in sociology to detect a note of derision in that, and to wonder about its accuracy. Mrs. O’Leary’s cow is a warning, largely ignored, to view accounts of the fire with a certain degree of skepticism. The bovine arsonist can’t be the only fabrication. Victorian sensationalism runs through many stories — the woman kneeling in the middle of the street, clutching a crucifix, praying while her splayed dress burns. The nameless arsonists busily setting new fires, even as the city blazes, then later being hung en masse for it, though there is no evidence either situation actually occurred.

Yes, bartenders rolled barrels of whiskey into the street. Yes, the fire was met with chaos, lawlessness, looting, theft, robbery and a general sense that the end of the world had come. But those events were then colored by a lens of preconception.

The Victorians idealized childhood, for instance, and accounts are rich with girls running, their golden tresses aflame. “Hundreds” of separated children wailing for their parents. The fire was immediately viewed as a morality tale, filtered through class biases. Alexander Frear, a New York politician, was in town, and claimed he saw a “ragamuffin on the Clark-street bridge, who had been killed by a marble slab thrown from a window, with white kid gloves on his hands and whose pockets were stuffed with gold-plated sleeve buttons.” An arresting scene, until you pause to wonder how Frear knew what was stuffed in the urchin’s pockets. Maybe he used his imagination. Maybe he rifled through them. He was, after all, a politician.

Not that children didn’t find themselves separated and in trouble, as first-person accounts demonstrate. Claire Innes was 12. She and her father were part of a crowd trying to cross the Clark Street bridge. The bridges were choke points for South Division residents desperate to escape the flames.

“People began turning and pushing against us,” she later wrote. “There was no resisting the crush and we were swept along . . . I felt as a leaf in a great rushing river . . . The wind was terrible, like a storm, and filled with cinders and fire. I held up my hands to keep them from my eyes . . . When I turned, I could not find Father or Mother or my sister or brothers. I ran down the sidewalk after them, calling their names and searching everywhere for a familiar face. They were gone — into the smoke and dark and falling fire.”

Claire ended up trapped in an alley, fire cutting off her escape at both ends. She cowered under a pile of bricks, prayed and waited and didn’t find her family for two days.

J. Paul Getty Museum
The ruins of St. Joseph Church after the Great Chicago Fire.

A similar trial awaited Bessie Bradwell, 13, who donned her favorite dresses in layers before she left home with her parents — her mother grabbing the cage with the family’s pet bird as they left, unable to abandon it to the flames. Her mother and brother sought refuge at the lakefront, but her father, James Bradwell, a county judge, went to his office by the courthouse in an attempt to save his rare law books. Bessie went with him. It was also the offices of the Chicago Legal News, which her mother, Myra Colby Bradwell, had founded in 1868. The first woman to pass the Illinois Bar Exam, Myra Bradwell had been thwarted from becoming a lawyer by the bias of the time. Bessie picked up the heavy ledger recording the names and addresses of subscribers.

“‘This is a good thing to save, and I will take care of it,'” she recalled herself saying, years later. But in the confusion outside, she lost her father and fled on her own, strangers occasionally patting out fires from flying embers that had sprung up on her coat.

Judge Bradwell found her mother and brother on the lakefront.

“Where is Bessie?” were his first words.

“Why, I thought she was with you,” her mother replied.

“My father was sure I was dead,” the younger Bradwell remembered. “My mother, who was always an optimist, said ‘No, I’d trust that girl to go the ends of the earth — she’ll come out all right, don’t you worry.'”

Heroes, villains, victims

Accounts of the fire alternate between heroism and criminality. Residents load their possessions onto wagons, only to have them driven off by thieves, who themselves must toss away the loot they’d just stolen to save themselves. Some cartmen make heroic efforts to save family treasures; others charge outrageous fees, then ask for more two blocks away. Some Chicagoans ran into burning buildings to aid those trapped. Others looted the buildings as they burned. Several women described clutching boxes of their jewels, only to later hurl them away in their flight. Residents sometimes had time to bury prized possessions in their gardens — even stoves or pianos — and that strategy sometimes worked. Circuit Court Judge Lambert Tree was able to save his family silver that way, his only possessions to survive the fire.

At the courthouse, smoke filled the basement jail, and 150 prisoners screamed to be let free. But the jailer, who had received no orders, refused. Finally, the mayor sent instructions — the murderers were chained together and led north, while the rest were simply released. “They evinced their gratitude by pillaging a jewelry-store nearby,” an 1872 account observed.

J. Paul Getty Museum
The burned-out Cook County Courthouse after the Great Chicago Fire. It stood where the City Hall/County Building is now, on the block bounded by Washington, Clark, Randolph and LaSalle.

The courthouse was on the block bounded by Washington, Clark, Randolph and LaSalle, exactly where the City Hall/County Building stands today. By midnight, Mayor Roswell Mason was there, sending desperate telegrams to cit ies across the Midwest, requesting aid.

Across the street, Philip Sheridan was also busy telegraphing. The Civil War general had his headquarters here, managing the wars out West against Native Americans. (Originally based in St. Louis, he found that city too “forlorn” and moved to Chicago where, among other advantages, horses were cheaper.) Sheridan put out requests from the Army for tents and supplies. He also took charge of blowing up structures to create a fire break in the South Division, and the fire didn’t go much beyond Harrison Street.

Chapin, the Harper’s artist, positioned above the Randolph Street bridge, felt himself “a second Nero” watching the mass of humanity struggling below, eventually producing a dramatic lithograph. Historians generally remark on there being no photographs of the actual fire, but fail to add that this shouldn’t be surprising. There were no photographs of Civil War battles taking place either. It isn’t just that the cameras were bulky, but that they required long exposures. Those depopulated scenes of devastation might actually have had people in them, but they didn’t stand still long enough to be preserved on the film of the time.

The courthouse bell, 5 feet tall, pealed continuously until shortly after 2 a.m., when it broke free, plunging through the blazing tower, falling into the basement. If anybody within miles was still sleeping, that woke them.

By then, the fire had leapt the Chicago River again, into the North Division, where there were many stately homes, the Water Tower and the waterworks. Lill’s Brewery caught fire first. The fire was slow in catching hold, but train cars with kerosene exploded, and soon the fire was moving north faster than a person could run.

Chicago Daily News collection/Chicago History Museum
Image of a painting of the Great Chicago Fire by Edgar S. Cameron.

Survivors of the fire invariably spoke of how loud the conflagration was, the stupendous roar of the flames, the cries of fleeing residents, exploding barrels, crashing masonry, that tolling courthouse bell and terrified animals everywhere. A pet store burned before anyone thought to save its occupants, its birds and monkeys shrieking horribly within.

The hay used to feed horses flew aloft in pillow-sized chunks, the rain of burning debris so intense that John Tolland, keeper of the water intake crib 2 miles off shore, had to battle to keep the structure from burning, wetting it with buckets. The upside was he had all the water he needed. The downside was, if he failed, there was no escape. The choices would be to burn to death or drown.

The fire swept north to Lake View, then a separate town, destroying the waterworks, ending the losing efforts of firemen altogether by cutting their supply of water. Chief Williams was so shocked — it was supposed to be fireproof — he raced to confirm the fact himself then, in a lapse of self-interest that can be understood and perhaps forgiven, dragooned a squad of firemen to rescue the contents of his own home.

The Water Tower, at the base of Chicago Avenue, was, at 182 feet, the tallest structure in Chicago. It was scorched, but did not burn, though more buildings burned in the North Division than in the other two parts of town combined. Residents took refuge at the Sands, the beach north of the river, and in Lincoln Park, which was a Civil War cemetery in the process of being relocated. That only 300 people died — perishing in their beds or pushed off jammed bridges and drowned, or crushed by buildings collapsing into the street — was credited to the city’s layout, which encouraged flight.

“They had reason to thank the flat topography, and the square, open plan of the city for their delivery from being roasted by thousands in the flames,” Colbert wrote.

Early Tuesday morning, the rain came, only 30 hours late. William Gallagher, who had traded his Bible for a police badge, deputized to patrol the smoldering West Division after the fire had moved east, exulted to the heavens.

“Praise God from whom all blessings flow,” he shouted, hearing the rain, though immediately pausing to contemplate the “awful night for the people on the prairies.”

Almost 18,000 buildings were destroyed. Some 100,000 — nearly a third of the population — left homeless.

J. Paul Getty Museum
The Water Tower was among the few structures to survive the Great Chicago Fire.

Recover, rebuild, renew

The task of recovery began immediately. Mayor Mason established martial law, and while Chicagoans took great comfort in the presence of General Sheridan and his troops, violence was minimal and arson illusionary. After an Army sentry shot a lawyer returning home late at night, the military was withdrawn.

William Kerfoot put up a hovel and painted a famous sign: “W.D. Kerfoot Real Estate: All Gone but Wife, Children, and Energy.” Money and supplies and skilled workmen were arriving before the ashes cooled. In that loss were seeds of progress, for the city and for many living in it.

For instance, Mary Jones, the Memphis seamstress, who joined the refugees crowding the beach.

“The fire made thousands homeless,” she remembered. “We stayed all night and the next day without food on the lakefront, often going into the lake to keep cool. Old St. Mary’s Church at Wabash Avenue and Peck Court was thrown open to the refugees and I camped there until I could find a place to go.”

Next door, the Knights of Labor held meetings. Jones attended those meetings and became one of the countless Chicagoans whose lives were changed by the fire in unexpected ways. She would eventually become a familiar figure at union rallies and strikes, a fiery orator, always dressed in black in memory of her lost husband and children. Workers would call her “Mother Jones.”

Sun-Times file
Mary Jones survived the Great Chicago Fire, was inspired to become active in a burgeoning labor movement and eventually became known as “Mother Jones.”

“From the time of the Great Chicago Fire I became more and more engrossed in the labor struggle,” she later wrote. “I decided to take an active part in the efforts of the working people to better the conditions under which they worked and lived.”

The other Jones, the tailor John Jones, continued his push to influence the city that gave him freedom. That November, he ran on the Fire-Proof Ticket and was elected a Cook County commissioner, thus becoming the first Black elected official in the state of Illinois.

Like most common wisdom, the idea that it was the fire that boosted the city on to greatness is an oversimplification. Chicago was a boomtown, growing fast in size and reputation before it burned. “I wish I could go to America if only to see that Chicago,” Otto von Bismarck, then chancellor of the North German Confederation, had told Sheridan during his inspection tour in 1870. The Union Stockyards, and the bulk of the city’s manufacturing and business base to the South and West, were untouched. It was still the hub of rail traffic for the country, still a port.

Chicago’s rise from the ashes was complicated. The Panic of 1873 halted most major construction here for half a dozen years. Though even that calamity was not without benefit; it was the Panic, not the fire, that sent architect Louis Sullivan to Chicago.

The fire certainly cleared out the old city, leaving a blank slate for the creation of modern architecture.

Sun-Times file
The Union Stockyards, shown in 1948, were untouched by the Great Chicago Fire.

A major reason aid flowed so swiftly was Chicago’s reputation as a striving, hardworking town, thus in the Victorian mind worthy of charity in tough times. That calculus was applied to Chicago residents by the various boards and committees set up to distribute the world’s largess. Generally, relief was handed out based on who you were, not what you needed, and like sympathy, it tended to flow more to those who lost a lot, rather than to the most downtrodden who actually needed help. You had to deserve the help you got.

In England, a band of famous writers — Robert Browning, John Stuart Mill, Alfred Lord Tennyson — spearheaded an effort to rebuild the public library which they assumed Chicago had, and therefore had lost. In fact, there was no public library in Chicago but, receiving the donated books, the city was shamed into starting one, stuck in an abandoned water tank, starting a tradition of jamming our main library branch into odd public spaces.

Southern cities also sent scorn. Still bitter over losing the Civil War, they saw the fire as divine retribution for Sherman’s burning of Atlanta, or for the city’s notorious vice dens and saloons. “Chicago will never be like the Carthage of old,” one New Orleans paper opined. “Its glory will be of the past, not of the present, while its hopes once so bright and cloudless will be to the end marred and blackened by the smoke of its fiery fate.”

Most of the city’s Black homes were spared, enough that some would later say among themselves that the fire was divine punishment for the sins of white people. Though that perspective would be tested in the “Little Fire” of 1874 that gutted their community and a dozen blocks downtown.

All manner of deeds, tax rolls and official records were lost. Much early history of the city. Two janitors tried to save the original handwritten copy of the Emancipation Proclamation, which Lincoln had sent to the Chicago Historical Society to be used to raise funds during the Civil War. They reached it, wrapping it in a flag, but lost their bundle escaping the burning building.

General Sheridan also lost his papers and diaries, making his memoirs much harder to write, as he had to go by memory. But Chicago softened the loss in several ways: Sheridan married a local woman, half his age, and fans bought them their house when they moved to Washington, D.C., and later erected a statue of him alongside the major lakeside road named in his honor.

Sun-Times file
A statue of Gen. Philip Sheridan stands on Belmont Avenue, near DuSable Lake Shore Drive and Sheridan Road, named in the Civil War general’s honor.

Joe Chamberlin, the young Evening Post reporter first on the scene, would rise to become editor of the Chicago Times before moving back East to a successful career in newspapering, interviewing every president from Ulysses S. Grant to Warren G. Harding. He also met 9-year-old Helen Keller, and became her lifelong friend.

Myra Bradwell would flee to Milwaukee with the subscriber ledger her daughter Bessie had lugged for nine hours and publish her Chicago Legal News without interruption. Her quest to become a lawyer would not be as successful, meeting its end in 1873 with Bradwell v. Illinois, an 8-to-1 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court. “The paramount destiny and mission of women are to fulfill the noble and benign offices of wife and mother,” Justice Stephen J. Field wrote. At least the bird she rescued “lived to a good old age.”

Bessie Bradwell, by the way, did “come out all right,” just as her mother predicted. She graduated first in her class at Union College of Law (later Northwestern Law School). By then, unlike her mother, a woman could become a lawyer, and she did, also serving as assistant editor of Chicago Legal News after her mother’s death in 1894, and editor-in-chief for 20 years, until her own death in 1927.

Like Chicago, Robert Lincoln’s business interests were boosted by the fire. His home on South Wabash was beyond the burnt district, and while his office was destroyed, the vault was secure. Even losing his office proved to be a boon; lawyers whose buildings were intact invited those displaced by the fire to share their premises, and in this way Lincoln met Edward Swift Isham. They became partners in 1872, and their firm, Isham & Lincoln, was prominent in Chicago for over 100 years, until 1988.

Sun-Times file
Mary Todd Lincoln, photographed in Washington, D.C., by Mathew Brady in January 1862

The fire loosened Mary Todd Lincoln’s faltering grip on reality. She became terrified of fire and would point at smoking chimneys and declare the city was burning down. She stored her trunks at the Fidelity Safe Deposit Company, to protect them from the next conflagration, and once, on a premonition, sent them to Milwaukee for safekeeping. Her doctors warned her son that a woman in her condition might suddenly leap out the window, believing the house was ablaze. Robert Lincoln began legal proceedings against his mother, who was declared insane in 1875 and committed to Cook County Hospital.

The fire is often credited with improving the city’s zoning and building codes but, like Mrs. O’Leary’s cow, those were often more convenient fiction than significant fact, as much ignored as honored. Strict fire codes didn’t stop the Iroquois Theater from opening without fire ladders — upper-floor fire doors led out to nothing but a fatal plunge — or accessible exits or working fire suppression equipment backstage. About 600 people died when the Iroquois burned in 1903, making it the deadliest building fire in United States history until 9/11. Whatever other lessons the Great Chicago Fire taught, the importance of fire safety wasn’t one of them.

Not that people didn’t try. The International Fire Marshals Association time their Fire Prevention Week to coincide with the anniversary of the fire. This year it runs Oct. 3 through 9 and its theme, “Learn the Sounds of Fire Safety,” encourages people to know the difference between fire alarms and carbon dioxide alarms.

In a show of whimsy unusual for a municipal entity, in 1961 the Chicago Fire Department opened its fire academy on the spot where the O’Leary cabin stood. The O’Leary home was untouched by the fire, incidentally, since the wind blew the flames northeast from the barn, and the cottage was to the south. Some think this irony stoked resentment against them, and there can be little doubt the O’Leary slur will be passed on forever.

If you’d like to mark the 150th anniversary in a setting that owes its existence to the fire, you might consider a picnic in Grant Park. The area was a lagoon between Michigan Avenue and lakefront railroad tracks and became a convenient place to dump rubble from the burnt district. The park stands on that landfill, with the crushed remnants of the fire still underneath. Workers on a ramp to Lake Shore Drive in 2016 dug up charred bricks, timber and ash buried there since the fire. Upon such ruins a great city grew.

Mark Capapas/Sun-Times
Markers both inside and outside the Chicago Fire Department’s training academy, 558 W. DeKoven St., recall the history of the facility’s location.Mark Capapas/Sun-Times
The Chicago Fire Department’s training academy, 558 W. DeKoven St., now stands where the Great Chicago Fire started.

Read More

‘Everything went wrong’ — the Great Chicago Fire at 150Neil Steinbergon October 8, 2021 at 12:42 pm Read More »

How the Great Fire changed Chicago architectureLee Beyon October 8, 2021 at 12:51 pm

Rebuilding the Marine Building, located on the northeast corner of Lake and LaSalle Streets, after its destruction during the GReat Chicago Fire of 1871. | Chicago History Museum, ICHi-002845; Copelin & Hine, photographer

The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 — terrible, costly, deadly — changed the city in myriad ways. And it had a big hand in making Chicago an architectural capital.

It’s been 150 years since the last embers from the Great Fire flickered out, leaving behind a smoldering city with the will and the money to rebuild.

And it did. Chicago virtually remade itself within 20 years. New buildings sprang up downtown and in other areas ravaged by the conflagration. Millions of tons of rubble from the fire were dumped into the lake, creating landfill that would be planted and reshaped into Grant Park and portions of Burnham Park, just south of current day Roosevelt Road.

Confident and reenergized, Chicago in 1889 annexed the 125-square-mile crescent of townships around the edges of the city. In one sweep, Chicago tripled in physical size, picked up 225,000 new residents.

The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 — terrible, costly, deadly — changed the city in myriad ways. And it had a big hand in making Chicago an architectural capital.

The fire altered the way we constructed buildings and protected them from fire. The blaze shaped the planning and development of neighborhoods as populations moved to join those who were forming and populating new communities outside of the fire zone.

“There was a feeling among historians that everyone knows about the fire and ‘yeah it was bad, but it didn’t change the city much,’ and the fire has been exaggerated in Chicago history,” said D. Bradford Hunt, professor and chairman of the history department at Loyola University Chicago.

“But the Great Fire transformed lives in Chicago and gave the city [a reputation as] a place of renewal, progress and great possibilities,” he said, referencing an entry on the fire in the Encyclopedia of Chicago.

For better and for worse, this is true. Skyscrapers, fire-resistant buildings, breathtaking architecture and the eye-popping structures of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition came in the decades following the fire — and were writ deeply into the city’s genetic code.

But, arguably, so was the city’s tendency to clear away entire neighborhoods, often with haste, and build new, to barrel expressways through communities or plant the first McCormick Place convention center building right on the lakefront.

Said author Dominic Pacyga, professor emeritus of history at Columbia College Chicago: “The fire was really Chicago’s first urban renewal project.”

In a ‘fireproof’ city, terra cotta is king

The Great Fire, like many major historic events, gave birth to a myth: That after the fire, Chicago — particularly its downtown –immediately became a new city of early skyscrapers and fireproof buildings.

Those things did happen, but it took a while. The city’s first real skyscraper, the 10-story, steel-framed Home Insurance Building at Adams and LaSalle streets didn’t come along until 1885, almost a decade and a half after the fire.

And while most commercial buildings and other structures within the 2,100-acre fire zone were rebuilt in fire resistant materials such as brick, stone or terra cotta cladding, temporary buildings made from wood were also allowed.

Which isn’t to say that building a fireproof city wasn’t the goal. Chicago Tribune Publisher Joseph Medill ran for mayor under the Union-Fireproof Party — the election was a month after the fire — and won nearly 73% of the vote.

“No more fires, because we’re going to build only with brick and stone,” Hunt said. “Medill runs on that platform. He wins on that platform.”

Ironically, brick and stone buildings were also lost or ruined in the fire. The blaze was hot enough to loosen mortar or melt iron frames and cast iron storefronts, causing a building to collapse.

Medill’s Tribune headquarters at the time, a masonry building, was lost in the fire.

Masonry buildings with wooden roofs were vulnerable also.

Once in office, the new mayor pushed for better building codes, including a ban on wooden construction.

Sun-Times file
Publisher Joseph Medill running on the Union-Fireproof Party was elected mayor one month after the Great Fire.

But when residents, particularly German immigrants, who were moving to Chicago en masse, complained about the cost of rebuilding in brick or stone, the City Council successfully reduced the ban to the fire zone only.

“The City Council divides the city because ‘Who wants stone?'” Hunt said. “It’s usually the elites — the commercial class — that have property downtown, and people in the nicer neighborhoods who want stone. Immigrants, especially German immigrants who were kind of the majority of those coming over [then], who do not want to build brick.”

But the ability to build wooden houses outside of the fire zone led to the rapid growth of communities such as Canaryville and much of the South and Southwest sides, along with Andersonville and huge swaths of the North and Northwest sides.

Open tracts of land outside the fire zone were especially attractive.

“Much of the western part of Lincoln Park remained rural until the 1870s, when the Chicago Fire of 1871 stimulated real estate development outside the fire zone,” said a 2020 city-drafted landmark designation report on a cluster of 1880s brick commercial buildings at Halsted and Willow streets that detailed the community’s history.

“The more built-up eastern portion of the community area had been destroyed, and many residents rebuilt in areas untouched by the fire, including the areas along Halsted and east and west of the street,” the report said.

Over the next few years after the fire, the city grew lax in enforcing fireproof construction.

“The interesting thing about that debate over brick and wood is that it brought up the question — the same question we face today with vaccinations,” Hunt said.

“Like, ‘I don’t want to get vaccinated. You can do that if you want, but I’m not doing it. You want to build with stone. That’s fine. I can’t afford it. I’m building with wood and it’s my choice,'” Hunt said.

Then on July 14, 1874. during a hot, dry summer, Chicago was struck by a second great blaze, although smaller than the first one, that began near current day Roosevelt Road and Wells Street and burned northeast toward downtown. The fire stopped when it reached the new brick and stone buildings built after 1871.

The second fire incinerated 50 acres of primarily wooden buildings and residences — about 800 structures in all — and killed 20 people. But it also caused insurance companies, with the 1871 conflagration fresh in their minds, to push the city to definitively ramp up fireproof construction and improve its fire department.

“You need both fires,” said Chicago History Museum Senior Vice President John Russick. “Because if it had only been the 1874 fire, maybe it’s not big enough and it’s not critical enough.

“But I think what happens in 1874″But I think what happens in 1874 is, is the fire that burns that year burns the city that was re- built — or a big chunk of the city that was rebuilt — because [those areas had been] built basically the same way [as before the 1871 fire],” he said. “And so really you didn’t have much change.”

But change did come after the two fires. And a major one was the use of terra cotta as building cladding. The mixture of clay and sand, baked rock-hard at 2000-degree temperatures, was not only fireproof, it could be molded into ornamental forms, greatly enhancing a building’s architectural beauty.

The Northwestern Terra Cotta Company was established in Chicago in 1878. At its factory and offices located at Wrightwood and Clybourn avenues, the company by 1890 employed a veritable army of 500 people, many of them skilled artisans from Europe.

Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times file
In the decades after the fire, structures such as the Wrigley Building were clad in terra cotta. The material was fireproof and could be molded into ornamental shapes and styles.

The use of terra cotta formed a perfect marriage with the rise of steel framed buildings, a new technology pioneered in Chicago in the decades after the fire. Architects could create buildings with strong, weight-supporting steel skeletons and then clad them in terra cotta that could be formed in myriad architectural styles.

And for the next 40 years, cladding from Northwestern Terra Cotta and similar companies wound up on Chicago’s most architecturally significant structures, including the Wrigley Building, the Civic Opera House, the Louis Sullivan-designed former Carson Pirie Scott department store at State and Madison streets, plus countless banks, storefronts, churches, schools, homes and other buildings scattered around the city’s neighborhoods.

Sun-Times file
The former Carson Pirie Scott department store building at State and Madison

The aftermath of the Great Fire also brings to the surface the larger question of how a modern American city should look and function. Pre-fire Chicago was a rapidly growing city — and an unbridled mess in many parts of town, where quality buildings and shanties could share the same block, and humans and working livestock competed for space on wood paved streets.

The fire, at least, provided a clear slate to start anew.

“There are the big issues [after the 1871 fire] about whether we’re building the right kinds of buildings,” Russick of the Chicago History Museum said. “But also . . . America is relatively new to the idea of a big city. So, urban planning: the whole notion of thinking about what a city should look like and what kind of infrastructure is essential and, you know, city services and all of that, and uniformity of design becomes important.”

These questions helped draw Daniel H. Burnham, a 25-year-old transplant from Henderson, New York, to Chicago. He’d been here for a short while in the 1860s but left to mine gold in Nevada. By 1873, he joined with friend John Wellborn Root, 21, and the two formed what would soon become the successful architecture firm, Burnham & Root.

Sun-Times file
Architect and urban planner Daniel Burnham thought cities could be orderly and beautiful. He tested his theories as chief planner of the 1893 World’s Fair and co-author of the 1909 Plan of Chicago.

The two men were responsible for a number of important Chicago buildings in the years after the fire, such as the Rookery Building from 1889 at 209 S. LaSalle St., the late, great Montauk Block, an early — and fireproof — skyscraper built in 1883 at 115 W. Monroe St., and the 21-story Masonic Temple, at the northeast corner of State and Randolph streets, from 1892, which was later demolished.

But Burnham was also among those wrestling with the question of how to build better cities. And how can a metropolis, particularly a growing one, become a place of beauty and order?

Burnham would famously answer these questions with his historic 1909 Plan of Chicago, co-authored with Edward H. Bennett. The visionary document, marked by stunning watercolors by artist Jules Guerin, called for a host of things, including new civic buildings, harbor facilities and parks, an improved and protected lakefront, and broad, green boulevards radiating from downtown.

But the Chicago Plan, though globally influential, came almost 40 years after the Great Fire. However, 20 years earlier Burnham tested his theories on urban order as chief planner of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition.

The world’s fair was essentially Chicago’s coming out party, a means to show the world a rebuilt city that was no longer a fire ruin, nor an untamed frontier town.

Sun-Times file
As chief planner for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, Daniel Burnham turned a lakefront swamp 8 miles south of downtown into a beautiful, but temporary, city.

Burnham created a 700-acre electrified city-within-a-city with gleaming white neo-classical buildings set against wide landscaped walkways.

The romantic-looking buildings were made of plaster but looked convincing enough and helped ignite the City Beautiful movement in which upstart metropolises — including Chicago — looked to classical Europe for design cues.

The World’s Columbian Exposition took in more than 27 million people and showcased a new, reborn Chicago, the likes of which were dreamed of and conceived moments after the last of the Great Fire’s blazes were extinguished 22 years earlier.

Chicago goes big after the fire

Arguably, recovering from Great Fire instilled the city with the will to build big, and if need be, wipe the deck clean and build again.

“It’s a landscape on which we continue to paint anew the idea of what Chicago should be,” Russick said.

“There is a feeling that we can rebuild bigger and better,” Hunt said.

For instance, the city in 1887 undertook the Herculean and unprecedented feat of reversing the flow of the once very foul Chicago River to keep Lake Michigan’s supply of drinking water clean.

But Chicago’s pattern of clear cutting areas to build bigger hasn’t always led to better.

In the 1960s Mayor Richard J. Daley wrecked most of the Near West Side’s Little Italy neighborhood like so much fire rubble to make room for the University of Illinois Chicago campus.

Sun-Times file
The city ripped up an Italian neighborhood in the Near West Side in the 1960s to build the University of Illinois Chicago campus.

But the neighborhood and UIC could have coexisted, as the areas around DePaul University and to some extent the University of Chicago show, had it been planned that way from the start.

And Pacyga noted whole communities on the South, West and Near North sides that were bulldozed in the 1950s and 1960s to build public housing high-rise buildings.

“And now they’ve torn them down,” he said.

But there are also times when it all seems to work. Mayor Richard M. Daley’s administration in 2009 paid $90 million for the former Michael Reese Hospital site, then razed it in what turned out to be a failed bid to win the 2016 Summer Olympics.

A collection of early and mid 20th century buildings and a noteworthy postwar landscape were lost. But now, the cleared cite is slated to be turned into a $3.8 billion mixed-use development called Bronzeville Lakefront. It will likely be the largest privately built project in the South Side’s history.

The ‘I Will’ spirit

There is a fascinating, if somewhat overlooked, subtext to the Great Fire story: That for most, the will to stay in Chicago and rebuild was greater than the desire to flee and stay gone.

“They don’t just head to [northwest Indiana],” said Russick, whose museum opens an exhibit on the blaze. City on Fire: Chicago 1871 on Oct. 8.

“They don’t go to St. Louis,” Russick said. “There is this real impulse to build right on the foundations of the city that burned. And there is something really powerful about that.”

Read More

How the Great Fire changed Chicago architectureLee Beyon October 8, 2021 at 12:51 pm Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks: 2 players already make Team USA Olympic SquadVincent Pariseon October 8, 2021 at 12:00 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks figure to play a big part in the 2022 Olympic Winter Games. The National Hockey League is sending their players overseas which is going to make the tournament even more fun. Each hockey country is naming three players to their squads early. Team USA named its three players early and there is […] Chicago Blackhawks: 2 players already make Team USA Olympic Squad – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Blackhawks: 2 players already make Team USA Olympic SquadVincent Pariseon October 8, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

2 killed, 13 wounded — including 3 teens — in citywide gun violence ThursdaySun-Times Wireon October 8, 2021 at 11:38 am

Two people were killed and 13 others, including three teens, wounded in citywide shootings Thursday. | Sun-Times file

Two men were found fatally shot in an apartment in Brighton Park on the Southwest Side.

Two people were killed and at least 13 others, including three teens, wounded in citywide gun violence Thursday.

Two men were found fatally shot Thursday inside an apartment building in Brighton Park on the Southwest Side. About 1:40 p.m., 80-year-old Juan Alvarado was found in the hallway of an apartment building in the 4400 block of South Campbell Avenue with a gunshot wound to his head and chest, Chicago police said. A second man, whose age is unknown, was found inside an apartment with multiple gunshot wounds. The 80-year-old was taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The second man was pronounced dead at the scene. His name hasn’t been released yet.
In nonfatal attacks, two 15-year-old boys, a ride share driver and another man were shot on the Near North Side about 2:15 a.m. when someone in a passing car fired at another car. The boys were standing on the sidewalk in the 900 block of North Orleans Street when someone in a red Dodge Charger fired at a gray car, police said. One boy was hit in the leg and the other was shot in the leg and foot, police said. They were taken to Lurie Children’s Hospital in fair condition. A 38-year-old ride share driver was also shot while waiting for his passengers, police said. He was struck in the hand and was transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in fair condition. The fourth victim, a 20-year-old man, was later found at Balbo Drive and DuSable Lake Shore Drive — 2 1/2 miles away — and was taken in serious condition to Northwestern Hospital with a gunshot wound to his side.
A 17-year-old boy was wounded in a shooting in Gresham on the South Side. About 5:30 p.m., the teen was 1100 block of West 81st Street when someone shot him in the foot, police said. He was taken to St. Bernard Hospital, where his condition was stabilized, police said.
Hours later, a 71-year-old woman was shot and critically wounded by a relative after she was mistaken for an intruder in West Town on the Northwest Side, police said. The woman entered a residence about 9:30 p.m. in the 2100 block of West Superior Street when her relative, who has a valid FOID card, fired multiple shots, striking her in the lower backside, police said. She was taken to Stroger Hospital, where she is in critical condition, police said.

At least seven others were wounded in shootings across Chicago Thursday.

Ten people were wounded in shootings Wednesday across Chicago, including two teenagers.

Read More

2 killed, 13 wounded — including 3 teens — in citywide gun violence ThursdaySun-Times Wireon October 8, 2021 at 11:38 am Read More »

Chicago Bears: 3 keys to defeating the Los Vegas RaidersAnish Puligillaon October 8, 2021 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Bears face a great matchup this weekend when they travel to Las Vegas to take on the Raiders. I believe this matchup has immense consequences for the Chicago Bears and the trajectory of their season regardless of the outcome but who will actually win? The Chicago Bears face a huge litmus test in […] Chicago Bears: 3 keys to defeating the Los Vegas Raiders – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Chicago Bears: 3 keys to defeating the Los Vegas RaidersAnish Puligillaon October 8, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Cook County carjackings on pace to be the worst in 2 decades: Camry is No. 1, most victims are men, Sunday’s the worst dayFrank Mainon October 8, 2021 at 10:30 am

Anthony Jones, 28, in his Nissan Altima — the car that a would-be carjacker tried to take from him last January in Oak Park. Jones tried to drive away and was shot in the head and might never fully regain the vision in his left eye as a result. | Anthony Vazquez / Sun-Times

The numbers, bad last year, are more than 43% worse this year. Sheriff Tom Dart’s office has created a database to make sense of why. Some of the findings are surprising.

Anthony Jones didn’t realize it, but, driving one chilly morning in Oak Park, he fit the profile of a typical carjacking victim.

To start, this was in January — the worst month for carjackings in Cook County this year.

Jones was driving a 2019 Nissan Altima — the No. 3 most-targeted vehicle for carjackers to steal.

He’s 28 — the No. 1 age bracket for victims is 20 to 29.

He’s a man — men are twice as likely to get carjacked as women in Cook County.

He was driving in the west suburbs — where this terrifying crime has become increasingly common.

And he was in a car parked at a curb — one of most common places for carjackers to strike.

It happened just after 7 a.m. on Jan. 20.

Google Street View
The BP gas station at Roosevelt Road and Harlem Avenue in Oak Park where Anthony Jones had picked up a package of Nutter Butter cookies just before he was carjacked.

Jones had left his car on a street next to a park and walked to a nearby BP station at Roosevelt Road and Harlem Avenue in Oak Park, where he bought a package of Nutter Butter cookies.

Back in his car, he was looking at his phone for music to play while he ran errands. That’s when he noticed a man sprinting toward him.

The guy cursed at Jones and told him to get out.

Jones remembered hearing about a woman in Aurora who did what a carjacker told her and got shot anyway. So he hit the gas.

The would-be carjacker shot him through his window, striking him in the head. Though he was badly wounded, the bullet went through his temple and exited his cheek.

“I was able to move my hands and arms,” Jones says. “I was, like, ‘Wow, my brain’s still functioning.’ “

Frank Main / Sun-Times

Jones — who says he might never regain full vision in his left eye — is among nearly 1,400 carjacking victims this year in Chicago and the rest of Cook County, more than 115 of them in the suburbs.

It’s a carjacking crisis, with the county on pace to see more carjackings this year than it has in two decades. Through the end of September, there were 43.5% more carjackings countywide this year than in the same period last year, when carjackings also were way up over the year before.

In the face of the rise in carjackings, the Chicago Police Department formed a task force in March that includes the Cook County sheriff’s office, the Illinois State Police, the FBI and suburban police departments.

As a part of that effort, the sheriff’s office has created a database allowing suburban departments to share information about carjackings with the task force, making it easier to spot patterns that go beyond any single jurisdiction and to help deploy officers better to fight the problem, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart says.

Before, Dart says, “Every town had their own data. You had no idea what was going on in the town next to you.”

Now, he says, “We’re putting the puzzle together.”

Tyler LaRiviere / Sun-Times
Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart says sharing information is key to “putting the puzzle together” on who’s behind the sharp rise in the number of carjackings.

Some of the findings gleaned from the database have been surprising:

For most of this year, there have been more carjackings on Tuesdays than on any other day of the week. Investigators’ theory is that carjackers figure there are fewer cops and less traffic on the streets on Tuesdays. Sheriff’s officials say the number of arrests rose this year after task force members were deployed on Tuesdays. Recently, Sunday has slightly edged out Tuesday as the worst day for carjackings.
The epicenter of carjackings in the city and suburbs is the West Side — not the Loop, Gold Coast or other high-traffic places. The west suburbs also have been hit hard. Many of the vehicles carjacked in the suburbs wind up on the West Side or the South Side.
Men have accounted for more than two-thirds of all carjacking victims, but suburban women are equally at risk in the late morning and early afternoon.

Frank Main / Sun-Times
Frank Main / Sun-Times

The No. 1 most-targeted vehicle model over the past year and a half? Toyota Camry, followed by Jeep Grand Cherokee and Nissan Altima.

Some carjackers steal Camrys and Altimas because they’re common and can be used in other crimes without drawing attention to the car, sheriff’s officials say.

Criminals often target Grand Cherokees and Dodge Chargers because they bring top-dollar in illegal resales in Chicago and also get shipped to overseas markets including Ukraine and Dubai, where they’re in high demand, officials say.

Research by the sheriff’s office, including interviews with suspects who’ve been arrested, showed there are two general types of carjackers: juvenile thrill-seekers and crews of older, professional carjackers

More than half of the people arrested for carjacking in Chicago last year were juveniles. They often target victims downtown because they’re showing off. They broadcast their heists on social media, but they don’t know the exit routes very well, so their chances of getting caught are high, officials say.

Then, there are the pros. They do their homework. They study Google Maps to plan getaways. They decide in advance which vehicles they want to boost, rather than looking for an easy score.

And they work as a team, sometimes including kids as young as 12 who’ll take the fall if they get caught because their punishment is minimal in juvenile court, officials say.

Often, professional carjackers will work with a “chase” vehicle. After a heist, the ones who grabbed the car will pull into an alley or onto a quiet street so they can trade places with the members of the crew who were in the chase vehicle. That keeps their victims from being able to identify who pulled the gun on them if the stolen car is stopped.

After a vehicle is stolen, professional teams sometimes turn to crooked locksmiths to create new key fobs. They’ll also replace the license plates with stolen ones from vehicles of the same make, model and color as the vehicle they carjacked — to keep the cops off their trail.

Cook County sheriff’s office
Chicago’s West Side (in dark red) is the epicenter of carjackings in 2021 through Sept. 30.

The carjacking task force relies on helicopters and airplanes to track fleeing carjackers and cut down on potentially dangerous car chases.

Dart says carjackers have been wearing masks like everyone else during the coronavirus pandemic, making it difficult for witnesses to identify them.

When prosecutors don’t think detectives have enough evidence to charge someone with vehicular highjacking, they’ll often file lesser charges, like possession of a stolen vehicle or criminal trespass to a vehicle.

Last year, police arrested people for vehicle hijacking in about 11% of the carjackings in Chicago, and prosecutors approved vehicle hijacking charges in fewer than half of those cases, according to a University of Chicago Crime Lab report.

Lately, that’s been a source of friction between Cook County prosecutors and cops. Sometimes, the police have turned to federal prosecutors to charge carjacking suspects.

Chicago police arrest photo
Edmond Harris, 18, is charged with shooting Anthony Jones on Jan. 20 during an attempted carjacking. He’s also charged with a March 6 carjacking and with killing an Uber driver during a March 23 carjacking.

That’s what happened with Edmond Harris. He was charged in federal court with killing Uber driver Javier Ramos and taking his 2013 Lexus GS early on March 23 in the 1300 block of South Independence Boulevard on the West Side. Federal authorities say Harris, who lives nearby, left the 46-year-old Ramos dead in the street, shot in the head.

Harris also is charged with carjacking a Chevrolet Impala at a Shell gas station on March 6 in the 3900 block of West Roosevelt Road. Chevy has been the No. 1 make of carjacked vehicles in Cook County over the past year and a half, according to sheriff’s officials.

On March 24, Harris showed up with a lawyer at a West Side police station and was arrested for the carjacking at the Shell station, court records show. While being taken to the lockup, though, Harris asked an officer if his arrest was about Ramos’ murder the night before, according to court records.

In June, Harris was charged by federal authorities with Ramos’ killing.

A few days later, he was charged in Cook County criminal court with attempting to carjack Anthony Jones and shooting him.

U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
In a photo posted on social media, Edmond Harris displays a gun, according to federal authorities.

Jones, who works for a Mount Prospect tool company, was planning to work at home on the day he was shot, which was on a Wednesday.

“He seemed very surprised I wasn’t willing to give up my car,” Jones says.

He says his attacker wasn’t wearing a mask, making him easy to identify.

Anthony Vazquez / Sun-Times
Anthony Jones.

After Jones was wounded, he got out of his car and stumbled into the gas station for help. But he says the cashier told him to leave because he was bleeding on the floor.

Jones, who was in shock, sat outside the gas station and called his father and a friend before he dialed 911. An ambulance rushed him to Loyola University Medical Center, and he was hospitalized for six days.

Jones is working again but says, “My eye is pretty messed up with retinal damage. I may never be able to see out of my left eye.”

Jones says he’s grateful to police and prosecutors for arresting and charging Harris with shooting him, even if it was months later.

“When I got home, I got really mad, thinking about how he was going to get away with it — how nobody cares,” says Jones, who lives in Forest Park.

He says he’s replaced his driver-side window, which was shattered by the bullet that struck him.

“Yes, I still drive it,” Jones says. “But I’m a little more careful.”

Contributing: Jon Seidel

Read More

Cook County carjackings on pace to be the worst in 2 decades: Camry is No. 1, most victims are men, Sunday’s the worst dayFrank Mainon October 8, 2021 at 10:30 am Read More »

Can Salukis outrace Jackrabbits in Top 10 FCS road showdown?on October 8, 2021 at 10:00 am

Prairie State Pigskin

Can Salukis outrace Jackrabbits in Top 10 FCS road showdown?

Read More

Can Salukis outrace Jackrabbits in Top 10 FCS road showdown?on October 8, 2021 at 10:00 am Read More »