Wacker Drive Under Construction ins September of 1925 |
September 1, 1925 – Two days after the South Water
Street market closes for business, the Chicago
Daily Tribune rails against the street that will replace it, specifically
the fact that the new road along the river will be named after Charles H.
Wacker, the head of the Chicago Plan Commission. “It is small town stuff at its worst,” the
paper proclaims, “to rename South Water street because it is double decked and
remade . . . We certainly acknowledge Mr. Charles Wacker’s civic spirit and his
useful service in the protection and realization of the city plan . . . But to
give his name to the chief thoroughfare of the city, after Michigan boulevard,
is not only crude vandalism, but without fitness of proportion. Mr. Wacker has been a useful citizen, but his
service in the city does not tower above that of all other citizens . . . what
of Daniel Burnham, who was the creator of the city plan, one of the most famous
and gifted of our citizens? If we give Mr. Wacker’s name to our second greatest
street, how are we going to honor Burnham with any respect for proportion?
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