January 16, 1925 – At the closing session of a
two-day conference of the Great Lakes Harbor Association 300 delegates from 80
cities located on the Great Lakes pass a resolution that requested the secretary
of war to require of the sanitary district of Chicago the installation, within
a reasonable length of time, of a modern system of sewage disposal and
protested against any legislation that may sanction diversions affecting the
water levels of the great lakes.” [Chicago Daily Tribune, January 17, 1925]
The resolution reads, “With an astounding disregard for the rights of her
neighbors and in defiance of all precepts of law and justice, under the pretext
that the sanitary welfare of that city made the dilution system of sewage
disposal necessary, Chicago has for twenty years been abstracting the waters of
the great lakes in great quantities.
This abstraction of water has on the one hand caused the lowering of the
levels of the lakes to the injury of commerce thereon, and on the other the
raising of the levels of the Illinois river to the injury of the land owners of
that region. The sewage which Chicago by
virtue of its sanitation system is thus carrying into the Illinois river is
polluting the waters of that stream to an alarming degree.” Officials of the sanitary district plan to
leave for Washington within two days “to face the interests which would prevent
the city from diverting 10,000 cubic feet of water per second from the lake for
sanitary purposes.”
Also on this date from an earlier blog . . .
January 16, 1945 -- In one of the worst fires to hit Chicago in a quarter-century 14 people are killed and 8 injured in a fire at the General Clark Hotel at 217 North Clark Street. The night manager of the hotel said that 76 people were registered when the fire started just after midnight. It was brought under control three hours later, after three people had jumped into firemen's nets and a dozen others had been rescued by ladders.
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