August 26, 1927 – The new Adams
Street Bridge opens at 2:00 p.m. when Mayor William Hale Thompson uses a pair
of golden scissors to cut a ribbon that stretches across its center. Nearly a thousand cars join a parade from
Grant Park to the bridge as boats stream up the river to watch the ribbon-cutting
and listen to speeches from Mayor Thompson, Commissioner of Public Works Wolfe
and Deputy Commissioner Edward F. Moore.
The new bridge cost $2,500,000 and had been under construction since
1923. It sits on piers that go down 95
feet to bedrock and extends 265 across the river.
August 26, 1927 – John Philip Sousa conducts “Stars and Stripes Forever” on a terrace east of the new Buckingham Fountain as the fountain is dedicated before 50,000 Chicagoans. And “As though responding to the direction of the bandmaster and the magic of his baton, the fountain began to glow with misty blue lights circling each of the three tiers. A moment later the rush of water started. For half an hour the lights were played on the 134 jets, through which 5,500 gallons of water were poured each minute, and all the various lighting effects were displayed.” [Chicago Daily Tribune, August 27, 1927] Walter B. Smith, a friend of Kate Buckingham, the woman who donated the fountain to the city in memory of her brother, Clarence, makes an address explaining the donation for Buckingham, who is present among the guests in the grandstand. Michael Igoe, a member of the U. S. House of Representatives and a commissioner of the South Park Board, accepts the $700,000 fountain on behalf of the city.
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