Showing posts with label Terra Cotta Parade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terra Cotta Parade. Show all posts

Friday, March 30, 2018

March 30, 1902 -- Cable Car Switchmen




March 30, 1902 – The Chicago Daily Tribune runs a feature on two men, Charles Erickson and John Axelson, who are responsible for switching 3,222 streetcars each day, “the hundreds of cable trains that crawl out of the La Salle street tunnel every day and follow one another in rapid succession into different sections of the North Side traversed by the cable system.” [Chicago Daily Tribune, March 1902] Each man works nine hours on a job that “must be done no matter what the condition of the weather may be, and it must be done without the protection of shelter of any sort.  In winter and summer, when it is cold and when it is hot, when it rains and when the sun shines ….” The job entails making certain that cars running in Wells Street and Clark Street get around the curve at LaSalle Street and Illinois Street.  The key to the operation is the mouth of the LaSalle Street tunnel where as soon as the switchman “sees the sign on the top he knows how to set his switches.”  There is virtually no time during the nine-hour shift when a train is not rounding the curve.  Erickson says, “It’s not such hard work, but you have to keep your eyes open and your hands busy.  In winter it is harder than in summer, because the switches freeze and cannot be handled so easily as in warm weather … The first car from the barns in the morning reaches the curve at 5:45 o’clock, and the last one at night passes here at 12;50.  Between those hours there is scarcely a minute that the man on duty is not busy with the switch.”  The first cable car in the city ran at 2:30 p.m. on January 28, 1882, and the last one arrived at the Twenty-First Street powerhouse on October 21, 1906.  At the turn of the century Chicago had the second largest cable car system of any city in the nation, which would morph into the largest streetcar system in the world in the ensuing decades.  Note that the building behind the switchman in the 1902 Tribune feature still stands today at 500 North LaSalle Street.  It is the old powerhouse for the LaSalle Street cable cars.


March 30, 1853 – The Chicago Daily Tribune reports on a court case that will continue to have an impact on the city for well over a century.  The case involves a suit which James H. Collins files against the Illinois Central Railroad Company, in which Collins attempts to enjoin the railroad from running its tracks “in the lake at some distance from the shore.” [Chicago Daily Tribune, March 30, 1853] The nut of the case is that the railroad, by constructing tracks off shore, will impact the value of privately held property along the lake.  The attorney for Collins, John M. Wilson, argues that “the State has the right to use the waters of the Lake for all public purposes,” but that “the State cannot give the company this power.”  The attorney for the railroad argues that “the Legislature of the State of Illinois has passed a law giving to the Illinois Central Railroad Company so much of the lands belonging to the State as they may pass through and as may be necessary for the laying of the track and the construction of depots.”  As the day drags on, a lawyer for Collins says, “It is a conceded point, that if the complainants are the owners of property where the Company proposes to locate their road, that property cannot be taken, except by legal measures, and not then unless due compensation is made … This Company seeks with the strong arm of power to take this property and these advantages, without compensating the owners … There is no authority to sustain the position that one owning land upon a body of water can be cut off from the water and its attendant advantages, without compensation.” In a January, 1951 article the Chicago Tribune made an interesting point about the transaction that came following the Collins vs. I.C. case, “The Illinois Central did not ask for its lake front tracksite.  That was assigned to it by the city.  The lake at that time came right up to Michigan av.  I. C. historians assert the city decided it would be a nice thing to have a railroad between itself and the open lake, and stuck the Illinois Central out there for protection.”  In any event, the railroad got the land, built a trestle, and occupied prime lakefront real estate for a century or more, sparring with the city over its position on lakefront land for most of that time.  The above photo shows the train that carried the body of Abraham Lincoln to the city as it moves along the lakefront trestle in 1865.


March 30, 1945 -- Frank Lloyd Wright addresses the Chicago Chapter of the American Institute of Architects at the Casino Club. He talks at length about "the philosophy of organic architecture" [Chicago Daily Tribune, March 31, 1945] and makes this observation when asked about the future of cities, "Cities are just as dated as static and the radio. Americans just want to live. Cities are not important. The reality of buildings consists of space within -- to live in. The old period of putting the outside in -- is gone." The photo above was taken in 1945, the year of the Casino Club address.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Terra Cotta Parade


I love terra cotta.  And the stuff is plastered all over Chicago, “a great, glazed city,” according to sculptor Walter S. Arnold.

The largest producer of terra cotta in the city and for many years in the entire country was the Northwestern Terra Cotta Company, which had its headquarters in the Railway Exchange Building at Michigan and Jackson as the twentieth century began.  That building, now known as the Santa Fe building, is a shining example of the beauty and versatility of glazed terra cotta.

According to the Encyclopedia of Chicago Northwestern Terra Cotta was started in 1878 and by the early 1890’s employed close to 500 men.  The Beaux Arts style with its extensive decoration and the first generation of Chicago-inspired buildings with their many references to nature and iconographic symbolism brought about rapid growth and by 1910 the Northwestern plant at Clybourn and Wrightwood employed about 1,000 workers. 

Business was so good that the company opened plants in St. Louis and Denver.  Then, after World War I design styles changed over a decade.  Extensive ornamentation was out and the streamlined, sleek look of what we now call Art Deco was in.  The company’s last plant in Denver closed in 1965.  The transparency of the mid-century modern style left no room for fancy gee-gaws made out of baked clay.

Anyway, here are a few of my favorite pieces.  I’ll be adding more as the months go by.  I’ve got plenty.  Like I said . . . I love the stuff.

Krause Music Store – 4611 North Lincoln Avenue

JWB, 2007
Louis Sullivan’s final hurrah.  The terra cotta “K” stands for William Krause who hired architect William Presto to design a music store with living quarters above it.  The building was finished in 1922; two years later Sullivan was dead.

The Fisher Building – 343 South Dearborn

JWB, 2008
Some sort of crawling, serpent-dragon hybrid from Charles Atwood’s Fisher Building.  Atwood, working for Daniel Burnham, designed the building for Lucius P. Fisher, a Chicago paper magnate.  Atwood’s original building is awash with terra cotta ornamentation making reference to the developer’s last name. The building, finished in 1896, is the tallest of the original group of Chicago skyscrapers that is still standing. 

680 North Lake Shore Drive

JWB, 2008
An eagle from the former American Furniture Mart, designed by Nimmons & Co.  When the second section, including the tower, was competed in 1926, this was the largest building in the world.  Lohan & Associates led the re-design of the building to condominiums and office space between 1979 and 1984.

350 North Clark Street

JWB, 2008
A great 1912 building designed by Alfred Alschuler.  The “T” is the first initial of John R. Thompson’s last name.  Thompson started out his career running a small grocery in rural Illinois and went on to oversee a national chain of groceries and 109 restaurants – 49 in Chicago and 11 in New York City.

Victor Falkenau House (Demolished) – 3400 South Wabash
Displayed in the Art Institue of Chicago

JWB, 2009
An angel from the third-story stringcourse of the Victor Falkenau House at 3420 South Wabash Avenue, designed by Louis Sullivan and the firm of Adler and Sullivan.  Built between 1888 and 1889. Leveled in 1958.  The fragment is displayed in the Art Institute of Chicago.  Falkenau was a contractor and head of the Building Contractors’ Council in the city.