Editor's Note: Ron of Knotmyline.com,  who fished from Montrose Pier as a child, has given us kind permission to  reprint this post. Ron, now in his seventies, lived on Chicago's North Side when he was a kid. Be sure to visit his blog for more stories.
Montrose Pier and Harbor
I was just a toddler when first my parents took me out to Montrose Pier.   The mile or so long pier extends out into the lake and ends with a  horseshoe or fishhook shape.  There were several tall towers on the pier  with lights and foghorns to warn and alert vessels on the lake.
Some of my early memories are of fishing for perch with my dad and  brother on Montrose pier. Pilings about 16 feet apart had been driven  into the lake bed, fill of some sort was added and on top of the fill  were huge limestone blocks at about 10 feet square.  I imagine that at  one time these blocks had been placed somewhat evenly on the fill, but  over the years due to erosion and weathering they had become a jumble of  uneven stones. In many areas there were big gaps between the blocks and  to get from one to the other was an adventure. A few years after World  War II the park district renovated the pier.  They encased it entirely  in concrete and put in a center chain handrail.
My brother tells of how in the early and mid 40′s the lakefront was  still being developed and he would take a bus to the old Lake View  pumping station at Clarendon and Montrose and then walk on pipes and  fill and junk to get to the pier. This expansion and improvement of  Chicago’s parks began with the 1930s projects of the New Deal. The area  along Lake Shore Drive in Chicago from Jackson Park to Montrose Harbor  is actually a 15-mile chain of land entirely created by dredging,  landfill and plantings, accomplished with the labor of hundreds funded  by the Works Progress Administration (WPA).  The development of Montrose  Harbor started in 1934, the year I was born.
One of my favorite characters associated with Montrose pier was  George the hot dog man.  Before the renovation George would carry his  wares out to the anglers, but once the concrete was in, he had a large  steam cart that rolled on wheels easily along the pier. He would push  his cart along and every once in a while shout at the top of his lungs,  “Hot coffeeeeee”, “Hot Doggggs” and folks would gather around.  “Keep  the change?” he would ask his patrons in his broken Greek accent adding,  “Always, in the old country, I would tell the old man – keep the  change, old man!”  On warm sunny days he would sneak up on on an angler  sound asleep on the pier.  Standing nearly on top of the person he would  shout “QUIET, QUIET PLEASE, MAN SLEEPING!”  Usually the sleeper would  almost leap into the lake startled with that shout. If someone needed  their trolley anchor thrown out into the lake, George was the man for  the job.  He would wind up and pitch that anchor further than all but a  few.
The renovation of the pier made life a lot easier for anglers and  sightseers. Prior to it the pier was a dangerous place.  Broken bottles,  old fishhooks and other assorted trash collected between the limestone  blocks.  Lazy anglers used the dark recesses between blocks as a toilet,  filth accumulated around the towers and the stench could be nauseating.  The concrete brought an end to most of that, a welcome sight to most of  us. Because of Lake Michigan’s dangerous waters, the pier is still a  place where one needs to be alert at all times. Occasionally a seiche  will occur on the lake and those waves can easily wash across the pier  and leave it barren.  But regardless of all the effort and possible  danger, a day at the pier can easily be one of the best you can enjoy.
 

5 comments:
Ron
Thank you for the great article on the horseshoe, they're not many of us left that remember.
George's Hot coffeeeee was always a welcome sight He would sell hot coffee and rolls in the morning. then sandwich's, hotdogs and pop in the afternoon. He had an old shack near the bait shop that he kept all his equipment in . His son Jimmy went to Stewart school a couple of semesters behind me.
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This answers one of my long-standing questions about the origin of the pier given its unique design compared to anything else jutting out into the lake. My many years living in Uptown, it was always one of my favorite places to go watch sunrises/sunsets, catch sheepshead, even slept out there overnight a couple times (shh, not allowed - you didn't hear anything!), etc., and I was always curious if it was constructed to play some role in the integrated fire control (IFC) area for the Nike missile down at Belmont Harbor during the Cold War or whether it was constructed before/after that time.
Sounds like, based on this, it was constructed decades before the Nike missiles were deployed in the area and got a major "facelift" shortly after WW2 - the pier was part of the New Deal, not the Nike program!
Thank you for answering this question, Ron - I have wondered for a LONG time! Certainly as a Chicago-history and war-history enthusiast (literally, my two Labrador Retrievers are named Nike and Ajax, after the program and model of missiles we had at our two Nike sites in Chicago), I really appreciate your history lesson...!!!
Montrose Harbor and Montrose Point was completed in 1934 but construction took several years. You can find a few aerial pictures from 1931 and 1932 online. The hook was there. The land fill was an extension of Lincoln Park by the Lincoln Park Commission (before the Chicago Park District was created in 1934).
I was just a toddler when first my parents took me out to Montrose Pier. The mile or so long pier extends out into the lake and ends with a horseshoe or fishhook shape. There were several tall towers on the pier with lights and foghorns to warn and alert vessels on the lake.
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