September 28, 2011

About Stewart School and Uptown from a Reader

Bill Matteson
Uptown Chicago History Correspondent

One of the neat perks of this Uptown blog is running into so many people you "almost knew";
this one is from John, now retired and living in Orange County NY. John is a former teacher at Lane Tech and went to Stewart school with Harrison Ford back in the day. Please read John's last two lines.

FROM JOCK
I went to Stewart School, the same time as Harry Ford. Had Mrs. Crammer, Mrs. Hefferman, etc. Just saying hi! Remember the big bus building fire by the boys side playground? I did not see it mentioned in your blog.

FROM BILL
I remember Mrs Kramer, red hair and leopard skin fur coats, she lived at the Edgewater Beach I remember the fire also. It was Wilbert Bus company. Where did you live and what years were you in Stewart?

FROM JOCK
Do you recall the guys with a bull whip in the boys playground? We had a neighbor move two houses down about 10 years ago who's father worked at Wilson Ave bowling, the multi-story bowling alley and billiard tables. Small world! He has since moved to Ohio

FROM BILL
I was probably one of the Bull whip guys. Send me your email address

FROM JOCK
LOL, if it were you, about 5 years older than me, it scared me when it made that loud crack, but I loved to watch from the chain link fence in the alley. In later years I actually got a leather whip to try it out for myself, and it did make a crack. One does not hear about things like that anymore.

Hi Bill, (in reference to practicing with bull whip's in the school yard)

Yep, that had to be you in the school yard, there was a girl there too and another guy or two. Imagine after all these years.

Odell Jackson was the manager of the Walgreen's on the corner of Broadway and Wilson. I have tried to find him too. In 1970 the same little old lady was still working there from when we were kids. Remember when the First Federal Bank put in a heated sidewalk, so it did not need shoveling?
Yeah, we spent lots of time at the Mode, the Riviera, Uptown, Pantheon, etc. We went to the movies every Saturday. I also remember going to the Chicago theater to see Frankie Lane, and when a circus came to the Uptown theater. It is a shame about the Granada theater. I spent a lot of summer time at Wilson Beach, and the Corinthean Yacht Club. A neighbor had a boat, and let me sail with him. That is one of the things about Chicago I could never get out of my system. We were all friends, no matter what your position in life. Even the ball players (Cubs) were really friendly as they left the Sheridan Hotel to go to a game, and took time to talk. Heck, the family games of "soft ball" at the parks included everyone. I was surprised to learn they now have an occasional game of 16 inch ball here. I still have my original indoor ball, and have since bought two more via mail. The sports stores here never heard of the ball. The indoor ball had a nickname, something like mush ball.

Hi Bill,
I sure do remember Bissets, when very young I remember using the ladies room there. And we would go to the Oasis at the corner of the alley behind Stewart and Wilson, and get a cherry coke with two straws. I also went to John the Barber. Next to the Alden Hotel was the Chinaman's laundry. I do not remember the name of the drug store at Wilson and Sheridan, but spent a lot of time in there. Going down Wilson in the other direction was a vegitable store, and a fish store. There were also numerous candy stores, usually in a basement with a street entrance. Near Broadway and Sheridan there was another bowling alley, that also had a Burlesque Bar on the corner. The block before had a bakery. I see that the Beuena Church was torn down. That was such as beautiful building. Going down Sunnyside, one apartment complex had a beautiful, but old stone garden with miniature buildings. I used to go up the the Edgewater Beach Hotel to see the radio show, I think was called the Breakfast Club, and of course their elephant. The fireworks were always wonderful on the fourth of July. The best year was when the city built "the Hill" in the park for sleigh riding. We also did a lot of fishing off "the Hook". The bait shop is still there behind the yacht club.

Bill, you lived about 2.5 blocks from me. About a 5 minute walk apart. Around 1954 I was swimming the rocks with my sister while visiting our dad, and a big storm came in and washed all our clothes, wallets, etc into Lake Michigan. We were in the water when the big wave came, and felt lucky to be alive after we managed to get out, and finding everything missing that we left on the rocks.

I would have loved to see the construction when they put the rocks in place. They are such big blocks of stone. Do you know where they were mined, and how far they were transported, as well as the means of transportation?

Remember the Shamrock bar on Wilson, on the right going toward the lake. And, the ice truck and horse drawn vegetable wagon that went down the alley calling their presence as they went. We would have to run down with money to buy what our mom told us to buy. The ice man would give us a chip of ice to suck on. To think people were still using ice boxes then. Did you know the "cigar tree" in our back yard behind Stewart? That tree was there for so long. We did not know it was really a catalpa tree, which is supposed to be short lived. It was also a great climbing tree. Remember climbing the wall of the school with the bricks that stuck out of the wall, and climbing to the two low roofs on each side of the building. The Pit side was easier to climb since we had the pit wall to start on. It is amazing how such old memories come back after all these years. I was asking my 92 year old mother about when she took me to Clarendon's playground and sand box, where a boy with mongoloid down syndrome would play, and she said I was only two at that time. I have no idea how that came out of this old brain. And, don't forget the terrific ice skating at Clarendon in the winter. That was the biggest rink I can remember seeing. Later on I ice skated at a pay location not far up Wilson, but don't recall the name. I do remember you had to walk past a bar, which turned out to be one for an alternative life style.

Let the memories roll! I feel bad for the kids today not having a feeling of security in their world. It seems we had much more freedom, and responsibility.

John

September 24, 2011

Advertise on Uptown Chicago History

We're about to redo some of our display and text advertisements, and I thought I'd offer first dibs on space to our loyal readers. We can run a text ad under the Chicago Resources column or a 125x125 display advertisement. E-mail editor@compassrose.com for rates.

Thanks!
Joanne

September 21, 2011

September 18, 2011

Wilson El, Uptown Chicago 1975


Slide currently available on eBay, auction 110745883066.

September 15, 2011

Small Stores before the chain

Bill Matteson
Uptown Chicago History Correspondent

Uptown was composed of many privately owned Mom and pop stores the only chain stores were The Dime stores Woolwoth and Kresge
There was an A& P or National Tea food store on Broadway between Wilson and Leland.
But for the most part all the food came from small stores. All small stores had a meat counter with at least cold cuts,, if not a small meat selection.

Spencer's was in the lower right section at 4742 Kenmore, There were a lot of basement stores in the Area. Masons Deli was on Lawrence on the south side of the street just a few doors east of Kenmore, another basement store was on Lawrence just west of Kenmore, we bought most of our food at Staars on Leland just east of Kenmore, I used to love working the long handled claw to get boxes from the top shelf. right across the street was another basement store, name long forgotten
My friend Aki lived on Sheridan just south of Leland, they had a dry cleaners and laundry.
And in all cases there was always a curtain that separated the store from the living quarters.

Aki and I became friends as soon as we met some time in about 1946 The war was over. During the war they were in an interment camp in California and migrated to Uptown with a lot of other Japanese families, Aki had great parents and two beautiful sisters, they opened a dry cleaners and lived in the back of it.

Now me and Aki found a way to make money, we knew every store in Uptown that paid bottle deposits, so very early every Saturday and Sunday Morning we would head to the park with our wagons bikes and a couple of boxes. we would pick up all bottles and return them to the proper stores and collect the deposit.
Now the trick was to take the bottles to the store that sold that brand, 2cts for small bottles 5cts for qt size and 10cts for 1/2 gal size
Thats right folks 1/2 gal beer bottles Tavern Pale was the most popular '
we would also take a small shovel and window screen and sift the sand around the concession stands, always picked up money, now I have a metal detector
but its not as much fun now as it was then,
If pickings were slim at the park, we would ride through the alleys and look up on the back porches, if we spotted a sizable amount we would volunteer to take them off their hands.

We made enough to keep us going the movies, roller skating and Riverview and the big treat was buying the salami ends at a deli for 5cts/
At the S.W. corner of Wilson and Kenmore was Angelos Pizza. Aki and I went in one day and he ordered a pizza I said what's that, he said he didn't know, but he heard they were good and they came from Italy. he was right and I was hooked.
Life was good

September 9, 2011

Electroliner at Wilson Avenue, Uptown Chicago, 1941

Thanks to Uptown Update for the head's up on this, a North Shore line Electroliner at Wilson Avenue in January 1941 (original Kodachrome transparency photo by Charles E. Keevil from the Walter R. Keevil collection.

September 7, 2011

TREASURES

Bill Matteson
Uptown Chicago History Correspondent

Every kid had his own crystal set to listened to the radio, no power source required , all I would have to do is ground it to the radiator. and it worked. I could never figure out why?
Today I try to explain what a radiator is, to the Grandkids.

Comic books were legal tender on Kenmore, and wealth was measured by how many comic books you had. We all had stacks of Comics about three feet high, we would meet three days a week for Comic book trading. comics with a cover on were worth three with out a cover.
Always some Idiot Do Gooder would try to get comic books off the street because it was leading the youth of America to a life of crime or would lead us into homosexuality , Captain America and Bucky, Batman and Robin, etc, Even at an early age we just figured there were a lot of adults with to much time on their hands.

Of course marbles , YoYo's and Tops were part of our treasure trove
the Jack Knife was always a major part of every boys things, it was almost a right of passage when reaching a certain age, to get a pair of "Lumberjack Boots"
These boots had a built in snapped pocket that held your jack knife, Our teachers thought nothing of our sharping pencils with our knives
"Try that today and there will be the SWAT Team and a school lockdown"

Model Air Planes
Father and Son Shoe Stores, gave you a model air plane, if you bought a pair of shoes
So would Thom McCann
I would spend a month putting a model air plane together.
The kits, available at the time, were not the snap together plastic junk they sell today, it took real skill to make a model airplane.
the structures would be printed on a thin sheet of balsa wood including all the ribs, these were painstakingly cut out and glued together.
Rich kids had Xacto hobby knifes, but the kids on our street were lucky to find an old single edged razor blade.
Thin paper was stretched around the ribs and then "doped" then carefully heated with a candle to tighten it against the fuselage .
we could purchase all supplies in the hobby section of either Woolworth's or Kresges

It was powered by a rubber band and they flew pretty good, then after all that work we would power them up light the tail on fire and let them go and watch them crash and burn,

Today I haven't the slightest idea why we did that, but we did nevertheless
Back In the day we needed Batteries for flashlights only.

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