Showing posts with label Edgewater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edgewater. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2008

Winthrop Terrace Apartments

Originally a hotel, Winthrop Terrace, 5734 Winthrop Ave., is located in Edgewater, a few blocks north of the current border with Uptown. Today it is the Winthrop Terrace Apartments. From their Web site:

Winthrop Terrace is a nine story vintage high rise building originally constructed in 1926 as the Winthrop Terrace Hotel and later converted to the apartment building you see today. Winthrop Terrace offers several unique studio layouts available in various sizes and prices. All of the apartments have been newly updated with modern amenities while keeping some of the vintage charm.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Yacht Club, Edgewater Beach Hotel


The Edgewater Beach Yacht Club, "Most Distinctive Cocktail Room in America,"
Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago.

Here's another 1930s-era cocktail recipe to enjoy along with the postcard:

Deep Sea Cocktail

1 dash Absinthe
1 dash Orange Bitters
1/2 part French Vermouth
1/2 part Gin

Shake well and strain into a cocktail glass. Add 1 olive and squeeze lemon peel on top.

(If you don't have access to absinthe, try Pernod or the new Absente.)

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Edgewater Beach Apartments

Before the city extended Lake Shore Drive, the Edgewater Beach Apartments, part of the Edgewater Beach Hotel complex, sat right on the shore. Below is an image captured from Google Maps, showing just how far the Apartments now are from the lake front. Click on image for a larger view.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Costume from the Edgewater Beach Hotel

I found this sketch a few years back, and one of these days I'll get around to framing it. Until then, I'll share it here.

It's a design sketch for a costume used in one of the floor shows at the Edgewater Beach Hotel. Every month would bring a new floor show featuring top national acts from across the country and a line of dancers. Through the ’40s and ’50s, the Dorothy Hild Dancers performed there, and I imagine it was designed for her dancers. You gotta love the bird hat!

The only identity as to the artist is the signature "Marilyn." The costume was to fit nine girls for the "Snowbird Ballet."

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

1892 Descriptions of the Uptown/Edgewater Area

One of the books I have in my collection is The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World Columbian Exposition. Published in 1892, it is more or less a travel guide on what to see and do in Chicago while attending the world's fair.

There is a brief section on the best "suburban towns" to visit, most of which were later annexed to the city. I live at Winthrop and Argyle, part of a village that was once known as Argyle Park. From what I've heard, Argyle Park had many large, beautiful homes and mansions that were later torn down for the six-flat apartments of the twenties (which I also love) and apartment hotels. The brief description from the book reads: "Situated on the Evanston division of the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul R.R. It is is distant from the City Hall five and a half miles. It is a beautiful suburb with wide avenues and macadamized streets."

I had to look up what macadamized meant. It sounded fancy. The American Heritage Dictionary defined it as "to construct or pave (a road) with macadam." Not very helpful, that. I finally had to look it up on Wikipedia, which describes the entire process. Skip ahead if this is more than you want to know: "Macadam is a type of road construction pioneered by the Scotsman John Loudon McAdam in around 1820. It consisted of creating three layers of stones laid on a crowned subgrade with side ditches for drainage. The first two layers consisted of angular hand-broken aggregate, maximum size three inches, to a total depth of about 8 inches. The third layer was about 2 inches thick with a maximum aggregate size of 1 inch. Each layer would be compacted with a heavy roller, causing the angular stones to lock together with their neighbors."

The description of Edgewater in the Aristic Guide was a little more detailed: "Situated on the Evanston division of the Chicago, Milwauke & St. Paul Railroad, seven and a half miles from the City Hall. It is charmingly situated just north of the city limits, on a gently sloping eminence overlooking Lake Michigan. The town was originally laid out in a natural forest of beech, birch, and maple. Only enough of these were removed to allow space for avenues and building, leaving the town itself buried in a wilderness of foliage. It is the most charming suburb of Chicago. The residences are all of modern architecture, elegant in design, solid in construction, and rich in furnishings. Between the spreading branches of the trees a fine view of the lake is presented. In short distance from the city, together with its many natural charms, makes it a favorite residence for the wealthiest citizens."

Sounds idyllic, doesn't it?