This image kind of reminds me of waiting for election results during the last aldermanic race!
Here we see the results of some election being projected onto the front of the Sheridan Trust Savings Bank (before it moved across the street into what is now the Bridgeview Bank building).
Original caption: View of a crowd at North Broadway and West Lawrence Avenue in the Uptown community area of Chicago, Illinois, watching election returns on the night of Nov. 4, 1920. The returns are projected on a large screen stretched above the crowd. DN-0009882, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago Historical Society, Library of Congress
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Broadway Lawrence Racine, 1920
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Labels: Broadway, Lawrence, Racine, Sheridan Trust Bank
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Fred Mann's Rainbo Gardens
Here is a series of three postcards showing the interior of Rainbo Gardens. The location was a top Chicago entertainment destination for about a hundred years, and it was here that vaudevillians Ted Healy and Moe Howard asked Larry Fine to join their comedy act that eventually became The Three Stooges.
Host to a variety of amusements and some of the early twentieth century's best-known celebrities, Fred Mann's Rainbo Gardens was one of Chicago's premier entertainment venues. Located at 4812-36 North Clark Street, Rainbo Gardens lured patrons from across the city with its eclectic mix of traditional vaudeville acts, trendy jazz bands, extreme sports events, and easy-going dance and liquor policies...
For more, go to Jazz Age Chicago.
Today, the site is home to Rainbo Village. For a series of images of the demolition of the original building, go to Landmarks Preservation Council.Postcard images courtesy J.C.
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Labels: Clark, Lawrence, Rainbo Gardens, Rainbo Village
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Sheridan Road South from Lawrence, the Old Kemper Building
Does the old Kemper Building look strange to you? That's because it's actually shorter in this image than it is now. Four more stories were added some time after its initial construction.
It was built by Harry Emmerman in 1925 and housed the Mutual Insurance company. It was one of Uptown's best and most modern office buildings, with air conditioning and stunning views of Lake Michigan (the shore was closer in those days). In 1928, Kemper insurance moved into the top floors, and eventually bought and took over the building. It would be its headquarters for forty years, until the company moved out to Long Grove. They donated the building to Chicago Ecumenical Institute in 1971. Today, it houses a variety of non-profit groups.
I have a personal connection to this building (one generation removed). When my mom was young and single, she worked for Kemper Insurance. This was in the mid-sixties. She became good friends with two women who also worked there, Marsha and Herma. (Herma is now my godmother.)
When Marsha got engaged, she had a bridal shower, and my mom attended. Someone there took home movies, which Marsha later subjected her youngest brother Ron to. Being a good brother, he humored her, but he made her stop the film and back it up when this pretty blonde—my mom—appeared on the screen. "Who is that? Can you fix me up with her?" he asked.
Marsha went to work the following day, and told my mom what happened. "You don't have to go out with the guy if you don't want to, Donna," she said. "He is my brother." But my mom was game, and agreed to the blind date. A week later they were engaged.
And that's how my parents met.
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Labels: Family, Kemper, Lawrence, Postcards of Uptown, Sheridan
Monday, October 1, 2007
Friday, September 14, 2007
Huszagh & Hill New Lawrence Hotel for Sale
The Lawrence House, located on the northeast corner of Kenmore and Lawrence, is for sale. Originally an upscale apartment hotel, it was designed by Ralph Huszagh and Boyd Hill, and built in 1928. The architectural team is also responsible for the Aragon Ballroom.
The New Lawrence Hotel was an art deco dream and had an indoor swimming pool, exercise room, rooftop garden, and all the modern conveniences of the day. Known as the Lawrence House today, the majority of its tenants are 55 or older, although it is not officially a senior building.
The pricetag is $19 million. Full details can be found at Crain's Chicago.
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Labels: Huszagh and Hill, Kenmore, Lawrence, Postcards of Uptown



