Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Nikola Tesla's "Egg of Columbus" at the 1893 Chicago World's Columbian Exposition.

Nikola Tesla (1856-1943) was a Serbian-American engineer and physicist who made dozens and dozens of breakthroughs in the production, transmission and application of electric power.

Tesla Electric Light and Manufacturing Company was in Rahway, New Jersey, that operated from December 1884 through 1886. Tesla is forced out of the Tesla Electric Light Company with nothing but worthless stock.
Nikola Tesla (1856-1943)


He endured a brutal winter of 1886/87 working as a ditch digger. He persevered, determined to develop his concept of generating electricity through rotating magnetic fields. However, Tesla knew that he must find a way to help investors and supporters understand the potential of his invention.

The rotating magnetic field is one of Tesla's most far-reaching and revolutionary discoveries. This is a new and wonderful manifestation of force — a magnetic cyclone — producing striking phenomena that amazed the world when he first showed them. It results from the joint action of two or more alternating currents definitely related to one another and creating magnetic fluxes, which, by their periodic rise and fall according to a mathematical law, cause a continuous shifting of the lines of force.

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Tesla invented the first alternating current (A/C) 'motor' and developed A/C electric  generation and transmission technology.

There is a vast difference between an ordinary electromagnet and the one invented by Tesla. In standard electromagnets, the lines are stationary, and in Tesla's invention, the lines are made to whirl around at a furious rate. The first attracts a piece of iron and holds it fast; the second causes it to spin in any direction and speed desired. 

Long ago, when Tesla was still a student, he conceived the idea of the rotating magnetic field. This remarkable principle is embodied in his famous induction motor and power transmission system, now universally used.
Tesla's exhibit at Chicago's 1893 World Columbian Exposition.


Tesla devises a machine to illustrate the concept: an electromagnetic motor that generates the force needed to spin a brass egg and stand it upright on its end.
Nikola Tesla's "Egg of Columbus" was exhibited
at Chicago's 1893 World Columbian Exposition.
Tesla named the device the "Egg of Columbus" after the famous story in which Christopher Columbus challenged the Spanish court and investors to stand an egg upright. When they failed, Columbus took an egg and crushed the bottom flat so it would remain upright. They accused him of playing a cheap trick. Still, Columbus overcame their objections by explaining that an idea can seem impossible until a clever solution is found, at which point it suddenly becomes easy.
How The "Egg of Columbus" Works.
Canadian Tesla Technical Museum.
Tesla Projects Laboratory Inc.
 
Tesla incorporates this logic in his Egg of Columbus to present his concept of alternating current A/C electricity to investors. It is a stroke of brilliance that results in funding from investors Alfred S. Brown, director of Western Union, and Charles F. Peck, a big-shot attorney from New York City. 

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Tesla’s first laboratory opened in April 1887 and was located at 89 Liberty Street in New York’s Lower Manhattan Financial District. This is where Tesla began planning and developing his designs for the A/C induction motor.

Tesla wrote in his autobiography of this time in his life when he went from ditch digger to laboratory owner, where he finally built the first models of his induction motor concept: "Then followed a period of struggle in the new medium for which I was not fitted, but the reward came in the end, and in April 1887, the Tesla Electric Company was organized, providing a laboratory and facilities. The motors I built there were exactly as I had imagined them. I made no attempt to improve the design but merely reproduced the pictures as they appeared to my vision, and the operation was always as I expected."
Nikola Tesla (year unknown).



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In 1893, three years prior to the earliest attempts in Hertz wave telegraphy, Tesla first described his wireless system and took out patents on a number of novel devices which were then but imperfectly understood. Even the electrical world at large laughed at these patents. But large wireless interests had to pay him tribute in the form of real money, because his "fool" patents were recognized to be fundamental. He actually antedated every important wireless invention.

Nikola Tesla lived a century behind his time. He had often been denounced as a dreamer even by well-informed men. He has been called crazy by others who ought to have known better. Tesla talked in a language that most of us still do not understand. But as the years roll on, Science appreciates his greatness, and Tesla receives more tributes.
"Today, Nikola Tesla is considered to be the greatest inventor of all time. Tesla has more original inventions to his credit than any other man in history. He is considered greater than Archimedes, Faraday, or Edison. His basic, as well as revolutionary, discoveries for sheer audacity, have no equal in the annals of the world. His master mind is easily one of the seven wonders of the intellectual world."                                                                                        ─ Hugo Gernsback
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There are a lot of assumptions made reguarding Tesla's private life. One of the few 
things that we know for sure is that Tesla never married. Tesla's seemingly indifference  in women {friends, like a sister}, made him the perfect target for whispers and gossip that he was homosexual, but, of course, there's no evidence. (Karl-Maria Kertbeny coined the term 'homosexual' in print 1868.) 

Tesla, unbeknownst to him, was the cynosure of all the lady's eyes. Despite being surrounded by beautiful, intelligent, women of substance, many who grew to love Nikola, yet nobody became Mrs. Nikola Telsa.

The issue wasn't the failure to meet his expectations. Instead, it turns out to be Tesla's 'no distractions' attitude allowing him to focus his energy on inventing (solutions to a problem), improvements, and , most importantly, the documentation.
 
"I don't think that you can name many great inventions that have been made by a married man." ─ Nikola Tesla.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Saturday, October 8, 2022

Hugh Brannum, Mr. Green Jeans on the Captain Kangaroo show.

Hugh Brannum (1910-1987) was an American vocalist, arranger, composer, and actor known for his role as Mr. Green Jeans on the children's television show Captain Kangaroo.

Brannum was born in Sandwich, Illinois, in 1910 to a Methodist minister. He attended Maine East High School in Park Ridge, Illinois, where he played sousaphone in the school's marching band, later learning the bass violin.

Robert James “Bob” KeeshanCaptain Kangaroo, had a recurring role as the Town Clown, a pantomime piece that took place in and around the exposed wagon home of a tramp-like circus clown.
Captain Kangaroo as the Town Clown.




The "Kangaroo" part of Keeshan's name came from the oversized pockets on the lower half of his bright red jacket.
Captain Kangaroo Worn Red Jacket. Movie/TV Memorabilia Costumes.





Hugh Brannum (Mr. Green Jeans) and Cosmo Allegretti (Mr. Moose). On the first show of every month, the Captain had a birthday cake for all of the children with birthdays that month. Brannum indicates that the show is celebrating its fifth year on the air. 1960



One of the show's long-running gags was the "Ping-Pong Ball Drop," instigated by the telling of a joke (usually a knock-knock joke) by Mr. Moose, in which the punchline included the words "ping-pong balls." At the mention of those three words, a shower of ping-pong balls was released from above on the Captain.


Especially in later seasons, the show also featured a running gag where on selected episodes, the Captain would try to perform a particular activity three or four times in the episode, only to fail differently on each attempt.
Captain Kangaroo promotional postcard. Shown from the left are Dancing Bear, Bunny Rabbit, Captain Kangaroo, Grandfather Clock, Mister Moose, and Mister Green Jeans (Hugh Brannum). 1961

At the end of each episode, the Captain always encouraged parents watching the show to spend quality time with their children daily, and he often demonstrated various creative ways to do so. In later seasons, that changed to him saying, "Well, what would you like to do today? You know it could be a good day for..." then a song would list many different activities while short film clips of each related activity are presented. The song ended with the singers saying, "There's so much to do. These things are just a few." Then it would cut back to the Captain, who would sign off with, "So whatever you do, have a great day!"
Captain Kangaroo and Dancing Bear. circa 1956



Captain Kangaroo and the Schwinn Bicycle Company
From the late 1950s, the Schwinn Bicycle Company used children's television programming to expand its child and youth bicycle market dominance. The company was an early sponsor (from 1958) of Captain Kangaroo. 


The Captain himself was enlisted to sell Schwinn-brand bicycles to the show's audience, typically six years old and under. At the end of each live Schwinn marketing promotion, Bob Keeshan would intone, "Schwinn bikes—the quality bikes—are best!" and "Prices slightly higher in the South and the West." Schwinn deemed the on-air marketing program successful, and the company increased its market share of child and youth bicycles throughout the 1960s. 
1968 Schwinn Pea Picker Krate in front of a Schwinn advertisement for showrooms. 


The marketing program continued through the 1971 season, when the Federal Trade Commission's Staff Report, Guidelines on Advertising to Children, recommended against Schwinn's on-air marketing practices using the show's host. In response, Schwinn and the show's writers altered the format in 1972. The Captain no longer insisted that his viewers purchase a Schwinn but instead made regular on-air consultations with the new Captain Kangaroo character, Mr. Schwinn Dealer. Brilliant. 
VIDEOS
Opening Theme for the Captain Kangaroo Show.

Captain Kangaroo Episode From 1956

Captain Kangaroo (Bob Keeshan) on 48 Hours (CBS) 1995
Opens with the Ping-Pong Ball Drop.

THE CAST
  • Bob Keeshan as Captain Kangaroo, Mr. Pennywhistle, Mr. Doodle, Wally and the Town Clown.
  • Hugh "Lumpy" Brannum as Mr. Green Jeans, the New Old Folk Singer, Percy, Uncle Backwards, Mr. McGregor, and Mr. Bainter the Painter.
  • Cosmo Allegretti appeared as Mr. Bunny Rabbit and Mr. Moose (both of which he also created), Dennis the Apprentice, Willy, Miss Frog, Mr. Whispers, Dancing Bear, Grandfather Clock, and Uncle Ralph; he was the voice of Aniforms puppet TV Fred (a live-action on-screen puppet that appeared behind the blackboard in the Treasure House), and was the artist behind the Magic Drawing Board.
  • Sam Levine as The Banana Man; the character was created by Adolph Proper.
  • Bill Cosby as himself, the host of the Picture Pages segment (1980–1984).
  • Debbie Weems appeared as Debbie (1973–1978), the voice for the puppet character Baby Duck.
  • James Wall as Mr. Baxter (1968–1978) - was also the stage manager.
  • Carolyn Mignini as Kathy and other female roles (1981–1983).
  • Kevin Clash as the puppet character Artie (1980–1984) and as himself, acting in many of the sketches.
  • John Burstein as Slim Goodbody (1978–1981).
  • Bill McCutcheon as Mr. Homan (1965–1968).
  • Jane Connell as Mrs. Homan (1965–1968).
  • Dr. Joyce Brothers as herself for three seasons.
Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D. 

Saturday, October 1, 2022

The Association House of Chicago, an early Settlement House.

The Association House of Chicago (AHC) was one of the original Chicago Settlement Houses located at 2150 West North Avenue in today's Wicker Park. AHC has played a significant and historic role in Chicago's westside neighborhoods. Founded in 1899 as a settlement house by Ellen Holt, a student of Jane Addams, AHC served as a "port of entry" for new immigrants for decades. At one time, they boasted the best playgrounds in Chicago. 



As early as 1900, (AHC) began serving women and girls working in nearby factories. The founders laid the cornerstone of the new and expanded Association House building at 2150 West North Avenue in 1905. That year attendance topped 1,000, and more than 4,500 showers were taken at Association House in the summer.
The original settlement house building is on the left. 1905

The reading room and library opened in the new building in 1908, and within two weeks, 500 children had borrowed books.

Early participants included many Scandinavians, Germans, Poles, and later, Russian Jews, reflecting changes in the 1910 census. Leadership welcomed the diversity and provided a place that celebrated all cultures and religions.


With a generous estate gift from fellow founding organizer Susan Poxon, Association House opened Druce Lake Camp in Lake County to provide a summer escape from the city for young girls and boys.

During the depression, funds were scarce, but programs continued, including dental and nutrition services, manual training, and art and music classes. A pilot program providing education for children with developmental disabilities began. The program rapidly grew and catalyzed the formation of 17 other parent groups in Illinois and 350 groups across the country, ultimately helping to deinstitutionalize countless children.


By 1950, multi-cultural participants represented 29 different nationalities, with Latinos representing a significant new population. 

Ellen Holt bequeathed Association House $50,000 ($495,000 today) at her death in 1961.

AHC began services in Child Welfare with a foster care program in 1976. 

The AHC is still going strong at 1116 North Kedzie Avenue in Humboldt Park since 1997. They served thousands of families each year through programs focused on Behavioral Health, Workforce Development, Child Safety, and the Association House High School, a charter school for youth left behind by the traditional school system.

The original building was sold and converted into condos in 1999.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Saturday, September 24, 2022

A Former Southwest Chicago Suburban Airfield's Connection to Aviation History.

Cornelius R. Coffey made aviation history in the 1930s at Harlem Airport at 87th Street and Harlem Avenue in today's Bridgeview.
Cornelius R. Coffey
In the history of Negro aviation, Bessie Coleman, the first Negro woman to earn a pilot's license, is usually remembered as the one who opened the skies to Negro aviators. 

Less well known was Cornelius Coffey, who, with much the same vision and fighting the same obstructions, changed a cornfield in south Chicago into an airport that housed the nation's first large group of young, talented Negro aviators. 

In the years just before and after World War I, some 180,000 Negro Southerners immigrated to Chicago, settling on the city's rough south side. Bessie Coleman, a Texas transplant who wanted to fly, learned that aviation schools didn't accept Negro applicants, and she had to sail to France to earn a pilot's license. "Queen Bess" subsequently became the toast of the Chicago Defender newspaper, and when she died in a fall from her airplane in 1926, some 10,000 Chicago Negro mourners filed past her casket.

Coffey never met Coleman, and the Arkansas native quietly mapped his own route to the sky. Young Coffey possessed a great gift for mechanical work. He was the top graduate in a south Chicago auto engineering class in 1925, quickly earning the allegiance of Emil Mack, the white Chevrolet dealer who employed him. Coffey later found a spot at the dealership for a mechanic friend named John Robinson.

The two young men wanted to fly, but no one would teach them, so they taught themselves. Later, in 1929, they enrolled in an aviation mechanics program at Chicago's Curtiss-Wright School of Aviation. When they showed up for class, they were turned away because they were Negro, even though they had already paid their tuition. Mack threatened to sue on their behalf, and the school reluctantly admitted the pair. 


In 1931, the 28-year-old Coffey finished first in his graduating class and Robinson second. Two weeks later, Coffey took the exam to earn his mechanic's license from the U.S. government. The school must have been impressed because it changed its policy, inviting the men to return and teach all-Negro classes. They did. The aviation mechanic's degrees didn't open many doors, however. Coffey and Robinson were still unwelcome at airstrips except Akers Airport, near where they worked, so when Akers closed, they were grounded.

The men joined with several other local Negro aviation enthusiasts to form the Challenger Air Pilots Association (the name referred to the Curtiss Challenger engine). The new group looked for a place to fly from. In 1931, the group, joined by one or two white pilots from Akers, bought a half-mile-wide tract of land in Robbins, an all-Negro town southwest of Chicago. There they buried boulders, dropped trees, roughly leveled the terrain, and cobbled together a hangar from second-hand lumber. When they finished, their small fleet of disparate craft—a Church Mid-Wing, an International F-17, and a WACO 9—was parked at what historians consider the first Negro-owned airport in the United States.

The achievement is primarily a historical footnote: About a year later, a violent thunderstorm roared through Robbins, demolishing the hangar, flipping airplanes, and scattering hopes.

But a few miles north, at 87th Street and Harlem Avenue in Oak Lawn (today's Bridgeview) intersection, William Schumacher had purchased 140 acres of farmland with an airport in mind, and his brother Fred would manage it. Before Robbins' devastating storm, Fred Schumacher visited Robbins and, probably sensing a good tenant, invited the group to come to use his brother's airport.

After the storm, while Coffey was on a trip to Detroit, Robinson and two other Challenger members—pilot Dale Lawrence White and Curtiss-Wright school graduate Harold Hurd—approached Fred Schumacher to take him up on his offer. The facility was taking shape. Grass had sprouted where cornstalks had been plowed under, and a hangar and office sprang up along Harlem Avenue.

Schumacher readily agreed to rent the lower end of the airport to the Challenger group. Still, in an interview recorded for the Smithsonian Video History Program on Negro aviators, Hurd said that Schumacher initially insisted on segregation. He was already running an all-white school. "Look, fellas," he said, "I'm going to put you at the end of the field to save you from having any trouble with the other guys."

Negro and white pilots parked their airplanes in separate hangars, sharing Harlem's four sod runways, the longest of which was 2,000 feet. The rural area soon echoed with the thundering exhausts of Curtiss engines; the sky above the corn and wheat fields of Worth Township teemed with WACOs, Travel Airs, and Taylor Cubs. The leaders of the Challenger group were acknowledged to be Coffey and Robinson. 

At Harlem Airport, Schumacher asked Coffey to recertify the overhauled aircraft of his white customers, enabling Coffey to begin earning money as a mechanic. It started an amicable working relationship with the man Coffey called "Shoes." The Coffey Flying School operated on the airport's south end, and Schumacher's school was on the north. Coffey taught both white and Negro students together. "Every 10 students I took, I had one white student and one girl student in that unit," he said years later.

One of those "girl students" was Willa Brown, a former Curtiss-Wright student of Coffey's. In 1938, the pert 27-year-old traveled to Harlem to take flying lessons from her old teacher. Two years earlier, Brown, a former Gary, Indiana schoolteacher with a master's degree in business administration, had strutted into the Chicago Defender newsroom in jodhpurs and boots to promote an amateur airshow at Harlem. City editor Enoc Waters was so taken by her that he assigned himself to cover the event.


At Harlem, Brown became the first Negro woman to earn a pilot's license in the United States. She became indispensable to Coffey's operation and the Negro aviation movement. For a time, she also was Coffey's wife. In 1939, editor Waters proposed that the Challenger Air Pilots Association broaden its scope; within weeks, the new National Airman's Association was chartered, with Coffey as president, Dale White as vice president, Brown as secretary, and Waters as the group's unofficial promoter.

Smith remembers that Coffey and his instructors washed out few students, almost willing the young men and women to succeed. Smith himself struggled until Brown rescued him. She asked Smith to go for a ride one day. Smith was six-foot-two and weighed 210 pounds, and the five-foot-two Brown took off in a Cub. "She said, 'I've been watching you, Quentin, and I know you can learn to fly. Let me show you something,'" he remembers. "She pulled it up into a stall, and we spun seven or eight times—and you don't spin a Cub!—and then she pulled it out, and this little lady said to me, 'You can't be King Kong, Quentin. You've got to be gentle. You're going to learn to fly today.'" And he did. Smith completed training at Tuskegee and was assigned to a bomber group based in Seymour, Indiana.

In late 1939, civilian pilot training sites were announced; they included seven for Negro students (Tuskegee, which had finally begun flight instruction, was one). Harlem Airport was the only Negro training site that was not a college campus.

Coffey was to direct flight training and personally maintain the aircraft of his renamed Coffey School of Aeronautics. Willa Brown would run a ground school at Chicago's Wendell Phillips High School and coordinate the overall program.

"Shoes" sold Coffey a 50-horsepower Piper Cub needed for primary flight training, and another white friend helped Coffey buy a second one. For secondary training, Coffey and Brown cajoled the Curtiss-Wright school into lending two 220-horsepower WACO PT-14s.
The Coffey school also would teach cross-country and flight instruction; it and Tuskegee were the only Negro programs offering all four levels of instruction. Each trainee received 35 hours of flight time. By June 1941, the school's fleet—mostly Cubs—had increased to 10. When rain caused excessive puddling on Harlem's sod runways, the students practiced from paved airfields in Harvey or Joliet.

Everything about the civilian pilot training program at Harlem was modest. Coffey and Brown lived in a small cottage at the southern tip of the airport, a building that doubled as the Civil Air Patrol unit headquarters. Classroom work was conducted in a small one-room building crowded with student desks. 

The government wouldn't fund student housing at Harlem, so in 1942 supporters of the program erected a dormitory: a cot-lined room with adjacent latrines and showers. At one end, Brown supervised a dining area that served three meals daily to flight students and anyone else who wandered in.

"The atmosphere at Harlem was camaraderie," Quentin Smith recalls. He trained at the airport in 1942 at the invitation of Brown, whom he had known in Indiana. Smith says in his months at Harlem, all the student pilots had at least some college education and quickly bonded. "Every day, it wasn't raining, and we weren't flying. All we had to do was study," he recalls. "In the evenings, we'd get in the planes and get the feel of them. I probably wouldn't have made it without all the camaraderie. I mean, out there, we were so far from Negro people, we had to drive 20 miles just to see any."

Coffey and Brown procured olive green Civilian Conservation Corps uniforms to bolster the students' esprit de corps (a feeling of pride, fellowship, and common loyalty). They also quietly used some of their earnings to set up a pool of cash that the unpaid students could dip into for incidental needs.

Coffey remained committed to integration. When the Army Air Corps announced that the military unit from Tuskegee would be segregated from white servicemen, Coffey, speaking as NAA president, objected. "We'd rather be excluded than segregated," he declared. In the end, Army traditions prevailed. The Tuskegee Airmen would be a separate fighting unit known informally as the Red Tails; their most famous mission was flying escort for bombers in Europe.

Coffey offered to pay the Negro teen­ager, Bev Dunhill, 50 cents an hour to work at Harlem, plus give him 30 minutes of flying time each weekend. Dunhill instantly accepted though he didn't tell his airplane-fearing mother for six months. Each day Dunjill rode a streetcar to the end of the line at 63rd Street, where Coffey met him and drove him to the airport. The teen spent his days pushing airplanes from the hangar, washing fuselages and performing minor maintenance.

The number of pilots that the Harlem wartime program turned out is unknown, but it was in the hundreds. No airplane was ever wrecked. After the war, Coffey worked at Harlem but spent most of the next two decades teaching aviation mechanics in high schools and an area college.

Some of the aviators from Harlem's early years had distinguished careers. Coffey got a patent on a popular carburetor warming system, and the Federal Aviation Administration honored him with an aerial navigation waypoint ("Coffey Fix" in FAA spelling) to align aircraft landing at Chicago Midway Airport. Harold Hurd was inducted into the Illinois Aviation Hall of Fame. Dale White broke employment barriers for Negro mechanics. Willa Brown ran twice, unsuccessfully for Congress, the first Negro woman to try for a Congressional seat. Quentin Smith stayed active in aviation, becoming president of the Gary, Indiana Regional Airport Authority. And Bev Dunhill, who had entered the cadet program at Tuskegee as World War II ceased, re-enlisted in 1949 and became an F-86 jet combat instructor in Korea, along with a pilot named Gus Grissom.


Harlem Airport grew even busier in the post-war years, with six flying schools, a repair service, and half a dozen hangars. Forty acres were added, and 10 unpaved runways crisscrossed the field.


In September 1956, the airport lost its lease. A parcel of land that had once been a cornfield was transformed once more, this time into a residential sub­division and a shopping center named Southfield Plaza. 

Today, customers walk to Shop' N Save, Hobby Lobby, and Walgreens on the pavement where leather-helmeted pilots once revved engines to taxi and take off. Grassy airstrips scarred by ruts have disappeared under smooth streets lined with houses and trees. The acreage's only link to aviation is several hundred feet overhead, where airliners descend toward landings at Midway Airport.

For Harlem's 23-year existence, Fred Schumacher was manager, building his business on twin pillars: full service and a relatively enlightened sense of brotherhood. When the facility closed, he picked up and moved to Chicago-Hammond Airport. Probably the person in the best position to know, Schumacher told a newspaper reporter at Harlem's closing that some 350,000 hours of instructional flying had been logged at the rough field. This number represented a lot of realized dreams, regardless of their race.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Sunday, April 24, 2022

Monroe City One-room Schoolhouse, Valmeyer, Illinois.


The one-room Monroe City Schoolhouse that stood for nearly 100 years in Monroe City, Illinois, was moved to a new location in the new Valmeyer, Illinois (on the bluffs). 

The Monroe City School was built in 1918 and closed in 1955.
Monroe City School Postcard.




Property owner Melvin Allscheid donated the 1,200-square-foot schoolhouse to the Valmeyer Community Heritage Society. They moved the structure 10 miles from KK Road just east of Bluff Road to a new concrete foundation on a village-owned property at 321 South Cedar Bluff Drive and Empson Drive, just across the street from the current Valmeyer school campus, in April of 2011.

Today the one-room schoolhouse is home to the Valmeyer Community Heritage Society.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Chicagoan Magazines from 1926 to 1935, 166 Full Issues.

The Chicagoan, published from 1926 to 1935 in Chicago, was explicitly modeled on the New Yorker in both its graphic design and editorial content. The magazine aimed to portray the city as a cultural hub and counter its image as a place of violence and vice. It was first issued biweekly and then, in a larger format, monthly, ceasing publication in the midst of the Depression. The magazine received little national attention during its lifetime and few copies survive.
ISSUES OF THE CHICAGOAN MAGAZINE.







Vol. 1, No. 1, June 14, 1926
Vol. 1, No. 2, July 15, 1926
Vol. 1, No. 3, August 1, 1926
Vol. 2, No. 1, Sept 15, 1926
Vol. 2, No. 2, October 1, 1926
Vol. 2, No. 3, October 15, 1926
Vol. 2, No. 4, Nov. 1, 1926
Vol. 2, No. 5, Nov. 15, 1926
Vol. 2, No. 6, Dec. 1, 1926
Vol. 3, No. 1, March 26, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 2, April 9, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 3, April 23, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 4, May 7, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 5, May 21, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 6, June 4, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 7, June 18, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 8, July 2, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 9, July 16, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 10, July 30, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 11, Aug. 13, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 12, Aug. 27, 1927
Vol. 3, No. 13, Sept 10, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 1, Sept 24, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 2, October 8, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 3, October 22, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 4, Nov. 5, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 5, Nov. 19, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 6, Dec..17, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 7, Dec. 31, 1927
Vol. 4, No. 8, January 14, 1928
Vol. 4, No. 9, January 28, 1928
Vol. 4, No. 10, Feb. 11, 1928
Vol. 4, No. 11, Feb. 25, 1928
Vol. 4, No. 12, March 10, 1928
Vol. 4, No. 13, March 24, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 1, April 7, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 2, April 21, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 3, May 5, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 4, May 19, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 5, June 2, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 6, June 16, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 7, June 30, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 8, July 14, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 9, July 28, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 10, August 11, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 11, August 25, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 12, August 8, 1928
Vol. 5, No. 13, Sept 22, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 1, October 6, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 2, October 20, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 3, Nov. 3, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 4, Nov. 17, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 5, Dec. 1, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 6, Dec. 15, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 7, Dec. 29, 1928
Vol. 6, No. 8, January 12, 1929
Vol. 6, No. 9, January 26, 1929
Vol. 6, No. 10, Feb. 9, 1929
Vol. 6, No. 11, Feb. 23, 1929
Vol. 6, No. 12, March 2, 1929
Vol. 6, No. 13, March 16, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 1, March 30, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 2, April 13, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 3, April 27, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 4, May 11, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 5, May 25, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 6, June 8, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 7, June 22, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 8, June 6, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 9, July 20, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 10, August 3, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 11, August 17, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 12, August 31, 1929
Vol. 7, No. 13, Sept 14, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 1, Sept 28, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 2, October 12, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 3, October 26, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 4, Nov. 9, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 5, Nov. 23, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 6, Dec. 7, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 7, Dec. 21, 1929
Vol. 8, No. 8, January 4, 1930
Vol. 8, No. 9, January 18, 1930
Vol. 8, No. 10, Feb. 1, 1930
Vol. 8, No. 11, Feb. 15, 1930
Vol. 8, No. 12, March 1, 1930
Vol. 8, No. 13, March 15, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 1, March 29, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 2, April 12, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 3, April 26, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 4, May 10, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 5, May 24, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 6, June 7, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 7, June 21, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 8, July 5, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 9, July 19, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 10, August 2, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 11, August 16, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 12, August 30, 1930
Vol. 9, No. 13, Sept 13, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 1, Sept 27, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 2, Oct. 11, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 3, Oct. 25, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 4, Nov. 8, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 5, Nov. 22, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 6, Dec. 6, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 7, Dec. 20, 1930
Vol. 10, No. 8, January 3, 1931
Vol. 10, No. 9, January 17, 1931
Vol. 10, No. 10, Jan. 31, 1931
Vol. 10, No. 11, Feb. 14, 1931
Vol. 10, No. 12, Feb. 28, 1931
Vol. 10, No. 13, March 14, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 1, March 28, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 2, April 11, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 3, April 25, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 4, May 9, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 5, May 23, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 6, June 6, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 7, June 20, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 8, July 4, 1931
Vol. 11, No. 9, July 18, 1931
Vol. 12, No. 1, August 1931
Vol. 12, No. 2, Sept 1931
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Vol. 12, No. 4, November 1931
Vol. 12, No. 5, December 1931
Vol. 12, No. 6, January 1932
Vol. 12, No. 7, February 1932
Vol. 12, No. 8, March 1932
Vol. 12, No. 9, April 1932
Vol. 12, No. 10, May 1932
Vol. 12, No. 11, June 1932
Vol. 12, No. 12, July 1932
Vol. 13, No. 1, August 1, 1932
Vol. 13, No. 2, Sept 1932
Vol. 13, No. 3, October 1932
Vol. 13, No. 4, November 1932
Vol. 13, No. 5, December 1932
Vol. 13, No. 6, January 1933
Vol. 13, No. 7, February 1, 1933
Vol. 13, No. 8, March 1, 1933
Vol. 13, No. 9, April 1, 1933
Vol. 13, No. 10, May 1, 1933
Vol. 13, No. 11, June 1, 1933
Vol. 13, No. 12, July 1, 1933
Vol. 14, No. 1, August 1, 1933
Vol. 14, No. 2, Sept 1, 1933
Vol. 14, No. 3, October 1, 1933
Vol. 14, No. 4, November 1, 1933
Vol. 14, No. 5, December 1, 1933
Vol. 14, No. 6, February 1, 1934
Vol. 14, No. 7, March 1, 1934
Vol. 14, No. 8, April 1, 1934
Vol. 14, No. 9, May 1, 1934
Vol. 14, No. 10, June 1, 1934
Vol. 14, No. 11, July 1, 1934
Vol. 14, No. 12, August 1934
Vol. 15, No. 1, Sept 1, 1934
Vol. 15, No. 2, October 1, 1934
Vol. 15, No. 3, November 1, 1934
Vol. 15, No. 4, December 1, 1934
Vol. 15, No. 5, January 1, 1935
Vol. 15, No. 6, February 1, 1935
Vol. 15, No. 7, March 1, 1935
Vol. 15, No. 8, April 1, 1935  

© The Quigley Publishing Company, a Division of QP Media, Inc.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.