Friday, December 2, 2016

Chicago's Famous Block 37.

The story of Chicago's Block 37 is the history of a great American city's downtown business districts in a microcosm. Block 37 is bordered by State, Randolph, Dearborn and Washington streets.
Block 37 - Randolph Street, Chicago, Illinois. 1909
At the center of Chicago, this typical urban block missed no trend, from the first office buildings in the 1870s to the early skyscrapers of the 1890s and the supermarkets of the 1930s. Even through long decades of decline, from the perceived street anarchy of the 1960s to the massive urban renewal of the 1980s that finally demolished the block, Block 37 has mirrored the enthusiasms and fears of the City. The movie palaces, seedy political hangouts, fine billiard parlor, novelty store, and gourmet food hall made it a primary destination for those seeking the Loop's pleasures. Also, a place of work where small newspapers were published, violins repaired, hair cut, and fortunes read, this one city block, in its prime, attracted thousands of people an hour. On a typical day, it housed the population of a small town, only to be completely empty at night. 

All the City's variety was packed into 16 buildings of various sizes and conditions. Its landlords, high and low, were among Chicago's first families and fabled entrepreneurs. A scene for brilliant acts of charity and extraordinary moments of predation. Block 37 was a prime arena for the urban arts, from fly-by-night retailing and three-card monte to international real-estate deals involving hundreds of millions of dollars. To understand the rise and fall of this one block in some of its daunting details is to appreciate Chicago's unique attraction to city lovers and haters alike. To know Block 37 is to know Chicago.

Favored by its unique geography, the land was to become Block 37 already had a rich history before the first Europeans couldoed into the swampy prairie on Lake Michigan. At least 100 years before Chicago (Chicagou or Chicagoua) was surveyed, scribed, and squared, the Potawatomi pursued an active commercial life on the site. With its proximity to the lake and the main branch of the Chicago River, the block was important, too, after Fort Dearborn was established, and the area became a key area of settlement of the Northwest Territories.

The block was platted in James R. Thompson's 1830 survey and numbered one of the City's original 58 blocks. Its strategic location between State and Dearborn Streets to the east and west and Randolph and Washington to the north and south assured that the block's original eight lots, equally cut from only 120,000 square feet of ground, would become fully deployed in the City's remarkable political, commercial, and industrial development.
James R. Thompson's 1830 plat survey.






After Chicago's incorporation as a town in 1833, Block 37, situated only several hundred yards from the Cook County courthouse and across the street from the City's largest bank, boomed along with the City. The famous Crosby Opera House was built between State and Dearborn Streets on Washington Street.

When the Great Chicago Fire of October 8, 1871, razed the entire downtown, the block had already been densely developed for decades. Rebuilt immediately after the fire at over four times its original square footage and increasingly added to over the next century, Block 37 shared the fortunes of other American downtowns from New York to San Francisco. Resiliently prosperous and endlessly inventive in the sort of commerce it could support, the block survived not only the fire but a worldwide Depression and a host of cunning mayors and deal-makers until it finally fell prey in 1989 to the final "improvement" that flattened, in the name of urban renewal, every one of its buildings—including, without distinction, its architectural treasures and notorious firetraps.

Block 37 was, in the end, a victim of the trends it had so efficiently exploited in the past. After World War II, as Chicago's population began its permanent migration away from the core and out to the suburbs, the block started to suffer from the neglect that would eventually make it a candidate for urban renewal. Beginning in the early 1960s, the historic Loop was bypassed to redevelop North Michigan Avenue. The old downtown was perceived and relentlessly advertised as hopelessly decayed and dangerous. 

The once superior location of Block 37 at the matrix of the City's political, commercial, and social life now doomed it. By the 1970s, State Street had lost its preeminence as a shopping center to the department stores on Michigan Avenue and the large regional malls multiplying in the suburbs. The entertainment "Rialto" along Randolph Street — Chicago's equivalent to Times Square — had closed its live shows and subsisted on pornography and action films. At the same time, on Washington Street, the gourmet shop Stop and Shop, a city institution, went out of business. Offices for lawyers, political activists, and skilled artisans on the block's Dearborn Street side went unrented as the center of Chicago shifted to the grand new towers of the West Loop. None of the billions of dollars flooding the City during the skyscraper boom of the 1980s reached Block 37 in time.

Ironically, the block's very dereliction became its last chance. Speculators and city hall insiders had written down the land values of the entire North Loop to the point in 1979 when the Chicago Plan Commission declared 26.74 acres, seven full or partial blocks including Block 37, "blighted." This designation qualified the area for a "taking." Once, a valuable commercial property was seized from its lawful owners, condemned, and written down as worthless. After speculators had delayed the taking almost a decade and bid up land costs, the City paid nearly $250 million for the entire North Loop, including almost $40 million for Block 37 alone. In 1983, a local development group, JMB, won the right to develop the whole block. 

A series of delays, beginning with a challenge from historic preservationists and prolonged by costly legal battles, put off the block's demolition until 1989, when t
he City started to leveling Block 37 in 1989, making way for the construction of a mixed-use development that included office space, retail stores, and restaurants. Shoppers Corner was in the last demolition phase, closing in June 1991.

Chicago traded the land title to the developers for $12.5 million, less than a third of what it had paid. Plans to build two towers and a large retail mall fell prey to the national real-estate crash of the 1990s.
The Block 37 building at State and Washington Streets in Chicago's Loop.
The block was temporarily used as a winter skating rink and a summer student art gallery for almost a decade. At the opening of the twenty-first century, this once diverse and active place still lies empty, an unwanted orphan of progress. The history of Block 37 will continue to mirror the rise and fall of Chicago's downtown. Its long and varied history is an intimate calibration of the history of a great American city.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D. 

Looking North on Clark Street and Lincoln Park West, Chicago, Illinois. 1899

Looking North on Clark Street and Lincoln Park West, Chicago, Illinois. 1899

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Fort de Crévecoeur and Fort Pimiteoui in the Illinois Country.

On January 5, 1680, eight canoes passed through the Narrows of the Illinois River above Peoria and came upon the Peoria Indians camped on both sides of the Pimiteoui Lake. With René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle (Sieur de La Salle being a title only)  canoe on the right and Henri de Tonti on the left, eight canoes in total formed a line to cover the width of the river, signaling the Indians that they came in peace. The Indians were frightened at first, but, upon realizing that the white men meant no harm, welcomed them with a feast of bear meat, buffalo fat, and porridge. 
Antique French map of North America in 1681 by Claude Bernou, showing Fort de Crevecoeur location. Click for a jumbo sized map.
Fort Crevecoeur (broken-heart) was the first public building erected by white men within the boundaries of the modern state of Illinois and the first fort built in the West by the French. It was founded on the east bank of the Illinois River, in the Illinois Country near the present site of Creve Coeur, a suburb of Peoria, Illinois, in January 1680. It was destroyed on April 16th of that same year by members of La Salle's expedition, who were fearful of being attacked by the Iroquois as the Beaver Wars extended into the area.
Fort de Crévecoeur
La Salle paid the Indians for the corn taken from their village by what is now Starved Rock, Illinois, presented the chiefs with gifts of axes and tobacco, and smoked the calumet pipe. The Indians rubbed the bare feet of the priests with bear's grease to stimulate their fatigued muscles.
Map of Fort de Crévecoeur in 1680
That night, the Peoria Indians were visited by Monsoela, chief of the Maskouten nation, who, accompanied by a party of Miami Indians and their enemies, the Iroquois. Frightened by the sudden change in attitude on the part of the Peoria Indians, six of La Salles' men deserted the camp the following day.

Fort de Crévecoeur
This fort is known variously as Fort Saint Louis II, Fort Saint Louis du Pimiteoui, Fort Pimiteoui, and Old Fort Peoria (Pimiteoui, was the name of what is today's Peoria Lake).

On April 15, 1680, Tonti left Fort Crévecoeur with Father Ribourde and two other men to begin fortification of what is today called Starved Rock; Fort Saint Louis du Rocher. The following day, the remaining seven men at Fort Crévecoeur pillaged the fort of all ammunition and provisions, set it ablaze destroying it, and fled back to Canada.

In order to reassure the Indians, La Salle agreed to help defend them against the Iroquois. The Illinois River had frozen over during the night, but as soon as the river began to thaw, LaSalle and his men began the building of Fort Crévecoeur one league downstream and across the river from the Pimiteoui Village.

According to La Salles' journals, translated by Pierre Margry;
"On January 15, toward evening a great thaw, which opportunely occurred, rendered the river free from ice from Pimiteoui as far as there (the place destined for the fort). It was a little hillock about 540 feet from the bank of the river; up to the foot of the hillock the river expanded every time that there fell a heavy rain.
Two wide and deep ravines shut in two other sides and one-half of the fourth, which I caused to be closed completely by a ditch joining the two ravines. I caused the outer edge of the ravines to be bordered with good chevaux-de-frise (a series of heavy timbers placed in a line, interlaced with other diagonal timbers which were often tipped w/ iron spikes), the slopes of the hillock to be cut down all around, and with the earth thus excavated I caused to be built on the top of a parapet capable of covering a man, the whole covered from the foot of the hillock to the top of the parapet with long madriers (beams), the lower ends of which were in the groove between great pieces of wood which extended all around the foot of the elevation; and I caused the top of these madriers to be fastened by other long cross-beams held in place by mortise and tenon with other pieces of wood that projected through the parapet.
In front of this work I caused to be planted, everywhere, some pointed stakes twenty-five feet in height, one foot in diameter, driven three feet in the ground, pegged to the cross-beams that fastened the top of the madriers and provided with a fraise at the top 2½ feet long to prevent surprise. I did not change the shape of this plateau which, though irregular, was sufficiently well flanked against the savages[1]. I caused two lodgments[2] to be built for my men in two of the flanking angles in order that they be ready in case of attack; the middle was made of large pieces of musket-proof timber; in the third angle the forge, made of the same material, was placed along the curtain which faced the wood. The lodging of the recollects was in the fourth angle, and I had my tent and that of the sieur de[3] Tonti stationed in the center of the place."
Fort St Louis du Pimiteoui 
Reestablishing a more lasting presence, Fort St Louis du Pimiteoui was established nearby in 1691, a center of trade during the colonial period. Henri de Tonti was a primary founder of both the Crevecoeur and Pimiteoui posts.
Fort Pimiteoui (Old Peoria) circa 1702
Two of the men who had been at the fort joined Tonti at Starved Rock and told him of the fort's destruction. Tonti sent messengers to La Salle in Canada to tell him what had happened and returned to Fort Crévecoeur to collect those tools that had not been destroyed and take them to the Kaskaskia Village at Starved Rock.

On the tenth of September 1680, six hundred Iroquois warriors, armed with guns, came upon the Kaskaskia village. Both the Iroquois and the Illinois Indians accused Tonti of treachery. He tried to mediate their differences and detain the Iroquois until the old people, women, and children could flee the village. Tonti was wounded by an Iroquois who stabbed him with a knife. The Kaskaskia village was burned and the Iroquois built a fort on the site. Tonti, with his companions, fled for Green Bay.

ADDITIONAL READING:
Fort Crévecoeur By Arthur Lagron, Civil Engineer and Ex-Officer of the French Genie Militaire. (This article was published in the early 1900s and in a Historical Journal housed at the Peoria Library. Transcribed by Kim Torp) 

Compiled by Neil Gale, Ph.D.



[1] "SAVAGE" is a word defined in U.S. dictionaries as a Noun, Verb, Adjective, and Adverb. Definitions include:
  • a person belonging to a primitive society
  • malicious, lacking complex or advanced culture
  • a brutal person
  • a rude, boorish or unmannerly person
  • to attack or treat brutally
  • lacking the restraints normal to civilized human beings
Unlink the term "RED MEN," dictionaries like Merriam-Webster define this term, its one-and-only definition, as a Noun meaning: AMERICAN INDIAN (historically dated, offensive today).

The term Red Men is used often in historical books, biographies, letters, and articles written in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries.

I change this derogatory term to "INDIANS" to keep with the terminology of the time period I'm writing about.

[2] Lodgments: A place in which a person or thing is located, deposited, or lodged.

[3] Sieur de: {French}; French nobility.