Thursday, June 14, 2018

The Eight Surviving Structures of the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition 1893.

THE PALACE OF FINE ARTS:
The Palace of Fine Arts in 1893 - Today's Museum of Science and Industry.
From the time the fair closed in 1893 until 1920, the Palace of Fine Arts building housed the Columbian Museum of Chicago.

In 1905, the name was changed to the Field Museum of Natural History to honor Marshall Field, the Museum's first major benefactor, and to emphasize its natural sciences collection in anthropology, botany, geology, and zoology.

Construction began in 1915 on a new home for the Field Museum of Natural History at its new site in Grant Park.

Specimens and collections were moved from the Jackson Park site to the Grant Park site in 1920. 

In 1933, the Palace building re-opened as the Museum of Science and Industry in time for the Century of Progress World's Fair. The Museum of Science and Industry represents the only fire-proof and central building remaining from the World's Fair of 1893. The backside of the Museum (overlooking Jackson Park Lagoon) was actually the front of the palace during the Fair, and the color of the exterior was changed during renovations. But the building looks almost exactly the way it did in 1893. Some of the light posts from the fair still illuminate the museum campus. 

On December 6, 1943, the Museum's name was changed to the Chicago Natural History Museum.

In the Post World War II Era, The Field Museum began a new exploration focusing on scientific research instead of collecting items for its exhibitions in 1945.

On March 1, 1966, trustees voted to change the Museum's name back to the Field Museum of Natural History.

WORLD'S CONGRESS BUILDING:
World's Congress Building in 1893 - Today's Art Institute of Chicago
The second building, the Art Institute building, was one of the few buildings not built in Jackson Park; instead, it was built downtown in Grant Park. 

The Interstate Industrial Exposition building, built in 1872, was razed in 1892 to construct the Art Institute. The construction contract was executed on February 6, 1892, and was officially opened to the public on December 8, 1893.

The World Congress Auxiliary of the World's Columbian Exposition occupied the new building from May 1 to October 31, 1893, after which the Art Institute took possession on November 1, 1893. The construction cost of the World's Congress Building was shared with the Art Institute of Chicago, which, as planned, moved into the building (the Museum's current home) after the Fair's close and officially opened to the public on December 8, 1893.

CLOW AND SONS SANITARY WATER CLOSET




1893 World's Columbian Exposition Water Closets (toilets) by the James B. Clow and Sons Sanitary Co. Tickets were sold for admission to the pay washrooms. 
                               
The paid washrooms had a sink and towels to wash your hands, and the free toilets did not have sinks. There were 3,000 Water Closets on the fairgrounds. This restroom building stands just behind the south side of the Museum of Science and Industry.

MAINE STATE BUILDING:
1893 Maine State Building as it Stands Today.
Each of the (then) 44 States of America constructed buildings on the World's Fairgrounds. The Maine State Building was designed by Charles Sumner Frost. The State of Maine had initially planned to make its State building a gift to Chicago and leave it in Jackson Park. However, at the close of the Fair, the Ricker Family, founders of the Poland Spring Resort and purveyors of Poland Springwater, purchased the Maine State Building. The Maine State Building was dismantled and shipped on 16 freight cars to Poland Spring. It was reassembled and served as a library and gallery on the resort grounds. The Maine State Building underwent many renovations over the years and had fallen into disrepair by the early 1970s. In 1977, the Poland Spring Preservation Society acquired the building. The Maine State Building is presently operated as a museum and may be found on the resort grounds.

THE DUTCH COCOA HOUSE:
The Dutch Cocoa House
The Dutch House is a historic multi-unit residential building at 20 Netherlands Road in Brookline, Massachusetts. This four-story brick building was originally built as an exhibition hall at the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago, where it served as the Dutch Cocoa House. It is a close copy of the Franeker City Hall in Franeker, Netherlands. The door frame, embellished with stone animals, replicates the Enkhuizen Orphanage. After the fair ended, the Dutch High Renaissance-style building was dismantled brick by brick and reconstructed at its present location. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. The Dutch House was moved to Brookline, Massachusetts.

THE PABST PAVILION:
The Pabst Pavilion in 1893
Captain Frederick Pabst traveled from Milwaukee to the World's Columbian Exposition to display his brewery's products. After the fair closed, he moved his Pabst Pavilion, which had resided inside the enormous Manufacturers and Liberal Arts Building, to his recently completed Mansion in Milwaukee. The pavilion was attached to the east side of the home and used as a summer room. After Captain and Mrs. Pabst died in the early 1900s, the Pabst heirs donated the Mansion to the Catholic Archdiocese. Ironically, the Pabst Beer Pavilion was used as a private chapel for the Archbishop. In the 1970s, the Mansion was slated for demolition, and it was saved from the wrecking ball and is currently being restored as a period museum. The Pabst Pavilion serves as the museum gift shop. When you tour the Pabst Mansion Museum, you will likely enter through the Pabst Pavilion that was visited by World's Columbian Exposition Fair-goers 125 years ago.

A TICKET BOOTH FROM THE FAIR:
A Ticket Booth From The 1893 World's Fair 
While most of the grand buildings and monuments were destroyed, smaller elements of the World's Fair have withstood the past century. In particular, this ticket booth from the fair now stands in the side-yard shadows of a famous Oak Park home. The DeCaro House, 313 North Forest Avenue, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1906, draws most of the attention from historians, but the unusual shack in the yard is a treasure. In its retirement from the ticket business, the structure has been used as a garden tool shed, a rabbit hut, and now a garden decoration.

BUILDING OF NORWAY (aka THE NORWAY PAVILION):
The Building of Norway at the 1893 World's Fair
The building was constructed by M. Thams & Company, in less than 90 days, during the winter of 1892-93 near Trondheim, Norway. After a public display there, the building was disassembled and shipped across the Atlantic, departing on March 15, 1893, and arriving in Chicago in mid-April, well behind schedule. 

Tucked among some willow trees in the foreign building section in the northeast corner of the World's Columbian Exposition grounds stood a striking structure made of massive pine beams. Built in the style of a medieval stave church, its gabled roof with carved dragons evokes the prow of a Viking Ship

The building officially opened on May 17 (Norwegian Constitution Day, "Syttende Mai"), but construction continued through June. During the Fair, the building served as an office and headquarters for the Norwegian Commission, offering only a few visitor displays. Some believe there was a chapel in the Norway Pavilion, but none existed. 

When the Fair closed, the Norway Building was again taken apart and shipped by train to Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, and installed on the C. K. Billings summer estate. The Billings estate changed hands twice and was eventually owned by William Wrigley, Jr., who painted the Norway Building ochre yellow and used it as a home theatre. 
In 1935, the family owners of the Norwegian-American Museum known as Little Norway negotiated the acquisition of the Norway Building. The building was dismantled one final time and shipped by truck to Blue Mounds, where it can be toured as part of the outdoor Little Norway Museum. One of the features that undoubtedly made the Norway Building more portable than most structures is that it is constructed without a single nail and is held together entirely by wooden pegs.

BUILDING OF NORWAY UPDATE: September 19, 2015
Norway Building from the 1893 Chicago World's Fair heads home.
Olav Sigurd Kvaale walked up the old wooden stairs of the medieval-style church. He paused under the gabled portico and touched the intricate, 122-year-old carvings surrounding the massive door.

"This," he said, his hand on carvings, "is my grandfather."

A year earlier, Kvaale journeyed across the Atlantic from his home in Norway in a quest to learn more about his grandfather, Peder, a farmer and woodworker who, in the 1800s, was among a team of craftsmen in Norway who built the church, known as The Norway Building, for the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.

Kvaale discovered a valuable gem of family history and a larger story of a building that had traveled on an extraordinary journey. Believed to be one of the last surviving structures from the Fair, it had been moved from Chicago to an estate in Lake Geneva — where, painted bright yellow, it served for a time as a private movie house for the Wrigley family — before ending up at a minor tourist attraction tucked into the rolling countryside 30 miles west of Madison.

By last year, the building was in danger of being lost. Water seeped through the wood-shingled roof, mice scurried along the floorboards, and rot chewed at the foundation.

When Kvaale first saw the building, though, he looked past the signs of disrepair and marveled at the artistry: the chiseled faces of Norse kings and queens, the dragon's tail that swirled around the exterior entranceway. This, he had learned from relatives, was his grandfather's proudest creative achievement. He vowed to try somehow to save it.

Now, after rallying support in the region of Norway where the building was initially constructed, Kvaale has returned to Wisconsin, this time with a team of a dozen Norwegian craftsmen. The clang of hammers and chisels echoes across the verdant valley. Piece by piece, windows, wall panels, and support beams are painstakingly removed, labeled, and laid out on the surrounding lawn.

The Norway Building is going home.

A winding road cuts through the forest, leading to the now-shuttered tourist attraction, Little Norway.

Operated by the same family since 1937, the quaint attraction had, over the years, drawing thousands of visitors, who came to walk in the gardens, peek into the small Museum of Norwegian artifacts, or take a tour led by guides in traditional Norwegian dress.

The half-dozen original log cabin buildings on the property had been erected in the mid-1800s by a Norwegian immigrant farmer, who built them, according to Norwegian tradition, on a south-facing slope to catch the sun's warmth. Each building had been meticulously restored and furnished with Norwegian antiques and artwork.

The most striking feature of the property was, no doubt, the Norway Building, which stood on the hillside overlooking the valley. With its gabled roof topped by dragons and ornate shingles crafted to look like reptilian scales, the building gave the secluded property a sense of enchantment and made a visit feel like stepping into the pages of a fairy tale.

Commissioned by Norwegian officials for the World's Fair, it had been built as a symbol of cultural pride. It is patterned after the stave churches that, in the Middle Ages, dotted the rugged Norwegian landscape.

After the Fair, The Norway Building was moved to Lake Geneva, where it was installed on a lakeside estate eventually owned by the Wrigleys. A wealthy Norwegian-American named Isak Dahle acquired it in 1935 and brought it to his summer retreat in Blue Mounds.

Almost as soon as Dahle had erected the ornate building on his rural property, neighbors began hopping a fence to come to see it. So Dahle hired a caretaker and charged admission, 5¢ for adults and 3¢ for children.

In the era before Disneyland, people flocked to see the spectacle in the Wisconsin woods. It even attracted Norwegian royalty. Crown Prince Olav, who later became king of Norway, came for a tour in 1939, and his son, Crown Prince Harald, the current king, visited in 1965, according to the 1992 book "The Norway Building of the 1893 Chicago World's Fair."

Over the years, Dahle's descendants continued to run Little Norway, which was open from May to October. But attendance declined as the world became more modern and entertainment options proliferated.

"We didn't have interactive things or movies or anything like that. Part of the goal at Little Norway was to stay the same," said Scott Winner, 55, a grand-nephew of Dahle who returned from college in 1982 thinking he'd help out for the summer but fell in love with the place and decided to stay. "It was like the place that time forgot."

The Winner lived in a large stone house his grandparents had built. He raised his two children there and considered his work at Little Norway as "a labor of love." He said he rarely did more than break even and often lost money.

His wife worked in business development for the Wisconsin Department of Commerce. For years they kept Little Norway afloat by selling the lumber from their surrounding 270-acre property. But rising insurance costs and taxes, Winner said, along with sparse attendance, forced them in 2012 to close the doors.

Every day for two years, Winner would look out his kitchen window at The Norway Building and wonder what would become of it. Several historical foundations explored a possible purchase, and negotiations with one continued for over a year but eventually collapsed.

The future seemed bleak in the summer of 2014 when Winner began receiving phone messages from a man in Norway who said he wanted to visit.

For weeks, Winner ignored the man's calls. He wanted to save time with tourists, and he needed to find a buyer, or The Norway Building would undoubtedly fall into ruin.

Four thousand miles away, in Norway, Olav Sigurd Kvaale was plumbing his family's history.

As a Christmas gift, an uncle had given him a photo of The Norway Building, and a notation at the photo's edge explained that Kvaale's grandfather had worked on the building's carvings.

Kvaale Googled the Norway Building and immediately found the website for Little Norway. Excited to see his grandfather's handiwork, he arranged to travel to Wisconsin with a group of relatives.

After he booked the plane tickets, he learned that Little Norway had been shuttered.

He called the phone number on the Little Norway website, but no one answered. He emailed a local reporter who had written about the attraction in hopes of getting contact information for the owner but had yet to be successful. He even tried the local Rotary Club.

Finally, a distant relative of Kvaale's in Seattle reached Winner by phone and convinced him of the importance of the visit. A date was set.

In the following weeks, Kvaale and his relatives worried about what they would find in Wisconsin. The Norway Building had, by then, endured three moves over its 120 years.

They were emotionally overcome when they arrived at Little Norway on a crisp, clear afternoon in September 2014. Kvaale's cousin, Sigrid Stenset, wept to see the carvings around the entranceway. They recognized the patterns as ones their grandfather later repeated in furniture and cabinetry, two of which sat in Kvaale's living room in Norway. They were confident their grandfather's hands had crafted the intricate designs.

And inside, they were pleasantly surprised at the building's condition.

Driving away, Kvaale and his relatives began to hatch a plan.

Back in Norway, Kvaale organized a coalition of friends and began to approach donors and politicians. He wrote about the building's plight for the local historical society, and a newspaper picked up the tale.

Stave churches are points of national pride in Norway. Built with wooden posts — "stave" in Norwegian — and featuring Viking motifs, they date to the Middle Ages. Britannica.com says there were once as many as 800 to 1,200, but only about 30 survive. Today they draw tourists from around the world.

Although The Norway Building is technically a replica of a stave church, Kvaale and his allies felt confident that, if it were returned to Norway, it would attract visitors and thus boost the local economy. The building's vagabond history, they believed, told a unique story.

With the effort gaining momentum, a Norwegian government official contacted Winner in October. "He said, 'Would you be willing to sell it?'" Winner recalled. "I said, 'If it returns to its home, I think it would be a romantic idea. '"

A delegation from Norway came to inspect the building in April and, impressed with how well it had held up, decided it was strong enough to move. They agreed to pay the Winners $100,000, with the local Norwegian government and private donors kicking in an estimated $600,000 for dismantling and shipping. Their goal is to have the building restored, rebuilt, and open to the public by next summer in Orkdal, where it was born.

"There are, of course, people (in Norway) who think this money should be spent another way," said Kai Roger Magnetun, the cultural director of Orkdal. "But I feel certain that when the building arrives in Orkdal, almost everyone will be proud."

The M. Thames & Co. factory, once located in the city of Orkanger, is gone, but many residents in the area are descendants of those who once worked there. Locals will be interested in the preservation, Magnetun said, and many are already following the disassembly on a Facebook page and a website, ProjectHeimatt.org, which means "going home."

The sale has been bittersweet for Scott Winner, whose family has cared for The Norway Building for three generations. On a Sunday not long ago, he climbed the hillside before dawn, sat on the building steps and sobbed.

He and his wife, Jennifer, first kissed on those steps. They were married inside, beneath the St. Andrew's crosses. His parents were married there too.

But watching the Norwegians work over the last two weeks had provided reassurance.

"They're taking such great caretaking it down. They want to save all these little trim pieces," he said. "They really are saving it."

On a recent day, scaffolding hugged The Norway Building, which had been stripped of roof sections, several walls, and many of its ornaments. Once displayed, spewing fire from the gables, the huge carved dragons lay prone in the grass.

As Kvaale pulls up shingles and floorboards, he likes to think about his grandfather.

"I want my grandfather to know we are taking this building back to Norway," Kvaale said. "I like to think that maybe he looks down on us."

The project is not only about moving a building, he said, but also about honoring his ancestor's work. His grandfather and many others constructed the building over just three months in 1893. They had worked with such careful craftsmanship that the building has survived a long, meandering journey across two continents.

"This is the last move," Kvaale said. "When it comes to Orkdal, it must stand there and stay there."

It will, he said, finally be home.

THE NORWAY BUILDING IS NOW IN ORKDAL, NORWAY.

Decedents of the Norwegian workers who originally constructed the building brought a team of skilled craftsmen to Wisconsin in 2015 to disassemble the structure again for a trip back to Norway. With $600,000 in funds and more than 10,000 hours of labor by a team of volunteers, the structure was restored and reassembled. September 9, 2017, a dedication ceremony welcomed the structure, renamed the Thams Pavillion, to its new home in Orkdal, Norway.

CONCLUSION:
Since many other buildings at the fair were intended to be temporary, they were removed after the Fair. Their facades were made not of stone but of a mixture of plaster, cement, and jute fiber called staff, painted white, giving the buildings their "gleam." Architecture critics derided the structures as "decorated sheds." The White City, however, so impressed everyone who saw it (at least before air pollution began to darken the facades) that plans were considered to refinish the exteriors in marble or some other material.

On the afternoon of Monday, July 10, 1893, four Chicago firemen, eight firemen hired by the Columbian Exposition, and three civilians lost their lives in a fiery inferno that leveled the cold storage building. It was the greatest loss of life in the Chicago Fire Department up to that point.

In any case, these plans were abandoned in July 1894 when much of the fairgrounds was destroyed in a fire (rumored to have been started by squatters), thus assuring their temporary status.

ADDITIONAL READING: 

Monday, June 11, 2018

The History of the Chicago Historical Society.

Founded in 1856 and incorporated in 1857 by an act of the state legislature, the Chicago Historical Society and its collection grew and opened its first building at the NW corner of Dearborn and Ontario Streets.

Before the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, there were only two libraries in Chicago open to the public. One of these was that of the Young Men’s Association, organized in 1841. The other was the Chicago Historical Society Library, founded in 1856, which may be said to have had a continuous existence for over 160 years, for although the entire collection, amounting to 100,000 volumes, manuscripts, and pamphlets, was destroyed on October 9, 1871, yet before the end of November of that year, active steps had been taken to resume the work.
The First Chicago Historical Society building at the NW Corner of Ontario and Dearborn Streets (1868-1871)
Sister societies in all parts of this country, and even abroad, contributed their publications and duplicates, and the New England Historic Genealogical Society of Boston placed a room in its new fire-proof building at the disposal of this Society, to which the various donations were sent until a safe place of deposit could be provided.

Very considerable collections were soon made and forwarded to Chicago, only to be consumed in the Chicago Fire of July 14, 1874. Undismayed by this second calamity, a few enterprising and cultured men, true to the brave and sterling qualities for which Chicago has become famous, stood together and began the work of the Society again at a time when men of less exalted ideals would have felt justified in turning their whole attention to the re-establishment of their own homes.

As the result of such a heroic effort, the Society met for the first time in its temporary building on October 16, 1877, with the nucleus of a third collection and with a prestige heightened by these vicissitudes. It was even possible to reassemble the more significant portion of the rare books and newspapers destroyed, for members of the Society contributed their personal copies of these works, and hundreds of volumes in the Library bear the autographs of pioneer citizens.

The Society has occupied the following locations: 
1856-68, Newberry Building, northeast corner of Wells and Kinzie Streets; 
1868-71, Society’s Building (first), Dearborn and Ontario Streets; 
1872-74, Number 209 Michigan Avenue; 
1877-92, Society’s Building (second), Dearborn and Ontario Streets; 
1892-96, Collections were stored in temporary buildings until the third building was completed;
1896-1931, Society’s Building (third), Dearborn and Ontario Streets.
1932-Present, the Current building at 1601 North Clark Street at the intersection of North Avenue in the Old Town Triangle neighborhood in the Lincoln Park community. 

In 1892, the Henry D. Gilpin fund, having by careful investment more than doubled itself, and the legacy under the will of John Crerar having become available, it was determined to solicit from its members subscriptions for the erection of a permanent fire-proof home for the Society, on the site at the corner of Dearborn Avenue and Ontario Street so long identified with its history. To this appeal, the members responded with their unfailing liberality.

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The cornerstone of the new Chicago Historical Society structure was laid with appropriate ceremonies on November 12, 1892, 21 years after the Chicago Fire. The organization built a massive stone edifice designed by Henry Ives Cobb, which housed the Gilpin Library and exhibition spaces. On the evening of December 15, 1896, the formal dedication took place.

And... the Excalibur Nightclub building was not used as a morgue for the Chicago Eastland disaster. This is a common misconception, but no evidence supports it.

The temporary buildings being cleared away on the same site, the cornerstone of the new structure was laid with appropriate ceremonies on November 12, 1892. The organization built a massive stone edifice designed by Henry Ives Cobb, which housed the Gilpin Library and exhibition spaces. On the evening of December 15, 1896, the formal dedication took place in the presence of a brilliant and representative gathering.
In the late 1920s, the trustees began planning a new $1 million museum to house its growing collection and to celebrate the city’s centennial. Designed by Graham, Anderson, Probst & White, the Romanesque Revival building opened in 1932 in Lincoln Park at Clark Street at North Avenue.
That building has been the organization’s home ever since, with various additions, renovations, and improvements. In 1972, the Society unveiled a modern limestone addition by Alfred Shaw and Associates. It was renamed the Chicago History Museum in September 2006.

Are you looking for the history of the Chicago Public Library?

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D. 

Clark and Madison Streets, Chicago. 1868

East side of Clark Street looking south from Madison Street, Chicago. 1868

Chicago, taken from top of Isabella Building. (circa 1890).

Chicago, taken from top of Isabella Building. (circa 1890).

Sunday, June 10, 2018

A Brief History of the Chicago Tribune.

The Chicago Tribune is a daily newspaper based in Chicago and owned by Tronc, Inc., formerly Tribune Publishing Company. Chicago incorporated as a town in 1833 and as a city in 1837, when its population reached 4,000. By the mid 1840s, Chicago had grown from a frontier settlement and was attracting attention as an up-and-coming city. In 1848 Chicago got its first telegraph and railroad.
LEFT: At the southwest corner of LaSalle and Lake streets stood this quite splendid building, the first home of The Tribune—one room on an upper floor in 1847.
CENTER: The Tribune’s second home was above Gray’s grocery store on the northwest corner of Lake and Clark streets in 1849.
RIGHT: The third Tribune home in the old post office building in May, 1850.
First published on June 10, 1847, the Chicago Daily Tribune was transformed by the arrival in 1855 of editor and co-owner Joseph Medill, who turned the paper into one of the leading voices of the new Republican Party.

Daily circulation grew from about 1,400 papers in 1855 to as high as 40,000 during the Civil War (1861-1865), when the paper was a strong supporter of President Lincoln and emancipation.

In July of 1847, 20,000 visitors from across the nation streamed into Chicago (population 16,000) for the Rivers and Harbors Convention, foreshadowing the city's future as a convention center. The visitors would leave impressed with Chicago's potential.

It was an opportune time to start a newspaper. But James Kelly, a leather merchant, and two newspapermen, John E. Wheeler and Joseph K.C. Forrest, almost certainly did not foresee Chicago's quick population growth. For them, opening the city's third newspaper, the Chicago Daily Tribune, gave them a source of ready-to-reuse news stories for their literary weekly, The Gem of the Prairie, begun in 1844 and folded in 1852.

The first issue of the Tribune (now lost) consisted of four pages. Four hundred copies were printed on a hand press in the paper's humble office on the third floor of a wooden building at La Salle and Lake Streets.

The content was largely literary. There was local news, but reports from the East came in the form of letters or dispatches from other newspapers. "Fresh" overseas news was more than a month old. "Our views, in all probability, will sometimes be coincident with the conservatives; sometimes we may be found in the ranks of the radicals; but we shall at all times be faithful to humanity -- to the whole of humanity -- without regard to race, sectional divisions, party lines, or parallels of latitude or longitude," the newspaper printed.

The city's first newspaper, the Chicago Democrat, founded in 1833, took no notice of the newcomer. However, the Chicago Journal welcomed the Tribune to "the stormy sea" of Chicago journalism.

Within six weeks of opening, the founding partners hit rough water. Kelly quit because of failing eyesight. Forrest pulled out in September of 1847, questioning the wisdom of his $600 investment. Wheeler, the editor, bowed out in 1851. But as the city grew, so did the Tribune's circulation, reaching 1,800 by 1851.

Ownership would change hands several times, but the paper's politics remained constant. The Tribune supported anybody who was not a Democrat; i.e., the Whigs, Free Soilers and even members of the short-lived Know-Nothing Party received the papers attention.

That stance differed dramatically from the first Chicago Tribune, A Democratic Weekly launched in 1840 to support a second term for President Martin Van Buren. It followed Van Buren's lead and the Democratic Weekly folded after a year. Like the first adhesive United States postage stamp, also introduced in 1847, the second Chicago Tribune Newspaper would stick. 


Between the 1910s and the 1950s, the Tribune prospered under the leadership of Medill's grandson Robert R. McCormick. Calling his operation "World’s Greatest Newspaper," McCormick succeeded in raising daily circulation from 230,000 in 1912 to 650,000 by 1925, when the Tribune stood as the city's most widely read paper. In 1925, when it moved into the Tribune Tower on North Michigan Avenue, the paper employed about two thousand men and women. During the 1930s and 1940s, McCormick used the Tribune's editorial pages to attack the New Deal and promote isolationism and anti-Communism. 

After McCormick died in 1955, the Tribune moved toward a more moderate (if still Republican) editorial stance, as it increasingly became the product less of individual personalities than of a large business corporation. Meanwhile, the Tribune's younger media cousins were growing faster than the newspaper itself. This development had begun under McCormick, who oversaw the founding of WGN (after “World's Greatest Newspaper”) radio in 1924 and WGN television in 1948. By the end of the twentieth century, when the newspaper's parent company (the Tribune Company) was a national media giant that employed close to six thousand Chicago-area residents, the future of traditional print dailies was uncertain. Nevertheless, the Tribune, now available in electronic form, continued to be Chicago's leading newspaper.
The Tribune Building, SE corner of Madison and Dearborn Streets, Chicago, 1869-1871.
The Tribune Tower was built in 1868, but was destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire in 1871.

In 1922 the Chicago Tribune hosted an international interior and exterior design competition for its new headquarters to mark its 75th anniversary, and offered $100,000 in prize money with a $50,000 1st prize for "the most beautiful and distinctive office building in the world". The competition worked brilliantly for months as a publicity stunt, and the resulting entries still reveal a unique turning point in American architectural history. More than 260 entries were received.The winner was a neo-Gothic design by New York architects John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood, with buttresses near the top.
The Chicago Tribune Tower today.
Prior to the building of the Tribune Tower, correspondents for the Chicago Tribune brought back rocks and bricks from a variety of historically important sites throughout the world at the request of Colonel McCormick. Many of these reliefs have been incorporated into the lowest levels of the building and are labeled with their location of origin. Stones included in the wall are from such sites as the St. Stephen's Cathedral, Trondheim Cathedral, Taj Mahal, Clementine Hall, the Parthenon, Hagia Sophia, Corregidor Island, Palace of Westminster, petrified wood from the Redwood National and State Parks, the Great Pyramid, The Alamo, Notre Dame de Paris, Abraham Lincoln’s Tomb, the Great Wall of China, Independence Hall, Fort Santiago, Angkor Wat, Ta Prohm, Wawel Castle, Banteay Srei, or Rouen Cathedral's Butter Tower, which inspired the shape of the building.

The Tribune Tower, built in 1923-25, is a neo-Gothic skyscraper located at 435 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago. It was the home of the Chicago Tribune, Tribune Media, and Tronc, Inc., formerly known as Tribune Publishing. WGN Radio broadcasts from the building, while the ground level houses the large restaurant Howells & Hood, named for the building's architects. It is listed as a Chicago Landmark on February 1, 1989, and is a contributing property to the Michigan–Wacker Historic District. 

WGN Radio Station (720 kHz AM) started when Colonel Robert McCormick transformed his fledgling radio station into WGN on June 1, 1924, inspired by the motto of his Chicago Tribune Newspaper as “World’s Greatest Newspaper.” The predecessor to WGN was WDAP, which signed on the air on May 19, 1922, and was founded by Thorne Donnelley and Elliott Jenkins.

Originally based in the Wrigley Building, the station moved its operations to the Drake Hotel in July. On May 12, 1923, the Zenith Radio Company signed on radio station WJAZ from the Edgewater Beach Hotel. However, after this brief period, the Tribune switched its operations to WDAP, and the Zenith station became WEBH, the license eventually being deleted on November 30, 1928. WGN's main studio in the Tribune Tower, 1930s -1940s which could seat 600 people.

WGN-Television was founded by the Chicago Tribune. WGN-TV began test broadcasts in February 1948 and began regular programming on April 5 with a two-hour special, "WGN-TV's Salute to Chicago," at 7:45 p.m. that evening.

Compiled by Neil Gale, Ph.D.