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Index to Volume 27 This index includes author, title, and subject entries. Illustrations are indicated in italics. If a subject is illustrated and discussed on the same page, the illustration is not separately indicated. A Baseball: Negro Leagues, 3:55, 56; and segregation, 3:57, 58. See also names of individual teams, leagues, and players Abbott, Robert, and woman’s suffrage, 2:17 Battle for Chicago, Wayne Andrews, 3:49 Abraham Lincoln—Frederick Douglass Center, ) 2:23 Baxter International, 1:59, 61, 62; medical innovations, \dams, Myron B., suggests 1933 world’s fair, 2:46 1:65-66 Adams, Rosemary K., “From the Editor,” 1:3, 2:3 Beadle, George, 2:69 Addams, Jane, 2:5, 6, 34; and woman’s suffrags ) 16 Beauty contests, at A Century of Progress, 2:52, 53 Adler Planetarium, 1:42; and A Century of Progress, 2:47 Bell, Col. James, director of operations at A Century of African Americans: and housing, 1:64; and Chicago Public Progress, 2:54 Schools, 1:67; protesting discrimination, 2:4—25; women’s Bellamy, Ralph, 3:42—43 clubs, 2> :4—25; Republican Party, 2:16; discrimination in Belle of Ottawa (boat), 3:28 employment, 2:21; and savings clubs, 2:23-25; migrants Bennett, Edward, 1:41; and Plan of Chicago, settle on West Side, 2:33; discrimination against at A Cen- Berkeley free speech movement, 3:51 tury of Progress, 2:50; and “firsts,” 3:54. See also Civil Bernstein, Carl, 3:51 Rights Movement; Lynching, campaigns against; Race riots; Billiken Hoop and Needle Club, 2:16 Segregation, in Chicago Binford, Jessie L., on A Century of Progress, ba Rose Club, 2:17 Birth of a Nation (movie), 2:22, 23 exander Dumas School, 3:58 Bishop, Mrs. L. S., and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 ll the President’s Men (movie) Blair, Bill, scouts Ernie Banks, 3:55 loha Suffrage Club, 2:16 Bliven, Bruce, on A Century of Progress architecture, 2:48 pha Suffrage Club, 2:12, 15, 16 Blount, Dr. Anna, and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 tgeld, John P: and Juvenile Court, 3:7; Our Penal Machinery Blue Island Avenue, 2:32 and Its Victims, 3:7; elected governor, 3:8 Board County and City School, 3:16-17 narillo Colts (Negro League baseball team), 3:55 Bocage, Adolphe, on 1890s Chicago, 1:9, 14 nerican Petroleum Institute, 2:71 Boehm, Lisa Krissof, “The Fair and the Fan Dancer: A Century merican Social Hygiene Association, on Sally Rand, ) 2:5 of Progress and Chicago’s Image,” Yesterday’s City, 2:42—55 Bohemia Club, 3:44 nerican Union of Decorative Artists and Draftsmen, 2:50 “Bohemians,” and journalism, 3:44, 48 nerican Women’s Volunteer Service, Chinatown branch, 1:48 noco Building (formerly the Standard Oil Building), 2:67 Booth, Mrs., and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 idrews, Wayne, Battle for Chicago, 3:49 Boston Store, 1:19 itilynching campaigns. See Lynching, campaigns against Bourget, Paul, on Union Stock Yards, 1:10 rchitecture: balloon-frame construction, 1:11—12; sky- Bowen, Louise de Koven, 2:5 scrapers, 1:12—14; at A Century of Progress, 2:48—51 Brickhouse, Jack, 3:51 “Ardis Krainik: In Memoriam,” Making History, by Timothy J. Bridewell Penitentiary, 2:12 Gilfoyle, 1:56—-58 Bridewells. See Jails Art Institute of Chicago, 1:27, 2:4—5; Women’s Board, 2:64 Bridgeport (neighborhood), 3:24, 22¢ Ashland Avenue, 2:27, 3:40 Bridges: swing, 1:18; rolling lift, 3:: 3¢ ) Ashland Block, 1:12, 13 Bright New City (lecture series), 2: 56 64, 71 \ssembly line techniques, in 1890s, 1:10 Broad Ax (newspaper), on Fannie Barrier Williams, 2:10 Bruce, Mrs. Blanche K., 2:10 Atwood, Charles, 1:30 Brumback, Charles, 3:65 B Bubbly Creek, 3:38, 40 Buckingham, Kate, 1:38 Baker, Gene, 3:57 Buckingham Fountain, 1:22—23, 26, 38, 39, 40-41 Balloon-frame construction, popularity of, 1:11—12 Buenger, Theodore Ernst, 2:27 Banks, Eddie, 3:55 Bundy, Dr., inhumane treatment of, 2:19 Banks, Ernie, 1:69, 3:54-65; education, 3:55; baseball statis Burnham, Daniel, and Plan of Chicago, 1:26, 30 tics, 3:58, 61; runs for alderman, 3:62; jobs outside base- Burns, Walter, Front Page character, 3:49 ball, 3:63 2 Burns, Wilbur, and Chicago Press Club, 3:51 Banks, Essie, 3:55 Burroughs, Nannie, 2:10 Banning, Ephraim, 3:10, 11 Business practices, in 1890s America, 1:4—21 Barnes, Albert C., and Juvenile Court, 3:19 Butcher, Fanny, 3:51 Barnes, Helen Howell, 2:53 Byrne, Emmett F., 3:62 66 | Chicago History Winter 1998—99 Index to Volume 27 This index includes author, title, and subject entries. Illustrations are indicated in italics. If a subject is illustrated and discussed on the same page, the illustration is not separately indicated. A Baseball: Negro Leagues, 3:55, 56; and segregation, 3:57, 58. See also names of individual teams, leagues, and players Abbott, Robert, and woman’s suffrage, 2:17 Battle for Chicago, Wayne Andrews, 3:49 Abraham Lincoln—Frederick Douglass Center, ) 2:23 Baxter International, 1:59, 61, 62; medical innovations, \dams, Myron B., suggests 1933 world’s fair, 2:46 1:65-66 Adams, Rosemary K., “From the Editor,” 1:3, 2:3 Beadle, George, 2:69 Addams, Jane, 2:5, 6, 34; and woman’s suffrags ) 16 Beauty contests, at A Century of Progress, 2:52, 53 Adler Planetarium, 1:42; and A Century of Progress, 2:47 Bell, Col. James, director of operations at A Century of African Americans: and housing, 1:64; and Chicago Public Progress, 2:54 Schools, 1:67; protesting discrimination, 2:4—25; women’s Bellamy, Ralph, 3:42—43 clubs, 2> :4—25; Republican Party, 2:16; discrimination in Belle of Ottawa (boat), 3:28 employment, 2:21; and savings clubs, 2:23-25; migrants Bennett, Edward, 1:41; and Plan of Chicago, settle on West Side, 2:33; discrimination against at A Cen- Berkeley free speech movement, 3:51 tury of Progress, 2:50; and “firsts,” 3:54. See also Civil Bernstein, Carl, 3:51 Rights Movement; Lynching, campaigns against; Race riots; Billiken Hoop and Needle Club, 2:16 Segregation, in Chicago Binford, Jessie L., on A Century of Progress, ba Rose Club, 2:17 Birth of a Nation (movie), 2:22, 23 exander Dumas School, 3:58 Bishop, Mrs. L. S., and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 ll the President’s Men (movie) Blair, Bill, scouts Ernie Banks, 3:55 loha Suffrage Club, 2:16 Bliven, Bruce, on A Century of Progress architecture, 2:48 pha Suffrage Club, 2:12, 15, 16 Blount, Dr. Anna, and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 tgeld, John P: and Juvenile Court, 3:7; Our Penal Machinery Blue Island Avenue, 2:32 and Its Victims, 3:7; elected governor, 3:8 Board County and City School, 3:16-17 narillo Colts (Negro League baseball team), 3:55 Bocage, Adolphe, on 1890s Chicago, 1:9, 14 nerican Petroleum Institute, 2:71 Boehm, Lisa Krissof, “The Fair and the Fan Dancer: A Century merican Social Hygiene Association, on Sally Rand, ) 2:5 of Progress and Chicago’s Image,” Yesterday’s City, 2:42—55 Bohemia Club, 3:44 nerican Union of Decorative Artists and Draftsmen, 2:50 “Bohemians,” and journalism, 3:44, 48 nerican Women’s Volunteer Service, Chinatown branch, 1:48 noco Building (formerly the Standard Oil Building), 2:67 Booth, Mrs., and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 idrews, Wayne, Battle for Chicago, 3:49 Boston Store, 1:19 itilynching campaigns. See Lynching, campaigns against Bourget, Paul, on Union Stock Yards, 1:10 rchitecture: balloon-frame construction, 1:11—12; sky- Bowen, Louise de Koven, 2:5 scrapers, 1:12—14; at A Century of Progress, 2:48—51 Brickhouse, Jack, 3:51 “Ardis Krainik: In Memoriam,” Making History, by Timothy J. Bridewell Penitentiary, 2:12 Gilfoyle, 1:56—-58 Bridewells. See Jails Art Institute of Chicago, 1:27, 2:4—5; Women’s Board, 2:64 Bridgeport (neighborhood), 3:24, 22¢ Ashland Avenue, 2:27, 3:40 Bridges: swing, 1:18; rolling lift, 3:: 3¢ ) Ashland Block, 1:12, 13 Bright New City (lecture series), 2: 56 64, 71 \ssembly line techniques, in 1890s, 1:10 Broad Ax (newspaper), on Fannie Barrier Williams, 2:10 Bruce, Mrs. Blanche K., 2:10 Atwood, Charles, 1:30 Brumback, Charles, 3:65 B Bubbly Creek, 3:38, 40 Buckingham, Kate, 1:38 Baker, Gene, 3:57 Buckingham Fountain, 1:22—23, 26, 38, 39, 40-41 Balloon-frame construction, popularity of, 1:11—12 Buenger, Theodore Ernst, 2:27 Banks, Eddie, 3:55 Bundy, Dr., inhumane treatment of, 2:19 Banks, Ernie, 1:69, 3:54-65; education, 3:55; baseball statis Burnham, Daniel, and Plan of Chicago, 1:26, 30 tics, 3:58, 61; runs for alderman, 3:62; jobs outside base- Burns, Walter, Front Page character, 3:49 ball, 3:63 2 Burns, Wilbur, and Chicago Press Club, 3:51 Banks, Essie, 3:55 Burroughs, Nannie, 2:10 Banning, Ephraim, 3:10, 11 Business practices, in 1890s America, 1:4—21 Barnes, Albert C., and Juvenile Court, 3:19 Butcher, Fanny, 3:51 Barnes, Helen Howell, 2:53 Byrne, Emmett F., 3:62 66 | Chicago History Winter 1998—99 C “Chicago school” of economics, 2:56, 67, 68 Chicago Society of Professional Journalists, 3:52 al-Sag Channel, 3:22 Chicago Theological Seminary, 1:59 ampbell, Joseph, inhumane treatment of, 2:19 Chicago Tribune: on Plan of Chicago, 1:30; and A Century of ampbell family, first case in Juvenile Court, 3: 3:14, 18 Progress, 2:46, +7; on Sally Rand, 2:53; on Juvenile Court ‘anada geese, 3:23 3:14; circulation war, 3:49; profitability of, 3:49 Canal Street, as site of new Maxwell Street Market, 2:34 Chicago Urban League, 2:5; and antilynching campaign, 2:19 Capitalism and Freedom, by Milton Friedman, 2:68 Chicago Women’s Amateur Minstrel Club, 2:17 Carmichael, John, 3:51 Chicagoan of the Year, Chicago Press Club award, 3:51 Case, Selon H., state senator, 3:11 “Chicago’s Front Yard,” photo essay, by Dennis Cremin, A Century of Progress World’s Fair, 1:49; dancers at, 2:43, 1:22-43 52-55; exhibits, 2:42, +7; and Chicago’s image, 2:42—55; Chicago’s Senior Citizen’s Hall of Fame, 1:52, 54 economic success, 2:44, +8; promotion of, 2:48; architec- hildren, Youth and Families Initiative of Chicago Community ture of, 2:4+8—51; and discrimination against African Ameri- [rust, 1:70 cans, 2:50. See also names of individual buildings and ‘hinatown, Chicago, 1:44—55 exhibits hinese American Civic Council, 1:49, 52 Cermak Road, Bridge, 3:39 hinese Children’s Rhythm Band, 1:55 Challenger (space shuttle), 3:63 hinese Christian Union Church, 1:45, 54 Chandler, Happy, baseball commissioner, 3:58 hinese immigrants, 1:44—55 Cherry, Fannie, 2: >2. >2 hinese New Year, 1:52 Cherry, Wiley, 2 222 hinese Women’s Club of Chicago, 1:49, 54 Cherry family, 2:33 ? hristoff, Peggy Spitzer, “Women of Chinatown,” article, Chiang Kai-Shek, Madame, visit to Chicago, 1:55 1:44-55 Chicago: Eine Wesstadt im amerikanischen Westen, by Ernst von hung, Frances Moy, 1:48 hung, Mansie. See O’Young, Mansie Chung Hesse-Wartegg, ie) Chicago: Greatest Advertised City in the World, Not the Wickedest hurch of the Good Shepherd, 1:62, 68 (pamphlet), by Lee Alexander Stone, 2:44 ircle Campus. See University of Illinois, Chicago Campus Chicago, image of, 1:4-21, 2:42-55 (UICC) Chicago American, 3:22 ity government, and Ernie Banks, 3:62 Chicago and Cook County School for Boys, 3:19 ity News Bureau, 3:51 Chicago Association of Commerce, 2:47 Civic Opera House, 1:58 Chicago Bar Association, 3:12 ivil Rights movement, 3:61; on West Side, 2:36; and Mae Chicago Bulls, victory celebration, 1:43 Jemison, 3:63 ‘leveland, Grover, president, and Chicago Press Club, 3:46, 51 Chicago Community Trust, 1:68, 70 Chicago Congregational Club, 3:18 ‘lifford, Carrie W,, 2:8 Chicago Cubs: and Ernie Banks, 3:54, 55; and segregation of ‘lotee Scott Settlement, Sunday Club, 2:16 baseball, 3:58 olumbia College, journalism degree, 3:53 Chicago Daily News: and Ben Hecht, 3:43; profitability of, 3:49 ommonwealth Edison, 2:63 Chicago Defender, 2:17; on woman's suffrage, 2:17; and anti- ommunity Renewal Society, 1:62 lynching campaign, 2:19 ‘ongregational Church of Park Manor, 1:62 Chicago Drainage Canal. See Sanitary and Ship Canal Congress Expressway. See Eisenhower Expressway ongress for Racial Equality (CORE), 2:37 Chicago Examiner, circulation war, 3:49 onstruction: and assembly line techniques, 1:11; pay for Chicago Federation of Women’s Clubs, 2:16 workers, 1:13—14; deaths of workers, 1:17-18 Chicago Fire, 1871, and landfill, 1:24, 27 Chicago Globe, 3:49 ontracts, by handshake, 1:9 ook County Courthouse—City Hall, 3:14 Chicago Hebrew Institute, 2:30-31 ook County tuberculosis center, 1:54 Chicago Herald & Examiner, and Charles A. MacArthur, 3 ORE. See Congress for Racial Equality (CORE) Chicago Inter Ocean, 3:8; on Juvenile Court, 3:14 ormell Charity Club, 2:10 Chicago Journal, on the 1{@M Canal, 3:22 omwell, Dean, No Place for a Nice Girl (painting), 3:53 Chicago Literary Renaissance, 3:49 oterie Club, and antilynching campaign, 2:19 Chicago Newspaper Reporter’s Association, 3:52 remin, Dennis H., “Chicago’s Front Yard,” photo essay, Chicago Plan Commission, and A Century of Progress, 2:46 1:22-43 Chicago Political League, 2:12 Chicago Press Club, 3:43-—53; membership of, 3:44, 49; bene- ‘rime, 3 / rissey, Forrest, on A Century of Progress dancers, 2:52 fits of, 3:45; facilities, 3:45, 52, 53; yearbook, 3:47; under- ground banquet, 3:49; opens to women, 3:52; and back urtis, Nina T, 2:15 taxes, 3:53; closes its doors, 3:53 ‘The Chicago Press Club: The ‘Scoop’ behind The Front Page,” Yesterday’s City, by Richard Digby-Junger, 3:42-—53 Daley, Richard J., mayor, 3:51 Chicago Public Schools, 3:59. See also names of individual Dallas Green Monarchs (Negro League baseball team), 3:55 schools Dancers, exotic, at A Century of Progress, 2:52-—55 The Chicago Riot (pamphlet), 2:29 Dartmouth College, 3:54 Chicago River, 2:26, 38, 3:21, 24, 26, 40; lock in Lake David, Joseph B., judge, and Sally Rand, 2:54 Michigan, 3:32; reversing the flow, 3:36; South Branch, 3:40 Davis, Elizabeth Lindsay, 2:12 Index to volume 27 | 67 Dawes, Charles Gates, vice president, 2:44, 46 Flower, Lucy, and Juvenile Court, 3:4, 8, 10, 14 Dawes, Rufus, president of A Century of Progress, 2:44, 46 Foin, Chin F, 1:46, 47 de Priest, Oscar, 2:7; election as alderman, 2:15, 17; founds Foin, Mrs. Chin (Yoklund Wong), 1:45, 46-47, 54, 55 “People’s Movement,” 2:16 Follansbee, George A., 3:10 de Rousiers, Paul: on the economic growth of the Midwest and “For Home, Family, and Equality: African American Women’s West, 1:4, 7; on Union Stock Yards, 1:10; on compact size of Clubs,” 2:4-25 Loop, 1:14; on lack of elegance in Chicago, 1:17 Forston, Bettiola, 2:16 Dearborn Street, 1:14—-15, 16-17 Fort Dearborn, 3:22 Death, attitudes toward, 1:21 Fourth Presbyterian Church, 1:47 Delinquency, 3:7. See also Juvenile Court Fox, Carol, 1:56 Democratic National Convention, 1996, 2:38; 1968, 3:5 Frederick Douglass Center, 2:12, 20, 21 Department stores. See names of individual stores Frederick Douglass Woman’s Club, 2:12, 16 DePaul University, and Bright New City lecture series, 2: Friedman, Milton, 2:56—72; childhood, 2:58; education, 2:59, Des Plaines River, 3:21, 22 60; and New Deal, 2:60; academic appointments, 2:61; gov- Dever, William E., mayor, 2:46 ernment posts, 2:61; and John Maynard Keynes’s theory of Digby-Junger, Richard, “The Chicago Press Club: The ‘Scoop’ consumption, 2:61; wins Nobel Prize, 2:61, 68; books by, behind The Front Page,” Yesterday's City, 3:42—53 2:68; influence on economic policy, 2:68; and volunteer Dirksen, Everett M., senator, 3:51 army, 2:68; and the “Reagan Revolution,” 2:69 Donoghue, George T., 2:54 Friedman, Rose, 2:68 Dornfeld, Arnold A. (Dorny), 3:51 Frink, Carol, 3:49 Douglas, Paul, senator, 2:67, 3:51 “From the Editor,” Rosemary K. Adams, 1:3, 2:3, 3:3 Dreiser, Theodore, 3:49 “From Wrigley Field to Outer Space: Interviews with Ernie Du Bois, W. B., 2:8 Banks and Mae Jemison,” Making History, by Timothy J. Gil- Duran, Jovita, 2:33 foyle, 3:54-65 The Front Page, 3:42, 43, 49 E G An Early Encounter with Tomorrow, by Arnold Lewis, excerpted, 1:4-21 G. I. Bill, and journalism, 3:51 The Earth We Share (science camp), 3:64 Gad’s Hill Summer Encampment, 2:21 East St. Louis, race riots, 2:19 Garden, Mary, 1:56 Easter Lily Club, 2:24 Garfield Park Conservatory, 2:64 “Ecumenicism and Philanthropy in Chicago: Interviews with Garment industry, 2:32 William B. Graham and Kenneth B. Smith,” Making History, General Federation of Women’s Clubs, 2:12 by Timothy J. Gilfoyle, 1:59-70 Gentrification, 2:26 Edison Company. See Commonwealth Edison Giles Charity Club, and antilynching campaign, 2:19 Efficiency, and Chicago, 1:4-21 Gilfoyle, Timothy J.: “Ardis Krainik: In Memoriam,” 1:56-58; Eighth Ward, and Ernie Banks, 3:62 “Ecumenicism and Philanthrophy in Chicago: Interviews Eisenhower Expressway, 2:38-39 with William B. Graham and Kenneth B. Smith,” 1:59-70; “Urban Migrants: Interviews with Milton Friedman, John Ella, John W, and Juvenile Court, 3:11 Swearingen, and Mary Ward Wolkonsky,” 2:56—72; “From Employment: and African Americans, 2:20-21, 23; of immi- Wrigley Field to Outer Space: Interviews with Ernie Banks grants, 2:32, 33, 46-47, 48, 52, 54 Endeavor (space shuttle), 3:54, 63 and Mae Jemison,” 3:54—-65 Englewood (neighborhood), 3:58 Golden, Dr. Carrie, 2:10 Good Shepherd Manor, 1:64 Equal Rights League of Chicago, 2:20 Good Shepherd Tower, 1:64 Europeans, view of Chicago, 1:4—21 Goose Lake Prairie State Park, 3:23 Exclusion laws, governing Chinese immigration, 1:45, 46, 47, Gould, Chester, 3:51 49,55 Graffis, Herb, and Chicago Press Club, 3:51 F Graham, William B., 1:59-70; education, 1:59; successes with Baxter International, 1:61—62; business innovations, “The Fair and the Fan Dancer: A Century of Progress and 1:65-66; and Lyric Opera of Chicago, 1:68; trusteeships, Chicago’s Image,” Yesterday’s City, by Lisa Krissoff Boehm, 1:68 2:42-55 Grandin, Madame Leon, on railway accidents, 1:21 Fairbanks, Charles, 3:46 Grant, Cary, 3:42 Fairview Street, 1:1] Grant Park, 1:22—43; as cultural center, 1:26; as element in Faulkner, Mrs. G. M. of Liberia College, Africa, 2:12 1909 Plan of Chicago, 1:26; renamed, 1:26; and landfill, Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs of Ohio, 2:8 1:34-35; annual events, 1:43 Field Columbian Museum. See Field Museum of Natural His- Great Depression, 2:59-60; and A Century of Progress, 2:42, tory 44; effect on Chicago Press Club, 3:51 Field Museum of Natural History, 1:42; and A Century of Great Migration, 2:36 Progress, 2:47; and Bright New City lecture series, 2:64 Greek immigrants, settle on West Side, 2:32 Fire. See Chicago Fire, 1871 Greek Orthodox Church, Good Friday procession, 2:32 First Immanual Day school, 2:27 The Green Ginger Jar, by Clara Ingram Judson, 1:54 First Ward, 2:12 Greenberg, Douglas, 1:69, 2:56, 3:64 68 | Chicago History | Winter 1998-99 Gregory, S. S., and Juvenile Court, 3:8 J Grimke, Francis J., reverend, 2:8 Groves, Adelaide, 3:15; and Juvenile Court, 3:8 Jackie Robinson Major League All-Star Team, 3:56 Guarie (early settler), 2:26 Jackson Park, site for World’s Columbian Exposition, 1:25 Guerin, Jules, 1:31; and Plan of Chicago, 1:31-33, 36-37 Jails, 3:8, 9 H Jean, Helen Wong, 1:45, 48, 49, 54, 55, 52 Jean, Lena Toy, 1:49 Haines School, 1:55 Jean, Thomas, 1:52 Hall, Mrs. George Cleveland, 2:12, 17 Jemison, Charles, 3:56 The Hall of Science, 2:49 Jemison, Dorothy, 3:56 Halsted Street, 2:32 Jemison, Mae C., 3:54—-65; education, 3:56, 58; spaceflight, Harlem Globetrotters, 3:55 3:59, 60, 61, 63; education, 3:60; Peace Corps, 3:61; as an advocate for science education, 3:64; founds Jemison Harris, Emily J., “A Meeting of the Waters,” photo essay, 3:21-41 Group, Inc., 3:64 Harrison, Carter Henry Sr., mayor, resident of West Side, 2:27 Jemison Group, Inc., 3:64 Jemison Institute for Advancing Technology in Developing Harrison Street, 2:32 Haymarket Affair, 2:28-29 Countries, 3:54, 64 Hecht, Ben, 3:42, 49, 50, 51 Jewish immigrants, Eastern European, settle on West Side, 2:30-31 Henry Horner Homes, 2:38 Johnson, Bascom, on Sally Rand, 2:55 Herguth, Bob, and Chicago Press Club, 3:53 Hermant, Jacques, on 1890s Chicago, 1:7, 9 Johnson, Fenton, 2:16 Johnson, Hilding, reporter, 3:49 Heron, black crowned night, 3:24 Johnson, Hildy (Front Page character), 3:49 Herriott, Justin, watercolor of Chicago River, 3:25 Hesse-Wartegg, Emst von: Chicago: Eine Weststadt im amerikanis- Jolliet, Louis, 3:21, 22 chen Westen, 1:6; comments on 1890s Chicago, 1:18 Jones, Anna H., 2:8 Jones, Llewellyn, on A Century of Progress, 2:50 His Girl Friday (movie), 3:42—43 Hoellen, John, alderman, 3:62 Jones, Minora, 2:12 Journalists: in Chicago, 3:43-53; college degrees, 3:51; on the Holy Family Church, 2:27 job training, 3:51; salaries, 3:51, 52; and alcohol, 3:52-53 Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, 2:32 Judson, Clara Ingram, The Green Ginger Jar, 1:54 Hong Kong Noodle Company, 1:49 The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair, and Chicago’s image, 2:42 Hopkins, Harry, 2:61 “Justice for the Child: The Beginning of the Juvenile Court in Horse cars, 1:18 Chicago,” article, by David S. Tanenhaus, 3:4-19 Housing, and discrimination against African Americans, 2:10, 36-37; 3:57-59 Juvenile Court: established in Chicago, 3:4—19; individualized treatment, 3:16; probation staff, 3:16 Houston Buffalos (Negro League baseball team), 3:55 Juvenile Protective Association, and A Century of Progress, “How high will she go?” cartoon, by John T. McCutcheon, 2:11 29) Howey, Walter, 3:49 Juvenile Protective League, 2:21 Hull-House, 3:58; as common ground, 2:34 Hummer, Philip, 1:69, 3:64 K Huncke, Olga, 1:45, 54-55 Hurd, Harvey B., judge, and Juvenile Court, 3:10, 11 Kan, E. B., 1:47 Hurleigh, Robert F., and Chicago Press Club, 3:51 Kansas City Monarchs (Negro League baseball team), 3:54, 55 Hyde Park Center, 2:21 Kelly, Edward, mayor: and A Century of Progress, 2:48; and Hyde Park Colored Republican Club, 2:12 Sally Rand, 2:54 | Keynes, John Maynard, theory of consumption, 2:61 Kiner, Ralph, 3:57 King, Coretta Scott, 2:36 Ideal Woman’s Club, 2:12, 16 King, Martin Luther Jr., 2:36 Illinois, presettlement landscape, 3:21 Kleiman, Carol, 3:52 Illinois &@M ichigan Canal, 3:21—41; commissioners designate Know Your Chicago (lecture series), 2:56, 64, 71 lakefront as open space, 1:24-25; 3:32; National Heritage Knupfer, Anne Meis, “For Home, Family, and Equality: African Corridor, 3:21 American Women’s Clubs,” article, 2:4—25 Illinois Central Railroad, 1:24, 41 Krainik, Ardis, 1:56-58, 69 Illinois State Reformatory, 3:11 Kupcinet, Irv, 3:53 Illinois Technical School, discrimination against African Ameri- cans, 2:21 L Immigrants: settle on West Side, 2:27, 30-31; conflict between, 2:30. See also names of individual ethnic or reli- La Salle, Robert Cavalier Sieur de, 3:22 gious groups Labor, activism on West Side, 2:28—29 Industrial Schools, 3:10, 11, 13 Laflin, James Lawrence, 2:67 International Press Club, 3:53 Lake Michigan, 1: cover; 3:20-21, 32-33 Inter-Ocean. See Chicago Inter Ocean Lake Park. See Grant Park Inter-State Industrial Exposition Building, 1:24, 26 Lake Shore Drive, construction of, 1:26 Italian immigrants, settle on West Side, 2:32 Lakefront, 1:26, 3:32. See also Grant Park Index to volume 27 | 69 Landers, Ann, 1:58, 3:52 Moore, William T., 3:46 Lange, Oskar, 2:67 Moore-Smith, Alberta, 2:20, 24 Lardner, Ring, 3:51] Morgan Park High School, 3:54 Lathrop, Julia, and Juvenile Court, 3:8, 14, 16 Morgan Park (neighborhood), 3:59 Lavandier, Joe, 3:51 Morrison Hotel, 1:49 Leadership Greater Chicago, 1:69-70 Mount Hope Cemetery, 3:46 Lederer, Eppie, 1:58, 3:52 Movie theaters, discrimination against African Americans, Lend Lease Administration, 2:63 Mumford, Lewis: on Chicago, 2:43; on A Century of Progress, Lessing, Julius, on balloon-frame construction, 1:11—12 Municipal Pier. See Navy Pier Lewis, Arnold, “Time is Money,” article, excerpted from An Museum of Science and Industry, 3:60 Early Encounter with Tomorrow, 1:4—21 N Lewis, J. Hamilton, senator, 2:19 Libby, McNeill and Company, discrimination against African NAACP. See National Association for the Advancement of Col- Americans, >-791 223 ored People (NAACP) Lin, Margaret, doctor, 1:45, 52-54, 53, 55 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Logan, Adella Hunt, 2:8, 10 (NAACP), 2:5; and antilynching campaign, 2:19 Lohr, Lenox, general manager of A Century of re yPTeSS 2 44, National Association of Colored Women (NACW): Department 46, +7, 54 of Education, 2:8; and women’s clubs, 2:10; and anti- LOncle Sam Chez Lui, by Louis Michaud, 1:6 lynching campaign, 2:18-19 Loop, compact size ol, 1:14, 17 National Association of Equal Suffrage League, parade, 2:15 Louis, Ah, 1:49 National Equal Rights League, 2:20 Lynching, campaigns against, 2:18-19 National Negro Business League, 2:21 Lyric Opera of Chicago, 1:56 98, 63, 68; Women’s Board, National Recovery Administration (NRA), 2:60, 61-62 2:56, 69 National Research Council, and A Century of Progress, 2:42, +7 M National Resources Committee, 2:60 Navy Pier, 2:64 MacArthur, Charles A., 3:49; and The Front Page Negro Fellowship League, 2:16, 17, 20, 23; and antilynching McClelland, John, 3:52 campaign, 2:19 McCosh School, 3:58 ‘ Negro Leagues. See Baseball, Negro Leagues McCoy-Gaines, Irene, and Birth of a Nation, 2 2) New Deal, and jobs for economists, 2:60, 61 McCutcheon, John 17 ‘How high will she go?”, 2:11; New Republic, on Chicago, 2:43 tury of Progress cartoon, 7-42:54 5 Newberry Avenue, 2:33 McDowell, Mary, 2:5, 6 Newcomer, John C., state senator, and Juvenile Court, 3:11, 12 McGrew, Martha, and A Century of Progress, 2:54 Newsdealers, and circulation war, 3:49 McKinsey, J. O., chairman of Marshall Field and Company Newspaper Club of Chicago, 3:48 2) :05 2 Newspapers: circulation war, 3:49; mergers, 3:52. See also Journalists Madden, Martin, congressman, 2:19; and antilynching cam- No Place for a Nice Girl (painting), by Dean Cormwell, 3:53 paign, 2:19 Nobel Prize, won by Milton Friedman, 2:61 Madison, James, president, 3:22 Northwestern University, 1:56; journalism degree, Madison Street, 2:38 NRA. See National Recovery Administration Mae Jemison Academy, 3:64 O Majors, M. A., editor, 2:12 Making History award winners, 1:56 O’Brien, Pat, 3:43 Mandel Brothers, 1:7 O'Farrell, Molly, 1:46 Mann, James, congressman, 2:19 : Olivet Baptist Church, 2:23, 25 Marquette, Jacques, priest, 3:22, 24 On, Wong, 1:49 Marshall Field and Company, 1:4—5; and discrimination O'Neal, Buck, 3:57 against African Americans, 2:21, iL 23; chairman dies, 1937, Orchestra Hall, and Bright New City lecture series 2°63 Original Providence Baptist Church, 2:33 Martineau, Harriet, Society in America, 3:23 Orr, D., cartoons of A Century of Progress, 2:47 Mass transit, 1:18—20 Our Penal Machinery and Its Victims, by John P. Altgeld, 3:7 Maxwell Street Market, 2:30, 34-35; as common ground, 2:34 Outer Drive. See Lake Shore Drive Medical Center District, 2:40—41 “A Meeting of the Waters,” by Emily J. Harris, photo essay, Overset (newsletter), 2D.i vdilo Overton, Anthony, 25 3:21-4] Overton Hygenic Company, 2:23, 24 Menjou, Adolphe, 3:43 O’Young, Henry, 1:47 Merwin, Samuel, on Chicago, 2:42 O’Young, Mansie Chung, 1:45, 47, 48, 49, 52, Mexican immigrants, settle on West Side, 2:33 Michaud, Louis, LOncle Sam Chez Lui, 1:6 r Migrants, to Chicago, 2:56—72 Mississippi River, 3:21 Parades, for woman’s suffrage, 2:10, 17, 14-15 Moley, Raymond, 2:61 Parks. See names of individual parks A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960, by Milton Pavarotti, Luciano, 1:58 Friedman, 2:68 Peace Corps, 3:61 70 | Chicago History | Winter 1998-99 Peatrie, Elia, W., 2:12 Schulz, Dr., and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 Pedestrians, 1:5, 18, ) | The Scoop (newsletter), 3:51 People’s Movement, 2:16 Sears Tower, 2:67 Peterson, Charles S., city treasurer, and A Century of Progress, 2:47 Second Ward, 2:12; elects Oscar de Priest, 2:7, 16, Phyllis Wheatley Club, 2:10, 16; and woman’s suffrage, 2:17 woman’s suffrage, 2:17 Plan of Chicago, 1909, and Grant Park, 1:26, 31-37 Segregation, in Chicago, 3:57, 59; protests against, Planned Parenthood, 2:71 Shedd Aquarium, 1:42; and A Century of Progress, Poe, Edgar Allen, 3:44 Sinclair, Upton, and Chicago’s image, 2:42 Polk Street, 2:32 Skeletal steel frame construction, 1:]12—14 Presidential Towers, 2:38 Skyline, Chicago, 1:22—23, 40-41, 43, 3:40-41 Press clubs, 3:43—53 Skyscrapers, speed of construction, 1:12—14 Productivity, in 1890s Chicago, 1:4-21 Smith, Edwin Burritt, and Juvenile Court, 3:11 Progressive Negro League, 2:12, 20, 21 Smith, Emma, 2:24 Progressives, 2:4—25 Smith, Fannie I , dean of girls for Wendell Phillips School, Prohibition, effect on Chicago Press Club, 3:49 222) Providence Baptist Church, 2:33 Smith, Kenneth B., reverend, 1:59—70, 60; education, 1:61: Public housing, 2:38 pastoral appointments, 1:62; and affordable housing, 1:64; Public relations business, and Chicago Press Club, 3:52 on Chicago Board of Education, 1:66—67; and public school Public Relations Society of America, 3:52 reform, 1:66—67; and ecumenicism, 1:68—69 Public transportation, 1:18, 20-21 Snowden, Joanna, 2:24, 25 Purciarello, Felicia and Daniel, 2:32 Society in America, by Harriet Martineau, 3:23 R South Park District, takes control of Lake Park (Grant Park), 1:26 Spencer, Mary Belle, 2 Race riots: East St. Louis, 2:19; Chicago, 1919, 2:42 Springer, Elmira, 2:12 Racine Street, 2:32 Squire, Belle, and woman’s suffrage, 2:15 Railroads, 3:22; accidents, 1:20, 21; Strike of 1877, 2:29 Standard Oil of Indiana, 2:56, 62, 65-67. See also Amoco Rainville, Harold, 3:62 Building Ralston, Fanny, 2:24 Stanford University, 3:56, 59 Rand, Sally, and fan dance, 2:42—55 Starr, Ellen Gates, 2:34 Randolph, Robert Isham, 2:54; attempts to improve Chicago’s Starr, Merritt, Juvenile Court, 3:11 image, 2:44 State Home for Juvenile Female Offenders, 3:11 Randolph Street, 1:16—17; market, 2:32 State Street, bridge, 3:26 Restaurants, in turn-of-the-century Chicago, 1:7 Stead, William T., on railroads, 1:21 Richmond, Virginia, 1:61 Stevenson, Adlai Jr., 3:51 Rickey, Branch, 3:58 Stevenson Expressway, 3:37 Roberts, J. H., 2:10 Stewart, Ella S., and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 Robinson, Jackie, 3:58 Stigler, George, 2:67 “Rooting, Uprooting: The West Side,” photo essay, by Susan M. Stone, Edward Durrell, architect of Amoco Building, 2:67 Samek, 2:26—41 Stone, Lee Alexander: attempts to improve Chicago’s image, Roti, Frank, alderman, 1:49 2:44; Chicago: Greatest Advertised City in the World, Not the Royko, Mike, 3:51, 53 Wickedest (pamphlet), 2:44 Russell, Rosalind, 3:42 Stone, Melville E., 3:45 Ryberg, Walter, 3:51 Streetcars, 1:18 Rydell, Robert, World of Fairs, 2:55 Streets of Paris (at A Century of Progress), 2:52—55, 55 Rynlciewicz, Stephen, 3:52 Suffragettes. See Woman's suffrage S Sullivan, Dennis E., 3:13 Sullivan, Leon, reverend, 1:64 Sacred Heart Academy, 2:30 Sun Life Assurance Company, 1:47, +9 Swearingen, John, 2:56—72; education, 2:59, 62; and Standard St. Anselm’s Roman Catholic Church, 1:64, 68 Oil of Indiana, 2:62, 65; becomes chair of American Petro- St. Basil Greek Orthodox Church, 2:32 leum Institute, 2:71 St. Francis of Assisi Church, 2:33 Swift and Company, 1:8—9 St. Stephen African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, 2:33 Salem, Dorothy, on woman’s suffrage, 2:17 T Samek, Susan M., “Rooting, Uprooting: The West Side,” photo essay, 2:26—41 Tanenhaus, David S., “Justice for the Child: The Beginning of Sandburg, Carl, 3:49, 51 the Juvenile Court in Chicago,” 3:4—19 Sanger, Margaret, 2:70, 71 faxi dancers, at A Century of Progress, 2:52—53 Sanitary and Ship Canal, 3:22, 31, 34, 35, 37, 40 Taylor Street, 2:32 Saperstein, Abe, 3:55 Tervalon, Charlotte and Masces, 2:19 Saturday Evening Post: on Chicago, 2:42; on A Century of Texas Wholesale Grocery Corporation, 3:55 Progress architecture, 2:48 A Theory of Consumption Function, by Milton Friedman, 2:68 Sauer, Hank, 3:57 Thompson, William, mayor, 2:23; and A Century of Progress, 2:47 Schmidt, Martin J., 2:3 “Time is Money,” article, by Arnold Lewis, 1:4—21 Index to volume 27 | 74 Traffic, 1:17-20 Williams family, 2:7 Transportation, deaths caused by, 1:17, 18, 21 Winter, effect on Chicagoans, 2:72 Travel and Transport Building, 2:48 Withers, Z., 2:8 Treasury, Department of the, and Milton Friedman, 2:61 Wolf Point, 3:25, 28; buildings on, 2:26 Trinity Church, 1:62 Wolkonsky, Mary Ward, 2:56—72; childhood, 2:58; education, A Trip to Chicago: What I Saw, What I Heard, What I Thought, by 2:58; vice chair of American Red Cross Canteen Corps, 2:63; Martindale C. Ward, 1:6 works for Lend Lease Administration, 2:63; starts Bright New Trout, Grace Wilbur, and woman’s suffrage, 2:16 City and Know Your Chicago lecture series, 2:64; and Lyric Truman, Harry, president, and Chicago Press Club, 3:51 Opera, 2:69; and University of Chicago, 2:69; and WITW, Tuberculosis, 1:54 2:69; and support of Planned Parenthood, 2:71 Tugwell, Rex, 2:61 Woman’s Relief Corps, 3:4 Tuthill, Richard S., judge, 3:15, 16; and Juvenile Court, 3:14, 18 Woman’s suffrage: and African Americans, 2:5-17; in western Twain, Mark, and Chicago Press Club, 3:44—45 states, 2:10; parades for, 2:14-15, 17 Twelfth Street, 2:27 “Women of Chinatown,” by Peggy Spitzer Christoff, 1:44-55 Twentieth Century Penny Club, 2:24 Women’s boards of cultural organizations, 2:69. See also names U of individual organizations Women’s clubs: African American, 2:4-25; protest discrimina- UIC. See University of Illinois, Chicago Campus tion against African Americans, 2:18—23; and economic self- Union Park, 2:27, cover; as common ground, 2:34 determination, 2:23-25 Union Stock Yards, 3:38; and assembly line techniques, 1:10 Women’s College Board, sponsors Know Your Chicago lecture United Center, 2:38 series, 2:64 United Charities of Chicago, 3:56 Women’s Second Ward Republican Club, 2:12 University of Chicago, 1:59, 2:68, 69; economics department, Wong, Yoklund. See Foin, Mrs. Chin 2:56, 67; Women’s Board, 2:56; hires Milton Friedman, 2:61 University of Illinois, journalism degree, 3:51; Chicago Campus Woodlawn (neighborhood), 3:58 Woodward, Bob, 3:51 (UICC), 1:54, 2:38 “Urban Migrants: Interviews with Milton Friedman, John Woolley, Celia Parker, 2:12, 21 Swearingen, and Mary Ward Wolkonsky,” Making History, by Works Progress Administration, 3: 5 5 Timothy J. Gilfoyle, 2:56-72 World of Fairs, by Robert Rydell, 2:a 5 Urban renewal, 2:26 World’s Columbian Exposition: cS ongresses, 1:26; Court of V Honor, 1:28—29; architecture, 2:50; exotic dancers, 2:52 World’s Congress Building, 1:27. See also Art Institute of Chicago Van Gilder, John, 2:53 World’s Fair News, 2:52, 54 Veblen, Thorstein, 2:67 Virginia Union College, 1:61 World’s Fairs. See A Century of Progress Exposition; World’s Columbian Exposition W WPA. See Works Progress Administration Wright, Frank Lloyd, and A Century of Progress, 2:50 Walker, Maggie Lena, 2:24 Wrigley, Phil, and segregation in baseball, 3:58 Ward, Aaron Montgomery, 1:38; and court battle to keep lake- Wrigley Building, and Chicago Press Club, 3:52, 53 front clear, 1:26 Wrigley Field, 3:57 Ward, Arch, and Chicago Press Club, 3:51 WTTW (radio and television station), 2:56, 69 Ward, J. Harris, 2:61; and Marshall Field and Company, 2:63 Ward, Martindale C., A Trip to Chicago: What I Saw, What I . Heard, What I Thought, 1:6 Waring, Mary F,, doctor, 2:10 Yarbrough, Cordelia, 2:10 Washington, Booker T., 2:10, 12, 24 Yesterday’s City: “The Fair and the Fan Dancer: A Century of Washington, Harold, mayor, and school reform, 1:66 Progress and Chicago’s Image,” by Lisa Krissoff Boehm, Washington Boulevard, 2:27 2:42-55; “The Chicago Press Club: The ‘Scoop’ behind The Washington Park Council of Churches, 1:68 Front Page,” by Richard Digby-Junger, 3:42—53 Wealth, attitudes toward, 1:7 Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA), 1:61 Wells, Ida B., 2:12, 13, 21, 23; and woman’s suffrage, 2:15, 16; Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA), 2:8; Indiana and antilynching campaign, 2:19; and economic support of Avenue Branch, 2:8—9, 18 black-owned businesses, 2:24 Wendell Phillips High School, 2:21 West Side (neighborhood), 2:26-41 West Side Tenants’ Union, 2:37 West Side Women’s Club, 2:16 WGN (radio station), 3:51 Whitechapel Club, 3:46, 48 Whiting, Indiana, and Standard Oil of Indiana, 2:62 Wilkie, Franc B., 3:45, 46 Williams, Annie, 2:7 Williams, Fannie Barrier, 2:10, 12 72 | Chicago History | Winter 1998-99

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