Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts

Friday, November 6, 2020

The Year 2020 continues…Just Hanging around the House

This year has been a doozy don’t you think!  Covid-19 with over 225,000 deaths in the USA, the politics/election, civil rights issues, rioting, storms, wildfires…the list goes on and on.  It’s been one nasty year for sure.  By the time I publish this post, we should know who our next President will be.  Will that settle things down…or will they get worse in the near term?

Like most of you, we’ve really limited ourselves to ‘hanging around the house’.  We used to view this relative lack of activity as an occasional relaxing break in the action.  Now it’s the norm...and it’s getting to us!  Can you spell boredom?  

So once again…this post will be about food, views around our home and Halloween, such as it was.



Let’s start with food, not ‘just food’, but rather top notch comfort food!  In addition to the fresh rolls that friends Larry and Bev brought us recently, they also dropped off some amazing cream of potato soup.

Laurie served hers as designed…add shredded cheese and green onions and serve with a roll.  My serving of potato soup was sprinkled liberally with my favorite condiment…Tabasco.  In either case, the soup was excellent!

Oh yes, I had a roll left for my dinner as well.  I slathered it with some Amish butter and applied a generous amount of multi-berry jam… It served as my dessert and it was immediately consumed after I finished my soup.

On a recent sunny fall day, Laurie took this photo along one side of our house.  There already was some fall color showing and you can see the Smoky Mountains in the distance.


Then one day, we decided to finish off the remaining deep dish pizza that I’d received with a Chicago themed food gift pack.  It was either to celebrate Father’s Day or my birthday.  Two of these pizzas were part of the gift pack but we already had the deep dish sausage version.  Lou Malnati’s is famous for their deep dish pizza and they also make a great thin crust version.

We’d lived in Chicago for 27 years and we’ve been outspoken about the one thing that we really miss after moving to East Tennessee.  One word – FOOD!  Chicago hot dogs, ethnic cuisine, local bakeries and butcher shops, steaks, pizza and more.  We are thin crust pizza aficionados though and never really got into deep dish pizzas.  That said, we did prefer this deep dish pepperoni pizza over the sausage version we’d eaten before.

Back to faux cooking…prepared food in lieu of bothering to do it ourselves!  We’d picked up this package of Main St. Baked Scalloped Potatoes during a recent visit to Costco.  How could we go wrong with cheesy scalloped potatoes!  So what should we use for a main dish with this comforting side dish?

The answer to the above question also came from Costco.  This is our package of A La Cart Sesame Soy Beef Short Ribs.  Like the potatoes, this entrée could be ready in minutes!

…and the combination of the previous 2 pre-cooked ready-in-minutes food offerings is shown above on Laurie’s dinner plate.  Note: For something healthy we did have a small side salad before attacking the main course. 

The short ribs were very tender and very tasty but the sauce was a bit too sweet for my taste.  Laurie didn’t think so though… We both agreed that the potatoes were about as good as one could make at home with all fresh ingredients.  Excellent!  Yes, that roll on Laurie’s plate was furnished courtesy of our friend Bev and Larry.  

Now for a non-food photo or two!  Halloween here is very tame.  No sidewalks, dark roads and few children…it all equals no trick or treaters.  Nor does that stop us from consuming a bag of ‘just in case any kids show up’ candy, but that’s another story.

This was about as close as we got to seeing kids at Halloween.  Laurie is their great aunt and they live in the St. Louis Missouri area.  From the left, Delany, Charley, Avery and Elliot.  Arya is standing guard over the group.  They aren’t a spooky bunch but they are cute!  There was some fancy pumpkin carving going on, that’s for sure…


I’ll end this post with a photo that Laurie took of the full moon (a blue moon) on Halloween eve.  I like that misty image shining through the semi-bare branches of our oak tree. 

A blue moon isn’t necessarily blue.  It actually is the second full moon in the same month.  This relatively rare occurrence happens once every 2.5 years on average, hence the saying, "It'll happen once in a blue moon!"  However, this particular ‘blue moon’ was even more special.  It was the first full moon seen in all U.S. time zones since 1944!  It won’t happen again until 2039…

Just click on any of the photos to enlarge them…

Thanks for stopping by for a visit!

Stay Safe and Take Care, Big Daddy Dave

Monday, July 20, 2020

Décor and More

The pandemic and our general self-isolation has eliminated some of our excuses for not digging through our piles and stacks of ‘stuff’, figuring out what to give away, what we could sell and what we could actually use…


Then there are those items that really aren’t immediately usable…but which we would never discard!  This is a large glass framed collage created by my mother…Elizabeth (Beth) Weed Myers Thomson.  It was made with egg shells, ferns and an assortment of flowers and leafs.  It’s held together pretty well for the last 40 – 45 years.  We still don’t have a place for it.


Then there’s this photograph of a castle in Scotland, on the isle of Mull to be exact.  This is Laurie’s family castle on the McCormick (maternal) side of her family.  The two people standing directly in front of the tower are Laurie’s cousin Alan and his son Jeremy.  We did find a space for this large photo in our bedroom.

Moy Castle stands on a low rock platform at the head of Loch Buie.  It was built in the 15th Century but was abandoned as a residence in 1752 in favor of a newer home, Lochbuie House.  No access to Moy Castle is permitted due to crumbling masonry and a long term stabilization and renovation project. 


This Grandma Moses style oil painting, depicting a family gathering walnuts, was painted by Beth Thomson (my mother) at least 50 years ago.  She created many paintings in this style as well as a couple series of tiles and, late in her life, even greeting cards for the nursing home she was living in.  I used to have to help her gather and de-husk walnuts for dyes she used for her weavings… Working with walnuts was not my favorite job as husking them stains everything! 


This metal sign was already hanging on the wall next to my side of the bed.  It was forced to relocate by the ‘walnut gathering’ painting shown above.  Laurie and I acquired this nice sign during a visit to the Magnolia Market at the Silo’s in Waco Texas.

It reads, “grow old with me…the best is yet to be”.


We also came across an engraving of George Washington that we’d acquired many years ago when we were still purchasing antiques and collectable objects.  We looked around and decided that it would sit nicely on this old Eastlake Desk in our foyer.  The desk was originally given to my mother by her sister, Jeane W. Austin, to furnish my mother’s new house.


Here’s a close up of that George Washington engraving with his bust and surrounded by critical points in the Revolutionary War.  We bought it from a print and frame shop in Chicago back in the mid-1980s. 

At the time, the engraving was warranted as being over 100 years old and the frame was actually dated as being from 1885.  I recognize one scene at the bottom left as being from Valley Forge.  The picture at the lower right is either Burgoyne’s surrender at Saratoga or Cornwallis’ surrender at Yorktown. 


This is another oil painting by my mother, this time showing children playing in piles of fall leaves.  Stylistically, it is a crossover from her primitive Grandma Moses period over to her impressionistic period.  We ended up hanging this painting in our third bedroom.


This hand-colored engraving is from Historie Naturelle’s Ornithologie, published in 1790.  This is plate #180 and it was attributed to Denis Diderot…a French philosopher, art critic and writer who is best known as co-founder, chief editor and contributor to the Encyclopedie.  I actually believe that the art work was by Brenard Direxit. 

I could only identify one of the birds in the engraving.  The red bird at the lower left is called the musician or organ wren.  It is named for its elaborate song.  It’s native to South America, especially the Amazon rainforest.  I will tell you that when we bought it, this attractive engraved illustration cost more than the frame.  However, now I could purchase another copy of it on the Internet for $65.00!  This piece of art is now hanging our bonus room/man cave.


When Montgomery Ward went out of business in 2001, I rescued this old aerial photograph of downtown Chicago from the trash.  All of the interconnected buildings along the Chicago River starting at the far left to the break at Chicago Avenue and then on across the street to far right…were part of this huge complex.  

The 8-story building with the tower at the right side of Chicago Avenue was the 600,000 sq. ft. Administration Building.  It was completed in 1907.  That huge building just to the left of the Administration Building was the 2,000,000 sq. ft. Catalog Building.  It was completed in 1908.  I’m still holding on to this print…but don’t have a place to display it right now.

While I can’t specifically date the photo, I do know that the tower on the Administration Building was completed in 1929.  My best guess, given the height of the buildings shown on the north shore area of downtown Chicago would be that this photo was taken sometime in the early 1930s.  The former catalog center is now home to restaurants, the Big Ten Network, Wrigley, Echo Global Logistics, a gym, a spa, Groupon, Dyson Inc. and 296 luxury condominiums.


How about a bit of screened-in porch décor?  How about celebrating and remembering fond memories from the past? 

All of these items have been added over the last couple of years, but our latest ‘find’ amongst our ‘stuff’ was the rendering of Laurie’s former city skyline, Maplewood Missouri.  Her former family home is in Maplewood and that’s where she grew up.  The sign with the numbers above the porch sign provides the city’s zip code.  Heafford Junction Wisconsin is the little town adjacent to the cabin on Deer Lake where her family spent vacations every summer.  We’ve also stayed there since we’ve been together…



I’ll end this post with two more great bird photos that Laurie captured!  This hungry little female house finch did a great job of stripping the seeds from the Thai basil plant in one of Laurie’s several herb pots that she maintains on our deck. 

Thai basil is native to Southeast Asia.  Its flavor is generally described as anise and licorice-like and slightly spicy.  While widely used in Southeast Asia, it plays an especially prominent role in Vietnamese cuisine.  It’s also the cultivar most often used for Asian cooking in Western kitchens.

That’s all for now… Just click on any of the photos to enlarge them.

Thanks for stopping by for a visit!
 
Stay Safe and Take Care, Big Daddy Dave

Friday, May 29, 2020

Collectibles or Junk?


I tend to be a bit of a pack rat…not a hoarder per se, but rather a person who doesn’t easily part with weird or interesting items that some would deem ‘collectibles’.  Of course, others might be more inclined to rename some of my collectibles as ‘junk’. 

As the saying goes, “One Person's Junk Is another Person's Treasure!”  So here are a few miscellaneous ‘collectibles’ that I ‘discovered’ the other day while rooting through drawers in our storeroom…




I have badges!  Lots of badges… In one of my former lives, I was involved in Loss Prevention, (security and safety), at long time retail icon, Montgomery Ward.  I was based at the company’s headquarters in Chicago and my last 3 months were spent helping close down the company as it went out of business after 129 years.
 
One day I found a pile of old security badges in the trash and the collector in me was inclined to save them.  I probably picked up over 100 old badges.  These are 2 of the fancier ones.  The first one, from Virginia, might have been for store use but was more likely carried by a field investigator or security supervisor. (I have no idea what the ‘P-2’ on the badge stood for)

That second smaller badge is even more shiny and ornate.  It is smaller but this one has its own leather badge case.  It was probably carried by the Mobile store security manager.  That store had closed before I joined the company in 1987.



This is yet another ‘collectible’.  I’m sure this watch from 1993 has almost no value as it doesn’t work!  Still, with the Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer watch face, I couldn’t let it go into the trash.  Not much value though… There is a working model of this same watch on eBay and they are only asking $19.95.

Rudolph was created in 1939 by Robert L. May.  He was on assignment for Montgomery Ward.  The company had been buying and giving away coloring books for Christmas every year and management decided that creating their own book would save money.  May’s daughter liked reindeer and, as a child, he had been treated as an outcast like Rudolph.  “Rollo” and “Reginald” were other names that May considered.  The Montgomery Ward artist who drew Rudolph changed him from a reindeer to a cute white-tail deer in an effort to deflect criticism about the red nose. (A red nose was considered a sign of alcoholism) 

In its first year of publication, Montgomery Ward distributed 2,400,000 copies of Rudolph’s story.  The rest, as the saying goes, ‘is history’!


Moving from fun to mundane… This little object is an advertising hand-out from the Parisian Novelty Company.  The name of the company is a little misleading as it was and is based in Chicago Illinois.  Parisian Novelty Company was founded in 1898.  For more than 100 years, it was the leading manufacturer of button parts, button making machinery and other equipment for companies serving the promotional products industry.  In 2008, the button division of the company was acquired by the Matchless Group, which had been founded in Chicago even a bit earlier…in 1885.

Note the address on the object, 3510 South Western Avenue, Chicago 9, Illinois.  It took me a little to figure out that the ‘9’, referred to the city of  Chicago’s Ninth Ward…



In case you were wondering what this item is, it’s a 24” tape measure.  Despite the company’s then current focus on plastic buttons, (promotional, campaign, souvenir, etc.), the measuring tape’s case is metal.  The spring is still working and there is a stop lever on the side to hold the cloth measuring tape at whatever length is being measured.  I have no idea when this object was produced but I’d guess that Parisian Matchless could tell me if I asked…



Sticking with Chicago for one more ‘collectible’, this is a souvenir folder from “A Century of Progress International Exposition, aka, The Chicago World’s Fair.  This iteration of the World’s Fair was held from 1933 to 1934 in the midst of the Great Depression.  It was a celebration of the city’s centennial and its theme was technological innovation.  Fair visitors saw the latest developments in science and industry, including autos, rail travel, architecture and even cigarette-smoking robots.

Despite the Great Depression, by the time the Fair closed, a total of 48,469,227 visitors had viewed the exhibits…and picked up their souvenirs. 

So what was inside this folder?


What did you expect!?  When I first picked this item up, I was a bit stunned and not a little disappointed when I discovered that it was full of various sizes and types of sewing needles… At least it is colorful!

This ‘needle kit’ was just one of the vast number of Century of Progress souvenirs that visitors could buy…or that were sometimes given out.  Other examples include: picture books; postcards; photo collections; bottle jacks and openers; stamps; mini steins; mugs; art deco bracelets; keys to the city; bookmarks; ashtrays; brass bowls; train sets; pocket watch fobs; FDR brass tokens/coins; playing cards; cigarette cases; spoons; Belgian tapestry; umbrellas and; cast iron pencil holders.  That is just to name a few examples! 
Interested?  Just cruise the exhaustive listing of souvenir items listed on eBay!

I did find a couple of my needle folders for sale and mine won’t help me much with the cost of retirement… It was listed for $6.99 plus $1.75 for shipping!  But, I did have many more needles in my folder! 

If you’d like to learn more about Chicago’s Century of Progress/World’s Fair, just go to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Century_of_Progress.


This picture shows one of the busy locks in Sault Ste. Marie Michigan.  I have no idea where I obtained this print either…but I found a nearly identical picture on the internet while researching ‘whaleback’ ships.  While this photo identified the lock as the Weitzel Lock, the identical photo, which is in color, identifies it as the Poe Lock.  The Weitzel Lock was built in 1881 and the larger Poe Lock was built in 1896.  That large building is the administration building and it was completed in 1897…so I’m guessing that this probably is the Poe Lock.  This was a busy scene… As early as 1893, over 12,000 ships passed through the Locks!

The whaleback design vessels were initially intended as easy-to-tow barges and they evolved into powered freighters in their own right.  They were usually used for carrying grain or ore.  When fully loaded, the ship looked like a whale’s back.  A total of 44 of these vessels were built between 1887 and 1898.
 
Factoids:

The whaleback Charles W. Wetmore, built in 1891, was the first Great Lakes Vessel to leave the lakes.  She shot the St. Lawrence River’s rapids in doing so!  She traveled on to Liverpool England, then subsequently returned to New York and from there steamed around Cape Horn to Everett Washington.

         ·         A shipyard was built in Everett Washington with the intention of building additional whaleback ships.  Only one was ever built.  The City of Everett was completed in 1894 and it sailed for 29 years, becoming the first American steamship to navigate the Suez Canal and the first American steamship to circumnavigate the globe!

         ·         The only remaining whaleback designed ship is the SS Meteor (formerly the Frank Rockefeller)  This 380 foot long ship was built in 1896 and it was finally retired in 1969.  It is now a museum ship in Superior Wisconsin.



These 2 photos are the front and back covers of a 22 page 1940 Ironrite advertising booklet.  Ironrite was a well-known household appliance name brand especially during the 1940s and 1950s.  Originally based in Detroit Michigan, the business was established in 1911 as a machine shop.  It was originally named the Sperlich and Uhlig Company, (the founder’s names), but it was changed to the Ironrite Ironer Company in 1927.  The first Ironrite ironers were actually built in 1921 and Detroit’s J.L. Hudson Department Store was the product’s first retail dealer.

The Ironrite Ironer was later manufactured in Mount Clemens Michigan from the mid-1940s until 1961 when the plant was closed down as demand waned.  At its peak, the company was producing as many as 400 units per day and many home laundry rooms were equipped with one of these ironing machines!  The popularity of permanent press clothing was partly responsible for the end of this product’s popularity.

The automatic ironer, also called a mangle, was an electric appliance that used a roller and a cast-iron shoe to press clothing. Company brochures promised homemakers that an Ironrite ironer could take them away from the "nerve-racking method of lifting, pushing and pulling a heavy, hot hand iron back and forth hundreds of times to complete an ironing." A popular home appliance in the era before permanent-press clothing, the Ironrite could be found in many home laundry rooms.



The theme or selling point for these ‘automatic ironers’ was that they eliminated housewives from their ‘hardest home drudgery, hand ironing!  These machines, also called a mangle, used a roller and a cast-iron shoe to press clothing.  As you can see from the picture on the first page shown above, now housewives could “iron sitting down”…”in a comfortable natural position”!  Several different models were available over the years and even the chair, (called a ‘health chair’ by Ironrite), was available to the company’s customers.  

As you can see in the second picture above, you could see the product demonstrated at your favorite store and they even offered home demonstrations.  My favorite offer though is that if you took your ironing to an Ironrite Dealer, they would iron it for free as part of their demonstration of the ironer!
  
Factoid

An Ironrite ‘Health Chair’ constructed with steel and lacquered plywood is part of the collection of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City!

Ironrite Ironers and accessories have been slow to fade from the scene and many units are still in use.  Many of these ironers (in working order) and related accessories are offered for sale on eBay.  Manuals and books range from $9.99 and up, better ironers range from $250 to over $300 each and a ‘rare’ Model 88 Ironrite ironer in a Mahogany Cabinet is priced at $750.  Check out the items for sale at eBay… Just click on https://www.bing.com/shop?q=ebay+ironrite&FORM=SHOPPA&originIGUID=0A0FDB71C00E4D359ABDD21AF260937E.

The items I’ve included in this post are certainly not big money items…but I enjoy having them and I like the history behind them.  I’ll just hold onto the collection, and someday, hopefully many years from now, my son David II will have to figure out what to do with dad’s accumulation of all these dang ‘collectibles’.

Just click on any of the photos to enlarge them…

Thanks for stopping by for a visit!

Stay Safe and Take Care, Big Daddy Dave

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Leisure Time and Travel – Early 1900s


Once again, I’ve delved into my collection of early postcards.  On this occasion my focus is on Leisure Time and Travel in the early 1900s.  Of course back in those days, it’s hard to completely separate travel from commerce in general. 

My apologies for the disparity in print, spacing and background in parts of this post...but I'm not mentally disposed to go back and rework the entire post.


This postcard shows the old Union Depot in Kansas City Missouri.  It was built in 1878 but this postcard was mailed from Kansas City to Mrs. J.A. Johnson in Hot Springs Virginia in 1909.

The old Union depot was located in the bottomlands near the Missouri River close to the stockyards and meatpackers...primary shippers for the railroads.  From a passenger’s viewpoint, the location was less than ideal.  From some angles, passengers actually had to avoid trains on the tracks.  Most passengers from the city accessed the depot via a ‘thrilling and noisy cable car ride down a steep incline. 

Visitors to Kansas City left the safety and comfort of their rail cars and they were ‘greeted’ by about 4 blocks of saloons, gambling centers, billiard halls, tattoo parlors and brothels that surrounded the depot.  Smoke from the coal-fired trains coated near-by buildings with black soot.  Then there was the flooding!  In 1903 a major flood convinced the city leaders to build a new and larger depot that would avoid the water issues and better serve passengers.  However, the replacement depot wasn’t finished until 1914.  
  
This old depot was nicknamed the “Jackson County Insane Asylum” by those who thought it was too large and garish.  With its 125 foot clock tower and being a hybridization of Second Empire style and Gothic Revival, it certainly was an attention getter… FYI, it was only the second Union station (a station used by 2 or more rail lines) in the USA.

While the depot was initially thought to be too large, it was overwhelmed in 2 years and by the start of the 1900s, over 180 trains per day passed through the station!  The population of Kansas City Missouri had tripled from the time that this depot opened in 1878 through 1905 or so.  On 10/31/1914, the last train departed from the depot.  It was torn down in 1915.


This postcard from 1908 shows the city of St. Ignace Michigan on the shore of Lake Huron.  It’s located close to the tip of the State’s Upper Peninsula across the Straits of Mackinac.  For years this town has been a gateway to the Upper Peninsula as well as to Mackinac Island, a very popular tourist destination.  As of the November 1957, Michigan’s lower and upper- peninsula have been connected by the Mackinac Bridge.  However, in the early days all traffic went via water, with the vessels departing on the 5 mile journey from St. Ignace.  You can see the piers and a couple of ships in the picture.


In 1882, the Detroit, Mackinac and Marquette Railroad came to St. Ignace.  This rail ferry terminal was the where the connection was across the Mackinac Straits to Michigan's upper-peninsula.  Farmers and the lumber industry could now easily move their product to Detroit, a truly major market.  At the same time tourists ‘discovered’ the charms of Mackinaw Island and began exploring the wilds of Northern Michigan.

A railroad car ferry became the actual link across the straits for both commerce and travelers.  In addition to freight cars, passenger cars would just be loaded/rolled onto the “SS Chief Wawatam”.  The ferry was owned by the Duluth South Shore and Atlantic, the Pennsylvania and New York Central railroads.  The Chief Wawatam was the last hand fired, coal fueled commercial carrier on the Great Lakes.  She was in service from 1911 until 1984.  She was designed to operate year around.  This car ferry was designed to break ice flows with her bow propeller, which could both maneuver the ship and suck water out from underneath the ice to enable it to be broken by the force of gravity.

Roads in the early days were less than ideal or even passable.  Auto ferry services across the Straits of Mackinac didn’t begin until 1923, a year after this second St. Ignace postcard was mailed.  By 1952, the Michigan Department of Transportation was operating 5 ships on this route, with a total capacity of 500 vehicles per trip.  By 1952 the ‘new’ auto ferry route had carried 12 million vehicles and 30 million passengers.  I crossed the straits on one of these auto ferries in both directions in 1952.


Leisure time doesn’t necessarily mean extensive travel.  This postcard showing someone feeding a swan in Chicago’s Garfield Park was mailed in September of 1908.  This park includes 184 acres in the East Garfield Park neighborhood on Chicago’s West Side.  It was designed as a ‘pleasure ground’ by William LeBaron Jenney and its home to the Garfield Park Conservatory, one of the largest conservatories in the USA. 

The first portion of the park was originally named Central Park and it was opened to the public in August of 1874.  Jenney, who is now best known as the father of skyscrapers, based his design of the park on parks he’d seen and visited in Paris.  In 1881, the park was renamed in honor of slain President James A. Garfield.

Note that the park was designed to serve as a ‘pleasure ground’ for Chicagoans.  The idea was that it should be used for passive recreation such as strolling and picnicking.  The large lagoon was added as a means to drain the park site while creating desired and attractive water features.  It was used for boating in the summer and ice skating in the winter. 


Chicago has a number of large and distinctive parks.  This postcard, which was mailed in 1915, pictures Washington Park.  It was built in 1870 and it covers 372 acres in the Washington Park community on the South Side of Chicago.  Named for George Washington, it was conceived by Paul Cornell, a Chicago real estate magnate who founded the adjoining town of Hyde Park.  Cornell hired famed landscape designer Frederick Law Olmstead and his partner to lay out the park.

When Olmsted examined the property designated for the park, he saw a field filled with trees and decided to maintain its character by creating a meadow surrounded by trees.  In keeping with the bucolic picture on the front of this card, he called for sheep to graze on the meadow as a way to keep the grass short.  Through the trees you can just make out on of the lagoons that were included in the design.  As per the back of this postcard, the park “contains 7 miles of charming driveways, walks and bridle paths.

Another leisure time activity back in the early 1900s and continuing today are visits to museums.  The Art Institute of Chicago was founded in 1879 in Grant Park.  It is one of the oldest and largest art museums in the USA.  The building on this 1906 postcard was built in 1893 as part of the World’s Columbian Exposition.  While most of the buildings constructed for the Exposition were temporary, the Art Institute lobbied for a building that would serve as part of the fair, but would be used by the Institute after the Exposition ended.
This building, now greatly enlarged, was completed in time for the second year of the Exposition.  The entrance to the Art Institute is still guarded by 2 bronze lions who were created by Edward Kemey’s in 1894.  They each weigh more than 2 tons!
Chicago’s Art Institute is huge, now reputedly the second largest art museum in the USA.  Its annual number of visitors now totals around 2 million.  Wear good walking shoes and plan for a break or two because it will wear you out!  Laurie and I are fortunate in that we visited the Art Institute many times, sometimes with a private group.  The Institute’s Security Director sponsored a few visits and dinners for his peers in the Chicago area.
To learn more about Chicago’s Art Institute and perhaps to plan a visit, just go to https://www.artic.edu/.  
P.S. I don’t know when someone invented that annoying sparkly glitter…but this postcard is still shedding it!


Yes…we’re still touring Chicago in the early 1900s.  What can I say, this is the postcard album that I picked for this post and it’s still all about leisure time!
This postcard that was mailed to Menomonee Falls Wisconsin in 1911 shows the “Baseball Grounds”.  A bit of research confirmed that this postcard shows West Side Park, the name of 2 different baseball parks that used to be in Chicago.  Both of them were home fields for the team we all know (and love) as the Chicago Cubs.  In this photo, the playing field is covered with fans… Given the date of the postcard, plus the visible stands and buildings, I believe that this is the second West Side Park.

The Cubs played on this field for almost a quarter-century but both West Side Parks hosted baseball championships.  This field was the home of the first 2 World Champion Cubs teams in 1907 and 1908.  In 1906, it was also the home of the only cross-town World Series in Major League Baseball history.

The original layout of the park could seat roughly 12,500 fans.  However, as was common at the time, fans were often permitted to stand along the outer perimeter of the playing field itself.  Early in the 1900s a small covered grandstand was added behind home plate.  Uncovered bleachers extended along both foul lines and into left field.  From 1906 through 1910, the Cubs won 4 National League pennants and 2 World Series championships…and then we waited another 108 years for another championship!

After the Cubs moved to Weeghman Park in 1916, (now Wrigley Field), West Side Park continued to host semipro and amateur baseball events for a number of years.  It even served as a setting for Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show.  This ballpark was torn down in 1920 and the property was sold to the University of Illinois.  It’s now occupied by the University of Illinois Medical Center.


Before the USA had automobiles and/or passable highways, the best way to travel the long distances between and around the Great Lakes was by ship.  From the mid-1800s until into the 1950s, a person could travel most of the lakes in comfort and even luxury.  A Chicago or Detroit businessman could board a ship in his hometown and take an overnight trip to spend the weekend in a cool northern cabin in northern Michigan or Wisconsin.  Then he could take another ship back to work after relaxing a bit…

The SS Theodore Roosevelt was one such passenger steamer.  This postcard, mailed in May of 1918, shows the ship passing through the State Street Bridge in Chicago.  The card, written by ‘Pearl and Fred’ stated that they arrived alright, that they were “going to a show tonight and a ball game tomorrow”.
This ship was built in Toledo Ohio in 1906 and, with one exception, operated on Lake Michigan for most of its useful life.  It was taken over by the U.S. Navy in April of 1918 for service as a troop transport in WWI.  As such, she transported troops back and forth across the English Channel between the United Kingdom and France.  She served in this role for about a year and then was sold to the Cleveland Steamship Company.

Based on the date of the postcard and her draft into government service, the card is somewhat older than the mailing date would imply.
 
In late 1919 or early 1920, the SS Theodore Roosevelt resumed her commercial career as a passenger ship, operating on Lake Erie this time.   In 1926, ownership changed again and she moved back to Lake Michigan.  The final portion of her career was based in Detroit Michigan.  She was sold for scrap in 1950.  

Its amazing to consider that prior to WWII, roughly fifty (50) cruise steamers sailed on the Great Lakes.  Most of these ships were large and luxurious, some having elegant staterooms with private baths…plus another 70 to 100 passenger cabins.


Now we’re off to Detroit, where, on May 1, 1905 at the annual meeting of the shareholders of the Detroit, Windsor and Belle Isle Ferry Company, it was recommended by the company president that a “new boat should be built”…”the new steamer to be a general purpose boat suitable for Bois Blanc, Belle Isle, excursions and to be a very powerful ice crusher and could be used on the Windsor ferry in case of very severe weather.”

This new ship was 164 feet long and 45 feet wide.  As a result of a public competition, which awarded $10 in gold and a season’s pass, the steamer was named “Britannia”.  This vessel entered service on July 4, 1906, with a trip to Bois Blanc Island, aka ‘Boblo’.  This card was mailed in August of 1909 to Mr. Carl Hanson in Fort Dodge Iowa from initials “S.W.”  He reported that he and his group were having a fine time and they were about to board the Britannia for ‘Boblo’.

Bois Blanc means ‘white woods’ in French.  The island was so named because of all its birch and beech trees.  Boblo is an English corruption of the French pronunciation of Bois Blanc.  In any case, the Britannia and several other vessels were in the business of transporting folks to the Boblo Island Amusement Park as well as another more staid park at Belle Isle on the US side.  The Boblo amusement park began operation in 1898 and remained in business until the fall of 1993.

Even though there was a bridge to Belle Isle, most people didn’t have an automobile in the early days so a boat ride up the Detroit River was a fine solution.  As roads improved and the bridge to Belle Isle was more accessible to the public and the size of the crowds headed to Boblo increased, larger boats were needed.  Britannia’s design as an all-purpose boat was a failure…too small for the Boblo crowd and too big for the dwindling ferry business to Belle Isle. 

Britannia was greatly altered and for a short time, 1924 to 1928, she was used for cross-river ferry service to Canada.  When she was replaced by a much larger vessel in 1928, she became a ‘spare boat’.  Then the Ambassador Bridge opened across the Detroit River in 1929, followed soon after by the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel in 1930.  So much for cross river ferry service…

Britannia was idle for several years.  Then she was converted to a tug.  Part of her superstructure, including the main cabin was taken ashore and used as part of a house in Wyandotte Michigan.  The severely modified vessel was used to tow log rafts on Lake Superior and then she was sold again in 1952.  Nothing is known about Britannia after that until she was scrapped at Duluth Minnesota in 1961.  A sad fate for a pleasure boat indeed…

Note: Boblo Island/Bois Blanc Island has an interesting history involving American Indians, Forts, an attempted revolution in Canada, the Underground Railroad and Viet Nam draft evaders… Check it out at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bois_Blanc_Island_(Ontario).


I thought that I’d end this post with a bucolic country scene.  This postcard depicting leisure time along Michigan’s Paw Paw River, was sent in July of 1906.  The sender in Waterville Michigan was “Rob” and Miss Inez Dobbins in Elgin Illinois was the recipient.  Rob assured her that he “was having a fine time”.  Keep in mind, back around the turn of the twentieth century, a postcard was the way to send a short text or ‘email’. 

The Paw Paw River is located in the southeast corner of Michigan’s Southern Peninsula close to the south end of Lake Michigan.  It only flows about 62 miles before it joins the St. Joseph River just before that River flows into Lake Michigan at Benton Harbor.  Native Americans named the river after the pawpaw fruit that grew abundantly along the river’s banks.

The Paw Paw River watershed is known as Michigan’s “Wine Country”.  The land near the river is ideal for vineyards and it’s also rich in biodiversity.  It includes wetlands, prairie fens, barrens and floodplain forests.  That was probably the charm or draw for visitors in the early 1900s.  Today, the Nature Conservancy is protecting the Paw Paw Prairie Fen.  Check it out at https://www.nature.org/en-us/get-involved/how-to-help/places-we-protect/paw-paw-prairie-fen-preserve/. 

I’ll end with a little information on the pawpaw.  It’s an understory tree found in well-drained, deep, fertile bottom-land and hilly upland habitat.  Pawpaw fruits are the largest edible fruit that is indigenous to the United States.  The fruit is sweet and custard-like, similar to banana, mango and pineapple.  They are commonly eaten raw but are also used to make ice cream and baked desserts.  

Just click on any of the postcards to enlarge them…

Thanks for stopping by for a visit!

Take Care, Big Daddy Dave