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Tag: roosevelt

  • Today in Chicago History: Bears introduce new coach Ralph Jones

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    Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Dec. 27, according to the Tribune’s archives.

    Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.

    Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

    • High temperature: 61 degrees (2008)
    • Low temperature: Minus 10 degrees (1950)
    • Precipitation: 1.74 inches (2008)
    • Snowfall: 10.1 inches (1894)

    1929: The Chicago Bears introduced Ralph Jones, of Lake Forest Academy, as their coach.

    From George Halas to Ben Johnson: What was said about every Chicago Bears coach when they were hired

    “We believe our hope for development of a winning team would be increased if we could turn the squad over to a professional coach,” Bears co-owner George Halas said. “Neither Ed (Sternaman) nor I had time to coach the Bears. Last season, the worst since we entered professional football with the old Staleys, the coaching responsibility was divided between us and Ralph Scott. As a result our offense was ragged and by midseason the team had lost its morale.”

    Jones had a 24-10-7 (.706) record during the 1930-32 seasons.

    Soldiers carry Sewell Avery, chairman of the board of Montgomery Ward & Co., out of the building on April 27, 1944, after he was removed from his own office by the army on instructions of Atty. Gen. Biddle. Avery had defied the department of commerce when it tried to take over the huge plant. (Fred Giese/Chicago Tribune)

    1944: Eight months after Sewell Avery, chairman of Montgomery Ward & Co., refused to renew a union contract on orders of the War Labor Board — and the feds moved in, literally, and moved Avery out — President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered another seizure of the company.

    The National Guard has been activated to Chicago 18 times from 1877-2021. Here’s a breakdown.

    The company fought the government takeover, saying its goods were not related to the war effort, but it lost its battle in the courts.

    Avery didn’t get his company back till 1945. Then, fearing a postwar depression, he refused to expand along with his competitors, and Wards hopelessly lost ground.

    One survivor of a North Central Airlines plane that crashed into a hangar and exploded at O'Hare International Airport on Dec. 27, 1968, told the Tribune how he escaped from the aircraft. "I popped open the emergency window, said 'Let's get out of here,' and jumped,'" said U.S. Air Force Sgt. Carl Tessmer. (Chicago Tribune)
    One survivor of a North Central Airlines plane that crashed into a hangar and exploded at O’Hare International Airport on Dec. 27, 1968, told the Tribune how he escaped from the aircraft. “I popped open the emergency window, said ‘Let’s get out of here,’ and jumped,’” said U.S. Air Force Sgt. Carl Tessmer. (Chicago Tribune)

    1968: Buffeted by wingtip turbulence from a jet that had just taken off, a North Central Airlines Convair 580 lost control while taking off and hit a hangar at O’Hare. Twenty-eight died and 27 others were injured, including several people on the ground.

    Vintage Chicago Tribune: Plane crashes that stunned our city

    This crash and others prompted the Federal Aviation Administration to require a greater interval between jet aircraft on takeoff and landing.

    Want more vintage Chicago?

    Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago’s past.

    Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather at krumore@chicagotribune.com and mmather@chicagotribune.com

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    Kori Rumore

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  • Landmarks: Story of Roosevelt’s globe highlights revived Dixie Highway tour

    Landmarks: Story of Roosevelt’s globe highlights revived Dixie Highway tour

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    For a little while, there was a big secret in Chicago Heights. Washington bigwigs were visiting. Mysterious shipments of valuable resources would arrive.

    Something important was happening on the city’s East Side at a time when most of the world’s attention was focused on armed conflict that had engulfed the globe.

    The secret turned out to be a gift for the president being put together in a workshop at 12th Street and McKinley Avenue, where the Weber Costello Company long had manufactured school supplies such as blackboards, erasers, maps and globes.

    The firm’s top mapmakers, including chief cartographer B.E. Brown, of Steger, and Chicago Heights resident Arthur Wallmeyer, head of lithography, were recruited for the effort. They oversaw “nine months of secret and sometimes feverish activity,” according to an account published a few years later, on display at Bloom Township High School library in Chicago Heights.

    “The War Department placed the full resources of the government at their disposal,” including supplying “secret geographical information” from the Office of Strategic Services. “Scarce materials needed in the plate making department were rushed by plane from all parts of the country,” the account states.

    By the time it was finished, they had assembled a 50-inch globe that was “unique in mapmaking history.” Weber Costello described it as “the largest ever manufactured,” with a caveat.

    “Actually, larger spheres have been made, but since they were planned for display rather than the shaping of world decisions, their maps have been drawn on the surface of the finished ball and they do not present the hairline accuracy of the 50-inch map,” the company stated in a promotional booklet.

    Chicago Heights figures prominently on a 50-inch globe made in the city by Weber Costello, one of several that were sent to Allied leaders during World War II. (Paul Eisenberg/Daily Southtown)

    The item originally planned as a Christmas present for President Franklin Roosevelt became part of the war effort. Identical copies were made for British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, the U.S. War Department and other agencies. Midcentury newspaper accounts indicate Roosevelt’s model accompanied the president to a summit in Casablanca, Morocco, where world leaders plotted to drive their German and Italian enemies from North Africa.

    Weber Costello made several of the 50-inch globes during the war and a few more by commission into the 1950s, marketed as The President Globe. In an advertising pamphlet from the ‘40s, the company printed an endorsement from Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall, who had received the third one.

    “The globe and its companion will serve a high purpose in our war effort, and I thank you again on behalf of the War Department as well as personally for your tireless work and splendid cooperation in the face of many difficulties,” Marshall wrote.

    Marshall’s globe is on display at the American Geographical Society Library at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Roosevelt’s globe, which he initially situated prominently behind his Oval Office desk, is at his presidential library and museum in New York. Churchill’s globe is at his Chartwell estate museum in Kent, England.

    A 50-inch globe created by Weber Costello Co. in Chicago Heights, along with the U.S. War Department, is displayed at Bloom High School in Chicago Heights. (Paul Eisenberg/Daily Southtown)
    A 50-inch globe created by Weber Costello Co. in Chicago Heights, along with the U.S. War Department, is displayed at Bloom High School in Chicago Heights. (Paul Eisenberg/Daily Southtown)

    Another of the 50-inch globes that had such a prominent role in World War II history was proudly housed at the Weber Costello headquarters.

    Decades passed. Gradually the new-globe sheen faded and its WWII provenance became old hat. By 1964, Weber Costello’s globe had been loaned to Kline’s Department Store in Chicago Heights, which used it to promote its annual August sale of sheets, according to a Star Newspapers story from that year.

    Not long after that, Weber Costello went out of business and the globe was donated to Bloom High School. By then, it had seen better days. In the early 1970s, the school threw it out, according to a 1990s newspaper story, but a social studies teacher retrieved it and placed it in his classroom. When that teacher retired, someone proposed splitting the cherry wood globe at the equator and turning it into two large planters.

    Instead, a group of teachers undertook a public fundraising effort to restore the globe. Donations poured in from alumni, history buffs and community members. The School Board chipped in the remainder, and when word got out, the Chicago History Museum requested the artifact on temporary loan for a Chicago in Wartime exhibit marking the 50th anniversary of World War II in 1992. By the time it returned to Bloom, a special niche had been carved for the historic globe in the school’s library.

    Bloom High School in Chicago Heights May 10, 2024. The first high school in Illinois to be placed on the National Register of Historic Places will be a stop on the upcoming Day on the Dixie tour. (Paul Eisenberg/Daily Southtown)
    Bloom High School in Chicago Heights May 10, 2024. The first high school in Illinois to be placed on the National Register of Historic Places will be a stop on the upcoming Day on the Dixie tour. (Paul Eisenberg/Daily Southtown)

    Tim Jacko, the school’s librarian, said it’s a great addition to the first high school in Illinois to be added to the National Register of Historic Places. Built in Art Deco style amid the Great Depression, the school also is filled with art from famous creators, some dating to the institution’s old building in the 1910s.

    For many students, though, it’s just part of the backdrop of regular high school life.

    “It’s kind of just there, and students are like, yeah, it’s the globe,” Jacko said.

    Others, who might be more enthusiastic about its history and role in worldwide events, don’t get much of a chance to see this artifact.

    “It’s a rarity that we have visitors come in and look at the globe, because we are a school,” Jacko said. “It’s not like people can come in off the street and take a look at it.”

    But one of those opportunities is coming up June 22, thanks to a group of car enthusiasts who will once again drive the nearby Dixie Highway.

    The Crete-based A’s R Us Model A Car Club revived the annual June event formerly known as Drivin’ the Dixie last year, though it was a last-minute effort.

    Members of the A's R Us Model A Ford club erect new storyboard signs along the Dixie Highway in 2015, the 100th anniversary of the historic highway. (Phil Serviss)
    Members of the A’s R Us Model A Ford club erect new storyboard signs along the Dixie Highway in 2015, the 100th anniversary of the historic highway. (Phil Serviss)

    Started as the Dixie Dash in 2002 as a 200-mile timed distance event from Blue Island to Danville along the historic named road, the car caravan transitioned the following year into a more relaxed touring format taking motorists from Blue Island to Momence with stops highlighting the rich history of the south suburbs.

    It also became a fundraiser for efforts to promote the Dixie Highway as a destination in its own right, much like a similar national project along Lincoln Highway.

    “We made it to the 100th anniversary of Dixie Highway in 2015, and that’s when we put up the story boards and signage that runs from Blue Island All the way down to Danville,” said Phillip Serviss, of Beecher, who’s coordinating the event. “By 2018, time moved on for a lot of people. People were tired and we turned it over to the Blue Island Historical Society as a keeper of the drive kind of thing.”

    Drivin’ the Dixie returned for 2019 going from Momence to Blue Island, and then “the pandemic hit and destroyed lots of things,” Serviss said.

    The break reenergized interest among the classic car crowd, “so we revived it last year and had about 60-65 cars,” he said. It was sort of a last-minute effort, without much publicity, but now “we have another year under our belt and we’ve refined the whole thing.”

    Drivers, who can be in any sort of vehicle, will start in Markham, which “has really stepped up,” Serviss said, with breakfast at the Markham Roller Rink. And the route will extend south past Momence “along the original Dixie Highway” — now farm roads — to St. Anne, where a reception event is planned with food and live music. Details about participating are at as-r-us.com/.

    Just as in previous incarnations, Day Along the Dixie will feature stops highlighting points of interest, including a free ice cream cone in Homewood at one of the original Dairy Queen shops, and a history presentation by South Cook Explore map compiler and local history author Kevin Barron at Thornton Distillery, the oldest standing brewery in Illinois.

    In Crete, a display will highlight the village’s plethora of Sears kit homes, including one street with a concentration of “six or seven of them.”

    “If you didn’t know Sears had kit homes, you will after June 22,” Serviss said.

    A presentation in the village of Grant Park will showcase how the grain elevator there works, and “the complexity of maintaining grain so that it doesn’t rot.”

    Along with Bloom, historic buildings such as the Farm Museum in Momence, the Thornton Historical Society and the old Depot in Beecher will be open.

    Phil Serviss, left, and John Maracic, members of the A's-R-Us Model A Ford club based in Crete, erect a new Dixie Highway sign in April along the route of the historic road in Crete. June's Day on the Dixie tour will raise money for maintenance and more signs along the route, Serviss said. (Phil Serviss)
    Phil Serviss, left, and John Maracic, members of the A’s-R-Us Model A Ford club based in Crete, erect a new Dixie Highway sign in April along the route of the historic road in Crete. June’s Day on the Dixie tour will raise money for maintenance and more signs along the route, Serviss said. (Phil Serviss)

    As in the past, the event is a fundraiser for maintenance and new signs along the Dixie Highway, a cause dear to Serviss.

    “I was born in Harvey, raised in Homewood, when I got married I ended up in Glenwood and I’m back in Beecher now, so I’ve never left Dixie Highway,” he said. “It was the first north-south highway in the country, but it’s kind of a forgotten highway. We’re trying to not forget it.”

    And it offers a chance to ensure other highlights of suburban history aren’t overlooked either, such as the Weber Costello globe tucked away in a corner of Bloom’s library.

    “To see something like this, something that Churchill and Roosevelt used to plan the war, it’s kind of cool,” Jacko said. “Not to mention it has this link to Chicago Heights history. You get to see how this town contributed to the war. It’s a good experience.”

    Landmarks is a weekly column by Paul Eisenberg exploring the people, places and things that have left an indelible mark on the Southland. He can be reached at peisenberg@tribpub.com.

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    Paul Eisenberg

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  • Priciest home sales in Roosevelt | Long Island Business News

    Priciest home sales in Roosevelt | Long Island Business News

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    Priciest home sales in Setauket

    The three highest-priced home sales in Setauket last month ranged from $800,000 to $1.835 million. 

    December 1, 2023

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    David Winzelberg

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