Author Archives: Lee Diamond

Our beautiful sanitary canal

River walk bridge into Eugene Field Park

River walk bridge into Eugene Field Park

River Park is located at the convergence of the Chicago North Shore Channel, the sanitary canal portion, and the Chicago River’s North Branch. It sits near the southern edge of the original development of the River Park District’s projects of the 1920s.  The overarching design was to combine the typical park design and features like sports fields, field houses, pools and playgrounds at six spots along trails that followed the river.  Part of the design was the creation of these trails and allowed for the separation of walking, playing, cycling and park activities from streets that bypassed the different parks.  This is achieved by a series of paths that pass under the bridges where busy streets like Foster, Bryn Mawr, and Peterson are completely avoided.

It serves as an early and exemplary vision of how to do it right.  The parks and paths leave the common dangers of auto traffic and offer the neighborhoods safer options for children and families and all users including park goers, sports activities, jogging, strolling, dog walking or cycling. The intelligent use of the sanitary canal as the way to get under the traffic creates this unique opportunity, and serves all users well, allowing true city respite in the neighborhoods within Lincoln Square, Albany Park and West Ridge, leading directly to the Skokie and Evanston portions to the north, where the familiar traffic returns from Peterson north to Green Bay Road at every major intersection.

For two brief miles before that, we get a glimpse of forward thinking civic design can yield, and it is beautiful.  For long stretches, there is nothing beyond what the river provides between parks, and the result is perfect.  We will begin our Tour of Lincoln Square at the largest of the original River Park District’s parks.  We will meet in front of the Fieldhouse at River Park at 5100 N Francisco this Saturday, at 11:00 AM.

Tour of Lincoln Square
River Park Fieldhouse at 5100 N Francisco in Chicago
Saturday December 6, 2014 at 11:00 AM

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Burried in Uptown

Graceland Cemetery

Graceland Cemetery

Uptown is a very good place to go to get buried.  Many have.  The area is home to two separate cemeteries, Graceland and St. Boniface.  Graceland is right across the street from Wunder’s Cemetery to the south in Lakeview and the Andersonville neighborhood which crosses from Uptown north into Edgewater, borders on a fourth cemetery, Rosehill.  If you were looking to consolidate your search for interment while keeping your options open, you could certainly do worse than Uptown.

Cemeteries usually do not allow bikes on their grounds, so we only get to explore the gates of most area cemeteries on our tours, or any outlier buildings that are visible from the street.  Not everything can be part of the tours, which is perfectly fine.  We don’t go in buildings and we don’t enter cemeteries and as a general rule, these are exterior-only tours on bicycles.  Still, cemeteries are an essential link to our city’s history and a focus of mine on the research side of the tours so during my planing, I will just walk the grounds of the cemeteries in the area.

Graceland Cemetery is particularly interesting and is one of the Victorian era cemeteries in Chicago to house so many noteworthy individuals in Chicago’s past, that reading the names of those buried on its grounds is a roll call of the city’s founders, builders, leaders, legends, scoundrels.  Amongst those interred at Graceland are one of the earliest city settlers, Dexter Graves. Alan Pinkerton, the famous lawman and founder of the Pinkerton Detective Agency is buried here, along with one of his employees, Kate Warne, the first female detective in the US. Piano maker William Kimball, US Supreme Court Chief Justice Melville Fuller, boxing champions Bob Fitzsimmons and Jack Johnson, Chicago Mayors Joseph Medill, Fred Busse, Carter Harrisons Sr. and Jr., inventor and railway industrialist George Pullman, Charles Dickens’ brother Augustus and many other famous citizenry dot the grounds. The names are like a listing of Chicago streets and famous brands….Armour, Lawson, McCormick, Kinzie, Clark, Goodman, Honore, Wacker, Field, Palmer…

Graceland is also commonly referred to as “The Cemetery of Architects” with permanent residents that include Daniel Burnham, Louis Sullivan, Howard Van Doren Shaw, Marion Mahoney Griffin, William Le Baron Jenny, William Holabird, Henry Bacon, Bruce Goff, Dwight Perkins, John Root, David Adler and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe as well as noted structural engineer Fazlur Khan and architectural photographer and preservationist Richard Nickel.

Exploring the markers and tombs of Graceland is a peaceful repose.  Lock up your bike, and take a visit to stroll the grounds of Graceland and you will be rewarded with a serene decampment in an area otherwise overwhelmed with bustle, just north of the chaos that Wrigley wrought. Graceland takes over the intersection of Irving and Clark with imposing and somber beauty.  It’s walled exterior and entrance do nothing to reveal its inner calm and its serene order, far more impacting and impressive than its dour boundaries suggest.  It is an area poised to make you want to remember and to be at peace and its effects are tranquil, calming.  It is an area I recommend you make time to explore on your own, offering us all a unique link to Chicago’s history.

This Saturday, November 8 at 11:00 I will be at the fieldhouse at Chase Park at 4701 N Ashland for the Tour of Uptown.  While we won’t get to explore the grounds of Graceland directly, we will visit its gates and learn its history and riders will get to check out works by architectural icons like Dwight Perkins, Rapp and Rapp, Henry J. Schlack, Barry Byrne, George Maher, Walter Ahlschlager, Herm V. Von Holst, Bruce Goff, Eben E. Roberts, Vernon Spencer Watson and Thomas Eddy Tallmadge. We’ll learn about the grand historic districts of Uptown, the split from Edgewater, Uptown’s neighbor to the north and we will visit numerous Chicago and National Landmarks, all while enjoying the crisp November weekend on our bikes. I hope you can join us.

Tour of Uptown
Saturday November 8, 2014 at 11:00 AM
Chase Park – 4701 N Ashland in Chicago

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