{"id":6930,"date":"2016-03-09T09:56:50","date_gmt":"2016-03-09T15:56:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/maxwellhalsted.publish.uic.edu\/?page_id=6930"},"modified":"2020-11-27T13:53:34","modified_gmt":"2020-11-27T19:53:34","slug":"chicago-light-beautiful-domestic-order","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/home\/chicago-light-beautiful-domestic-order\/","title":{"rendered":"CHICAGO ENLIGHTENED CITY BEAUTIFUL"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1>CHICAGO ENLIGHTENED, A &#8220;WELL-REGULATED CIVILIZATION&#8221;<\/h1>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/2912.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone wp-image-13588\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/2912-300x228.jpg\" width=\"500\" height=\"381\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/2912-300x228.jpg 300w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/2912.jpg 738w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 500px) 100vw, 500px\" \/><\/a><br \/>\nPromoted by city planners and architects, The City Beautiful Movement took off in the 1890s and early 1900s. \u00a0Architect Daniel Burnham in Chicago who designed the 1893 \u201cWhite City\u201d and later the \u201cPlan for Chicago\u201d was closely \u00a0identified with the movement. The philosophy directed practitioners to redraw the map of rapidly growing cities by designing an aesthetic of beauty drawn from neo-classical conventions. Proposing to eliminate \u201cthe general smudge in which we work,\u201d \u00a0the movement emphasized an enlightened order and the aesthetics of harmony to rid cities of pervasive urban ugliness.<\/p>\n<p>Beauty in the urban designer\u2019s aesthetic came alive in symmetrical forms pleasing to the eye, agreeable to the senses, and monumentally grand. With a presentation of colorful drawings, the City Beautiful appeared in scrupulously landscaped parks and gardens, in integrated transportation grids synchronized with broad green-belt boulevards, in picturesque neo-classical buildings, and in stately strategically located museum repositories of \u201ccivilization.\u201d \u00a0No poverty was visible.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/08\/886-THE-BRIDGE-A-FAILURE-Puck-illus-749x1024.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/08\/886-THE-BRIDGE-A-FAILURE-Puck-illus-749x1024.jpg\" width=\"478\" height=\"653\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Reformers were viscerally disgusted by wretched and foul conditions. Private lives in the modern industrial and segregated city were swamped by dirt and garbage in the streets, alleys, and narrow passageways of slum tenements.\u00a0Influencing how citizens would think about cities in the future, The City Beautiful Movement cast itself as an engagement in participatory politics. Exposure to beauty in the built-environment would liberate urban citizens for democracy.<\/p>\n<p>Beyond a pure architect\u2019s aesthetic in picturesque illustrations, beauty in the new city assumed the superior teachings of an educator\u2019s morality. The City Beautiful would uplift the masses out of the darkness, poverty, crime, and chaos characterized by Chicago\u2019s West Side slum. \u00a0It would raise citizens to the the level of dignity associated with engagement in shared civic beauty and public service. \u00a0bjb<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/900-SITE-SMALL-PARK-IN-GHETTO-GRASS-FLOWERS-1024x845.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/900-SITE-SMALL-PARK-IN-GHETTO-GRASS-FLOWERS-1024x845.jpg\" width=\"523\" height=\"431\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<h3>INTRODUCTION<\/h3>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/1dch2zcez48o7avprv5eekduehnnxyrr\">An Idealized City by Olivia Manzano<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h3>PHOTO GALLERY<\/h3>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/kitnbte7lg6ehza5klrefjqkz9ebxt7g\">City Parks and Playgrounds<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/n3jkoov4uaycp0g57aaibehebnqygffo\">City Beautiful-Chicago Monuments<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h3>CITY BEAUTIFUL: WEST SIDE (1901-1913)<\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/3871.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/3871.jpg\" width=\"349\" height=\"279\" \/><\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/0359.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/0359.jpg\" width=\"302\" height=\"272\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Dream, delusional, fanciful, impractical, staggering were among the objections to Daniel Burnham\u2019s architect drawings centering the city on the lakefront with a grand boulevard from Grant Park to Halsted Street, end of the line.<\/p>\n<p>Not all local residents bought into the City Beautiful restructuring plans to move the train terminals eliminating the West Side \u201cportal\u201d to the city which included the ghetto as a busy and active business district at Maxwell Street and Halsted.<\/p>\n<p>Among the responses: \u201cWhy should the people be compelled to accept [these plans] just to please a few real estate gamblers and some lovers of the arts and the classics.\u201d \u00a0Facetious and satirical: \u201cAs I saw the beautiful pictures of the city beautiful we will have fountains in west Madison Street, with poets and poetesses walking along Clinton, and the simple-minded residents of the west side, after work is done, will take their <em>gondolas<\/em> and row on the limpid bosom of the Chicago river, idly strumming guitars.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Except along the beautified lakefront, Michigan Avenue, Lake Shore Drive, and pockets of gentrification&#8211;a &#8220;city practical&#8221; with all its blemishes, warts, and \u201calien\u201d peoples indeed prevailed for the remainder of the century, expanding outward\u00a0into neighborhoods west, north, and south. \u00a0bjb<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/5o1pskqmzf1eoaj9ynuiqz1pe9c5r8ps\">Begin to Judge Flower Gardens (1901)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/vfiit4m4l6tf3gafe1y4gzuop4sybifo\">Suggests West Side Plaza (1908)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/t06837o2vsk0656zgs7ikulh4rf3kx6k\">Utility Opposes &#8216;City Beauty&#8217; (1908)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/nfu51o77dbse38pqvhsdofrnj4cwrf50\">A City Beautiful or A City Practical-Which Shall It Be? (1910)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/k1ii5gfrnqxdc7yd2t61y3g9uiwjb1ic\">Board Boosting City Beautiful (1911)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/jhwu4d92eqkxgpl6v4ioveamvqq3nzj7\">Sample Gardens in Public Parks For City Farmer (1913)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/kc8vyf1z2l8bjwmt751mjiz1g4mjfvcq\">Fable and Dream (1913)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/home\/maxwell-st-architecture\/\">See <em>Maxwell Street Architecture Tour<\/em><\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/884-IN-A-COSMOPOLITAN-CITY-Puck-illus-715x1024.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/884-IN-A-COSMOPOLITAN-CITY-Puck-illus-715x1024.jpg\" width=\"394\" height=\"564\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<h3><\/h3>\n<h3>CITY BEAUTIFUL (1900-1913)<\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/3835.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/3835.jpg\" width=\"331\" height=\"266\" \/><\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/3836.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/3836.jpg\" width=\"327\" height=\"272\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Animating the City Beautiful Movement, Ebenezer Howard in 1902 published a utopian vision, <em>Garden Cities of To-morrow<\/em>. The inspired tract graphically laid out and illustrated the aspirations of a new civilization, plotted to eliminate friction between capital and labor, countryside and town. The city, with affordable rents and independently managed by the residents themselves, was designed for a domesticated beauty harmonizing &#8220;town&#8221; with spaces free of slums, overcrowding, poverty, toxic air and infectious diseases within belts of natural green-belt environment with fresh air, beauty, and health.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/Diagram_No.3_Howard_Ebenezer_To-morrow.-1024x699.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/Diagram_No.3_Howard_Ebenezer_To-morrow.-1024x699.jpg\" width=\"442\" height=\"302\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>No beneficiary of privilege or nobility, Howard was the son of a baker and served out his time as a modest clerk in a long career as a British civil servant. However, the original impression for his visionary green cities tracked back to the U.S. and specifically Chicago where he lived in the 1870s. He had first migrated to Nebraska in the post Civil War year of 1871 where he failed as a farmer, then resettled in Chicago working as a stenographer and reporter for the courts and newspapers before returning to Britain in the later 1870s.<\/p>\n<p>During these seminal years of personal formation in the U.S. Howard acquired an admiration for American poets Walt Whitman and Ralph Waldo Emerson. \u00a0He was infected by their passion for minimizing the alienation of human life and\u00a0improving the quality of\u00a0material and spiritual society through the essential truths of nature. Subsequently Edward Bellamy and Henry George, best selling free-thinking American visionaries and critics of capitalism\u2019s material greed, shaped Howard\u2019s \u201csuburban\u201d model for a city plotted to integrate function and beauty.<\/p>\n<p>In \u201cto-morrow\u2019s\u201d twentieth century from the perspective of 1902, planned cities harmonizing landscape beauty and practicality in residential living assured the future of enlightened living. \u00a0bjb<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/902-Garden_Cities_of_To_morrow-Howard-22-656x1024.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/902-Garden_Cities_of_To_morrow-Howard-22-656x1024.jpg\" width=\"377\" height=\"588\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/m4cogp16j4jfg86871lkhjbmdql563d8\">Garden City of To-Morrow by Ebenezer Howard (1902)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/hbzfc5lsanz98dsn1uafzsco5ua8ic1v\">Parks, Boulevards, and Their Influences (1900)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/z84hl95omiodj2ghbpzxj7txq4ofzyun\">To Make a City Beautiful, Daniel Burnham (1902)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/0vd68cobobfj1esfw8hmlqkzdcs2211w\">Plans For a City Beautiful; Chicago Not Last in the Race (1907)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/gb10tn8l4p67rnq1uz6lzh9xkinj9yzy\">Plan For City Beautiful (1908)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/6p8j1bev5uvqexi5egzb3cew4pag2pw8\">Gardens in Windows, on Porches, in Dooryards&#8230;Chicago the Real City Beautiful (1909)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/94vgxcjhs4ci0291q82petzzuxpcsgxp\">Nature Experts in Demand&#8230;City Beautiful (1909)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/a1va9vb9irkdy86wz4g4al0jobv7i96x\">The Call of The New City (1913)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h3>HOUSE BEAUTIFUL (1878-1920)<\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2015\/04\/1489.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2015\/04\/1489.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"327\" height=\"265\" \/><\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2015\/04\/0805.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2015\/04\/0805.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"313\" height=\"264\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Furnishing the proper home and behaving correctly in the House Beautiful became a popular theme in a proliferating number of nineteenth-century American advice books, manuals, and magazines antedating the City Beautiful movement.<\/p>\n<p>From 1844 to 1903 an evangelical magazine, <em>The House Beautiful<\/em>, preached that the home was a spiritual temple. Material representations of artistic beauty were godly. In <em>The American Woman\u2019s Home<\/em> (1869), Catherine Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe dedicated a chapter to beautiful and tasteful furnishings in parlors\u2013the family room&#8211;as the vessel for wholesome Christian soulful living. Moral and spiritual truth resided in good taste displayed by families aspiring to refinement and enlightened respectability in America.<\/p>\n<p>Clarence Cook\u2019s articles in <em>Scribner\u2019s\u00a0Monthly<\/em>\u00a0in 1877 on home furnishings, collected in<em> The House Beautiful<\/em> (1878), served as a standard reference work for an expanding well-to-do middle class. Popular magazines with a modern message and lavish advertising for home products now appeared: <em>Ladies Home Journal<\/em> (1883) reaching one million subscribers in 1903;<em> Good Housekeeping<\/em> (1885) with a circulation of 300,000 in 1911.<\/p>\n<p>In contrast to the \u201cugliness\u201d outside on Halsted Street, multiple art and craft objects adorned the rooms, mantles, and walls inside Hull-House. The Arts and Crafts Movement in Chicago was founded at Hull-House in 1897 and supported traditional craft skills practiced by diverse ethnic nationalities. Believing that industrial capitalism degraded the life-giving spirit of human endeavor, advocates promoted the interaction of art and labor embodied in moral regeneration through craftsmanship.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/ARTS-CRAFTS-1.jpeg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/ARTS-CRAFTS-1.jpeg\" width=\"509\" height=\"375\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Hull-House both provided training and displayed the handicraft arts of weaving, ceramics, book-binding, and wood working. \u00a0Frank Lloyd Wright delivered his landmark &#8220;The Art and Craft of the Machine&#8221; to the Chicago Arts and Crafts Society at Hull-House in 1901. \u00a0Wright cited leading spokespersons, William Morris and John Ruskin, who worked to elevate the aesthetic tastes of industrial workers by means of \u00a0contemporary \u00a0craft designs.\u00a0 He observed in conclusion that &#8220;the essence of this thing we call the Machine &#8230; is no \u00a0more \u00a0or \u00a0less \u00a0than \u00a0the \u00a0principle \u00a0of \u00a0organic \u00a0growth \u00a0working \u00a0irresistibly \u00a0the \u00a0Will \u00a0of \u00a0Life \u00a0through \u00a0the \u00a0medium \u00a0of Man.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>At Hull-House enveloped by the ugliness outside on Halsted Street, Jane Addams\u00a0associated\u00a0the aesthetics of the beautiful with \u201cthe fittings of a well-ordered life and the surroundings which are suggestive of a participation in the best of the past.\u201d Children needed to be exposed to the &#8220;best&#8221; a higher civilization offered. \u201cA child cannot be brought up in the midst of what is ugly and dirty and grimy and be the best kind of child. It is impossible. Aesthetics lie close to education and morality.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Among the educated reformers sheltered in cloistered spaces, Jane Addams condemned the \u201cugliness\u201d of neighborhood streets as a primary cause of disorderly habits and moral retardation in West Side children. From her perspective, immigrant girls on the street competed by showing off their garish and \u201cugly department store hats.\u201d Rowdy boys lived out their fantasies of illicit adventure, misbehaving on the streets after imbibing the interminable wacky action in cheap storefront movie theaters.<\/p>\n<p>Reformers presumed that affordable publications with &#8220;how-to&#8221; tips and recipes for beautification of the home for working classes of &#8220;moderate incomes&#8221; would succeed in elevating moral behavior. \u00a0bjb<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/01r849d1bnrekbrg6l256autdqaz15cf\">The House Beautiful by Clarence Cook (1878)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/htq9jgivgo3dtemmby338zmbcmudw10o\">House Beautiful: Words For the Homemaker of Limited Means (1897)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/livu4u5ktyhu61r4izashkr2aufkvowq\">House Ornamental: The Brick Beautiful (1903)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/81iwn4a296q3mve70oi5z82onma4kxik\">House Ornamental: The Handmade Kitchen Beautiful (1903)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/yfoivprg929f1v7id2exwaxr1y6272xb\">Hull-House Domestic Interiors: Gallery<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h3>GARDENING IN CHICAGO, THE GARDEN CITY (1903-1910)<\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/0398.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/0398.jpg\" width=\"347\" height=\"270\" \/><\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/0351.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"details-image alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/02\/0351.jpg\" width=\"322\" height=\"288\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In the 1830s,\u00a0Chicago&#8211;a swampy outpost burdened by clay soil, severe winters and strong winds&#8211;began gratuitously to adopt the name &#8220;garden city.&#8221; In fact, an abundance of regional prairie plants and seeds together with local truck farmers delivering their products to the city\u2019s west-side wholesale markets did make for a central produce hub of national importance. \u00a0In addition, backyard and front yard gardeners working to decorate their local street residences; broad green-belt boulevards with lush vegetation planted in the median; even immigrants committed to indoor nurseries in tenements&#8211;all nourished the legacy of an urban botanic verdant place. Designed by landscape architects Frederick Law Olmsted, Jens Jensen, and O.C. Simonds, gardens and parks scattered within the city surrounded by a belt of forest preserves\u2013all exalted Chicago\u2019s reputation for enlightened splendor and beauty. \u00a0bjb<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/iya4guuke32qyi1cj5b6ypiioc0kkt4x\">Gardening Mania Is Much Like Love (1903)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/0o96ovmktktb4m29x1txpr7imxa269mj\">Chicago Becomes City of Gardens, an Old Nickname (1904)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/x0tjjyoyfnxevahcgf6iln6i6ijytoj5\">Chicago as Farming Center Has 64,000 Acres Vacant (1906)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/zl3ddwyfnly5ctv477q8ixg3j9skrs91\">Gardening in Chicago (1908)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/d3q88c920hkvnubkj2031hfbhllkthi8\">Porch Gardens Spots of Beauty&#8230;Form Oases in Crowded Districts (1908)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/hfma1q9szxtq5hptkeosvqlb421u7ay0\">Garden Scenes in the Actual Life Of Chicago, Transforming Vacant Lots into Veritable Oases (1909)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/fk7z15iw3zrkds76igfdea0smdnawugh\">Gardening in The Garden City (1910)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/udp9hg98837z23n8red722s27r1sel04\">Want To Keep Husband Home, Put Him To Gardening, He&#8217;ll be Too Tired to Go Out at Night (1910)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/House-Beautiful-1920-1024x975.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2017\/07\/House-Beautiful-1920-1024x975.jpg\" width=\"557\" height=\"531\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<h3>PLAN OF CHICAGO by DANIEL BURNHAM<\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago03.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone wp-image-13420\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago03-225x300.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"399\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago03-225x300.jpg 225w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago03-768x1023.jpg 768w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago03-769x1024.jpg 769w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago03-1000x1332.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago03.jpg 1538w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago2.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone wp-image-13419\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago2-225x300.jpg\" width=\"300\" height=\"399\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago2-225x300.jpg 225w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago2-768x1023.jpg 768w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago2-769x1024.jpg 769w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago2-1000x1332.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/PlanofChicago2.jpg 1538w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Whether immigrants or emigrants, nearly all Chicagoans in the massively growing metropolis came from somewhere else. With no roots in the city and socially and culturally fragmented , the majority of the population as a practical matter pursued personal or private interests: finding a job, making and accumulating money, marrying upward, speculating and investing in goods and property, planning a move elsewhere under better circumstances. In contrast, the pursuit of quality of living itself and good works were stated priorities more exclusively limited to well-to-do classes along the lakeshore and in the suburbs.<\/p>\n<p>Necessarily focused on their private concerns and the provisional circumstances of their daily existence, the majority of Chicagoans as a matter of course acquiesced to the insult of filthy air from coal furnaces, water pollution, unpaved and broken streets with transportation gridlock across railway corridors, overcrowding and congestion. Add to the list of afflictions: serious hazards to health, outbursts of class, ethnic, and racial hatred, and the frequent event of labor violence.<\/p>\n<p>To transcend the rough city with its sharp edges, the architect planner Daniel Burnham had a better idea. As he put it, \u201cmake no small plans.\u201d Could this new megaton city of nearly two million work for the betterment of all, could it benefit by becoming \u201cwell ordered\u201d embracing at once entrepreneurial interests, public works, and individual needs? \u00a0Burnham\u2019s futurist response was strenuously in the affirmative.. His vehicle was a comprehensive progressive planning document,\u00a0wedding conventions of the classical past to promises of a designer\u2019s prospective model.<\/p>\n<p>In 1893 Burnham successfully oversaw the design and building of the World\u2019s Columbian Exhibition on the south lakefront, popularized as \u201cThe Great White City.\u201d Plaster facades of neo-classical buildings in Beaux-Arts ornamental style, Japanese gardens and Venetian waterways, a fairground (the original Ferris Wheel), and green-belt boulevards\u2013the city of the future worked in practice as an integrated whole within the limited confines of Jackson Park. \u00a0Astute planning and market savvy made the Exhibition \u00a0a financial success.<\/p>\n<p>In 1909 \u201cThe Plan for Chicago\u201d Burnham laid out on paper the first comprehensive program with controlled growth for the future of a \u201cCity Beautiful.\u201d He centered the city on the lakefront\u00a0and river, with every citizen within walking distance of a park. Chicago would be \u201cThe Paris of the Prairie\u201d with boulevards radiating from a domed municipal palace. The effort was noble. \u00a0However, beyond the sculpted \u00a0lakefront harbor areas, manicured parks, and statuesque museums it remained on paper, testimony to one architect-planner&#8217;s enlightened progressive vision in Chicago. \u00a0bjb<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/powot7sxac8u6qy092cj51p2dmal1m0y\">Plan Of Chicago (1909)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/9b4kuv76wi780wgtj1gbmbh75t0d9scm\">Plan Of Chicago by Daniel Burnham<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h3>CITY PLANNING (1909-1913)<\/h3>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1912.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-13575\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1912-300x247.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"247\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1912-300x247.jpg 300w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1912-768x632.jpg 768w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1912-1024x843.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1912-1000x823.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1912.jpg 1812w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1913.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone wp-image-13576\" src=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1913-300x213.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"332\" height=\"236\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1913-300x213.jpg 300w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1913-768x546.jpg 768w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1913-1024x727.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1913-1000x710.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/files\/2016\/03\/CITY-PLANNING-1913.jpg 1858w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 332px) 100vw, 332px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>With the rapid growth of Chicago expanding beyond the center grid; with the increasing dominance of money-driven private business interests; with the density of working-class poverty concentrated in inner-city housing&#8211;an enlightened &#8220;city better\u201d became a model aspired to by landscape architects, civil engineers, geographers and public administrators.<\/p>\n<p>Intervention in the built environment became a dominant concern for a new generation of liberal designers and planners. The professional mission was to reverse the blighted consequences of raw sewage on filthy streets, epidemic diseases in crowded tenements, deteriorating health among the working poor, congested transportation routes to city markets, and chaotic neighborhood sprawl.<\/p>\n<p>Baron Georges-Eugene Haussmann\u2019s redesign of the capital city of Paris in the mid-19th century with long, straight, and wide boulevards had established an historical precedent. Nevertheless, the evils of urban life for transient inner-city working people in a dynamo-driven industrial city like Chicago, controlled by raw political self-interests, presented a new level of confrontation and resistance to environmental planners and reformers. \u00a0bjb<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/vzltxvgkefw3gzwdck0p3h1lheto5l9p\">Modern City Planning (1909)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/20j5jjqofimsy430vzfjclcin4k8xxeq\">American City Planning (1912)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/ol1v1p9ftuceop67dz3uyqo9ir5xtgrr\">American City Planning-Great Ground Plan (1913)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/0fthlz3m431qp2uk4a8ztcikokyf7tm0\">American City Planning-Traffic &amp; Terminals (1913)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/pjlhel7ug0qs1e2nnpzfmqw151iwwv8i\">Civic Progress in America (1913)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/f1kntudnt1v58wszlp4e6f4cpaelj0gr\">Freight Depots Most Important In City Planning (1913)<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h3>READING SUGGESTIONS<\/h3>\n<ul>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/0670fy00xqnv8vkl45qcadm9wdj1qtz1\">Chicago Enlightened, City Beautiful<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<li><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/uofi.box.com\/s\/w53tlww5h26i8p7ifeiwjx7lp937cfue\">Liberal State \/ Illiberal Reformers<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>CHICAGO ENLIGHTENED, A &#8220;WELL-REGULATED CIVILIZATION&#8221; Promoted by city planners and architects, The City Beautiful Movement took off in the 1890s and early 1900s. \u00a0Architect Daniel Burnham in Chicago who designed the 1893 \u201cWhite City\u201d and later the \u201cPlan for Chicago\u201d was closely \u00a0identified with the movement. The philosophy directed practitioners to redraw the map of<\/p>\n<div class=\"read-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/home\/chicago-light-beautiful-domestic-order\/\">Read More<\/a><\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":981,"featured_media":0,"parent":29,"menu_order":5,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/6930"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/981"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6930"}],"version-history":[{"count":179,"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/6930\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":21412,"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/6930\/revisions\/21412"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/29"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/maxwellhalsted.uic.edu\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6930"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}