Friday, January 21, 2011
Lake County's Gridiron History
To keep things neutral, I'd like to share some football images from the Lake County History Archives, Bess Bower Dunn Museum.
Lake Forest College football team, circa 1899. Dunn Museum
"Illinois Foot Ball Eleven - 1899." Dunn Museum
"6th Corps Area Championship Game, November 29, 1925." Fort Sheridan-41, Jefferson Barracks-0. Dunn Museum 92.24.566
A great view of the sidelines at the Fort Sheridan game, 1925. Dunn Museum 92.24.560
Deerfield High School football schedule for 1932. Dunn Museum 2007.17.61
Women's Army Corps member, Technician 5th Grade, Mary Boyd, with Fort Sheridan football team members, 1944. Dunn Museum 92.24.1884
Lake County Rifles, circa 1965. Bob Amann is seated front row far right. Dunn Museum 2010.28.202
Bob Amann, a lifelong Lake County resident and newspaperman, co-founded the Lake County Rifles, a semi-professional Central States Football League that played from 1965 to 1972. Thanks to a generous donation by Amann's children, the museum now has an extensive collection of Lake County Rifles photographs, programs, news clippings, trophies, and memorabilia.
You may have seen the Rifles play at Weiss Field in Waukegan or Carmel High School in Mundelein. Rifles' program, 1973. Dunn Museum 2010.28.14
Friday, January 14, 2011
Historian: Bess Bower Dunn (1877 - 1959)
The day after her passing, the courthouse flags were at half mast in memory of Bess and the county's Recorder of Deeds, Gustaf H. Fredbeck, who had also passed away.
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Adlai E. Stevenson II
Lake County resident, Adlai E. Stevenson II (1900-1965) was one of the most important statesmen of the 20th century.
Stevenson was a popular and effective governor of Illinois from 1948 to 1952, before running twice unsuccessfully for president against Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956. He was appointed as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations from 1960 to 1965.During the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1961, Stevenson famously confronted Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin in an emergency meeting of the Security Council. He provoked Zorin to admit that offensive weapons had been placed in Cuba and declared that he would wait "until Hell freezes over" for Zorin's response.
Presidential campaign button for Stevenson and Sparkman, 1952. Senator John Sparkman was a conservative Democrat from Alabama. (LCDM 2009.5)
In 1937, Stevenson purchased property in Libertyville Township along today's St. Mary's Road south of Route 60. For this reason, he was known as "the man from Libertyville." Since 1960 the property has been part of the Village of Mettawa.
Stevenson loved this property and called it "the farm." He hired Frank Holland to be the farm manager and caretaker. Holland worked for the Stevensons from 1937 to 1963 and again from 1965 to 1970. Guests to "the farm" included Eleanor Roosevelt, a close friend of Stevenson's, and John F. Kennedy.
Adlai Stevenson with his farm manager, Frank Holland, on "the farm," 1948. Stevenson would share in the sheep shearing and other farm tasks. Photo courtesy of Jim Holland.
Stevenson had a remarkable political pedigree. His grandfather, Adlai E. Stevenson I, was Vice President under U.S. President Grover Cleveland from 1893-1897. His maternal great-grandfather, Jesse W. Fell, was a close friend and campaign manager for Abraham Lincoln.
There was a great sense of loss when Stevenson died suddenly of a heart attack in London, England in 1965. He was an eloquent speaker and was enormously informed in national and world affairs, working tirelessly to raise the level of the public's awareness about the world and America's place in it.
Cover of Life Magazine from 1965 in memory of Stevenson, showing him at home at "the farm." Copyright Getty Images.
In 1969, most of the property was sold to Edison Dick, a longtime friend of Stevenson. In 1974 the Dick family donated the estate to the Lake County Forest Preserves. The property has since been designated an Illinois Historic Site and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Through a generous grant from the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, the Stevenson Historic Home has been restored, and is open for tours. The 40-acre site is open daily for self-guided tours of the grounds. Tours of the home and exhibit gallery are by appointment and can be arranged through the Lake County Discovery Museum at 847-968-3381.
Presidential campaign slogan for Stevenson.(right)
The Stevenson Historic Home is also the site of the Stevenson Center on Democracy. The Center is a newly organized non-profit corporation which seeks to enhance the global understanding and practice of democracy, and continue Adlai E. Stevenson II's legacy. Learn more about upcoming events sponsored by the Center at the Stevenson Historic Home: www.stevensoncenterondemocracy.org/index.html
Thursday, December 30, 2010
A Bright and Prosperous New Year!
Several years ago, I decided to get smarter about handling the rush of the holiday season, and started sending New Year's cards. By New Year's Day, the frenzy of shopping, wrapping, decorating and merrymaking is over and done with, and I can write a nice note to family and friends wishing them the best for the coming year.
What seemed like a novel idea to me, and the people who got my "post holiday" cards, is actually an old tradition. At the turn of the 20th century, sending New Year's greetings in the form of a postcard or greeting card was quite popular. New Year's postcard, circa 1915 (left).
This German postcard from 1905 was sent from Chicago, and portrays a pig and monk dancing on a keg of beer. The pig (especially in Austrian tradition) foretells a year filled with fortune and good luck, as do the clovers. The keg of beer and dancing represent the festivities surrounding the New Year. Postcard from the Dorothy Gleiser Collection, 1905 (73.9.99).
This American New Year's greeting is one of my favorite New Year's cards in the collection—mainly because of the cat, but also because it's such a dynamic greeting for the New Year. Of course, the bottle of bubbly represents celebration, but the loud pop of the cork has the added benefit of scaring away evil spirits. Postcard from the Dorothy Gleiser Collection, 1906 (73.9.99).
Noise making stems from Old World tales that evil spirits hover near as the New Year approaches. The noise of blowing whistles and horns, ringing bells, and popping champagne corks, all ward off impending danger.
This design of the "year" festooned with four-leaf clovers was easily understood by the recipient as a wish for good luck throughout the coming year. Year date postcards were particularly popular between 1908-1912. Postcard from the Dorothy Gleiser Collection, 1907 (73.9.99).
There is a lot of symbolism in this 1908 Swiss New Year's postcard. It was sent from a relation in Frauenfeld, Switzerland to Lizzie Schlager in Waukegan, Illinois.
The child with the broom and ladder is a chimney sweep and represents sweeping away the pains and tribulations of the past year and beginning with a clean slate. Also pictured is a red and white mushroom and horse shoe, both symbols of good fortune. And of course, the clock's hands are on twelve, striking midnight to ring in the New Year. Lizzie Schlager Collection, 1908 (61.8.300).
This stunning colorized photo postcard is from Lundsbrunn, Sweden. The children represent renewal, much like babies (versus an "Old Man" the symbol of the past year). The four-leaf clovers, horse shoe and bag of money are all representations of good fortune and plenty, while the number "1" is for January 1st and a new beginning. Postcard 1915 (LCHA).
This is the back of the Swedish postcard, showing that it is addressed to Miss Alice Carlsson of Waukegan.
Any combination of the symbols seen above were employed to make an appealing New Year's wish. Additionally, you might see a stork carrying a baby (rebirth), a couple kissing (good luck to celebrate the first few minutes of the New Year with the one you love), shooting stars (induces prosperity), and elves with red hats ("Tomtens" for good fortune and popular with the Pennsylvania Dutch).
The museum's archival collections hold approximately 160 postcards related to the New Year.
Friday, December 17, 2010
Images of Christmas Past
In December 1865, Susannah Smith of Millburn wrote in her diary:
22nd - Will have no school till Tuesday because Monday will be “Merry Christmas.”
24th - Went to Church.
25th - Cousin William, and family came to spend Merry Christmas with us and we had a merry, merry time. They stayed all night.
As a young unmarried woman, Susannah taught at a one-room schoolhouse, Grubb School, located at Grass Lake and Beck Roads one half mile east of Deep Lake Road (now part of Lake Villa). Her diary gives many insights into rural life, including a glimpse into holiday festivities, and the fact that school was back in session the day after Christmas.
In this 1908 photograph, Mildred Holloway Minto of Millburn sits with her daughters, Ruth (on lap) and Katherine in front of the family's Christmas tree. Mildred married David Harold Minto in 1905, who was the son of Civil War veteran David J. Minto and Susannah Smith.
Susannah Smith Minto continued to keep a diary for many years. In 1910, she commented on activities surrounding the coming holiday:
December 10th - I rec’d a nice box of writing papers & cards as a Christmas gift from Mrs J.M. Strong of 60 So.
December 22nd - Men got Christmas trees from our woods. [The Minto property was on Deep Lake Road north of Grass Lake Road, adjacent to Loon Lake.]
Una [Susannah's daughter] has quite a hard cold, hope it may be better tomorrow as she has promised to go to M. [Millburn] to help to decorate Christmas trees for evening. H [Susannah's son, David Harold Minto] making ironing board for K. [his daughter Katherine] on Christmas; he is working down in cellar making it this evening. I made shortbread.
On Christmas day 1911, the Wilton Family gathered in Avon Township for this family portrait:
Friday, December 10, 2010
Kenar - Jakubowski, North Chicago
In 2007, a collection of photographs and documents from the Kenar-Jakubowski Family of North Chicago was donated to the museum.
For the museum, the donation enhances its holdings for the North Chicago area, and the period of the 1920s - 1940s. It also increases our understanding of immigration to the county. Much of the county's history is related to settlement and growth, and this donation is the story of first generation Americans.
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Jacob Kenar (photo 1944) |
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Julia Kenar (1904-1984), circa 1920 in her North Chicago letterman sweater |
The collection gives insight into life in North Chicago in the first half of the 20th century, and into the lives of immigrant families and their children. These were ordinary people living out ordinary lives, and in part that's what makes the materials all the more fascinating. It's a slice of life.
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Julia was the only woman in the Kenar family to drive a car. Pictured here on Victoria Street, North Chicago, circa 1925. |
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Julia's husband, Joseph Jakubowski (1902-1976), studio photo circa 1920. |
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Joe worked as a butcher. He's pictured here in the meat market's slaughter yard. The original Holy Rosary Church can be seen in the background at 14th and Victoria. Photo circa 1922. |
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Julia and Joe had this house built between 1941-1946 on Skokie Highway near Stearns School Road in Gurnee. |
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One of many receipts related to the construction of Julia and Joe's home. |
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Another local business the Jakubowski's patronized as they furnished their new home. |
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Julia Kenar Jakubowski was a plant superintendent at Pfanstiehl (Fansteel) Chemical Corporation. She is shown in this photo at the plant, standing in the back of the room, 1942. |