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Visiting Chicago's Pullman District
CHICAGO, IL (AP) - It was a remarkable, if short-lived, 19th century blue-collar
utopia.
George M. Pullman, famous and wealthy from the luxurious sleeping car that
bore his name, in 1880 began building whole neighborhoods of homes that he
rented
to workers at his state-of-the-art factory in Chicago.
Although the experiment lasted only 18 years, most of the neighborhood remained
intact for more than a century - until the landmark Pullman Works administration
building and its 12-story clock tower were set ablaze by an arsonist on Dec.
1, 1998.
But these icons of history and neighborhood pride have since been restored
and can be seen by visitors wanting to explore the industrial roots of the
city’s
southeast side.
“
I was afraid how it was going to be viewed, that the headline in the paper on
page 17 was going to be, ‘Old factory on the south side burns,’” Shari
Parker, a 20-year Pullman resident and volunteer at the site, says of the fire. “What
we got was a lot of incredibly good publicity.”
The area is a symbol of “working-class men and women who made things, real
things,” Parker says. She added that “it’s terribly corny” to
say “this is what built America. But it is!”
Visitors may get a taste of that history begininng at the partially restored
1881 Hotel Florence, which Pullman built for visiting executives and salesmen.
Tours of the rebuilt administration building and clock tower are available
by special arrangement.
The clock tower merely punctuates the history around it. While most of the
original factory buildings are gone, the 12-block neighborhood - with homes
built almost
entirely of brick made from Lake Calumet clay and styled in Romanesque Revival
or gothic architecture - is remarkably unchanged.
Visitors can see the homes, from mansions built for Pullman executives to
rowhouses, on guided or self-guided tours offered by the Historic Pullman Foundation.
The homes are privately owned and can only be seen from the outside; many of
the
occupants have in the neighborhood for years. But a foundation-sponsored house
tour annually opens doors to some of the homes and there are other events throughout
the year.
In sharp contrast to the period’s nightmarish worker tenements, these
homes boasted indoor plumbing, gas for cooking and lighting, daily garbage
pickup,
front and back yards and nearby parks.
All this was part of the plan by architect Solon Spencer Beman, who was just
27 when Pullman hired him to design not just a community but a lifestyle.
Pullman’s visionary ideas for a planned city crop up in such current urban
planning buzzwords as “smart growth” and “sustainable communities,” according
to Historic Pullman Foundation president Michael Shymanski.
“
It’s a micro-version of the city of Chicago in its diversity,” says
Shymanski, an architect. “It’s one of the few neighborhoods on
the far south side that has retained its continuity of population over the
past 40
years, and yet it is economically, socially and racially integrated.”
Pullman’s downfall came in 1893, when a national recession hit Chicago
particularly hard. Pullman cut jobs and wages, but not rents. A nationally
supported strike followed, ended by federal intervention.
The attitude that Pullman’s company town was paternalistic and “un-American” culminated
in an 1898 Illinois Supreme Court ruling ordering the company to sell non-industrial
property.
The company remained in business into the 1980s, and while it didn’t
stay at its original site, the factory buildings had industrial tenants for
decades.
The entire neighborhood became a National Historic Landmark in 1971.
The state bought the clock tower building and Hotel Florence in 1991, and
stabilization projects kept the tower standing, Wagenbach says.
Then came that disastrous, freezing night in December 1998.
“
It was just like a wedding cake in flames,” says Pullman resident Tony
Dzik. “Unfortunately, it burned down the best part of Pullman.”
The Pullman Foundation led a mail-card campaign to restore the area. It was
so successful politicians declared, “Stop the postcards! What do you want
us to do?” says Shymanski, who has lived four decades in the neighborhood.
Then-Gov. George Ryan had just created a multibillion capital construction
program that provided the money - $10 million, three-fifths of the total
spent on restoration
at the site.
The day in 2005 when the rebuilt tower, now with a digital clock, returned
to its summit even took on a 19th-century flavor, remembers Linda Beierle
Bullen, the site’s curator.
“
People in the neighborhood came out with picnic lunches and sat the entire day
on the factory site, for about eight, 10 hours, watching that clock tower go
up,” Bullen says. “There was a big cheer and people had their pictures
taken with the clock tower in the background.”
While the future of the neighborhood is sound, questions surround what will
happen to the administration building. It’s a matter of finding another
generous benefactor to complete the structure.
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