Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

-

Who would’ve thought that settlement in the swamps of Lake Michigan would blossom into the thriving, vibrant city of Chicago?

One hundred years after the Windy City received its charter to incorporat­e from the state of Illinois, Chicago threw a massive, six-monthlong celebratio­n to commemorat­e the triumphs and tragedies of its history.

The party kicked off on March 4, 1937. A front-page Chicago Daily News story described the festivitie­s.

“With a tremendous burst of sound and a holiday atmosphere seldom equaled, Chicago today issued a resounding notice to the world that just 100 years ago this city obtained a charter from the Illinois legislatur­e and launched its lusty career,” the paper proclaimed.

In the morning, a parade led by the Black Horse Troop — a horse-back division of the Illinois National Guard that escorted dignitarie­s and other special visitors to the city — marched from the Drake Hotel to City Hall, “where foreign consuls and their staffs presented official congratula­tions to Mayor [Edward Joseph] Kelly,” the paper recounted.

Then, just before noon, Kelly delivered a radio address from the Chicago Historical Society auditorium. He sat in a chair once owned by General Henry Dearborn and struck a gavel used by the city’s first mayor, William B. Ogden, the paper said.

“Chicago is a wonder city of the ages,” the mayor proclaimed. “As we honor the past, we think of the future. What a contemplat­ion!”

“If things happen in Chicago during the next 100 years in proportion to what has happened during the past century,” Kelly continued, “there can be no question about our city becoming the largest city on the entire globe.”

The address lasted three minutes. It is unclear if

Kelly mentioned Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable, who would not be recognized as Chicago’s first citizen by the city for several decades, or the Native American groups that inhabited the area before European settlers.

As Kelly finished his speech, the celebratio­n officially began.

“At 12 noon the peak of the announceme­nt was reached, with everything in Chicago which could make noise open at full blast,” the paper reported. “Locomotive­s, automobile­s, factories and boats turned on full power of whistles, horns and sirens.”

Later that night, partygoers headed to the Chicago Stadium for the opening jubilee pageant.

“IF THINGS HAPPEN IN CHICAGO DURING THE NEXT 100 YEARS IN PROPORTION TO WHAT HAS HAPPENED DURING THE PAST CENTURY, THERE CAN BE NO QUESTION ABOUT OUR CITY BECOMING THE LARGEST CITY ON THE ENTIRE GLOBE.”

Mayor Edward Joseph Kelly, 1937

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States