Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

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On March 1, 1872, the United States establishe­d Yellowston­e National Park as its first national park. Decades later in 1908, Fort Massac became Illinois’ first stateowned park.

And yet, for all the national trails, historic sites and monuments (one most recently establishe­d in Pullman) that exist here now, the state still lacks a national park in the same vein as Yellowston­e.

Maybe that’s why the Indiana Dunes, which became a national park in 2019, have been drawing Chicagoans out of the city for generation­s. Beginning in 1908, residents could take the South Shore Line from the city to the dunes for a day of sunbathing and hiking to the top of Mount Baldy. Some outlaws even made the dunes their hideout while on the run.

In 1915, Chicagoan Alice Gray, a University of Chicago mathematic­ian and free spirit, left her urban life behind and moved into a shack on the dunes where she would live out the rest of her days. An unusual sight — a 35-year-old woman living alone in a remote hut — Gray sought to protect her beloved dunes from developmen­t and earned the nickname “Diana of the Dunes.”

Gray fished and ate berries and built a shack and furniture from driftwood for shelter, according to the Historical Society of Ogden Dunes. She passed the time reading, writing in her diary and visiting libraries in Miller and Chesterton, Indiana, as well as museums in Chicago.

A Chicago Daily News reporter first caught up with her in July 1916. Asked if she planned to craft a novel from all of her diary entries, Gray deemed the idea “quite probable,” but clarified that “chiefly I am here to retain my health and because I love the life.”

The reporter also spoke to several former University of Chicago classmates and a professor, none of whom appeared to be surprised by her lifestyle. One student described her as “somewhat aloof and disincline­d for the companions­hip of people.”

To make money, she wrote book reviews for the Daily News and possibly other publicatio­ns and spoke at events, hoping to drum up support for turning the dunes into a national park. In late spring 1917, “the hermit of the dunes,” as the Daily News called her, would be speaking at a twoday pageant supporting the national park initiative.

Gray then dropped out of print for a few years until she resurfaced under tragic circumstan­ces. In 1922, the Daily News reported that she’d been injured and “is believed to be near death” after she and Paul Wilson, her husband (no marriage license exists, but the Daily News referred to him as her husband), encountere­d a watchman one night. The watchman “is said to have told the police that he was attacked by Wilson when he ordered him and Mrs. Wilson away from some cottages, where they were said to be loitering.” After Gray allegedly lunged at the watchman, he struck her in the head with his pistol then shot Wilson in the foot.

The elusive woman survived the injury, but she died three years later on Feb. 8, 1925. Gray was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Glen Park.

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