Lost in the Jungle: The Seljan Expedition and Two Chicagoans who Never Returned

September 20, 2010


The following article was submitted by Croatian journalist and explorer, Mladen Postruznik. It is the story of the ill-fated Seljan expedition and includes the disappearance of two Chicagoans in 1913. While speculating on what happened to the adventurers, the article leaves more questions than provides answers. The author hopes that others can provide additional information.

By Mladen Postruznik

In 1912, the Peruvian government was more interested in commerce than conquest. President Guillermo Billinghurst, and the rest of the country's officials hoped to open the Amazonian parts of Peru, and connect them to the coastal ports. The Panama Canal was being finished, and very soon the coast of Peru would become more interesting for merchants from Europe and the East Coast of the United States. The Amazon had a lot to offer: rubber gum, mineral wealth, even precious and rarely seen fruits. But, a road would need to be built and hostile land explored. In an unlikely alliance of the Peruvian government, two experienced Croatian explorer brothers and two Chicagoans, with their eyes on adventure and free land, an expedition was launched. But, the dream would become a nightmare. The Chicagoans - Wilbur F. Cromer [a civil engineer from Evanston] and William L. Page [a one time Latin teacher at Lake View High School]and one of the Croatian explorers - would never return.

A Road Over the Andes

It was in 1899, when two brothers left their small town in Croatia, armed only with their military and artistic knowledge. Mirko and Stjepan (a.k.a Stevo) Seljan had chosen the life of explorers. Their first target was Ethiopia, known then as the Abyssinian Empire and ruled by Menelik The Second.

During the next 13 years the brothers' adventures became very well known among the Croats: mapping South Ethiopia, earning the title of the governors of south provinces of the empire, traveling to Brazil to explore many unknown rivers. They were the first to take photos of Iguazu Falls, they wrote a book on Guayra Falls (that was later sunk by the building of the Itaipu Dam), and they even explored Xingu River. Revolution in Mato Grosso in 1906 stopped their plans to explore Central Amazonia. But, in 1911, they went on, to the western side of the South American continent – looking for new projects in Chile and Peru.

They found what they were looking for in Peru; a contract from the Peruvian Government for the construction of a road across the Andes, from Juanjui to Trujillo. In exchange, the brothers were to be gifted with some very fertile land along the river Huayabamba, a tribute of Huallaga.

Chicagoans Join the Party

The Seljan brothers had one problem. In order to accomplish this task, they needed some initial funding. They established the Peruvian American Corporation, and started to look for investors. But, where? Croatians in Peru were mainly miners, not yet rich, and many of them were very doubtful of the project. So, Mirko and Stjepan decided to go to the United States. After all, that big country is always ready to take advantage of an opportunity and embraced adventurous ideas. They were sure to find funding in America.

And they were right. During their American tour the brothers gave lectures and musical performances (they are said to have been fine musicians) in Croatian Clubs across the country and it was during one of those appearances in Chicago that they met Ernest T. Gundlach, (who had also attended Lake View High School) an entrepreneur who had once worked for the Inter-Ocean newspaper and later established an advertising agency, Gundlach Advertising Co. Gundlach would provide the backing but he and the Peruvian government decided to also provide the expedition with a little help. The Seljan expedition was finally planned: Stjepan would remain in Chicago and Mirko Seljan must go back to Peru, to start his part of the job from the Amazonian side of the Andes; another party would start a bit later, headed by two Chicago explorers – Wilbur F. Cromer and William L. Page. That party would take another route across the Andes, to make it's way down to the Huayabamba Valley. The plan was for the two routes to merge on the river Jelache.

At the end of 1912. Mirko Seljan started to make his way from Lima, on route to Cerro de Pasco – Huanuco – Tingo Maria, and down the Huallaga River. At the time, that area was considered remote and very dangerous. Mirko was accompanied by another American, Patrick O'Higgins. Higgins, an engineer and representative of the American Syndicate funding the venture may have also been from Chicago, but not much else is known about the man.

Cromer and Page arrived at the Huayabamba River. Here they got support from a local governor named Eduardo Pena Meza, and landlord don Antonio Lopez. After careful preparation, they chose an Indian girl, Juliana, to be their guide, and 12 strong men to escort them into the jungle. The slopes of the Andes, with deep canyons and rivers awaited them. And, this is where the mystery begins.


Missing Chicagoans and Speculations


The other party, headed by Mirko, also gathered in Lima, in January 1913. Cromer and Page got another companion – Peruvian engineer Alejandro S. Lezcano. Their bad fortune is described in the Bulletin of the Geographical Society in Lima, in 1922. That report is somewhat controversial; it mentions Pataz, a mining town over the river Maranon, to be their point of interest, on the other hand, it is known that they went north through Cajabamba to get to the town of Bolivar, at the time called Cajamarquille. That route is described in the articles in the Chicago Daily Tribune.

The Peruvian government persuaded the relatives of the missing Chicagoans that not only the perpetrators of the violent crime against them were found, but also that Page and Cromer, the victims, were laying in marked graves. I do not believe that was then or is it now.

On July 30th 1913, after it was obvious that Cromer an Page were not going to return, 41 members of their families asked the Peruvian government for a report of the events. According to that report, "They advanced to the mining town of Pataz, searching for Pampa San Juan, looking for the missing expedition in Pajaten, from which on the day of March 20th they returned their animals and the expeditionists proceeded on foot." [Pajaten mentioned here is an old Franciscan mission, not Gran Pajaten – famous ruins of Chachapoyans, now known as "The cloud people." Arturo A. Cuadra, an engineer that visited this area six months later claims that Cromer and Page never reached mission Pajaten or the area of Santa Rosa del Huambo.

William L. Page in his last letter to his brother, Dr. Charles S. Page wrote:
"Well, here I am in Cajabamba, safe over the Black Cordilleras of the Andes, and, believe me, I have been in some hair curling places....Will try to get across the Maranon within three days."

The same route was taken by a Croatian expedition, led by Mladen Kuka, in 2001. In order to get across Rio Maranon, the Americans went south, to the town of Huamachuco, and then to the east, crossing the Maranon in Chagual. Crossing that river, you have to descend from passes at some 4,000 mts, to the bottom of the canyon at some 1,250 mts. From there, it is a steep path 25 km long to the miner's village Pataz. Some 5 km, in another valley, is the village of Los Alisos, and that is the path to get across the Andes once again. The highest passes here lie at an altitude of 4,200 mts above sea level, there are many small lakes that locals describe as "the eyes of the mountain." It is also very cold.

There is little doubt that it was foul play; they were attacked, robbed and murdered in an unknown place. Later, their weapons, clothing and other possessions were found in Condomarca (closer to Cajamarca). The Indians claimed that they were not payed as escorts and guides, so the white men gave them their weapons and other belongings. According to the locals, after that they simply left them in the wilderness.

The same explanation was given regarding the portion of the expedition headed by Mirko Seljan. He did not return either. And in the years to follow, legends of cannibalism emerged although nothing has ever been proven.

The Peruvian government did find Mirko Seljan's hand drawn map. The map emerged after English war hero George T. Dyott had found it in possession of the Indians; on the map there was a hand drawn cross that marks the last known position of the Seljan expedition. So, they concluded and said – that is the place where Cromer and Page also ended their lives. I doubt that. That place lies on the mouth of the river Bombonaje and Jelache and has nothing to do with Cromer and Page. But, the explanation was convincing, and families and relatives stopped asking questions.

Conclusion
Mirko Seljan's memory lives on. In the town of Karlovac there is the First Croatian Explorer's Club, established in honor of the Seljan Brothers, that keeps this tradition alive. It should be noted that after Mirko disappeared, Stjepan continued to explore South and Central America until 1917 when he settled in Brazil. Stjepan died in 1936.

When I came across the names of the deceased Chicagoans, Cromer and Page, I decided to publish this story in Chicago; a virtual tombstone for them. Perhaps descendants of Cromer and Page still live in the Chicago area and can provide more information. If so, please contact me. (see contact information below)

There are many historical stories about Chicago. Many famous persons dedicated their lives to the city; but to us, explorers in Croatia, the small story of Cromer and Page is very inspiring. It is a tale of exploration and courage and, of course, re-establishes the bonds between Croatia and the United States. As Mirko Seljan wrote in his last letter: "You will be celebrating Christmas in your warm and enlightened homes; I will be in the forest, on the border of civilization, trying to make some modest advance for humankind".

PHOTOS (provided by the author are credited to Mladen Kuka)


Fertile valley is still a mystery, although Rio Abiseo National Park was established


Santa Barbara: don Antonio Lopez farm on Huayabamba –


Hand drawn map of Seljan Expedition; unknown hand added the cross to mark the place of his tragedy

Mladen Postruznik is a journalist, writer and secretary of First Croatian Explorer's Club in Croatia. If you have additional information on this story, please contact him at: post.mladen@gmail.com

Recommended reading:

Croatian Americans
Life and Work of Brothers Seljan
Croatians (Encyclopedia of Chicago)

Photo credit:
William L. Page: Chicago Tribune, September 12, 1913

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Eugene V. Debs: Chicago Strike Leader to Prison to U.S. Icon

September 17, 2010



By Joe Mathewson


Twice consigned to prison by the U.S. Supreme Court for violating federal law, Eugene V. Debs of Indiana nevertheless left an influential mark on the nation, confirmed by an unlikely federal seal of approval years later.

Debs attained the fame of violent conflict in Chicago. A high school dropout, elected to the Indiana Senate at 29, and a workers’ activist, he organized the American Railway Union, the nation’s first industrial union, only to be outrun by his own members. In May 1894 they struck against the Pullman Palace Car Company of Chicago in protest against drastic wage cuts imposed by the company in the Panic of 1893. Other union members refused to handle Pullman cars and those connected to them, even U.S. Mail cars, on the 22 lines converging in Chicago, a boycott.

Fearing a government reaction, Debs actually argued against the actions at a convention of his union in Chicago, but ultimately relented and assumed leadership of the strike and boycott. However, the protest turned violent. Strikers sabotaged railroad tracks and switches, causing derailments of engines and trains, the damage running into the millions. Other union members walked out of the massive Union Stock Yards on Chicago’s South Side, crippling its production of meat products for the nation.

Debs was proved prescient. President Grover Cleveland, alarmed by the tieup’s impact on both mail service and the economy, sought a court injunction ordering the strikers back to work. The federal court in Chicago granted the order, directing Debs and other union leaders to cease interference with railroad operations. But they defied the order, causing the president to send in the U.S. Army to break the strike; 13 workers were killed in a bloody confrontation. Debs and other leaders were ruled in contempt of court and sent to jail.

Clarence Darrow, Chicago’s most celebrated lawyer of that era, left his railroad employment to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to set aside the contempt rulings. But his petition for a writ of habeas corpus was denied.

Writing for a unanimous court, Justice David J. Brewer recognized that many union members had given up their own jobs in support of fellow workers, but declared firmly:

“We yield to none in our admiration of any act of heroism or self-sacrifice, but we may be permitted to add that it is a lesson which cannot be learned too soon or too thoroughly that under this government of and by the people the means of redress of all wrongs are through the courts and at the ballot-box, and that no wrong, real or fancied, carries with it legal warrant to invite as a means of redress the cooperation of a mob, with its accompanying acts of violence.”


Imprisoned in Woodstock, Illinois, Debs began studying socialism, ultimately embracing the cause. He emerged months later as a committed socialist activist, helping to organize the Socialist Democratic Party and running as its candidate for president in 1900 and several more times. He abhorred war and opposed U.S. participation in World War I. But when he gave a speech in Ohio in June 1918 praising several men and women jailed for encouraging resistance to the draft, he himself was charged with inciting disloyalty and attempting to obstruct the draft, in violation of the Espionage Act of 1917.

For that single speech Debs was convicted and sentenced to serve ten years. Once more he sought review by the U.S. Supreme Court. But, in 1919, the Court again affirmed his imprisonment. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote that the jury was justified in finding that “one purpose of the speech, whether incidental or not does not matter, was to oppose not only war in general but this war, and that the opposition was so expressed that its natural and intended effect would be to obstruct recruiting.”

Like other newspapers around the country, the Chicago Tribune rejoiced at the verdict: “The government, as well as all loyal citizens, have denied political animus but insisted that freedom of speech does not constitute license to arouse hatred of national duty.”


Even in prison, Debs ran again for president. His 1920 campaign featured a photo of him in inmate’s garb, with the slogan: “For President Convict 9653.”
Warren G. Harding was elected, and, despite Debs’ opposition to his candidacy, graciously commuted Debs’ sentence to time served. Debs died in 1926, just short of his 71st birthday.

Today his home in Terre Haute, on the campus of Indiana State University, is maintained by the Eugene V. Debs Foundation, “keeping alive the spirit of progressivism, humanitarianism and social criticism epitomized by Debs.”
It includes a Debs museum and is open to the public. In 1965 it was made an official Indiana historic site by the Indiana General Assembly.

Ironically, despite Debs’ notoriety for confronting the federal government, in 1966 the house was designated a National Historic Landmark by the U.S. Park Service, which conscientiously monitors its upkeep. www.eugenevdebs.com

Joe Mathewson, a former Supreme Court reporter for The Wall Street Journal and practicing attorney in Chicago, teaches journalism at Northwestern University’s Medill School. This article is adapted from his book,“The Supreme Court and the Press: The Indispensable Conflict,” to be published in January by the Northwestern University Press. Read more from Joe Mathewson on his site, Jmathewson's Blog.


Recommended reading:

Eugene V. Debs Internet Archive (This is a fantastic resource!)

Photo credit:
"You Railroad Men" (cover of 1906 pamphlet)
Eugene V. Debs pin (The Anarchist Encyclopedia: A Gallery of Saints & Sinners ...)

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Benefit for Blues Pioneers: Kansas Joe and Papa Charlie McCoy

September 13, 2010



On October 3rd the Old Town School of Folk Music will host a benefit for two under appreciated pre-war blues musicians, Kansas Joe and Papa Charlie McCoy. The show, preceded by a free walking tour of other blues grave sites at Restvale Cemetery (including Muddy Waters) will be a survey of their musical development from Mississippi to Memphis to Chicago, as well as a fundraiser to buy gravestones for their unmarked graves.

From string band music in Mississippi to country blues in Memphis to jump blues in Chicago, Joe and Charlie McCoy played important roles in several musical genres. Their careers not only mirrored the "great migration" of African-Americans to the north, but also the development of African-American music from its rural roots to the foundations of rock and roll. But after 20+ year careers, they were both buried in unmarked graves when they died in 1950. Join musician Arlo Leach and a lineup of bands inspired by the McCoy Brothers in a benefit concert to raise money for their gravestones.

One very famous band inspired by the McCoys was the great Led Zeppelin (no, they won't be there) whose cover of "When the Levee Breaks" written by Joe McCoy (but changed a bit by Jimmy Page for the 1971 Led Zeppelin IV album) is a classic. Here's the original:



Tickets are $20 General Public/$18 Old Town School Members/$16 Seniors & Children and can be purchased in advance here.

For details and more information on the event (or to make a donation!), please see the McCoy Brothers Tribute website.

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Remembrance

September 11, 2010



“There are stars who's light only reaches the earth long after they have fallen appart. There are people who's remembrance gives light in this world, long after they have passed away. This light shines in our darkest nights on the road we must follow.”

From: The Talmud

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Cartographic Tales of Chicago History

September 9, 2010


Historic maps of Chicago tell all kinds of intriguing stories about the city's origins and development: vanished creeks and woods, big projects never accomplished, forgotten ethnic groups and neighborhoods, mysterious subdivisions, abandoned industrial areas, vice districts and world's fairs, ghosts of railroad stations and streetcar lines and freight tunnels, reminders of a constantly changing Loop. Dennis McClendon, a Chicago geographer and historian who produced the maps for the Encyclopedia of Chicago, will show the interesting stories seen in various corners of three dozen maps from Chicago's past.

The Newberry Library, Ruggles Hall
Thursday, September 16, 5:30 pm, doors open; 6:00 program
Admission is free and no reservations are required. This program is sponsored by the Chicago Map Society. A small donation at the door is encouraged and greatly appreciated.

Recommended reading:
Chicago Growth 1850-1990: Maps by Dennis McClendon
The Plan of Chicago: A Regional Legacy by Dennis McClendon
Mapmaking and Map Publishing (Encyclopedia of Chicago)
Historical Maps of Chicago (Map shown is Chicago, 1859)
1931 Chicago Gangland Map Available
Where, What and When: Historic Maps of Old Chicago

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Identifying a Lost Leader

September 5, 2010



HANNAH SHAPIRO and the 1910 CHICAGO GARMENT WORKERS' STRIKE

By Rebecca Sive

In July 1976, Hannah Shapiro Glick, the initiator of the 1910 Chicago Garment Workers' strike, saw some photos of it in a magazine feature story on the exhibition: "Forgotten Contributions: Women in Illinois History." At the prompting of her daughter, she contacted the project director of "Forgotten Contributions" to identify herself as the strike's initiator, unknowingly answering a question asked by Mari Jo Buhle in her Signs article on the strike.(1) Glick's testimony not only answered Buhle's question but indicated why subsequent observers of the event have written conflicting and often inaccurate reports about it.

On September 22, 1910, Hannah [a.k.a. "Annie"] Shapiro (later Glick), a seventeen-year-old Jewish immigrant born at Nehzin, in the Ukraine, initiated the workers' walkout in shop 5 of the clothing firm of Hart, Schaffner & Marx, 1922 South Halsted Street, Chicago. That Thursday,after returning from vacation for the Jewish New Year, Shapiro complained to her foreman about a cut in the piecework rate from 4 cents to 3 & 3/4 cents for seaming a pair of pants. He replied that nothing could be done; Shapiro returned to her co-workers and reported what the foreman had said. She returned the following Friday and Monday to talk to the management-again without success. Next, under Glick's leadership, workers from shop 5 walked out. By Wednesday, workers in other company shops refused to do the work of shop 5 and, by the end of the week, workers in seven out of ten Hart, Schaffner & Marx shops were out. A month later, 40,000 Chicago garment workers were on strike. Partially because of ethnic conflicts and factional rivalries, Hart, Schaffner & Marx workers did not return to work until January 1911. Workers employed at other clothing firms went back in February 1911.(2)

In 1914, Hannah Shapiro stopped working to marry Julius Glick. In 1922, she was identified in the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Joint Board Report as the initiator of the 1910 Chicago strike. But, as the years passed and as personal associations and memories faded, Glick became lost to her 1910 compatriots and later historians. Her part in the strike was never systematically documented. Thus, historians, journalists, and labor activists have written histories which suited their own purposes but which have been necessarily incomplete.(3) The rediscovery of Glick and her role, placed against the number and diversity of such conflicting reports, indicates that historians must now chart new directions in order to understand fully the true history of this significant strike and its women leaders.

Below are the outlines of Hannah Shapiro Glick's participation in the 1910 strike. Her recollections sixty-six years later were vivid and personal:

It wasn't because I wanted to work, but I could see that every little cent helped. ...I went to work at Hart, Schaffner & Marx; I thought, "I have to better myself." ... There's nothing like in a big place to work; 'cause they have a wonderful system to work.(4)... We got along nicely with every language, let me tell you, but I always minded my own business, but when it came to this, [the strike] I couldn't stand this ... They were all afraid to say a word but I wasn't... People who are older than I am would stay in the house and not to budge. So I was the first one... If not for me, it seems they couldn't move ... I'm a strong girl; I never regretted it...I think if not for the strike, they would never have what they have now; we had to strike and I think we had the right to go...They stayed like glue; they felt they had to show we have to be recognized as people and, really, we struggled; it wasn't easy...The workingman has to live too, that's what it had to show and it did too.(5)


By her own account, Glick was young, fearless, and responsive to the righteousness of the workers' struggle. Her convictions gave her strength; she was a tireless picketer and a good speaker, though not a trained organizer. She remained a private person and did not befriend any of the well-known public figures of the strike; although she remembered meeting Jane Addams, dancing with Clarence Darrow [Darrow represented the workers during arbitration], organizing with Agnes Nestor and Mary Dreier Robins, and watching Bessie Abramovitch (Hillman) flirt. She had no memory of Clara Masilotti, the Italian strike leader. Furthermore, Glick does not appear "conferring" in any photographs, as Masilotti did, (6) nor did she write any articles about the strike, (7) or teach English to strikers as Masilotti did. (8) She did not speak at meetings of the workers, as Abramovitch did, but only at a few gatherings of sympathetic "society" women organized by the Women's Trade Union League.

Although she never emerged as a political leader, Glick was one of the "girl strikers" Buhle's Socialist thinkers admired. (9) However, she was always her own woman. She did not participate in the selling of the "Special Girl Strikers' Edition" of the Chicago Daily Socialist because she did not agree with Socialist organizing tactics. (10) Of her own significance in the strike, Glick said: "The strike, I'll tell you the truth for me, it was a joke, but for the married people...But I was the spokes [sic]... At first they said, 'A young girl, what does she know, good from bad, couldn't she make up 1/4 cent? ... Women can't stick to anything.' [but] the only time I didn't go [to help collect money and picket] was Saturday." In retrospect, she saw her importance as having been a model of steadfast courage. Her role in the 1910 Chicago Garment Workers' strike suggests the need for research to increase historians' awareness of the various types of workingwomen activists who were involved, the diversity of their views, and the complexity of their political activities. This would do much to clarify not only the differing strike response of Chicago's ethnic groups but also the complex roles of women workers in such activities.

Department of Continuing Education
Roosevelt University

Notes

1. Mari Jo Buhle, "Socialist Women and the 'Girl Strikers,' Chicago, 1910," Signs 1, no.4 (Summer 1976): 1039-51.

2. The workers who returned in February were employees of firms which were members of the Wholesale Clothier's Association. The association operated a labor bureau which effectively blacklisted workers who complained about working conditions.

3. The following versions of who initiated the 1910 strike illustrate these inaccurate reports: (1) Chicago Daily Socialist (October 17, 1910): "When the strike started three weeks ago with the walkout of the sixteen girls..."; (2) Amalgamated Clothing Workers' Joint Board Report (Chicago: Amalgamated Clothing Workers, 1922), p. 26: "The first spark was struck on September 22 in Shop 5 ... Annie [sic] Shapiro, one of the first six to go out..."; (3) Humbert Nelli, The Italians in Chicago: 1880-1930 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1970), p. 81: "Strike activities began on September 29 at Hart, Schaffner & Marx Shop 21 (a pants shop) when a group of female employees, led by a Sicilian girl, left their jobs to protest a quarter-of-a-cent wage cut"; (4) Nellie Zeh, "The Girl Striker-a Prophecy," Chicago Daily Socialist (November 21, 1910), quoted in Buhle, p. 1047: "It was a girl who took the lead in the great conflict between capitalism and the working-class. Sixteen girls walked out of Hart, Schaffner & Marx's establishment, Saturday at noon, October 7...The time was ripe and when the little Jewess, who acted as leader, said: 'Come, we can endure these conditions no longer' and walked out with fifteen girl comrades ..."; (5) R. Dvorak, "The Chicago Garment Workers," International Socialist Review 11, no. 6 (December 1910): 346-47: "One day sixteen of the girls in the shop felt ready to 'do or die.' The leaders, Clara Masilotti, Bessie Abramovitch, Rosie [sic] Shapiro, had the girls well in hand. Clara Masilotti, only 17 years old, came to the boss and told him that she had enough of the persecution. He laughed at her and told her to go back to work. They argued back and forth until the girl pulled out a little whistle. Before the boss could stop her she had blown it." Clara Masilotti, according to accounts in a number of sources (Chicago Daily Socialist; Nelli; Agnes Nestor, Woman's Labor Leader: The Autobiography of Agnes Nestor [Rockford, Ill.: Bellevue Books, 1954]), walked out after the strike had already started when she heard a whistle blown outside her shop. She did not work with Shapiro or Abramovitch but in an independent clothing shop run by Ralph Neumille located at Blue Island and Polk Streets.

4. Glick said, before her death in July 1977, that working conditions were good; her only complaints were about the piecework rate. However, in her 1910 testimony to the Illinois State Senate she said otherwise ("Report of Special Committee on Garment Workers' Strike in Chicago," Illinois Senate Journal 47 [1911]: 423-28).

5. All quotations from Hannah Shapiro Glick are from conversations with her (July 1976-November 1976).

6. Chicago Tribune (November 4, 1910). Pictured are Agnes Nestor, Clara Masilotti, Margaret Dreier Robins, Emma Steghagen, S. M. Franklin, and Lillian Carr.

7. Chicago Daily Socialist (November 21, 1910). Others who wrote articles for the "Special Edition" were Clarence Darrow, Margaret Haley, Agnes Nestor, and Margaret Dreier Robins.

8. Women's Trade Union League Report on the 1910 Chicago Garment Workers' Strike (Chicago: Women's Trade Union League, 1910), p. 39.

9. See the following articles on the strike in the Chicago Daily Socialist (October 12, 24, and 31, 1910; November 21, 1910): "No Wonder the Toilers Struck" and "Women Active for Workers." Some of the testimony in these two articles is Glick's, although she is not named.

10. Glick indicated her feelings about Socialist organizing tactics in my interviews with her.

Rebecca Sive is a Chicago-bred community organizer and women's rights activist, recognized widely for her civic leadership and advocacy. Rebecca co-chaired Women for Washington in Harold Washington's historic 1983 election as the first African-American Mayor of Chicago. Both before and since, Rebecca has been a strategist, writer, and spokesperson for numerous women's causes at the regional, state, and national levels. Rebecca is also the author of the blog, SiveSiftings.
The above article originally appeared in the journal, Signs, Vol. 3, No. 4 (Summer, 1978), pp. 936-939 and is reprinted with the kind permission of the author.

Recommended Reading:
Women's Trade Union League of Chicago. Official report of the Strike Committee :Chicago Garment Workers' Strike, October 29, 1910-February 18, 1911. (Women Working, 1800-1930; Harvard University Library Open Collection)(Photos scanned from this book)
Annie Shapiro and the Clothing Workers' Strike (History Speaks) by Marlene Targ Brill (Recommended for children ages 4-8)
Interactive Labor Trail
Chicago Garment Workers Strike
Chicago Labor History Links

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1931 Chicago Gangland Map Available

September 3, 2010


Yep, the Newberry has it. Really; I'm not kidding!

Thanks to an "Anonymous" tip, I learned that the Bruce Roberts 1931 "Map of Chicago's gangland from authentic sources: designed to inculcate the most important principles of piety and virtue in young persons, and graphically portray the evils and sin of large cities" can be purchased from the Newberry Library Poster shop for $14.95 plus shipping. Knock three times, you'ze mugs, and tell them the Journal sent ya.
Sing a Song of Gangsters
A Pocket Full of Dough
Four and Twenty Bottles
Make a Case You Know

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Resting in Pieces

September 2, 2010


UNDERGROUND CHICAGO: A WALKING TOUR

Did you know that cemeteries and skeletons played a major role in the history of Chicago? Over the last 100 years, digging in almost any area of the city's original Gold Coast has uncovered unidentified skeletons and remains of the graveyards that used to inhabit the neighborhood. Join an excursion of Lincoln Park and hear about how it was once a vast, windswept wasteland that housed a gigantic burial place.
Learn of the dramatic efforts made to remove 35,000 bodies from the area's cemeteries to make way for homes and businesses, and join the tour to the location of several thousand bodies from the area's Civil War prison camp. Hear stories of grave-robbing and private investigation swirling around the sites of the original cemeteries. The fantastic tales even include the graveyards' involvement in the Chicago Fire and modern-day skeleton discoveries as unwitting home owners find bodies in their backyards!

Chicago Historian Sally S. Kalmbach invites your participation on a trek that will surprise and thrill you as you discover how death, disease, and bones have changed the face of Chicago history.

Walking tour dates:
Thursday, SEPTEMBER 30th 10 a.m. until noon
Saturday, OCTOBER 2nd 10:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m.
Please RSVP to sskalmbach@yahoo.com OR 773 868 9096
$25 per person

Recommended reading:

Hidden Truths: The Chicago City Cemetery and Lincoln Park
What Lies Beneath Lincoln Park (Chicago Life Magazine)
Graveyards of Chicago: the People, History, Art, and Lore of Cook County By Matt Hucke, Ursula Bielski

Photo credit: Early Chicago

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About Me

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a.k.a. Sharon Williams. I'm a frustrated amateur historian, bibliophile and student with an unnatural and utterly romanticized view of Chicago's history. So sue me... Feel free to contact me with any questions, comments, requests or appropriate articles. Contributors are always welcome.

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