Chicago - City of Big Shoulders

Chicago - City of Broad Shoulders


This course is about Chicago, We will cover the history of the city and region, the politics, corruption, arts, plans, neighborhoods, humor, achievements and the future of the City.

Who's your clout?

Clout
In the mid-twentieth century, Chicago writers coined the term “clout” to mean political power and influence. This political usage probably was taken from the baseball expression “What a clout!” which described a powerful hit.

DINNER WITH MAYOR EDWARD J. KELLY, 1938
In Harold Gosnell's Machine Politics (1937), a Chicago precinct captain claimed that no one could “get anywhere” in politics “without clout from behind.” In 1958, Irv Kupcinet wrote that defendants in Chicago trials are “found innocent on the age-old legal premise of reasonable doubt—not ... reasonable clout.” Clout's association with Chicago politics was solidified by Len O'Connor'sClout: Mayor Daley and His City (1975).
By the 1970s, the query “Who's your clout?”—questioning one's ability to reach and persuade those in power—had found wide national usage beyond its Chicago origins.

Chicago: The Cost of Clout


An interesting article by Aaron Renn  about Chicago. He contends that Chicago's lagging economy is due to clout. I think he is correct.  Quotes:
"It described the sad reality of how Chicago’s economy is in the tank, and has been underperforming the nation for the last few years."
"The region also has lagged in innovation, firm creation and growth in productivity and gross metropolitan product over the past decade, according to economic development consultant Robert Weissbourd, president of RW Ventures LLC. "
"Believe it or not, a lot of it goes back to that bane of Chicago politics: Clout. People in Chicago tend to write off clout and political corruption in Chicago with a shrug, as a unique or even amusing local affectation, or just part of the character of purely political life of the city, but one that doesn’t fundamentally change its status as the “City That Works.” But nothing could be further from the truth. Chicago’s culture of clout is a key, perhaps the key, factor holding the city back economically."

Read the article at:

http://www.urbanophile.com/2011/01/16/chicago-the-cost-of-clout/

http://www.urbanophile.com/

Ubi Est Mea -- Where's mine?

Ubi Est Mea -- Where's mine?

Tthe late great Chicago newspaperman, Mike Royko, gave the "Windy City" its unofficial motto: "Ubi Est Mea -- Where's mine?", meaning where is my share of the boodle. A sometimes heard alternative is, "What's in it for me?


Chinaman was an epithet for political mentors and backers in the politics of Chicago, Illinois, U.S., in the 1900s. Although politically incorrect, the term is still in use today. An example of the use of the term appeared in the January 27, 2004 Chicago Sun-Times: "Before the age of political correctness, Munoz would have been called Torres' chinaman, and in City Hall, that's still what they'd call him, but if you prefer, you can stick with mentor or patron."


  1. Joe Peyronnin: "Ubi Est Mea -- Where's Mine?" - Huffington Post

    www.huffingtonpost.com/.../ubi-est-mea----wheres-min_b_149...‎

    by Joe Peyronnin - in 39 Google+ circles
    Dec 9, 2008 – That's why the late great Chicago newspaperman, MikeRoyko, gave the "Windy City" its official motto: "Ubi Est Mea -- Where's mine?" ...

  2. Where's Mine? - Neighborhoods - Blogs - Chicago Sun-Times

    blogs.suntimes.com/neighborhoods/2008/01/wheres_mine.html‎

    Jan 25, 2008 – t's been 40 years since Mike Royko suggested Chicago take on a new motto, Ubi Est Mea -- "Where's mine?" Still, loads of city politicians ...

  3. One More Time: The Best of Mike Royko - Page 19 - Google Books Result

    books.google.com/books?isbn=0226730727
    Mike Royko - 2000 - Literary Collections
    The Best of Mike Royko Mike Royko. October 27, 1967 ... The new motto — Ubi Est Mea — means "Where's Mine?" The phrase "Where's Mine?" can be heard ...

  4. The Evolution of Rod Blagojevich's Favorite Phrase | Mental Floss

    mentalfloss.com/.../evolution-rod-blagojevichs-favorite-phrase‎

    by Brenna Ehrlich - in 19,748 Google+ circles
    Jan 15, 2009 – Back in 1967, tough-talking Chicago journalist Mike Roykoconcocted a ... for the City of Strong Shoulders—"Ubi Est Mea," or: "Where's mine?

  5. Royko: A Life in Print - Page 136 - Google Books Result

    books.google.com/books?isbn=0786751975
    F. Richard Ciccone - 2009 - Biography & Autobiography
    "The new motto— -'Ubi Est Mea' —means "Where's Mine?'" Royko's first collections of columns, "Up Against It, " was published in 1967 by Henry Regnery ...

  6. BARACK: BEWARE WHERE'S MINE? !!! - John McCarthy - Open ...

    open.salon.com/blog/john_mccarthy/.../barack_beware_wheres_mine‎

    Jan 20, 2009 – Royko wrote that the real Chicago slogan was, is, and always will be, "Where's Mine?" Barack Obama will have a very short honeymoon before ...

  7. Royko . - Google News

    news.google.com/newspapers?nid=348&dat=19970430&id...‎

    In typical tongue-in-cheek fash ion, Royko suggested the city's motto of urbs In Horto" — city in a garden — should be changed to Est Mea" — where's mine?

  8. Remember Royko's “Ubi Est Mea — Where's Mine?” | admin

    currentbuzz.org/?p=4171‎

    Jun 1, 2011 – If it's good enough for Washington (the revolving lobbyist/elected official door) I guess it's good enough for Chicago: Former Mayor Richard M.
  9. Results for similar searches

    1. Mike Royko, One More Time: The Best of Mike Royko, excerpt

      www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/730719.html
      An excerpt from One More Time: The Best of Mike Royko. Also available on website: online catalogs, secure online ordering, excerpts from new books. Sign up ...
      More results for wheres mine royko

List of Chicago Mayors


The mayoral term in Chicago was one year from 1837 through 1863, when it was increased to two years. In 1907 it was again lengthened to four years, the present duration. Until 1861, municipal elections were held in March. In that year, legislation changed them to April. In 1869, however, election time was changed to November, and terms expiring in April of that year were lengthened. In 1875, the election day was moved back to April by the city's vote to operate under the Cities and Villages Act of 1872.

#NameTermPartyNotes
1William Butler Ogden1837–1838Democratic
2Buckner Stith Morris1838–1839Whig
3Benjamin Wright Raymond1839–1840Whig
4Alexander Loyd1840–1841Democratic
5Francis Cornwall Sherman1841–1842Democratic
6Benjamin Wright Raymond (2nd)1842–1843Whig
7Augustus Garrett1843–1844Democratic
8Alson Sherman1844–1845Independent Democrat
9Augustus Garrett (2nd)1845–1846Democratic
10John Putnam Chapin1846–1847Whig
11James Curtiss1847–1848Democratic
12James Hutchinson Woodworth1848–1850Independent Democrat
13James Curtiss (2nd)1850–1851Democratic
14Walter S. Gurnee1851–1853Democratic
15Charles McNeill Gray1853–1854Democratic
16Isaac Lawrence Milliken1854–1855Democratic
17Levi Day Boone1855–1856American Party
18Thomas Dyer1856–1857Democratic
19John Wentworth1857–1858Republican
20John Charles Haines1858–1860Democratic
21John Wentworth (2nd)1860–1861Republican
22Julian Sidney Rumsey1861–1862Republican
23Francis Cornwall Sherman1862–1865Democratic
24John Blake Rice1865–1869Republican
25Roswell B. Mason1869–1871CitizensMayor during the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.
26Joseph Medill1871–1873FireproofBorn in Canada
27Harvey Doolittle Colvin1873–1875People's
28Monroe Heath1876–1879Republican
29Carter Harrison, Sr.1879–1887Democraticfather of Carter Harrison, Jr.
30John A. Roche1887–1889Republican
31DeWitt Clinton Cregier1889–1891Democratic
32Hempstead Washburne1891–1893Republican
33Carter Harrison, Sr. (2nd)1893DemocraticAssassinated in office; father of Carter Harrison, Jr.
34George Bell Swift1893RepublicanMayor Pro Tem
35John Patrick Hopkins1893–1895Democratic
36George Bell Swift (2nd)1895–1897Republican
37Carter Harrison, Jr.1897–1905DemocraticFirst Chicago born mayor; son of Mayor Carter Harrison, Sr.
38Edward Fitzsimmons Dunne1905–1907Democratic
39Fred A. Busse1907–1911Republican
40Carter Harrison, Jr. (2nd)1911–1915Democratic
41William Hale Thompson1915–1923Republican
42William Emmett Dever1923–1927Democratic
43William Hale Thompson(2nd)1927–1931Republican
44Anton Cermak1931–1933DemocraticAssassinated in office; second foreign born (in Kladno, Austria-Hungary)
45Frank J. Corr1933Democratic32 days, Acting Mayor
46Edward Joseph Kelly1933–1947DemocraticAct of the Illinois legislature permitted City Council to elect a non-alderman to fill the vacancy.
47Martin H. Kennelly1947–1955Democratic
48Richard J. Daley1955–1976DemocraticDied in office; father of Richard M. Daley
49Michael Anthony Bilandic1976–1979Democratic
50Jane Margaret Byrne1979–1983DemocraticFirst female mayor
51Harold Washington1983–1987DemocraticDied in office; first Black/African-American mayor
52David Duvall Orr1987Democratic8 days, Interim Mayor
53Eugene Sawyer1987–1989DemocraticElected by city council to complete Mayor Washington's term
54Richard M. Daley1989–2011DemocraticLongest serving mayor; son of Richard J. Daley
55Rahm Emanuel2011–presentNonpartisan1First Jewish mayor

Bathhouse John Coughlin 1893-1938

"Bathhouse" John Coughlin (August 15, 1860 – November
11, 1938) was an alderman of Chicago's First Ward from 1893 until his death. Coughlin acquired his nickname as a result of working in a bathhouse as a masseur. Eventually he was able to purchase a tavern and several bathhouses of his own. Coughlin and his partner, fellow First Ward alderman Michael "Hinky Dink" Kenna, were known as the "Lords of the Levee", a district which was part of their ward. The "Levee" was known as being a vice-ridden section of Chicago and home to many saloons, gambling dens, prostitutes, pimps, and flop houses. The two also led the Gray Wolves of Chicago.

Coughlin and Kenna were also the hosts of the First Ward Ball, an annual political fundraiser which brought together safecrackers, prostitutes, gangsters, politicians, businessmen, gamblers, and a variety of other types. The event raised more than $50,000 a year for the two First Ward aldermen until it was closed down in 1909 by Mayor Fred Busse. By the time it was banned, the ball was so large that it had to be held in theChicago Coliseum, the city's major convention center. Besides its notoriety in attracting many unsavory characters it often ended with the police having to curb disorderly conduct bordering on rioting.

Later when Coughlin was accused of corruption, he demanded a retraction, not for the charge of graft, but for the claim he was born in Waukegan,Illinois.










  1. Click to read More:   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Coughlin_(alderman)


    John Coughlin (alderman) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Coughlin_(alderman)

    "Bathhouse" John Coughlin (August 15, 1860 – November 11, 1938) was an alderman of Chicago's First Ward from 1893 until his death. Coughlin acquired his ...

  2. Era of "Hinky Dink" and "Bathhouse John" - Encyclopedia of Chicago

    encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/2408.html

    “Hinky Dink” Kenna and “Bathhouse John” Coughlin created in the 1890s a First Ward political machine based on graft and protection money from the saloons, ...
  3. Images for bathhouse john coughlin

     - Report images

  4. Hinky Dink and Bathouse John - My Al Capone Museum

    www.myalcaponemuseum.com/id147.htm

    Bath House John " Coughlin came from the same Irish Slum District . He was born in 1860. They went to the first Jones School at Harrison and Plymouth Court.

  5. Alderman John Coughlin's Basement Bathhouse - The Chicago ...

    chicagocrimescenes.blogspot.com/.../alderman-john-coughlins-basement....

    Feb 24, 2009 – John J. Coughlin was the proprietor of a bathhouse in the basement of the Brevoort Hotel at this location, 143 W. Madison (now 118 W.

  6. Bathhouse John Coughlin - History of Chicago Politics

    chicagopolitics.wikidot.com/bathhouse-john-coughlin

    Mar 29, 2008 – Growing up in a rough Irish neighborhood in Chicago known as "Connelly's Patch," 1 "Bathhouse" John Coughlin was perhaps the most ...

  7. "Bathhouse" John Coughlin; Chicago Alderman / Poet / Barkeep ...

    ► 1:14► 1:14
    www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWlGDRbephI

    Jan 26, 2012 - Uploaded by ChiTownView
    Chicago's 1st ward encompasses the wealth of downtown and the large population of transients that used to ...
  8. More videos for bathhouse john coughlin »

  9. bath house john, hinky dink & chicago's history of graft and corruption

    www.prairieghosts.com/graft.html

    Michael "Hinky Dink" Kenna and "Bathhouse" John Coughlin, Chicago politicians, ran the notorious, gangster-infested First Ward for almost four decades, ...

  10. "Hinky Dink" Kenna and "Bathhouse" John Coughlin - NBC Chicago

    www.nbcchicago.com/.../The-12-Most-Corrupt-Public-Officials-In-Illino...

    Jan 19, 2012 – Numbers 3 and 4 on our list are former 1st Ward Aldermen Michael "Hinky Dink" Kenna and "Bathhouse" John Coughlin, the so-called "Lords of ...

  11. "Bathhouse" John Coughlin - The Clarence Darrow Collection

    darrow.law.umn.edu/photo.php?pid=1361

    "Bathhouse" John Coughlin (1860 - 1938) was an alderman in Chicago's First Ward from 1892 or 1893 until he died in 1938. Coughlin and alderman Michael ...

  12. Hinky Dink And Bathhouse John`s `Carnival Of Evil` - Chicago Tribune

    articles.chicagotribune.com › Featured Articles

    Jan 25, 1987 – Hinky Dink And Bathhouse John`s `Carnival Of Evil` ... two aldermen), Michael ``Hinky Dink`` Kenna and John ``Bathhouse John`` Coughlin.
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Table of Contents

Early History

  • Introduction

  • Table of Contents

  • Glaciers and Geography

  • Location, Location, Location

  • Paleo Indians - First Chicagoans

  • Native American Trails

  • Trail Marker Trees

  • Historic Native Americans

  • The lllinois Confederation or Illini

  • Marquette and Joliet 1673

  • Illinois and French Colonists

  • The Illinois and Fox Wars 1730

  • Pontiac's War 1763-1766

  • Illini - The End Starved Rock 1769

  • The Pottawattamie 1766-1836

  • George Rogers Clark 1779

  • Jean Baptist du Sable 1788

  • Fort Dearborne Massacre of 1812

  • The Blackhawk War of 1832

  • Chicago Incorporated 1833

  • I and M Canal 1824-1848

  • The Great Chicago Fire 1871

  • Chicago History Snapshot

  • Historical Populations


Politicians

  • Clout

  • The Cost of Clout

  • Where's Mine?

  • List of Mayors

  • Hinky Dink 1897 to 1923

  • Bathhouse John 1893-1938

  • Mayor Big Bill Thompson 1915-1931

  • Mayor Anton Cermak 1931-33

  • Mayor Richard J. Daley 1955-1976

  • Mayor Jane Byrne 1979-1983

  • Mayor Harold Washington 1983-1987

  • Mayor Richard M. Daley 1989-2010

  • Mayor Rahm Emmanuel

  • President Abraham Lincoln and Chicago

  • President Barak Obama and Chicago

  • Lincoln's Statue in Grant Park

  • Greylord 1980's


Crooks

  • Chicago - Most Corrupt City

  • Our Governors Make License Plates

  • H. H. Holmes - 1893

  • FBI - Chicago

  • Al Capone

  • Frank Nitti

  • St Valentine's Day Massacre

  • Top 5 Gansters in Chicago

  • Tony Accardo

  • John Wayne Gacey

  • Operation Greylord

  • Street Gangs

  • Crime Rates

  • Murders and Gang Wars


Writers and Pundits

  • Mike Royko

  • Carl Sandburg

  • Carl Sandburg Poems

  • Saul Bellow

  • Dr. Milt Rosenburg

  • Dr. Paul Green

  • Andrew Greeley

  • Chicago Authors


Transportation

  • The Grid Plan

  • Plank Roads

  • Horse Drawn Trolleys

  • Cable Cars

  • Street Cars

  • Railroads

  • Commuter Railroads

  • The "EL" Elevated Railroads

  • Electric Interurban

  • Trails to Rails

  • Interstate System

  • Address System


Miscellaneous

  • Quotes

  • Fire South Side

  • Lakefront - Forever Free and Clear

  • Reversing the Chicago River

  • Great Lakes Megalopolis

  • The World's Fair 1893

  • Daniel Burnham

  • The Burnham Plan of 1909

  • The Deep Tunnel Plan

  • Urban Renewal

  • Historic Photos

  • Public Housing


Neighborhoods

  • Neighborhoods

  • The Gold Coast

  • Lincoln Park

  • Greek Town

  • Little Italy / University Village

  • China Town

  • Hyde Park / The University of Chicago

  • Mount Greenwood

  • Beverly / Morgan Park

  • Pullman

  • Demographic Change


Suburbs

  • University Park Governors State U

  • Tinley Park

  • Geneva

  • Riverside

  • Wilmette


Airports

  • Meig's Field - Closed in the Night

  • Midway Airport

  • O'Hare Airport

  • The New Third Airport


Museums

  • Field Museum

  • Museum of Science and Industry

  • Art Institute

  • Sculpture


Music

  • Chicago, Chicago, A Toddling Town

  • Good Morning, America, How Are You?

  • Bad, Bad, Leroy Brown, Baddest Man

  • Chicago Blues

  • List of Songs About Chicago


Movies

  • Top 40 Chicago Movies

  • The Blues Brothers



Miscellaneous

  • Historic Photos

  • Your Recommendations for Chicago

  • Sustainable Chicago


Interesting Articles

  • The Death and Life of Chicago


Bragging Rights

  • Chicago Number 6 in the World

  • Nobel Laureate U of C Number 2

  • Jane Adams Hull House


Things to Do

  • Things to Do


Class-Presentations (20 minutes,

90 Minutes of Discussion +-)


  1. chicagocityofbigshoulders1.blogspot.com

  2. chicagocityofbigshoulders2.blogspot.com

  3. chicagocityofbigshoulders3.blogspot.com

  4. chicagocityofbigshoulders4.blogspot.com

Videos

  • Chicago Videos
  • Al Capone
  • Chicago Statistics
  • Chicago Tourism
  • Cityscape Chicago on Vimeo
  • What To See In Chicago
  • Bad Bad Leroy Brown

Class at Pierian Spring Academy

Chicago - Stormy, Husky, Brawling, City of the Big Shoulders

This course will be about Chicago. We will cover the history of the city and region, the politics, the corruption, the arts, the plans, and the achievements of the City. We will discuss current events.

Pierian Spring

In Greek mythology, the Pierian Spring of Macedonia was sacred to the Muses. As the metaphorical source of knowledge of art and science, it was popularized by a couplet in Alexander Pope's poem "An Essay on Criticism" (1709): "A little learning is a dang'rous thing;/Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring."

Pierian Springs

  • Web Site

Popular Posts

  • List of Chicago Mayors
    The mayoral term in Chicago was one year from 1837 through 1863, when it was increased to two years. In 1907 it was again lengthened to f...
  • Location, Location, Location
    Why has Chicago  grown so rapidly?  Location, Location, Location. The map below shows water way links in the United States.  Chicago is nea...
  • The Illinois Confederation / Illini / Illiniwek
    The Illinois Native Americans owned most of Illinois when the first French explorers and fur traders moved into the area.  The Illinois wer...
  • St. Valentine's Day Massacre
    The  Saint Valentine's Day Massacre  is the name given to the 1929 murder of seven mob associates as part of a -era conflict between ...
  • Commuter Railroads
  • Deep Tunnel 1972 - 2029
    The Deep Tunnel Plan constructs a series of large tunnels underneath Chicago.  The system is designed so that when the surface is flood...
  • Fort Dearborn Massacre 1812
    August 15, 1812  From roughly 1620 to 1820 the territory of the Potawatomi extended from what is now Green Bay, Wisconsin, to Detroit,...
  • Chicago Racial Demographics 1910-2000
    ( View each year's map as a still image .) Interesting to watch the changes in Chicago. In 1900 the neighborhoods were over 90...
  • The Field Museum
    Sue, The World's Largest Tyrannasaurus Rex The Field Museum of Natural History on  Lake Shore Drive  next to  Lake Michi...
  • The Grid Plan
    Chicago follows the great American grid plan, with major streets following section lines every one mile. This plan was developed by the...

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      • Who's your clout?
      • Chicago: The Cost of Clout
      • Ubi Est Mea -- Where's mine?
      • List of Chicago Mayors
      • Bathhouse John Coughlin 1893-1938
      • Hinky Dink Kenna, Alderman 1897 to 1923
      • Hinky Dink and Bathhouse John
      • Mayor Big Bill Thompson 1915-1931
      • Mayor Anton Cermak 1931-1933
      • Da Mayor Richard J. Daley 1955 - 1976
      • Mayor Jane Byrne 1979 to 1983
      • Operation Greylord 1980's
      • Richard M. Daley 1989-2011
      • Barack Obama and Chicago
      • Mayor Rahm Emanuel
      • Lincoln Statue in Grant Park. ... Lincoln Statue i...
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Craig Hullinger AICP


Craig Hullinger is a City Planner from Chicago. He lived and worked in the Chicago region most of his career. He is a former member the American Institute of Certified Planners and a retired Marine Colonel.

craighullinger.com

craighullinger@gmail.com

309 634 5557
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