History2018-03-11T10:35:07-05:00


A Fair to Remember

Posts about the history of

the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago


Angels in the Spandrels: The Winged Decorations of Louis Sullivanโ€™s Transportation Building

Critics glorified and reviled Louis Sullivanโ€™s renegade design for the Transportation Building at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair. The polychromatic color scheme and the grand Golden Door received the most commentary at the time of the Columbian Exposition, and both elements continue to fascinate students of architecture today. Louis Sullivanโ€™s striking design for the Transportation Building featured a polychromatic faรงade and majestic โ€œGolden Doorโ€ entrance on the east side. [...]

By |April 14th, 2024|Categories: HISTORY, RESEARCH|Tags: , , |1 Comment

โ€œSick of the picturesqueโ€: Hamlin Garland oversells the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

Note: Hamlin Garland will be inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame at a ceremony on Tuesday, April 16, 2024, from 5:30โ€”8 pm at the Chicago History Museum. Further information about Hamlin Garland can be found at the Hamlin Garland Society website https://www.garlandsociety.org/ โ€œSell the cook stove if necessary and come. You must see this fair.โ€ This oft-repeated quote, brimming with enthusiasm and promise for the 1893 Worldโ€™s [...]

Seeing the Solar Eclipse of 1893 at the Worldโ€™s Fair

Did you see it? Viewers on April 8, 2024, snapped countless millions of photographs of the solar eclipse. For the total solar eclipse of April 16, 1893โ€”visible in South America and Africaโ€”only a handful of photographs were taken. At least one made it into a display at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. A photograph of the April 1893 solar eclipse, exhibited in the California State Building [...]

By |April 8th, 2024|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , |0 Comments

Cumberland Gap was passed over for the 1892 Worldโ€™s Fair

Congressmen filed into the great hall of the U.S. Capitol as the House of Representatives went into session on February 24, 1890. Just after noon, the first order of business was a vote to select a host site for the upcoming Worldโ€™s Fair, then planned for 1892. Boosters from New York, Chicago, St. Louis, and Washington, D.C., packed the galleries in nervous anticipation. Support in Congress seemed to be [...]

By |March 10th, 2024|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , |0 Comments

Did you see the 1893 Fair? Prove it with a โ€œCertificate of Visitation to the Worldโ€™s Columbian Expositionโ€

You bought your train ticket and booked your lodging in Chicago, traveled to Jackson Park and paid your fifty-cent admission. Youโ€™ve finally made it into the City of Wonders, the Dream City, the White City โ€ฆ the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition fairgrounds. How will anyone believe you are here if you donโ€™t purchase an official โ€œCertificate of Visitationโ€ to show friends back home? T. Dart Walkerโ€™s drawing โ€œIn [...]

Tea from the Boston Tea Party at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

Two hundred and fifty years ago, on December 16, 1773, American colonists angry at the British crown for imposing taxation without representation, staged what became known as โ€œThe Boston Tea Party.โ€ This act of colonial defiance to British rule has become a legendary part of American history, although aspects of the story are steeped in myth. Some of the tea from Boston Harbor appears to have made its way [...]

By |December 16th, 2023|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Californiaโ€™s โ€œTower of Orangesโ€ at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

California had a knack for building unusual towers for the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair. An amber-hued obelisk known as the โ€œOlive Oil Towerโ€ greeted visitors entering the south portal of the California Building. This display from Santa Barbara County was constructed from 2,000 quart-sized bottles of virgin liquid. In the northwest corner of the building, Butte County built twin towers made from several hundred boxes of choice dried fruits. In [...]

By |December 13th, 2023|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

โ€œAfter the Ballโ€ entertains and enrages at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

One song served as the (unofficial) anthem of the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition. More popular than โ€œTa-ra-ra Boom-de-ay,โ€ more often sung than โ€œAmerica,โ€ and more frequently parodied than โ€œDaddy Wouldnโ€™t Buy Me a Bow Wow,โ€ this tune could be heardโ€”for better or for worseโ€”throughout the fairgrounds all summer. Groups ranging from John Philip Sousaโ€™s band to the marimba quartet at the Guatemala Building to the donkey boys on the [...]

By |November 29th, 2023|Categories: AUDIO, HISTORY|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

This Side Up: The OTHER Man Who Mailed Himself to the Midway in a Box

[Continued from Part 1 of this article.] Millions of visitors poured into Chicago during the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair. They arrived by train, boat, carriage, wagon, horseback, bicycle, and several even walked. A few others chose, well โ€ฆ less conventional modes of transport. For example, Herman Zeitungโ€”the Austrian tailor, small in stature but big in braveryโ€”mailed himself C.O.D. to the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition. When he popped out of his [...]

By |October 4th, 2023|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: |1 Comment

This Side Up: The Man Who Mailed Himself to the Midway in a Box

Despite having nearly 120,000 people enter the fairgrounds on Friday, July 28, this was the slowest day of the week at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition. The day before had been a busy one, with Commercial Travelers and German Turners pouring into the Chicago fair for their "special days." Among the few events on Friday was the opening of an interesting package in the Womanโ€™s Building. The box contained [...]

By |October 3rd, 2023|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , |1 Comment
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