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


A Fair to Remember

Posts about the history of

the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago


Frรฉdรฉric Auguste Bartholdiโ€™s Visit to the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Part 1

โ€œMy only ambition has been to engrave my name at the feet of great men and in the service of grand ideas.โ€ โ€”Frรฉdรฉric Auguste Bartholdi Frรฉdรฉric Auguste Bartholdi in 1880. Most monographs about Frรฉdรฉric Auguste Bartholdi conclude his story with the 1886 unveiling ceremony for his Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. A lesser-known chapter in the French sculptorโ€™s life involves his next and final trip [...]

Ballyhoo on the Midway Plaisance

โ€œAll new words are created because a new sound is needed to voice an idea, usually also new.โ€ โ€”Charles Wolverton The word ballyhoo, according to the renowned and authoritative Oxford English Dictionary (OED), means a โ€œa showmanโ€™s touting speech, or a performance advertising a show.โ€ It can be used as a mass noun to mean โ€œbombastic nonsense; extravagant or brash publicity; noisy fuss.โ€ Though this โ€œcarnivalโ€ usage has uncertain [...]

By |May 18th, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Prominent Petunias

On April 29, 1893, gardeners at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition held a christening ceremony for a pair of plants. Inside the greenhouse behind the Horticultural Building, they sprinkled water from a can onto the opening blossoms of two petunias, baptizing the large white bloom as โ€œMrs. Potter Palmerโ€ (named after the President of the Board of Lady Managers) and the black one having one tiny white fleck as [...]

By |May 8th, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Progress of the Century: The Celebrated Agave Plant of the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

Uncle John rose with the morning sun on April 23, 1893 and made a bee-line for the Horticultural Building on the fairgrounds of the Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition in Jackson Park, Chicago. The opening of the Fairโ€”when President Cleveland would push the button to unfurl the flags along the White City rooftops and release the water to the glorious fountainsโ€”was still nine days away. Today, however, the Chief of the [...]

By |May 7th, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

THIS IS A LOAN from Isabella Stewart Gardner

A new Netflix documentary This Is a Robbery: The World's Biggest Art Heist reveals the grievous but fascinating story of a 1990 art theft from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. Two paintings from the collection (thankfully not stolen!) were loaned by Mrs. Gardner to the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition in Chicago and exhibited in the Palace of Fine Arts. Hanging in the Swedish display in Gallery 70 [...]

By |April 25th, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , |0 Comments

โ€œFarthest Northโ€: An Arctic Tableau at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

Crowds gather at the 1893 World's Fair to see a panorama depicting the Greely Expedition to the North Pole. [Image from the Illustrated American World's Fair Special Issue, 1893.] Seventy five years ago today, arctic explorer David L. Brainard (1856โ€“1946) died at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington D.C. He was the last survivor of the famous Lady Franklin Bay Expedition of 1881โ€“84 under the command of Lieutenant [...]

By |March 22nd, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: |0 Comments

Claude Monetโ€™s paintings at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

Irises, water lilies, and poppies can be spotted around Chicago this winter, colorful images promoting the exhibition Monet and Chicago at the Art Institute of Chicago through June 14, 2021. The show explores Chicagoโ€™s early connection to Claude Monet, whose canvases began arriving in this city around the time of the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition because of a few visionary collectors. Monet paintings adorned the walls of Bertha and [...]

By |January 31st, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , |0 Comments

Christmas in the Palace of Fine Arts of the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

More than a dozen works of art depicting Christmas themes adorned the halls of the Palace of Fine Arts at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Columbian Exposition. Edwin H. Blashfield's oil painting Christmas Bells (1891). [Image from Hitchcock, Ripley The Art of the World Illustrated in the Paintings, Statuary, and Architecture of the World's Columbian Exposition. D. Appleton, 1895.] An oil painting titled Christmas Bells (1891) by Edwin H. Blashfield [...]

By |December 25th, 2020|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

Ontarioโ€™s Mammoth Squash at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

So many things were big, big, BIG at the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair that it may have been easy to miss the worldโ€™s biggest squash. On display in the Horticultural Building in late September was a quarter-ton โ€œmonster squashโ€ from Canada. Gourdzilla received some proud coverage back home in the September 29, 1893, issue of the Windsor Star, which reported on the sensational vegetable: โ€œOntario is again the sensation provider [...]

By |November 26th, 2020|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: |1 Comment

Remembering Nancy Green, Aunt Jemima, and the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair

Though relatively unknown at the time, one participant in the 1893 Worldโ€™s Fair later became a famous fixture of food advertising and a part of many peopleโ€™s kitchens for more than a century. For the past ninety-seven years, the final resting place of the real woman behind the character was an unmarked plot of grass in a cemetery on Chicagoโ€™s South Side. A sign welcoming guests to the [...]

By |September 9th, 2020|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , |2 Comments
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