THE FAIRadmin2018-04-30T07:25:19-05:00

RECENT POSTS ABOUT THE HISTORY OF THE COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION’S BUILDING, FAIRGROUNDS, EXHIBITS, EVENTS, AND PEOPLE.

Chicago Magazine Recalls the “Indecent Undulations” on the Midway Plaisance

A photograph of "Egyptian Dancing Girls" from Picturesque World’s Fair shows more modest attire than is often described for the "belly dancer" show on the Midway. The February 2019 issue of Chicago Magazine offers a historical survey of baring skin in the Windy City. “Unbuttoning Chicago’s History of Covering Up” opens with the 1893 World’s Fair, summarizing how the “belly dancers” in the Street in Cairo exhibit on the Midway Plaisance shocked some viewers, raised ire of the Board of Lady Managers, and provoked U.S postal inspector Anthony Comstock to attempt to shut it down. [...]

By Scott|January 26th, 2019|Categories: NEWS|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

A Plan to Build Robert Burns’ Cottage at the 1893 World’s Fair

Each January 25th, Scots celebrate the life and works of their national poet, Robert Burns, by joining together for “Burns Night” or “Burns Supper.” The December 1892 issue of World’s Columbian Exposition Illustrated offered this brief report on a planned structure for the upcoming 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago: Robert Burns’ cottage will be shown at the World’s Columbian Exposition. A concession for this purpose was granted to the Scottish Industrial Association. The building will be constructed of material brought from Scotland and within the house will be displayed a Burns’ memorial collection. Although the Burns cottage was not [...]

By Scott|January 25th, 2019|Categories: REPRINTS|Tags: , |0 Comments

University of Notre Dame will cover its Christopher Columbus murals

The painting used as the source for a Columbian Issue U.S. postage stamp will be removed from public view at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. The basis of the engraving design for 10-cent Columbian stamp titled “Columbus Presenting Natives” is Return of Columbus and Reception at Court (1880-84), the largest of twelve murals about the life and voyages of Christopher Columbus by Italian painter and Notre Dame art professor Luigi Gregori. The painting depicts Columbus’ return to Granada. The artist reportedly worked himself into his canvas as the man with the mustache behind the red [...]

By Scott|January 24th, 2019|Categories: ANTIQUES, NEWS|Tags: , |0 Comments

PICTURESQUE WORLD’S FAIR – The Irish Village (p. 74)

PICTURESQUE WORLD’S FAIR. AN ELABORATE COLLECTION OF COLORED VIEWS Page 74 – THE IRISH VILLAGE THE IRISH VILLAGE.—There were two Irish villages in the Midway Plaisance, each possessing many attractions. The one here shown is that in which the Countess of Aberdeen was interested and in which she had a cottage. The village was one of the first of prominent features at the left upon entering Midway from the grounds proper, and comprised the exhibit of the Irish Industrial Association. The entrance was a copy of the north doorway to a chapel built by Cormac, Bishop of Munster, in [...]

Louis Sullivan’s Transportation Building … in Green

Adler & Sullivan’s Transportation Building. [Image from The World’s Columbian Exposition Portfolio of Views by C. D. Arnold and H. D. Higinbotham (C. B. Woodward Co., 1893).] Finding references to the 1893 World’s Fair--especially in unexpected places--can be a delight. All the more so when images of the White City show up in the context of another personal passion. A few weeks ago, the yellow brick road led to the White City. The Paramount Theater in Aurora, Illinois, offered a marvelous production of The Wizard of Oz in their 2018-19 Broadway series. Amid the technicolor spectacle was a [...]

By Scott|January 20th, 2019|Categories: NEWS, THEATER|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Jan. 24, 2019: Sophia Hayden’s Gold Medal To Be Auctioned

The reverse of Hayden's presentation medal . [Image from John McInnis Auctioneers.] John McInnis Auctioneers (76 Main Street, Amesbury, MA) will offer a rare item from the 1893 World’s Fair in their “Numismatics, Exonumia, Silver and Jewelry” auction on Thursday January 24, 2019. Lot 10 is a 14-karat gold presentation medal awarded to architect Sophia Hayden for her design of the Woman’s Building. An inscription on the obverse reads "Sophia G. Hayden--Presented by the Board of Lady Managers of the Worlds Columbian Commission 1893" with an image of her building. On the reverse is a portrait of Bertha [...]

By Scott|January 16th, 2019|Categories: ANTIQUES, EVENTS (past)|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

“We will hardly make fools of ourselves.” Carter Harrison’s Bid to Be the World’s Fair Mayor

After serving four terms as mayor of Chicago from 1879 to 1887, Carter Harrison, Sr. ran again in 1893 to become the “World’s Fair Mayor.” He oversaw the city’s hosting of the World’s Columbian Exposition until the fateful evening that he was assassinated, just days before the scheduled closing of the Fair. Shortly after the mayor’s death, The Review of Reviews (December 1893, p. 663) published this article, which included a letter written to the journal by the mayor nearly a year earlier, on January 16, 1893. The mayor’s missive, characterized by “audacity, buoyancy, naivete and egotism in every [...]

By Scott|January 16th, 2019|Categories: REPRINTS|Tags: |0 Comments

Pillars of the Fair: John Root and Henry Codman

Two pillars of the 1893 World’s Fair died unexpectedly before they could complete their work on the fairgrounds. Even the preliminary architectural contributions of both men, however, played a monumental role in the success of the Columbian Exposition. So, it was fitting that a small monument to the memory of these two leading designers graced the fairgrounds. John Wellborn Root (left) and Henry Sargent Codman (right). Glorious achievements January 13 marks the anniversary of the death of landscape architect Henry Sargent Codman in 1893 due to complications following an appendectomy. A 29-year-old protégé of Frederick Law Olmsted, [...]

Feb. 2, 2019: Potter & Potter Auctions to Offer Columbian Exposition Collectibles

A Statue of the Republic plaster model up for sale through Potter & Potter Auctions on February 2, 2019. Potter & Potter Auctions of Chicago will offer several interesting World’s Columbian Exposition items in their February 2nd auction, “Fine Books and Manuscripts: Featuring Important Chicago Memorabilia.” A unique lot is a three-foot, golden Statue of the Republic plaster model, identified as being produced by Orlandi Statuary of Chicago in 1993 for the 100th anniversary of the Exposition. We reported on another of these statuettes (though one including both the staff for the left hand and the globe-with-eagle [...]

By Scott|January 12th, 2019|Categories: ANTIQUES, EVENTS (past)|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Jan. 29, 2019: World’s Fair Auction #33 closes

Columbian Exposition collectors may be interested in World’s Fair Auction #33, now open for preview. Online bidding closes on Tuesday, January 29, 2019, at 10 PM EDT. The auction catalog can be viewed at: http://www.worldsfairauction.com/cgi-bin/catalog.cgi. Lots 7 through 25 are items related to the 1893 World’s Fair, and include several products commemorating various building of the White City: • a decorative powder box with a picture of the Administration Building; • a jig saw puzzle picturing the Transportation Building, with box; • a china pitcher decorated with an image of the Horticultural Building; • a porcelain plate showing the [...]

By Scott|January 11th, 2019|Categories: ANTIQUES, EVENTS (past)|Tags: |0 Comments
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