Chicago history

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CALUMET 412
Horseradish grinder, Maxwell Street, 1938, Chicago.
The Internet's Most Asked Questions
Chicago, 1967. I feel something nostalgic about 90's cause I'd lived that age though I've never been to Chicago.
Displaced: When the Eisenhower Expressway Moved in, Who Was Forced Out?
Rubenstein and Glickman Deli was located on 12th Street and Independence Boulevard in Chicago's Lawndale neighborhood. The area was known as the "Jewish West Side." (Photo courtesy Spertus Institute)
PHOTO – CHICAGO – WABASH AVE – CARRIAGES – PEDESTRIANS – SIGNS – 1907
Vintage Chicago Photos Archive | PHOTO - CHICAGO - WABASH AVE - CARRIAGES - PEDESTRIANS - SIGNS - 1907
Lyon’s Delicatessen. Maxwell Street Market, c. 1925. Shalom Chicago
Chicago's defining moments: 1840-1963
Maxwell Street, 1905 (From photo gallery "Chicago's defining moments: 1840-1963" trib.in/mVZ3Qp)
Historic Photographs from Chicago: A Biography by Dominic A. Pacyga
The Maxwell Street Market on the Jewish West Side pictured here in 1917 developed after the fire as the area became known as the Jewish Quarter or Ghetto, which became home to many Russian, Polish, and Lithuanian Jews at the turn of the century. (DN-0068696, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago History Museum.)
Remembering Maxwell Street
In the late nineteenth century, Jewish immigrants started a produce market on Maxwell Street where it crosses Halsted Street. Over the years, Maxwell Street, shown here in about 1905, grew into a vast Sunday-morning flea market. The market moved east to Canal Street in 1994, when the Maxwell Street area was bought by the University of Illinois at Chicago.
CALUMET 412
The Lox King, Jewish Deli, Lawrence Ave, Albany Park, 1970, Chicago. Wayne Sorce
@SavingPlaces | National Trust for Historic Preservation
chicago 1920s pictures | As the only sanctioned place where Chicago's black citizens could live ...