Site of Fort Dearborn Clarke House Iglehart House Soldiers' Home First Baptist Congregational Church Hitchcock House Illinois-Indiana State Line Boundary Marker Noble-Seymour-Crippen House Site of the Origins of the I&M Canal Wingert House Jane Addams Hull-House Rosehill Cemetery Entrance Groesbeck House St. Ignatius College Prep Building Raber House Wheeler-Kohn House Site of the Origin of the Chicago Fire of 1871 Stephen A. Douglas Tomb Site of the Sauganash Hotel/Wigwam
Pre-Fire Chicago Tour
The landmarks on this tour all played a crucial role in the early development of the City. The original Fort Dearborn, built in 1803, was the first permanent structure established in what is now Chicago. By 1816, surveying began on the Illinois & Michigan Canal, which would provide for continuous boat travel between the Chicago River and the Illinois-Mississippi rivers system.

Chicago, then a city of 3,000, received its City Charter in 1837. Development of the canal led to a land rush, and in just 13 years, Chicago was a city of 30,000. The immediate need to construct housing, along with a shortage of structural-grade wood, led to small, poorly built houses built by unskilled workers from inferior materials.

By the 1860's, Chicago had developed into a national center for commerce, serving as the westward bound transportation hub for both railroads and ships. The city's engineers began to tackle the problems of such growth, creating sewer systems, water pumping stations and mass transportation. The population had again increased tenfold from 30,000 in 1850 to almost 300,000 in 1870.

For two days in October of 1871, the Great Chicago Fire raged. It destroyed over 17,000 structures and left almost 100,000 homeless. To this day, Chicago's history is split into two distinct time frames: "before the fire" and "after the fire."

The landmarks listed here represent some of the few buildings constructed prior to the Fire of 1871 that still survive. These include some mid-19th century residences, along with some of Chicago's earlist institutional buildings.

  1. Site of Fort Dearborn
  2. Illinois-Indiana State Line Boundary Marker
  3. Iglehart House
  4. Rosehill Cemetery Entrance
  5. Groesbeck House
  6. Wheeler-Kohn House
  7. Raber House
  8. Hitchcock House
  9. Stephen A. Douglas Tomb
  10. Noble-Seymour-Crippen House
  11. Clarke House
  12. Jane Addams Hull-House
  13. First Baptist Congregational Church
  14. Wingert House
  15. Site of the Origins of the I&M Canal
  16. Site of the Origin of the Chicago Fire of 1871
  17. St. Ignatius College Prep Building
  18. Site of the Sauganash Hotel/Wigwam
  19. Soldiers' Home

Landmarks Home
Tours
Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War Tour
African-American History Tour
Art Deco Tour
Boul Mich Tour
Churches & Synagogues Tour
Early Skyscrapers Tour
Education Tour
Great Interiors Tour
Innovative Housing Tour
Labor and Industry Tour
Mansions Tour
Music & Art Tour
Parks Tour
Prairie School Tour
Pre-Fire Chicago Tour
Railroad and Bridges Tour
Terra Cotta Tour
The Loop Tour
The Modern Era Tour

You will find tour links in this location on every page. Look for this arrow to continue the Pre-Fire Chicago Tour tour.

 
 
 

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