Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Richard Benjamin Speck (December 6, 1941 – December 5, 1991) was an American mass murderer who killed eight student nurses in their South Deering, Chicago, residence via stabbing, strangling, slashing their throats, or a combination of the three on the night of July 13–14, 1966.
Gage Park murders: Chicago: 2016-02-02: 6: Six members of Martinez family murdered in house in Gage Park, Chicago [33] Duck Walk Killer: Chicago: 2: Unsolved spree killing in Rogers Park neighborhood: Mercy Hospital shooting: Chicago: 2018-11-19: 4: Mass shooting at hospital: Aurora, Illinois shooting: Aurora: 2019-02-15: 6: Mass shooting at ...
Chicago Shimpo – The Chicago Japanese American News, Friday, October 10, 2008. Volume 6732, p. 7. ISSN 0009-370X. Helmer, William and Arthur J. Bilek. The St. Valentine's Day Massacre: The Untold Story of the Bloodbath That Brought Down Al Capone. Nashville: Cumberland House, 2004. ISBN 978-1-58182-329-5.
The area north of Chicago, including today's Lincoln Park, was eventually incorporated as Lake View Township. The city, nonetheless, owned extensive tracts of land north of North Avenue, including what is now the park. The Township was annexed to Chicago in 1889. [7] The Lincoln Park Zoo opened in 1868. [8]
Johnny Veal was 17 when he and another man killed Sgt. James Severin and Officer Anthony Rizzato in 1970 as they walked across a field in the Cabrini-Green public housing complex. Veal, 68, and ...
Chicago shooting or Chicago massacre may refer to: Haymarket affair; Chicago race riot of 1919, a racial conflict between White-Americans and African-Americans, that killed 38 people (23 of whom were Black and 15 were White) Saint Valentine's Day Massacre, a gang shooting in February 1929 that killed seven people at Lincoln Park
All four victims were passengers on a Blue Line train as it was headed into the Forest Park terminal when they were shot shortly before 5:30 a.m., said Forest Park Police Deputy Chief Christopher ...
Lincoln Park is a 1,208-acre (489-hectare) park along Lake Michigan on the North Side of Chicago, Illinois.Named after US president Abraham Lincoln, it is the city's largest public park and stretches for seven miles (11 km) from Grand Avenue (500 N), on the south, [1] [2] to near Ardmore Avenue (5800 N) on the north, just north of the DuSable Lake Shore Drive terminus at Hollywood Avenue. [3]