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  2. Street signs in Chicago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_signs_in_Chicago

    In 1936, a federal grant allowed the city to install 64,000 yellow signs with black text for street names, but most were melted down for their metal in World War II. [1] After the war, the city tested multiple sign styles in the Loop and ended up with returning to the black-on-yellow color scheme, installing signs starting in 1950.

  3. Devon Avenue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devon_Avenue

    Devon Avenue / dɪˈvɒn / is a major east-west street in the Chicago metropolitan area. It begins at Chicago's Sheridan Road, which borders Lake Michigan, and it runs west until merging with Higgins Road near O'Hare International Airport. Devon continues on the opposite side of the airport and runs intermittently through Chicago's northwestern ...

  4. Hudson's Bay point blanket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson's_Bay_point_blanket

    Blankets of 2.5, 3, 3.5 and 4 point were most common during the fur-trade era. Today, Hudson's Bay blankets are commonly found in point sizes of 3.5 , 4 , 6 and 8 . [3] The misconception persists that originally the points were an indication of a blanket's price in beaver pelts or even its weight.

  5. Sullivan Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sullivan_Center

    Sullivan Center. The Sullivan Center, formerly known as the Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Building or Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Store, [4] is a commercial building at 1 South State Street at the corner of East Madison Street in Chicago, Illinois. Louis Sullivan designed it for the retail firm Schlesinger & Mayer in 1899 and later ...

  6. Marshall Field's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Field's

    On the day of his funeral, all the stores along State Street, big and small, closed and the Chicago Board of Trade suspended afternoon trading in his honor. [5] The board of Marshall Field and Company appointed John G. Shedd , (1850–1926), whom Field had once called "the greatest merchant in the United States", to serve as the company's new ...

  7. Ida B. Wells Drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ida_B._Wells_Drive

    Ida B. Wells Drive, formerly called Congress Parkway, was proposed in the 1909 Plan of Chicago as the central axis of the replanned city. The plan's authors, Daniel Burnham and Edward H. Bennett, proposed a broad new boulevard on the line of Congress Street that would cut through the long blocks between Van Buren and Harrison Streets, connecting a cultural center of new buildings in Grant Park ...