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Location: Chicago

The “Historic” Cards Gift Box (Chicago)

Featuring the Water Tower, Museum of Science and Industry (façade), The Chicago Athletic Association, The Marshall Fields Clock, The Rookery Façade, The Rookery Atrium, The Board of Trade building, The Wrigley building, The Tribune building, the Skyline

 

$25.00

More Landmarks in Chicago

1300 S. Lake Shore Drive,

1930, founded by Chicago philanthropist Max Adler

Architect: Ernest Grunsfeld Jr.

 

Also included in the “Museum” box

 

12 S. Michigan Ave.

1893, built 

Architect:  Henry Ives Cobb 

Classification: Skyscraper

 

Also included in the “Historic” gift box

 

 

Center of Grant Park

1927, dedicated 

Architect: Edward H. Bennett

Statues sculptor: Marcel F. Loyau

On summer evenings, special light and music show on the hour

 

Also included in the “Tourist” gift box

 

Sculpted female figures, architectural support rather than columns/pillars

Reproductions from the Greek ruins in Athens 

Karyatides, Greek, “maidens of Karyai“, an ancient town of Peloponnese

 

Also included in the “Museum” gift box

 

The River: 156 miles of rivers and canals running through Chicago, linking Great Lakes and Mississsippi Valley waterways

The Riverwalk: River-level walkway from Franklin to the lakefront

 

Also included in the “Tourist” gift box

 

Chicago—

“The Windy City”

“The Second City”

“My Kind of Town”

“Sweet Home”

“That Toddling Town”

“The Big Onion”

“City of the Big Shoulders”*

 

“Chicago” poem by Carl Sandburg

1914 appeared in Poetry, first of nine “Chicago Poems”

Sandburg described poem as a chant of defiance by Chicago… defiance of New York, Boston, Philadelphia, London, Paris, Berlin and Rome

The city was at the core of the meat-packing industry and a focal point for the railroad

Then, as now, Chicago is a hub of commodities trading and a key financial center for agricultural markets

One of the city’s many nicknames, “City of the Big Shoulders,” taken from the poem’s fifth line:

HOG Butcher for the World,
Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,
Player with Railroads and the Nation’s Freight Handler;
Stormy, husky, brawling,
*City of the Big Shoulders

 

Also included in all four gift boxes

 

800 N. Michigan Avenue

1869, built 

Architect: William W. Boyington 

1871, survived the Great Chicago Fire

1962, restored

 

Also included in the “Historic” gift box 

 

The Chicago “L” (Short for “elevated”)

Rapid Transit system serving the city and the suburbs

1892, first “L”, Chicago and South Side Rapid Transit Railroad: a steam locomotive pulling four wooden coaches carrying a two dozen people from 39th to the Congress Street terminal, 14 minutes

Today, fourth largest heavy rail rapid transit system in U.S.

More than 224 miles of track 

 

Also included in the “Tourist” and the “Theatre” gift boxes

 

S. Michigan Ave. (100 E) & E. Congress Pkwy. (500 S)

1928 “The Bowman and The Spearman”

Sculptor: Ivan Mestrovic

2004 “Magdalene”

Sculptor: Dessa Kirk

 

Also included in the “Theatre” gift box

 

1200 South Lake Shore Drive Chicago

1930, opened 

Chicago architectural firm Graham, Anderson, Probst & White

 

Also included in the “Museum” gift box

 

“The Mart”

222 W. Merchandise Mart Plaza, Near NOrth Side, junction of Chicago River’s branches                        

1930, opened, 4,000,000 square feet                                                                                                               

Art Deco Style, Architects Graham, Anderson, Probst and White                                                                    

Built by Marshall Field & Co., later owned more than 50 years by Kennedys                                       

Designed to be a  “city within a city”: Centralized Chicago’s wholesale goods business                          

Late 2000s, leading retail and wholesale destination, hosting 20,000 visitors and tenants per day

 

Also included in the “Museum” box

 

5700 S. Lake Shore Dr.

1893 former Palace of the Fine Arts building, World’s Columbian Exposition

1933 reconstructed, opened for Century of Progress Exposition

Architects,: Charles B. Atwood; Graham, Anderson Probst & White; Shaw, Naess & Murphy

 

Also included in the “Historic” gift box

 

5700 S. Lake Shore Dr.

1893 former Palace of the Fine Arts building,

World’s Columbian Exposition

1933 reconstructed, opened for

Century of Progress Exposition

Architects,: Charles B. Atwood; Graham, Anderson Probst & White; Shaw, Naess & Murphy

 

Also included in the “Museum” gift box

 

600 E. Grand Av. at Lake Michigan

1914, built 

Architect Charles Sumner Frost

Employed by the U.S. military during WWI and WWII, housing Red Cross units

 

Also included in the “Tourist” gift box

 

55 N. Michigan Ave

Also known as Pritzker Pavilion or Pritzker Music Pavilion

Bandshell in Millennium Park

Architect: Frank Gehry

Classified as a work of art

Designed with large fixed seating area, a Great Lawn, trellis network to support sound system and signature Gehry stainless steel headdress

2004, opened

Home of the Grant Park Symphony Orchestra and Chorus and the Grant Park Music Festival

The nation’s only remaining free outdoor classical music venue

Hosts wide range of music series and annual performing arts events

 

Also included in the “Theatre” gift box

 

Lake Shore Drive on Chicago’s Near South Side

1924, Opened 

“DEDICATED TO THE MEN AND WOMEN OF THE ARMED FORCES”

Home to the NFL‘s Chicago Bears

 

Also included in the “Tourist” gift box

 

111 S. Michigan Avenue

1893, built 

Architects: Shepley, Rutan, and Coolidge

 

The  Lions of the Art Institute of Chicago

Two bronze lion statues

flanking the Institute’s main entrances                                                                  

Sculptor Edward Kemeys

1893, created

 

Also included in the “Museums” gift box

 

 

Center of Millennium Park, Michigan Avenue at Randolph                        

Sculptor Anish Kapoor, called it “Cloud Gate”                                                

2006, dedicated

 

Also included in the “Tourist” gift box

 

Intersection of Congress Drive and Michigan Avenue in Grant Park

Bronze equestrian  sculpture standing as gatekeeper in Congress Plaza

Croatian sculptor Ivan Meštrović                                                                       

1928, installed                                                                                                    

(Other sculpture, The Spearman. Both sculptures missing weapons, the bow and arrow and the spear)

 

Also included in the “Theatre” gift box

 

141 W. Jackson Boulevard                                                                          

Skyscraper at the foot of the LaSalle Street canyon, in the Loop                                                                

1882, construction began at present location after the Chicago fire 

1885, opened                                                                                                                                               

Designed by William W. Boyington, best known today for his work on the Water Tower 

1925, Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) commissioned Holabird & Root to design current building 

1930, opened                                                                                                                                                 

Art deco style                                                                                                                                                   

1977, designated Chicago Landmark                                                                                                          

1978, added to National Register of Historic Landmarks  

Originally built for CBOT                                                                                                                            

2007, merged CBOT and  Chicago Mercantile Exchange 

 

Also included in the “Historic” gift box

 

78 E. Washington St. and Michigan Avenue

Boston architectural firm Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge

Neoclassical architecture

1897, opened as central library building and meeting hall and memorial for Grand Army of the Republic (GAR)

1977, converted to and arts and culture center

Houses city’s official receptions, Mayor of Chicago welcoming Presidents, royalty, diplomats and community leaders

Chicago Landmark

 

Also included in the “Theatre” gift box

                                            

 

 

North State Street, Chicago’s Loop      

Originally the Balaban and Katz Chicago Theatre                                                           

Oldest surviving grand movie palace                                                                                                             

1921, designed by primary architects Cornelius W. Rapp and George L. Rapp

Neo-Baroque Frenchrevival style–oldest surviving example of this style in Chicago

1925 to 1945, dominant movie theatre enterprise                                                                                           

1979 National Register of Historic Places                                                                                               

1983 listed as Chicago Landmark                                                                                                             

Distinctive marquee, “an unofficial emblem of the city”                                                                             

Appears frequently in film, television, artwork, and photography

1986 renovation completed                                                                                                                            

1994 marquee replaced, retaining look of original                                                                                     

2004 original marquee donated to the Smithsonian Institution  

 

Also included in the “Theatre” gift box 

1400 S. Lake Shore Drive                                                                                      

1921, built                                                                                                      

Architect: Daniel P. Burnham

 

Also included in the “Museum” gift box

 

170 N Dearborn St, Chicago’s loop                                                                                                 

Professional theater company, major part of Chicago theatre scene                                                          

Chicago’s oldest currently active nonprofit theater organization                                                                 

1925 founded as a tribute to Chicago playwright Kenneth Sawyer Goodman 

2000 company moved into the Dearborn building in Chicago’s theater district

 

Also included in the “Theatre” gift box 

 

875 North Michigan Avenue, Streeterville area of Chicago                            

100-story, 1,127-foot (344 m) tall skyscraper                                                            

Architects Skidmore, Owings and Merrill                                                                

Chief designer Bruce Graham, structural engineer Fazlur Khan                        

1964, development began                                                                                    

1967, interrupted                                                                                        

Engineering problem resolved by Raymond Concrete Pile Co.                        

1969, completed                                                                                                      

One of the most famous buildings of the Structural Expressionist style, the skyscraper’s distinctive X-braced exterior shows that the structure’s skin is part of its ‘tubular system’  

 

Also included in the “Tourist” gift box   

 

20 N Upper Wacker Drive, in Chicago’s Loop                                           

1929, housed in Civic Opera Building, Art Deco structure                                                                        

One of the leading U.S. opera companies                                                                                                 

1954 founded in Chicago under the name ‘Lyric Theatre of Chicago’                                                     

1954 Maria Callas debuted in U.S.

1956 re-organized under its present name                                                                                

World-famous artists performed, including opera tenor Luciano Pavarotti

Rudolph Nureyev debuting in U.S. at the Lyric

George Balanchine creating choreography for the Lyric

2020, Opera house became new home for Joffrey Ballet

 

Also included in the “Theatre” box

 

Marshall Field and Company Building or Macy’s at State Street                 

Known for its clocks, weighing about 7.5 short tons each                              

The southwest clock, on State and Washington, known as the Great Clock  

 1897, installed                                                                                                    

Marshall Field envisioned store as a beacon, as a meeting place                  

Clock installed as southwest corner of  store became a popular meeting place

People began leaving notes for one another on the Marshall Field’s windows.                           

Clock was an attempt to end this practice and encourage punctuality        

1978, building declared a National Historic Landmark

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places

2005, designated a Chicago Landmark 

 

Also included in the “Historic” gift box

 

24 W Randolph, Chicago’s loop                                                                                                            

1926, opened                                                                                                                                         

Architects Rapp and Rapp                                                                                                                        

Decor inspired by Indian architecture                                                                                                     

Initially, movies and vaudeville acts                                                                                                           

1930s primarily a movie house,                                                                                                                 

1934, at 12, Judy Garland’s debut appearance–with her sisters–as Frances Gumm    

1998, theatre restored and  reopened                                                                                                       

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places

 

Also included in the “Theatre” box 

 

50 W Washington

Sculptor Pablo Picasso

1967, dedicated

 

Also included in the “Tourist” gift box 

 

209 S LaSalle St, Chicago, IL 60604                                                                     

1886 Architect John Root  designed copper-plated ironwork

1907 redesigned by Frank Lloyd Wright,                                                                                              

maximizing amount of light and air in the building,                                                                       

sheltered by glass ceiling

 

Also included in the “Historic” gift box              

Designated “In an Attitude of Defiance”                                                            

1893, bronze statue created for the Art Institute’s opening at current location                                                                                                            

Sculptor, Edward Kemeys                                                                                    

(The north lion, “On the Prowl”)

 

Also included in the “Museum” box

 

435 North Michigan Avenue                                                                              

Contains rock fragments from around the world                                      

Architects John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood                                        

1925, completed

 

Also included in “Historic” gift box 

 

400-410 North Michigan Avenue

1920-21, built 

Architectural firm: Graham, Anderson, Probst & White

 

Also included in the “Historic” gift box

 

 “The Friendly Confines” 1060 West Addison Street 

1914, opened Architect: Zachary Taylor Davis 

Home of the Chicago Cubs Baseball team

1908 and 2016 World Series Champions 

 

Also included in the “Tourist” box

 

Northwest section Millennium Park, Historic Michigan Boulevard District of Chicago’s Loop                                                                                                                      

1917, original peristyle designed by renowned Chicago planner Edward H. Bennett, Daniel Burnham‘s partner in the Plan of Chicago, also known for designing Buckingham Fountain                                                              

1953, original, made of concrete, razed                                                                                                                                                          

2002,  Public park/Town Square, limestone replica of the semicircle of paired Roman Doricstyle columns                                                                                        

Hosts cultural events

Included in the “Museum” gift box