Showing posts with label Jackson Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jackson Street. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2009

Chicago: The Land Where Time Began

I've always been fascinated by time zones.  Just the other day in the elevator a man from India was telling his son that India is the only country in the world with a half-hour time zone (India is 10.5 hours ahead of Chicago).

I took the opportunity to correct him and inform him that Canada, Venezuela, Iran, Afghanistan, and Australia also have half-hour time zones.  When I got home I looked it up to be sure, and found that French Polynesia, Burma, and part of New Zealand also have them.

So, where did this mess start?  It turns out right here in Chicago.



In the Loop you will find a plaque marking the location where time zones were invented.  It reads:

THE STANDARD TIME SYSTEM IN THE UNITED STATES
ADOPED ON THIS SITE -- OCTOBER 11, 1883
Chicago's famous Grand Pacific Hotel, then on the site of the present Continental Bank Building, was the location of the General Time Convention of 1883 which, on October 11 of that year, adoped the current Standard Time System in the United States.
The Convention was called by the nation's railroads.  Delegates were asked to develop a better and more uniform time system to govern railroad operations.
Previously, time had been determined by the position of the sun, with high noon as the only existing standard of exact local time.  More than 100 different local times resulted from this method.
The new plan, proposed by William F. Allen, Convention Secretary, established four equal time zones across the country, each one hour ahead of the zone to its west.  All railroad clocks in each zone were to be synchronized to strike the hour simultaneously.
The Standard Time System was inaugurated on November 18, 1883.  On that Sunday, known as the "Day of Two Noons," the Allegheny Observatory at the University of Pittsburgh transmitted a telegraph signal when it was exactly noon on the 90th meridian.  Railroad clocks throughout the United States were then reset on the hour according to time zone.
Although implemented by the railroads, the Federal Government, states, and cities began to use the system almost immediately.  On March 18, 1918, Congress formally asknowledged the plan by passing the Standard Time Act.
THIS PLAQUE PRESENTED TO
CONTINENTAL BANK
BY
THE MIDWEST RAILWAY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, INC.
November 18, 1971

Incidentally, the bank building that replaced the hotel on this site is now being converted into a J.W. Marriott hotel.  What once was old is new again.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Slice of Life: Where the Mother Road Begins


Most people know the famous Route 66.  Many people know from the song that "it winds from Chicago to L.A."  But not everyone realizes that there's an actual location in Chicago where Route 66 officially begins.  It's Adams Street at Michigan Avenue.  Traveling northeast from Los Angeles, Route 66 ends at Jackson and Lake Shore Drive.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

The Loop's Most Peculiar Building


To the untrained eye, this is just another random alley in the Loop.  But if you know what you're looking for, this is a rare sight, indeed.

This is the Pickwick Stable -- an actual farm stable in the heart of the Loop.

Official records have the date this stable was built at 1892, but those records are notoriously sketchy.  The Chicago Tribune says it's actually 1857, which would make this one of the oldest buildings in the Loop.

The stable was built for Henry Horner back when much of the Loop was still farmland.  Since the horses left the Loop it has been used for a number of purposes, most often as a restaurant.

This picture is a rare snap.  Every time we've walked by it in the past either the gate is closed, or there are cars parked in the alley.  Sadly, since our last visit it looks like the historic cobblestones that once lined the alley have been replaced by concrete.

Interestingly, the stable is for sale.  Ask your favorite real estate consultant to look up 22 East Jackson Street 60604 for you.

If you're looking for more farming artifacts in the Loop, there is also a cattle path which still exists amid the skyscrapers of LaSalle Street.