Rhode Islandland Legacy
Rhode Islandland Legacy
Rhode Islandland Legacy
ORIGINAL:
MAR 4, 2010
Chicago
HISTORY.COM EDITORS
CONTENTS
The 1832 Black Hawk War ended the last Native American resistance in the
area. Chicago was incorporated as a town in 1833 and as a city in 1837, when
its population reached 4,000. In 1848 Chicago got its first telegraph and
railroad. Two innovations—grain elevators and the Board of Trade’s wheat
grading standards—quickly transformed the way crops were sold. By 1854 the
city was the world’s largest grain port and had more than 30,000 residents,
many of them European immigrants.
In the late 1800s Chicago grew as a national retail center and produced a
crop of brand-name business tycoons, including Philip Armour, George
Pullman, Potter Palmer and Marshall Field. In 1885 Chicago gave the world its
first skyscraper, the 10-story Home Insurance Building. In later years
architects Louis Sullivan, Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius all added to
the city’s growing skyline. In 1893 Chicago hosted the World’s Columbian
Exposition, which drew over 20 million visitors to its “White City” of
plaster Gilded Age buildings built on former bogland beside Chicago’s south
lakefront
Citation Information
Article Title
Chicago
Author
History.com Editors
Website Name
HISTORY
URL
https://www.history.com/topics/us-states/chicago
Access Date
May 15, 2020
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
April 28, 2020
Original Published Date
March 4, 2010
BY
HISTORY.COM EDITORS
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