Chili Today, Hot Tamale Scramble Squares
The now elegant and majestic Chicago lakefront was called Checagou, literally place of the bad smell, by its Pottawatomie Native American inhabitants when, in 1673, French explorers Pére Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet discovered that the French fur trade could reach Americas fertile heartland from the Great Lakes by portaging from the Chicago River to the DesPlaines River, linking with the Illinois River, which fed into the Mississippi. Checagou was then a shoreline of mosquito infested sand dunes and swamps where the chicakagou wild onions flourished and the lakes breezes circulated their unpleasant smell. Chicagos first settler was Jean Baptiste DuSable, a fugitive slave from San Domingo, who established a trading post on the north bank of the Chicago River. The city was incorporated in 1837 with a population of 4,170. In only sixty years, from 1830 to 1890, the population of the area grew from about 100 fur traders and Native Americans to an amazing 1 million people, a growth that was faster than any other city in recorded history! The Chicago River at Lake Michigan became the busiest port in the United States, crowded with ships that carried grain, lumber, meat and many other commodities and finished goods to and from nearby railroads that provided commerce to the nation.
Chicagos reputation as a world laboratory for architecture was fueled by fire. By the 1850s, the banks of the Chicago River were lined with wooden wharves. Fresh cut lumber stacked on the docks and rows of grain elevators became Chicagos first skyline. Balloon-frame buildings, hastily made with 2 x 4s enabled the port town to grow like wildfire, but also served as an abundant combustible fuel for the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, which destroyed 17,450 buildings and left 100,00 people homeless. The fires heat was so intense that coins fused together and a hardware store was reduced into a large ball of melted iron, preserved to this day by the Chicago Historical Society. Catherine OLeary was an Irish immigrant living on DeKoven Street on the citys southwest side. No one knows whether Mrs. OLearys cow really kicked over a lantern into a pile of hay, but on the evening of October 8, 1871 a small fire did begin in her barn and began to spread until it became a conflagration that was worse than the London fire of 1666. The fire jumped the river and destroyed everything in its path to the north until rain finally began to dowse the flames 25 hours later. Ironically, Mrs. OLearys house and the Chicago Water Tower, which stands proudly to this day on The Magnificent Mile of North Michigan Avenue, were among the very few structures not destroyed by the fire. Chicagos determined population, with its indomitable I Will spirit and available natural resources, turned the destruction of the city into an opportunity to rebuild from the ground up a bigger and better uniquely American city, beginning one of historys most important periods of architectural development. Features
- Award-winning Scramble Squares�
- World's Most Challenging Puzzle!
- Puzzle has only nine pieces!
- 144 different Scramble Squares styles!
- Includes a panel of fascinating facts, trivia questions and hidden answers.
- These little brain teaser puzzles are easy to play, but hard to solve.
- Exquisite artwork that will keep everyone in the family entertained.
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