| 341 |
Consumer Credit, Lendol Calder(
Authored Entry
) ...honest, but the few who were not gave the entire industry a reputation for remorseless extortion. A...
|
| 342 |
Chicago River, Charles Nilon(
Authored Entry
) ...major center of the lumber and meatpacking industries during the nineteenth century. Access through...
|
| 343 |
Public Broadcasting, Allyson Hobbs(
Authored Entry
) ...later relocated to the Museum of Science and Industry as a “working exhibit” and increased its on-...
|
| 344 |
Forest Glen, David M. Solzman(
Authored Entry
) ...century, Forest Glen had a scattering of industry along the rail tracks and limited commercial...
|
| 345 |
Hermosa, Marilyn Elizabeth Perry(
Authored Entry
) ...is disputed. Although railroads brought some industry, and annexation slowly added municipal service...
|
| 346 |
Archer Heights, Jonathan J. Keyes(
Authored Entry
) ...and commercial growth overtook residential growth. Industry, initially in the Crawford Industrial...
|
| 347 |
Jefferson Park, Marilyn Elizabeth Perry(
Authored Entry
) ...this access to transportation, relatively little industry developed in Jefferson Park. A complex of...
|
| 348 |
Lemont, IL, John D. Schroeder(
Authored Entry
) ...and shoe manufacturing. As the high-tech industry of its time, the Illinois Pure Aluminum Company (...
|
| 349 |
Libraries, Cook County, Alice Calabrese(
Authored Entry
) ...provide technical resources to those in the baking industry. Elementary and high schools have opened...
|
| 350 |
Lombard, IL, Elizabeth M. Holland(
Authored Entry
) ...a growing population. While commuters came, industry also developed. The Lombard train station was...
|
| 351 |
Luxembourgers, Kathleen Neils Conzen(
Authored Entry
) ...urban occupations gradually undermined the industry after the 1920s, and with it the most important...
|
| 352 |
Naperville, IL, Ann Durkin Keating(
Authored Entry
) ...residential, retail, industrial, and service industries boomed in and around Naperville. The city...
|
| 353 |
Chicago & North Western Railway Co., (
Business Dictionary
) ...became part of a conglomerate, Northwest Industries; four years later, the railroad was spun off and...
...bought by another old railroad company, the Union Pacific Corp. See also Northwest Industries Inc....
|
| 354 |
Rogers Park, Patricia Mooney-Melvin(
Authored Entry
) ...ultimately succumbed to changes in the movie industry as well as different tastes among the viewing...
|
| 355 |
Serbs, Peter T. Alter(
Authored Entry
) ...for unskilled work in the region's booming heavy industries. Most Serbian immigrants in the United...
|
| 356 |
Slovaks, Emily Brunner(
Authored Entry
) ...and stockyards. Women worked in light industry and in the stockyards, although most families...
|
| 357 |
Tourism and Conventions, Anne Moore(
Authored Entry
) ...for efficient gatherings, and by the 1990s, industry-specific conventions such as the hardware or...
|
| 358 |
Uptown, Amanda Seligman(
Authored Entry
) ...made Uptown the heart of the American film industry. Luxury apartment buildings and hotels appeared...
|
| 359 |
Washington Park, Wallace Best(
Authored Entry
) ...the Robert Taylor Homes (1962). The presence of industry in Washington Park has been negligible; nor...
|
| 360 |
Young Men's Christian Association, Paula R. Lupkin(
Authored Entry
) ...Americanization programs and worked with industry leaders like Sears, Roebuck to provide recreation...
|