The Fires of October 8, 1871

A recent short Chicago Tribune article on devastating wildfires noted the multiple Midwest fires that occurred on the same 1871 day as the Great Chicago Fire. Herein is a discussion of the fires that day and another 10 years later that was enormously destructive. The Great Chicago Fire of October Continue Reading

Ivan Meštrović and the Ox and Buffalo That Never Happened

If you’ve been paying attention since 1928, you might have noticed the two large equestrian statues on opposite sides of the Congress Parkway, just east of Michigan Avenue. They are The Bowman and The Spearman, sculpted and cast by Croatian artist Ivan Meštrović. The stories of how they came to Continue Reading

Chicago’s Lost, Altered and Disfigured Public Art, #1

Chicago has an astonishing collection of public art, numbering in the thousands. Stories about our public art objects abound. About some objects and artists little is known. For yet others, the prevailing stories are simply wrong. When we start telling the stories of our public art, the conversation inevitably turns Continue Reading

The Day My Great Uncles Died

This blog entry has received minor edits since its first publication. On one day in the summer of 1873, two of my great uncles died in Holyoke, Massachusetts.  John Knightley, age 8 ½, and his brother Patrick, age 10 months, died of whooping cough on July 15. John had been Continue Reading

Public Art – Chicago’s Hidden Treasure

This is an edited version of a “Maybe We’ll Talk About Public Art Too” podcast. Hello, everyone. My name is Ed McDevitt. This blog episode is called “Public Art – Chicago’s Hidden Treasure.” My original intent was to devote an entire blog and podcast series to Chicago’s collection of public Continue Reading