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Neighbors ban together to preserve open space at Washington Square Park during maintenance

Neighbors ban together to preserve open space at Washington Square Park during maintenance

Chicago Tribune5 days ago

Since its inception in 1842, Washington Square Park has seen its fair share of eras.
As the oldest park in Chicago, it was the landing spot for many people who lost their homes after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. The space earned the name 'Bughouse Square' in the early 1900s when people would come to the park to stand on soapboxes and crates to give long lectures about their theories, passions and ideologies.
Now, the Near North Side's nearly 3-acre landmark park is frequented year-round by residents and visitors alike — even in the bitter wintertime when the foliage is dead and the ground is snowed over.
But like any green space, the square needs its maintenance and upkeep. City officials say that in recent years, the park's grass has significantly deteriorated and needs to be aerated and seeded. The original plan, initiated by the Washington Square Park Advisory Council, was to close off all four grassy quadrants from September 2025 to spring 2026, making those areas inaccessible to residents for nearly eight months.
But for the residents of the neighborhood — particularly the dog owners — that plan felt disrespectful.
'I was shocked,' Nicole Barron, a local resident, said. 'I'm here two to three times a day. I have a dog and we don't have an outdoor yard, so this is our only outdoor space I can bring my dog.'
The fervent pushback from the neighbors appeared to catch the city by surprise. At a May 14 meeting at the Newberry Library, over a hundred people packed the room to advocate for the city to leave some grassy areas open while the city completes its beautification plan. The city changed course after the meeting and says it will take a phased approach to the aerating and seeding, scheduled to begin this fall.
'Washington Square Park has a formal architectural design that has allowed the Park District to work on one quadrant at a time for the past several years,' Michele Lemons, spokesperson for the Chicago Park District, said. 'We intend to continue this approach this fall by closing access to sections of the park to aerate and seed to restore the park's green areas. This will allow public access to sections of the park while other sections undergo restoration work.'
Lemons said cost for materials and labor are absorbed in routine park operating expenses, but did not respond to a question how much the project will cost overall.
But the threat of the park's closure, even if only temporary, seemed to spark a sense of unity in the neighborhood, reminding dog owners, parkgoers and neighboring schools what the historic park means to them and the community.
'People have been calling me, like, 'the girl that spoke at the dog meeting,' and like recognizing me at the Starbucks nearby,' Courtney Clay, who frequents the park with her cocker spaniel, said. 'And they'll say things like, 'Thank you for saving our park.''
It is also a reflection of how the city's oldest park, which served as the site of Chicago's first gay pride march, has evolved over the years.
The park was deeded in 1842 by developers eager to boost land values in the area. It was at first surrounded by the large homes of the well-to-do, even after the 1871 fire leveled most of the nearby buildings.
Eventually, after the wealthy had moved to the north and east, it became a gathering place for those who lived in nearby rooming houses, hotels and small apartments. And many of those people liked to get on soapboxes and speak their minds. Some famous folks were attracted to this free speech oasis, such people as Carl Sandburg, Emma Goldman and Eugene V. Debs. Others were anonymous anarchists, dreamers, poets, preachers and lunatics.'Washington Square Park is a special place, but it's not a unique story about how green spaces evolve,' said Taylor Evans Ghosal, who worked on a documentary about the park's history. 'Green spaces and parks in general, they evolve. They evolve and change to fit the communities that surround them, and I think they're just a really interesting microcosm of their community.'
Six Loyola University students have captured the magic of Bughouse Square, the city's oldest parkThat was a sentiment echoed by neighbors who frequent the park, some of whom emphasized that the park was not always a gathering place for the immediate community.
'When I came here, there really wasn't a park like it is now. It was pretty scary. It had a lot of trees, but it did not have a fence, and it wasn't really maintained,' said Mary Lou Sydel, who moved to the area in 1985. Sydel, who is part of the Washington Square Park Advisory Council, also noted that when she first moved to the park, it was not frequented by her neighbors.
In the 1990s, Washington Square Park was given landmark status and more people started to invest in the park to make it a more welcoming space. After the pandemic, Sydel noticed a boom in people using the park as a gathering space — particularly those with dogs. Now, nearly every day between 4 and 6 p.m., Sydel finds dozens of people enjoying the space and frequenting it to play with dogs in particular.
Some of her neighbors say that if it were not for Washington Square Park, they would have left the area long ago. That was the case for Rhonda Sanderson, a longtime resident who felt herself become more involved with her neighborhood during the pandemic when she started frequenting the park more.
'If there weren't the dogs at that park, it would not have any kind of atmosphere like it has. It is joyous,' Rhonda Sanderson said. 'People stop their cars to watch dogs play. Tourists walk through here … and they just go, 'Oh my God.' When they sit down, they're so fascinated with the interaction of all of us with the dogs, how we're all friendly and busy.'
At the same time, the proliferation of dogs has caused some tensions in the park, with some neighbors citing issues with off-leash dogs, torn-up grass and a general frustration with how the dogs appear to take over the space at times.
'I'm a dog owner, and I get it. I want to have a place to let my dog run free, but Washington Square Park is not a dog park,' said Willa Lang, executive director of the Chicago Parks Foundation. Lang emphasized that due to the park's landmark status, it is not possible to make the area a dog park.
'Off-leash dog activity significantly contributes to turf damage,' said Lemons, spokesperson for the Park District. 'The Chicago Park District Code states that domestic animals must be continuously restrained by a leash not exceeding six feet in length, except in areas designated as 'Dog Friendly Areas.''
Dog owners who violate leash laws are subject to a $300 fine, according to the city's municipal code. If the violation results in 'severe injury' to another person, the fine could run up to $10,000.
That tension came out at the May 14 meeting, which some owners say have prompted them and others to be more mindful about their behavior at the park.
'Everyone's trying to get along and be mindful that when there's children out there, the dog should be on the leash,' Brian Berg, a local resident who helped get the word out about the initial closure plan, said. 'And so I think everyone's trying to do better, and everybody's got a stake in their park. And I think that's, as a result of being listened to, that's one of the positives that comes out of that, too.'

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Neighbors ban together to preserve open space at Washington Square Park during maintenance
Neighbors ban together to preserve open space at Washington Square Park during maintenance

Chicago Tribune

time5 days ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Neighbors ban together to preserve open space at Washington Square Park during maintenance

Since its inception in 1842, Washington Square Park has seen its fair share of eras. As the oldest park in Chicago, it was the landing spot for many people who lost their homes after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. The space earned the name 'Bughouse Square' in the early 1900s when people would come to the park to stand on soapboxes and crates to give long lectures about their theories, passions and ideologies. Now, the Near North Side's nearly 3-acre landmark park is frequented year-round by residents and visitors alike — even in the bitter wintertime when the foliage is dead and the ground is snowed over. But like any green space, the square needs its maintenance and upkeep. City officials say that in recent years, the park's grass has significantly deteriorated and needs to be aerated and seeded. The original plan, initiated by the Washington Square Park Advisory Council, was to close off all four grassy quadrants from September 2025 to spring 2026, making those areas inaccessible to residents for nearly eight months. But for the residents of the neighborhood — particularly the dog owners — that plan felt disrespectful. 'I was shocked,' Nicole Barron, a local resident, said. 'I'm here two to three times a day. I have a dog and we don't have an outdoor yard, so this is our only outdoor space I can bring my dog.' The fervent pushback from the neighbors appeared to catch the city by surprise. At a May 14 meeting at the Newberry Library, over a hundred people packed the room to advocate for the city to leave some grassy areas open while the city completes its beautification plan. The city changed course after the meeting and says it will take a phased approach to the aerating and seeding, scheduled to begin this fall. 'Washington Square Park has a formal architectural design that has allowed the Park District to work on one quadrant at a time for the past several years,' Michele Lemons, spokesperson for the Chicago Park District, said. 'We intend to continue this approach this fall by closing access to sections of the park to aerate and seed to restore the park's green areas. This will allow public access to sections of the park while other sections undergo restoration work.' Lemons said cost for materials and labor are absorbed in routine park operating expenses, but did not respond to a question how much the project will cost overall. But the threat of the park's closure, even if only temporary, seemed to spark a sense of unity in the neighborhood, reminding dog owners, parkgoers and neighboring schools what the historic park means to them and the community. 'People have been calling me, like, 'the girl that spoke at the dog meeting,' and like recognizing me at the Starbucks nearby,' Courtney Clay, who frequents the park with her cocker spaniel, said. 'And they'll say things like, 'Thank you for saving our park.'' It is also a reflection of how the city's oldest park, which served as the site of Chicago's first gay pride march, has evolved over the years. The park was deeded in 1842 by developers eager to boost land values in the area. It was at first surrounded by the large homes of the well-to-do, even after the 1871 fire leveled most of the nearby buildings. Eventually, after the wealthy had moved to the north and east, it became a gathering place for those who lived in nearby rooming houses, hotels and small apartments. And many of those people liked to get on soapboxes and speak their minds. Some famous folks were attracted to this free speech oasis, such people as Carl Sandburg, Emma Goldman and Eugene V. Debs. Others were anonymous anarchists, dreamers, poets, preachers and lunatics.'Washington Square Park is a special place, but it's not a unique story about how green spaces evolve,' said Taylor Evans Ghosal, who worked on a documentary about the park's history. 'Green spaces and parks in general, they evolve. They evolve and change to fit the communities that surround them, and I think they're just a really interesting microcosm of their community.' Six Loyola University students have captured the magic of Bughouse Square, the city's oldest parkThat was a sentiment echoed by neighbors who frequent the park, some of whom emphasized that the park was not always a gathering place for the immediate community. 'When I came here, there really wasn't a park like it is now. It was pretty scary. It had a lot of trees, but it did not have a fence, and it wasn't really maintained,' said Mary Lou Sydel, who moved to the area in 1985. Sydel, who is part of the Washington Square Park Advisory Council, also noted that when she first moved to the park, it was not frequented by her neighbors. In the 1990s, Washington Square Park was given landmark status and more people started to invest in the park to make it a more welcoming space. After the pandemic, Sydel noticed a boom in people using the park as a gathering space — particularly those with dogs. Now, nearly every day between 4 and 6 p.m., Sydel finds dozens of people enjoying the space and frequenting it to play with dogs in particular. Some of her neighbors say that if it were not for Washington Square Park, they would have left the area long ago. That was the case for Rhonda Sanderson, a longtime resident who felt herself become more involved with her neighborhood during the pandemic when she started frequenting the park more. 'If there weren't the dogs at that park, it would not have any kind of atmosphere like it has. It is joyous,' Rhonda Sanderson said. 'People stop their cars to watch dogs play. Tourists walk through here … and they just go, 'Oh my God.' When they sit down, they're so fascinated with the interaction of all of us with the dogs, how we're all friendly and busy.' At the same time, the proliferation of dogs has caused some tensions in the park, with some neighbors citing issues with off-leash dogs, torn-up grass and a general frustration with how the dogs appear to take over the space at times. 'I'm a dog owner, and I get it. I want to have a place to let my dog run free, but Washington Square Park is not a dog park,' said Willa Lang, executive director of the Chicago Parks Foundation. Lang emphasized that due to the park's landmark status, it is not possible to make the area a dog park. 'Off-leash dog activity significantly contributes to turf damage,' said Lemons, spokesperson for the Park District. 'The Chicago Park District Code states that domestic animals must be continuously restrained by a leash not exceeding six feet in length, except in areas designated as 'Dog Friendly Areas.'' Dog owners who violate leash laws are subject to a $300 fine, according to the city's municipal code. If the violation results in 'severe injury' to another person, the fine could run up to $10,000. That tension came out at the May 14 meeting, which some owners say have prompted them and others to be more mindful about their behavior at the park. 'Everyone's trying to get along and be mindful that when there's children out there, the dog should be on the leash,' Brian Berg, a local resident who helped get the word out about the initial closure plan, said. 'And so I think everyone's trying to do better, and everybody's got a stake in their park. And I think that's, as a result of being listened to, that's one of the positives that comes out of that, too.'

Today in Chicago History: ‘May Day' born after workers take to the streets to demand an eight-hour workday
Today in Chicago History: ‘May Day' born after workers take to the streets to demand an eight-hour workday

Yahoo

time01-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Today in Chicago History: ‘May Day' born after workers take to the streets to demand an eight-hour workday

Here's a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on May 1, according to the Tribune's archives. Is an important event missing from this date? Email us. Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago) High temperature: 90 degrees (1951) Low temperature: 30 degrees (1943) Precipitation: 2.35 inches (1873) Snowfall: 1.6 inches (1940) Why May Day is an international workers' holiday — and how it began in Chicago 1867: Illinois quickly passed an eight-hour workday law, which went into effect on this date. Workers thought the vague language of the law could be enforced, and employers thought otherwise. Thousands of workers marched through Chicago to support the eight-hour workday, but a failed general strike proved the employers right. Flashback: Chicago's place at the forefront of labor history 1886: Three days before the Haymarket Affair — in which a bomb was thrown during a Chicago labor rally that resulted in the death of eight police officers and at least four civilians — tens of thousands marched on Michigan Avenue in a campaign to reduce the customary 10- to 12-hour workday to eight hours. Though the U.S. honors workers in September — with Labor Day, which also has Chicago roots — the May 1886 events are commemorated in Chicago by a memorial on Desplaines Street, north of Randolph Street: A bronze statue of a wagon that served as a speakers' platform during the labor meeting. 1893: The World's Columbian Exposition opened in Chicago. Beating out New York to host the spectacular world's fair was a miracle considering just 22 years earlier the city was in shambles following the Great Chicago Fire. The Ferris wheel, Cracker Jack and zippers were new-fangled things introduced to the more than 20 million attendees before the fair closed five months later. 1897: Louisa Luetgert, wife of Adolf Luetgert, owner of the A.L. Luetgert Sausage & Packing Co., disappeared. Luetgert was convicted of her slaying on Feb. 9, 1898, and dissolving her body in a vat of lye and sentenced to life in prison. Poet Gwendolyn Brooks, center, walks unrecognized by people in Chicago in 1961. Brooks lived on the South Side for most of her life. (Chicago Tribune archive) Gwendolyn Brooks writes at a table next to her books, circa 1961. (Robert MacKay/Chicago Tribune) Poet Gwendolyn Brooks at event at Columbia College on June 17, 1963. (Arthur Walker/Chicago Tribune) Poet Gwendolyn Brooks walks out of her home at 7428 S. Evans Ave. in the Grand Crossing neighborhood of Chicago in 1961. Brooks lived in the same house on the South Side from 1953 to 1994. (Robert Mackay/Chicago Tribune) Gwendolyn Brooks, center, and Ald. Leon Despres, are congratulated by Columbia College President Mirron Alexandroff, right, at the commencement exercise where Brooks and Despres were given honorary degrees on June 16, 1964, at the Prudential Building. (John Vogele/Chicago Tribune) Gwendolyn Brooks, of Chicago, was named by Gov. Otto Kerner, right, the new poet laureate of Illinois on Jan. 8, 1968. Brooks, a Pulitzer-Prize winning author and poet succeeds the late Carl Sandburg. (UPI Telephoto) Poet Gwendolyn Brooks, shown here on Aug. 5 1966, won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1950 and gave voice to the experience of African- Americans with her first poetry anthology, "A Street in Bronzeville," in 1954. (Arnold Tolchin/Chicago Tribune) Illinois' poet laureate Gwendolyn Brooks, center, shares her thoughts on verse with poetry award winners at the University of Chicago on June 11, 1981. (Walter Kale/Chicago Tribune) Gwendolyn Brooks reviews papers in a sun-lit area of the Library of Congress on Dec. 13, 1985, in Washington D.C. Brooks is the consultant in poetry to the library. (Paul F. Gero/Chicago Tribune) Gwendolyn Brooks on Dec. 13, 1985, at the Library of Congress in Washington D.C. (Paul F. Gero/Chicago Tribune) Poet Gwendolyn Brooks talks with student writers after a poetry reading at Ancona School in Chicago on Feb. 10, 1992. (Ovie Carter/Chicago Tribune) Gwendolyn Brooks, Illinois poet laureate, celebrates her 70th birthday by blowing out the candles on a huge cake surrounded by young aspiring poets at Ida Noyes Hall at the University of Chicago on June 7, 1987. (Walter Kale/Chicago Tribune) The home of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Gwendolyn Brooks from 1953 to 1994 in the Grand Crossing neighborhood of Chicago, April 29, 2025. (Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune) Nora Brooks Blakely, daughter of poet Gwendolyn Brooks, left, and sculptor Margot McMahon speak to a group of children about poetry and the new statue of Brooks at Gwendolyn Brooks Park on June 6, 2018, in Chicago. (Erin Hooley/Chicago Tribune) A mural on the wall of 316 E. 75th St. celebrates Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Gwendolyn Brooks, who lived in Grand Crossing from 1953 to 1994, April 29, 2025. (Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune) A new statue of poet Gwendolyn Brooks, sculpted by Margot McMahon, stands at Gwendolyn Brooks Park on June 6, 2018, in Chicago. (Erin Hooley/Chicago Tribune) Show Caption1 of 17Gwendolyn Brooks, a 32-year-old housewife and part-time secretary, has won the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for 'Annie Allen,' a ballad of Black Chicago life on May 1, 1950. Brooks is the first Black woman to capture one of the famed awards. (ACME photo)Expand 1950: Poet Gwendolyn Brooks won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1950, for 'Annie Allen,' a collection of works about a Black girl growing into womanhood while wrestling with racism, sexism, poverty and loss. A review in the Tribune praised its 'quick sense of the life of many people, the small intensities and the big disasters.' 1951: Minnie Minoso became the first Black player to play for the Chicago White Sox, homering in his first at-bat against Vic Raschi of the New York Yankees. 1960: Comiskey Park's exploding scoreboard debuted. Al Smith stepped up in the home half of the first inning of a doubleheader on May 1, 1960, and put the defending American League champs ahead with a two-run homer off Jim Bunning. Then the fun began. Smith triggered the public debut of owner Bill Veeck's biggest, baddest pinball machine — his $300,000 exploding scoreboard. The tradition of saluting White Sox home runs continues to this day. 1974: The Tribune became the first news organization to publish the entire 246,000-word transcript of the Watergate tapes, scooping even the government printing office by several hours. Vintage Chicago Tribune: The paper's role in the demise of Richard Nixon's presidency after Watergate President Richard Nixon resigned Aug. 9, 1974. 1997: WMAQ-Ch. 5 evening news anchor Carol Marin quit after management hired talk show host Jerry Springer to deliver news commentaries. She had been at WMAQ for 19 years. Co-anchor Ron Magers quit two weeks later. 2004: Farnsworth House, a steel-and-glass masterwork by architect Ludwig Mies van der Rhode, opened for tours after preservationists spent $7.5 million to buy and keep the icon of 20th century modernism in Illinois. Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago's past. Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather at krumore@ and mmather@

Chicagoans take part in ‘hanami' cherry blossom viewing at Jackson Park as blooms make long-awaited return
Chicagoans take part in ‘hanami' cherry blossom viewing at Jackson Park as blooms make long-awaited return

Chicago Tribune

time20-04-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Chicagoans take part in ‘hanami' cherry blossom viewing at Jackson Park as blooms make long-awaited return

After a few years of underwhelming results, Chicago's cherry blossoms are back in bloom. People from across Chicagoland flocked to Jackson Park over the weekend to see the pink and white trees in bloom, located just south of the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry under the shadow of the Obama Presidential Center development. Visitors took advantage of the trees for a nice photo opportunity or to have a moment of tranquility in the park. The successful bloom results are due to the right temperature balance this year, according to Karen Szyjka, operations support manager for the Chicago Park District. In order to have a successful cherry blossom bloom, Szyjka explained, the trees need to experience a certain period of cold temperatures — known as 'chill hours' — to fully break dormancy and produce their flowers. But fluctuating temperatures and earlier springs in recent years have messed up that process, causing many of the buds to go straight into leaf form. 'I was so sad last year when they didn't bloom. So I've definitely made it a point to come out this year to see them,' said Allison Ernst, 28, who drove down from Ravenswood with her fiance, Brendan Hein, to see the trees. The couple had come once before to Jackson Park to see the cherry blossoms when they were in bloom, but they said that time was toward the end of the bloom, when many of the petals had already fallen off the trees. 'It's beautiful,' Ernst said. 'I've been loving seeing all of the trees around Chicago going into bloom, and it gives so much hope that summer is coming and the weather is changing. It's a really good visual indicator of the seasons turning over.' For others, it was their first time seeing the trees in bloom in Chicago. Clarissa Obregon, 28, felt lucky to have a day off during the bloom, despite the gloomy weather Sunday. 'It's still a lovely day, regardless of the rain. (There's a) good amount of people here, enjoying it with me, so that makes it even better,' Obregon said. The Rogers Park resident is a flight attendant, which means that days off can be unpredictable. She decided to use her day off to sit by the Columbia Basin lagoon and sketch the cherry blossoms in a small green notebook she got from Boise, Idaho. 'I'm trying to build up this little notebook that I got,' Obregon said, who just started filling it up with sketches of little flowers. The first set of cherry blossom trees were planted in 2013 to commemorate the 120th anniversary of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. Another 50 trees were added in the three following years by the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Chicago in honor of their 50th anniversary and the relationship between Chicago and Japan, according to the Chicago Park District. The Park District planted an additional 34 trees in the fall of 2022 around the Museum of Science and Industry steps, bringing the total to 190. The Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Chicago is also funding the planting of 60 additional cherry blossom trees at the grove in honor of the organization's 60th anniversary. In 2024, 20 trees were planted in the southwest Columbia Basin, north Wooded Island and Japanese Garden areas. This year, sites for another 20 will be identified, and the trees will be planted during the spring and fall planting seasons. Regardless of temperatures and bloom, Chicagoans can also appreciate the bloom cycle. The cherry blossom trees, Szyjka explained, are part of a tradition known as hanami, which is the Japanese word for flower viewing. An important aspect of hanami is appreciating not only the bloom itself, but the transient nature of the flowers. 'The important and beautiful aspect of watching and participating in the whole process is that you're never really assured that you're going to have a bloom, that some years may be great and some years might not be — but that's kind of the way life is,' Szyjka said. 'When there's a beautiful bloom and a beautiful season, you embrace it with everything that you have.' Even when the cycle is finished and the heart-shaped petals are on the ground or floating through air, there is still a beauty for people to appreciate, Szyjka said. 'And to me, there's nothing more beautiful than the end stage, when you see these little hearts floating through the air, or you look down in the ground, you see a little pile of hearts — I just think it's lovely,' Szyjka said. While the cycle is not yet finished, others at Jackson Park expressed a similar sentiment Sunday. Elianis Rosado, 28, has lived in Chicago her whole life but had never seen the cherry blossoms before. The Garfield Park resident visited the trees Sunday with a friend to take photos and enjoy the scenery. 'They're a little paler than I expected, but they're so whimsical, and just seeing the petals blow in the wind was almost cathartic in a way, and just so peaceful,' Rosado said. Chicagoans can also participate in an official hanami festival on Saturday from 1 to 3 p.m. The festival, which is being held in partnership between the Park District and multiple cultural organizations, will include everything from taiko performances to origami folding. Attendance is free, and more details can be found online at

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