Chicago: From The Past Through Tomorrow

From Chicago Historical Society, 1601 N. Clark St.
Chicago, IL 60614 Copyright 2011

Shikaakwa[1]to the Miami tribe.
Checagou to LaSalle.
At the portage ‘tween Michigan Lake and Mississippi Channel
The name is Chicago at this locale.

A generation after the nation’s birth,
The Army saw what the land was worth.
Before the conflict of 1812,
Fort Dearborn thrived quite well.

Whistler picked the perfect spot
And his willing troops cut the preferred plot
On the south river bank just west of the lake
That is where they claimed their stake.

From Chicago Historical Society, 1601 N. Clark St.
Chicago, IL 60614 Copyright 2011


On a fateful Mid-August Date,
As warned by Black Partridge the Dearborn Fort met its first fate.
As part of the War with the British state,
The ninety three did evacuate.

Due to misunderstanding, or bigoted fear,
The Potawatomi skirmished at the column’s rear.
For a time the Miami again held the lake’s sphere.
It only lasted another four short years.


By 1833 the Town of Chicago began a growing spree.
A town of 200 grew at the base of the inland sea.
Railroads and cannels gave cause for jubilee.
The cathedral of commerce began to be.

Even before the disastrous Civil War,
In 1848, Chicago Board of Trade began keeping score,
To smooth the fees of the regions bountiful store,
They bet on the future on a tiered dance floor.

Douglas put Chicago on the political map,
Upholding popular sovereignty and the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
That, in turn, brought Abraham Lincoln to scrap,
 In late 1860, the nation entered its long cold snap.

From Chicago Historical Society, 1601 N. Clark St.
Chicago, IL 60614 Copyright 2011


In Chicago’s own Camp Douglas Prisoner Site,
Confederate soldiers gave up their last fight.
Holding up to 12,000 at the December ’64 height,
Many did succumb to the ceaseless night.

Over Four Thousand reside in Oak Wood Cemetery,
Moved from outside the Chapel, Hospital, and Commissary.
Initially it was done only because it was necessary.
Had to clear the space, all quite discretionary.

In spring of 1895, President Cleveland honored rebel souls,
So long after the church bell’s final toll.
In a continuing effort to make the nation whole,
In ’03, Congress cast names of those resting below.

From Chicago Historical Society, 1601 N. Clark St.
Chicago, IL 60614 Copyright 2011


Back before this somber trip, backwards the page of time must flip.
Rumor has it, in October 1871, the lantern was kicked,
And tiny flames at straw did lick,
The city was soon burning quick; built of dried wood, and little brick.

Near nine at night on that October Sunday eve
At the O’Leary barn fire sparked, danced, weaved.
When it passed due to falling rain,
More than four miles were consumed by flame.

The toll of the dead seem suspiciously low,
But Chicago sloughed it off, and began to grow.
The city’s commercial centers intact,
She boomed again as a matter of fact.

In eighteen hundred and eighty six, another fire began to burn.
Working men, tired of abuse, demanded decent respect they earned.
Agra giant Cyrus McCormick hired Pinkerton Men in retune.
On that dark third of May labor’s movement began to churn.

No one knew who bombed police,
Or who first broke the uneasy peace.
What little is known from Haymarket affair,
Workers demanding decency were left fading in the square.

A side not to this tale of strife,
Marshal Fields, retailer, feared for the city’s way of life,
Demanded anarchies and labor blood,
And innocent men died at the trap door’s thud.

Engel, Fischer, Parsons, and Spies
Danced on the governor’s rope ‘tween earth and sky.
Fielden and Schwab were condemned to penitentiary strife,
Lingg took his own life.

And again Capital was appeased,
The city moved forward as it pleased.
The growing commercial transport hub,
Embraced business money as its one true love.

Opportunity again came to the rancorous metropolis
During the era of outlawed booze, Capone filled in the necropolis.
Ratta-tat-tat was the city’s theme,
With that noise the Thompson did sing.

By today’s standards it would be a common weekend end.
But on Valentine’s day Capone ordered them in.
In ’29, South siders gunned down seven of the North Side’s “Irish” men.
Alphonse Gabriel "Al" Capone took control from them.

In this wretched festering mess,
Humanity was put to the test.
While Lombroso started the criminological quest,
Chicago’s studies said it best.

When there’s no way to succeed by the rules,
A cleaver man will be no fool,
To live the life of the American dream,
It becomes necessary to make a crime scene.

The only solution for this criminal venture,
Is for the citizens to stop being benchers.
Take an active role in the street,
Granma yells, get to your feet.

Citizens, neighbors, people of the ‘hood,
Take ownership to do what is good.
Work together without bitter strife,
That is how you make a good life.

These were the studies during the War years,
When Chicago’s wardens watch the sky with fear.
Secret under UofC, Fermi shattered the atom’s sphere.
This is where Global domination became clear.


After the US won the day,
The Boss’ Machine came to play.
Richard J. Daley was here to stay.
His word was the last say.

That brings us to 1968,
The days or rage, the days of hate.
Vietnam War was in full state.
The atomic young sent to shatter the red pirate.

From Chicago Historical Society, 1601 N. Clark St.
Chicago, IL 60614 Copyright 2011

Blood in the Jungle,
Blood on the beach,
Blood stained leaves,
Blood stained streets.

Boss Daley was put to the test,
The protestors decried military abuses fest,
Chicago’s police responded with excess,
Respectful reporters were threatened with arrest.

Seven men were held; conspiracy  declarative signers.
Hoffman, Rubin, Dellinger, Hayden, Davis, Froines, and Weiner.
The Chi-Town judge jailed them as protest primers.
But, in the end, the federal court upended the penalty definers.

Pause here; contemplate this fate.
The police act out on behalf of the state.
Authority misdeeds are tossed when it gets late.
And the very next day they make the same “mistake.”

In spite of the machine’s best effort,
The economy faltered, factories, job shops did desert.
The once thriving town of industry and mart,
Began to wither in a long dark night.  

Binladic, Byrne, Washington, Orr, Sawyer, and Dayley’s own son,
Could not stop what had begun.
The wealthy class fled threatening slum,
And wantonly abandoned the city at full run.

From Chicago Historical Society, 1601 N. Clark St.
Chicago, IL 60614 Copyright 2011

That brings us up to date,
Chicago’s still a declining city state.
Service industry doesn’t compensate,
The transient workers now depopulate.

Into this decaying mess,
The NATO5 came to protest.
Once again the city does test,
The firm resolve of the nation’s best.

With heavy hand the selfish few oppress,
While 14,000 demanded redress,
Crimes committed in the name progress,
Martial, Material, Military obsess.

And at no point have the citizen’s gain,
There is no growth in the current game,
From City Hall it is the same,
Damnation, want, decay in the state’s name.

And Chicago, like all great things of man,
Will be abandoned, forgotten after some last stand.
Slowly it sinks into epoch’s sand,
Tide and time it cannot withstand.







[1] Chicago. (2013, March 17). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:28, March 17, 2013, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chicago&oldid=544837449

Inland Sea




Lake Michigan is vast, an inland sea,
A Fresh water oasis as far as one can see.
To her beach parks heated Chicagoans flee,
From sweltry homes on the tracks of the Cree,
The beach fills with absent conferees.

Mishigami, Great Water, as the Ojibwa said.
She was born as the great age of ice fled.
Along her shores indigenous tribes spread,
Her game and fish was their daily bread.

The Havana Hopwell natives first resided in place,
Carving a life out of this natural space.
By the waters of the lady great they left their trace.
Lake trout, yellow perch, largemouth bass substance embraced.

Yet, long before recorded time
Paleo-Indians held the long shore line.
Only they know who they were
but they fell a mammoth not far from here.

In Kenosha’s museum  the proof is shown
With it the modern imagination roams.
A camp, a tribe, flourished in a forgotten harvest home,
Before Columbus and the European discovered the brome.

Imagine, if you will, small bark roofed huts,
Trails cut through knee high grass to thick glens where wild Elk rut.
Visualize the night filled with the cook fire’s sent,
Roasting mammoth to the coyote’s lament.

Conceive an open shore, home to Mallard, red fox, and raccoon,
Before Marquette and Joliet or even the Illiniwek commune.
Long ago home to some, a place to roam under the sun.
A purpose filled life, even before the bow and gun.

Now her shore amasses many a town,
From Chicago go north and communities abound.
She’s home to wind surfing, jet ski, kayak, and canoe,
Yachting, shipping, goods affordable for the few.

Lake Michigan is vast, an inland sea,
A Fresh water oasis as far as one can see.
To her beach parks heated Chicagoans flee,
From sweltry homes on the tracks of the Cree,
The beach fills with absent conferees.

Made Him Believe

The Bean. Millennium Park. Chicago, IL. Copyright 2013 

Free to move, is an ol’ Man’s groove,
Nothing to prove, looking to improve.
To Chicago to reboot, to find his ground,
Enough of empty suites, his soul’s flight’s bound.

Wanting to see it one last time,
Neighborhood, alley, church, sites of youthful crime.
Touch the stone of parents’ last rest.
Then to Michigan Lake to decompress. 

Deep in the city, the home bound soul,
His health has yet to pay life’s toll.
To spite his dark dread and funk,
The ill omen days, the almanac, debunked.

His own will drained by life’s love lost,
His desire, and dreams to the refuse tossed,
His far vision blackened to a pin point,
His own expiration he did disappoint.

Slowly in the city of youth,
Each footfall echoed his own truth.
Rambling along tree line streets,
Life whispered for greater feats.

Mischief, adventure, the joy of life,
Replaced the refrain of his disenchanted past wife.
With each step on the city’s walk,
A new beat chipped away dark gloom’s schlock.

Once again in this city by the lake,
He found life, passion, to change his fate.
No more did he live in dread,
He shook the sadness out of his head.

There was still a full life to be lead.
Indeed adventure would embrace his need.
Fulfillment, challenge, and successes to see,
Chicago, even the daily grind, made him believe.






NATO IN CHICAGO: ONE YEAR LATER

Police Move In. Michigan and Cermak. May 20, 2012. © 2012

A Panel, Discussion & Organizing Update

From @OccupyChicago Press Committee:

One-Year Retrospective on the impact of the 2012 NATO Summit protestsSaturday, 


5/18  //  4pm-7pm  //  
Trinity Church, 400 W. 95th Place

$5-10 donation all for the NATO 3 Defense fund

Food provided by Food Not Bombs Pilsen


____________

May 19th will mark the one year anniversary of the massive protests against the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in the city of Chicago. Looking back on these demonstrations, there are still many unanswered questions: How did the week alter the anti-war movement in America? How did it change the face of Occupy Chicago and Occupy as a whole? Just how far did the Chicago Police Department and the FBI go to harass and target activists for manufactured crimes? How well did attorneys respond in defending protester’s civil liberties?

And most importantly; When will the still incarcerated political prisoners, collectively known as the NATO 3, be free?

Join members of The NATO 5 Defense Committee, Occupy Roger’s park, the NLG, the Gay Liberation Network as we ask these questions and more. This event is part of a week of fundraising and action in support of the NATO 3 as they face their trial.

Panel will include:

Andy Thayer, Coalition Against NATO/G8 War and Poverty Agenda (CANG8) organizer
Speaking on: The impact of the Summit demonstrations on anti-war organizing

Kelly Hayes, Occupy Rogers Park and Occupy Chicago
Speaking on: The Occupy movement’s involvement and the Woodlawn Mental Health Clinic

Steven Horn, Journalist with Truthout
Speaking on: The Chicago Police Surveillance and Harassment of Organizers

A National Lawyer's Guild representative
Speaking on: The legal response to police repression during and after the summit

Moderator: Sarah Wild of the NATO 5 Defense Committee
____________ 
MAY 16 - 21: Free the NATO 5! International Week of Solidarity and Fundraising

Thursday 5/16: Defend the NATO 5 - Anniversary Benefit at the Ribcage
8PM-12:30AM // 3036 N Lincoln Ave., #3B // $10 Suggested Donation
Live music, food & drink, featuring Cavepainters and other local revolutionary musicians

Friday 5/17: NOISE DEMO
5PM // Cook County Jail, 26th St. & California
Bring noise makers, musical instruments, and banners! Voice your solidarity with the 10,000 held captive in CCJ!

Saturday 5/18: NATO in Chicago, One Year Later - A Panel, Discussion and Organizing Update
4PM - 7PM // Trinity Church, 400 W. 95th Pl. // $5-10 Suggested Donation
Speakers include Andy Thayer (CANG8), Kelly Hayes (Occupy Rogers Park), Steven Horn (Truthout)
Food provided by Pilsen Food Not Bombs

Saturday, 5/18: Punk Rock Karaoke Benefit for the NATO 3!
8PM - 2AM // Underground Lounge, 952 W. Newport Ave. // 21+, $5 at the door
Support the NATO 3 Defense Fund by rocking out to your favorite punk rock songs!
____________ 
If you can't attend the Week of Fundraising and Solidarity events, please consider making a donation to the Free the NATO 5! Defense Fund

8th Day Center for Justice has graciously offered to accept tax-deductible donations for us. 
To make your tax-deductible donation, please send checks or money orders to:
8th Day Center for Justice
205 W. Monroe St. Suite 500
Chicago, IL 60606
** Make sure to write “8th Day Center/Nato 5 Defense Fund” in the memo line! **

Donations to the NATO 5 Defense Fund will be used toward $20k - $40k in legal defense costs, which include expert witness fees, data retrieval off confiscated hard drives, and court costs. Your support funds will also be used toward commissary for the 5 activists, which will help them purchase supplemental food, stamps, envelopes, paper, hygiene products, socks, thermals, t-shirts, and phone cards. The food given to them at Cook County Jail is unhealthy and inadequate.

____________
Free the NATO 5!
              @FreeNATO5 | #FreeNATO5 | #NATO3 | #NATO5

Comforting One Another. Michigan and Cermak. May 20, 2012 © 2012

A Chance for Peace

There is a Chance for Peace Many years ago I took a class in the nature of war. I got it from a Liberal Christian Publication ca...