This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Community Corner

Western Springs: the Center of Chicago?

In 1897, the Chicago Tribune ran a story entitled, "Chicago As It Will Be 100 Years from Now, a City of Wonders Unbelievable." Western Springs was to be at the center of it all.

In 1897, 115 years ago, Chicago was anything but modern.

While the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition had dazzled visitors from all over the country, the rest of the city was still dusty, dirty and dangerous. For example, the polluted Chicago River still flowed into Lake Michigan, there were only a handful of buildings over ten stories tall and most everything still moved by horse-drawn means. The airplane would not even be invented for seven more years. Electric streetcars were just beginning to appear, as was electricity in general. But, the city was growing at an amazing rate, reaching 1.6 million residents by 1900.

Amid this growth and change, the Chicago Tribune ran a full-page story that predicted how the city and surrounding area might appear in 100 years, i.e., in 1997.

Find out what's happening in Western Springswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Many of the predictions were “spot on”.

Future Buildings

Find out what's happening in Western Springswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The story predicted, “Buildings of the present [1897] will have vanished to make room for stupendous structures.” The article described buildings of 60 or 70 stories in height. See first photo. To realize how remarkable this prediction was, one only has to recall that, as recent as 1964, the city’s tallest structure was the 41-story Prudential Building.

The article also stated the only limiting factor would be elevators, which, in the future, would be powered by electricity. It predicted that, “… the elevator of the future will be entirely unlike what we call an elevator. Electricity will change all that. The time will probably come when tenants of a building and their patrons will be carried up by means of perpetually ascending platforms.”

In vast buildings of this sort, the article forecast that, “… upper floors will be devoted to offices, theaters, restaurants and the great roofs might well be given up to roof gardens, where trees and shrubbery might grow.”  Indoor stadiums would also be built capable of accommodating 125,000 spectators. The article also discussed the cost of such buildings, stating that; “billions [of dollars] will be in use then as millions are now.” 

Population Growth

At the end of the 20th century (1997), the urban area was predicted to cover 1,000 square miles. In fact, today’s Chicagoland urban area is estimated at 2,100 square miles. And, according to the 1897 experts, “Population will approach 10 million people (in 1997) and will cover all of Cook and DuPage counties, as well as the northern portion of Will County. Well, that prediction was surprisingly close: today’s Chicago urban area has more than 8.7 million residents.

Of special interest, the article went on to say, the center of the population will, “probably [be] Western Springs, now just east of the DuPage County line.”

In 1897, population was just 600 residents or so, and the town was surrounded by farmland. So, imagine how wild this prediction must have sounded to our residents! See second photo.    

Lifestyle Changes

The article also described how, “… the manufacturing interests of the city will have moved south into Will County and northern Indiana.” The story also predicted that cemeteries would be converted into parks, as the practice of cremation, then frowned upon, would become generally accepted.

The city of 1997 was to be clean: “smoke will disappear, for the consumption of coal will be too costly. Electricity will furnish heat, light, and power, creating a cleaner and healthier life style.”

The article also envisioned a time when, “fruits and vegetables will know practically no season, for they will be transported from every corner of the country within the forty-five hours that they appear on the stands.” 

It was predicted that, “ … Chicago’s drainage canal would become inadequate," and would be, "… superseded by great tunnels that will collect the sewage and move it to points north, south and west, where the material will be distributed to farms many miles away.”

The interiors of homes were expected to be less crowded. According to the article, “There will be more light and more air. Wooden buildings will disappear and the people will decentralize themselves.”  It was predicted that citizens would be of, “… sturdier build and better brain, for correct sanitation and plenty of fresh air will build up their bodies.”

Future Transportation

The article foresaw a time when the omnipresent horses of that era would disappear (except at race tracks) and would be replaced by electric vehicles. 

While the article never mentioned the possibility of air travel, there was the subject of “pneumatic tubes”, similar to what you see at the bank’s drive-up. These would be six or more feet in diameter and capable of accommodating passengers. According to the story, “Suburban [train] service will be entirely conducted by means of pneumatic tubes, which will whisk passengers from a suburb ten miles away to the heart of the town in less than five minutes.”

As for more distant travel, the article suggested that, “… communication with distant points east and west will be carried on by means of the pneumatic tube service. It will take but an hour to reach New York.”

Although this may seem farfetched today, Jules Verne had proposed the same concept in 1863 and a working prototype (just 100 hundred feet long) was demonstrated in 1867 at the American Institute Exhibition. See third photo. 

The article also speculated that, “… short distance local traffic will be secured by means of the travelling sidewalk placed below the boulevards. There will be no charge, the municipality maintaining this feature of travel.”   

Government

Lastly, the forecasters predicted the formation of, “… the separate and independent State of Chicago. The time must come when the vast city will hold so preponderating a proportion of the inhabitants of the State that people will demand a separate government.”

Fortunately, the forecasters were decidedly wrong on the last point. But, many of the predictions did come true, including Western Springs’ central location relative to the Chicagoland of today.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?

More from Western Springs