View Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago in a larger map
Visit our Tour Destination: Illinois page to see the entire tour of the state’s Save America’s Treasures sites.
Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago. Photo courtesy of Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago. |
The same building as it appeared over 100 years ago: The Palace of Fine Arts at the World's Columbian Exposition, 1893, photographer C.D. Arnold. Source: Wikimedia Commons |
The Treasure: Located
in the only remaining major building from the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition,
the Museum of Science
and Industry, Chicago
is the largest science center in the country.
Accessibility: The
Museum of Science
and Industry, Chicago
is open daily from 9:30 to 4, with occasional special extended hours.
Background: In
1893, millions of people from all over the world flocked to Chicago to
see the White City and its many attractions . Officially known as the World’s
Columbian Exposition but often referred to as the Chicago World’s Fair, this
massive celebration of the Gilded Age opened in May 1893 and closed just seven
months later in October. In that short time, an estimated 27 million people
visited the fair. Then the gates closed, the people went
home, and nearly all the 200 buildings were soon lost to fire or neglect. Of the major buildings that were located in Jackson Park,
only the Palace of Fine Arts remains, reopened as the Museum of Science
and Industry, Chicago
in 1933.
The Palace
of Fine Arts was a
sturdier building than many at the fair. Designed by architect Charles B.
Atwood, the Palace
of Fine Arts was
constructed with a brick substructure that was then plastered over with the
white stucco. Extra care went into its construction since it was to be the
showcase for loaned art masterpieces from other countries. In a city known for
its fires, the Palace
of Fine Arts needed to be
fireproof.
After the fair, the building became the home of the
Columbian Museum of Chicago, renamed the Field Museum of Natural History in
1905. One of Chicago ’s most venerable
institutions, the Field
Museum moved out of
Jackson Park and to its current location in the Chicago Park District in 1921.
For several years, the large building lay vacant. Fortunately, it was rescued
for new use by philanthropist Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears, Roebuck and
Company, who pledged millions toward the establishment of an industrial museum
to inspire children to become engineers, scientists, and doctors. While the
conversion of the building included a replacement of the original exterior
plaster with Indiana limestone, the overall appearance
of the building today remains remarkably similar to how it looked when it was
the Palace of Fine
Arts in the White
City in 1893.
One of Chicago ’s most popular
attractions, the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago sprawls over 14 acres, offering more
than 400,000 square feet of exhibit space. It’s the largest science center in
the western hemisphere and has welcomed more than 175 million guests since it
opened in 1933. Among the most physically impressive of the 35,000 artifacts at
the museum, there’s the Apollo 8 space capsule, a German U-boat submarine, and
a United Boeing 727 aircraft that’s cantilevered to the museum’s east balcony.
The highly decorative areas of the Museum's East and West Pavilions were most affected by Chicago's extreme weather. Photo courtesy of the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago. |
Closeup view of the Museum's East Knuckle rooftop. Photo courtesy of the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago. |
Notes from the
Editor: There are always special exhibits and events at the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago but this
one particularly interests me: In 2012, the museum has been celebrating
its origins with “The White City… Then and Now.” Offered on special days, it
combines a virtual simulation tour of the World’s Columbian Exposition as it
would have looked in 1893 with a 25-minute architectural walking tour.
Like many people, my interest in the World’s Columbian
Exposition was piqued by Erik Larson’s non-fiction bestseller Devil in the White City. I suspect most
readers are lured to the book by the real-life horror story of the serial
killer H.H. Holmes. But while that story is undeniably fascinating, it’s easily
matched in intensity by the parallel story of Daniel Burnham’s heroic efforts
to build the World’s Fair and make it an international success for Chicago . In this rare
instance, I thought the hero stole the show from the villain.
Other Important
Sites: Check Chicago ’s
tourism websites to see if there are any tours of World’s Columbian Exposition
locations. While the Museum of Science and Industry provides the best indication of
the actual scale and appearance of the White City ,
other remnants of the fair remain. Daniel Burnham led the effort to build the fair from the 11th floor of the Rookery Building (209 South LaSalle Street), a handsome building that the Burnham and Root firm designed
in 1888. Various trees and lagoons in Jackson Park date back to the fair’s
original landscaping. The Wooded Isle in Jackson Park was the site of
Olmstead’s Japanese
Garden . Midway
Plaisance, a grassy median that runs through the University of Chicago ,
served as the main grounds of the fair. Here construction crews recently
unearthed the foundations that supported the giant Ferris wheel that was one of
the White City ’s most famous attractions.
Chicago World's Fair 1893, a chromolithograph by H.D. Nichols, published by L. Prang and Co. From the collection of the Boston Public Library. Source: Wikimedia Commons |
Tour America's History Itinerary
Tuesday’s (10/30) destination: 1992 Election Documentary Collection
© 2012 Lee Price
No comments:
Post a Comment