Chicago's Forgotten Island

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2025

Комментарии • 207

  • @ITSHISTORY
    @ITSHISTORY  Год назад +10

    To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance buying, check out Policygenius: Policygenius.com/itshistory. Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video!

    • @laurenmcelrath896
      @laurenmcelrath896 Год назад

      You have a obsessive like fascination for Chicago history and I love it. I wish some of yourvideos were longer to binge can you make a video going into detail about the Cabrini greens history more specifically the sniper field as they called it

  • @InflatablePlane
    @InflatablePlane Год назад +139

    I can’t get enough of Chicago’s industrial history. What an interesting city. And as one friend who lived there called it: “an architect’s playground”

    • @Dunavitzki
      @Dunavitzki Год назад +7

      Yeah? I think about all the lives worn down to the bone, chewed up and spit out.

    • @dragon81heart
      @dragon81heart Год назад +9

      Pittsburgh is another city that has an amazing history, with some parts of its incredible industrial history remaining, with other parts of it completely changed (such as the point downtown)
      With its geographic location, the bridges and tunnels that make it unlike any other city, and even canals before the railroads, Pittsburgh is one of the most interesting and historical significant cities in the history of the US

    • @tonyhuynh309
      @tonyhuynh309 Год назад

      I'm a local and this is yhe dumbest video ever. Wrigley and Morton salt are both on it as well as mcgrath lexus. Soon to be a casino. Goose island brew isn't famous

    • @talbotd27
      @talbotd27 Год назад +8

      I feel exactly the same. Living in a small town in Northwest Indiana my whole life, there was such a sense of wonder and excitement taking trips to Chicago growing up. I’d have so many questions about how and why certain things were the way they were. History tells us everything. What it is and why it it’s there, that’s why I live history so much. It answers every question that even my parents didn’t know

    • @DevinNixonDavis
      @DevinNixonDavis Год назад +1

      @@Dunavitzki me too. The labor history

  • @jovonne529
    @jovonne529 Год назад +13

    Ryan, you definitely need to do the video about Ogden Ave. It was a fascinating street, and I even remember traveling on that viaduct in 1992 before it closed. The fact that Ogden used to go all the way to Clark and Armitage is unknown to most people who are under 60 years old. Bits and pieces of it just kept disappearing over the years, and by the time I was a teenager, it stopped at North Ave. and Larrabee. Now, of course, it stops just north of Chicago Ave. There used to be a building on Goose Island that even had an Ogden Ave. address (1060 N. Ogden, I believe) with their main entrance on the second or third floor that could only be accessed from the Ogden Ave. viaduct. If I recall correctly, it was the main office of the Pickens-Kane Moving and Storage company.
    It's also untrue that you couldn't access Goose Island from the viaduct. There was a ramp/exit at Hickory St. that was added after the original construction in order to provide easy access to and from Goose Island from the I-90/94 expressway. The Hickory St. ramp was mostly used for truck and freight traffic, but it certainly was available for use by anyone and I used it many times as a shortcut. The gunshots from Cabrini-Green were real though. The Ogden viaduct would pass directly by the housing project at about 50 feet in the air and most people avoided the viaduct for that reason, especially during the 1970s.
    Great videos, Ryan, and keep up the great work.

    • @jbizz80
      @jbizz80 11 месяцев назад +4

      The movies Cooley High and Opportunity Knocks have scenes that show the Ogden viaduct in GREAT detail from the top of the bridge, right at the Halsted/Division intersection. There's also a car chase scene in Adventres in Babysitting on the viaduct near the same spot. We used to take the Division bus going west to shop on Milwaukee Avenue and we'd pass under the viaduct.

    • @jovonne529
      @jovonne529 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@jbizz80 I remember the viaduct in Cooley High, but I've never seen the other two movies. I'll have to check them out. Thanks for contributing some more first-hand history of Ogden Ave. These days, whenever I go by Division and Halsted it always looks weird without the viaduct and the Phillips Towing. Kind of similar to Grand and Central now without the viaduct running over Grand Ave. or State St. without Roosevelt running overhead. Great memories!

    • @DjSmokeMixtapes
      @DjSmokeMixtapes 9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the history lesson. I like to learn about things like this in the city.

  • @Bojangles5-2
    @Bojangles5-2 Год назад +10

    Sir, I just watched this on the TV and logged in here to say thank you for this superb video! It combines two of my favorites, history and Chicago. This is a fantastic, informative and entertaining, providing all of us with much more, great history of Chicago than we knew before. Thank you for this! Subscribed!

  • @Terinije
    @Terinije Год назад +73

    The physical Goose Island is pretty well-known nowadays thanks to the beer of the same name.

  • @Dizzy206
    @Dizzy206 Год назад +20

    Chicago is my favorite city when it comes to architecture. Wish Seattle could even come close.

  • @mar4kl
    @mar4kl Год назад +29

    Another part of Chicago that warrants your attention, IMO, is Elston Avenue. It runs from Milwaukee Avenue in the West Town neighborhood, right near Goose Island, basically following the river until Belmont Street, and continuing northwest until it ends at Milwaukee Avenue (again!) in the Norwood Park neighborhood. It used to be a mainly industrial thoroughfare, with streetcar, later converted to trolleybus and then regular buses, shuttling people to and from work. As the factories in the city declined, the street began to decay, and bus service was discontinued in the early 1970s. Not long after I moved to Chicago, Elston Avenue was selected to receive one of Chicago's earliest bike lanes, and it has been one of the city's cycling thoroughfares ever since. Over the last 20 years or so, Elston Avenue has been making a comeback, with new businesses and even some residential segments springing up. Still no transit service, although the buses that run along the cross streets generally stop at Elston. I have yet to find its history documented, but I bet it's fascinating.

    • @cocoaorange1
      @cocoaorange1 Год назад +1

      Back in 2012, I have to walk down Slaton St to go to a store. It was a little daunting since lighting is very poor at night. I sensed it was once an industrial area.

    • @bevrosity
      @bevrosity Год назад +1

      used to live on elston near the abbey pub

    • @neilstern7108
      @neilstern7108 Год назад +1

      Elston, where you get your license.

  • @Michael-dv9vd
    @Michael-dv9vd 2 дня назад

    I appreciate this channel so much. As someone who grew up in the Chicagoland area and has been to so many of the areas spoken of on this channel, I must say I love the context provided here. Can't thank you enough. 🙏🏻

  • @eunitskates
    @eunitskates Год назад +44

    There was railroad activity on the Island through the end of 2017. They stored empty cars there, which became a target of complaints of the quickly gentrifying area.

    • @USMCasper
      @USMCasper Год назад +2

      How much does the land cost now? Here they moved the homeless shelter and kicked out all the homeowners. Now the property that sold for 45k now sells for a cool 500k. Other neighborhoods have now lost value and have to deal with the crime increase brought on by the transients. Progress by their standards.

    • @MN12warbird
      @MN12warbird 7 месяцев назад

      I worked in the area 05 06 07 08

  • @h.mandelene3279
    @h.mandelene3279 Год назад +4

    @19:17 Actually that RR was "Milwaukee Road" and turned west crossing the river. The Island was is terminus yard. The yard, if u follow the abaondoned route west, it's now in Bensenville(or is that Franklin Park??), on the Southside of O'Hare Airport.
    Also, the path you did follow runs further north. It runs(ran) next to Wrigley Field. Many streets still have the tracks. You can see many cockeyed positioned homes where the track used to run.

  • @rogerpenske2411
    @rogerpenske2411 Год назад +16

    Another great Chicago story about Goose Island. There is a Chicago delicacy besides pizza and hotdogs and pork chops and steak in Chicago; breaded fried shrimp. That’s right, breaded fried shrimp. There are shrimp shacks all over the place in Chicago, particularly near the Chicago River. Where the Blues Brothers flew over the bridge that was opening in the movie The Blues Brothers, that is the 95th St. bridge. There is a shrimp shack that you can see through the passenger side window just before Ellwood hits the gas!Division St., runs from the lake and crosses over Goose Island. And there is a joint and division Street called Goose Island Shrimp, And yes, I’ve eaten there a bunch of times

    • @SupernovaX72
      @SupernovaX72 Год назад +4

      Yessss Goose Island shrimp I used to go there alot with my friends and it was amazing. The shrimp were huge. This was in the 90s though and havnt been there since. Once we got turned around and ended up in Cabrini green and the police pulled us over and made us leave 😆😆oops

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад +3

      Yep! It’s the best shrimp in Chicago!

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад +5

      @@SupernovaX72 It’s still there and it’s still great!

    • @WAL_DC-6B
      @WAL_DC-6B Год назад +1

      Isn't that fish/shrimp take-out restaurant located on Courtland Ave?

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад +1

      @@WAL_DC-6B No, there used to be one on Cortland but it closed down about 20 years ago.

  • @a.urbanchuk513
    @a.urbanchuk513 Год назад +2

    I grew up in Chicago and all my life my father called it goose island and as a young child I would ask why and he would just look down at me and say because of all of the little ones and give me a kiss. Loved your Channel. Thanks

  • @WAL_DC-6B
    @WAL_DC-6B Год назад +4

    I was employed as a locomotive engineer for the Soo Line Railroad and in the late 1990s I worked the job that switched out freight cars on Goose Island. There were a few areas in and around the island where our tracks were in the streets. Sometimes people would park their automobile over these rails thinking to themselves, "trains never go around here anymore." The conductor had a company provided cell phone and would call a local towing company to remove the vehicle blocking our right-of-way. It was amazing how fast they'd come out and tow it off the tracks to their impound yard.

    • @AMTK90200
      @AMTK90200 Год назад +1

      Yep, and that right of way later became part of the Chicago Terminal Railroad before being abandoned.

  • @ticklemetango
    @ticklemetango Год назад +3

    I like the balance between the VO and music intro much better on this one, nice work!

  • @donaldblair1982
    @donaldblair1982 Год назад +3

    Very nice! A totally forgotten place and history in Chicago. Thank you!

  • @Lurch685
    @Lurch685 Год назад +3

    I used to work at the FedEx hub on goose island. The daily commute from the O’Hare area was a pain in the ass, but the view was great.

  • @MulahVeli
    @MulahVeli Год назад +3

    Awe that’s where that beer came from lol I been on goose island a few time but I never knew I just thought it was a bridge

  • @ChristopherBalza
    @ChristopherBalza Год назад +9

    Thank you for sharing this video! I'm an Irish-American who is a graduate of Kendall College, which was located at the southeast tip of the island. Prior to Kendall, it was a Sara Lee factory that my great-aunt would often visit, so I take pride in my connections to this tiny island. I miss seeing the train cars parked in the middle of the streets, it gave the area that old industrial vibe which I love about Chicago. Being here for almost two decades I've watched the island transform from an area you didn't necessarily want to be (due to Cabrini Green and other factors), to a thriving corridor. Thank you for bringing back some wonderful memories and sharing the history of our little island. Cheers!

  • @ZatchPatch
    @ZatchPatch Год назад +8

    It is funny hearing Plainfield being mentioned since it is now a sizeable suburb but when I first moved there it was still essentially farmland.

    • @m.e.5482
      @m.e.5482 Год назад

      Plainfield has seriously blew up, even in da last 10 years.

  • @coreybenson3122
    @coreybenson3122 Год назад +15

    I use to work here as well! At the old Mercedes Benz of Chicago service center. It’s now an Acura dealer. The roof has a killer view of the city. It’s alive and well, thriving with industry. Warehouses, car dealers, and Greyhound’s central repair facility. I encourage everyone to get the frog legs at Goose Island Shrimp House. And get a picture of yourself at the Hooker Street sign lol.

    • @marcelino.i.v
      @marcelino.i.v Год назад

      North side right there making a new neighborhood there called Lincoln yards

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад +1

      The Greyhound facility is about to come down and be replaced by a residential high rise.

    • @coreybenson3122
      @coreybenson3122 Год назад

      @@boataxe4605 yep. It’s in Pilsen near the Costco now.

    • @micheleparker3780
      @micheleparker3780 Год назад

      😂

  • @lindakay9552
    @lindakay9552 26 дней назад

    My 2nd great grandparents came from Tipperary. They landed in Pennsylvania. Then Migrated to South Dakota, then Washington. The men worked the railroad as explosives masters. Then my papa became the explosive master at Howe Copper mine on Lake Chelan in the 1940s and 50s.
    16:14 Very interesting. There's a state park between Orondo and Chelan in Washington called Ogden Scenic Wayside!
    19:05 Wenatchee WA exists largely because of our massive train yard here. The Liberty Bell even passed through Wenatchee on the railroad. There are several areas in town where old railroad tracks crisscross the modern day streets, or zig zag back and forth across a river front park and seem to go nowhere. It's fascinating to see where people navigated through the valley before roads were built!

  • @Philtration
    @Philtration Год назад +7

    I grew up near Gosse Island in the 1960s when I lived by North and Ashland and saw the area change many times over the years.
    From the disappearance of the giant gasometer tanks and the Ogden Viaduct, to the closing of the Meister Brau brewery to the replacement of the 100 year old North Ave. bascule bridge.
    No matter where I have lived since those days I still think of the the Wicker Park to Goose Island part of Chicago as "home".

  • @Taterfried
    @Taterfried Год назад +1

    I lived on north ave and elston directly next to Stanley's which was right in this area. I loved walking over to goose island. This area was so awesome before they started sanitizing it and building more condos.

  • @mikeb9830jpchi
    @mikeb9830jpchi Год назад +1

    I'm glad you referenced the Forgotten Chicago article on Ogden Avenue. (Possible misspelling of Ogden earlier in the episode, or maybe that was the Navy Pier episode)
    Losing Ogden to time and the decay of Goose Island is a sorry state for people trying to access the Lake Shore in modern times.

  • @mmrw
    @mmrw Год назад +4

    So interesting. I’m from New York and the whole thing reminds me a lot of the Gowanus Canal area in Brooklyn, from the early immigrant groups to the later booming industry and pollution and even that it’s kind of both natural and man made, as the canal was built where there used to be a natural creek

  • @mayosmith888
    @mayosmith888 Год назад +3

    Goose Island Shrimp🦐🔥🔥

  • @xpress144
    @xpress144 Год назад +5

    Great video Ry. Definitely do something with Odgen- and possibly Mud Lake- and the Indian Trade from WAY BACK. Work the Des Plaines River in if possible. :)

  • @geedavia1785
    @geedavia1785 Год назад +3

    I remember riding Ogden ave as a shortcut as a child. We got off around North Ave. I remember taking the Division street bus going through Cabrini Green. I remember Finkl Steel in Lincoln Park. I remember the Horween Leather Company off Ashland Ave. I worked at Dr. Scholl's factory in Old town.
    I think the leather factory is the last of the Mohicans...

  • @mostmost1
    @mostmost1 Год назад +3

    I rode the Division bus to school in the early 90s. That bridge was like a roller coaster back then. The women loved the bounce.

  • @tc1718
    @tc1718 Год назад +3

    I left Chicago 2 years ago. Thanks for reminding me why I miss it. Great videos.

  • @davidrennie7872
    @davidrennie7872 Год назад +1

    Love your channel. Nothing else to say but just wanted to let you know I look forward to each new video.

  • @micheleparker3780
    @micheleparker3780 Год назад +1

    Lived here all my life; always heard about Goose Island but couldn't have told you you where it was or what it was -- thank you!!😁

  • @ycthedon1
    @ycthedon1 Год назад +3

    Goose Island is still productive and working💪🏽💪🏽‼️ Come visit The Island Recording Studio right by Goose Island Shrimp. The best Shrimp and Studio in Chicago ✅

  • @TheLepke2011
    @TheLepke2011 Год назад +24

    I'm from Chicago and all I knew of Goose Island is that it's really good beer.

    • @snoopy5736
      @snoopy5736 Год назад +2

      My favorite is the 312

    • @imperialmotoring3789
      @imperialmotoring3789 Год назад +4

      Owned by Budweiser now so I will never drink it again. Half Acre is better and still independent!

  • @jeffbransky7966
    @jeffbransky7966 Год назад +7

    Although the RR bridge at the north end of Goose Island looks like a lift bridge at first glance, it is actually a swing bridge that pivots at the north end. The huge concrete counterweight balances the load of the span. There were other RR bridges that pivoted at one end in Chicago, one which still exists, but it is parked on the east bank of the North Branch of the River a block south of Cortland Street.

    • @WalterKiefer
      @WalterKiefer Год назад +1

      Glad you mentioned this one! That is the last remaining asymmetric swing bridge left in Chicago, built by the Chicago, Milwaukee, & St. Paul railroad. There's a neat plaque describing its construction on North Ave.

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад +1

      Yes,that was referred to as “The old man’s bridge” because the tender,an old man,would have to come out and manually unlock it to open it. It was in use serving a scrap metal yard until a few years ago when the yard was forced out of business by the city.

    • @Ddrhodes123
      @Ddrhodes123 6 месяцев назад

      These are actually called Bascule bridges. A swing bridge pivots side to side while a Bascule pivots up. This is a single leaf while the downtown bridges are double leaf. Chicago is famous for having so many Bascule bridges.

    • @chooch1995
      @chooch1995 2 месяца назад

      @@Ddrhodes123- the bridge being referenced here is NOT a bascule bridge. It is a swing bridge. The counterweight is simply too close to the ground to allow for this bridge to lift & clear the river traffic sufficiently. Most swing bridges pivot from their centers, this one pivots from the side of the span ( the side with the counterweight ) & draws the bridge inward to the shore that its hinged upon. It sits on a turntable of ball bearings which can be seen upon close inspection.

  • @brendakrieger7000
    @brendakrieger7000 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing

  • @ccskiandrun
    @ccskiandrun Год назад +4

    You should look into Nicollet Island in Minneapolis. Could be a cool story too.

  • @roberthuron9160
    @roberthuron9160 Год назад +2

    For a suggestion,and a multi-part series,how about the histories of the Chicago Surface Lines(CSL),and the Chicago Rapid Transit(CRT),as both take up at least a century of operations! There are also tie-ins to London,and Boston,and other points! Thankfully there are books,put out by the Central Electric Railfans Association,and other writers,covering the history of those operators! Thank you for an interesting historical overview,mayhaps there were a few relatives of mine,in that great Irish movement 👍! Thank you 😇! 😇

  • @chicagorobb3956
    @chicagorobb3956 Год назад +2

    I think the opening scene to the first “Chucky” movie was filmed there

  • @giselematthews7949
    @giselematthews7949 Год назад +1

    Just LOVE your videos

  • @crabtonia
    @crabtonia 9 месяцев назад

    Another intriguing insight concerning my favourite US City...thank you once again...dgp/uk

  • @TurtleDude05
    @TurtleDude05 Год назад +3

    I didn't even know this existed. That's so interesting.

    • @pinky5097
      @pinky5097 Год назад +1

      Me either and I'm from Chicago.

  • @stevenzwolinski3047
    @stevenzwolinski3047 Год назад +3

    Cool video, love my country history, although never been chi town, someday maybe

  • @rarecandy3445
    @rarecandy3445 Год назад +2

    that kinzie st. bridge is an excellent spot for photographers

  • @SirT80
    @SirT80 Год назад

    Would love a video on the Ogden Ave viaduct!

  • @0fficialdregs
    @0fficialdregs Год назад +6

    GOOSE ISLAND!!! Home to the best deep fried jumbo shrimp!!

  • @milkman81
    @milkman81 Год назад +1

    Well done, thank you!

  • @torrez74
    @torrez74 Год назад +1

    Your videos are fantastic!!! If you ever do a video on the Ogden viaduct please include how Ogden use to extend to Clark. I have walked this route several times and like you said it’s strange to think this major artery just vanished but there are still remains from it. Also please include the 3rd floor door in the Pickens Kane building (1000 Ogden) crazy.

  • @rikijett310
    @rikijett310 Год назад +8

    Jones Island in Milwaukee would be interesting history. Also, how Chicago dug the canal to Lake Michigan reversing the flow of the Chicago River would be interesting. It seems Chicago dumps their sewage into the canal sending it downriver for others to enjoy and deal with. Chicago $hit coming through!!!!

    • @KatoOnTheTrack1
      @KatoOnTheTrack1 Год назад +2

      Yes, I’m there all the time taking in the views of the old elevators and taking video of UP operations.

    • @rikijett310
      @rikijett310 Год назад +1

      @@KatoOnTheTrack1 sounds pretty awesome!!

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад

      You’ve heard of the Big Bang theory? Well we call that The big flush theory!

  • @peterrezba995
    @peterrezba995 Год назад +2

    Thanks I had no idea Chicago had an Island

  • @imperialmotoring3789
    @imperialmotoring3789 Год назад +2

    Sad the Goose Island Beer Company sold out to Budweiser. I will never again drink it.

  • @hbsoltpk
    @hbsoltpk Год назад +3

    It’s not forgotten. Kendall College is there now

  • @brucebasile5083
    @brucebasile5083 Год назад +1

    The Roseland -Pullman area would make a good video.

  • @MyLifePixeled
    @MyLifePixeled Год назад +1

    I would love to see some videos about Louisville.

  • @WillyGoat54
    @WillyGoat54 Год назад

    You should do a video of the Chicago and Evanston railway, which ran right through Goose Island.

  • @mikeb9830jpchi
    @mikeb9830jpchi Год назад +1

    20:22 Where are we looking? it looks more like Calumet Harbor?

  • @rocktech7144
    @rocktech7144 Год назад +1

    Cabrini O Green was in exsistance until the early 2000s. The final building being demolished sometime around 2005.

  • @spuds6423
    @spuds6423 Год назад +1

    And now Anhauser Busch owns Goose Island brewery but most of the beer made for retail is produced in Baldwinsville NY. Everything new AB comes out with ii is made in B'ville! 🤔😁

  • @foureyedchick
    @foureyedchick Год назад +3

    I heard of Goose Island beer. It is talked a bout constantly on tv and radio.

  • @earldooshbag7446
    @earldooshbag7446 Год назад +4

    The street is called Kinzie, not Kenzie.

  • @rogerweiland6384
    @rogerweiland6384 Год назад +3

    Changing landmark names has always made me crazy. It's still the Sears tower, Comisky is still Comisky. Money does not buy prominance. Imagine trying this with Wrigley field. They tried tearing down the landmark and keeping the name with Soldier field, this also does not work.

  • @kelseyxx9754
    @kelseyxx9754 Год назад +3

    I worked on goose island about 2 years ago. It’s not vacant it is filled with warehouses

  • @LatinaChef1986
    @LatinaChef1986 Год назад +1

    Also, Kendall College moved in 2004 to Goose Island from Evanston.

  • @rosanesandberg9119
    @rosanesandberg9119 8 месяцев назад

    Really interesting. My father worked for Peoples Gas on Goose Island and I never knew its history.

  • @2380Shaw
    @2380Shaw Год назад +1

    I haven't heard of Goose Island until I bought and tried Goose Island beer

  • @MrChuckGrape
    @MrChuckGrape Год назад +1

    I know of this island because it was mentioned at the end of some Wesley Willis songs.

  • @xochiltepetzalailhuicamina2322
    @xochiltepetzalailhuicamina2322 Год назад +2

    Have you done a video on the Chicago Portage? It made Chicago literally.

  • @boataxe4605
    @boataxe4605 Год назад +7

    It’s far from “forgotten”many tour boats point it out everyday, and it’s about to undergo a major redevelopment. Also, being man made it’s not “mysterious” since there is no question of how it got there. PS If you want some great shrimp go to Goose Island shrimp house on Division,it’s a carry out only dive with the best deep fried breaded shrimp you’ll ever have.

    • @m.e.5482
      @m.e.5482 Год назад +2

      95th st. CALUMET fish would beg 2 differ lol

  • @MN12warbird
    @MN12warbird 7 месяцев назад

    I keep the tradition alive of that part of land being a lawless area. Those tracks are the starting line... they put speed bumps down because of us

  • @drjekelmrhyde
    @drjekelmrhyde Год назад +1

    I am allergic to fish and shellfish, but I knew about Goose Island from the Goose Island Shrimp House way longer than I knew about the beer.

  • @haskelldarascal3479
    @haskelldarascal3479 Год назад +1

    Former Greyhound mechanic here, greyhound is no longer at the location shown in this video as of January 2023, the property was sold back in 2017 (for a cool $50M) and they've only just now moved out. Soon it'll be torn down and made into condos or something. Yet another part of industry going away

  • @paulbaciu2494
    @paulbaciu2494 Год назад +1

    So funny. I’ve been delivering oil at the restaurant depo on hickory there and had no idea 😂

  • @RLJSlick
    @RLJSlick Год назад +3

    Excellent work! If you ever get a chance, you should stop by The Mouse Trap, right across the river. Off Color taproom!

  • @andrewmurray9391
    @andrewmurray9391 Год назад +1

    I'm officially associated with life insurance commercials and nostalgia memes. I'm this old.

  • @vburch4458
    @vburch4458 10 месяцев назад

    Are there any videos on Meigs field

  • @stephenshaw7593
    @stephenshaw7593 Год назад +4

    Technically the entire North Side and suburbs up to Evanston are an island.

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад +1

      Very true!

    • @Big_Sierra
      @Big_Sierra Год назад +1

      By that logic, so is the entire US east of the Mississippi..

  • @Vlabar
    @Vlabar Месяц назад

    It's hard to forget an island in Chicago that a Beer is named after

  • @pikinachu9850
    @pikinachu9850 4 месяца назад +2

    Prettyyy sure it was featured in Batman Begins

  • @97tavito
    @97tavito Год назад +1

    I'm watching this video on Goose Island right now.

  • @markshietze4783
    @markshietze4783 8 месяцев назад

    it's been over ten years now , but do they still do the Scrap Metals Recycling along there ?
    ... like , east of Home Depot and north & east of the Cable TV office building

  • @antonioperez2623
    @antonioperez2623 Год назад +2

    I never knew either even though I was born and raised in Chicago.

  • @vburch4458
    @vburch4458 10 месяцев назад

    How about a video on Chicago indoor shopping malls

  • @LuckyGuessGarage
    @LuckyGuessGarage 5 месяцев назад

    I'm definitely one of the people that visited Goose Island without knowing it. About 10 or so years ago there was alot of demolition work being done there and I delivered materials to the demo workers.

  • @thpass
    @thpass Год назад +1

    Please do a video on the diagonal streets of Chicago. Ogden, Elston and Milwaukee ave all deserve their own videos, so a 3-parter is ideal. Ogden especially so because traces of it are almost completely gone. I actually drove across it in the early 90s and it was indeed treacherous both for it's failing infrastructure and the threat of crime. The Forgotten Chicago site has an excellent resource page devoted to it. It is a testament to the shortcomings of urban planning of the last century. Milwaukee and Elston also have stories intrinsically linked to transit history of the city. Great video.

  • @robertjohnson4246
    @robertjohnson4246 12 дней назад

    This sounds somewhat like a hybrid of the Menomonee River Valley and Jones Island in Milwaukee.

  • @TheMrPeteChannel
    @TheMrPeteChannel 7 месяцев назад

    So the bridges no longer open? No more river traffic?

  • @JR-gh8lp
    @JR-gh8lp Год назад +1

    Imagine a park in that island!

  • @Allenryan819
    @Allenryan819 Год назад +1

    Goose island is very similar to Randall’s island here in New York.

  • @mikeschroeder8356
    @mikeschroeder8356 Год назад +1

    Ogden vid plz

  • @FlyinRaptorJesus
    @FlyinRaptorJesus Год назад +3

    Could you do some videos on Madison and Milwaukee Wisconsin?

  • @alanswanson5642
    @alanswanson5642 Год назад +1

    It is still completely industrialized. When my wife and went from starved Rock up to dusal harbor we needed gas to get back. Thinking the west marine would have a dock and there is an exon gas station. It didn't but did have a wall we could tie off to and climb up to transport gas to the boat.

    • @boataxe4605
      @boataxe4605 Год назад

      FYI: DuSable harbor has a gas dock.

  • @mattcrusher1180
    @mattcrusher1180 Год назад +1

    MAKE GENERAL IRON GREAT AGAIN !
    in memory of Mr. Nathan Rosemutter

  • @corrauniverse269
    @corrauniverse269 Месяц назад

    "Goose Island Airport" would've been a neat name

  • @zeke2095
    @zeke2095 Год назад +4

    i had to beat a guy up to get a key to this island

  • @tomfurie2996
    @tomfurie2996 7 месяцев назад

    Most Chicagoans have had Goose Island Beer. I remember visiting the brewery in the 90’son a bar crawl.

  • @StevenKluber
    @StevenKluber Год назад +2

    Would Daley have destroyed a goose island airport under cover of darkness?

  • @heated817
    @heated817 Год назад +3

    Clearly this video is not made by a Chicagoan. Everyone I know knows goose island is an island and knows where it is. Hell we have a famous beer company named after it. this island is no secret and its not forgotten lmaooo

    • @JerryHunt92
      @JerryHunt92 6 месяцев назад

      I’m a year late but THANK YOU 😂

  • @mattymatt6970
    @mattymatt6970 Год назад +1

    Seems like a stretch to say only 1% of Chicagoans know about its existence. I've known about it for years. I visited once by myself and noticed it right away. It's also easily visible and labeled on Google maps.

  • @albertcarello619
    @albertcarello619 Год назад +1

    Those abandoned railroad track and bridge should be converted to a Light Rail Line.

    • @AMTK90200
      @AMTK90200 Год назад

      Yeah that won’t be happening, that railroad (former Chicago Terminal Railroad) has had several parts on Goose Island paved over or torn up, and on the Lakewood Branch north of Goose Island, there have been buildings built right on top of where the railroad used to be (such as one on Webster Avenue).

  • @trueword247
    @trueword247 Год назад +8

    7:15 interesting history. but Ogden is spelled O-g-d-e-n, not "ogdeon"