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Tag: 200 Years of Illinois

April 26, 2017 (August 16, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: John B. Anderson Versus the World

american history Illinois / regional politics

On April 25, 1980, longtime Rockford congressman and powerful House leader John B. Anderson launched his independent campaign for the presidency.  Today, April 26, marks the anniversary of his first full […]

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April 19, 2017 (April 19, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Sorry, Charlie

Illinois / regional

On April 19, 1928, Illinois held its last public hanging as bootlegger Charlie Birger went up the rope in Benton on a spring morning. (We’ve published a book that tells his story.) […]

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March 28, 2017 (March 27, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Jack Benny’s “longest laugh”

Chicago communication

March 28 marks the date of a historic moment in the history of comedy. On that date in 1948, Jack Benny’s popular radio show aired one of the great exchanges […]

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March 20, 2017 (March 16, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Archaea, the third kind of life on earth

biography Illinois / regional local authors

Today we turn over the 200 Years of Illinois feature to Steven Lenz and Nicholas Hopkins, authors of an essay (reprinted below) in the new UIP book The University of Illinois: Engine […]

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March 17, 2017 (March 16, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Three state twister

Illinois / regional

This weekend marks the anniversary of the Tri-State Tornado, the deadliest tornado disaster in U.S. history. On March 18, 1925, an F5 twister formed near Ellington, Missouri in the early […]

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March 15, 2017 (March 14, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: The long and writhing road

Illinois / regional natural history

Clear LaRue Road. Today marks the day officials close the storied roadway to assist of one of Illinois’s majestic natural wonders: the spring snake migration in Shawnee National Forest. The limestone bluffs […]

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February 24, 2017 (February 23, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Death of a science fiction master

American literature science fiction

On February 25, 2009, science fiction master Philip José Farmer—author of the Riverworld series and the Hugo-winning To Your Scattered Bodies Go—departed our reality at age 91. When it happened I wondered, How […]

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February 7, 2017 (February 7, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Cheap Trick is big in Japan

music

February 7, 2017, marks the approximate, not to say the exact, date of a landmark in Illinois rock and roll. On this day (more or less) in 1979, the Rockford band […]

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January 23, 2017 (January 20, 2017)

200 Years of Illinois: Town of Steel

Illinois / regional

On January 21, 1972, DC Comics declared the largely misnamed Metropolis, Illinois the official home town of Superman. Metropolis had already adopted the Son of Krypton, and as we all […]

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December 22, 2016 (December 19, 2016)

200 Years of Illinois: Raggedy Riches

Illinois / regional

On Christmas Eve, 1880, an Arcola painter-illustrator and his wife welcomed John Gruelle to the family. John sank roots into the professional illustration trade himself at age 25 when he […]

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December 13, 2016 (December 12, 2016)

200 Years of Illinois: The Cavaness Murders

Illinois / regional

On December 13, 1984, a remarkable murder took place outside of St. Louis. Dale Cavaness, a physician in Eldorado, Illinois, killed his ne’er-do-well son Sean with two gunshots to the […]

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November 28, 2016 (November 28, 2016)

200 Years of Illinois: Henry Bacon, and that’s no baloney

architecture Lincoln

Reverent. Classical. (Well, neoclassical.) Uncontroversial in design, though the subject has a few fringe detractors. The Lincoln Memorial began to take shape in 1915. By then, architects and others had […]

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