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The Creative Quill

The Creative Quill

Writing that speaks louder than words



  • 26.02.2026

    The Narrowing

    The Narrowing

    The story has reached a point where Chicago stops being a landscape and starts being people. Fort Dearborn in 1812 was small, small enough that every contract mattered, every loyalty showed, every disagreement carried weight. Before the fort burned, something else happened. Continue reading

    Battle of Fort Dearborn, books, Chicago before the skyline, Chicago frontier, Chicago history, Chicago River 1812, Du Sable homestead location, Early Chicago history, factor definition, federal factory system, Fort Dearborn, Fort Dearborn 1812, Fort Dearborn massacre, frontier trading post, hiking, history, Jean La Lime, Jean LaLime, John Kinzie, Matthew Irwin, Nathan Heald, nature, Pioneer Court Chicago history, sutler definition, travel, War of 1812, War of 1812 Chicago
  • 19.02.2026

    1812

    1812

    In 1812, Chicago was not a city. It was a contested outpost at the edge of a widening war. From the fall of Fort Dearborn to the death of Tecumseh, the balance of power in the Northwest Territory shifted, and the ground beneath modern Chicago was permanently altered Continue reading

    Battle of the Thames, canada, Chicago before the city, Chicago frontier, Chicago history 1800s, Chicago origins, Early Illinois history, Fort Dearborn, history, Indigenous confederacy, Northwest Territory, politics, Potawatomi History, Tecumseh, travel, War of 1812, War of 1812 Chicago
  • 17.02.2026

    Chicken Nuggets and Chopsticks

    Chicken Nuggets and Chopsticks

    A packed sushi restaurant. Valentine’s Day. Raw tuna, delicate nigiri, centuries of culinary precision, and across the room, chicken nuggets and crinkle fries eaten with chopsticks. One table leaned into the unfamiliar. The other brought ketchup. A meditation on taste, exposure, and what we choose to model. Continue reading

    American habits, Cultural observations, Dining etiquette, food, food culture, humor writing, japan, Modern manners, Palate development, Parenting and modeling, People watching, restaurants, Social Commentary, sushi, Sushi restaurant, travel, Valentine’s Day
  • 10.02.2026

    Inside Fort Dearborn

    Inside Fort Dearborn

    Before Chicago was streets and skylines, Fort Dearborn stood at the river’s mouth watching movement, trade, and tension. This sidebar explores why it was built, what it controlled, and how its fall revealed just how fragile authority could be on land that answered to older rhythms. Continue reading

    American expansion, books, Chicago history, Early Chicago, Fort Dearborn, Great Lakes, hiking, history, Indigenous History, Indigenous history American expansion, Place and memory, travel, War and aftermath, writing
  • 27.01.2026

    Not so fortified

    Not so fortified

    After DuSable left, Chicago didn’t rush to replace him. The river held. The marsh waited. Then certainty arrived wearing uniforms and orders, and the land answered the only way it knows how, by withdrawing. Fort Dearborn did not fail loudly. It failed quietly, and everything changed. Continue reading

    American expansion, books, Chicago history, Chicago River, Early Chicago, Fort Dearborn, Great Lakes frontier, Hidden Chicago, history, Indigenous History, Jean Baptiste Point DuSable, travel, War of 1812, writing
  • 06.01.2026

    The Quiet Refusal

    The Quiet Refusal

    After the French withdrew and the British assumed control, Chicago did not erup, it withdrew. Pontiac’s War unfolded here through silence, refusal, and tightened trust, as the land resisted authority that arrived without listening and quietly prepared for what would come next. Continue reading

    american-revolution, books, Chicago history, Chicago Portage, Colonial Midwest, Early Chicago, Great Lakes frontier, history, Indigenous Resistance, Pontiac’s War, Potawatomi Chicago, revolutionary-war, travel
  • 02.01.2026

    When Silence Became a Warning (Part II)

    When Silence Became a Warning (Part II)

    Chicago never felt the war as thunder. It felt like an absence: familiar voices gone, routes fallen quiet, promises no longer arriving. When the fighting elsewhere ended, the marsh did not celebrate. It waited, emptied and alert, holding space for whatever would step into the silence next after the storm. Continue reading

    books, Chicago before settlement, Chicago history, Chicago Portage, Colonial America, DuSable, Early Chicago, French & Indian War, Great Lakes frontier, Potawatomi History, short-story, travel, writing
  • 11.12.2025

    When silence became a warning (Part I)

    When silence became a warning (Part I)

    Before the French and Indian War reached the frontier, Chicago felt it coming. Silence thickened, alliances trembled, and warnings traveled through the marsh long before the first shots were fired in the east. This chapter uncovers the quiet dread that shaped Chicago’s world on the brink of a continental conflict. Continue reading

    books, canoeing, Chicago history, Chicago Portage, Colonial America, DuSable Origins, Early Chicago, French and Indian War, Frontier Conflicts, Fur Trade Era, Great Lakes Stories, history, Indigenous Midwest, nature, Potawatomi History, travel
  • 08.12.2025

    Before anyone called it a war

    Before anyone called it a war

    Before the French and Indian War had a name, Chicago listened. From 1696 through the early 1750s, chaotic trade, Potawatomi power, firewater, and broken alliances turned the marsh into a warning ground, one that felt the war coming long before the first shot was fired. Continue reading

    american-revolution, canada, Chicago history, Chicago Portage, Colonial North America, Early Chicago, fiction, Firewater trade, Fox Wars, French and Indian War, French fur trade, Great Lakes history, history, Indigenous Midwest, Potawatomi History, Pre-Revolutionary America, travel
  • 05.12.2025

    Ketchup potato chips, Canadian chocolate and a giant Belle Tire

    Ketchup potato chips, Canadian chocolate and a giant Belle Tire

    Our family trips to Canada weren’t vacations; they were pilgrimages powered by chaos, contraband, ketchup chips, and the promise of better chocolate. Every mile was a fever dream of odd-hour departures, rogue seltzer bottles, Detroit landmarks, and the kind of family gatherings that left your hands chapped and your heart full. Continue reading

    canada, Canadian road trip memories, chaotic family travel stories, Childhood Memories, Childhood nostalgia, cross-border childhood memories, Eminem, family, family travel stories, family trip landmarks, family trips, Italian Canadian family stories, ontario, road trip memories, Toronto family visits, travel, vacation
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