
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

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