20 photos of Chicago in the 1950s

Published 2:30 pm Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Three Lions // Getty Images

20 photos of Chicago in the 1950s

The largest city in the Midwest, and the third most populous in the country, Chicago is a beacon of culture and commerce in the nation’s flatlands. In 1950, 3.6 million people—or 2% of the nation’s population—called the Windy City home. Unfortunately, as is the case for many of America’s biggest cities, suburbanization had a decidedly negative effect on it, and by the end of the decade, Chicago was facing a steep decline in population and prosperity.

Toward the end of the 1950s, many of the city’s biggest industries, like meatpacking and steel, began withdrawing from the urban center, searching for cheaper places to set up shop. This meant that many of the related factories shut down, which meant jobs went, money went, and single-family homes—the dream of many Americans—went as well. As a result, wealthier residents, with the means to relocate, left the city, as did their tax dollars. Crime rose and the ability to fight it went down. In the ’60s and ’70s, Chicago wasn’t the nice, family-oriented place it had been in previous decades.

That being said, the early part of the 1950s was a bit of a golden era for Chicago. The economy was thriving, both foreign and domestic immigrants were moving in at a rapid pace, which allowed for a rich and diverse culture, and the city was growing up—literally. New high-rises dotted the skyline regularly.

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It’s hard to describe exactly what life was like in Chicago during the 1950s using words alone, so Giggster combed the historical archives to compile a list of pictures of life in the city during the decade to give you a better idea. From daily activities like eating out to historical events like the 1959 steel strike, these photos are sure to transport you to another time.

View of the Chicago Theatre from State and Lake L station

Chicago History Museum // Getty Images

The Chicago Theater

The first large and lavish movie palace in the country, the Chicago Theater is one of the city’s most notable historical landmarks. In the 1950s, the theater’s owners, facing a downturn in fortunes, covered up much of the building’s original ornate architecture in an attempt to make it look more modern and appealing to audiences.

A worker relaxes with a newspaper at home with wife and four children

Robert Natkin // Getty Images

A Goldblatt’s man at home

A family relaxed in their Chicago apartment. According to the archives, the man worked at Goldblatt’s, a Chicago-based chain of department stores that featured upscale merchandise as well as bargain basements for shoppers of various economic levels.

Chicago street with three young children in front of a wood-sided home and a parked car

Robert Natkin // Getty Images

A workers cottage neighborhood

Three children stand in front of two homes built in the workers cottage style, the original Chicago home style. One of the homes is primarily wood-sided, which likely means it was built before the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.

Rail streetcar on a Chicago street

Universal History Archive // Getty Images

The end of an era

The 1950s marked the end of Chicago’s streetcar era. At one point, the city had the largest streetcar system in the world, but by 1958 the streetcars were gone, replaced by buses; the elevated train system—or better-known as the “L”—and private automobiles.

Car and show signs posted outside of the Regal Theater

Bettmann // Getty Images

The Regal Theater

A cultural mainstay for Chicago’s Black community, the Regal Theater, located in the Bronzeville neighborhood, was part nightclub, part movie theater, part stage theater, and part music venue. Some of the culture’s biggest stars, from Nat King Cole to Ella Fitzgerald, performed here before it was razed in the early ’70s.

Protesters with dogs and signs about unemployment

Bettmann // Getty Images

A Chicago-style protest

A group of protesters gathered outside a Chicago hotel to picket against Charles E. Wilson, former secretary of defense, who spoke at a dinner that was held at the hotel. Wilson had previously made disparaging comments about unemployed people.

Children play on and around a pickup truck

Robert Natkin // Getty Images

Bronzeville

From the 1920s and into the 1950s, the seven-mile long area from 22nd to 63rd streets between State Street and Cottage Grove Avenue, known as Bronzeville, was the center of Black life in Chicago, and in 1954 it had one of the highest concentrations of Black businesses and culture in the country. Middle- and upper-class families left the area once housing was no longer racially restricted, and the overcrowded and poverty-stricken areas caused a decline of the neighborhood’s living conditions.

Group of women perched on an outdoor rail

Transcendental Graphics // Getty Images

A Chicago girl—or two

A group of young women from the Chicago-based Hanover Models Agency exemplified the high fashion sense of the day, posing on an outdoor railing.

High angle view of the Chicago Business District by night

Bettmann // Getty Images

The business district

In this night shot of Chicago’s Michigan Avenue business district, the Wrigley Building with its well-known clock tower was lit up on the left, mirrored by the Gothic Revival-style Tribune Tower on the right.

Patrolman standing in deep snow and motions 'drive slowly' warnings to motorists

Bettmann // Getty Images

A Chicago winter

Known for its bone-chilling winters, Chicago experienced 26.3 inches of snowfall in the winter of 1955. A policeman reminded drivers to move slowly lest they spin out in the snowy traffic.

Street scene on Maxwell Street near Halsted Street, Chicago

Chicago History Museum // Getty Images

Maxwell Street

One of Chicago’s most vibrant and unconventional business and residential districts, Maxwell Street was home to one of the city’s biggest immigrant communities in the 1950s. Eastern European Jews, Germans, Irish, Poles, Mexicans, Koreans, Southern Blacks, and Bohemians all lived along the mile-long thoroughfare, many operating sidewalk stands that sold everything from shoelaces to food to clothing.

Waitress serving drinks at the GasLight Club

Bettmann // Getty Images

The Gaslight Club

A waitress delivers another round of drinks to patrons at Chicago’s Rush Street Gaslight Club, a members-only club that required a key for entrance. A precursor to the Playboy Club, the Gaslight featured models and waitresses in skimpy outfits who performed song and dance routines between serving drinks.

Woman and children standing next to Free Vaccination sign

Bettmann // Getty Images

Community outreach

Following the polio epidemic of 1952, the worst in the nation’s history, a Chicago public school offered free vaccines to children. Of all of polio’s victims, children were the most vulnerable to mild to disabling paralysis.

Aerial night photograph of Chicago, Illinois

Bettmann // Getty Images

The Loop

Patrons wander in and out of movie theaters in Chicago’s Loop on a holiday evening—notice the elves teetering on the streetlights to the delight of visitors. The area earned its name because of the elevated train system that encircles the downtown business and financial district of the city.

Chicago Cubs player Ernie Banks signs autographs at Wrigley Field

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A Chicago Cubs icon

Ernie Banks, the Chicago Cubs’ first Black player and the National League’s MVP in 1958 and 1959, signed autographs for young fans before a game. “Mr. Cub” played shortstop and first base for the team from 1953 through 1971.

Man places sign offering "strikers special" in window of tavern

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Preparing for a strike

In July 1959, 500,000 union members of the United Steelworkers of America, including 90,000 in the Chicago area, went on strike. Their 116-day work stoppage was among one of the longest in the history of the United States. On Chicago’s South Side, a tavern advertised its “Strikers Special,” perhaps hoping to drum up a little extra business during the crisis.

A waitress takes order from a family out at a restaurant

Chicago History Museum // Getty Images

Dining out

Not the typical family meal at the kitchen table, three generations enjoy a meal out at a restaurant. Many, such as The Berghoff Restaurant or The Walnut Room, were staples of better dining for families in downtown Chicago.

A long line of striking steelworkers queue up to receive pay checks

Bettmann // Getty Images

The steel strike

Hundreds of United Steelworker of America employees at the South Works of the United States Steel Co. in Chicago lined up to receive their last pre-strike paychecks in mid-July 1959. They did not return to work for more than 100 days.

Merchants at Maxwell Street Market, Chicago

Chicago History Museum // Getty Images

Maxwell Street Market

A precursor to the flea markets that exist in Chicago today, the Maxwell Street market was a Sundays-only affair started by Eastern European Jewish immigrants in the late 19th century. Tables that crowded the sidewalks each weekend sold things like glassware, socks, and fresh food.

Opening Day of 1959 World Series

Bettmann // Getty Images

A World Series bid

Chicago’s other baseball team, the White Sox, made it to the World Series in 1959. Fans lined up outside of Comiskey Park ahead of the first game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers took the series 4-2 at Comiskey Park in the end.

This story originally appeared on Giggster and was produced and
distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.