Be Transported To Another Era With These Photos Of The 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition In Illinois
The World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago was a grand event that showcased new inventions, cultural exhibits, and architectural marvels, attracting over 27 million visitors.
As a tribute to Christopher Columbus' voyage to the New World 400 years prior, a fair was held in Chicago. It was 1893 when the World's Columbian Exposition began and, during its six-month tenure, more than 27 million people attended. People were drawn to the sheer grandeur of the event.
The exposition spanned the area of 690 acres and featured 200, mainly, neoclassical-style buildings, most of which were temporary. The material used on the structures was white, and so it was given the name "White City." The fair represented American Exceptionalism and represented 46 countries. Let's step back in time now and look at some antique photographs from the World's Columbian Exposition.
Famous landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmstead, planned out the site for the fair. Along with his partner, Harry Codman, Olmstead identified Jackson Park as the chosen site. Together, they designed the pools and canals that ran along Lake Michigan.
The Columbian Fountain represented the Arts and Industries and was placed in a prominent spot outside the Administration Building. The fountain was set inside an impressive circular basin with a diameter of 150 feet.
Located along the Midway, the central street at the fair, was a Ferris wheel, introduced for the first time in America, creating much excitement in the crowds. It was the tallest attraction at the exposition at the height of 264 feet.
Footbridges allowed attendees to cross the canals and lagoons around the fairgrounds.
This was quite the international event with mosques, a Moorish palace, an Indian reservation, belly dancers, Irish and German villages, and so much more.
The Horticulture Building was an impressive part of the event, with its giant crystal dome and plants on display like cacti, banana trees, and orchids which many people had not seen before.
Exhibition halls in the Court of Honors buildings showed some of the latest inventions and appliances to the public for the first time. Most notably, Edison's electric lightbulb was on display, making its debut to everyone's amazement.
The Cliff Dwellers was an interactive exhibit that showed an imitation of Battle Rock Mountain in the Mac Eimo Valley of Colorado. Attendees of the event could enter and feel like they were transported to the Southwest. They could also climb along pathways to the top for a view.
Sadly, very few structures from the World Columbian Exposition remain today as most were temporary and destroyed after it ended. But at least photos documenting this grand, historic event remain.
Don't you wish you could go back in time and attend a world exposition as grand as this? What do you think? Please let us know in the comments!
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