Press ESC to close

Facebook Archives

Home / News / Facebook Archives

The RHS Facebook page is a rich archive of history-related posts by Carol Flynn, RHS Facebook admin and writer until mid-2025. Carol prolifically wrote a wide variety of meticulously researched local history articles for RHS. She continues to write for the Beverly Review and other media sources with articles particularly focused on local Ridge history.

Gertrude Blackwelder & Ingersoll-Blackwelder-Simmerling House

🔗
Gertrude Blackwelder & Ingersoll-Blackwelder-Simmerling House – Part 1

March is Women's History Month. This year the Ridge Historical Society salutes Gertrude Blackwelder, a remarkable woman who lived during the Progressive Era and worked tirelessly for women's suffrage and education reform. Mrs. Blackwelder made history by being the first woman to cast a vote in Cook County when women won expanded voting rights in 1913.

Gertrude and her husband, I.S. Blackwelder, were early settlers in Morgan Park, where I.S. served as president of the Village Board. Gertrude co-founded the Morgan Park Woman's Club in 1889, the oldest such club still in existence in Chicago. The Blackwelders were instrumental in establishing the Morgan Park High School, which opened in 1916. Their house is one of the most famous historical residences in the neighborhood – the Ingersoll-Blackwelder-Simmerling House on Prospect.

We've just entered a major feature on Mrs. Blackwelder on the RHS website so go here for more information: www.ridgehistorical.org.

Pictures: Mrs. Blackwelder voting, from the Chicago Tribune in 1913.

The Ingersoll-Blackwelder House as it appeared when the Blackwelders lived there – RHS archives.

🔗
Gertrude Blackwelder & Ingersoll-Blackwelder-Simmerling House – Part 2

Leading off from the post on Gertrude Blackwelder.

This is the Ingersoll-Blackwelder-Simmerling House as it looks today. And I really mean TODAY – March 7, 2019. I took this picture this morning. While the landscape looks barren, it's good to get these pictures before all the new plant growth comes in in the Spring and blocks the view of the house.

Houses are named for the person for whom the house was originally built. Then you can add additional hyphenated names if famous people lived there. The house was built in 1874 for grain broker John Ingersoll. The Blackwelders added the Queen Anne front in 1877.

There were other owners, but the house was allowed to fall into real disrepair. Then along came artist Jack Simmerling. Jack was a wonderful man, very concerned about preservation of Chicago's historic homes. He bought the dilapidated house and lovingly restored it, and his family lived there for many years. He told the story that at the time of purchase, the roof had caved in, and the main internal staircase was so covered with ice and snow you could literally sled down the stairs from the second floor bedrooms. When Jack died in 2013, the family sold the house.

Jack owned the Heritage Gallery on 103rd St., which is now run by his daughter Vicki. He was a founder of the Ridge Historical Society. This picture of Jack is from the Glessner House Museum website, which now houses his collection of artifacts from many of the Prairie Avenue mansions, demolished long ago.

– Carol Flynn, Ridge Historical Society Communications @ridgehistoricalsociety