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.
2023
Wrap up the holiday season at the Ridge Historical Society's Champagne event on Saturday, January 7th. There are still tickets available!
Information and tickets can be found at:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/champagne-sweets-and-savories-tickets-490496477167?fbclid=IwAR1cIeuDDTI3rQ4vXCV2733gcx44sH59be-X8oclYk_hgAi84LQ0-hOudhs
Next installment of the series on Native Americans on the Ridge in the Beverly Review newspaper.
https://www.beverlyreview.net/news/community_news/article_9e9f5c56-8b8f-11ed-a825-4b60496ff33d.html

Congratulations to BAPA on its Diamond Jubilee!
The Beverly Area Planning Association (BAPA) is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year. Every house in BAPA's "area" gets a copy of the BAPA Villager every month for free. This month is part 1 of BAPA's history; part 2 will be in February. The articles will probably be on the BAPA website, also.
Thank you to Mati Maldre, photographer and Ridge Historical Society Board member, for the use of his photo to illustrate the article.

The Christmas holidays are not over yet! The Twelve Days of Christmas go until January 6th.
Wrap up the holiday season at the Ridge Historical Society's Champagne event on Saturday, January 7th.
Information and tickets can be found at: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/champagne-sweets-and-savories-tickets-490496477167








The New Year in Chicago and on the Ridge 100 Years Ago – Part 2
Yesterday, we posted about New Year’s celebrations one hundred years ago. Despite Prohibition, 1922 turned out to be one of the liveliest New Year’s Eves in Chicago history, largely due to the police turning a blind eye to “the toters of hip liquor,” that is, the many people who imbibed from secreted hip flasks.
As temperance communities from their earliest days, Beverly and Morgan Park were never known for wild New Year’s parties. In 1922, the local paper reported that between Christmas and the New Year, social events included a “hop” in the Ridge Park field house hosted by the Beverly Hills Post of the American Legion, the annual children’s party given by the Morgan Park Woman’s Club, and a performance of The Messiah by the Euterpean Chorus, a local all-male ensemble, at the Morgan Park M. E. Church. Ridge Park flooded its baseball field, and the young people were having a “glorious time” ice skating.
There were private parties, of course, and whether liquor was served was not reported in society columns. Illegal stills discovered in the neighborhood were reported in the local papers occasionally, albeit rarely.
In January of 1923, the paper reported that Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rickert of 9922 Vincennes Avenue had a watch night party on December 31.
A little RHS sleuthing revealed that Harry John Rickert was born in Illinois in 1884. His mother was from Germany. In 1907, Rickert married Anna M. Rheinberger, a naturalized citizen born in Germany in 1886 who came to the U.S. in 1891. They had one son, Elwood Edward, born in 1908.
On his 1918 World War I draft registration and the 1920 U. S. Census, Rickert’s occupation is listed as a teamster, working for the Stephens and Kay company, hauling grain and coal. A “teamster” back then referred to a person who drove a wagon pulled by horses, mules, or oxen. However, the 1920s saw the real beginning of the trucking industry, and Rickert and his son were mentioned in the paper as going on a motor trip with friends, so Rickert could have been driving a delivery truck by then.
Apparently, Anna liked to entertain, as she is regularly mentioned in the papers as the hostess for events, ranging from fund raisers for hungry children in war-torn Germany to surprise baby showers to luncheons/card parties. She was active with the ladies’ aid group and the sewing circle of the Evangelical Zion Church at 100th Street and Throop Street, and neighborhood social groups like the Just Pals club and the Bunco Matrons.
Back then, New Year’s Eve parties were called “watch night parties” because the general theme was “watching the old year out” as opposed to welcoming in the New Year as is done today.
The custom was to open the front door at the stroke of midnight so the old year could exit and join all the years of the past, and the “baby new year” could enter and begin its life. The guests would form a circle and sing “Auld Lang Syne.”
Although we don’t know the details of the Rickerts’ New Year’s Eve party in 1922, some ideas as to what they might have done can be found in entertainment guides from the time.
In the early 1900s, party decorations started to become much more sophisticated, as commercial products replaced homemade ones. Several companies, notably Dennison Manufacturing Company, began making products such as heavy cardboard die cuts; paper plates, cups, and napkins; crepe paper streamers, and the like.
Dennison published books that were a combination of party planners and catalogs for their products for holidays such as Christmas, New Year, and Halloween. The pages from the “Dennison’s Christmas Book” of 1921 that included ideas for New Year celebrations are shared here.
We know that the Dennison line was available locally, because in December of 1922, an advertising announcement in the local paper stated: “New Year Favors, Jokes and Novelties. Full line of Dennison goods. Frank Kellner, 443 W. 63rd st.-adv.”
While winter holiday events occupied the attention of the residents of the Ridge, local news also caught the eye.
Two interesting pieces of news were shared that holiday week that became important historically.
Plans were announced for the first apartment building to be built in Morgan Park at 111th Street and Hoyne Avenue at the cost of $300,000. To be called Ridge View, the building would be three stories of 42 four- and five-room apartments. This was notable because up to this time, Morgan Park was primarily a community of single-family homes. Within a decade or two, local civic groups would begin to oppose the building of additional large apartment buildings in the community.
The second news item was that the Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago had purchased the southwest corner of 100th Street and Longwood Drive. The rumor was afloat that a new parish was going to be created with a church and school built on the grounds. This was the beginning of St. Barnabas Parish. At the time it set off a wave of opposition to more Catholics moving into the predominantly Protestant community, resulting in protestors burning a cross on the land, and managing to have the land condemned for use as a public park. Undeterred, founding pastor Father Timothy Hurley moved the location of the new parish a few blocks farther south, and this original land is now Hurley Park.
One more topic being covered in the local papers was that, just like this year, 1923 was the year for the aldermanic election. Candidates and their supporters were busy circulating petitions for inclusion on the ballot. As one newspaper pointed out tongue-in-cheek, we never know how popular or unpopular a man is until we hear the stories from the workers who knocked on the doors for signatures.
Happy New Year from the Ridge Historical Society.
