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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.

July 2023

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Local History

UPDATE: Wow, there has been a fast response to this post, but I knew people would like this. I talked to Elaine and when she returns from her upcoming vacation, we will plan an open house with Smith Village so people can come in to see this. It will likely be early August, so stay tuned. – Carol Flynn

PS – Elaine Spencer, by the way, lives in Smith Village and is on the Residents Council, if that is the proper name of the organization unit.

The late Jack Simmerling, artist and historian, and a founding member of the Ridge Historical Society, painted a mural on the wall of one of the dining areas at Smith Village that pretty much summarizes the history of the Beverly and Morgan Park communities.

Elaine Spencer, past President of RHS, and I recently viewed it for the umpteenth time and here are some pictures. (That's Elaine from the back.)

If you've never seen this in person, you should do so.

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Hofer Sisters – Part 12

Part 12 – The Hofer Sisters and Politics Continued

By Carol Flynn

The Hofer sisters became recognized as international peace workers with the successful visit of Baroness Bertha Von Suttner to the U.S. in 1912. Andrea Hofer Proudfoot stood by the Baroness’s side as her personal manager and secretary. Mari Hofer worked tirelessly behind the scenes, making the arrangements for over 1,200 presentations in sixteen states. Amalie Hofer Jerome also helped.

The Hofer sisters were known for their organizational skills. All were active in the Chicago Woman’s Club. In 1892, Mari, Bertha, Amalie, and Andrea were instrumental in starting the International Kindergarten Union, and all were charter members and served as officers or in other leadership roles.

Through her education programs at the settlement house, Bertha was involved in a number of groups. Amalie and Mari were founding members of the Playground Association of America, which included President Teddy Roosevelt. Amalie was a founder of the Civic Music Association of Chicago. Andrea and Elsa started the League of American Mothers. In 1913, Andrea founded the League for International Amity to continue the suffrage and disarmament education efforts started by the Baroness.

The Hofer sisters were also accomplished writers and speakers. Using Andrea as our continuing example, one of her calls for action in the peace movement is attached to this post. She became a sought-after speaker at international meetings of women. She was prominently featured at the International Council of Women meeting at the Hague in the Netherlands in 1913. The theme adopted by women’s groups throughout this time was: “In time of war prepare for peace; in time of peace prepare for its continuance.”

Andrea lived in Vienna for a few years, where her children went to school. They returned to Chicago when World War I started in 1914.

That year, Mari and Andrea were part of a national undertaking to raise funds for suffrage and peace causes in honor of Belva A. Lockwood. Working with Illinois women’s clubs, a pageant, totally under the direction of Mari, along with dancing and card games, was held at the Hotel LaSalle. The pageant included “dances of the nations,” that is, folk dances, one of Mari’s specialties, performed by young people of various organizations. Members of the Chicago Woman’s Club portrayed the queens of the world, including Queen Elizabeth and Marie Antoinette. They easily met their goal to raise $3,000 to contribute to the total goal of $20,000.

Mrs. Lockwood was the featured guest of the pageant, sitting in the center box. She was a very famous woman whose story has been mostly lost to history. She was active in women’s rights and women’s suffrage, and became one of the first women lawyers in the U.S. She was the first woman to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court. She ran for president in 1884 and 1888 and was the first woman to appear on official ballots. She supported the world peace movement and the temperance movement.

In 1915, Andrea was a leader of the International Conference of Women Workers to Promote Permanent Peace, known as the Women’s Peace Conference, held in San Francisco as part of the World’s Fair. She was joined on the planning committee by fellow Chicagoan Jane Addams. Miss Addams oversaw the programs on Social Service and War, and Andrea oversaw the section on International Amity and War.

After World War I, Andrea served as Secretary of the American Committee for Vienna Relief in Chicago. She was awarded the “Eiserne Salvator-Medaille” (Iron Salvator Medal) from the City

of Vienna in 1921, and the “Silbernes Ehrenzeichen” (Silver Insignia of Honor) from the Republic of Austria. Andrea’s great-granddaughter shared a picture of one of the medals with RHS.

Altruism was passed down to the next generation of Hofer descendants, as evidenced by a 1920 newspaper article about one of Andrea’s daughters donating a valuable violin that she acquired in Vienna for the Vienna relief effort.

In the next post, the later years of the Hofer sisters will be explored.

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July 4, 1923

By Carol Flynn

Happy Fourth of July!

Here’s what was going on in Beverly/Morgan Park one hundred years ago, according to the local newspapers of the day.

The Fourth of July fell on a Wednesday in 1923. The weather was perfect for a summer day – temperature in the low to mid-70s, and clear with a gentle breeze.

People had parties at their houses all day. They moseyed over to Ridge Park, where community events were held under the sponsorship of the Beverly Hills Post of the American Legion. The residents of the area contributed financially to the events, and did so willingly and generously. Several thousand people visited Ridge Park that day.

The usual events at Ridge Park for the Fourth of July included athletic competitions. For children, girls as well as boys, there were foot races and swimming and diving events. There were bike races for the boys.

For adult men, there were track events, including foot races, broad and high jumps, and team relay races, and swimming and diving competitions. The tennis courts at Ridge Park were very popular, and there was a tennis tournament, with singles and doubles for men. Baseball games between rival community and business-sponsored teams were very popular.

Adult women participated in mixed doubles in tennis. They probably could have scheduled more events for women, but likely the women were too busy in their hostess roles, and dressed in their fine cotton muslin summer frocks, to want to engage in unseemly physical activity.

A band performance and community sing-along, speeches, and fireworks at dusk generally rounded out the Fourth of July on the Ridge.

Other interesting things were going on in the community at the time.

The Ridge Park pool opened on July 2, just in time for the holiday. The lifeguard in charge was Ted Metcalf.

A new golf club was being built at 91st and Western Avenue, which would extend west to California Avenue. This, of course, became the Evergreen Country Club, run by the Ahern family, which lasted until 2010 when it was demolished to make way for the strip mall there now.

Work had just started on the new Catholic church that was being established in Beverly on Longwood Drive. This, of course, became Saint Barnabas Parish.

Mail carrier Elmer Morrison of the Washington Heights postal station was enjoying his annual vacation, and the carriers at other local stations were planning their vacations. The high school boys in the neighborhood were going to work the routes while the men were off. Patrons were asked to have patience if the mail was a “wee bit” late. They were asked to think of their hard-working postmen enjoying a rest, and of the “coming men earning their first big pay of sixty cents an hour.”

One of RHS’s favorite personalities from local history, David Herriott, the past editor of the Morgan Park Post newspaper and the past postmaster of the Morgan Park station, was in the news. He introduced to the Illinois legislature a bill that mandated every automobile in Illinois have a device installed that would limit its speed to twenty-five miles per hour. Herriott had long advocated for automobile safety regulations. The bill did not become law, obviously.

Comforts we take for granted today were new one hundred years ago. Gas mains were just being installed on 103rd Place. It was noted the residents would soon enjoy the “luxury” of cooking with gas.

At the same time, a new “electric house” at 97th Street and Hamilton Avenue was being made ready for public viewing. The goal was to show that electricity was “the cheapest servant” and introduce the growing number of electric appliances to “be a wonderful inspiration to all mothers.” Other communities were also showcasing electric houses, where practically everything in the house was operated by electricity, except the heat, which was gas. In addition to lighting, electric appliances included refrigerators, stoves, vacuum cleaners, toasters, mixers, blenders, coffee percolators, waffle irons, dishwashers, washers, driers, clothes irons, shavers, and radios.

The electrical industry was really taking off in the 1920s, offering boys an “opportunity to learn a profitable and pleasing trade.”

Prohibition was in effect, but alcohol never played much of a role in Ridge affairs anyway. The City of Chicago did not hold any public events for the masses that year, but instead many events went on in local parks, like the ones in Ridge Park. The city fire department discouraged fireworks due to the number of injuries and fires that usually resulted. Fireworks were not allowed to be sold in the city but many of the towns outside the city allowed them to be sold. Sporting events were the most popular way to spend the day – the Hawthorne racetrack saw a “monstrous crowd” on July 4, 1923.