Biking home from the store in yesterday's blissful sunshine, I took a longcut through the side streets near Touhy and Western. Lo and behold, as I cruised along ordinary streets lined with ordinary houses, I suddenly found this lovely mid-sized park, surrounded by several amazing period apartment buildings, full of people and life.
I was stunned. I spent about half a blissful hour walking around, investigating. I vowed to come back with my camera as soon as possible, which turned out to be today.
The most amazing of the period apartments is the Park Castle, pictured at top. It's an E-shaped building that turns its back to rushing Western Avenue, choosing instead to face the park. The designers went to quite a bit of trouble to make this building live up to its name, with turrets both massive and tiny, crenelated parapet walls and brick corbeling the length of the cornice. Some less impressive but still nice apartment blocks form a complete wall of architecture on the park's eastern side, a graceful enclosure that is the very model of an "outdoor room".
The half-timbered apartment block on the park's north side is lovely as well. A section of Estes Street was closed down to join its courtyards directly to the park. This was a change made in the 1960s, in imitation of the adjacent apartments on the east side, whose front courts directly abut the park.
The park features a massive playlot with a climbing complex; it is supposed to mimic an Indian village but its wooden construction brings to mind a frontier fort, ironically enough. A pair of metal plaques inset into massive granite rocks tell the story of the play lot and the Indian Boundary Line, a treaty line set up in 1816 and occupied by the Potawatomie Indians (and having lived in Milwaukee 7 years, I recognized that the plaque doesn't use the most common spelling of the name.) Typical of American dealings with the natives, the treaty only lasted till 1833. Land for the park was first acquired in 1915.
A Tudor Gothic field house, from 1929, is the park's headquarters, and hosts various classes and events. A steady stream of park visitors was entering and leaving the building as I passed by.
And in the park's opposite corner is... a zoo?
Yep, it's a children's petting zoo, normally occupied by goats, sheep and the like. Aside from this adolescent goose, it's empty at present; I don't know if it's just for the winter or a semi-permanent closure.
There's more -- tennis courts, a water play sprayer thing -- but I don't mean to just make a laundry list of amenities. This is a lovely park, one of the prettiest and most charming I've found in Chicago. It has the right mix of fields and trees, development and grassland, architecture and nature. It's comfortable without being bland. It's really a great park.
I'm delighted to find this amazing gem so close to my home, and stunned that I'd never encountered it before. Just goes to show there's a whole lot of Chicago left for me to see.
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5 comments:
My father worked at that building on the NE corner! I used to hang out at the park all the time. I never thought of the playground as having a Indian Village theme. makes to me now but at the time I thought they were supposed to be mideveil castles or something. I was just a kid. Those are some great aprtment buildings in the backround too. Especially the one my dad worked it. Lots of ancient junk in the basements, stuff I wish I had paid attention to now.
The Field House whil architecturally gorgeous wasn't always that great. i remember once on a feild trip in the fifth grade one of my classmates came out of the place exclaiming how nasty the bathroom on the inside looked. Don't know if it has changed over the years. I haven't been there in a while.
I live in the park castle building. you got some nice pictures of it.
ever been inside to see the deco-tile covered pool room?
I was raised in the Park Gables apartments on the north side of the Indian Boundary Park. It states under the picture that Estes Ave. was closed off in 1960. I actually was closed off before the building was built in 1928.
Phil Hodapp
Hey, Phil Hodapp, I remember you. Your younger brother, Jim, used to hang around with us. You lived across the back porch from the Halldorson's, Louise was my good buddy. Remember the swimming pool where we used to cool off on those hot summer days before a/c? Ah, those were the days. I lived in a bungalow at the corner of Morse and Campbell. Those bungalows now sell in the half million range. Margie Olson now Johnson
You can contact me at margenbillj@earthlink.net
What a wonderful step back in time - I grew up next to Indian Boundary Park - 2426 W. Lunt - our living room windows were right over the area of the ice rink each winter. I loved it - thanks for the great photos and memories; glad to see the pond and field house are still there...
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