Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on July 27, according to the Tribune’s archives.
Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.
From Halas to Hester: The 32 Chicago Bears inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame
Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)
- High temperature: 100 degrees (1955)
- Low temperature: 52 degrees (1985)
- Precipitation: 4.71 inches (1966)
- Snowfall: None
The state militia was called in to quell the violence on Chicago’s South Side during the 1919 race riots. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
1919: Black teen Eugene Williams floated on a wooden tie past an invisible but mutually understood line that separated a Black beach at 29th Street from a white beach at 26th Street. White youths threw rocks at him, according to later investigations, and Williams, who could not swim, was hit and drowned. Although several people, white and Black, tried to revive Williams, a police officer at the 26th Street Beach was unwilling to arrest the rock throwers on the word of their Black accusers or to help Williams. Unequal justice proved to be the rule during the ensuing violence, until the four-day chaos finally was ended by the Illinois militia and a cooling rain. Williams is buried in Lincoln Cemetery in Blue Island.
Vintage Chicago Tribune: Disasters!!!!! Crashes, fires, riots and more from Illinois history.
1960: A Chicago Helicopter Airways chopper, on a shuttle flight between Midway and O’Hare International Airport, crashed in a Forest Park cemetery after one of its rotor blades broke off. The accident killed the two crewmen and 11 passengers, and was blamed on a metal fatigue fracture in the blade. The federal government mandated more frequent inspections of the component.
An aerial view of the topping out of the Sears Tower on May 3, 1973, in Chicago. (James O’Leary/Chicago Tribune)
1970: Sears, Roebuck & Co. — then the world’s largest retailer — announced plans to build the world’s tallest building — 1,450 feet high with 110 stories.
The Sears Tower opened in 1973, but was not completed until 1974.
The 1,451-foot tower lost its crown as the world’s tallest when it was surpassed in 1996 by Malaysia’s Petronas Towers, and the American title in 2013 when New York City’s One World Trade Center was completed. After decades of construction in Asian countries, it’s now the 25th tallest in the world.
More than 50,000 people had gathered in Grant Park for a Sly and the Family Stone concert on July 27, 1970, when it devolved into a five-hour riot. Several people were shot, and multiple police officers and young people were hurt. At least 148 people were arrested. The band apparently refused to play due to the larger-than-expected crowd, which sparked the riot. (Chicago Tribune)
1970: A Sly and the Family Stone concert devolved into a riot. The show was supposed to be a goodwill offering, not only from city officials to the area’s youths, but also from the band to the city to make up for more than one last-minute no-shows.
Instead, the rock show disintegrated into a riot that injured 162 people, including 126 police officers. Thirty of those officers were hospitalized. Three young people were shot, though it wasn’t clear by whom. Cars were overturned and set ablaze.
Before its fury was exhausted, the mob rampaged through the Loop, breaking hundreds of windows and looting jewelry and department stores. Police arrested 160 people.
Otto, a gorilla at Lincoln Park Zoo, and a keeper during the gorilla’s escape from its outdoor habitat on July 27, 1982. (Lincoln Park Zoo)
1982: Otto — a 450-pound gorilla who was the star of the 1976 documentary “Otto: Zoo Gorilla” and named for disgraced former Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner — apparently scaled an 11-foot wall topped with electrical wires in an outdoor enclosure and escaped the Ape House at the Lincoln Park Zoo. He then lumbered north to the Primate House and climbed up a ramp to the Administration Building. He was sitting on the building’s roof just above zoo Director Lester Fisher’s office when veterinarian Tom Meehan hit Otto with tranquilizer darts. It took up to 10 zoo employees to place the gorilla on a stretcher and return him to the Ape House.
1983: After rejecting arguments that a permanent ban would be illegal, aldermen voted 42-2 to pass an ordinance — which did not name Wrigley Field or the Tribune-owned Chicago Cubs — making it illegal to conduct any sporting event between 8 p.m. and 8 a.m. in a stadium that “contains more than 15,000 seats where any such seats are located within 500 feet of 100 or more dwelling units.”
“With ‘Siamese Dream,’ one of about a dozen good-to-great records out of Chicago this year, the (Smashing) Pumpkins are getting Next Big Thing writeups in national magazines,” Tribune critic Greg Kot wrote about the record in 1993. (Chicago Tribune)
1993: The Smashing Pumpkins released “Siamese Dream.” Singer-guitarist Billy Corgan told the Tribune: “I’m writing albums for people of my generation, and if the rest of the world wants to listen, fine.”
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