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Опубликовано: April 20, 2021 в 11:12 am

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Marcey Street KinderCare | Daycare, Preschool & Early Education in Chicago, IL

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Marcey Street KinderCare

Welcome to Marcey Street KinderCare

Welcome to Marcey Street KinderCare in Chicago, Illinois! The forecast for your child’s future appears bright at our Windy City center. We are happy to accommodate your needs, whether you’re headed back to the workforce after maternity/paternity leave or on the search for an engaging summer experience. Our flexible schedule fulfills five days per week, 2 to 3 days, half days, or whatever you require. We provide a warm and supportive classroom for children of all abilities and backgrounds.

Our classrooms are places to thrive! 
In our safe and healthy classrooms, your child will be engaged in learning experiences that meet them where they are, both socially and academically. With fun daily activities, passionate teachers, and great friends, a lifetime of confidence starts here. Contact the center director to learn more about our child care options and schedule a tour! 

Meet Susan Turrise, Our Center Director

Meet Susan Turrise! She is the Center Director at Marcey Street KinderCare in Chicago, Illinois. Susan attended Rasmussen University, where she earned a Bachelor of Business Administration, Early Childhood Education, and Teaching; and Moraine Valley Community College where she earned an Associate’s Degree in Early Childhood Education and Teaching. She has been with KinderCare since 2011, and before that she was a teacher, manager, and an assistant director. “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” – Maya Angelou

  • Marcey Street KinderCare Programs
  • Our Teachers
  • Family Stories
  • FAQs

AMERICA’S MOST ACCREDITED

We’re so proud!

Nationally only 10% of daycares are accredited – nearly 100% of our learning centers are. That’s a big difference,
and that means KinderCare kids are getting the very best. Here’s why.

SCHOOL-READY

What Learning Looks Like

Our talented early-childhood teachers set kids down the path toward becoming lifelong learners in a positive, safe, and nurturing environment.

Marcey Street KinderCare Programs

Infant Programs (6 weeks–1 year)

Leaving your baby in someone else’s care is a big step. Everyone at our
centers—most importantly, our naturally gifted infant teachers—will work with
you to make sure the transition goes smoothly. When you step into our infant
classroom, you’ll see how much we want your infant to feel safe, loved, and
ready to explore their world.

Toddler Programs (1–2 Years)

Everything in our toddler classroom is designed for little explorers. That’s
because a lot is going on at this age. When your child is wandering all over the
place, that means they’re learning and discovering new things every day. We’ll
help them explore their interests (and find new ones!) as they play and learn.

Discovery Preschool Programs (2–3 Years)

This age is filled with so much wonder and curiosity. That’s why we offer a ton
of books and toys and bring artwork down to kids eye level. Children in
discovery preschool also begin to learn how we all work together in a
classroom. Simple math and science, pretend play, and group play help them
get used to a more structured school setting.

Preschool Programs (3–4 Years)

This age is all about expression, when kids really start to form their own ideas
about what they want to play and how they want to create. Every day in our
preschool classroom, your child will explore science experiments, create
artwork, and play pretend—all the skills needed for their big next step:
kindergarten!

Prekindergarten Programs (4–5 Years)

When you walk into one of our pre-K classrooms, you’ll see artwork and
writing displayed around the room. Labels are everywhere to help kids connect
letters with words. You’ll also see pictures on the walls that reflect the families
in our community. Your child will also deepen their knowledge in language,
math, science, Spanish, and social skills.

Learning Adventures – Enrichment Program

Cooking Academy™ (3 – 12 Years)

In Cooking Academy, kids learn new recipes from cultures around the world and
develop a healthy relationship with food. They’ll whip up everything from Southwest
rainbow lettuce wraps to pumpkin muffins, building their skills in STEM, communication,
and more along the way. And yes—little chefs get to eat their culinary creations!

Music Explorers™ (2 – 4 Years)

KinderCare families are already giving a standing ovation to our newest Learning
Adventures program: Music Explorers! Kids will learn to sing, move, listen, play
instruments, and even create their own tunes. Our original curriculum blends math,
science, social studies, literacy, and mindfulness (think yoga!) for a uniquely KinderCare
way of learning the foundations of music.

Phonics Adventures® (2 – 4 Years)

Learning how to read is a whole lot of fun at KinderCare! We help kids grow to love
books and words (and get ready for kindergarten) in our Phonics Adventures program.
From discovering the basics of vowels to practicing poetry, kids learn all about letters
and sounds in small-group lessons made just for their age group. (Bonus: Kids who
attend our phonics program are more prepared than their peers for school—and we
have the data to prove it.)

Spanish

Spanish Adventures provides young learners with a foundation for later success with
the Spanish language. Music, games, children’s Spanish literature, and other tools give
children multiple opportunities to hear, practice, and see Spanish language to develop
vocabulary and conversation skills. Curriculum includes lessons on greetings, numbers,
colors, animals, family, body parts, and pets, as well as how to engage conversationally
during common scenarios at home, a restaurant, or at the zoo.

STEM Innovators (3-8 Years)

You’ve probably heard a lot about how important STEM education is for your child, but
what does that really mean? Our STEM Innovators program takes kids’ natural ability to
make sense of the world and applies it to robotics, chemistry, coding, geology, and
more. While your child experiments, they’ll discover how to use technology to do
amazing things!

Our Teachers

We’re the only company in early childhood education to select teachers based on natural talent. Being a great educator isn’t enough though.
KinderCare teachers are also amazing listeners, nurturers, boo-boo fixers, and smile-makers. Put more simply,
we love our teachers and your child will, too.

Meet just a few of our amazing KinderCare teachers!

A KINDERCARE TEACHER WITH

An Artist’s Heart

“My classroom is full of art!” says Mary Annthipie-Bane, an award-winning early childhood educator at KinderCare. Art and creative expression, she says, help children discover who they really are.

We put our best-in-class teachers in a best-in-class workplace. We’re so proud to have been named one of Gallup’s 37 winners of the Great Workplace Award.
When you put great teachers in an engaging center, your children will experience
an amazing place to learn and grow.

Family Stories

Don’t take our word for it. Hear what our families have to say about our amazing center!

  • We are so thrilled with our Kindercare experience. Not only have we watched our son blossom into a rambunctious toddler from a squeaky little newborn, but we have seen all of the love his teachers and the Kindercare staff show him through his kisses being blown and waves goodbye every night. We have never seen a moment of separation anxiety from him, and we credit that to the level of trust and comfort he feels at Kindercare. We feel so fortunate to know our son is in such great hands every day. Thank you so much! Sincerely, Nicole and Mike C.

    Nicole and Mike C. – KinderCare Parent
  • As our oldest moves into an elementary school schedule, we see how spoiled we have been by KinderCare…the long hours they are open, the flexibility to pick up and drop off when we want, the fact that they are only closed a few days a year – the convenience is incredible. And, we’ve always felt totally comfortable and happy about the care and development our children have received at KinderCare.

    Amy R. – KinderCare Parent
  • Lincoln Park KinderCare is a friendly place, and the staff is so very wonderful!! We have returned there for our second child. Our children are four years apart, and the same teachers that took care of our older child are still there taking care of our second child. You feel that you are leaving your child in caring and safe hands. We feel that it is our second home!!

    Mireille A. – KinderCare Parent
  • We brought our child to KinderCare at about 9 months of age. She had previously been cared for by a full-time nanny, who came to the house during working hours. Over time we became fearful that our baby was missing out on important social interactions with other children her age, so we began to look around for daycare centers. Most of what we found did not inspire confidence. There are loads of daycare centers out there, but mostly we found that were either too far away for our liking, or in sketchy areas, or run by too few people, or by people we had a hard time communicating with. Whatever the reason, we just never felt confident to leave our baby with any of the care facilities we looked into. And then we found KinderCare. What we liked about KinderCare from the beginning was that it didn’t feel like some ma-and-pop outfit. KinderCare felt like a proper child care facility: menus are planned out weeks in advance, you get a record of what your child eats and does every day, the doors lock and open only with a code, it has a proper fire alarm system, there’s parking out front, there is a reception desk in the entry way, the care givers are caring for normal-sized groups of kids almost exactly the same age, they have specific responsibilities inside those groups, there is a curriculum of activities, developmental habits are tracked and recorded, etc. etc. This wasn’t a store front or the third apartment in a three flat that some person decided to run as a daycare center. Someone actually thought about how to build and run KinderCare. That was the biggest takeaway for us. The place feels partly like a school, partly like a cafeteria, and partly like a business. It is well managed and has operating procedures. And for whatever reason, those things made us feel confident that we could take our precious gift there every day – and nothing would go wrong. We were thrilled when our child was confirmed for a spot in the center. And we’ve never regretted the decision to take her there. We know she’s safe. We know she’s watched after. And we know that she’s on track. This all gives us great peace of mind.

    Plischke Family – KinderCare Parent
  • Lincoln Park KinderCare has been the perfect match and a true blessing for our family. The friendly and knowledgeable staff and fun environment have become part of our family and we are not just satisfied but are also proud to have our daughter be a part of this community. Our daughter has grown so much thanks to the expertise and genuine care of the staff and we look forward to the years ahead.

    Mason and Carla A.

    – KinderCare Parent

  • The first time that Ben got sick in infant care he was running a very high temperature. I got to school to find his teacher holding him – she said he was so sad and that he just wanted to cuddle..Made me feel so good to know he was in such loving hands! The first day that Ben transitioned from waddlers to toddlers, he was having a rough day and wasn’t eating his lunch. His old waddler teacher got the word and stopped into the room and let him sit on her lap for lunch time..That is just what he needed to clean his plate. Recently, one night when I was putting Ben to sleep he goes “Mommy, Ms. Winnonah and Ms. Heather know just what to do at school. It is fun there.” Just about sums it up! 🙂

    Katie D. – KinderCare Parent
  • Lincoln Park KinderCare has been a wonderful place for our family. At our first visit, to tour the facility, the staff made us feel comfortable and welcome. The first day we dropped our infant daughter off, it was sad and hard to leave her, but my husband and I felt extremely reassured that she was in good hands, and that was very calming to both of us. Our daughter has grown so much under the careful care of all the teachers and staff. From infancy into her two’s, they have always treated her as if she is the only child they tend to on a daily basis, and have given us some excellent insight into her growth. I would recommend this facility to everyone, as we have been very happy here. Choosing the right day care is the most important decision any new parents can make. Thank you for making ours both comforting and enjoyable.

    Kathy K. – KinderCare Parent
  • KinderCare has made a profound impact in our child’s life. We are continually impressed by the caring teachers as well as the unmatched teaching curriculum. As a consequence of the highly skilled staff, our 4 year old is able to read and do multiplication. We truly appreciate the program and highly recommend it.

    Immerman Family – KinderCare Parent
  • We have been so pleased with our son’s experience at Lincoln Park Kindercare. He has been going to “school” there since he was 4 months old and has experienced the loving care of the teachers in Infant 1, Waddler 1 and Toddler 1 classrooms. Some days he has so much fun that he doesn’t want to come home, and he talks constantly about his friends that he has made there. We continue to be amazed at everything he’s learned – this past weekend he surprised us by counting 2-4-6-8-10 as we were cleaning up his books, and he’s only 18 months old!

    Lyssa S. – KinderCare Parent


Share Your Story


If you have a story about your experience at KinderCare,

please share your story with us
.

Who Are KinderCare Families?

They hail from hundreds of cities across the country from countless backgrounds, and proudly represent every walk in life. What our families have in common,
though, is the want to give their children the best start in life. We are so proud to be their partner in parenting.

Hear from just a few of our amazing KinderCare families.

A Globe-Trotting Family Finds A

Home in Houston

Four young children, four different passports, two languages, two full-time jobs…oh, and a few triathlons thrown in for good measure.
Meet the globe-trotting Colettas—a family on the go.

Frequently Asked Questions

What accreditations does KinderCare have?

We are your trusted caregiver. Our centers are state-licensed and regularly inspected to make sure everything meets or exceeds standards, including child-to-teacher ratios and safe facilities. Our centers aren’t just licensed—most are accredited, too! Find out more.

Do you offer part-time schedules at Marcey Street KinderCare?

Everybody’s schedule is different. We’re happy to offer quality, affordable part-time and full-time childcare. Drop-in care may also be available. Reach out to your Center Director to learn more.

How does naptime work at Marcey Street KinderCare?

Our teachers meet every child’s needs during naptime. Our teachers know how to get babies to nap. In fact, they are pros at getting children of any age to nap. Visit our article on “10 Ways We Help Kids Get a Great Daycare Nap” to learn more.

Do you support alternative diets?

We strive to be as inclusive as possible. To that point, we provide a vegetarian option at mealtime, take care to not serve common allergens and can adapt menus based on your child’s food sensitivities. If your child has additional needs, we’ll work with you to figure out a plan.

Are meals included in tuition? Can I choose to send my child with lunch?

We provide nutritious meals and snacks developed by a registered dietician to meet the needs of rapidly growing bodies and minds. If your child has special dietary requirements and you would prefer to bring in their lunch, please make arrangements with the center director.

Does my child need to be potty-trained?

Every child begins toilet learning at a different age. Until your child shows an interest in toilet learning, we’ll provide diaper changes on an as-needed basis. When your child shows an interest, we’ll discuss how to work together to encourage toilet learning.

Daycare in Lincoln Park, IL for Ages 6 weeks to 12 years

KinderCare has partnered with Lincoln Park families for more than 50 years to provide award-winning early education programs and high-quality childcare in Lincoln Park, IL.

Whether you are looking for a preschool in Lincoln Park, a trusted part-time or full-time daycare provider, or educational before- or after-school programs, KinderCare offers fun and learning at an affordable price.

  1. Marcey Street KinderCare

    Phone:
    (312) 274-1850

    1733 N Marcey St
    Chicago
    IL
    60614

    Distance from address: 0. 65 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 5 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  2. University Children’s Center

    Phone:
    (312) 867-7056

    446 E Ontario St Ste 150
    Chicago
    IL
    60611

    Distance from address: 2.55 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 5 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  3. North Elston KinderCare

    Phone:
    (773) 267-7660

    3855 N Elston Ave
    Chicago
    IL
    60618

    Distance from address: 4. 05 miles

    Ages: 2 years to 6 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  4. South Loop KinderCare

    Phone:
    (312) 913-1557

    1501 S State St
    Chicago
    IL
    60605

    Distance from address: 4.26 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 6 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  5. Evanston KinderCare

    Phone:
    (847) 869-3456

    2014 Dempster St
    Evanston
    IL
    60202

    Distance from address: 8. 67 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 5 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  6. Des Plaines KinderCare

    Phone:
    (847) 803-9929

    8650 W Ballard Rd
    Des Plaines
    IL
    60016

    Distance from address: 13.08 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  7. Westbrook KinderCare

    Phone:
    (708) 562-7115

    1 Westbrook Corporate Ctr Ste 135
    Westchester
    IL
    60154

    Distance from address: 14. 24 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 6 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  8. Bensenville KinderCare

    Phone:
    (630) 766-2727

    324 E Green St
    Bensenville
    IL
    60106

    Distance from address: 14.89 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

Lincoln Park KinderCare (2022-23 Profile)

Overview
Student Body
Tuition and Acceptance Rate
School Notes
Nearby Private Schools
School Reviews
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School Overview

Student Body

Tuition and Acceptance Rate

School Notes

  • It can be
    incredibly nerve-wracking to raise a child without a manual.

    ..we
    scan the literature, read the books, attend birth classes and play
    groups, but every day greets us with the uncertainty of “Am I
    making the best choices for my child ” 

    Let us at Lincoln Park KinderCare help! Our staff
    has the National Association for the Education of Young Children
    seal of approval on their education, training, and ability to care
    for Little Ones (and their parents!). Questions and repartee about
    your outside of school endeavors are a part of our daily
    life. We love it. Let us take a load off your mind, find a kindred heart,
    share some tips and tricks, and join your
    “village”.

    Child-rearing is a messy job. Let’s do it with
    fingerpaints. 

    -Jenn
    Wisegarver, Center Director

    Lincoln Park KinderCare has been a part of the Lincoln Park
    community for over 10 years and has a staff with a combined
    total of over 200 years of experience in the early childhood
    education field.  We serve families from many
    neighborhoods including; Lincoln Park, Old Town, Wicker Park,
    Bucktown, Wrigleyville, Lakeview and Roscoe Village – just to name
    a few. We understand each family has different needs and would love
    the opportunity to show you how we can fit the needs of your
    family.

  • Our center has a security coded entry door with managers monitoring
    who is coming in and out of the building. We have a private
    playground surrounded by a six foot safety fence. All teachers and
    staff are CPR and First Aid certified.  We are on the Consumer
    Products Safety Commission’s mailing list and e-mail alerts to
    parents as we receive them. We conduct name to face counts
    every 30 minutes and emergency evacuations on a monthly
    basis.  Our nurse consultant also visits us monthly, keeping
    us informed of seasonal illnesses and enforcing proper diapering
    and handwashing techniques. Our Health and Safety Coordinator
    completes classroom checks weekly to be sure that your little
    ones are in the safest environment possible!
  • Hours Of Operation: 6:30 AM to 6:30 PM, M-F
  • Languages Spoken: Spanish
  • No subsidy

Source: National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)

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Montessori School Lincoln Park Chicago, IL

Monday-Friday | 7:00 am – 6:00 pm

Programs For:

Nido (6 weeks to 14 months)

Young Toddler (14 months to 2 years)

Toddler (2 years to 3 years)

Children’s House (3 years to 6 years)

Tours and Events

Guidepost Montessori in Lincoln Park is one of the most trusted Montessori schools in Chicago, Illinois. Indoors, rooms are spacious, bright, and light-filled, creating a warm and calm space for children to work. Our school is conveniently located in the Belden Centre, off of N Clark St and Belden Ave.

Explore Our Programs

What are the Montessori equivalent names for daycare, preschool, and kindergarten? Daycare corresponds to our Nido program, preschool years correspond to our Toddler program, and the kindergarten years correspond to our Children’s House program. Click each image below to read a program overview and discover what your child will learn when they join our school.

Nido

For infants ages 6 weeks to 16 months old (age varies according to location)

Toddler

For children ages 16 months to 3 years old (age varies according to location)

Children’s House

For children ages 2 to 6 years old

Guidepost at Home

For children ages 0 to 12 years old

Hear what parents have to say about Guidepost Montessori

Changing the world, one student at a time

We are a school where children find the joy in learning — and thus make it possible for them to continue learning for the rest of their lives.

To think mathematically.
To solve problems.
To create things.
To encounter great literature that inspires their character development.
To build themselves as capable, efficacious beings.
To place themselves in history and in society.
To spark meaningful friendships and deep personal values that last a lifetime.

Our goal at Guidepost Montessori is to serve each individual child, to help them realize their limitless potential, and the opportunities they will have to create real and lasting change throughout their lifetime.

Hear from our Lincoln Park Families

We love this place. The staff and teachers are truly kind, knowledgeable, and loving. We send our 5-month-old and 2-year-old. They learn a new skill every day, and we are always notified with their progression. Teachers explain what they are trying to achieve and ask for our support.

They also take feedback well and always want to do better. I feel so grateful to have such wonderful people taking care of our kids.

“Guidepost has been a perfect fit”

Guidepost has been a perfect fit for our pre-schooler! The staff at Guidepost are truly amazing. The guides are compassionate, understanding, and informative. I love the app they use to provide daily updates about what my little one is learning. Since enrolling at Guidepost, my daughter’s independence has increased, she’s learned skills to more effectively express her emotions when she’s upset, and she has learned so many things! Each day on our drive home she tells me about her daily artwork, the fun playground, and the new lessons she learned. Aside from the education component, the community is phenomenal. The school has hosted multiple virtual events, including pumpkin painting and hot cocoa in October and a book fair!

“The best decision we have made”

Enrolling our daughter at Guidepost has been THE BEST decision we have made. We were nervous because she is so young and due to COVID, hadn’t been around many other children or had any experience in a school environment but the administrators and guides at Guidepost were welcoming, patient, helpful and kind. After only 3 weeks, our daughter LOVES school and can’t wait to go each morning. And we see her developing new skills in front of our eyes. We could not be happier with our experience at Guidepost!

Start your journey with us

Book a Tour

Click to schedule

Enrollment Guide

Read about our programs

Contact Admissions

Get Started

Look Inside Our Classrooms

Interactive Tour

Meet our School Team

Head of School

Boryana Georgieva

Assistant Head of School

Victoria Lingafelter

Toddler Lead Guide

Sydney Lalmeyer

Stay connected to your child’s learning

Thanks to our app Transparent Classroom, you get a window into your child’s experience of school daily.

Your child’s Lead Guide will share what your child is learning and what their real-time assessments are – this way you can very closely follow your child’s development throughout the day, months, and years you stay within the Guidepost network. If you transfer from one of our locations to the next, your child’s progress and continuity will be tracked in the app and readily accessible. Read more about Transparent Classroom here.

In this app you will see important notes and milestones such as:

  • Daily toileting, eating (bottle feeding for infants), and sleeping habits
  • Curriculum introduction, progress, and completion
  • End of day summary of all activities
  • Notes such as bringing in more diapers or a new set of clothes
  • Reminders for upcoming classroom events like birthdays, holidays, or special occasions

Interested in becoming a room parent? Let your child’s Lead guide know!

What sets us apart from traditional schools

As the largest network of Montessori schools in the U.S., Guidepost Montessori is recognized for its outstanding academic standards, its steadfast commitment to Montessori education, and its deep respect for the potential in every child. At Guidepost, it is our mission to empower and equip your child with the knowledge, confidence and agency needed to reach their highest potential.

Education for life

Our education provides the freedom and guidance needed to construct a sense of self and purpose through joyful, meaningful work. We support your child in all areas of their development – social, emotional, physical, academic, and beyond.

Deeply individualized learning

Lessons are carefully structured and designed to appeal to each student’s level of development and needs. Our proprietary curriculum gives students increasing responsibility over their learning as they grow.

Dedicated teachers supported by industry experts

Our programming has been designed by leading education experts, and is implemented by passionate, qualified teachers. All of our Lead Guides are required to be AMI, AMS, or PMI Montessori certified and receive ongoing training and professional development.

Carefully prepared environment

At the heart of our school is our belief that children thrive when given freedom and responsibility in environments prepared for them. Guidepost Montessori classrooms are light, airy, calming, aesthetically beautiful spaces. Each material is carefully chosen and carefully displayed — to inspire and entice your child to explore.

Year-round programming

We think the education of our students is stronger when we can serve the whole family, which is why we are committed to very few closures throughout the school year, and offer extended day options for families.

Continuity and mobility

Our schools offer a continuing Montessori education for children as young as 10 weeks through to 18 years old. With a growing network of 100+ schools across the U.S., China and Europe – combined with our virtual and homeschool options – we can support continuity and consistency in your child’s education to meet your family’s changing needs.

North Park daycare | North Park Child Care l Hollywood Park daycare

Chicago’s favorite daycare

LadyBug and Friends in North Park

Ladybug is an all-day daycare and preschool serving families on Chicago’s northwest side including North Park, Hollywood Park, Budlong Woods and Peterson Park

Click Here For A Virtual Tour Of Our Location

Location Details

Enrollments

773-942-6577
lj-director@ladybug-daycare. com

Address

6100 N Lincoln Ave,
Chicago IL 60659

Hours

7:30 A.M. – 5:30 P.M.

Programs

6 weeks – 6 years

Our Programs

(6 weeks to 6 years old)

Check Out Our North Park School

Hear From Chicago Happy Parents

Heather Haddon

The center is organized, clean, cheery and professional. We love the caregivers, and our son has thrived there.

Terry Sullivan

The teachers have made our transition into daycare so easy.

Katie Desir

He lights up with excitement to see his teacher and classmates when we enter the room each morning.

Brad Slagle

She has also been struggling with taking consistent naps during the day, but the staff has worked with our desires and requests to help her sleep better.

Diana VanDegrift

The level of interaction, weekly themes, art projects, and special events have all exceeded our expectations

Carrie Mathos

It hits me every so often that I don’t get to spend a lot of time with him at this age, but I’m truly grateful that he’s spending a ton of time with people who care about him.

C V

I appreciate how loving the teachers are to our son and others children, responsive the center is to any concerns and the level of transparency they provide in communicating important updates to parents.

Karen Richardson

They’ve made every transition easy on us and are looking out for my daughter’s best interests at every turn.

More Reviews

We Proudly Serve Our Local Communities

Whether you’re looking for daycare in Hollywood Park, North Park, Budlong Woods or Peterson Park, LadyBug offers an experience unmatched by other Chicago daycare centers.


Send an inquiry

Why Your Child Will Thrive at LadyBug and Friends

LadyBug and Friends is a full-day Chicago daycare and preschool serving families with children from 6 weeks to 6 years old primarily serving the North Park, Hollywood Park, Budlong Woods, and Petersen Park neighborhoods. We value our role in helping young children in these communities to learn, grow, and thrive. Discover why LadyBug and Friends is able to provide the ideal environment for your child’s development.

Experienced teachers

Our high quality team of Chicago daycare teachers is trained to deal with the unique needs of children at all stages of early development. Each staff member has a passion for working with children and expertise in the field of early childhood education that exceeds DCFS standards. Furthermore, we provide continuous internal professional development opportunities to ensure our staff is constantly acquiring new skills and methods of encouraging growth and learning.

Individualized Attention

We recognize that each child has their own unique set of needs and their own pace at which they adjust to new activities and environments. We provide plenty of individualized attention for each child at our Chicago daycare center, offering enriching opportunities for all children no matter where they are on their developmental path.

Thoughtful Programming

Every aspect of our Chicago daycare program is carefully considered to nurture a specific, age-appropriate developmental skill or set of skills, a holistic approach that will lay a foundation for a lifelong love of growing and learning. From early exposure to music and languages to activities that promote socialization, creativity, and physical development, we are constantly refining our programs to provide the most well-rounded experience possible.

Safe and Supportive Environment

A child must feel secure in order to thrive, which is why we create an environment that protects both the physical and emotional well-being of each child. Under the watchful guidance of our highly trained, deeply committed and caring staff, your child will have the security and support they need to explore their world, try new things, and develop the social skills that will continue to serve them throughout their lives.

Commitment to Nutrition

Proper nutrition is an important part of childhood development. All children, ages 15 months and up, participate in our food plan. Our caterer Healthy Organic Kids provides healthy, nutritionally complete meals and snacks that will keep your child well-nourished throughout the day, while also establishing a foundation of healthy eating that will continue to serve them well as they grow.

We Take Safety Seriously!

At LadyBug and Friends your child’s safety is our top priority, and we understand that with COVID-19 you likely have questions about what procedures and protocols we have put in place to keep your child protected. We wanted to address the measures we are taking to provide a safe environment for your children, your family members, and our staff.

About LadyBug and Friends Chicago

At Ladybug and Friends we make it our mission to provide a holistic approach to early education, giving each child a safe environment to explore, learn, and grow in a manner that recognizes their unique qualities as they build a foundation for their future.

Our curriculum is designed to meet the specific developmental needs at each stage of early childhood, fostering qualities such as positive self-identity, emotional well-being, social skills, language, reasoning, creativity, physical development and respect for diversity and community.

We strive to ensure that these developmental goals are met through joyful and engaging activities that encourage development while nonetheless providing a sense of play and personal autonomy. We also believe that children flourish most when there is a foundation of good nutrition, plenty of rest, and respect for teachers and peers.


Send an inquiry

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Are you able to offer half days?

    Our rates are based on full-day care, so if you only want half-day care the rate would still remain the same. We do offer part-time weeks (2, 3, or 5 days), which is applicable where shown.

  • Hours of operation?

    Monday to Friday (7.30am – 5.30pm).

  • Do you offer discounts for siblings?

    Yes we offer a 10% discount for enrolled siblings.

  • Before/after school care?

    We do not provide care outside of our operating hours.

  • Is there an enrollment fee?

    Yes. Non-refundable one-time fee of $125 per child.

  • What is the payment schedule?

    Tuition week-in-advance payments are made before the Friday of each week.

  • What are the accepted payment methods?

    Check, Chase Quick Pay, Zelle or Credit Card (+3% fee for CC).

  • Do you take government help/assistance?

    We do not, we are a privately-owned company with our own set prices per age group.

  • Do families have to pay for weeks they do not need care (ie. vacation, sick days)?

    Yes, you pay for your spot no matter what. Families will receive a free week’s tuition every year on their anniversary week with the center.

  • Are meals provided for children?

    Yes, children 15 months and older will be on the center’s food plan, which consists of breakfast, AM snack, Lunch, and PM snack – all catered by Healthy Organic Kids.

  • How does the Waitlist work?

    Enrollments are limited, so if you are interested in our programs, you can register for a Tour and inclusion on our Waitlist to get notified 30 to 60 days before an enrollment becomes available.

    Waitlist participants are prioritized by the following;
    1) Siblings already enrolled.
    2) Already enrolled in other LadyBug location.
    3) Order of Waitlist acceptance.

  • Is there a fee to join your Waitlist?

    Yes. The waitlist fee is $150 per child.

Child Care Teacher Assistant job at Tiny Tots Incorporated in Chicago, IL 60614

Child Care Teacher Assistant

Tiny Tots Incorporated

Full Time

Chicago, IL 60614

Posted Today

Apply This Job

Job description

Job Summary

Tiny Tots Incorporated, a family owned and operated childcare center in Lincoln Park, is seeking a dynamic, dedicated Infant and Toddler Teacher Assistants to join our amazing team located in the heart of Chicago’s Lincoln Park community!
Our educators are supported by strong leadership and are inspired by our commitment to providing strong professional development opportunities and nature-inspired classrooms that allow our staff to be their most creative selves.
We are looking for team players who are enthusiastic about guiding each child to reach their full potential to join our dynamic team!

Minimum Qualifications

  • High School Degree or GED
  • Experience in a licensed early childhood setting or in childcare preferred
  • Willing to obtain CPR/First Aid certification

Other Requirements:

  • Team Player
  • Love for children and passionate for helping children reach their full potential
  • Friendly and a self starter

Benefits

Competitive compensation

Medical/Dental/Vision Insurance

Paid Time Off

401k Plan

Company Information

Every classroom is an extraordinary learning community that inspires a love of learning in every child. Our staff work closely with each child as they explore music and art, embrace nature and the outdoors, and engage in active learning, laying a foundation of a life-long learner. In a time of growth and innovation, we welcome you to join us in building your career, as we build a stronger community. We believe in work/life balance and offer a generous amount of time off.

About Tiny Tots Incorporated

Tiny Tots Incorporated was established in 2008 by Hadas Cohen, a mother who designed an innovative childcare program with a parent’s touch. The concept around Tiny Tots Incorporated was inspired by the birth of her first child. The goal was to provide an unsurpassed learning experience for children. After continuously searching for childcare that would answer all of the needs and wants of a new parent as well as a newborn, she realized that her only option was to start a childcare program of her own, where she could provide all children the type of care that only a mother could provide. Today, she is truly living her dream and proud to expand to a childcare center to provide the best possible care to a growing number of families. The key to Tiny Tots Incorporated is the successful curriculum and educational content provided as well as the personal attention each and every child receives while in her care. At Tiny Tots Incorporated children receive undivided attention; thereby meeting all of their needs, the way parents would provide: consistently, promptly and lovingly. The staff is thoroughly trained to follow an enriched curriculum that is consistent, fun and educational. Tiny Tots Incorporated is also proud to provide a foreign language immersion environment to all children. At Tiny Tots Incorporated all staff is fingerprinted as well as CPR and First-Aid certified. Our open-door policy allows parents to freely ask questions and get updates on their child.

Job Type: Full-time

Pay: $17.00 – $19.00 per hour

Benefits:

  • 401(k)
  • 401(k) matching
  • Dental insurance
  • Employee discount
  • Flexible schedule
  • Health insurance
  • Life insurance
  • Paid time off
  • Professional development assistance
  • Referral program
  • Retirement plan
  • Tuition reimbursement
  • Vision insurance

Schedule:

  • Monday to Friday

Supplemental pay types:

  • Signing bonus

COVID-19 considerations:
We have very strict Covid-19 guidelines in place to keep all staff, children and parents safe. As an added benefit, Tiny Tots Incorporated will have all new staff vaccinated for Covid-19 via our partnership with a local medical provider.

Experience:

  • Childcare: 1 year (Preferred)

Work Location: One location


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Francis W.

Parker School (Chicago)

Francis W. Parker School is an independent school serving students in the Chicago area from junior kindergarten through twelfth (final year of high school) grade. Located in Chicago’s Lincoln Park District, the school is based on the progressive education philosophies of John Dewey and Colonel Francis Wayland Parker, emphasizing community and citizenship. [7] Tuition ranges from $29,710 in Kindergarten to $37,240 in 12th grade. [8]

Content

  • 1 History
  • 2 Student activity
    • 2.1 Light athletics
      • 2.1.1 fall
      • 2.1.2 Winter
    • 2.2 Club, Club, Club, Club, Club, Clubs. organizations and interest groups
  • 3 Notable Alumni
  • 4 References
  • 5 external link

History

, students type and type: The Parker Weekly , which began publication in 1911. [9]

Parker has 944 students and underwent significant physical repairs between 2000 and 2009. Parker added an AstroTurf field, which began construction in June 2012 and was completed in September 2012. During the 2008–09 school year, the Auditorium was completely renovated with new classrooms, more seating, office space and a balcony. In the 2016–17 academic year, renovations began on the new Kovler family library. The new library will have a balcony, reading nooks, a Lego table and movable bookshelves. [10] [11]

Parker announced that the University of Chicago will take responsibility for the school’s publication of Schools: Research in Education , a national education journal that publishes stories and analytical reflections from faculty and students across country. [12] The school is a member of the Chicago Independent School League (ISL). [13]

Many famous people spoke at Parker during the three-week school meetings known as “Morning Exercises”, including Barack Obama, Albert Einstein, Jane Addams, and John Lewis. In addition, the Chicago Humanitarian Festival frequently uses the Parker Auditorium for guest speakers. Doris Kearns Goodwin, Camille Paglia, and Ta-Nehisi Coates all performed at Parker’s Heller Auditorium at the festival.

Student Activities

Athletics

Parker is part of the Independent School League (ISL) Athletic Conference, [14] and his team name is Colonel, named after the school’s founder, Colonel Francis Wayland Parker. Colonel Parker’s mascot was “retired” prior to the 2017–18 school year, and a new eagle mascot called “The Eagle” was introduced as a new mascot to better communicate with younger students. [15] The school has six sports in the fall season with eighteen interscholastic teams, three sports in the winter with fourteen teams, and five sports in the spring season with nineteen teams in middle school and high school. Parker has a strict policy on its sports department in both middle and high school, which means any student who tries out for a team will succeed, and over 65 percent of students play on at least one team during the school year. . The high school has both varsity and junior varsity teams. Francis W. Parker School (Chicago) Athletics

  • Boys tennis
  • Athletics student
  • Clubs, Organizations and Groups of interests

  • American Red Cross
  • Merg
  • Debate Club
  • Economy
  • French Club
  • Football Club
  • Fourth Wall
  • Gardeners
  • Club of green tape
  • Investment club
  • Latin American Student Organization (LASO)
  • Latin club
  • Launch x
  • Mathematical club
  • 9014

  • Men
  • 900

  • for court of color 900
  • Morning Choir
  • Parker Democrats
  • Parker Paws
  • Phaedrus Staff
  • Plant Club
  • Poetry Club Newsweek . [16]
  • Jennifer Beals, actress ( Flashdance , The Devil in a Blue Dress , Word L ). [16]
  • Sir Henry Channon, Member of Parliament (UK), diary. [17]
  • Bobby Florsheim, screenwriter
  • Erik Forsberg, director
  • Chuck Zhelatka, footballer
  • Edward Gorey, writer and illustrator
  • 0043 Blade Runner , Splash , Kill Bill ). [16]

  • Sarah Haskins, comedian
  • Anne Heche, actress [16]
  • Katherine Holabird, author
  • Celeste Holm, Oscar-winning actress
  • Arnold Horvin, Harvard Crimson and NFL football player
  • Ralph Horvin, Harvard Crimson and NFL football player
  • Peter Jacobson
  • Eric Kleenenberg, sociologist and author
  • Karin merchants, actress [18]
  • EMI Landecker, actress
  • Kate Levant, artist [ Quote ] 9000
  • Kevin A. Lynch, urban planner
  • Devid Mamet, playwright ( Glengarry Glen Ross ), author and screenwriter ( Verdict , Wag the Dog ). [16]
  • Joan Mitchell, artist best known for her paintings in the Abstract Expressionist movement. [16]
  • Alicia Patterson, Editor and Publisher
  • Eliza Paschen, Poet
  • Edith Pattu, Author
  • Alan Pearson, Conductor, Co-Founder The Alarm Ensemble, [19]
  • Artistic Director Mark Pincus, founder of social gaming company Zynga
  • Ayanna Pressley, Democratic Congresswoman US [20]
  • Jay Pritzker, entrepreneur [ citation needed ]
  • Jennifer Pritzker, founder of the Pritzker Military Museum and Library, the first and only transgender billionaire known , teacher and author
  • Jakob Weisberg, journalist and editor Slate . [16]
  • Joe Weisberg, creator of Americans
  • Jordan Weissman, founder of FASA Corporation & WizKids 9 Katherine C. Seeley, Asted W. Herndon: Ayanna Pressly seeks her political moment in a changing Boston. At: New York Times September 1, 2018
  • external link

    • Official website

    Top 20 – Chicago attractions

    Chicago is more commonly seen as a major industrial and financial core of the United States, and according to old American films, as the lair of the powerful Italian mafia led by Al Capone. However, the modern metropolis is one of the centers of tourism in the United States, which is visited by several million people a year.

    Chicago is full of parks, museums, modern shopping centers and trendy restaurants. The city is building on the shores of Lake Michigan. It boasts a well-groomed coastal strip and excellent city beaches. Sunbathing on the golden sand against the backdrop of glass skyscrapers, enjoy swimming and the sun, but in five minutes be ready to immerse yourself in the dynamic life of the metropolis – what could be better for an active and inquisitive tourist.

    The most interesting and beautiful places for walking. Photos and a short description.

    Millennium Park

    A 100,000 m² urban green oasis in downtown Chicago. It was created at the beginning of the 21st century and almost immediately gained popularity for its original design, convenience and beauty of landscapes. Unusual sculptures, art objects and installations are scattered throughout the park. The territory hosts exhibitions of contemporary art. Under the park there is a railway station and a large underground car park.

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    Fountain Crown

    The unique fountain in Millennium Park, designed by Jaume Plens, is a real engineering find. The design is a video installation placed on large facade screens, from which jets of water splash out. The image on the screens is constantly changing and is reflected in the water surface of the black marble pool. To implement this solution, quite complex technical research was required.

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    Cloud Gate

    Sculpture in the territory of Millennium Park. The locals have nicknamed it the “mirror bean” because the outline of the structure really resembles a bean. The object has become one of the symbols of progressive Chicago, the avant-garde of contemporary art and the territory of inspiration for trendy artists. The design of the sculpture was developed by the master Anish Kapoor invited from London.

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    Navy Pier

    An embankment that stretches along Lake Michigan for several hundred meters. The pier was built at the beginning of the 20th century for purely practical purposes – to provide logistics along the river and lake. In parallel, tourist ferries were launched. Very soon, the inhabitants chose this place and began to arrange picnics there. Over time, cafes, well-equipped playgrounds, gardens, shops and attractions appeared.

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    Magnificent Mile

    Paris has the Champs Elysees, New York has Fifth Avenue, and Chicago has the Magnificent Mile. This is a shopping street, one of the sections of Michigan Avenue, around which the most prestigious areas of the city are located. In these places, real estate costs fabulous money. Shops, hotels and restaurants are concentrated on the Magnificent Mile, there are always a lot of people here – both residents and visitors to Chicago.

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    Art Institute of Chicago

    School and museum founded in 1879 by an organization of American artists. In 1893, the organization received a new building, which is still located today. The museum exhibits a rich collection of impressionists (Monet, Renoir, Cezanne), as well as works by Picasso, Matisse, Warhol and many other worthy masters. Also at the Art Institute of Chicago, you can look at exhibitions of weapons, photography, African art and Asian culture.

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    Museum of Science and Industry

    Unusual museum and research center of the Western Hemisphere. It was housed in a building built for the opening of the World Exhibition in 1893. The exhibits are shown in dynamics, many copies are made in full size. For children, there is a reduced copy of the railway, which functions like a real one, and a puppet palace.

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    Field Museum of Natural History

    Museum complex on the shores of Lake Michigan, which houses collections dedicated to the natural history of the planet. The exposition has about 20 million copies, so even a cursory inspection will take several days. The space of the museum is divided into thematic areas: anthropology, geology, zoology. A valuable relic of the Field Museum is the largest surviving skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus Rex.

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    Adler Planetarium

    Space theater and museum built with funds from retired businessman Max Adler. The first visitors were admitted to the planetarium in 1930. Thanks to the generous donations of the former businessman, quite a large number of navigational and astronomical mechanisms were purchased for the exposition. The Chicago Planetarium is the first planetarium in the United States.

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    Shedd Aquarium

    Huge aquarium on the Chicago Museum campus. It is considered one of the largest indoor aquariums in the world. It contains huge whales, sharks, penguins, crocodiles, octopuses and a considerable number of various fish. In addition to marine life, iguanas, snakes, birds, otters, fur seals live in the Shedd Aquarium – in total more than 2,000 species of animals and 25 thousand individuals.

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    Chicago Cultural Center

    A complex where exhibitions, presentations, shows and other cultural events are constantly held. The Chicago Children’s Choir also performs here. The center opened at the end of the 19th century. At first it housed the Chicago Public Library and the Veterans Union. Later, both organizations moved to other places, and the building received the status of an urban cultural center open to all comers.

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    Chicago Theater

    Cultural monument of the early 20th century, one of the important art centers in Chicago. From the very opening, the theater was used very widely, it hosted concerts, shows of magicians, theatrical performances, performances of comedians. A lot of people always gathered for the performances, as the site very quickly won people’s love. Today, the popularity of the theater remains at a high level; artists from all over the States come here on tour.

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    Willis Tower

    Chicago skyscraper, which was considered the tallest in the world until 2009 (then the championship passed to the Sears Tower). It should be noted that the tallest skyscrapers in America have always been built in Chicago. Willis Tower consists of 110 floors, the height of the building is 442 meters, and together with antennas on the roof – 527 meters. Bruce Graham was the chief architect of this grandiose project. The structure up to the 90th floor is supported by a system of powerful internal supports.

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    John Hancock Center

    A 100-story skyscraper, another grandiose high-rise in Chicago. Among the locals, the name “Big John” is firmly attached to the skyscraper. Construction was completed by 1970. On the 94th floor there is an observation deck, from where you can look at Chicago from a truly “mind-blowing” angle. Inside the skyscraper is divided into a business part and residential areas.

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    Wrigley Field Baseball Stadium

    Arena for the most popular sport in the USA. The stadium always gathers full stands of fans during numerous cups. Wrigley Field has been the home ground of the Chicago Cubs for over 100 years. The stadium is an open space with stands installed around the perimeter. On the roofs of the surrounding houses, enterprising owners also organized places for spectators.

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    Lincoln Park Zoo

    Lake Michigan Zoo, one of the oldest in the New World. It opened in the middle of the 19th century. Now the zoo is one of the most popular attractions in Chicago, it is open seven days a week on a very convenient schedule. A comfortable and natural habitat has been created for the animals, sometimes it seems that they just roam among the trees and can easily approach visitors.

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    Buckingham Fountain

    Picturesque architectural composition in Grath Park. The fountain was built with private funds from one of the bankers. The sculptural group is made in the Rococo style and from a distance resembles a wedding cake. The four layers of this “cake” symbolize the states surrounding Michigan, and the jets of water are the lake itself. In the warm season, light shows are arranged here, in which several light sources take part.

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    Water tower

    One of the oldest buildings in the city, dating back to 1869. The tower survived the “great fire” of 1871, during which almost the entire city was destroyed. Several times they tried to demolish it, but the residents stood up for the structure. It is believed that the ghost of the caretaker lives in the tower. During the fire, he climbed to the very top and hanged himself to avoid an agonizing death from the fire.

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    Chicago River

    The river connects the Great Lakes and the Gulf of Mexico, the total length of the channel is a little over 250 km. As a result of the rapid industrial development of Chicago in the 19th century, the waters of the river were heavily polluted, after heavy rains and floods, epidemics flared up in the city. In 1900, the channel was redirected to the Mississippi River basin. There are 38 drawbridges across the Chicago River within the city limits.

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    Lake Michigan

    The largest freshwater lake in the United States, part of the Great Lakes system. The Michigan Territory lies entirely within the United States, unlike other lakes. The reservoir is called the “third coast of the States” after the Pacific and Atlantic coasts, as there are excellent sandy beaches. You can swim in the lake all summer, even at the end of August the water remains quite warm.

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    U.

    S.A. Excursions

    What to see in the USA?

    The number of attractions in the US is as huge as its scale.

    Washington DC

    • Washington DC is the capital of the USA and a beautiful city with something for everyone to see. The city has many museums, theaters, shopping areas and buildings that house government offices. In the center of the city is the Capitol (The U.S. Capitol) – the building of the US Congress, from which the famous National Mall Boulevard stretches 2 km long to the Lincoln Memorial.

    • National Mall and Memorial Parks unite many national, publicly significant attractions: the Jefferson and Washington memorials (at the top of the 170-meter memorial there is an observation deck with a beautiful view of the American capital), the Korean War and Vietnam War Veterans Memorial. The Smithsonian Institution, with its 19 museums, is also part of the National Mall.

    • The White House – the residence of the President of the United States, which organized excursions.

    • The Library of Congress is the country’s oldest public cultural institution and the largest library in the world. Its interiors are a work of art.

    • The Gothic-style Washington National Cathedral is the largest Catholic church in the Western Hemisphere. The cathedral is famous for its gargoyles, stained glass windows and surrounding gardens. The tour costs less than $5.

    • The National Zoo – The zoo’s variety of animals and plants, as well as its natural landscape, attract visitors of all ages.

    Los Angeles

    • Los Angeles is the largest city in California’s golden state and the second most populous in the United States. Its population, together with the adjacent territories, is over 11.5 million people. The heart of Los Angeles is its business part, the so-called Plaza, with its Mexican and Chinese shops and restaurants. In the business part of the city rises the Music Center, where the annual Oscars are presented.

    • Downtown – the nominal center of the city. It was here that the settlement that gave birth to Los Angeles was laid. On the modern street of Olvera, you can admire the national dances of the Mexicans and buy interesting souvenirs. Downtown is the only place in Los Angeles with a lot of skyscrapers. They are especially impressive at night.

    • Chinatown – a small corner of the East. The unique atmosphere of tranquility, polite bows and smiles, shops with Chinese silk, porcelain and jewelry, bushes, fountains, etc.

    • Hollywood is a legendary city of film, television and radio. The Manns Chinese Theater hosts premieres of films just shot in Hollywood. Here, famous movie stars of the past and present left their hand and footprints on the cement pavement of the palace. And nearby on Hollywood Boulevard stretches the Avenue of Stars. A 10-minute drive from the Chinese Theater is a unique open-air concert hall – the Hollywood Bowl. World celebrities give concerts here – opera singers, symphony orchestras, rock and pop stars.
    In Hollywood, it is worth visiting the Wax Museum and Guinness World Records. This will be especially interesting for children.

    • Beverly Hills – the area of ​​private villas of the rich. Luxurious estates symbolize the complete and final victory over industriousness – a victory known as “stardom”. In Beverly Hills, stars are allowed to demonstrate their “stardom” and inspire those who still have everything ahead of them.

    • Universal Studios – Worth spending a day here. You can star in a movie and receive it as a gift on a videocassette, learn the secrets of mind-blowing stunts in popular action movies, see “how movies are made”, watch an exciting show and, of course, ride the “cool” rides: “Back into the future”, “Jurassic Park”, “Shrek”.

    • Disneyland is the real first Disneyland. The park was opened by Walt Disney in 1955 as “the happiest place on earth.” This park attracts a huge number of tourists to Los Angeles. Up to 75 thousand people visit here every day.

    • Malibu, Long Beach, Manhattan Beach, Redondo Beach – good at any time of the day: a light breeze from the ocean, the rustle of palm trees, cozy cafes, young people surfing on the crest of a wave, girls in swimsuits rushing past on roller skates and bicycles.

    Pasific Ocean Park operates on the Santa Monica waterfront, where you can ride a roller coaster, watch performances of fur seals and dolphins.

    New York

    • New York is the largest city in the United States, the core of the world’s most densely populated urban area. Americans call it the “Big Apple”. The city is located in the extreme southeast of the state of New York, at the confluence of the river. Hudson in the Atlantic Ocean. It is the cultural, financial, business, political and information center of the United States.

    • The Statue of Liberty is the “Symbol of New York and the USA”, “one of the most famous sculptures in the world”, “the symbol of freedom and democracy”, “Lady Liberty”, no matter how many epithets and names were invented for this statue in New York. York! Some are amazed at its size, others pay tribute to the idea embodied in the sculpture, others simply perceive it as one of the modern wonders of the world.

    • The Brooklyn Bridge, built in 1883, connected Manhattan and Brooklyn, previously two unconnected cities. Bridge length – almost 490 meters, at that time it became the longest suspension bridge in the world.

    • Chrysler Building, a skyscraper built by Chrysler in 1930, one of the symbols of New York. The 319 m (1,046 ft) building is located on the east side of Manhattan at the intersection of 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue. Originally owned by the Chrysler Corporation, it is now jointly owned by TMW Real Estate and Tishman Speyer Properties.

    • The Iron Skyscraper, also known as the Flatiron Building, is a Manhattan skyscraper located at the junction of Broadway, Fifth Avenue and East 23rd Street. The name of the skyscraper was due to its shape, reminiscent of an iron.

    • The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York belongs to the largest art collections in the world. In terms of the variety of collections, in terms of quality, this is the most significant repository of fine art monuments on the American continent, which can be put on a par with such world-famous museums as the Louvre and the State Hermitage.

    • The New York Botanical Garden is one of the best places for nature lovers. The territory of its area is 100 hectares. It features 48 gardens and vegetable plantations, not counting 50 hectares of virgin forest. This 5-hectare living open-air museum houses the Everett Adventure Kindergarten, where children can learn about plant life in a fun way. And adults, using a half-hour tram ride, can visit the most amazing places in the garden – the Alpine Garden, the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden, the American Gallery, and the Jane Watson Irwin Evergreen Garden.

    • The Bronx Zoo is the largest zoo in the country and one of the largest in the world. It contains more than 3 thousand species of animals, birds and reptiles, including rare animals – bison. Among the main attractions are the pavilions “Wildlife of Asia”, “House of Reptiles”. The area is about 102 hectares. Founded in 1898. The New York Botanical Garden adjoins the zoo.

    Chicago

    • Chicago is the third largest city in the United States (after New York and Los Angeles), the country’s second largest financial center and the largest transport hub in North America. The city of Chicago is located in the state of Illinois. It arced along the southwestern shore of Lake Michigan for 29miles; The city center is located in the area where the Chicago River flows into the lake.

    • The Loop (“Loop”) – the business center of Chicago, where the exchanges are located, the main shopping street State Street (State Street), LaSalle Street, called Chicago Wall Street, Michigan Avenue (Michigan Avenue), considered the most beautiful street in the city, part of which – the “Magnificent Mile” (Magnificent Mile) – is famous for its luxurious hotels, restaurants and shops.

    • Sears Tower (skyscraper “Sears Tower”) – the tallest building in the United States (110 floors, height 443 m), consisting of nine towers of various heights, connected into a single structure. You can go up to the observation deck on the 103rd floor, which offers a view of the entire city, the surrounding area and Lake Michigan, and on a clear day – the adjacent territories of the four states. The building houses a skyscraper museum, shops and restaurants.

    • ArchiCentre (Architecture Center) – here you can get acquainted with the history of American skyscraper construction.

    • The Skyscraper District, home to the Louis Sullivan building with fine wrought iron lace and oversized windows, and the 1985 State of Illinois Building with revolving floors and transparent elevators. The Tribune Tower, a 1920s international competition gothic building that houses Chicago newspaper offices, can be seen just beyond the Michigan-avenue Bridge, home to the city’s wealthiest neighborhood.

    • Marc Chagall’s “Four Seasons” mosaic panels surrounding The First National Bank Building and Plaza.

    • A sculpture by Pablo Picasso in Daley Plaza, a popular meeting place for Chicagoans and visitors.

    • Lovers of sculpture and painting are recommended to visit the world-famous Museum of Contemporary Art and the Art Institute of Chicago.

    Parks and Museums Chicago

    • Scenic parks stretch from the shores of Lake Michigan to the city’s business and residential areas along Lake Shore Drive.
    The most famous of them – Grant Park (Grant Park), Millennium Park (Millennium Park) and Lincoln Park (Lincoln Park). Further south are Burnham Park and Jackson Park in Hyde Park.

    • Grant Park (formerly known as Lake Park) covers an area of ​​1.29 km2. It houses the Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum, the first plantarium built in the Western Hemisphere in 1930, Museum of Natural History. Field (Field Museum of Natural History) and Shedd Aquarium (Shedd Aquarium), which for a long time remained the largest aquarium in the world (19 million liters of water, 25,000 inhabitants) and to this day is one of the most visited places in Chicago. These three museums were merged in 1998 into the Museum Campus.
    The park is home to the Art Institute of Chicago, an art museum renowned for its extensive collection of Impressionist and American art.
    And in the center of Grant Park is the Buckingham Fountain – one of the largest fountains in the world. Opened in 1927, it still delights residents and visitors of Chicago with color-dynamic musical shows (from 21:00 to 22:00 during the warm season).

    • Millennium Park opened in 2004 at the north end of Grant Park, on top of the depot and large car park, and has become a major Chicago landmark. This is the largest rooftop park in the world (its area is 101,000 m2), and a kind of showcase of postmodern architecture. The three main highlights of the park are Cloud Gate, Crown Fountain and Jay Pritzker Pavilion.
    Jay Pritzker Pavilion is a 4,000-seat stage designed by world-renowned architect Frank Gehry. The pavilion consists of curved stainless steel surfaces, reminiscent of a delicate flower or the unfolding sails of a ship.
    Crown Fountain is a fountain designed by the Catalan sculptor Jaume Plensa. Two 15-meter towers are made of transparent glass blocks, reinforced on both sides with black granite panels and immersed in water. Between these glass panels are LED screens that, when illuminated, show the faces of nearly a thousand Chicagoans.

    • The Cloud Gate is a 110-ton, three-storey, mirror-polished steel structure resembling a drop of mercury, popularly known as “The Bean”. This is the first work in the United States by the famous Turner Prize-winning sculptor Anish Kapoor. The curved mirror surface reflects visitors, skyscrapers and the sky itself in a bizarre way.

    Houston

    • Houston is the largest and most important city in Texas. It ranks fourth in terms of population in the United States after New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. The city is crossed by numerous rivers, called here “bayo” and streams – “shouts”. There are many different lakes, the largest is Lake Houston.

    • There are two high-rise skyscraper centers in Houston, Downtown and Uptown, just south of Downtown.

    • There are 18 museum complexes in the Museum district:
    Museum of Fine Arts, Museum of Nature and Natural Sciences, Health and Medicine, Holocaust Museum, Modern Art, Children’s Museum, Museum of Photography, Weather Museum, Art Car Museum, The National Museum of Funeral History.
    For the convenience of visitors to the museum district, huge parking lots are equipped, and a small electric train runs through the district itself.
    In the museum district there is a huge zoo, which displays not only a variety of animals from around the world, but also the typical vegetation of the state of Texas.
    Here, in Herman’s Park, there is Miller Outdoor Theatre, a huge summer stage building, but with a large, well-equipped stage. From April to the end of November, the theater hosts performances, concerts, festivals, mostly free of charge.

    • Lone Star Flight Museum. The collection of restored rare aircraft and photographs, including famous plane crashes, is colossal.

    • Aquarium – the underwater world of the Gulf of Mexico, which a tourist gets into for $7.5, turns out to be very diverse, there are even huge toothy sharks.

    • Lyndon Johnson Spacecraft Center – NASA (NASA).
    This is not a museum, but an operating enterprise, but excursions are allowed there on all days of the week. The museum-training complex presents models of spaceships, various computer simulators, in order to try to fly and land on other planets, you can measure your weight and your strength on all the planets of the solar system. And there is also the Omnimax theater of 3D cinema, where various films about space are shown every hour. A tour of the NASA campus is carried out on small road trains of 4 cars, which can accommodate 100 people. There are two routes – one with a visit to the workshops, where you can see from the gallery, through a glass wall, how the creators of space engines work and see all the spacecraft and carrier stages, and on the second, tourists are taken to the Mission Control Center.

    • Bayou Place, a place called the heart of Houston. The “heart” is valuable because there are a lot of bars and restaurants with very different – Mexican, Italian, French – cuisine. And it beats 24 hours a day.

    National parks

    National parks in the country, there are about 60. The most notable: Yosemite, Death Valley, Yellowstone, Niagara Falls, Grand Canyon, Bryce Canyon, Monument Valley, Arches.

    • Yosemite National Park occupies a vast area in the western Sierra Nevada, in the mountains of central California. With countless lakes, meadows, forests and mountains, Yosemite’s rocky peaks are like colorful, theatrical Alpine scenery.

    • Death Valley National Park is located in the southeastern part of the Sierra Nevada mountain range in California. It is the largest park in the United States, with an area of ​​13,518 km2. The park is the lowest point in North America and has the driest, hottest climate of any national park in the United States. The air temperature reaches up to 40°C. The best time to visit the valley is from November to April.

    • Yellowstone National Park is located in the eastern part of the Cordillera. This is the largest nature reserve in the United States. The territory of the park is huge – almost nine thousand square kilometers. The park is primarily located in Wyoming. Yellowstone National Park has many hot springs (geysers), mud volcanoes, and fumaroles. Yellowstone geysers are varied. There are giants throwing a jet to the height of a thirty-story building, and there are small fountains two or three meters high.

    • Niagara Falls is located in the state of New York, on the border of the USA and Canada and actually consists of three waterfalls of glacial origin – Horseshoe Falls, sometimes also called Canadian Falls, American waterfall (American Falls) and Bridal Veil Falls. Although the height of the waterfall is small – 53 meters, the volume of water passing through it is very large. Niagara Falls is the most powerful and widest in North America. All three waterfalls are over a kilometer wide.

    • Grand Canyon National Park is the most famous and visited national park in the USA. The park is located in Arizona. The Grand Canyon of the Colorado River, one of the recognized natural wonders of the world, is located on the territory of the park. The area of ​​the park is 4927 km2. The southern ridge of the canyon is historically the most visited, here are the most popular viewing platforms.

    • Bryce Canyon National Park is located in southwestern Utah. Its area is 56 miles2 (145 km2). The main attraction of the park is Bryce Canyon. Despite the name, it’s not exactly a canyon, but rather a gigantic natural amphitheater along the east side of the Pontsogant plateau, shaped by erosion and shaped like a horseshoe. Nature has shaped the colorful limestones, sandstones and rocks into thousands of spiers, turrets shaped like temples and minarets, and countless labyrinths.

    • Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park is a desert valley on the border of Utah and Arizona, with its monolithic boulders and flat mountains, known throughout the world thanks to western films featuring the legendary John Wayne and other Hollywood cowboys. The valley is located on the territory of the Navajo Indian Reservation, which owns the exclusive right to accompany excursions in the reserve.

    • Arches National Park is located in Utah and is one of the state’s treasures. Park area 76519acres. The park is located on a huge salt pad left over from the ancient sea, where sedimentary rocks lie in layers, which turned into rocks under their own pressure. These rocks create more than 2,000 natural arches of various colors and sizes. The view of the sky and hills through the miraculous arches created by nature itself creates a feeling of unreality and fascinates the traveler.

    Mount Rushmore National Memorial is located near Keyston, South Dakota, USA. The mountain is known for the fact that a giant 18.6-meter-high bas-relief is carved into its granite rock, which is a sculptural portrait of four US presidents: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln.

    Peace Foundation. USA from Yekaterinburg. Landmarks of Los Angeles. Disneyland USA. Landmarks of New York. Landmarks of Chicago. US national parks. Mount Rushmore. What to see in the USA.

    Education | Sports in Chicago, IL

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    Kindergarten Jobs

    Kindergarten in Wheeling is looking for a full time/part time teacher and assistant teacher. Legal status is required.

    Coach/Choreographer Needed

    Part-time job in downtown Chicago looking for an English-speaking rhythmic gymnastics coach and/or choreographer with […] time/part time.

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    Kindergarten work

    Kindergarten in the Wheeling area is looking for a teacher and assistant teacher. Call.

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    PDR Masters Management School is recruiting a group of people who want to master the profession of paintless car repair with further employment. Training starts on December 1st. […]

    Teacher assistant needed

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    Best Illinois Attractions – US Highlights

    Illinois, bordering Indiana and the Mississippi River, is known as the Prairie State because of its farmland and hills. The contrast between the countryside of Illinois and its largest city, Chicago, means that Illinois has plenty of attractions to see. From the third tallest building in the US to the stunning Garden of the Gods, Illinois is full of interesting places to visit.

    Illinois is also known as “Land of Lincoln” because the famous US President Abraham Lincoln spent most of his life in this state, which was the first US state to ratify the 13th Amendment and abolish slavery. Lincoln’s influence is visible throughout the state, and there are more historical sites dedicated to Lincoln in Illinois than anywhere else in America. Springfield is the center of attractions in Lincoln. Illinois is the birthplace of another US president, Ronald Reagan, and has a driving trail that starts with a tour of the Reagan family home in the historic town of Dixon.

    Dixon is also home to the John Deere Historic Site, which houses the restored John Deere House and a working blacksmith shop. The famous American writer Ernest Hemingway was born and spent his first six years in Illinois, and the first McDonald’s was built in Des Plaines, Illinois. In addition to historical sites, Illinois has many natural and other famous attractions. Here are 21 for your wish list.

    CHICAGO SIGHTS

    1 – BUCKINGHAM FOUNTAIN

    Buckingham Fountain is one of Chicago’s top attractions for visitors.

    The Clarence Buckingham Memorial Fountain is a famous landmark in Chicago’s Grant Park and one of the largest fountains in the world.

    An impressive 20-minute 150-foot high water jet show is performed every hour, accompanied by lights and music.

    Buckingham Fountain is one of the most elaborate decorative fountains in the United States and was one of the factors that earned Grant Park a place on the National Register of Historic Places.

    The fountain is a fine example of Beaux-Arts design, made of pink marble and granite, with four Art Deco bronze seahorse sculptures representing the four states bordering Lake Michigan.

    The fountain opened in 1927 and in the same year the artist received the National Prize for his sculptures at the 1927 Paris Salon.

    The fountain was originally operated manually by two engineers working 12-hour shifts.

    As the light show grew in popularity over the years, its elements were gradually automated until the show was computerized in 1980.

    The fountain is open from 8 am to 11 pm daily.

    Buckingham Fountain is located at 301 S Columbus Dr, Chicago.

    2 – BOB IN MILLENNIUM PARK

    Bean is a famous Chicago landmark that every visitor should see.

    The most famous monument in Chicago’s Millennium Park is Cloud Gate, better known as “Bob”.

    The smooth polished sculpture by Anish Kapoor has no visible seams despite being made from 168 stainless steel plates welded together.

    Its mirrored surface is a popular place in Chicago to take selfies.

    Millennium Park is made up of several contemporary architectural features that blend into the landscape, such as the Crown Fountain.

    The park is located above the railway and garages, and in winter there is an ice skating rink, public art, a city garden, a theater and bridges.

    This is a popular venue for the Jay Pritzker Pavilion designed by Frank Gehry.

    The Pritzker Pavilion is large enough to seat 11,000 people, and the BP Bridge, also designed by Frank Gehry, connects the park to the lakefront.

    Millennium Park is located at 201 E Randolph St, Chicago.

    3 – MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY

    The Museum of Science and Industry is an important science museum located in the former 19th century Palace of Fine Arts.

    This is one of the largest science museums in the United States and has interesting exhibits such as the U-505 submarine, a World War II German submarine that was captured and hidden until German troops were convinced that the submarine sank.

    It helped the Allied forces win the war and U-505 has been on display in the museum since 1954.

    Other key galleries are the Whisper Gallery, where whispers can be heard throughout the room, and the Transport Gallery, which displays historic trains, cars, and aircraft.

    The museum has an extensive science education program for children, including lessons and excursions.

    Museum of Science and Technology is located at 5700 S Lake Shore Dr, Chicago.

    4 – PULLMAN NATIONAL MONUMENT

    Erected on the site of the 1894 Pullman strike, the two-month-long national railroad strike became a key moment in US labor law.

    This is a National Park Service site built on what used to be one of the first industrial communities in the US, a site created for the production of Pullman sleeping cars.

    You will also find the Porter A. Philip Randolph Pullman Museum and the Pullman Visitor Center.

    Pullman National Monument is located at 11141 S Cottage Grove Ave, Chicago.

    5 – I&M CHANNEL

    Which was built to connect New York and New Orleans, was the key to turning Chicago into a central shopping center.

    The 100-mile canal connects Lake Michigan to the Mississippi and is a recreational corridor offering hiking, biking, kayaking, and fishing.

    6 – NAVY PIERCE

    The Navy Pier dates back to 1916 and was known as the Municipal Pier when it was used as a dock for cargo and passenger ships.

    In 1918, the authorities turned the pier into a prison for evaders.

    It was renamed in 1927 in honor of Navy veterans who served in the First World War.

    During World War II it was used as a training center for the US Navy, and after the war became the classroom of the University of Illinois.

    Today it is a lively entertainment area with restaurants, bars, galleries, shops and halls.

    Also home to the Children’s Museum of Chicago, the Crystal Gardens, the glass atrium botanical garden, the Chicago Shakespeare Theater and the 200-foot Wheel of the Century.

    Navy Pier is located at 600 E Grand Ave, Chicago.

    7 – CLARK BRIDGE

    The Clark Bridge is a unique Illinois landmark that connects to another state. Do you know which state?

    Clark Bridge is a cable-stayed bridge that spans the Mississippi River between Missouri and Illinois.

    The bridge was named after explorer William Clark and carries route 67 across the river.

    The $85 million bridge is a 108-foot (33 m) wide bridge with two lanes of traffic in each direction and two bike lanes.

    The “Superbridge” featured in the documentary “Superbridge” delighted audiences around the world by highlighting the challenges of building a bridge during the Great Flood 1993 years old

    44 steel cables looped over saddles support the bridge and are perched on top of a pair of wide concrete pylons overlooking the Mississippi River.

    8 – WILLIS TOWER

    Willis Tower is one of Chicago’s modern landmarks.

    Willis Tower is a 108-story skyscraper with a height of 442.1 m, it is the third tallest building in North America.

    When built in 1974, it was the tallest building in the world, surpassing New York’s World Trade Center, and held that title for 25 years (from 1974 to 1998).

    Willis Tower is now the 23rd tallest building in the world, and its observation deck is the tallest in the US.

    Skydeck on the 103rd floor and has a glass box ledge at 1353 feet.

    Standing on glass with Chicago under your feet is a dizzying experience, just like jumping into an elevator in 60 seconds.

    United Airlines occupies 20 floors and is headquartered here.

    Willis Tower is located at 233 S Wacker Dr, Chicago.

    9- LINCOLN PARK ZOO

    The Lincoln Park Zoo is a huge Chicago landmark and green space from the sky.

    Lincoln Park Zoo is a green oasis in vibrant Chicago, home to over 200 animal species, from American beavers and American black bears to African penguins and Titi’s Bolivian gray monkeys.

    It has an extensive conservation program to improve wildlife care through science and conservation.

    Programs range from exploring how wildlife uses cities to exploring the African savannas.

    There is also the Bat Project, working with volunteers to observe bat species by recording their calls, the Black Rhino Conservation Project and the Massasauga Rattlesnake Project.

    The Lincoln Park Zoo is located at 2001 N Clark St, Chicago.

    10 – GENTLEMEN STATUES

    Gentlemen Statues are contemporary Chicago landmarks worth seeing.

    The Gentlemen’s Statues is an eye-catching Chicago landmark on the banks of the Chicago River.

    Created by Taiwanese artist Ju Ming, trained as a woodcarver but working in a variety of contemporary environments, the minimalist statues were installed at AMA Plaza.

    The Gentlemen’s Statues are located at 330 North Wabash, Chicago.

    11 – BIRTH OF ERNEST HEMMINGWAY

    Famous writer Ernest Hemingway was born in a Victorian house in Oak Park, west of downtown Chicago.

    His 1890 house is now a beautifully preserved museum where he was born in 1899 year.

    Hemingway grew up in this house for the first six years of his life, and the house has been restored and furnished to reflect the times in which he lived.

    Nearby is the Ernest Hemingway Museum, which contains a collection of rare photographs, videos, children’s diaries and personal letters.

    While in Oak Park, visit the Frank Lloyd Wright House and Studio, where the world famous architect lived and worked for 20 years.

    Ernest Hemingway House is located at 339N Oak Park Ave, Oak Park.

    12 – BAPS COMPLEX SRI SWAMINARAYAN MANDIR

    BAPS Sri Swaminarayan Mandir is a blend of 21st century Indian architecture and technology.

    The impressive architecture of this Hindu temple makes it a unique contemporary landmark in Illinois.

    Built according to Shilpa Shastra, sacred Hindu architecture, it has a collection of shrines.

    The temple was built of limestone and marble stones from Turkey and Italy, carved by 2000 craftsmen in Rajasthan.

    The entire complex covers 27 acres (11 ha).

    BAPS Sri Swaminarayan Mandir is located at 4N739 Il, Route 59, Bartlett.

    ILLINOIS NATURAL ATTRACTIONS

    13 – CAHOKIA MOUNDS

    Cahokia Mounds – Mysterious Illinois Landmarks for your wish list.

    The 70 mounds of Cahokia are located on the territory of the ancient city of the American Indians and spread over a vast area of ​​2200 acres.

    The mounds date back to 700 AD and their early settlers were the Woodland Indians who lived in villages along the Cahokia Creek.

    Around 1000 AD, a highly structured society emerged with its own social and political system, which grew until its population reached about 20,000 people.

    Mysterious mounds are still a mystery, but experts believe that the indigenous people used them for burial and ritual purposes.

    The earth was dug out of the pits and carried in baskets on the backs of the settlers to the barrow.

    The largest mound is Monks’ Mound, named after the French monks, with a foundation of 14 acres (5.6 ha), it was the home of the chief and the site of ceremonies.

    Another significant barrow, barrow 72, has been excavated and unearthed 300 ceremonial burials of young women.

    On the platform of seashell beads on top of this barrow, the royal couple stayed for about 20 years.

    The Cahokia Mounds are located in Collinsville, Illinois, across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, Missouri.

    14 – HUNGRY ROCK STATE PARK

    Starved Rock State Park has many natural attractions in Illinois worth noting.

    Starved Rock State Park in downtown Illinois is a year-round hiking destination offering winter hiking, frozen waterfalls, and winter ice climbing.

    During the summer you can see 14 waterfalls, including Tonty Canyon Falls.

    The park is located on a bluff of the Illinois River in La Salle County and features 18 canyons with moss-covered vertical walls, waterfalls, natural springs, and stunning views.

    Sandy cliffs filled with pines, oaks and cedars.

    Wildlife includes gray squirrels, white-tailed deer, raccoons and several bird species, including woodpeckers and rough-winged swallows.

    Hungry Rock State Park’s history dates back to 8000 BC, with villages and settlements that supported Native American tribes and European explorers.

    Starved Rock State Park is located at 2668 East 875th Road, Oglesby.

    15 – GARDEN OF THE GODS

    The Red Rocks of the Garden of the Gods in Shawnee National Forest is a stunning natural attraction in Illinois that is well worth visiting.

    The eye-catching red cliffs of the Garden of the Gods in Shawnee National Forest are an impressive natural attraction in Illinois well worth a visit.

    The sculpted sandstone cliffs are millions of years old, with picturesque cliffs dropping 100 feet.

    These rock formations were created when geological uplifts formed along a natural fault line millions of years ago.

    Located in the Shawnee National Forest, there is archaeological evidence to support that prehistoric humans began visiting the Garden of the Gods around 1330 BC.

    Many First Nations tribes are associated with the Garden of the Gods, including the Kiowa, Apache, Cheyenne, Lakota, Comanche, and Pawnee peoples.

    The Ute people believed that the red stones were associated with spirits.

    Located in northwest Chatsworth, the park was once part of the historic Iverson Movie Ranch and has been featured in several films such as The Lone Ranger and Tarzan.

    The Garden of the Gods is located on the Highway 34 Lookout Trail in the Shawnee National Forest.

    16 – CHARLES MOUND

    One of the unusual things about Charles Mound (1235 feet) is that it is the highest natural point in Illinois, but it is located on private property.

    Northwest Illinois avoided glaciers during the last ice age and has high plateaus cut by deep river valleys.

    The Mississippi River flows through the region.

    Property owners allow tourists to climb Charles Mound once or twice a year.

    Charles Mound is located 17.7 km north of Galena at 688 West Charles Mound Road, Scales Mound, Illinois.

    ILLINOIS HISTORICAL SITES

    17 – ABRAHAM LINCOLN’S GRAVE

    Abraham Lincoln’s grave is an interesting historical landmark in Illinois.

    Lincoln’s Tomb State Historic Site is the grave of the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln, and his family.

    In the public vault, north of the tomb, in 1865 the final funeral services for the President were held.

    The tomb was designed by sculptor Larkin Meade and built from bricks sheathed in Quincy granite.

    Two stairs lead to the terrace, where there is a 35-meter obelisk and a bronze statue of Lincoln.

    Four groups of bronze sculptures each represent the military service of the Civil War – cavalry, infantry, artillery and navy.

    In front of the tomb is a bronze copy of the marble head of Lincoln Gutzon Borglum (the original is in the US Capitol in Washington).

    The rooms inside the tomb are made of marble and bronze, and the southern entrance leads to a rotunda with corridors decorated with statues and tablets leading to the burial chamber.

    The remains of Abraham Lincoln lie in a concrete vault under the marble floor of the burial chamber.

    Abraham Lincoln’s grave is located in Oak Ridge Cemetery at 1500 Monument Ave, Springfield.

    18 – METAMORE COURT BUILDING

    Bronze statues of Abraham and Mary Lincoln add charm to the whimsical courthouse.

    Although Lincoln was born in Kentucky and raised in Indiana, it was in Illinois that he became a key figure in American history.

    Lincoln practiced law at the old Metamore Courthouse, which was in the Eighth Judicial District.

    Bronze statues of Abraham and Mary Lincoln add charm to the whimsical courthouse.

    Lincoln is recognized as the president who led the nation through the Civil War, saved the Union, and abolished slavery before he was assassinated.

    The Metamora Courthouse is located at 113 E Partridge St, Metamora.

    19 – OLD STATE CAPITOL

    The old State Capitol building in Springfield is a famous landmark in Illinois.

    The Old State Capitol is a historic Greek Revival building that served as the seat of state from 1840 to 1876.

    Renovation of the fifth state house in Illinois is underway in Springfield.

    It was here that the 16th President of the United States, Lincoln, acted as a legislator and delivered his famous speech in 1858, which began with the words “A house divided against itself cannot stand…”

    Soak up the history as you walk through the rooms where Lincoln created history.

    The Old State Capitol Building is located at 526 E Adams St, Springfield.

    20 – BLACK HAWK STATUE IN LOWDEN STATE PARK

    The Black Hawk Statue is an impressive landmark in Illinois.

    A 48-foot (14.6 m) statue of the famous American Indian Chief Black Hawk stands on Eagle’s Nest with a beautiful view of the Rock River Valley.

    Black Hawk was a Sauk Indian warrior and leader of a faction of Sauk and Fox who refused to accept the 1804 treaty to resettle the Mississippi River.

    He was captured and sent to prison.

    Lowden State Park is named after Governor Frank Lowden, who served in Illinois during World War I.

    Lowden State Park is located at 1411 N River Rd, Oregon, Illinois.

    21 – SUGARCREEK 9 COVERED BRIDGE0075 The Sugar Creek Covered Bridge is an Illinois historic landmark for your wish list.

    The Sugar Creek Covered Bridge is a Burr truss bridge that crosses Sugar Creek near Chatham.

    This is the last covered bridge in Sangamon County and an Illinois historic landmark built around 1880, possibly by early settler Thomas Black, who ran a mill and tavern.

    The bridge is now a National Register of Historic Places footbridge.

    Sugarcreek Covered Bridge is located at Pioneer Park, 769 Covered Bridge Rd #587, Glenarm.

    Lincoln Park – Wikiwand Lincoln Park

    This article is about the park in Chicago. For the neighborhood, see Lincoln Park in Chicago. For the rock band, see Linkin Park. For other uses, see Lincoln Park (disambiguation).

    Lincoln Park is a 1,208-acre (489-hectare) park located along Lake Michigan in North Chicago, Illinois. Named after U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, it is the city’s largest public park, stretching seven miles (11 km) from Grand Avenue (500 N) in the south to Ardmore Avenue (5800 N) in the north, north of the lake. Shore Drive terminus at Hollywood Avenue. Several museums and a zoo are located between North Avenue (1600 N) and Diversey Parkway (2800 N) in the area of ​​the same name. Further north, the park contains parklands, beaches, recreational areas, nature reserves, and harbors. South of Lake Shore Drive, almost to the center of the city, a narrower strip of beaches stretches. With 20 million visitors a year, Lincoln Park is the second most visited city park in the United States after Central Park.

    Park recreational facilities include baseball/softball fields, basketball courts, beach volleyball courts, cricket fields, soccer fields, golf course, lacrosse fields, rugby fields, tennis courts, volleyball courts, field houses, archery skate park and driving range.

    The park also has several harbors with boats and public swimming beaches. There are gardens, public arts, bird sanctuaries, a zoo, the Lincoln Park Conservatory, the Chicago Museum of History, the Peggy Notebaert Museum of Nature, the Alfred Caldwell Lily Pool and Theater on the Lake with regular outdoor performances held throughout the summer.

    CONTENT

    • 1 History
    • 2 zoos, conservatory and museums

      • 2.1 Zoo
      • 2.2 Conservatory
      • 2.3 Lily pool
      • 2.4 Museum of Nature
      • 2.5 Historical Museum
    • 3 recreation areas

      • 3.1 Services
      • 3.2 Beaches
      • 3.3 Golf
      • 3.4 Boating
      • 3.5 Chicago Lakeside Trail
    • 4 Wildlife

      • 4.1 North Pond
      • 4.2 Animal shelters
    • 5 Public art
    • 6 In the media
    • 7 Other
    • 8 links
    • 9 External links

    History

    Lincoln Park Divan Mausoleum, October 2013. This mausoleum is the only surviving remnant of a cemetery that existed in part of Lincoln Park in the 19th century.

    Magazine photo Harper’s Weekly, showing people escaping the Great Chicago Fire by fleeing to the Lincoln Park Cemetery.

    Concert at Lincoln Park 1907 to approximately

    In 1860, Lake Park (formerly Cemetery Park), the forerunner of today’s park, was established by the city on land north of the city burial ground. Five years later, on June 12, 1865, the park was renamed in honor of the recently assassinated President Abraham Lincoln.

    Listed on the National Register of Historic Places at 1994, part of the oldest section of today’s Lincoln Park near North Avenue began life as a city cemetery in 1843. It was divided into the Potter’s Field, the Catholic Cemetery, the Jewish Cemetery and the General Cemetery. City cemetery. These cemeteries were the only cemeteries in the Chicago area until 1859. In 1852 David Kennison, who is said to have been born in 1736, died and was buried in the City Cemetery. Another notable burial in the cemetery is Chicago Mayor James Curtiss, whose body was lost when the cemetery was added to the park.

    Throughout the late 1850s, discussions were held about closing the cemetery or abandoning it due to health problems. In the autumn of 1858, Dr. John H. Rauch suggested that the burial grounds were a health hazard, which “might serve very well for plantations of groves and forest trees”, which would be “useful and beautifying the city”. This idea was dropped during the Civil War, but revived by Dr. Rauch after it ended. By 1864, the city council decided to add to the park all the 120-acre cemeteries (0.49km 2 ) north of Northern Avenue, moving the graves. Sections of the cemetery south of Northern Avenue were also moved, but this section was left for residential development. To this day, the Divan Mausoleum can still be seen as the most visible reminder of history as a graveyard standing among the trees behind the Chicago History Museum. Ira Coach, who is buried in the tomb, was one of the first Chicago innkeepers who opened Tremont House in 1835. It is believed that the sofa is not the only person buried in the old cemetery in Lincoln Park. A plaque posted nearby states that “the tomb contains the remains of six members of the Couch family and one family friend.” Due in part to the destruction of burial markers during the Chicago fire, many of the remains were difficult to remove. More recently, at 1998, during the construction of the park, bodies from the nineteenth century were discovered.

    Another large and notable group of graves moved from where Lincoln Park is today are those of the approximately 4,000 Confederate POWs who died at Camp Douglas. Many prisoners died between 1862 and 1865 as a result of the poor condition they were in when they were taken to the battlefield, or the illness and deprivation that existed in the federal prison. Although the camp was located south of downtown Chicago, close to stockyards, the remains were originally buried at the site of today’s Lincoln Park. Today, their graves can be found in Oak Woods Cemetery in South Chicago. 4,000 m² mass grave and monument erected by southerners and friends from Chicago in 1895, perpetuate the memory of these southerners, whose earthly remnants remained in the north. Author George Levy believes that the remains of many Confederate prisoners can still be found under what is now a baseball field, the former site of a potter’s field. An estimated 35,000 people were buried in the park.

    From the 1860s to the 1950s, the park expanded south and then north along the seven miles (11 km) from Lakefront in Chicago. (See Notes 1, 2 and 3). The creation of public parks along the entire Chicago waterfront was a central tenet of the Burnham 19 plan.’09 Chicago Development. From 1912 to 1991, the Lincoln Park Gun Club was located in the park.

    Another aspect of the park’s history was the seating in the Young Lords Lincoln Park neighborhood and the takeover of institutions led by José Cha Cha Jimenez, protesting the displacement of Hispanics by Mayor Richard J. Daly’s urban renewal policy.

    Anti-Vietnam War protesters in Lincoln Park during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. You can see the MC5 band play

    It was also the scene of violent events that took place during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. These events took place around the convention center, Grant Park, Old Town and the park.

    I indicated that it was in the interest of the city to locate us in Lincoln Park, ten miles (16 km) from the conference hall. I said that we weren’t going to march around the conference room, that I didn’t really think that politics in America could be changed by marches and rallies, that what we were representing was an alternative lifestyle, and we were hoping that the people of Chicago were coming, hung out in Lincoln Park and saw what we were talking about.

    Abbie Hoffman, Chicago 7 samples

    Zoo, conservatory and museums

    Lincoln Park Zoo Nature Boardwalk

    Zoo

    Main article: Lincoln Park Zoo

    Lincoln Park is well known for the Lincoln Park Zoo, a free zoo that is open all year round. The Lincoln Park Zoo is home to a wide variety of animals. It includes big cats, penguins, gorillas, reptiles, monkeys and other species, totaling about 1250 animals. Two sections of the Lincoln Park Zoo are reserved for children. The partially closed Pritzker Family Petting Zoo includes a variety of North American wildlife. The zoo farm is a working replica of a Midwestern farm that keeps horses and livestock such as pigs, cows, and sheep. At Farm at the Zoo, kids can feed and interact with the animals, as well as watch live demonstrations of farm work such as milking cows. In 2010, the zoo converted the South Pond to create a wildlife habitat and swamps with natural promenade.

    Conservatory

    Lincoln Park Conservatory

    Main article: Lincoln Park Conservatory

    Lincoln Park Conservatory offers year-round plant exhibits from a variety of climates around the world. Today’s greenhouse was built in stages from 1890 to 1895. It consists of a vestibule, four exhibition halls, and fifteen cultivation and cultivation houses. The lobby and Palm House were built and opened to the public in 1892 and contain giant palms and rubber trees, including a 15-metre (50 ft) violin-leaved rubber tree planted in 1891. In the Palm House one can also find the Garden Figure, a sculpture by Frederick Hibbard. The Fern Room, or Fernery, was opened in 1895. It contains forest floor plants, most notably an extensive collection of ferns. The tropical room was originally called the stove. Opened in 1895, it contained a selection of tropical plants suspended from bark-covered walls. It is now called the “Orchid Room” and contains about 25,000 natural species. The exhibition house is used for seasonal flower and plant exhibitions. As part of a docent program run by the Chicago Park District and the Lincoln Park Conservatory, there are free tours of the conservatory and its outdoor gardens from 1 pm to 4 pm on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays and from 9until 12 noon on Saturdays.

    Lily Pool

    Alfred Caldwell’s Lily Pool in Lincoln Park is a National Historic Landmark.

    Main article: Alfred Caldwell Lily Pool

    Alfred Caldwell Lily Pool is located on Fullerton Boulevard between Stockton and Cannon Drives. It is a historical example of Prairie School landscape architecture. Lily Pool was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and as a National Historic Landmark on February 17, 2006. Lily Pool was originally built to grow tropical water lilies in 1889.. In 1930, the Works Progress Administration hired landscape architect Alfred Caldwell to redesign the pool in the Prairie School style. From 1998 to 2002, Lily Pool underwent extensive restoration by the Lincoln Park Conservancy and the Chicago Park District, which gave the site a historic designation and renamed it after Alfred Caldwell. Lily Pool is open seasonally from mid-April to mid-November from 7:30 am until dusk or 7:30 pm every day. The undergraduate program, run by the Chicago Park District and Lincoln Park Preserve, offers free tours from 1 pm to 4 pm on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays and from 9until 12 noon on Saturdays during the working season.

    Museum of Nature

    Peggy Notebeth Museum of Nature – Chicago Academy of Sciences, South Wing, overlooking the tallgrass prairie

    Main article: Peggy Notebeth Museum of Nature

    the most recent institution is the Museum of Nature. The Academy Museum’s previous building, the Matthew Laughlin Memorial Building, was the first Park District museum in the parks. Museum exhibits include exhibits on the ecological history of the Illinois region, a live butterfly house, and a green house demonstration. The Butterfly House features over 200 species of exotic butterflies. The museum also offers educational programs for adults and children.

    Historical Museum

    Main article: Chicago History Museum

    The Chicago Historical Museum (formerly the Chicago Historical Society), located at Clark Street and North Avenue, focuses on Chicago’s human history. Perhaps among his most famous possessions are Abraham Lincoln’s deathbed and several pieces of furniture from the room where he died at the Petersen home in Washington, D.C., as well as the clothes he and his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, wore on the evening of his assassination. The museum also houses the most important collection of materials related to local history, from the Great Fire of Chicago to the Young Lords in Lincoln Park. In addition to exhibits, the museum still houses an extensive research library that includes books and other published material, manuscripts, paintings, sculptures, and photographs.

    Recreational areas

    Postcard of the park around 1900.

    View of Chicago from the South Pond Bridge in July 2018

    Amenities

    Lincoln Park runs north-south through five Chicago community areas: Edgewater, Uptown, Lake View, Lincoln Park, and the Near North. For seven miles (11 km), Lincoln Park has many dedicated recreational spaces. The park has playgrounds; basketball, beach volleyball, tennis, volleyball courts, boat facilities; beaches; swimming; field and beach houses; running and cycling paths; playing fields and fields; archery, baseball, cricket, soccer, lacrosse, rugby, soccer, softball; golf course ; driving range; skate park and riding areas. Near Montrose Point is Cricket Hill, one of the few sledding hills available in Chicago’s parks.

    Beaches

    Main article: Chicago beaches § Lincoln Park beaches

    Along the park’s 7-mile shoreline, there are seven public swimming, sunbathing, and beach volleyball beaches that are protected during the summer months. Beaches from north to south: Thorndale, Hollywood and Foster in Edgewater; Montrose in Uptown; North Avenue in Lincoln Park; and Oak Street and Ohio in the Middle North. Chicago’s first public beach, North Avenue Beach, opened in Lincoln Park at 1895 year.

    Golf

    Waveland Avenue Golf Course (now Sydney R. Marovitz Golf Course) in Uptown and Lakeview, Chicago is a lakeside golf course. (Pol Waveland Avenue ) ) Known for its challenging narrow fairways, it offers nine tees on a par-36 course. Further south, at the back of Lakeshore Drive, is a driving range and mini golf course.

    Boating

    There are three harbors in the park providing a marina and docking for boaters: from north to south, they are Montrose in uptown, overlooking the lake at Belmont Harbor and Diversea Harbor in Lakeview and the neighborhoods of Lincoln Park. Montrose Harbor has 630 berths and is home to the Chicago Corinthian Yacht Club. Belmont Harbor provides 730 berths, a fuel dock and ship storage. The Chicago Yacht Club has a Belmont station and this is where the Belmont Yacht Club is located. Diversi Harbor has 714 berths and the Diversi Yacht Club has a gas station. Diversey also has a public boat ride, and the park also has rowing, rowing, and crewing channels.

    Chicago Lakefront Trail

    The Chicago Lakefront Trail (abbreviated as YPT) is an 18-mile multi-use trail in Chicago along the coast of Lake Michigan. It is popular with cyclists and joggers. It is intended to promote cycling. From north to south, it passes through Lincoln Park, Grant Park, Burnham Park and Jackson Park.

    Wildlife

    North Pond

    Beaver in North Pond in 2014

    North Pond Nature Reserve (41°55′42″N, 87°38′15″W / 41.92833°N 87.63750°W / 41.92833; -87.63750 (Northern Pond)), located between Fullerton, Diversy, Stockton, and Cannon, is a ten-acre pond that has become an important wilderness area. Historically it was a dune, then a landfill and an ornamental pond; in 1999-2000 it was converted to a coastal natural area, greatly improving water quality by restoring the natural ecology of the Midwest. Restoration of prairie highland plants, savannahs and woodland included only high quality native species such as blue stalk, sky blue aster, nodding wild onion, grama bunting, butterfly weed, prairie purple clover, rough flaming star, wild quinine, prairie phlox , conifers, false dragon head, northern prairie seeds, showy goldenrod, rattlesnake host, shooting star and wild bergamot. North Pond Nature Preserve is notable in that in April 2004, Mayor Richard M. Daly and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service signed the Migratory Bird Cities Conservation Treaty, making the city eligible for federal funds to restore habitat for migratory routes on shore of the lake. for birds.

    Restoration using native plants has brought a wide variety of wildlife to this city pond, including many species of birds, turtles, frogs and even a few beavers. Great blue herons, black-crowned night herons, green herons, mallards, wood ducks, song sparrows and woodpeckers can be seen regularly in the North Pond Nature Reserve.

    Animal shelters

    Lake dunes and beach grass (left) and tallgrass prairie and forest reserve (right) in Lincoln Park at Montrose Point, a former Nike missile base turned nature reserve.

    Further north in the park, in the Lake View area (3600 N), is the Bill Jarvis Migratory Bird Sanctuary (41°56′56″N, 87°38′26″W/41.94889°N 87.64056°W / 41. 94889;-87.64056 (Bill Jarvis Migratory Bird Sanctuary).; formerly Lincoln Park Addison Migratory Bird Sanctuary). First landscaped and built with limited public access in the 1920s under the direction of the Chicago Academy of Sciences, its spring is supplied with city water to mimic the natural environment of a lake swamp with associated forests and grasslands. Most of its 7-acre (2.8 ha) area is completely fenced off to protect the habitat from human encroachment. Instead, there is a nature trail and a viewing platform along its perimeter. At 19In the 40s, the caretakers of the Park District lost their funding, and the site was locked up. In 1968, the entire site was almost bulldozed to build a golf course, but its Lake View neighbors, including Bill Jarvis, led a successful campaign to preserve and restore it. Today, over 150 species of birds live here, including six species of herons, such as the black-crowned night heron; wooden ducks; woodcock; hawks; yellow-billed cuckoos; hummingbird; blackbirds; vireos; 34 songbird species; and 18 native sparrow species. In addition, small mammals such as rabbit, opossum, raccoon, and sometimes fox and coyote live here.

    In the Uptown area (4400N 41°57′48″N 87°38′00″W / 41.96333°N 87.63333°W / 41.96333; -87.63333 (Montrose Point Bird Sanctuary)) is the 15-acre (6.1 ha) Montrose Point Bird Sanctuary (including the “Fairy Fence”). During the Cold War, Cape Montrose, which overlooks Lake Michigan, was used as a Nike missile base by the United States Army. The army camouflaged its rocket launchers and barracks behind honeysuckle hedges. When at 19In the 70s the army left, ornithologists noticed how honeysuckle attracts birds. They successfully lobbied for a new reserve in the park area. After extensive replanting, the site supports forests, high prairies, and lake dune habitats that annually attract tens of thousands of migratory birds of over 300 different species.

    Public art

    Lincoln Park is known for its sculptures, which the WBEZ calls “Chicago’s Outdoor Sculpture Hall”. Abraham Lincoln: Man is the famous standing statue of Lincoln in Lincoln Park by Augustus Saint-Gaudens, the same sculptor who created Abraham Lincoln: Head of State in Grant Park. Replicas of Lincoln Permanent in Lincoln Park can be found at Lincoln’s grave in Springfield and in Parliament Square, London. The statue is located at Dearborn Street and North Avenue. It was completely restored in 1989 as part of the “Monument Adoption” program held in Lincoln Park, and 8,200 square feet of formal gardens were added in front of the monument.

    The only person memorialized with statues in Grant and Lincoln parks is Alexander Hamilton; a statue of Hamilton was created by John Angel. Just as there is a statue of Abraham Lincoln in Grant Park, there is a large monument to Ulysses S. Grant in Lincoln Park overlooking Cannon Drive. The sculpture was created in 1891 by Louis Rebisso.

    Statue of Hans Christian Andersen by Johannes Gelert (1896) on Stockton Drive off Webster Avenue is a tribute to the Danish storyteller. Eugene Memorial Field (1922) Designed by Edward McCartan Remembers Chicago Daily News columnist and poet who wrote “Little Boy Blue” and “Winken, Blinken and Nod.” William Ordway Partridge’s statue of William Shakespeare (1894) is the third great storyteller in Lincoln Park. This seated Shakespeare has a circle that kids can climb on. A bust of Sir Georg Solti, conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, was also located in the official garden of the Lincoln Park Conservatory until its move to Grant Park in 2006. You can also find statues in honor of the German poets Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich Schiller. in Lincoln Park. A large statue of Goethe is located near Diversity Parkway and Stockton Drive. A smaller statue of Schiller is at the western entrance to the zoo. Painting by Cyrus Edwin Dallin “1890” “ Peace Sign” is on display in the park.

    On Addison Street stands a 40 feet (12 meters) totem pole depicting a Kwanusila Thunderbird. South of Diversy can be seen a statue of John Peter Altgeld (1915), the nineteenth-century governor of Illinois who pardoned the men convicted of the Haymarket bombing. This statue was created by Gutzon Borglum and unveiled on September 6 (Labor Day), 1915. Borglum went on to create the Mount Rushmore National Memorial.

    • Alarm clock

    • John Peter Altgeld

    • Hans Christian Andersen

    • Green Vardiman Black

    • Dream Lady Eugene Field Memorial

    • Benjamin Franklin

    • Goethe Monument

    • Ulysses S. Grant Monument (photochrom circa 1901)

    • Alexander Hamilton Statue

    • René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle

    • Abraham Lincoln – Standing Lincoln after restoration of Lincoln Park

    • Statue of Friedrich Schiller in the official garden
      Lincoln Park Conservatory

    • William Shakespeare in Grandma’s Garden at Lincoln Park Conservatory

    • Peace signal

    • Statue of Richard J.