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                                         Chicago 
                                        was founded due to the fact that there 
                                        was an easy portage point between the 
                                        Chicago River and the Des Plaines River. 
                                        The spot was well known for a century 
                                        before Jean Baptiste Point Sable, a black 
                                        man possibly of Haitian origin, set up 
                                        a trading post at the mouth of the river. 
                                        A man called John Kinzie, who became a 
                                        successful fur trader and had business 
                                        dealing with people from as far away as 
                                        the Northern Great Lakes, followed him; 
                                        he is commonly called “The Father 
                                        of Chicago”. 
 In 1803 the site was given military importance 
                                        with the creation of Fort Dearborn, and 
                                        in the war of 1812 the fort was destroyed 
                                        with everyone in it (rebuild in 1816). 
                                        This was followed by the construction 
                                        of the Erie Canal, and then around 1850 
                                        the railroads arrived. As the population 
                                        grew the city became a transport hub, 
                                        which helped swell its numbers. As the 
                                        city grew out of control it was ripe for 
                                        disaster, and in 1871 a fire made over 
                                        90000 people homeless.
 
 The fire caused Chicago to rebuild it’s 
                                        wooden buildings and replace them with 
                                        steel and stone. As the 20th century approached 
                                        the city found itself a centre of western 
                                        culture, with a reputation for brawling 
                                        lustiness. In 1909 the “Burnham 
                                        Plan” saw the city change again, 
                                        and with architects and designers like 
                                        Frank Lloyd Wright one of the distinctive 
                                        U.S. contributions to architecture, the 
                                        skyscraper, came into American culture. 
                                        Today one of the largest buildings in 
                                        existence, The John Hancock Tower, calls 
                                        the city it’s home.
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        As 
                                        World War I ended and the roaring 20s 
                                        came into being, the city became home 
                                        to Prohibition and the birthplace of “The 
                                        American Gangster”. Al Capone (among 
                                        many others) slaughtered each other (as 
                                        well as many hapless people) over twenty 
                                        years. As the depression turned into the 
                                        WWII era the city had prospered and advanced; 
                                        with the war came considerable growth 
                                        in the Chicago metropolitan area, especially 
                                        in outlying suburbs.
 
 Though the 1950s to the 1990s the city 
                                        of Chicago has seen a decline in population, 
                                        although its diverse economic base spared 
                                        it the worst of the economic decay of 
                                        other large midwestern cities. Chicago's 
                                        many cultural and other attractions make 
                                        it a popular convention tourist city. 
                                        Today it remains a bustling metropolis 
                                        filled with many peoples from many background 
                                        and remains an excellent place to visit.
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