Windy City, Origin of Name (Chicago)
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The City of Chicago has been known by many nicknames, but its most widely recognized is The Windy City. Potential explanations for this particular nickname include Chicago's:
- Weather
- Politics
- World's Fair
- Cincinnati rivalry
Contents
Meaning
Weather
Geographic conditions in the area (e.g., proximity to Lake Michigan, local prevailing winds, etc.) make Chicago a naturally windy area. Another contributing factor is how the city was rebuilt after the Great Chicago Fire. With a clean slate planners modeled new streets on the grid system. In high density areas, such as the Loop, man-made wind tunnels are created on high windy days as there are even "columns and rows" for wind to travel down and pick up speed.This "windy" explanation is from the Freeborn County Standard of Albert Lea, Minnesota, November 20, 1892 (digitized citation available on Newspaperarchive.com}:
- Chicago has been called the “windy” city, the term being used metaphorically to make out that Chicagoans were braggarts. The city is losing this reputation, for the reason that as people got acquainted with it they found most of her claims to be backed up by facts. As usual, people go to extremes in this thing also, and one can tell a stranger almost anything about Chicago to-day and feel that he believes it implicitly.
Politics
Others say that the name comes from Chicago's political history. Specifically referencing the "spectator sport" style of politics practiced in the last century. It is meant to be a jab towards the Chicago Democratic Machine which for the most part has been led by the Daley family for the past 50 years. Machine politics may have fallen out of style every where else in the country but it is for the most part alive and well in Chicago. To sum it up, when Chicago politicians speak they are "blowing a lot of wind".World's Fair
It had been a popular myth that the first person to use the term "Windy City" was the New York Sun editor Charles Dana. In 1893, Chicago won the bid to host the World's Fair, also known as the Columbian Exposition. This was a big deal because the French had just put the Americans to shame at the previous World's Fair with the building of the Eiffel Tower. The next world's fair was seen as a chance by many Americans to show the world that it too was a great country.Another factor that made this bid competitive was the list cities competing for the right to host the fair. At the top New York, St. Louis and Washington D.C. all fought hard for the right and many New Yorkers thought they had it in the bag. In the end it came down to New York and Chicago. Chicago finally won in a run off vote and many prominent New Yorkers were extremely irritated that a "frontier town" could best them.
Charles Dana was New York's leading fair booster, but there is little evidence that he even used the "Windy City" term. The first known attribution of Dana to the origin of "Windy City" was in the Chicago Tribune, "Chicago Dubbed 'Windy' in Fight for Fair of '93," June 11, 1933:
- “Don’t pay any attention,” wrote Charles A. Dana day in and day out in his New York Sun, “to the nonsensical claims of that windy city. Its people could not build a World’s Fair even if they won it."
Cincinnati rivalry
Cincinnati and Chicago were rival cities in the 1870s. The baseball inter-city matches were especially intense. The 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings were the pride of all of baseball, so Chicago came up with a rival team called the White Stockings to defeat them. "Windy City" often appeared in the Cincinnati sporting news of the 1870s and 1880s.The first known citations of "Windy City" are three from 1876, and all involve Cincinnati:
- Cincinnati Enquirer, May 9, 1876 headline: "THAT WINDY CITY. Some Freaks of the Last Chicago Tornado."
- Cincinnati Enquirer, May 13, 1876: "Only the plucky nerve of the eating-house keeper rescued the useful seats from a journey to the Windy City."
- Chicago Tribune, July 2, 1876: "The Cincinnati Enquirer, in common with many other papers, has been waiting with great anxiety for the fulfillment of its prophecy: that the Chicago papers would call the Whites hard names when they lost. Witness these scraps the day after the Whites lost to the Athletics: There comes a wail to us from the Windy City."
The Hawk, or Hawkins
Chicago's wind is often called "The Hawk." This term has long been popular in African-American English. A Baltimore Sun series of columns in 1934 attempted to examine the origin of the phrase "Hawkins is coming" for a cold winter wind. The first recorded Chicago citation is in the Chicago Defender, October 20, 1936: "And these cold mornings are on us—in other words “Hawkins” has got us."[link]Sources
- [NBierma.com] - Nathan Bierma lists several references to the name compiled from sources at the Chicago Public Library stretching from 1890 to 1939.
- [USA Today] - The transcript of a letter from Barry Popik, who is an historian of American slang and a consultant to Oxford English Dictionary.
- [The Straight Dope] - Ongoing updates to the source of the name.
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