Chicago History Museum

Archives and manuscript collections include personal papers and institutional records from Chicagoans and Chicago institutions such as Claude A. Barnett, director of the Associated Negro Press; the Board of Lady Managers of the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893; the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Senator Paul H. Douglas; District 31 of the United Steelworkers of America; and Marshall Field & Company. The total collection approximates 22,000 linear feet in length. 

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Prints and photographs holdings approximate 1.5 million images of Chicago’s people, streets, activities, events, and buildings, including 20,000 photos taken by the architectural photography firm Hedrich-Blessing. Two major digital collections consist of 55,000 images from the 1902-1933 Chicago Daily News and 1,000 Hedrich -Blessing photographs of buildings designed by Mies van der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright, Bertrand Goldberg, and of buildings designed for the 1933-34 Century of Progress. 

Architectural drawings and records comprise 250,000 drawings and 200 linear feet of manuscripts from many of Chicago’s major architecture firms such as Holabird & Roche/Holabird & Root, Harry Weese Associates, Alfred S. Alschuler, and Rapp & Rapp, as well as drawings of Graceland Cemetery.

Published materials include 70,000 books and pamphlets; 14,000 volumes of periodicals; 3,500 volumes of newspapers; 2,000 scrapbooks composed primarily of  newspaper clippings; more than 11,000 maps and atlases; and 12,000 reels of microfilm that include major Chicago daily newspapers, city and telephone directories, and dissertations.  The Abakanowicz Research Center also houses a substantial collection of items considered ephemeral, including 6,000 pieces of sheet music; over 1,000 menus; trade cards; entertainment programs; and miscellaneous pieces such as tickets to events, transportation tickets, invitations, and announcements of coming events.