City Of Big Agriculture: Here Are The Crops Chicago Was Once Famous For

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City Of Big Agriculture: Here Are The Crops Chicago Was Once Famous For

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For decades, Chicagoan Barb Carney heard stories about the flowers and the pickles.

Neighbors and family members told her about enormous cucumber farms in Bowmanville on the city’s North Side, vast commercial flower fields in Winnemac Park, and greenhouses that lined the North Side.

It struck her as strange that agricultural businesses had once dominated huge swaths of Chicago that are now covered by houses and businesses.

So she sent Curious City a question along these lines: What parts of Chicago were commercially farmed and what was raised, just before becoming residential?

The short answer is: A lot!

In the decades following the city’s founding in 1833, Chicagoans drained swamps, and once they had gained metal-blade plows they worked the rich soil that lurked below a vast prairie. This farming continued for many decades, sometimes in land smooshed between roads and commuter rail lines.

So, here’s a surprising twist to our answer to Barb: The city’s emergence as an agricultural center occurred at the same time the city was industrializing and, in fact, for some of the very same reasons.

“If you think of it, all those things that made us this trading town, they also made us a very good place to export,” says Daniel Block, Chicago State University geographer and author of Chicago: A Food Biography.

Specifically, these things included great railway access, abundant immigrant labor, central trading markets and processing facilities. Plus, Chicago had awesome soil and plenty of manure.

If you’re inclined to think of 19th-century Chicago as a railway-tangled, smoke-belching industrial behemoth, here’s more about how it was also the first city of flowers, a pickle powerhouse and the heart of American celery. (Pun definitely intended.)

Celery: Miracle food meets Lake Michigan

The city’s remaining link to its once-vast celery industry may be the celery salt finish on Chicago-style hot dogs. But 150 years ago the city was at the heart of a celery craze that had spread across the United States.

“Celery was huge, kind of like kale today,” says food historian Bruce Kraig. “It was this big 19th-century food fad because people thought it had miraculous health properties. I think it’s because it was so fibrous and you had to chew it so long.”

Folks ate celery at restaurants, used special crystal celery vases and consumed celery pills and tonics like Paine’s Celery Compound advertised as “a positive cure for dyspepsia, biliousness, liver complaint, neuralgia, rheumatism, and kidney troubles.”

Milton K. Paine invented Paine's Celery Compound in the late 1800s as a multi-purpose antidote. (Courtesy Peachridgeglass.com)

So Chicago — with its celery-friendly sandy soil, abundant fresh water and national rail transportation — was a perfect spot to grow and export the vegetable to an often dyspeptic nation. Plus, celery could be harvested as late as January during a mild winter, so long as it was packed in sand or soil.

Hundreds of Chicago immigrant farmers grew the vegetable on what became the city’s North Side. According to 19th century Chicago horticulturist Edgar Sanders, Lakeview Township soil was “black,” “boggy” and “plentiful mixed with sand.” He added: “There is no land which can compete with such as this for celery culture.”

By the end of the century, though, other lands stole Chicago’s celery crown. Kalamazoo, Michigan, had cheaper land, as did California, which had also had an advantage of a year-round growing season.  

Farmers in what became the Edgewater neighborhood grew celery well into the 20th century. In an essay for the Edgewater Historical Society, Carl Helbig recalls that his father grew it in manure-filled hotbeds over “black and sandy” soil as late as the 1930s. But he admits the crop was already well on the way out.

“I venture to say that my father was the last one to grow celery in that large a volume in Edgewater,” he wrote.

Pickles: Agriculture Meets Industry

In the late 1880s, Chicago was home to no fewer than three nationally famous pickle brands: Budlong, Squire Dingee and Claussen. These operations thrived in Chicago for several reasons: European pickle know-how; a robust local salt processing industry; rail and other transportation options; and — early on, at least — productive pickle farms.

In 1903, the Chicago Tribune reported that there were “12,000 bushels of onions and cucumbers picked and sacked in a day” during the busy season on North Side farms that stretched from Bowmanville (around Foster and Western) to Evanston.

During the early 20th century, 'tall-tale' postcards were used to create the Midwest's identity as a place of agricultural abundance. (Courtesy amusingplanet.com)

Lyman Budlong became an industry leader shortly after he arrived in Chicago. In 1859 he established a pickling business near Foster and Lincoln avenues in the middle of his Budlong Pickle Farm, which, by some accounts, stretched across 700 acres.  

By the turn of the century, though, a pickle blight forced pickle-makers to import cukes from outlying farms. Still, according to Eleanor Atkinson’s 1912 The Story of Chicago and National Development, Budlong’s farm kept growing other crops.  

“The farm is occupied profitably with raising every kind of garden truck [vegetable] which can be persuaded to grow, most of it going to city tables, but some shipped to distant points in the U.S. and Canada. This farm gives employment to about 2,000 hands in the busy season and affords healthful and remunerative employment to those who toil in the city during the winter and can get out to the pickle farm for air and ready money when the work is slack in town and the city is stifling with dust and heat in its crowded quarters.”

But such a large farm couldn’t last forever in the expanding city. By the 1920s the Budlong Farm had become a golf course and was later subdivided into a residential area called Budlong Woods. Squire Dingee also moved its operations out of Bowmanville to Lincoln Park and eventually merged with Beatrice Foods.

An August 1903 edition of the Chicago Tribune featured the Budlong pickle farm in the Lincoln Square neighborhood.

The Claussen pickle company on the South Side, however, enjoyed a longer life. According to the Claussen Pickle website, that company was founded in 1870 on the site of Claus Claussen’s farm at “51st and South Western Blvd. He had a surplus crop of cucumbers one year, and so he decided to pickle them. Claussen pickles were produced on the same piece of land until 1976 when the plant moved to Woodstock, Ill.”

Even if nationally known pickles are no longer grown and processed in the city, their influence, like celery’s, lives on as an integral part of the Chicago-style hot dog.

Vegetables for any season: Chicago’s climate meets European Innovation

Even though Chicago had the fertile soil and infrastructure needed for farming, the city lacked year-round warmth. So local truck farmers (those who “trucked” produce to Chicago’s central markets) turned to greenhouses to supply lettuce, tomatoes, peas and other veggies in the off season. It was a popular European technology that could be fueled cheaply by Chicago’s abundant coal supply.

“Illinois ranked first among other states in area covered by glasshouses. … A large percentage of these [were] in neighborhoods of Chicago, and several firms have each over a million square feet of glass,” Cathy Jean Maloney writes in her book Chicago Gardens.

In 1870 the John C. Moninger Co. was founded in Chicago and would become one of the nation’s biggest greenhouse manufacturers.

Immigrants from Luxembourg ran many of the greenhouses on Chicago’s far North Side and its northern suburbs.

The Breiter family poses near a row of lettuce in their greenhouse. (Courtesy Cathy Jean Maloney, Chicago Gardens: The Early History)

Thousands of Luxembourgers settled around Ridge and Devon Avenues, where the ground was higher and good for planting outdoors as well. In the Encyclopedia of Chicago, author Kathleen Neils Conzen writes that there were “Perhaps a hundred greenhouse clusters stretched from Rogers Park northwest through West Ridge, Niles Center, and Des Plaines, most in Luxembourg hands by 1919 when their growers’ association numbered some 1,200 families.”

Jim Leider of Leider Horticulture is a third-generation Chicago grower. But he says his tropical plant business today is different from his Luxembourgish grandfather’s turn-of-the-century truck farm with a greenhouse in Rogers Park.

“My grandfather tells a story that he had to get up early, early in the morning to take his produce down to South Water Market,” Leider says. “He’d load it up on the horse and buggy, sell it there, and come back home. He said that he was so tired by the time he was going back to Rogers Park that he would fall asleep, but the horse knew the way home.”

Chicago’s greenhouse culture wouldn’t last forever. Once refrigerated trains could efficiently import cheaper produce from across the country, there was less need to grow off-season produce locally.

“Plus, the cost to heat them in the winter was getting prohibitive,” Leider says, “and rising real estate values in the city made it more attractive for people to just sell them.”

Flowers: Infrastructure and technology allow Chicago to bloom

It may be hard to believe, but for several decades Chicago was the nation’s flower capital.

One of the earliest citizens to grow commercial flowers, especially roses, was Dr. John A Kennicott. In 1837, he settled in what is now the village of Glenview specifically a National Historic Landmark called The Grove. In 1881 his descendants built a wholesale business that served flower farms across the city and suburbs.

Great-great-grandson Harrison “Red” Kennicott says Chicago was the nation’s floral capital for some familiar reasons.

“For one, Chicago was a railroad hub and that was the main means of getting flowers to other localities,” he says. “There was also a very inexpensive local source of coal to fuel the greenhouses. And there was also a plentiful supply of labor to work in the greenhouses.”

Like a lot of Chicago’s flower growers, Joseph Budlong (the brother of pickle-maker Lyman Budlong) started his Bowmanville greenhouses to grow vegetables, but when their profitability declined, he transitioned to flowers exclusively by 1880 with the Budlong Nursery around Lincoln and Foster Avenues.

J.A. Budlong's greenhouses in Bowmanville covered an expanse of land near Foster and Lincoln Avenues in the Lincoln Square neighborhood. (Courtesy Sulzer Library)

A 1907 description in American Florist magazine estimated that the Budlong Nursery housed 30,000 grafted rose plants (mostly American Beauty and Richmond) in its dozens of glass houses.

In the early part of the 20th century flower greenhouses covered swaths of the North Side and northern suburbs. And there, Kennicott says, growers produced hundreds of thousands of roses and carnations that would find their way to tables, weddings and graves all over the country.  

But by the 1950s, affordable and reliable air shipping shifted the center of flower production to California and later South America.

Block says remnants of Chicago’s greenhouse past linger in legacy flower centers along the Chicago border; they include Clesen Wholesale in Evanston and Urhausen Greenhouses in the village of Lincolnwood.

Perhaps the oldest legacy of Chicago’s floral past can be seen in the annual Chicago Flower and Garden show, which started in 1847 as the Chicago Horticultural Society’s “Exhibition of Fruits and Flowers.”

Budlong Nursery grew and exported flowers like carnations and roses. (Courtesy Sulzer Library)

Fields of produce: Dutch and German truck farms feed the masses

In the mid 1800s, rural immigrant farmers from Holland, Germany, Sweden, and Luxembourg flocked to areas just outside the city limits to establish truck farms.

Some of the most famous were set up in Dutch communities on what became the South Side. The future Roseland neighborhood, for example, was settled by Dutch families in 1849. By 1900, that community had grown to around “240 Dutch Catholic families … who had opened truck farms on the south fringe of Roseland and in Kensington,” according to Robert Swierenga’s Dutch Chicago.

These farmers grew everything from spring asparagus and lettuce to late fall squashes and pumpkins for both local and export markets. Soon enough, many of these farms specialized in raising onion sets — small onions used to plant bigger ones.

The Klaas Solle family tends an onion field in Summit, Illinois. (Courtesy Charlotte Solle Siegers and Donna Siegers Tuls. Photo from Robert Swierenga's 'Dutch Chicago,' 2002.)

Author Edna Ferber set her 1924 novel, So Big, in Roseland where she describes turn-of-the-century Halsted Street as full of agricultural color: “Mile after mile of cabbage fields, jade-green against the earth. Mile after mile of red cabbage, a rich plummy Burgundy veined with black.”

By the early 20th century the Pullman Palace Car Company and other urban development ate up much of the Roseland area; Dutch farmers sold their land, taking on factory work or moving to plots in suburban South Holland and Lansing.

Geographer Daniel Block notes that a legacy of this Dutch farming hung around the Chicago area well into the 21st century; the DeJong Brothers spinach farm in Lansing didn’t close until 2015.

Another legacy of Chicago truck farming remains on the North Side to this day. The Meinke Garden Center stands where Henry Meinke’s grandfather started a farm on Chicago’s border with Niles on Touhy Avenue in the 1870s.

“Back when I was a boy, we grew beets, carrots, onions, and tomatoes, and took them down to the South Water Market,” says the 91-year-old third-generation farmer. “Later, we started a farm stand on the property here in 1929.”

Before World War II, Meinke says, “this whole area was German and Luxembourger farmers,” and they were growing for a clientele with largely European roots. But today, Meinke says, his family’s garden center caters to a new wave of Chicago immigrants.

“We sell a lot of hot peppers and bitter melon plants because we have a diverse group of customers these days,” he says. “One new plant we are raising this year is a moringa tree. It’s native to India, grows quite rapidly, and is supposed to be very nutritious. … You see, people, they like to have the plants that they are used to from their home country.”

More about our questioner

Curious City questioner Barb Carney (left) and WBEZ reporter Monica Eng (right) visited Winnemac Park on Chicago's Northwest Side. Curious City confirmed Barb's suspicion that there had once been pickle and flower farms in that area. (WBEZ/Monica Eng)

Barb Carney has lived in the Chicago area all her life. Today, she owns and runs a specialized leather furniture repair shop in the Forest Glen neighborhood on the Northwest Side, where she says the staff listens to WBEZ all day long.

Born in the Ravenswood neighborhood, raised in Evanston, and a longtime resident of the Lincoln Square and North Park neighborhoods, Barb says she has always been interested in the history of Chicago’s neighborhoods. She became intrigued with the city’s transition from agricultural to residential after hearing tales from her elderly German-American neighbors in Lincoln Square, and her father’s recollections of buying local flowers in the ’50s.

“He used to talk about how he took the streetcar to the end of the line to the greenhouses,” she says. “[He’d] buy dozens of carnations for the ladies in his office to celebrate the birth of me and my brother,” she says.

During the course of reporting, Barb learned that these greenhouses were likely in the Irving Park neighborhood or near Evanston.

One of her favorite discoveries emerged during an interview with professor Daniel Block when he explained to her that you can often tell how long an area was farmed by its housing stock. A preponderance of bungalows and two-flats suggests farming occurred in that area up until around 1920. The presence of a good many ranch houses meant it was rural through World War II.

“I was amazed at how much was going on up into the ’50s and, not just that there was a lot, but that it was so spread out.” Barb says. “And that the evidence of where it was is pretty much the architecture. Wow.”

Monica Eng is a reporter for Curious City. Follow her at @monicaeng or write to her at meng@wbez.org