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Happy (almost) Halloween, Chicago!
This is my favourite holiday and I tried to find some information on Chicago’s history with Halloween to put in this article. I hope you learn something new and are able to come out to Green City Market this Saturday at 9am to take my very special Halloween-themed market tour where I will fill you in on all of the Halloween traditions associated with local foods! Everyone is invited…just look for me dressed like Little Bo Peep!
The earliest known reference to ritual begging on Halloween in Chicago was in 1920.
On 23 October 1921, Jane Eddingon of the Chicago Daily Tribune wrote the article “Halloween Fal-Lalls and Fare”, which discussed the popular Halloween candy of the time:
There was a profusion, even a confusion, of candies in orange and black. There were orange gumdrops, orange jelly beans, orange buttercups, and chips and hard candies. And there were black (licorice) gumdrops and jelly beans and buttons and all possible devices that were ever seen in black candies…There were lovely and dainty opera sticks in both orange and black, tied often with ribbon and for the center of some of the endless arrangement of these things in Halloween candy boxes–witch and black cat decorations on them–and ultimately tied with wonderful pompons of black…ribbon.
Chicago newspapers in the early 1920s reported that children of Chicago would go out on Halloween in costumes and be rewarded from neighbours with with nuts and candies for their rhymes and songs. Unfortunately, not every child (or adult!) was nice and vandalism became the prevalent “trick” on Halloween nights. This continued to grow through-out the 30s in Chicago until one day Chicago put an end to the shenanigans. In 1939 at the start of World War II, Chicago entertained the idea of banning Halloween. In 1942 the Chicago City Council banned Halloween for the duration of the war, substituting “Conservation Day” in its place.
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