Chicago T-Shirts
Description: The Chicago and North Western was a Class I railroad in the Midwestern United States. It was also known as the "North Western". The railroad operated more than 5,000 miles of track at the turn of the 20th century, and over 12,000 miles of track in seven states before retrenchment in the late 1970s.
Description: For the Chicago Lover on your Windy City Gift list who LOVES Diversity. Great Chicago Heartbeat Pride for the PROUD CHICAGOAN
Chicago Pride City Skyline EKG Heartbeat Rainbow Night T-Shirt
by TeeCreations
$16 $23
Description: ChicagoFest was a Chicago music festival established in 1978 by Mayor Michael Bilandic. It was a two-week event held annually at Navy Pier that featured sixteen separate stages, each sponsored by a national retail brand and a media sponsor compatible to the stage's format, e.g. Rock WLUP, Chicago Tribune Jazz, Miller Brewing Company Blues and WXRT, that broadcast live from the festival. The stages were: Rock, Classic Rock, Country, Blues, Comedy, Roller Disco, Pin Ball Arcade, Jazz, Children's, Variety, Ethnic, as well as a Main stage seating 30,000. There were approximately 600 concert performances by headline artists produced each year.
Description: Lucky Clover Irish Chicago Flag St Patricks Day T Shirts
Lucky Clover Irish Chicago Flag St Patricks Day T-Shirt
by Tee Styley
$16 $23
Description: On July 12, 1979, 48,000 fans packed Chicago’s Comiskey Park for a doubleheader that included a promotion involving blowing up disco records. The event devolved into a fiery riot when crazed rock n' roll fans stormed the field as part of an anti-disco promotional event when a local disc jockey took the field between games to destroy the records listeners had brought. Once the crate of disco records had blown up, the crowd chanting 'DISCO SUCKS' cheered uproariously and began taking the field. From there they began throwing records and cherry bombs, tearing up the field and stadium facilities and otherwise devolving into an all-out riot that ended up with the Chicago PD riot squad being called in.
Description: Ben Johnson's locker room speeches after WINS get me so pumped
Have a Good Better Best Christmas - Chicago Bears Ugly Christmas T-Shirt
by BodinStreet
$16 $23
Description: ChicagoFest was a Chicago music festival established in 1978 by Mayor Michael Bilandic. It was a two-week event held annually at Navy Pier that featured sixteen separate stages, each sponsored by a national retail brand and a media sponsor compatible to the stage's format, e.g. Rock WLUP, Chicago Tribune Jazz, Miller Brewing Company Blues and WXRT, that broadcast live from the festival. The stages were: Rock, Classic Rock, Country, Blues, Comedy, Roller Disco, Pin Ball Arcade, Jazz, Children's, Variety, Ethnic, as well as a Main stage seating 30,000. There were approximately 600 concert performances by headline artists produced each year.
Description: Magikist was founded in 1943 by Wilbur "Bill" Gage, who changed the name of his Austin Rug Cleaners to Magikist, melding the words "magic" and "kissed." His wife at the time, Doris Greenwood, suggested the "sweetest name in rug cleaning" slogan and came up with the company logo, a pair of red lips. Gage operated Magikist in the Chicago area south of Howard Street and Lionel and Shirley Gelfand operated Magikist in the area north of Howard Street. In the Chicago area, the Magikist Lips (in the form of huge signs on the Edens Expressway, Dan Ryan Expressway, Kennedy Expressway, and Eisenhower Expressway which lit up and flashed) were well-known landmarks.
Popes from Chicago: 1. Popes from Green Bay: 0 T-Shirt
by BodinStreet
$16 $23
Description: Rose Records was founded by Aaron Rosenbloom in 1931 as Rose Radio. They initially sold radios, components, and offered repair services. They soon added phonographs and records, which quickly overtook radio sales, prompting Rose to stop selling radios altogether. Rose grew to become one of the largest record stores with over 100,000 titles in stock at their three-story flagship location on Wabash Avenue. At its peak, Rose Records had 35 locations throughout the Chicagoland area, but began consolidating stores until the flagship was the last one standing, and closed that in 1995.