These 5 Chicago history tours will show you a different slice of the city

In a city with a history as rich as Chicago’s, summertime is full of opportunity to explore outside your neighborhood, fire up your kids’ summer brains or simply try something different.

This list presents you with options.

Head underground … and watch for rats

Why go on a walking tour that openly plugs rats? Because those critters own this city just as much as we do. For proof — and to earn a new appreciation for our fellow citydwellers — sign up for local tour guide Mike McMains’s “Underground Chicago (Plus Rats!) Tour,” a 90-minute exploration of the city under the city. Departing from the Mag Mile and quickly descending into the lower regions and underbelly of the city, it’s an educational way to learn something new about Chicago, entertain guests hankering for a tour or simply avoid the hot summer sun. $30, 90 minutes, tourswithmike.com.

The Jaffee History Trail features eight informative stops with facts about the city’s history.

Chicago History Museum

Stroll the Jaffee History Trail

If you haven’t taken the time to explore the Jaffee History Trail, which opened in 2021 just east of the Chicago History Museum, put it on your list. Encompassing 4.5 acres of landscaped grounds planted with native pollinators, the little trail features eight informative stops with representations of the city’s history — from the giant hunk of metal discovered in the museum’s back yard to the infamous Couch Tomb. Free; explore at your own pace; daily; chicagohistory.org/exhibition/jaffee-history-trail.

Chicago historian Shermann “Dilla” Thomas speaks to local high schoolers playing in the Double Duty Classic baseball game during a bus tour in 2023 in Chicago.

Owen Ziliak/Chicago Sun-Times

Take a bus tour with Dilla

Most locals know Auburn Gresham–based historian Sherman “Dilla” Thomas from his viral TikTok videos proving “everything dope about America comes from Chicago.” But have you ever taken one of his neighborhood tours? Book tickets and board the bus for one of Dilla’s Mahogany Tours through neighborhoods on the South and West sides such as North Lawndale, Englewood or Bronzeville. $45, durations vary; weekends; chicagomahogany.com.

Learn about a seminal architectural style

If you pay any attention to residential buildings in older parts of town, you may be familiar with the typical workers cottage: small, 1½-story homes built for working-class families between the 1880s and 1919. Across the city, there are nearly 60,000 of these homes, but they’re rapidly being demolished. Enter the Chicago Workers Cottage Initiative, a small group who organized in 2021 to celebrate these little houses and preserve them from demolition. During the warmer months, the group occasionally leads informative, intimate tours of neighborhoods with a lot of workers cottages such as McKinley Park and Logan Square. Donation, 90 minutes; weekends; workerscottage.org.

This photo shows an aerial view after the first atomic explosion at the Trinity Test Site near Alamogordo, N.M., on July 16, 1945. Trinity Site, a designated National Historic Landmark, only opens to the public twice a year. But the University of Chicago campus also played a vital role, and visitors can walk a historical route there nearly any day of the year.

AP Photo, File

Dig into the city’s love affair with film

Yes, we know about the Art Institute’s Ferris Bueller’s Day Off tour — but this one’s better. “From Fairgrounds to Film Set: Chicago’s Midway, Movies, and the 1893 World’s Fair” starts from the Midway Plaisance, whose ties go back to the World’s Fair, then winds along the tree-lined streets of Hyde Park to showcase five stops tied to the movies. It’s worth your time just to stroll through the leafy University of Chicago campus, and you’ll walk away with a new appreciation for our city’s role in the film industry. $29.99, 75 minutes; chicagomovietours.com.  

  Comunidad LGBTQ+ de Chicago: Cuéntanos tu historia

Want to take your own film-related tour? Stream the Oscar-winning movie Oppenheimer, then take this self-led tour of the relevant atomic sites on the campus of the University of Chicago.

More from the Summer Guide
Yes, Chicago is always a food town. But summer brings forth a particularly glorious array of handhelds, frozen delights and seasonal specials.
Evanston, Oak Forest, Winnetka, Westmont and other nearby suburbs will put on fireworks displays on Independence Day.
This year’s edition of the parade kicks off at 11 a.m. Sunday near Sheridan Road and Broadway in Uptown.
Ancient artifacts depicting women are often interpreted as symbols of physical beauty or fertility. But ancient women also spiked balls and severed heads. An exhibit at the National Museum of Mexican Art explores it all.
La edición del desfile de este año comenzará el domingo a las 11 a.m. cerca de Sheridan Road y Broadway en Uptown. Se reforzará la seguridad y habrá menos participantes que el año pasado.
This year’s edition of the parade will kick off at 11 a.m. Sunday near Sheridan Road and Broadway in Uptown. Security will be beefed up, and fewer participants will march than last year.
Some business owners are helping to fill the gaps in communities that don’t have a chain coffee shop offering specialty drinks and food.
The museum’s first cicada bobblehead is a nod to the double brood emergence of the 13-year and 17-year cicadas in more than a dozen states, including both broods in Illinois.
Meher Dance Company is one of a number of dance groups offering lessons at various locations around the city during SummerDance 2024.
These are the best ways to stay cool right now without spending too much or going too far.

Lauren Viera has covered Chicago’s arts and cultural scenes for more than 20 years. She is the author of “The 500 Hidden Secrets of Chicago” (Luster) and lives in Logan Square.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *