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The Alley Chicago - If You Dare!
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The Alley Chicago If You Dare!

We are located at:
3228 North Clark Street
CHICAGO, IL 60657

For anything involving our website please use the below contact information as our in-store staff will be unable to assist you.
Call us at: (773) 883-1800 x 666
Email us at: thealleychicago@aol.com


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The Alley Chicago is located at 3228 North Clark Street, and our family of stores encompasses the corners of Belmont & Clark in the Chicago area known as Lakeview, one block west of Boystown, and five blocks north of Wrigley Field.
Our store hours are as follows:
(All hours are subject to change)
Mon-Thurs 12pm-10pm
Fri & Sat 12pm-10pm
Sun 12pm-8pm
Phone:
(773) 883-1800 ext 222 (For store related questions only)
(773) 883-1800 ext 666 (For all web & mail-order related inquiries)
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McKenna Workingman's Exchange T-shirt

McKenna Workingman's Exchange T-shirt
McKenna Workingman's Exchange T-shirt
McKenna Workingman's Exchange T-shirt

McKenna Workingman's Exchange T-shirt

Price: $10.00
Retail: $13.13
You Save: $3.13 (24%)
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Detailed Description
Specifications

We screen print these high quality t-shirts in house, right here in Chicago!

Please allow 7-10 business days for processing as stock varies daily.

Specialty sizes 2XL, 3XL, and 4XL may be delayed.

Features:
• 50/50 cotton/poly
• Seamless collar
• Fully double needle stitched

Available is sizes S-3XL.


History
Michael "Hinky Dink" Kenna (1858–1946) was one of the two aldermen elected in Chicago's First Ward, from 1897 to 1923.

At the age of ten, Kenna left school and began selling newspapers. By the age of twelve, he had borrowed fifty dollars from a bar keeper and purchased a news stand at the corner of Monroe and Dearborn Streets. He was so successful that he was able to pay back the loan within a month. According to legend, it was at this time that Kenna got his nickname from Chicago Tribune publisher Joseph Medill because of his small stature. Even as an adult, Kenna stood just 5 foot 1 inch (156 cm) tall.

In addition to being an alderman, Kenna ran a saloon, The Workingman's Exchange, located on Clark Street. Kenna doled out meals to the indigent in exchange for votes.

Kenna and his partner, fellow First Ward alderman "Bathhouse" John Coughlin, were known as the "Lords of the Levee", a district included in their ward which provided them with the support of prostitutes, pimps, tavern-owners, and gamblers.

Coughlin and Kenna were also known for hosting the First Ward Ball, an annual fundraiser which brought together gangsters, safecrackers, prostitutes, politicians, businessmen, gamblers, and other types as well. The event raised more than $50,000 a year for the two men until it was closed down in 1909 by Mayor Fred Busse. By the time it was banned, the ball was so large that it had to be held in the Chicago Coliseum, the city's major convention center. Besides its notoriety in attracting many unsavory characters it often ended with the police having to curb disorderly conduct bordering on rioting.

In 1923, the number of aldermen per ward was lowered from two to one, and Kenna stepped aside to become a Ward Committeeman, leaving the alderman's position of the First Ward to his partner. Aldermen were elected by their constituents and were paid a salary while Committeeman were elected by precinct captains and were paid from the coffers of their political party. Hinky Dink remained First Ward Committeeman until his death at age 89 in 1946.

Although he left his heirs an estate worth over one million dollars, and an additional thirty-three thousand dollars to be used to erect a mausoleum for his remains to repose in, his heirs took all of the money and bought him an eighty-five dollar tombstone instead.

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