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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
View Larger Map
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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O'Leary Dairy The Great Chicago Fire T-shirt
Price: $10.00 Retail: $13.13 You Save: $3.13 (24%)
This item is in stock
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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-4XL.
History
Catherine O'Leary (also known as Cate O'Leary) (ca. 1827 - July 3, 1895) was an Irish immigrant living in Chicago, Illinois in the 1870s. It was alleged that on the evening of October 8, 1871, a fire started in her barn at 137 DeKoven Street which went on to burn a large percentage of the city, an event known as the Great Chicago Fire. She was married to Patrick O'Leary. The couple's son, James Patrick O'Leary would grow up to run a Chicago gambling hall.
After the Great Chicago Fire, she was used as a scapegoat by Chicago Tribune reporter Michael Ahern, who admitted in 1893 that he had made up the story of a cow kicking over a lantern because he thought it would make colorful copy. This story took the population's imagination and many still believe that the fire began with the O'Learys' cow knocking over a lantern. Other theories posit that Daniel "Pegleg" Sullivan or Louis M. Cohn, who claimed to have been gambling in the barn with the O'Learys' son and several other boys, were involved in the start of the fire.
However, the story of Mrs. O'Leary's Cow has garnered the attention and imagination of generations as the cause of the fire. Popular culture, such as Gary Larson's cartoon The Far Side, Brian Wilson's song "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" and Rita Hayworth's song "Put the Blame on Mame" from the movie Gilda have referred to the story with the expectation that the populace will understand the reference. Popular 1930s character actress Alice Brady won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance as Mrs. O'Leary in the film In Old Chicago.
Years later, people would sing a parody to the minstrel song There'll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight
Late one night, when we were all in bed, Old Mother Leary left a lantern in the shed; And when the cow kicked it over, she winked her eye and said, "There’ll be a hot time in the old town, tonight."
Catherine O'Leary died on July 3, 1895 of acute pneumonia at her home at 5133 Halsted Street and was buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery. In the PBS documentary, Chicago: City of the Century, a descendant of O'Leary stated that she spent the rest of her life in the public eye, in which she was constantly blamed for starting the fire. Overcome with much sadness and regret, she "died heartbroken."
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Manufacturer:
The Alley Chicago | | SKU: |
ALLEY 153
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ALLEY 153 |
| Unit: |
1 |
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