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The first Greeks in Chicago
arrived as ship captains in the 1840s. They
started out as food peddlers and, by natural progression, became
restaurant owners. Around the turn of the century, the Greeks
concen-trated around the Harrison, Blue Island and Halsted
area, originally known as the as Deltaîbut later re-named as
Greektown. During the 1960s,Greektown was displaced by the Eisenhower
Expressway and the University of Illinois at Chicago, forcing a move
north a few blocks.
In 1968, gyros and saganaki (flaming cheese) were introduced in this
country by Chicago's Greektown. From 1970 to 1990, most of the current
restaurants and businesses opened, and the Taste of
Greece summer festival became a tradition. In 1996,with the Democratic National
Convention coming to town, the city of Chicago recognized Greektown's
contribution to the city by pouring millions of dollars into street
renovations and erecting traditional Greek temples and pavilions at the major
intersections in Greektown.
Today, Old World traditions are prevalent in the many establishments of
Greektown. The language is still heard in the neighborhood, and the
community comes out in full ethnic pride during the annual Greek
Independence Day parade, the Taste of Greece and the days surrounding
Greek Easter. Chicago's Greek- town is truly the best sampling of Greek
heritage outside of Athens, and has grown to be a world- renowned
attraction. |
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Event Calendar
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