reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
We now possess the official 1929 Chicago Tunnel Network map, revealing exactly which buildings the Chicago Tunnel system connects to, and no longer needing to ask others about tunnel connections. The map, hidden in the Chicago History Museum and never digitized until today, is shown in full to identify buildings with current tunnel connections. The presenter asserts that the old-world buildings were connected by a vast underground web, not just independent structures, and that the tunnels predate roads and selective routing suggests a purposeful network rather than a mail-centric system.
Key points and claims:
- The 1929 map shows tunnels linking to various buildings in Chicago, and the presenter emphasizes that these tunnels were already present before the roads and were not built merely to transport mail.
- The official narrative claims that the interconnected tunnels were constructed in the 1890s to transport mail and move freight, and were officially shut down in 1959; the presenter finds this story illogical and inconsistent with the evidence of widespread tunnel connections and reliance on underground transport.
- The map’s black lines are tunnels, not roads, and the tunnels appear to skip entire blocks and connect specific buildings rather than following streets or uniform routes.
- Examples highlighted on the map and in accompanying discussion:
- The Palmer House shows two tunnel entrances. The presenter questions the repeated construction of multiple Palmer Houses on the same site, and notes the Palmer House entrances on the map.
- The Temple (33rd Lodge) is discussed, with the building demolished in 1939 due to “poor internal services,” and replaced by a Walgreens.
- The La Salle Hotel and the Stock Exchange are shown with a tunnel between them; the Stock Exchange building was demolished in 1972.
- The Rookery Building is examined; 1891 photos show subterranean features and an alleyway that is identified as a tunnel connection between the Rookery and nearby structures.
- The map indicates that these tunnels existed under streets that were surface-dirty and congested in the early 1900s, suggesting underground transport as a primary mode.
- The presenter argues that access to publicly funded buildings (like City Hall) is possible for tunnel entrances and intends to press for access to sub-basement plans, arguing that publicly funded buildings are subject to public records and tours.
- The plan includes visiting the actual buildings to verify tunnel entrances visible on the map, leveraging public records requests to uncover entrances that may be overlooked or unknown by building administrations.
- The presenter claims that the underground network extends beyond Chicago and suggests a similar web exists in cities worldwide, implying that the 1929 map is a snapshot of an ongoing, larger network that has expanded since.
- The upcoming work involves contacting publicly funded buildings to request tunnel-entry information and documenting the responses.
Note: The transcript includes sponsor and channel-promotional material, which has been omitted from this summary per content guidelines.