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Statue of William McKinley (Chicago)

1905 establishments in Illinois1905 sculpturesBronze sculptures in IllinoisMcKinley Park, ChicagoMonuments and memorials in Chicago
Outdoor sculptures in ChicagoSculptures of men in IllinoisStatues in ChicagoStatues of William McKinleyUse American English from September 2020Use mdy dates from September 2020
William McKinley Monument, McKinley Park, Chicago, early 20th century (NBY 717)
William McKinley Monument, McKinley Park, Chicago, early 20th century (NBY 717)

The William McKinley statue is a monumental statue of William McKinley in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Located in the McKinley Park neighborhood, the statue was designed by Charles Mulligan and dedicated in 1905.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Statue of William McKinley (Chicago) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Statue of William McKinley (Chicago)
South Archer Avenue, Chicago McKinley Park

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Statue of William McKinley (Chicago)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.82628 ° E -87.68386 °
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Address

William McKinley Memorial

South Archer Avenue
60632 Chicago, McKinley Park
Illinois, United States
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William McKinley Monument, McKinley Park, Chicago, early 20th century (NBY 717)
William McKinley Monument, McKinley Park, Chicago, early 20th century (NBY 717)
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Nearby Places

Brighton Park crossing
Brighton Park crossing

The Brighton Park crossing is a major railroad crossing in Chicago, Illinois, hosting three major freight railroads. The crossing is northwest of the intersection of Western Avenue and Archer Avenue, in the Brighton Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. The railroads involved in the crossing are CSX, Canadian National and Norfolk Southern. The crossing consists of the CN's two-track Joliet Subdivision in a roughly east–west orientation intersecting five north–south tracks operated by NS and CSX. Collectively, these railroads operate approximately 80 trains per day through the crossing. The junction is visible from the CTA Orange Line trains that pass on an elevated structure immediately southeast of the crossing. The CN line was formerly the main line of the Gulf Mobile & Ohio and its predecessor Alton Railroad, and this location hosted the GM&O's Brighton Park passenger stop. The line currently carries Metra Heritage Corridor commuter trains to Joliet and Amtrak passenger trains to St. Louis. Metra formerly operated a Brighton Park station located near the crossing, but this station was closed in 1984.Until July 6, 2007, the crossing was controlled by a human switchtender in a cabin near the crossing using semaphore signals to govern train movements through the diamonds. Because the crossing was not interlocked, all trains were required to make a stop before proceeding over the crossing as signaled by the specific semaphore signal governing the track the train was on. As a major crossing, and one of the few remaining locations with this classic method of operation, Brighton Park was a major attraction for rail enthusiasts, but had become increasingly inefficient for Chicago area rail operations. As part of the Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency Program (CREATE) project, the Brighton Park crossing, the semaphore signals, and switchtender's cabin were taken out of service on the evening of Friday, July 6, 2007 and conversion to an interlocked crossing ensued over the following weekend. As part of the conversion project, some of the tracks at the crossing were realigned and new crossing diamonds were put in place.