place

43rd station

CTA Green Line stationsChicago Transit Authority stubsChicago railway station stubsFormer North Shore Line stationsRailway stations in the United States opened in 1892
Harlem bound train at 43rd station, December 2018
Harlem bound train at 43rd station, December 2018

43rd is a station on the Chicago Transit Authority's 'L' system in the Grand Boulevard community area in Chicago, Illinois, on the Green Line at 314 E 43rd Street, three blocks east of State Street. It opened on August 15, 1892, when the South Side Elevated Railroad extended service south to serve the World Columbian Exposition in 1893.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 43rd station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

43rd station
East 43rd Street, Chicago Grand Boulevard

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: 43rd stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.816462 ° E -87.619021 °
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Address

43rd

East 43rd Street
60653 Chicago, Grand Boulevard
Illinois, United States
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Harlem bound train at 43rd station, December 2018
Harlem bound train at 43rd station, December 2018
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Nearby Places

The Forum (Chicago)
The Forum (Chicago)

The Forum is a historic event venue at 318-328 E. 43rd Street in the Bronzeville neighborhood of the Grand Boulevard community area of Chicago, Illinois. Chicago alderman William Kent and his father Albert had the venue built in 1897, intending it to be a social and political meeting hall. Architect Samuel Atwater Treat gave the building a Late Classical Revival design with Georgian Revival features. In its first decades, the Forum hosted speeches and rallies from politicians of all major parties and various community events.Following the Great Migration of the 1920s, Bronzeville became a predominantly African-American neighborhood, but the Forum continued to serve as a community center. Several civil rights organizations met in the Forum, including the National Negro Congress' Chicago council; the Chicago Scottsboro Defense Conference, a group organized to defend the Scottsboro Boys; movements that petitioned to racially integrate Major League Baseball; and a meeting of the Freedom Riders. The Forum was also a major jazz venue, and Chicago musicians such as Nat King Cole and Tiny Parham played the venue often. In the 1940s, the building became the headquarters of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World, a black fraternal organization formed in response to the white-only Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks.The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 16, 2019.