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Cicero Illinois

Cicero (originally called Hawthorne) is located in Cicero, Illinois, bordering Chicago to the north and east. It is one of the largest cities in the state of Illinois and the second largest city in Illinois after Chicago.

Cicero connects the city with most suburbs via Cicero - Chicago International Airport and the Chicago Metropolitan Transit Authority (CTA). Public transportation stops at Ciceros Avenue and 26th Street, and Cicero is connected to the rest of Chicago by Interstate 75 and I-80.

Cicero used to run from Harlem Avenue to Western Avenue, but much of the area was annexed to Chicago. To return to Route 66, head a few miles west on Ogden Avenue to the neighboring suburb of Berwyn.

Later, the Cicero area was separated by two railroad tracks, one from the Chicago and Northern Illinois Railroads and the other from Interstate 75. Two were renamed for businesses, and others, such as Clyde and Hawthorne, remained as station names.

Henry's Drive - Captures the spirit of Route 66, and it's one of the best places to eat a classic Chicago hot dog. Freddy's has been named Chicago Best's fourth best restaurant and has featured in the Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune. It is a must have in Cicero and is served at the corner of North and South State Streets, across from Henry's Drive - In.

Cicero's proximity to Chicago means you can find entertainment right in the township and enjoy a day in and around the Windy City. If you are planning to spend time in Chicago or just looking for cheap accommodation or a visit with family and friends, you will be surprised and excited by all that this community has to offer, especially all the shops they have in Cicero. It feels like a distant world, but it can even be Chicago - like, with great food, great entertainment and lots of great shops and restaurants.

The city of Cicero has a chequered history, dating back to 1849, when the county of Chicago annexed its eastern border. A community founded by a county board in 1849, it was a 36-square-mile tract bordered by what is now Pershing County, which is now the state of Illinois. In 1869, Ciceros was incorporated into the city, and in the same year, Chicago annexed the area along its western border, from the Illinois River to the Chicago River. In 1889, Chicago annexed territory on its eastern border and by 1897, a tram was running between the city and Ciceros.

In the 1920s, Al Capone changed everything and took over his empire in Cicero, and during the local elections of 1924, he turned the city itself into a war zone. He bullied voters, kidnapped pollsters, threatened news reporters, and people who supported his criminal behavior. In 1924, after the local elections, Cap, one of the most notorious gangsters in Chicago history, kidnapped a pollster and threatened a news reporter with the death of all those who supported him. In the 20th century, Ciceros attracted many industries and became the largest manufacturing center in both Illinois and Chicago, while serving as a major shipping port for the U.S. Postal Service. This brought well-paying jobs and the area's first population boom, and Ciceros received an influx of industry.

Police opened fire on Capone and his crew at Hawthorne Works, and the Sportsman's Park complex was destroyed. Now acquired by the city of Cicero, it is closed and demolished and begged back to its original location.

To leave Chicago, take the 1955 West Adams Street to Michigan Avenue and then turn right onto Michigan Avenue to reach the Hawthorne Factory site at the Hawthorne Works Museum and Archives. The vast Western Electric plant, once located east of Cicero Avenue, is located at the intersection of Michigan and Adams streets, west of Chicago. It was located on the site of a former industrial park, the Sportsman's Park complex, in the heart of downtown Chicago's South Side. The huge factory site of Hawthorn Works, a huge western electrical factory, once stood east of Ciceros Avenue.

As for nightlife, Cicero has transformed itself into the original vice paradise of Chicago. Remember, once you smelled black powder in the air, you knew you were in Ciceros. Be sure to visit the "Town Hall of Cicero," where you can almost see Al Capone slapping the mayor.

Western Electric built a telephone system manufacturing plant with more than 20,000 employees, a figure that dwarfed the population of Cicero, which had only 14,557 inhabitants in 1910. New residents were drawn to the city due to its proximity to Chicago and its high-quality hotels and restaurants.

Prohibition was the law of the land, Chicago Mayor William E. Dever cracked down on robbery, and Al Capone moved operations to Cicero. In 1901, the rest of Chicago, such as Oak Park and Berwyn, voted for separation, but weak political leadership and the city's separation from the administration led some cities, such as Oak Park and Berwen, to vote to secede from Ciceros, while others, such as Austin, were incorporated into the city of Chicago. The rest of Illinois, with the exception of Chicago and its suburbs, had voted for separation in 1901.

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