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Chicago Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium in Chicago, Illinois

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Through the 19th and early 20th centuries, tuberculosis — nicknamed the “white plague” — was taking so many lives, the attempt to find a cure helped lay the foundation for modern medicine. But before antibiotics, TB patients were sent to live in isolation in sanatoriums, where they received the best treatment known at the time: rest, nutrition, and fresh air.

In the US, many of these facilities were located out West, where there was ample sunshine and clean, dry air, which some doctors believed would dry the moisture from patients’ lungs. In fact, the tuberculosis sanatoriums that sprung up in the 1800s were what put some early towns in Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico on the map. However the largest municipal sanatorium in the country was located back East, run by the city of Chicago: the Chicago Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium.

Just over a hundred years ago, in March, 1915, Chicago opened its public tuberculosis sanitarium on a 160-acre site bound by Bryn Mawr, Pulaski, Peterson and Central Park avenues in the northwest part of the city. The 650-bed, 32-building facility was founded to provide treatment and long-term care at no cost to patients suffering from this highly contagious and often fatal disease.

The infectious disease, usually affecting the lungs, is characterized by a chronic cough, which spreads the contagion through the air, and weight loss, which earned it the historical nickname “consumption.” Though TB cases are at an all-time low in the US, an estimated one third of the world is infected today, mostly in developing countries. 

Because patients — called “lungers” in the early 1900s — were kept isolated from others for months or sometimes years, Chicago's public sanitarium essentially functioned like mini-city. It offered not only a full range of medical services but also education, recreation, exercise, religious services, and job training — with a tunnel system connecting the main buildings on the grounds. The municipal sanitarium was even the first to have a maternity ward. 

One patient from the 1940s described life at “the San,” as people who lived and worked there called it, in a letter: “On the whole the Sanitarium life wasn’t so bad. We used to play chess, checkers, rummy, poker, or pinochle. Also there were some fairly good looking women patients out there. There was a rule against visiting them. That was a silly rule. I learned how to play chess at the sanitarium. You can find a place like that only in this country.”

By the late 1960s, new effective drugs and vaccines to treat TB came on the market, and were so successful, tuberculosis institutions began closing their doors several years later. The Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium closed down in 1974.

The city wanted to turn the old sanitarium into shopping and apartments, but neighborhood locals fought City Hall — and won. The site was redeveloped as North Park Village, with much of the grounds and buildings preserved and repurposed. Today, the public center includes a public park, senior citizen housing and a 46-acre nature preserve and educational center, an oasis within the bustling city. 


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