4. Uptown Theatre
• The Uptown Theatre opened its doors August 18,
1925, billed as "An Acre of Seats in a Magic City.“ It
also known as the Balaban and Katz Uptown Theatre,
is a massive, ornate movie palace in the Uptown. It the
last of the "big three" movie palaces built by the
Balaban & Katz theatre chain run by A. J. Balaban, his
brother Barney Balaban and their partner Sam Katz.
• The largest in Chicago, it boasts 4,381 seats and its
interior volume is said to be larger than any other
movie palace in the United States.
7. Green Mill Cocktail Lounge
• The Green Mill Cocktail Lounge (or Green Mill Jazz
Club) is an entertainment venue. It is known for its jazz
and poetry performances, along with its connections to
Chicago mob history.
• Originally named Pop Morse's Roadhouse, the
business opened in 1907. It was renamed Green Mill
Gardens a few years later, a nod to the famous Moulin
Rouge ("Red Mill") of Paris. In its early years, it was a
popular hangout for movie actors from nearby Essanay
Studios. The namesake gardens were removed in the
1920s during the construction of the Uptown Theatre
on the same block.
10. Graceland Cemetery
• Established in 1860, Graceland Cemetery is a large
Victorian era cemetery located in the north side
community area of Uptown.
• The cemetery is typical of those that reflect Queen
Victoria's reconception of the early 19th century
"graveyard". Instead of poorly maintained headstones,
and bodies buried on top of each other, on an
ungenerous parcel of land; the cemetery became a
pastoral landscaped park dotted with memorial
markers, with room left over for picnics, a common
usage of cemeteries. The landscape architecture for
Graceland was designed by Ossian Cole Simonds