We're digging deeper to preserve Chicago's past for a digital future. 

In December 2018, Lake Forest College's Digital Chicago: Unearthing History and Culture project came to its formal conclusion, and the Digital Chicago project website was transferred to an institutional home with the Chicago History Museum.

The relationship between Lake Forest College and the Chicago History Museum, along with other Chicago cultural and humanitarian organizations, continues with the Humanities 2020 initiative, a $1.1 million Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant, to enhance and advance humanities education through deep engagement with issues of race in Chicago. 

Exhibits from Lake Forest College students that share these Chicago stories will continue to be added to the site.


Between 2015-2018, twenty Lake Forest College faculty, working with undergraduate student research assistants, delved into Chicago's forgotten or at-risk history to produce digital projects for the public interest. 

Their work was supported by an $800,000, four-year grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to Lake Forest College to involve students and faculty in exploring specific sites in Chicago’s history, through urban archaeological digs, innovative digital humanities projects, and complementary coursework in a wide array of disciplines (including English, History, Art, Music, and others). 

The Digital Chicago website brings this historical research to light, based on faculty-undergraduate student collaborations that are the highlight of the small liberal arts college experience. 

These exhibits reveal stories about Chicago via maps, timelines, 360° tours, recreated musical history, theatrical history, and others. 


Grant Team

Davis Schneiderman, Digital Chicago Project Director

Krebs Provost and Dean of the Faculty; Professor of English

Emily Mace, Chicago Digital Humanities Coordinator

Coordinator and project manager for the Digital Chicago grant

Anne Thomason, Digital Archivist for Digital Chicago

Librarian for Archives and Special Collections

Jennifer Larsen, Director of Chicago Programs 


Chicago Fellows

Digital Chicago centers on the work of Lake Forest College faculty who served as Chicago Fellows during the four calendar years of the grant, 2015-2018. The Chicago Fellows met regularly and collaborated to develop specific project goals. During their tenure as Fellows, they taught a course oriented toward their research project. All Fellows worked with the assistance of one or more undergraduate student Chicago Fellows Research Assistants. Over the course of their Chicago Fellows year, each Fellow produced a digital project that has become part of this repository of projects. Fellows also presented their work to the Lake Forest College campus community in the fall semester of the year with the Digital Chicago Seminar, and often presented their work with the Chicago area public more broadly.  

2015 Chicago Fellows

2015 Chicago Fellows

2016 Chicago Fellows

Chicago Fellows 2016

2017 Chicago Fellows

2017 Chicago Fellows

2018 Chicago Fellows

2018 Chicago Fellows

Chicago Archaeological Fellow, 2015-2018

Rebecca GraffRebecca Graff, Assistant Professor of Anthropology serves throughout 2015-2018 as Chicago Archaeological Fellow. Visit her work on the Charnley-Persky House Archaeological Project.


Permissions

Digital Chicago complies with The Mellon Foundation's Intellectual Property Policy.

All items on the Digital Chicago website are used with the permission of their original sources; rights and permissions to use and distribute those items are held with the original copyright owners, unless otherwise specified. 


Contact

For more information, contact us via email.