New Food Co-op

<< back to group Evolver Chicago
August 14, 2009

A few days ago, the founder of Whole Foods wrote an editorial in the Wall Street Journal. He's against unions and against health care. He also has been trying to drive all competition in healthy, organic food selling out of business. I eat mostly organic, and have shopped at WF a lot.

However, when I read that editorial, I started doing some research, and I came across a brand new food co-op, which is in the process of opening. Doors should open in about a month. It's call Dill Pickle Food Co-op.

http://dillpicklefoodcoop.org/

The co-op is named after the infamous Chicago Dill Pickle Club (which I'd never heard of before joining this co-op). Here's a little history.

Chicago social club, established around 1914.

The Dill Pickle Club afforded an unconventional meeting place for good talk, entertainment and food for uninhibited and free-thinking persons of the times. The Dill Pickle (spelled also Dil Pickle and called simply “the Pickle” by most of its habitués) was founded by Jack Jones, a former labor activist. Once one of Chicago’s best-known Bohemian nightspots, the club provided a forum for free speech as well as affording encouragement for artistic expression. Its patrons included Socialists, atheists, anarchists, “liberated” women, professional lecturers and soapbox orators, artists, actors, literary hopefuls and all sorts of unconventional types.

By 1917, in order to locate the peripatetic club, both the famous and the infamous were exhorted to squeeze “Thru the Hole in the Wall Down Tooker Alley to the Green Lite Over the Orange Door.” 22 Tooker Place was just south of the Newberry Library on Dearborn Street, and a sign outside read “step high stoop low leave your dignity outside.” Those who entered would find a variety of fare – lectures or debates on controversial topics, perhaps a play or concert, even a swinging party, supplemented by coffee, tea, sandwiches or even bootleg whiskey. The atmosphere of the place was an enjoyable mix of the radical, the rough, the erudite, the creative and sometimes the inane. And always there was plenty of stimulating talk.

The Dill Pickle Club was frequented by such literary figures as Carl Sandburg, Edgar Lee Masters, Maxwell Bodenheim, Ben Hecht, Charles MacArthur, Sherwood Anderson among many others. Besides the tough owner, Jack Jones, another mainstay of the club was Ben Reitman, who occasionally lectured on provocative subjects. Noted Chicago doctors, professors and local intellectuals were among the assorted speakers, and continuing throughout the twenties and early thirties there would be both serious and amusing presentations by all sorts of people.

As the Depression progressed, the Dill Pickle’s fortunes declined. By 1933, tax difficulties and the actions of over-zealous inspectors and professional moralists signaled the beginning of the end. For a full history of the Dill Pickle, see The Rise and Fall of the Dil Pickle, Edited and Introduced by Franklin Rosemont, Chicago, Charles H. Kerr Publishing Company, 2004.

See you at the next meeting.

Comments

praise for Dill Pickle Co-Op

I have been to this place a few times and it's great. Although a little bit expensive they have a lot of great stuff like Upton's Naturals (a local Chicago based veggie/vegan meat substitute) which I highly recommend. And I am pretty sure they have locally grown veggies.

Also a great event to check out is the Farmers Market at the Empty Bottle which also has handmade goods. I think they do it monthly.

praise for Dill Pickle Co-Op

Please post this info on the Chicago Evolver reginal page.
http://www.evolver.net/group/evolver_chicago

We will our reality,
Thanks
Timothy "SMU" McCarthy