Fire and Clay: How Brick Reveals the Hidden History of Chicago

Brick of Chicago

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By the late 1920s, at its peak of brick making and consumption, Chicago was making over a billion bricks a year for its buildings and importing almost another billion nicer face bricks for their front facades. Throughout Chicago’s history, brick dramatically transformed from a simple fireproof building material into an integral piece of architectural design. And no one knows the hidden details and stories of this fascinating history like Chicago’s foremost brick aficionado, Will Quam.
 
In Fire and Clay, Quam takes us on journeys to experience the beauty and mystery of Chicago’s buildings. He also explores how developers, architects, and masons followed changing fashions as they designed and built the city, creating connections across disparate neighborhoods. The red bricks that make up Lincoln Park mansions, for example, are the same as those found on Pullman row homes and Pilsen workers’ cottages, just as Rogers Park’s colorful bricks can also be found far across the city in South Shore. Known for his popular walking tours, Quam has built his life around the appreciation, study, and evangelizing of this most humble building block’s many wonders. Here, he pours all his knowledge into the first book of its kind, beautifully illustrated with more than one hundred of his own full-color photographs.
Dimensions:8.25 x 9.25 x 1.25" 
Material: Paper, cloth, board, 320 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0-226-82810-1
ISBN-10: 0-226-82810-7


Brick of Chicago
(Oak Park)

Brick of Chicago is Will Quam, an architecture photographer and historian whose work focuses on Chicago's amazing masonry architecture. Learn more at brickofchicago.com