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New Bulls head coach Phil Jackson, left, with GM Jerry Krause, center, and owner Jerry Reinsdorf, meet the press on July 10, 1989. (Charles Cherney/Chicago Tribune)
New Bulls head coach Phil Jackson, left, with GM Jerry Krause, center, and owner Jerry Reinsdorf, meet the press on July 10, 1989. (Charles Cherney/Chicago Tribune)
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Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on July 10, according to the Tribune’s archives.

Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.

Flashback: July 10, 2015

Brookfield Zoo's Stingray Bay exhibit was closed July 13, 2015, after a weekend malfunction of a life support system apparently caused the deaths of 54 rays. (Chris Walker/Chicago Tribune)
Brookfield Zoo’s Stingray Bay exhibit was closed July 13, 2015, after a weekend malfunction of a life support system apparently caused the deaths of 54 rays. (Chris Walker/Chicago Tribune)

2015: Oxygen levels dropped inside the Brookfield Zoo’s Stingray Bay, resulting in the deaths of all 54 stingrays inside the exhibit.

Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

  • High temperature: 102 degrees (1936)
  • Low temperature: 50 degrees (1997)
  • Precipitation: 1.89 inches (1876)
  • Snowfall: None
Captain George Wellington Streeter and Ma Streeter with their dog, Spot. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
Captain George Wellington Streeter and Ma Streeter with their dog, Spot. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)

1886: Capt. George Wellington Streeter’s steamboat Reutan ran aground on a Near North Side sandbar now known as Streeterville.

From the 1880s until he died in 1921, Streeter asserted not just ownership but sovereignty over 186 acres of prime lakeshore between the mouth of the Chicago River and Oak Street. An 8-foot bronze statue of Streeter — wearing a top hat and holding pup Spot — stands at the northwest corner of McClurg Court and Grand Avenue.

Boxing legend Jack Johnson and his wife Lucille in an undated photo. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
Boxing legend Jack Johnson and his wife Lucille in an undated photo. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)

1912: Black heavyweight champion Jack Johnson opened Cafe de Champion, 41 W. 31st St. in Bronzeville. But only three months after it opened to fanfare, his wife, Etta, died by suicide in the couple’s apartment above the venue while revelers partied below. The shooting made the front page of the Tribune the next day.

In 1913, an all-white jury in Chicago convicted Johnson of traveling with his white girlfriend, Lucille Cameron, in violation of the Mann Act, which made it illegal to transport women across state lines for “immoral” purposes.

The case would later be held up as a deplorable example of institutional racism in early 20th-century America. Johnson was sentenced to a year and a day in prison in June 1913, but fled to Canada with Cameron, whom he married while free on bond. He remained a fugitive for seven years, traveling from Europe to Mexico, where he fought bulls and ran a bar called the Main Event.

President Donald Trump granted a rare posthumous pardon to Johnson on May 24, 2018.

School teacher John Scopes of Dayton, Tennessee, stands before Judge Raulston while on trial in July 1925 for teaching human evolution in school, in violation of Tennessee's Butler Act. (Chicago Herald and Examiner)
Schoolteacher John Scopes of Dayton, Tennessee, stands before Judge John Raulston while on trial in July 1925 for teaching human evolution in school, in violation of Tennessee's Butler Law. (Chicago Herald and Examiner)

1925: John Thomas Scopes, charged with teaching evolution in Tennessee, went to court in the celebrated “Monkey Trial.” WGN Radio broadcast the proceedings live — including Clarence Darrow’s defense of Scopes — a milestone for the new medium of radio, and a flesh-and-blood Chicago institution.

A crowd of 5,000 civil rights marchers swarmed down State Street on July 10, 1966, after a rally at Soldier Field where the Rev. Martin Luther King spoke. King led the march and tacked a list of demands on the door of City Hall. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
A crowd of 5,000 civil rights marchers swarmed down State Street on July 10, 1966, after a rally at Soldier Field where the Rev. Martin Luther King spoke. King led the march and tacked a list of demands on the door of City Hall. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)

1966: Two years after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was the keynote speaker at the Illinois Rally for Civil Rights at Soldier Field, he returned to the venue to deliver another speech on a sweltering day.

King told the 30,000 attendees, “This day we must decide to fill up the jails of Chicago, if necessary, in order to end slums.” He outlined 14 basic goals of the Chicago Freedom Movement and later posted them to the LaSalle Street entrance of City Hall.

Bulls assistant coach Phil Jackson, left, leans over to talk with head coach Doug Collins during the Bulls vs Detroit Pistons game at the Chicago Stadium on May 29, 1989. Jackson would be named head coach two months later. (Bob Langer/Chicago Tribune)
Bulls assistant coach Phil Jackson, left, leans over to talk with head coach Doug Collins during the Bulls vs Detroit Pistons game at the Chicago Stadium on May 29, 1989. Jackson would be named head coach two months later. (Bob Langer/Chicago Tribune)

1989: Phil Jackson was hired as head coach of the Chicago Bulls to replace Doug Collins.

After the Bulls won their sixth championship trophy, Jackson departed — and so did Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen. No coach ever enjoyed as much championship success in Chicago.

“This was our last dance and it was a wonderful waltz,” he said at the team’s championship rally in Grant Park.

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