The iconic clock on the Marshall Field & Co. flagship store
Corner of State Street and Washington Street, Chicago
Sandwiches for supper turned
into a trip down memory lane for me. It wasn’t just any sandwich—it was a
classic Marshall Field Turkey Sandwich that actually resembles “classic”
sandwiches served in many places. I remember having something similar at
Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth. An open-faced sandwich with rye topped by
turkey, Swiss cheese, and Thousand Island dressing and decorated with tomato,
sliced egg, bacon and olive—shh! don’t tell Christian because I didn’t offer
him an olive, which he loves.
Anyway, the sandwich started
me thinking about my many ties and trips to the flagship Marshall Field store in
downtown Chicago. Those excursions started when I was very young. My father, an
osteopathic physician, had an office on the seventeenth floor of the Marshall
Field Annex, and Mom would end shopping trips by taking me to the bargain basement where, hidden away in a
corner, was a snack bar that far as I can remember only served hot dogs and
frozen malts. I loved it. Then, nearby, was a secret door (I just thought it was
a secret—it really wasn’t) that opened to a staircase. Go up one floor and
through the door and, like magic, we were in the lobby of the annex without having
to go out of the building and cross the downtown street. We’d take the elevator
to the seventeenth floor. That was in the day when there was a white-gloved,
uniformed operator in every elevator.
By the time I was old enough
to be turned loose in the store, I knew every inch of every floor. I could take you to household goods or teen
clothes. I knew we came in by the glove counter, and on that pillared first floor
were the hosiery and jewelry counters. On the sixth floor you could choose from
several restaurants. The Walnut Room, a bit staid and dignified, was the main
dining area, but Mom and I always liked The Verandah, decorated as though it were
part of a southern mansion. In fact, I bet I had the classic sandwich there.
And I know at least once, when Mom was nowhere around, my friend Eleanor Lee
and I rode up the down escalator and down the up, to the consternation of store
employees no doubt. Today I’m uncertain of my footing on escalators and avoid
them when I can, so I look back on that adventure with awe.
Eventually I could go downtown by myself, riding the IC or Illinois Central commuter train. And mostly I went to Marshall Field’s though I did give a bit of business to rival Carson, Pirie & Scott just a block down State Street. I remember once paying twenty dollars for a blouse and thinking I was terribly extravagant. By then, Dad had closed his downtown office and was full time president of the Chicago College of Osteopathy and administrator of the adjacent hospital, so I had no downtown refuge.
The last time I was at Field’s
was in the nineties, when I visited with a Texas friend who had grown up in a
northwest Chicago suburb. We had lunch in the Walnut Room, and it was a bit
shabby. We both felt the magic we remembered from our childhood was gone. But
my connection to Field’s doesn’t end there.
I can’t remember which came first—the book I read or the one I wrote. The one I read was What the Lady Wants: A Novel of Marshall Field and the Gilded Age, by Renée Rosen, which perhaps inspired both the title and subject of my The Gilded Cage: A Novel of Chicago. My novel focused on Bertha (Cissy) Palmer, wife of hotelier Potter Palmer who built the Palmer House. Marshall Field played a large part in that story, for he and Potter Palmer were prominent among Chicago’s Robber Barons, along with Gustavus Swift, Philip Armour, George Pullman and others. Cissy Palmer interested me because she was the first (or one of them) woman philanthropist and most probably the first marred to a Robber Baron. The fictionalized version of her life covers Chicago history from the 1840s through the 1893 Columbian Exposition, including the Great Fire, labor troubles, the Civil War, and the Haymarket Riot. You can read a bit more about Cissy and her world here: The Gilded Cage: A Novel of Chicago - Kindle edition by Alter, Judy. Literature & Fiction Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com. (That’s called blatant self promoton or BSP.)
Last night, Christian liked
the Marshall Field sandwich so much he voted to keep it on the rotation of
dishes we frequently have. I agreed, because not only did I like it, it brought
back happy memories. There has never been another store like Field’s—not even Neiman
Marcus—and I miss it. At least you can still get their much-praised Frango Mints
online.
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