Good morning, Chicago.
On a sunny Sunday, more than 40,000 marathon runners dashed through the spectator-lined streets of Chicago.
The marathon is known for its flat track and fast times. Four world records have been set on the course. And this year, the marathon made history by introducing its first nonbinary division.
One of the six marathon majors in the world, the course started and ended in Grant Park, winding through 29 neighborhoods, as far north as Uptown and all the way down to Bronzeville.
This year’s first finisher was men’s wheelchair racer Marcel Hug, who set an unofficial course record of 1:25:20. Susannah Scaroni, an alum of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, won the women’s wheelchair race in 1:45:48.
Benson Kipruto of Kenya won the men’s race in 2:04:24, while Ruth Chepngetich of Kenya grabbed her second consecutive Chicago Marathon win, finishing the women’s race at 2:14:18.
Emily Sisson came in second in the women’s race, setting an unofficial American record of 2:18:29.
Read more on the 2022 Chicago Marathon here. See the best signs spotted by Tribune photographers on race day.
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day.
COVID-19 tracker | Monkeypox tracker | Afternoon briefing | Compare gas prices | Puzzles & Games | Daily horoscope | Ask Amy | Today’s eNewspaper edition
Gentrification may be old news in Logan Square, where the wealthy first began snatching up decrepit greystones for cheap along Logan Boulevard in the 1980s, but high home prices have finally taken root in the heavily residential western end of the neighborhood, where gang crime was once deeply entrenched.
A modest five-bedroom frame house on North Sawyer Avenue in the middle of the beat is now selling for $875,000. Less than a mile west, a fully rehabbed two-story single-family home on Belden Avenue, with a coach house and glass exterior designed by architect Carlos Concepcion, is on the market for $1.85 million.
A former Franklin Park man remembered as a lover of all things Chicago died last week while trying to flee his Florida home where he’d been riding out Hurricane Ian.
According to his daughter, Michelle Schuline, Mitch Pacyna and his partner, Mary Wojciechowski, lived in Fort Myers Beach for 27 years and weathered many storms together. But Ian was different.
Afternoon Briefing
Daily
Chicago Tribune editors’ top story picks, delivered to your inbox each afternoon.
Indigenous people in Chicago have influenced everything from the placement of roadways along their onetime trade routes to the name of our city itself.
Chicago is home to the largest population of Native Americans in the Midwest and the second largest east of the Mississippi River — more than 30,000 people representing at least 100 tribes, according to the University of Illinois at Chicago. Native American culture is alive in Chicago — you just have to know where to look.
Chicago dad Exavier Pope will tell you he aced homecoming dress selection for his 17-year-old daughter, Emory. He had a few ground rules, of course. The dress couldn’t have a plunging…
Read More: Where to find depictions of Native American life around Chicago – Chicago