Hampton House (Chicago)

Cornell, a successful lawyer, businessman and real estate speculator, purchased 300 acres (1.2 km2) of Lake Michigan lakefront land between 51st and 55th Streets in Hyde Park Township (six miles south of downtown Chicago).

He constructed a hotel, The Hyde Park House, in the 1850s near the planned rail depot in order to introduce travelers to a new suburb that provided escapes from the cities.

The 4 story Hyde Park House was a popular summer respite for a clientele who had the time and money for extended stays.

In 1923, proprietor Harry W. Sisson was linked to the Ku Klux Klan by the American Unity League, which resulted in a boycott by Catholics and Jews.

[1] As the Sisson and Hotel Sherry it was a popular lakefront host to American League opponents of the Chicago White Sox.

However, this is changing with the Hyatt Place hotel and mixed-use development at 53rd Street and Lake Park Avenue, two blocks to the west.

Paul Cornell's Stone in front of the Hampton House
Sisson Hotel from Lake Michigan
Sisson Hotel (l.) and Cooper-Carlton (r.) from S. Hyde Park Boulevard
Hampton House Entrance, October 2006