Maywood, Illinois

Everything Maywood is known for

5 songs mention this city 1 artist from here

Music in Maywood

Songs About Maywood

John Prine
Kacey Musgraves
7%
"My idea of heaven is to burn one with John Prine"
Can’t Live Without
Abbey Duncan
6%
"He's gotta love John Prine like I do"
All My Heroes Have Halos
C.J. Garton
6%
"From Haggard to Prine to Jones"
Sleep on My Side
Megan Moroney
2%
"You never listen to John Prine"
Dialogue #6
Johnny Cash
2%
"But as John says in his song"

Artists From Maywood

Rivers & Roads in Song near Maywood

Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Maywood.

History of Maywood

8213 West Summerdale RoadyGoat

1972

On an ordinary block in Norwood Park, a quiet northwest suburb of Chicago, John Wayne Gacy lived in a modest ranch house from 1971 to 1978. He worked as a contractor, threw block parties, performed as Pogo the Clown at children's hospitals, and buried twenty-six young men in the crawlspace beneath his own floors. The house was demolished in April 1979 after investigators finished excavating it. A different house was later built on the lot and given a different address, 8215, in part to give the neighborhood some distance from what had happened. The street itself is the same. The trees are older now. Most of the people who drive past do not know.

RoadyGoat → · 7.7 mi away

Lou Malnati's Pizzeria RoadyGoat

Lou Malnati learned deep-dish pizza from the founders of Pizzeria Uno, then opened his own place in Lincolnwood, Illinois in 1971. The Malnati Chicago Classic — sausage patty layered under cheese and chunky tomato sauce on a buttercrust — is Chicago's most shipped pizza. Lou died in 1978 but his sons built it into a Chicago institution with dozens of locations. The buttercrust is what separates it from every imitator.

10.8 mi away

The Murder Castle Site RoadyGoat

1893

At the corner of 63rd and Wallace, on Chicago's South Side, there is now a post office. In 1893, during the World's Columbian Exposition, the three-story building on this lot belonged to a man calling himself H. H. Holmes. He had designed the upper floors himself, with windowless rooms, soundproofed walls, staircases that led nowhere, and gas jets he could control from his office. An unknown number of visitors to the Fair, most of them young women, checked into his hotel and were never seen again. Holmes was eventually arrested for insurance fraud; the building caught fire in 1895 before its full architecture could be documented, and was demolished decades later. The post office that replaced it is unremarkable. The sidewalk is the same one.

RoadyGoat → · 12.5 mi away

Maxwell Street Market

1880

The legendary open-air market on Chicago's Near West Side where generations of immigrants traded goods and blues musicians busked on the sidewalks.

9.9 mi away

Chess Records

1950

The legendary recording studio where Muddy Waters, Chuck Berry, Howlin' Wolf, and Etta James created the Chicago blues sound that became rock and roll.

11.9 mi away

Chicago Pile-1 - Site of First Nuclear Reaction

1942

On December 2, 1942, Enrico Fermi achieved the first controlled, self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction in a squash court under the football stands at the University of Chicago.

13.9 mi away

Haymarket Square

1886

Site of the 1886 Haymarket affair, a pivotal event in the international labor movement that led to the establishment of May Day.

10.0 mi away

Hull House

1889

The settlement house founded by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr in 1889 that pioneered social work, labor reform, and women's suffrage advocacy.

10.1 mi away

Wrigley Field

1914

Second-oldest active Major League Baseball park, home to the Chicago Cubs since 1916 and site of their drought-ending 2016 World Series victory.

10.8 mi away

Things to Do in Maywood

Everything Near Maywood

241 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.

Explore Maywood on the Map