Morgan Shoal
Above: aerial view of Morgan Shoal from the 2015 Morgan Shoal Framework Plan
Morgan Shoal stands upon the Chicago lakefront from 45th Street to 51st Street, covering about 4,460 linear feet of shoreline. At Morgan Shoal, the bedrock, found 90 feet below downtown Chicago, protrudes to the surface and is exposed. In July 1914, the Silver Spray passenger ship hit the Shoal and sank. The remains of the wreck can be seen from shore. Many South Siders have fond memories of Pebble Beach at Morgan Shoal. In 2014-2015, members of the community and the Chicago Park District held four meetings and developed together the Morgan Shoal Framework Plan.
Morgan Shoal and Promontory Point are the only sections of the 1993 Chicago Shoreline Protection Plan not completed. Both Morgan Shoal and the Point are endangered as the City (CDOT), Chicago Park District and Chicago Divsion of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are now funded for design and construction. Both Morgan Shoal and Promontory Point ought to be preserved under the 1993 Memorandum of Agreement, and not demolished and replaced with concrete as planned.
Advocates for Morgan Shoal are organizing to stop the paving of Pebble beach with concrete. You may reach them here, on FB at MorganShoalRocks https://www.facebook.com/groups/741417450757950 or Instagram: @MorganShoalRocks
Promontory Point Conservancy completely supports the 2015 Morgan Shoal Framework Plan because it strives to preserve the historic limestone revetment and it resulted from good community process. We are disturbed to learn that the Chicago Park District, CDOT and Chicago US Army Corps of Engineers are not moving ahead constructing this award-winning design, dismiss it as "aspirational" only, and appear to have hired a contractor for another design. The Framework Plan was an excellent, award-winning, community-based design process, even as the Chicago Park District and its consultant SmithGroup might have reached out more extensively into the Bronzeville community (Yes, members of this community use the Burnham Park lakefront.) to deepen and enrich community engagement about the Morgan Shoal's Framework Plan. Now it appears that the Framework Plan, whatever the breadth of its outreach, is irrelevant, and what the community will get in unknown and undisclosed even as new construction will start early next year.
Morgan Shoal stands upon the Chicago lakefront from 45th Street to 51st Street, covering about 4,460 linear feet of shoreline. At Morgan Shoal, the bedrock, found 90 feet below downtown Chicago, protrudes to the surface and is exposed. In July 1914, the Silver Spray passenger ship hit the Shoal and sank. The remains of the wreck can be seen from shore. Many South Siders have fond memories of Pebble Beach at Morgan Shoal. In 2014-2015, members of the community and the Chicago Park District held four meetings and developed together the Morgan Shoal Framework Plan.
Morgan Shoal and Promontory Point are the only sections of the 1993 Chicago Shoreline Protection Plan not completed. Both Morgan Shoal and the Point are endangered as the City (CDOT), Chicago Park District and Chicago Divsion of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are now funded for design and construction. Both Morgan Shoal and Promontory Point ought to be preserved under the 1993 Memorandum of Agreement, and not demolished and replaced with concrete as planned.
Advocates for Morgan Shoal are organizing to stop the paving of Pebble beach with concrete. You may reach them here, on FB at MorganShoalRocks https://www.facebook.com/groups/741417450757950 or Instagram: @MorganShoalRocks
Promontory Point Conservancy completely supports the 2015 Morgan Shoal Framework Plan because it strives to preserve the historic limestone revetment and it resulted from good community process. We are disturbed to learn that the Chicago Park District, CDOT and Chicago US Army Corps of Engineers are not moving ahead constructing this award-winning design, dismiss it as "aspirational" only, and appear to have hired a contractor for another design. The Framework Plan was an excellent, award-winning, community-based design process, even as the Chicago Park District and its consultant SmithGroup might have reached out more extensively into the Bronzeville community (Yes, members of this community use the Burnham Park lakefront.) to deepen and enrich community engagement about the Morgan Shoal's Framework Plan. Now it appears that the Framework Plan, whatever the breadth of its outreach, is irrelevant, and what the community will get in unknown and undisclosed even as new construction will start early next year.
- Chicago Park District capital projects (Scroll down and select Morgan Shoal Revetment Construction)
- Morgan Shoal Framework Plan, March 2015
- CDOT BRIC Pre-Application and Exhibits for Morgan Shoal Project, September 30, 2020. This document and especially its exhibits spell out the most recent design plans for Morgan Shoal and Promontory Point. (Obtained by FOIA)
- 2013 Illinois Shoreline Erosion Study issued by the Chicago Division of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers includes the City and Chicago Park District's plans for Morgan Shoal. In this most recent plan for Morgan Shoal, the Chicago Corps and CDOTplan to build a rubble mound breakwater at the Shoal. Morgan Shoal reach is cited on pages 45-52, 58-9, 106-7, 138-9, 324-5, 335-7, 340, 367-392 (plan), 447-451 (drawings).
- Information session for Morgan Shoal Project, for potential bidders for the construction project, given by the Chicago Public Building Commission, the Chicago Park District and the City (CDOT), recording, May 18, 2021.
- CDOT and Chicago Park District slideshow to Public Building Commision presentation above regarding construction at Morgan Shoal, May 18, 2021
- Building commission picks architect and engineer for Morgan Shoal redesign. Evening Digest. Hyde Park Herald. October 7, 2021.
- Building Commission initiates major Morgan Shoal reconstruction project. Marc Monaghan. Evening Digest. Hyde Park Herald. June 4, 2021
- Chicago Park District's 2018 South Lakefront Framework Plan.
- City of Chicago’s 2021 Five Year Capital Plan: General Obligation Bond Booklet, showing capital funds raised for Morgan Shoal Project including Promontory Point on pp. 2-3 and p. 24.
- An endangered piece of history beneath Lake Michigan's surface: the shipwreak of the Silver Spray has rested a stone's throw from the Hyde Park shoreline for nearly 100 years. Julia Thiel. Reader. February 23, 2013.