Island delights: a bike tour of Blue Island with Active Trans’ Jane Healy

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Jane Healy, Mike Healy and Jason Berry.

[This piece also appeared in Checkerboard City, John’s weekly transportation column in Newcity magazine, which hits the streets in print on Wednesday evenings.]

Jane Healy is a diehard booster of the blue-collar south suburb of Blue Island, and she’s the ultimate biker mama. [I borrowed this phrase from J. Harry Wray’s book Pedal Power, which also profiles Jane, since I couldn’t think of a better term to describe her.] Along with her husband Mike and kids Will, Katie and Genevieve, she usually pedals to get around this scruffy railroad town of some 22,500 people, located just south of Chicago and straddling the Calumet-Sag Channel. Jane is board president of the Active Transportation Alliance advocacy group, and she’s been spearheading Blue Island’s current bike boom, helping get hundreds of local kids jazzed about cycling.

In 2006 Healy got the idea to lead a “bike train,” escorting a group of children to and from her kids’ school on cycles. “Pretty soon every time I’d open my garage door I’d have hordes of small children running toward me asking to go on a bike ride.” Soon she found grant money to launch Cal-Sag Cycles, an earn-a-bike program where teens learn bike safety and repair skills and build their own Fuji hybrids.

“A lot of the kids are very at-risk and are targeted for help by their teachers,” she says. “One kid, Rodsean, was struggling, but he’s a smart kid who’s really good with his hands.” Rodsean flourished in the program and eventually wound up working as chief mechanic for the school district’s annual Bike Day, which draws some 500 students for a Critical Mass-style bike parade through the town.

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Bike Day in Blue Island.

Healy is convinced that Blue Island is a diamond in the rough, so she invited me to join her for a two-wheeled pub tour of the city, filling me in on the town’s history and urban planning issues along the way. “Blue Island is quirky, it’s historic and it’s a really good ethnic mix,” she says. “You see kids riding bikes down the street and they’re all colors. You hear lots of Spanish, and you also hear Italian being spoken by the nuns heading into the Italian grocery store.”

The city is located on a six-mile-long glacial ridge that also runs through Chicago’s Beverly and Morgan Park neighborhoods from 87th Street to 130th Street. Back when the region was covered by ancient “Lake Chicago,” the precursor to Lake Michigan, this land was literally an island. “After the lake receded, black oaks grew on the ridge, and early settlers thought it looked like a blue island standing in the prairie,” Healy says.

The town of Blue Island was founded in 1835 as a way station for travelers along the Vincennes Trail, now Vincennes Avenue, from southwest Indiana to Chicago. In the 1860s Healy’s mother’s family came to Blue Island from Germany as part of a wave of German immigration that lead to four breweries being founded here, and the beer industry continued here until Prohibition.

As befitting a town with a rich brewing history, Blue Island has a gaggle of good bars, so after I ride Metra’s Rock Island Line to 119th Street and hike ten minutes to Jane’s house, she fits me out with a bike and we hit the road with Mike to visit a few of them. After rolling down a shady residential street lined with bungalows we come to the Maplewood Inn, 12432 Maple Avenue, a cozy wood-paneled tavern. Jason Berry, an urban planner with the city of Blue Island meets us there, riding a bike with an “I Love Blue Island” sticker. We just lean our rides against an outside wall—Healy says there’s no need to lock them in this relatively sleepy burg.

There’s a vintage Budweiser Clydesdale lamp hanging inside, and a large sign behind the bar features a poem:

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We order MGDs and a cup of house-made, booze-soaked cherries. Berry tells me Blue Island recently adopted its first active transportation plan, which features a whole section on the Cal-Sag Trail, a proposed greenway that would run some thirty miles along the canal and the Calumet River. The trail would connect a dozen or so suburbs from Lemont to Burnham, including several underserved communities. “The plan realizes how damn important that trail is to Blue Island,” Berry says. “It will be transformational.”

One of the fun things about this town is that its rolling topography is a departure from pancake-flat Chicago. To demonstrate, Jane takes us to “Dead Man’s Gulch,” a steep cobblestone alley that dips down to cross a street and then rises up again. Bombing the hill is a rite of passage for Cal-Sag Cycles kids. “When you can go down Dead Man’s Gulch without hitting your brakes you have earned the badge of courage,” Jane says.

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Dead Man’s Gulch.

Next we roll to Haas’ Tavern, 12725 Western Avenue, whose exterior wall still sports a faded “ghost sign” mural ad for the defunct Gettleman beer company. Inside the dive features framed portraits of Richard J. Daley, FDR and Harry S. Truman, as well as a defunct shuffleboard table. Mike grew up in the area and tells us he used to hang out in this bar when he was nineteen, shortly before the drinking age was raised.

We cruise the careworn Western Avenue business district then stop on the Western bridge over the channel to take in the surprisingly breathtaking view. A couple of other rusty spans are visible to the east, as well as a water aeration station that looks like a large stair-stepped waterfall. Its purpose is to add oxygen to the canal so that fish can thrive. Jane tells me University of Chicago crew teams row on the canal, and a couple of motorboats speed by as we gaze at the water.

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Next we check out a dilapidated bridge over the Little Calumet River, which meanders from the Cal-Sag southeast to Indiana. The river is flanked with lush vegetation and it almost feels like we’re hanging out on the bayou. A retaining wall nearby is covered with colorful graffiti. “That’s what’s great about Blue Island,” says Berry. “It’s forgotten enough that this stuff still exists.” We backtrack to the Riverside Tap, 13351 Aulwurm Drive, a bar with a huge backyard where brawny men in ball caps and sleeveless t-shirts pitch horseshoes in multiple horseshoe pits.

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The Little Calumet River.

After that we roll down to the Maple Tree Inn, located below the Western Avenue bridge at 13301 South Olde Western, featuring some of the best New Orleans-style food in the region. Mardi Gras posters and giant masks are on display, and Trombone Shorty and other Crescent City favorites play on the sound system. Jane points out that the beautiful wooden back bar is the original one from the Schlitz pavilion at the 1893 Columbian Exposition.

Over pints of Louisiana-brewed Abita beer we talk more about strategies to help hardscrabble Blue Island live up to its potential as an economically viable community and the bike capital of the south suburbs. “CNT [Center for Neighborhood Technology] and every other planning acronym in Chicago has been down here doing studies,” Berry says. “But how do we leverage all that academic and professional interest into a transformation? How do you turn a bike plan into bike lanes?”

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John Greenfield

John has lived in Chicago since 1989 and has worked a number of bicycle jobs, from messenger to mechanic to managing the Chicago Department of Transportation's bicycle parking program, arranging the installation of over 3,700 bike racks. He writes regularly for Time Out Chicago, Newcity, Momentum and Urban Velo magazines and works at Boulevard Bikes in Logan Square.

5 thoughts on “Island delights: a bike tour of Blue Island with Active Trans’ Jane Healy”

  1. I agree that Blue Island is a diamond in the rough with great potential.  I’d love to see it rebuild a more robust tax base so it can deal with the infrastructure issues (pavement and bridges) that are an obstacle to good cycling conditions.  

    Sounds like you had a fine tour.  Ending at Maple Tree Inn – perfect!  I’ll drink to that – Abita Turbodog.

  2. Thanks for the tour of Blue Island – and for the work you’re doing to make biking so popular and fun.  Keep working with the City and other government people – and be ready to take advantage of stimulus money when it’s available.  There are lots of civic works being done to stimulate the economy.  If you persevere, you’ll accomplish the admirable goals you’re seeing to achieve.  Good luck!

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