Chicago was a different place during the reign of Al Capone, but some of the many infamous locations he made famous are still around or have been recreated so you can see what the city was like during that era.
I've always known Quincy as being called "Little Chicago," but having one of the biggest criminal minds linked to a mansion in Quincy might make the statement true.
It's a fact that there are 60 miles of tunnels under Chicago, Illinois. A new claim says that they were used extensively by the mob and specifically by Al Capone as 'murder tunnels'. A new documentary explores what can be learned about that history.
It's interesting that there's a restaurant named after legendary baseball personality Harry Caray in Chicago, but that's not the most interesting thing about his restaurant. The fact that it includes a secret vault from the man who was Al Capone's right-hand man is the intriguing part.