Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Feb. 2, according to the Tribune’s archives.
Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.
Vintage Chicago Tribune Special Edition: ‘It’s GROUNDHOG DAY!!!!!’
Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)
- High temperature: 52 degrees (2020)
- Low temperature: Minus 16 degrees (1996)
- Precipitation: 1.45 inches (1983)
- Snowfall: 6.6 inches (2011)
1925: Sears opened its first retail store on Chicago’s West Side.
The Homan Square site was already home to the company’s mail-order plant when the store, which featured an optical shop and a soda fountain, opened. Sears national headquarters was based here on a 55-acre site. Operations moved to the new Sears Tower headquarters in 1973, then to Hoffman Estates in 1995.
Sears closed its last Chicago store in 2018.
2008: Five women — 42-year-old store manager Rhoda McFarland of Joliet; Jennifer Bishop, 34, of South Bend, Indiana; Sarah Szafranski, 22, of Oak Forest; Connie Woolfolk, 37, of Flossmoor; and Carrie Hudek Chiuso, 33, of Frankfort — were killed, shot execution-style, inside a Lane Bryant women’s clothing store in Tinley Park by a gunman who posed as a delivery man. A sixth woman, also a store employee, was shot in the neck but survived and provided police with a description of the killer. The case is still unsolved.
2011: Snowmageddon. Seven people died during a Jan. 31-Feb. 2 snowstorm (nicknamed the Groundhog Day blizzard) that dropped 21.2 inches — the third largest snowfall in the city’s history.
Chicago’s 10 largest snowfalls since 1886 — and how the Tribune covered them
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