City Cast Chicago logo
Display Ad: Children play near Chicago's Cloud Gate. "Big plans. Coming right up." with pizza graphic on left; "Enjoy Illinois. Meet in the middle." on right.

This Week in Chi History: U of I Navy Pier

Posted on October 17, 2022   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Sidney Madden

Sidney Madden

University of Illinois at Navy Pier in 1960. (Don Honick / Chicago History Museum / Getty)

University of Illinois at Navy Pier in 1960. (Don Honick / Chicago History Museum / Getty)

Any other Illini surprised to learn the college once had a Navy Pier campus



On Oct. 21, 1946, the university opened a city location for all the World War II veterans taking advantage of the GI Bill.



The two-year commuter campus, called the “Harvard on the Rocks," wasn’t exactly comfortable for students who complained of the distracting noises and smells of the pier’s working dock, the Tribune reported.



But that didn’t stop demand: The Navy Pier location quickly reached its capacity of 5,500 students, according to WTTW.



More than 100,000 students, including former Gov. James R. Thompson, attended the Navy Pier college during its almost 20 years in operation, according to the Encyclopedia of Chicago. (Author and Logan Square native Shel Silverstein lied about attending the campus.)



 In 1965, the campus relocated and expanded to the Near West Side, sparking displacement and gentrification in the area.

Share article

Hey Chicago

Stay connected to City Cast Chicago and get ready to join the local conversation.

Can't subscribe? Turn off your ad blocker and try again.