6 Best Sights in Chicago, Illinois

Background Illustration for Sights

We've compiled the best of the best in Chicago - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Chicago History Museum

Lincoln Park Fodor's choice

Seeking to bring Chicago's often complicated history to life, this museum has several strong permanent exhibits, including Chicago: Crossroads of America, which celebrates homegrown cultural contributions from urban blues to the skyscraper and demystifies tragedies like the Haymarket Affair, in which a bomb thrown during a labor rally in 1884 led to eight anarchists being convicted of conspiracy. In Sensing Chicago, kids can take a spin on a penny-farthing bicycle or dress up like a Chicago-style hot dog. Don't miss City on Fire: Chicago 1871, which immerses visitors in the destruction and aftermath of the notorious inferno that displaced one-third of the city’s residents in just two days. Like most of the exhibits here, it's presented in a way that's comprehensible to kids, but substantive enough for adults. 

DuSable Museum of African American History

Fodor's choice

Sitting alongside the lagoons of Washington Park, the DuSable Museum, a Smithsonian Institution affiliate, offers an evocative exploration of the African American experience. The most moving displays are about slavery—rusted shackles used on slave ships are among the poignant and disturbing artifacts—as well as Chicago's role in the civil rights movement. The museum also has a significant art collection.

Field Museum

South Loop Fodor's choice

More than 400,000 square feet of exhibit space fill this gigantic museum, which explores cultures and environments from around the world. Interactive displays examine such topics as the secrets of Egyptian mummies, the art and innovations of people living in the Ancient Americas, and the evolution of life on Earth. Originally funded by Chicago retailer Marshall Field, the museum was founded in 1893 to hold material gathered for the World's Columbian Exposition; its current neoclassical home opened in 1921. The museum holds the world's best dinosaur collections but the star of the show is 65-million-year-old "Sue," the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossil ever found. Don't hesitate to take toddlers to the Field. In the Crown Family PlayLab, kids two to six years old can play house in a re-created pueblo and compare their footprints with a dinosaur's.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Jane Addams Hull-House Museum

University Village Fodor's choice

Hull House was the birthplace of social work. Social welfare pioneers and peace advocates Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr started the American settlement house movement in this redbrick Victorian in 1889. They wrought near-miracles in the surrounding community, which was then a slum for new immigrants. Pictures and letters add context to the two museum buildings, which re-create the homey setting the residents experienced. The museum, located on the UIC campus, also hosts a range of events typically geared toward progressive social movements.

Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures

This gem (known until 2023 as the Oriental Institute) began with artifacts collected by University of Chicago archaeologists in the early 20th century (one is rumored to have been the model for Indiana Jones) and has expanded into an interesting, informative museum with a jaw-dropping array of artifacts from the ancient Middle East. With the largest collection of such antiquities in the United States, you'll see amulets, mummies, limestone reliefs, gold jewelry, ivories, pottery, and bronzes from the 8th millennium BC through the 13th century AD. A 17-foot-tall statue of King Tut was excavated from the ruins of a temple in western Thebes in 1930.

1155 E. 58th St., Chicago, IL, 60637, USA
773-702–9507
Sight Details
Suggested admission $10
Closed Mon.

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Polish Museum of America

Wicker Park

The Chicago metro area has the largest Polish population of any city outside Warsaw, and this museum celebrates that fact. Take a trip to the old country by strolling through exhibits of folk costumes, memorabilia from Pope John Paul II, and the reconstructed rooms of famed pianist and statesman Ignacy Paderewski. There's also Hussar armor and an 8-foot-long sleigh in the shape of a dolphin. Chat up the knowledgeable docents and you might be treated to tales of Paderewski's romances or the exploits of the progressive 13th-century queen Jadwiga. 

984 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago, IL, 60642, USA
773-384–3352
Sight Details
$10
Closed Mon., Wed., and Fri.

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