There was moderate damage to some buildings near the quake, but nothing much happened in Chicago. A chunk of re-rod in the Edens Expressway in northwest Chicago was said to have been broken and exposed by the earthquake, causing damage to passing cars.
We felt nothing in our building. Keren and I slept soundly. In the U.S., the U.S.Geological Survey usually compiles information on these earthquakes. In fact, we're encouraged to report our experiences here.

Earthquakes are not completely unknown to this part of the country (see picture at right); we sit near the New Madrid Seismic Zone. It's not a normal seismic zone like those found near the intersection of plates (e.g. San Andreas in California, Dead Sea Fault in Israel -- see next map of earthquakes since 1963, where most fall along major fault lines). Rather, it's part of a Midcontinent Rift System, specifically the so-called "Reelfoot Rift".
The strongest recorded earthquake in Illinois was in 1968, at magnitude 5.4. However, a legendary earthquake in neighboring Missouri, the New Madrid earthquake, is said to have

I don't want to say in this high rise we live in long enough to find out if an earthquake will ever damage Chicago. The city hasn't even been here 200 years, short on geological time scales, so it doesn't seem impossible that we might get a real scare someday. If another 8.0 quake should strike within a few hundred miles of here, the last place I want to be is on the 9th floor of any building.
I don't think there was any major damage from the New Madrid quakes (3 biggies over about 3 months that year) as far away as Chicago--just some ringing of church bells in Boston maybe. I have a pretty good book on the subject if you ever have time to reat it.
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