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Today in Chicago History: Parents arrested for leaving daughters ‘home alone’ while they took Mexico trip

December 29, 2025 by Chicago Tribune

Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Dec. 29, according to the Tribune’s archives.

Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.

Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

  • High temperature: 63 degrees (1984)
  • Low temperature: Minus 15 degrees (1880)
  • Precipitation: 0.93 inches (2019)
  • Snowfall: 5.8 inches (2000)
“The Adventures of Kathlyn,” which is considered the first motion picture serial, debuted in Chicago theaters on Dec. 29, 1913. Its 27 episodes were also produced at Chicago’s Selig Polyscope Co. (Chicago Tribune)

1913: Like a good cliffhanger? The first episode of “The Adventures of Kathlyn” — which was produced by the Chicago-based Selig Polyscope Co. — debuted in local theaters.

Kathlyn Williams starred as Kathlyn, the daughter of a California man who collects wild animals. After receiving a letter that he was captured in India, she travels there to fight for his release. Charles Clary was the villainous Prince Umbullah, whose mission through 27 reels was to capture Kathlyn — or put an end to her.

Archive: When Chicago and Essanay Films created Hollywood

The release of the episodes was spaced about two weeks apart. In a clever marketing tactic, a book was released at the same time as the serial and adventure lovers could follow along with the story, which was also printed in the Tribune.

Bill Wade (No. 9, at right center) plunges into the line to score the Chicago Bears' winning touchdown in the NFL championship game on Dec. 29, 1963 against the New York Giants. (Tony Berardi Jr./Chicago's American)
Bill Wade (No. 9, at right center) plunges into the line to score the Chicago Bears’ winning touchdown in the NFL championship game on Dec. 29, 1963, against the New York Giants. (Tony Berardi Jr./Chicago’s American)

1963: The Chicago Bears beat the New York Giants 14-10 to win the NFL championship.

Chicago Bears coach Jim Dooley was fired on Dec. 29, 1971. (Chicago Tribune)
Chicago Bears coach Jim Dooley was fired on Dec. 29, 1971. (Chicago Tribune)

1971: A 1-13 season in 1969 combined with bad luck and worse quarterbacks doomed Bears coach Jim Dooley. He became the first Bears coach to be fired after going 6-8 in 1971.

“Halas never forgave me for the 1-13,” Dooley said in a 2001 interview.

He later returned as an assistant under Mike Ditka.

Vintage Chicago Tribune: Bears playoff appearances — including the ‘Sneakers Game,’ the ‘Fog Bowl’ and ‘Double Doink’

A crowd of 45,801 endured 9-degree temperatures and an 11-mph wind at Wrigley Field to watch a dominant Bears defense intercept five passes by Giants quarterback Y.A. Tittle — who was hobbled from a hit by Larry Morris, the game’s MVP. Quarterback Bill Wade sneaked for both touchdowns after interceptions of Tittle passes by Morris and Ed O’Bradovich.

It was the final championship for George Halas as coach.

David and Sharon Schoo leave the Kane County Courthouse on Jan. 12, 1993, after appearing before Judge John L. Petersen and filing a motion for a gag order, which was denied. (Bill Hogan/Chicago Tribune)
David and Sharon Schoo leave the Kane County Courthouse on Jan. 12, 1993, after appearing before Judge John L. Petersen and filing a motion for a gag order, which was denied. (Bill Hogan/Chicago Tribune)

1992: David and Sharon Schoo, of St. Charles, were arrested upon their return to Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport from Acapulco, Mexico. David, an engineer at a smoke alarm company, and Sharon, a homemaker, left their 9-year-old and 4-year-old daughters at home. Later in the day, they were charged with felony child abandonment, cruelty to children and misdemeanor child endangerment. Since their maternal grandmother could not care for them, the girls were moved to a foster home.

The Schoos left their children home with “TV dinners and cereal, but no instructions on how to reach their mother and father,” the Tribune reported.

The plight of the Schoo daughters came to light one day after the couple left on the vacation. On Dec. 21, 1992, the two girls filled a bath tub to overflowing, which caused an electrical short circuit in the home that triggered a smoke alarm. They called 911 and then went to a neighbor’s house to wait for police. After the children were discovered alone, they told police their parents had left them home by themselves previously for extended periods.

Vintage Chicago Tribune: Revisiting ‘Home Alone’ sites with the film’s location manager

The Schoos were held on $50,000 bonds each at Kane County Jail and were bailed out by Sharon Schoo’s estranged father. Two weeks later they pleaded not guilty. In February 1993, a grand jury returned a 64-count indictment of the parents for charges that included aggravated battery, misdemeanor battery and felony possession of marijuana.

In a plea-bargain agreement designed to spare their daughters more trauma, the Schoos each pleaded guilty in April 1993 to a misdemeanor count of child neglect. The parents received custody of their girls but also were sentenced to two years of probation each and ordered to perform 200 hours of community service.

In an update from 1997, the Tribune reported the Schoos terminated their parental rights to the girls, who were then living with adoptive parents in another locale. Sharon Schoo died in 2003. The attorneys who represented the Schoos were suspended from practicing law for a year for trying to sell the couple’s story to television.

Illinois became one of the first states with specific rules for when a child can be left alone, as a result of the Schoos’ case.

Chicago Bears head coach Marc Trestman, left, and general manager Phil Emery hold a news conference at Halas Hall in Lake Forest on Jan. 2, 2014. (José M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune)
Chicago Bears head coach Marc Trestman, left, and general manager Phil Emery hold a news conference at Halas Hall in Lake Forest on Jan. 2, 2014. (José M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune)

2014: Bears coach Marc Trestman was fired — along with Bears general manager Phil Emery — for missing the playoffs in both of his seasons.

Ben Johnson is the 19th Chicago Bears head coach. Here’s a look at how past coaches fared — and why they left.

Want more vintage Chicago?

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Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather at krumore@chicagotribune.com and mmather@chicagotribune.com

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