The community area was annexed from Cicero Township in 1869. After the 1871 Great Chicago Fire, plant workers moved to the area to support a new McCormick Reaper Company plant. Demographics shifted in 1890 towards immigrants from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, with many Czech cultural institutions and churches established in the area. The Czech in the area migrated towards the suburbs until a new influx of residents, Jewish former residents of Maxwell Street, became the majority around 1918 before moving northward around 1955. In the 1950s, another wave of residents, black people from the South Side and American South, became the new majority. Real estate brokers used blockbusting and scare tactics to remove white residents throughout the next decade.
Beginning in the 1960s, riots, housing discrimination, predatory lending, and other social and economic disasters led to many businesses and residents leaving, with waves of job loss, abandoned property, and poverty ensuing. Community residents formed the grassroots organization the Contract Buyers League in 1968 to combat the discriminatory and predatory housing practices targeting the area. Assisted by a Jesuit seminarian and twelve white college students, the organization fought the discriminatory real estate practice known as "contract selling", renegotiating around 400 housing contracts and saving an estimated $25,000,000 for exploited black homeowners. In 1986, the Steans Family Foundation was founded to concentrate on grantmaking and programs in the community; the foundation noted signs of revitalization by the 1990s with new shopping and dining, the creation of Homan Square, and new residents moving in – this time Hispanic, and a stabilization in population decrease. Beginning in 2021, violence prevention groups led by READI Chicago, Communities Partnering 4 Peace, and Chicago CRED began using large-scale relationship-based intervention tactics in the neighborhood, and city funds created a Community Safety and Coordination Center to centralize community resources. From 2021 to 2022, North Lawndale saw a 58%[2] decrease in gun violence.
Reinvestment efforts in the decades following 1990 include proposals of new raised greenway parks and new affordable/mixed-income housing development, though the community has raised concerns of how to reinvest into the area without gentrification pricing out longtime residents. In 2022, the area had a new grocery store to alleviate the area food desert and received a proposal for a new STEAM academy.
Once part of Cicero Township in 1869, the eastern section of North Lawndale to Pulaski Road was annexed to Chicago by an act of the state legislature. Thereafter, streets were platted and drainage ditches were installed between Western (2400 west) and Pulaski Road (4000 west). The name "Lawndale" was supplied by Millard and Decker, a real estate firm which subdivided the area in 1870. In 1871, after the Great Chicago Fire, the McCormick Reaper Company (later International Harvester) constructed and occupied a new large plant in the South Lawndale neighborhood, and many plant workers moved to eastern North Lawndale. The remaining area west of Crawford Avenue was annexed in 1889 by a resolution of the Cook County Commissioners.
By 1890, North Lawndale was beginning to be heavily populated by Bohemian immigrants from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Czechs moved most heavily to the area from Crawford (Pulaski) west, and from 12th St. (Roosevelt Rd.) to 16th St. Real estate firm W.A. Merigold & Co. was the chief developer of that part of the community, which resulted in the name "Merigold" being associated with the neighborhood. Czech institutions popped up in Merigold, beginning in 1890 with the Slovanska Lipa/Sokol Tabor (Czech fraternal & gymnastic organization) at 13th & Karlov.
In 1892, the Bohemian Catholic Church, Our Lady of Lourdes, was established at the corner of 15th & Keeler. In 1909 the Czech Freethinkers School, Frantisek Palacky, was built at 1525 S. Kedvale. The Merigold neighborhood was also known as Novy Tabor (New Camp) by the Czech immigrants who settled there. The premier Czech institution, established in 1912, was the Ceska Beseda (Bohemian Club) at 3659 W. Douglas Blvd. This club was attended by Chicago's Czech elite, as well as the visiting Czech elite of the rest of the United States and Czechoslovakia.
It was the place for its members to celebrate and enjoy literature, drama, and music by the most renowned and talented Czech artists. The ethnic Bohemians spread throughout the rest of the North Lawndale neighborhood; they were the original owners of many of the beautiful greystone buildings that graced the picturesque streets of the neighborhood. Many of the elite members of the Bohemian community resided in the vicinity of the 1800 and 1900 blocks of South Millard Avenue.
These wealthy men, as well as the rest of the Czech residents of North Lawndale, were strongly committed to their neighborhood, and were involved in civic affairs. Anton Dvorak Public Elementary School at 3615 W. 16th St. was named after the revered 19th-century Czech composer Antonín Dvořák. Several members of the North Lawndale Czech community occupied positions in city as well as county government. In the post-World War I years, the Czechs began leaving the neighborhood for newer housing in the western suburbs of Cicero, Berwyn, Riverside, and Brookfield.
By the 1920s, many of the Czechs were gone, and Jews became the majority ethnic group of the neighborhood after having left the crowded confines of the Maxwell Street ghetto. North Lawndale later became known as being the largest Jewish settlement in the City of Chicago, with 25% of the city's Jewish population.[3]
From about 1918 to 1955, Jews, overwhelmingly of Russian and Eastern European origin, dominated the neighborhood, starting in North Lawndale and moving northward as they became more prosperous. In the 1950s, blacks migrated into the area from the South Side and from southern states. Unscrupulous real-estate dealers all but evacuated the white population by using blockbusting and scare tactics related to the change in ethnicity. In a span of about ten years, the white population of North Lawndale dropped from 87% to less than 9%, but the number of total residents increased.
Housing and racial discrimination; decline
In 1966, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. visited North Lawndale and "stayed in an apartment there to highlight the deplorable conditions, which included broken doors and rodent infestations. He used the experience to campaign against discriminatory housing practices nationwide, which helped pave the way for the Fair Housing Act."[4]
According to the Steans Family Foundation, in the decades following the 1960s:[3]
there were a series of economic and social disasters ... Riots followed the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., in 1968, destroying many of the stores along Roosevelt Road and accelerating a decline that led to a loss of 75% of the businesses in the community by 1970. Industries closed: International Harvester in 1969, Sears (partially in 1974 and completely by 1987), Zenith and Sunbeam in the 1970s, Western Electric in the 1980s. By 1970 African Americans who could also left North Lawndale, beginning a precipitous population decline that continues to this day.
The poverty resulting from the loss of thousands of jobs due to restructuring of industries from the 1960s to the 1980s meant that money was not available for property maintenance. Houses were abandoned and thousands of structures were leveled during this time. Much land sat vacant until the building and real estate boom of the 2000s. Due to these factors, the total neighborhood population dropped from 124,937 in 1960 to 41,768 by 2000.[3]
Writer Jonathan Kozol devotes a chapter of Savage Inequalities: Children in America's Schools (1991) to North Lawndale. He notes that a local resident called it "an industrial slum without the industry."[6] At the time, it had "one bank, one supermarket, 48 state lottery agents ... and 99 licensed bars."[6] According to the 1980 census, 58 percent of men and women 17 and older had no jobs.
In 1986, the Steans Family Foundation was founded to concentrate on grantmaking and programs in North Lawndale.[3] In the 1990s, the foundation noted signs of revitalization, "including a new shopping plaza and some new housing" associated with Homan Square, stabilization of the declining population, and a rise in new residents, mostly Hispanic. They constituted 4.5% of the population.
According to Charles Leeks, director of NHS, North Lawndale has the greatest concentration of greystones in the city. In late 2004, the City of Chicago enacted "The Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative" to promote the preservation of the neighborhood's greystone structures.
The Contract Buyers League (CBL) was a grassroots organization formed in 1968 by residents of the North Lawndale community. Assisted by Jack MacNamara, a Jesuit seminarian, and twelve white college students based at Presentation Roman Catholic Church, led by Msgr. Jack Egan, the CBL fought the discriminatory real estate practice known as "contract selling".
Groups similar to the CBL formed in cities around the country to combat contract selling. The CBL was the most influential in winning justice for exploited black homebuyers. The CBL renegotiated 400 contracts for its members, saving residents an estimated $25,000,000. The FHA finally responded to pressure from the CBL by reforming its discriminatory underwriting policies in order to lend to blacks.[citation needed]
Though the departure of Sears and other businesses from the area had devastated the neighborhood, the repurposing of the Sears complex – known as Homan Square – would aid in rebuilding the community. Beginning in the mid 1990s, homeowners came to fill approximately 350 affordable housing units, and a new grocery store and the neighborhood's first Starbucks opened. However, the financial crisis of 2007–2008 set the area back; the grocery store and Starbucks closed, replaced with a grocery store with more limited options and creating a food desert.[4] In the following years, community nonprofit organizations led change in the area: UCAN, a center for disadvantaged youths moved to the area in 2016,[4] and violence prevention groups led by READI Chicago, Communities Partnering 4 Peace, and Chicago CRED reduced violence and crime in the area by tens of percentage points after beginning area operations in 2021,[9] returning $3-$7 to the community for every $1 invested.[10] Later in 2021, the city opened the community-led Community Safety and Coordination Center, a centralized community resource center for many types of issues.[11]
In 2022, the neighborhood's first black-owned grocery store opened, using produce and grocery giveaways that served 300-500 families per day to build trust in the neighborhood, following a strategy from the Black Panther Party.[12] This followed a black-owned health food store that opened in the neighborhood in 2018.[13]
K-Town is a nickname for an area in Humboldt Park, North Lawndale, and West Garfield Park[note 1] between Pulaski Road and Cicero Avenue in which the names of many north–south avenues begin with the letter K (Karlov, Keating, Kedvale, Keeler, Kenneth, Kenton, Keystone, Kilbourn, Kildare, Kilpatrick, Kirkland, Knox, Kolin, Kolmar, Komensky, and Kostner). The pattern is a historical relic of a 1913 street-naming proposal, by which streets were to be systematically named according to their distance from the Illinois-Indiana border; K, the eleventh letter, was to be assigned to streets within the eleventh mile, counting west from the state line. The eleventh mile is the easternmost area in which the plan was widely implemented, as many neighborhoods to the east were already developed and had street names in place. The portion of K-Town bounded by W. Kinzie St, W. Cermak Rd, S. Kostner Ave, and S. Pulaski Rd was listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places on September 9, 2010.
John W. Fountain wrote in his 2005 memoir:
K-Town is a city within a city, a fifteen-minute drive from downtown Chicago's skyscrapers ... I used to joke that the "K" stood for "kill." I was only half-joking ... it had developed a reputation for being one of the rougher places in the city. ... K-Town is where my grandfather ... and all the other black folk that flocked to the West Side during the mid-to-late-1950s bought proud brick houses on tree-lined streets with crackless cement sidewalks. ...[14]
Homan Square
The site of the former Sears headquarters was redeveloped beginning in 1988 as Homan Square. In 1993, residents at a community discussion expressed fear of being developed out, with renters having few protections from rising rent.[15] The development has included new construction of owned and rental mixed-income housing; adaptive reuse and restoration of historic properties for use as community center, school, and other facilities; a new community pool and recreation center; and associated retail.[4] Homan Square is often used as an example of the revitalization of North Lawndale.[16] The former Sears tower was rehabbed and reopened to the public as "The John D. and Alexandra C. Nichols Tower" in 2015.[4] It now houses non-profit groups and youth association offices. Despite the renaming, the tower retains the "Sears Roebuck" plaque on top of the building. The 14th floor of the tower is now used as a space for parties and other community events. A windowless portion of the building indicates the tower's former connection to the Sears Merchandise Building. The complex before demolition was situated along the former Baltimore and Ohio Chicago Terminal Railroad line (now CSX).
Homan Square was the area that housed a police compound "likened to a CIA black site" in 2012, where people were held without their rights being respected.[17]
In 2022, the city heard proposals for the Altenheim Line, an elevated park similar to the Bloomingdale (606) Trail, that would be developed on the site of former rail lines with existing rail running near the park.[19] Some residents expressed concerns about gentrification; Alderman Michael Scott Jr. expressed that he was confident the community could avoid gentrification and keep residents there due to being able to control the market price with much land being owned by both the city and the Cook County Land Bank Authority.[19]
Crime
Historian Paul Street, citing a 2001 demographic study by Claritas Inc., writes that more than 70% of men aged 18–45 residing in North Lawndale had criminal records.[20]
Beginning in 2021, violence prevention groups led by READI Chicago, Communities Partnering 4 Peace, and Chicago CRED began using large-scale relationship-based intervention tactics in the neighborhood. Flatlining Violence Inspires Peace provided street outreach workers, a major component of the joint movement. The initiatives also included providing the residents – with a focus on young men – with social services such as trauma-informed[10]cognitive behavioral therapy and economic opportunities such as job training and legal support.[21] Three years ago, the city's budget for violence prevention had been less than $1 million per year.[21] In 2021, the city spent approximately $50 million on violence prevention, with additional support from private funds,[22] which allowed violence prevention groups to work collaboratively instead of competing for grants.[23] The funds also supported the summer 2021 creation of a new, community-led Community Safety and Coordination Center, a central site for resources for gender-based violence, housing initiatives, youth programs, and physical and mental health, as well as job readiness programs partnered with labor unions.[11] In 2022, the budget accounts for $85 million towards similar services.[23]
Evaluations from the University of Chicago Crime Lab in 2022 found that participants in the youth program Choose to Change had "48% fewer violent crime arrests and 32% fewer school misconduct incidents than their control group peers," while participants in the male gun violence prevention program READI Chicago had "63 percent fewer arrests and 19% fewer victimizations for shootings and homicides."[9] The Crime Lab further stated that there is "about 85% confidence that for every dollar invested in a program like READI Chicago, society reaps $3 to $7 in return."[10]
From 2021 to 2022, North Lawndale saw a 58% decrease in gun violence.[2]
As of 2020, North Lawndale experienced much student loss, much of it due to people leaving the city but also due to having "the most charter schools and [the] highest percentage of students enrolled in charter schools" out of all Chicago community areas.[25] Less than 30% of students in the West Side attended their zoned public schools.[25] Early the same year, charter elementary school Frazier Preparatory Academy was closed for performance reasons, and students were split between Lawndale Community Academy, Sumner Math and Science Community Academy, and Crown Community Academy of Fine Arts. Later that year, the community heard proposals to merge the three schools into one new STEAM school due to low enrollment.
By 2022, the neighborhood received a new proposal to create the new STEAM elementary school without consolidating the other three schools; the new school's student body would be made of 80% Lawndale residents and 20% from elsewhere in the city.[26]
Notable people
Arts, literature, and entertainment
Shelley Berman (1925–2017), comedian, actor, writer, teacher, lecturer and poet. He was a childhood resident of North Lawndale.[27]
Kim Novak (born 1933), actor, lived at 1910 S. Springfield Ave.[32]
Harold Ramis (1944–2014), actor, comedian, director and writer. Ramis was a childhood resident of North Lawndale living at 13th Street and Keeler Avenue and 14th Street and Kostner Avenue before his family moved to Rogers Park as part of the white flight of the era.[33]
Andrea Jenkins (born 1961), first black openly transgender woman elected to public office in the United States upon her election to the Minneapolis City Council in 2017. Jenkins was a childhood resident of North Lawndale.[37][38]
Meyer Levin (1905–1981), attorney. He was a childhood resident of North Lawndale.[27]
Benjamin F. Lewis (1909–1963), member of the Chicago City Council from Chicago's 24th ward from 1958 until he was murdered in his ward office in 1963. He was a resident of 3457 West 13th Place.[40]
Another Showtime TV series, The Chi, which debuted in 2018 and is set on the South Side of Chicago, films in the neighborhood.[citation needed]
Notes
^Although these long streets extend beyond the bounds of North Lawndale, and West Garfield Park, published sources identify the name K-Town as referring specifically to an area of North Lawndale, and West Garfield Park, i.e. the area through which these streets pass.
^Watkins, William Henry. Black Protest Thought and Education (Volume 237 of Counterpoints : studies in the postmodern theory of education, ISSN 1058-1634). Peter Lang, 2005. ISBN0820463124, 9780820463124. p. 185 (Section "Farragut High School")
^"North Lawndale". Encyclopedia. Chicago History. Archived from the original on January 30, 2013. Retrieved September 8, 2008. Against the wishes of King and his aides, housing authorities fixed the place up a bit before the activist and his family moved in. King later noted that in the more confined space, his children became more irritable and less patient. He also bonded with local residents by demonstrating his facility with a pool cue in a nearby billiards parlor.
Santo Zosimus (Zosima) dari PalestinaYang dimuliakan (Rahib)Lahirskt. 460Palestina, Keuskupan Timur (Kekaisaran Romawi Timur)Meninggalskt. 560Palestina, Keuskupan Timur (Kekaisaran Romawi Timur)Dihormati diGereja Ortodoks Koptik AleksandriaGereja OrtodoksGereja Ortodoks OrientalGereja Katolik RomaPesta4 April Yang dimuliakan[1] Zosimas dari Palestina, juga disebut Zosima, merupakan Santo di dalam Gereja Ortodoks dan Ritus Timur. Hari peringatannya jatuh pada tanggal 4 April. Santo Zos...
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Little Island, Waterford – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (November 2012) (Learn how and when...
مستشفى الأمل للتأهيل معلومات عامة القرية أو المدينة نابلس الدولة فلسطين سنة التأسيس كمركز1991 (منذ 33 سنة) كمستشفى2018 (منذ 6 سنوات) خدمات المستشفى عدد الأسرّة 10 أسرة تعديل مصدري - تعديل مستشفى الأمل للتأهيل مستشفى أهلي في مدينة نابلس، في الضفة الغربية، تأسس في البداية كمركز...
American sportswriter This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable, independent, third-party sources. (February 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) For the Scrabble player, see Joel Sherman. Joel Sherman is a sportswriter for the New York Post. He is also a baseball insider wit...
Eastern Creek International RacewayLokasiEastern Creek, New South WalesZona waktuGMT+10Koordinat33°48′15″S 150°52′14″E / 33.80417°S 150.87056°E / -33.80417; 150.87056Koordinat: 33°48′15″S 150°52′14″E / 33.80417°S 150.87056°E / -33.80417; 150.87056PengelolaAustralian Racing Drivers ClubDibuka10 November 1990Acara besarV8 SupercarsA1 Grand PrixGrand Prix motor balap AustraliaMuscle Car MastersSirkuit Grand PrixPanjang3.930 ...
Explosion in Braamfontein NZASM 40 Tonner locomotive being recovered at Braamfontein after the explosion The Braamfontein Explosion was an explosion of a freight train carrying dynamite in Braamfontein, a suburb of Johannesburg, in 1896. It was one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history. Explosion Part of the track where the explosion took place at Braamfontein on 19 February 1896. The crater created by the dynamite explosion (looking west) at Braamfontein on 19 February 1896. On 16...
1568 peace treaty ending the Austrian-Turkish War For other treaties signed in Adrianople (Edirne), see Treaty of Edirne (disambiguation). This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources.Find sources: Treaty of Adrianople 1568 – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2024) Treaty of Adrianople15...
Finnish artistic gymnast Maisa KuusikkoKuusikko at the 2019 Junior World ChampionshipsPersonal informationFull nameMaisa KuusikkoCountry represented FinlandBorn (2005-06-16) 16 June 2005 (age 18)Tampere, Pirkanmaa, FinlandDisciplineWomen's artistic gymnasticsLevelSenior International EliteYears on national team2018–present (FIN)ClubTampereen VoimistelijoidenHead coach(es)Igor Cherepov Medal record Women's artistic gymnastics Representing Finland FIG World...
Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento militari francesi non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso delle fonti. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Pontus De la Gardie Pontus De la Gardie (Aude, 1520 – Fiume Narva, 5 novembre 1585) è stato un nobile e militare francese al servizio della Corona di Svezia. Biografia Era figlio di Jacques De la Gard...
1995 compilation album by Alan JacksonThe Greatest Hits CollectionCompilation album by Alan JacksonReleasedOctober 24, 1995RecordedJune 26, 1989-May 31, 1995GenreCountryLength66:24LabelAristaProducerScott HendricksKeith StegallAlan Jackson chronology Who I Am(1994) The Greatest Hits Collection(1995) Everything I Love(1996) Singles from The Greatest Hits Collection Tall, Tall TreesReleased: October 9, 1995 I'll TryReleased: January 1, 1996 HomeReleased: April 15, 1996 Professional rati...
Cet article court présente un sujet plus développé dans : héraldique. Écu Champ Support Support Cri de guerre Cimier Timbre Lambrequin Casque Couronne Terrasse Ordres Pièce Charge Devise Dextre Senestre éléments des armoiries Illustration du poète Hartmann von Aue représenté en chevalier dans le Codex Manesse (1305-1315). L'adoption du haubert et du heaume rend le combattant méconnaissable lors d'une guerre ou d'un tournoi, d'où l'intérêt de l'identifier grâce à des arm...
Politics of the Dominican Republic Constitution Constitutional Court Law Legislature Congress of the Dominican Republic Chamber of Deputies President of the Chamber Radhamés Camacho Senate President of the Senate Reinaldo Pared Pérez Executive President of the Dominican Republic (list) Luis Abinader (PRM) Vice President of the Dominican Republic Raquel Peña (PRM) Cabinet Judiciary Supreme Court of the Dominican Republic National Council of the Magistracy Council of the Judiciary Branch Na...
Fictional family This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article possibly contains original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations. Statements consisting only of original research should be removed. (June 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message)This article is written like a personal reflection, personal essay, or argumen...
Politique arctique de l'Union européenne Description Politique de l'Union européenne Origine Politique étrangère et de sécurité commune :- Résolution du Parlement européen de 2008[1]- Communication de la Commission de 2008[2] modifier La politique arctique de l'Union européenne est la politique développée par l'Union européenne à l'égard de la région arctique. Définition et enjeux de l'Arctique Définition L'isotherme à 10 °C définissant la région arctique. L'A...
FA Cup 1872-1873 Competizione FA Cup Sport Calcio Edizione 2ª Organizzatore FA Date dal 19 ottobre 1872al 29 marzo 1873 Luogo Inghilterra Partecipanti 16 Formula Eliminazione diretta Risultati Vincitore Wanderers(2º titolo) Secondo Oxford University Semi-finalisti Queen's Park Statistiche Incontri disputati 13 Gol segnati 35 (2,69 per incontro) Cronologia della competizione 1871-1872 1873-1874 Manuale La Football Association Challenge Cup 1872-1873 è s...
Universitas Padjadjaranᮅᮔᮤᮗᮨᮁᮞᮤᮒᮞ᮪ ᮕᮏᮏᮛᮔ᮪ Tampilkan peta yang diperbesarTampilkan peta yang diperkecil InformasiJenisPerguruan Tinggi Negeri Badan HukumDidirikan11 September 1957; 67 tahun lalu (1957-09-11)Lembaga indukKementerian Pendidikan, Kebudayaan, Riset, dan TeknologiRektorProf. Dr. Hj. Rina Indiastuti, SE., MSIE.Staf akademik1.790 (2013)[1]Jumlah mahasiswa32.931 (2016)[1]Sarjana23.999 (2016)[1]Magister5.182 (...
Form of gymnastics using a wheel-shaped apparatus Aachen (1996)RollAix Performers on ice, RWTH Aachen U. (2009) Russian circus performer (2009)Würzburg (1931) Wheel gymnastics (German: Rhönradturnen) is a form of gymnastics that originated in Germany. Wheel gymnasts do exercises in a large wheel or hoop known as the Rhönrad, gymnastics wheel, gym wheel, or German wheel, in the beginning also known as ayro wheel, aero wheel, and Rhon rod. Wheel design The large wheel consists of two circles...