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Washington Park Subdivision

Coordinates: 41°47′00″N 87°36′44″W / 41.783457°N 87.61219°W / 41.783457; -87.61219

The Washington Park Subdivision is the name of the historic 3-city block by 4-city block subdivision in the northwest corner of the Woodlawn community area, on the South Side of Chicago in Illinois that stands in the place of the original Washington Park Race Track. The area evolved as a redevelopment of the land previously occupied by the racetrack. It was originally an exclusively white neighborhood that included residential housing, amusement parks, and beer gardens.

Washington Park Subdivision is south of Washington Park. (Chicago Park District - green, University of Chicago - lavender)

During the late 1920s and 1930s, the area became the subject of discriminatory twenty-year covenants (private real-estate agreements), which at first had been upheld by the United States Supreme Court but were later determined to be unenforceable by the court, beginning with a challenge in a seminal case brought by Carl Hansberry. The case is a vital part of legal studies and considered an important part of a broad class of histories. The play Raisin in the Sun is based on Lorraine Hansberry's struggles in this neighborhood.

Location

Due to the non-rectangular shape of the Washington Park community area, the original Washington Park Race Track actually occupied the Southern two-thirds of the Washington Park Subdivision, which is a 4-city block (8 east-west half-blocks) by 3-city block area in northwest corner of the Woodlawn community area and bounded by Dr. Martin Luther King Drive to the west, South Cottage Grove Avenue to the East, East 60th Street to the North and East 63rd Street to the South. This is the area directly south of Washington Park and both south and east of the Washington Park community area. It would be part of the Washington Park community area if the community area were to complete its logical proper rectangle.[1]

Historical significance

Between 1884 and 1905, the race track occupied part of the area now known as Washington Park Subdivision.[1] After the city outlawed gambling, the area was redeveloped as a residential housing subdivision with neighboring commercial recreation such as the White City amusement park that flourished until the Great Depression.[1] The neighborhood also included a beer garden that was remodeled by Frank Lloyd Wright.[1][2]

Between 1900 and 1934, the African American population in Chicago grew from 30,000 to 236,000. In this time, Chicago's demographics changed so that instead of having this population diluted in scattered places, it was concentrated in two large strips of land. The concentration was enforced by violence at first, but restrictive covenants became the preferred way to enforce segregation after a few decades.[3]

When necessary, community organizations used violence to pursue their segregationist purposes, and between 1917 and 1921, bomb use discouraged encroachment into majority white neighborhoods. The bombs were used at the residences of African Americans as well as the properties of real estate agents and bankers.[4] In 1919, African American banking magnate Jesse Binga, the owner of the first Chicago bank to be operated by African Americans, and the first African American who lived in the Washington Park Subdivision,[5] endured five bombings of his home by angry whites.[6] Binga lived on the block diagonally northwest of the northwest boundary of the subdivision at 5922 South Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive.[7]

Although they were previously rare, racially restrictive covenants among property owners that outlawed the purchase, lease, or occupation of their properties by African Americans became common in Chicago in the 1920s, following the Great Migration.[8] Local businessmen and the University of Chicago became alarmed at the prospect of poorer African Americans moving from the Black Belt due to a combination of racial succession and economic decline.[2] In 1926, the United States Supreme Court upheld racially restrictive covenants in Corrigan v. Buckley (271 U.S. 323 (1926)).[3] In 1927, the Chicago Real Estate Board (CREB) sent representatives throughout the city to promote such covenants, which it viewed as a progressive alternative to violence. The board representatives provided model contracts drafted by the Chicago Plan Commission as part of their efforts. By 1928, the Hyde Park Herald reported that the covenants prevailed throughout the South Side,[8] and 95% of the homes in the subdivision were covenanted.[9][10] Most African American neighborhoods were bounded by covenanted areas since 85% of Chicago was covenanted.[3]

Legal issues

Between 1928 and 1940, the subdivision was a legal battleground. In 1928, landlords in the subdivision signed the covenants in which they agreed that they would not rent to non-whites. The language of the covenants state that no properties in the subdivision "...shall be sold, given, conveyed or leased to any negro or negroes, and no permission or license to use or occupy any part thereof shall be given to any negro except house servants or janitors or chauffeurs employed thereon..."[11] The covenants were signed by "owners of land on the one or the other side of Evans, Langley, Champlain, St. Lawrence, Rhodes, Eberhart, Vernon and South Park Avenues, between 60th and 63rd Streets and on 60th, 61st and 62nd Streets between South Park and Cottage Grove Avenues" on September 30, 1927, and they were recorded at the Cook County Register of Deeds on February 1, 1928. They were intended to be valid and in force until January 1, 1948.[11]

The Great Depression decreased white demand for the subdivision's properties. A few well-off African Americans convinced some owners to sell properties to them. The most famous case was that of Dr. James L. Hall, who rented a property located at 419 E. 60th St. from the white Issac Kleiman.[12] In 1933, Olive Ida Burke (the wife of Mr. Burke—a future defendant in the famous Hansberry v. Lee case)[3] sued Kleiman in the case now known as Burke v. Kleiman.[3] The circuit court granted an injunction in favor of the plaintiffs, which was upheld on appeal by the Supreme Court of Illinois.[13] The plaintiffs stipulated that as of 1928 more than 95% of the property owners signed the covenant. This stipulation was later proved false—only 54% had actually signed.[3]

In 1937, Carl Hansberry purchased a property from James Joseph Burke located at 6140 South Rhodes. Anna M. Lee, and other promoters of the covenants, sued to prevent Hansberry's family from living in the neighborhood.[14] This led to the Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U.S. 32 (1940) case. Defendants argued that the stipulation made previously in Burke v. Kleiman that more than 95% of the owners had signed the covenant was false and the case should be re-adjudicated.[3] Plaintiffs, while admitting to the fact, contended that the principle of res judicata barred courts from rehearing the old arguments.[3] The Illinois courts ruled in favor of plaintiffs. However the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People decided to represent the buyer in the United States Supreme Court. The case caught the attention of national real estate magazines and African American newspapers.[10] The U. S. Supreme Court eventually reversed that ruling stating the application of res judicata in this case would violate Fourteenth Amendment.[3] The play Raisin in the Sun was inspired by Lorraine Hansberry's time in the neighborhood after her father won the repeal of restrictive covenants.[15]

The result of Hansberry v. Lee led to racial succession. White tenants were often evicted to make way for higher-paying African American renters.[16] By 1950, the subdivision was over 99 percent African American.[1][2] The Hansberry case is a seminal case in civil procedure and class action legal studies.[3] It is also considered an important study of African American, Chicago and legal history.[3]

While the purchase case proceeded, some landlords subdivided properties and rented them to blacks at a premium. Some realtors began encouraging white families to move out so that they could rent properties to African Americans. Smaller property owners were pressed to sell to realtors or directly to African Americans because the neighborhood was undergoing a racial transformation.[10] The conditions of this neighborhood are described in a section of Black Metropolis by St. Clair Drake and Horace Roscoe Cayton.[10]

The Supreme Court ruling and several similar rulings led to the racial transformation of the Woodlawn and Hyde Park community areas. Political futures were determined by positions taken on this issue. Future five-term Mayor of Chicago Richard J. Daley ran for Cook County Sheriff in 1946 as a progressive anti-covenant candidate.[8] Eventually, in Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U.S. 1 (1948), which was argued by Thurgood Marshall, the U. S. Supreme Court declared restrictive covenants in general unenforceable.[8]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Seligman, Amanda (2005). "Washington Park Subdivision". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved December 31, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c Seligman, Amanda (2005). "Woodlawn". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved December 31, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Kamp, Allen R. (1986–1987). (PDF). UC Davis Law Review. University of California, Davis. 20: 481–500. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 12, 2010. Retrieved January 2, 2009.
  4. ^ Washington, Sylvia Hood (2005). "Planning and Environmental Inequality". Packing Them In: An Archaeology of Environmental Racism in Chicago, 1865–1954. Lexington Books. p. 140. ISBN 0-7391-1029-2. Retrieved January 3, 2009. Washington Park Court.
  5. ^ "Jesse Binga". negroartist.com. Archived from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved January 23, 2009.
  6. ^ Rutkoff, Peter M. & William B. Scott (Fall 2004). "Pinkster in Chicago: Bud Billiken and the Mayor of Bronzeville, 1930–1945". The Journal of African American History. Retrieved January 1, 2009.[dead link]
  7. ^ Not For Tourists Guide to Chicago. Not For Tourists Inc. 2005. pp. 74–75. ISBN 0-9758664-9-4.
  8. ^ a b c d Hirsch, Arnold R. (2005). "Restrictive Covenants". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. Retrieved December 31, 2008.
  9. ^ Frisbie, Margery (2002) [1991]. "Jack Was Starting Everybody's Fire". An Alley in Chicago: The Ministry of a City Priest (paperback as An Alley in Chicago: The Life and Legacy of Monsignor John Egan) (Paperback). Sheed & Ward. ISBN 978-1-58051-121-6.
  10. ^ a b c d Drake, St. Clair and Horace Roscoe Cayton (1993). Black Metropolis. University of Chicago Press. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-226-16234-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ a b Plotkin, Wendy (September 1, 2003). . Arizona State University. Archived from the original on February 10, 2007. Retrieved January 1, 2009.
  12. ^ staff (August 5, 1933). . Chicago Defender. Archived from the original on February 10, 2007. Retrieved January 2, 2009.
  13. ^ . Wendy Plotkin. Archived from the original on February 10, 2007. Retrieved January 2, 2009.
  14. ^ . Wendy Plotkin. Archived from the original on February 10, 2007. Retrieved January 2, 2009.
  15. ^ "A Raisin in the Sun". NPR.org. March 11, 2002. Retrieved February 16, 2009.
  16. ^ Hirsch, Arnold R. (1998). "The Second Ghetto and the dynamics of neighborhood change". Making the Second Ghetto: Race and Housing in Chicago 1940–1960. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-34244-3.

External links

  • Official City of Chicago Washington Park Neighborhood Map
  • Official City of Chicago Woodlawn Neighborhood Map[permanent dead link]

washington, park, subdivision, coordinates, 783457, 61219, 783457, 61219, name, historic, city, block, city, block, subdivision, northwest, corner, woodlawn, community, area, south, side, chicago, illinois, that, stands, place, original, washington, park, race. Coordinates 41 47 00 N 87 36 44 W 41 783457 N 87 61219 W 41 783457 87 61219 The Washington Park Subdivision is the name of the historic 3 city block by 4 city block subdivision in the northwest corner of the Woodlawn community area on the South Side of Chicago in Illinois that stands in the place of the original Washington Park Race Track The area evolved as a redevelopment of the land previously occupied by the racetrack It was originally an exclusively white neighborhood that included residential housing amusement parks and beer gardens Washington Park Subdivision is south of Washington Park Chicago Park District green University of Chicago lavender During the late 1920s and 1930s the area became the subject of discriminatory twenty year covenants private real estate agreements which at first had been upheld by the United States Supreme Court but were later determined to be unenforceable by the court beginning with a challenge in a seminal case brought by Carl Hansberry The case is a vital part of legal studies and considered an important part of a broad class of histories The play Raisin in the Sun is based on Lorraine Hansberry s struggles in this neighborhood Contents 1 Location 2 Historical significance 3 Legal issues 4 Notes 5 External linksLocation EditDue to the non rectangular shape of the Washington Park community area the original Washington Park Race Track actually occupied the Southern two thirds of the Washington Park Subdivision which is a 4 city block 8 east west half blocks by 3 city block area in northwest corner of the Woodlawn community area and bounded by Dr Martin Luther King Drive to the west South Cottage Grove Avenue to the East East 60th Street to the North and East 63rd Street to the South This is the area directly south of Washington Park and both south and east of the Washington Park community area It would be part of the Washington Park community area if the community area were to complete its logical proper rectangle 1 Historical significance EditBetween 1884 and 1905 the race track occupied part of the area now known as Washington Park Subdivision 1 After the city outlawed gambling the area was redeveloped as a residential housing subdivision with neighboring commercial recreation such as the White City amusement park that flourished until the Great Depression 1 The neighborhood also included a beer garden that was remodeled by Frank Lloyd Wright 1 2 Between 1900 and 1934 the African American population in Chicago grew from 30 000 to 236 000 In this time Chicago s demographics changed so that instead of having this population diluted in scattered places it was concentrated in two large strips of land The concentration was enforced by violence at first but restrictive covenants became the preferred way to enforce segregation after a few decades 3 When necessary community organizations used violence to pursue their segregationist purposes and between 1917 and 1921 bomb use discouraged encroachment into majority white neighborhoods The bombs were used at the residences of African Americans as well as the properties of real estate agents and bankers 4 In 1919 African American banking magnate Jesse Binga the owner of the first Chicago bank to be operated by African Americans and the first African American who lived in the Washington Park Subdivision 5 endured five bombings of his home by angry whites 6 Binga lived on the block diagonally northwest of the northwest boundary of the subdivision at 5922 South Dr Martin Luther King Jr Drive 7 Although they were previously rare racially restrictive covenants among property owners that outlawed the purchase lease or occupation of their properties by African Americans became common in Chicago in the 1920s following the Great Migration 8 Local businessmen and the University of Chicago became alarmed at the prospect of poorer African Americans moving from the Black Belt due to a combination of racial succession and economic decline 2 In 1926 the United States Supreme Court upheld racially restrictive covenants in Corrigan v Buckley 271 U S 323 1926 3 In 1927 the Chicago Real Estate Board CREB sent representatives throughout the city to promote such covenants which it viewed as a progressive alternative to violence The board representatives provided model contracts drafted by the Chicago Plan Commission as part of their efforts By 1928 the Hyde Park Herald reported that the covenants prevailed throughout the South Side 8 and 95 of the homes in the subdivision were covenanted 9 10 Most African American neighborhoods were bounded by covenanted areas since 85 of Chicago was covenanted 3 Legal issues EditBetween 1928 and 1940 the subdivision was a legal battleground In 1928 landlords in the subdivision signed the covenants in which they agreed that they would not rent to non whites The language of the covenants state that no properties in the subdivision shall be sold given conveyed or leased to any negro or negroes and no permission or license to use or occupy any part thereof shall be given to any negro except house servants or janitors or chauffeurs employed thereon 11 The covenants were signed by owners of land on the one or the other side of Evans Langley Champlain St Lawrence Rhodes Eberhart Vernon and South Park Avenues between 60th and 63rd Streets and on 60th 61st and 62nd Streets between South Park and Cottage Grove Avenues on September 30 1927 and they were recorded at the Cook County Register of Deeds on February 1 1928 They were intended to be valid and in force until January 1 1948 11 The Great Depression decreased white demand for the subdivision s properties A few well off African Americans convinced some owners to sell properties to them The most famous case was that of Dr James L Hall who rented a property located at 419 E 60th St from the white Issac Kleiman 12 In 1933 Olive Ida Burke the wife of Mr Burke a future defendant in the famous Hansberry v Lee case 3 sued Kleiman in the case now known as Burke v Kleiman 3 The circuit court granted an injunction in favor of the plaintiffs which was upheld on appeal by the Supreme Court of Illinois 13 The plaintiffs stipulated that as of 1928 more than 95 of the property owners signed the covenant This stipulation was later proved false only 54 had actually signed 3 In 1937 Carl Hansberry purchased a property from James Joseph Burke located at 6140 South Rhodes Anna M Lee and other promoters of the covenants sued to prevent Hansberry s family from living in the neighborhood 14 This led to the Hansberry v Lee 311 U S 32 1940 case Defendants argued that the stipulation made previously in Burke v Kleiman that more than 95 of the owners had signed the covenant was false and the case should be re adjudicated 3 Plaintiffs while admitting to the fact contended that the principle of res judicata barred courts from rehearing the old arguments 3 The Illinois courts ruled in favor of plaintiffs However the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People decided to represent the buyer in the United States Supreme Court The case caught the attention of national real estate magazines and African American newspapers 10 The U S Supreme Court eventually reversed that ruling stating the application of res judicata in this case would violate Fourteenth Amendment 3 The play Raisin in the Sun was inspired by Lorraine Hansberry s time in the neighborhood after her father won the repeal of restrictive covenants 15 The result of Hansberry v Lee led to racial succession White tenants were often evicted to make way for higher paying African American renters 16 By 1950 the subdivision was over 99 percent African American 1 2 The Hansberry case is a seminal case in civil procedure and class action legal studies 3 It is also considered an important study of African American Chicago and legal history 3 While the purchase case proceeded some landlords subdivided properties and rented them to blacks at a premium Some realtors began encouraging white families to move out so that they could rent properties to African Americans Smaller property owners were pressed to sell to realtors or directly to African Americans because the neighborhood was undergoing a racial transformation 10 The conditions of this neighborhood are described in a section of Black Metropolis by St Clair Drake and Horace Roscoe Cayton 10 The Supreme Court ruling and several similar rulings led to the racial transformation of the Woodlawn and Hyde Park community areas Political futures were determined by positions taken on this issue Future five term Mayor of Chicago Richard J Daley ran for Cook County Sheriff in 1946 as a progressive anti covenant candidate 8 Eventually in Shelley v Kraemer 334 U S 1 1948 which was argued by Thurgood Marshall the U S Supreme Court declared restrictive covenants in general unenforceable 8 Notes Edit a b c d e Seligman Amanda 2005 Washington Park Subdivision The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago Chicago Historical Society Retrieved December 31 2008 a b c Seligman Amanda 2005 Woodlawn The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago Chicago Historical Society Retrieved December 31 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k Kamp Allen R 1986 1987 The History Behind Hansberry v Lee PDF UC Davis Law Review University of California Davis 20 481 500 Archived from the original PDF on June 12 2010 Retrieved January 2 2009 Washington Sylvia Hood 2005 Planning and Environmental Inequality Packing Them In An Archaeology of Environmental Racism in Chicago 1865 1954 Lexington Books p 140 ISBN 0 7391 1029 2 Retrieved January 3 2009 Washington Park Court Jesse Binga negroartist com Archived from the original on July 15 2012 Retrieved January 23 2009 Rutkoff Peter M amp William B Scott Fall 2004 Pinkster in Chicago Bud Billiken and the Mayor of Bronzeville 1930 1945 The Journal of African American History Retrieved January 1 2009 dead link Not For Tourists Guide to Chicago Not For Tourists Inc 2005 pp 74 75 ISBN 0 9758664 9 4 a b c d Hirsch Arnold R 2005 Restrictive Covenants The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago Chicago Historical Society Retrieved December 31 2008 Frisbie Margery 2002 1991 Jack Was Starting Everybody s Fire An Alley in Chicago The Ministry of a City Priest paperback as An Alley in Chicago The Life and Legacy of Monsignor John Egan Paperback Sheed amp Ward ISBN 978 1 58051 121 6 a b c d Drake St Clair and Horace Roscoe Cayton 1993 Black Metropolis University of Chicago Press p 184 ISBN 978 0 226 16234 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Plotkin Wendy September 1 2003 Racial Restrictive Covenant of the Washington Park Subdivision in the City of Chicago Arizona State University Archived from the original on February 10 2007 Retrieved January 1 2009 staff August 5 1933 Judge Gentzel Upholds Jim Crow Plot To Appeal Woodlawn Property Owners Show Colors in Tilt Against Race Chicago Defender Archived from the original on February 10 2007 Retrieved January 2 2009 Burke v Kleiman Decree Partial August 3 1933 Wendy Plotkin Archived from the original on February 10 2007 Retrieved January 2 2009 State of Illinois County of Cook In the Circuit Court of Cook County Anna M Lee et al vs Paul A Hansberry et al Gen No 37C 6804 Complaint in Equity Complaint to Enforce Restrictive Agreement Injunction and Other Relief Wendy Plotkin Archived from the original on February 10 2007 Retrieved January 2 2009 A Raisin in the Sun NPR org March 11 2002 Retrieved February 16 2009 Hirsch Arnold R 1998 The Second Ghetto and the dynamics of neighborhood change Making the Second Ghetto Race and Housing in Chicago 1940 1960 University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 34244 3 External links EditSample racial covenant Official City of Chicago Washington Park Neighborhood Map Official City of Chicago Woodlawn Neighborhood Map permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Washington Park Subdivision amp oldid 1120766931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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