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Chapter 1: Chicago in the 1950s/1960s

Chicago and its suburbs were already experiencing a tight housing market before an influx of new citizens arrived in the 1950s and 1960s. The Chicagoland area saw an increase in the African American population as they fled racial violence and sought more opportunities following two Great Migrations from the South. During this time there was a 64% population increase of non-white individuals in the city of Chicago, and a 83% increase of non-white individuals in the suburbs in 1960. 

Many minorities in Chicago-especially Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Jews, and Asians—have suffered from a discriminatory housing market, but African Americans have been the most prevalent victims. By the early twentieth century, white property owners and real estate agents had devised systems to ensure residential areas remained racially segregated.

In Focus: The Chicago Freedom Movement & the Fight for Fair Housing exhibition tour
  1. Chapter 1: Chicago in the 1950s/1960s
  2. Jennetta Pegues, National Public Housing Museum, interview
  3. Byron Dickens, National Public Housing Museum, interview
  4. Chapter 2: White Flight
  5. Dorothy Tucker, HistoryMaker interview
  6. Chapter 3: Preventative Practices
  7. Art Minson, HistoryMaker Interview
  8. Chapter 4: Welcome to Elmhurst
  9. Chapter 5: Selma, The Turning Point
  10. Chapter 6: Focusing on the North
  11. Chapter 7: Grant Park to City Hall
  12. Chapter 8: Soldier Field
  13. Chapter 9: Summer of '66 Marches
  14. Chapter 10: Marquette Park
  15. Reverend Evan Clay, HistoryMakers interview
  16. Chapter 11: Remember Why You're Here, Brother
  17. Chapter 12: Escalation and Agreement
  18. Chapter 13: Federal and Local Fair Housing Laws
  19. Chapter 14: Depth of Field, Teens Project
  20. Chapter 15: The Movement is Not Over