Chicago on the Make

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Chicago on the Make Page 58

by Andrew J. Diamond


  Thailand, immigrants from, 315

  Thatcher, Margaret, 9, 264

  The Woodlawn Organization/Temporary Woodlawn Organization (TWO), 162–164, 179, 180, 196–200

  Thompson, E. P, 5

  Thompson “Big Bill”: “America First” campaign of, 51; anti-immigration and, 52; black voter support for, 40–41, 47–48, 71, 112–113; and Cermak, loss to, 52–53; and gangsters, 53; and Great Depression, 53; labor and, 48–49; as no friend to African Americans, 78; patronage and, 53–54, 76–77, 349n35

  Thorne, Robert J., 26, 28, 30

  Thrasher, Frederic, 27, 44

  TIF funds (tax increment financing): overview, 13; Chicago Mercantile Exchange renovations and, 329–330; gentrification and, 305; inequalities reinforced by uneven distribution of, 282–283, 331; minority-owned businesses receiving patronage from, 287, 288; opposition to, 328–329, 331–332; original intent of program, 282, 368n49; as pinstripe patronage, 282; proposal to dissolve, 291; public scrutiny avoided in, 282; as “shadow budget,” 281–282; subsidies to downtown agenda via, 282–284, 331–332, 369n56; teachers union call to fill budget gap using, 328

  Till, Emmett, 137

  Tillman, Dorothy, 256, 277, 278

  Touraine, Alain, 162

  tourism, R.M. Daley and development of, 264; beautification, 266, 285; and “City of Neighborhoods” campaign of RMD, 294–295; and diversity of neighborhoods, 297–298, 300; Rahm Emanuel and privatization of, 370n79; infrastructure, 285–286; service jobs for, 286–287; “tourist bubble,” 286

  Toynbee Hall social settlement (London), 16

  Trinity United Church of Christ, 276

  Trumbull Park Homes, 126, 132–133, 156

  Trump, Donald, 1, 325

  Turner, Damian, 335

  Tuthill, Richard, 16–17

  21st Century Vote, 277–278

  TWO. See Temporary Woodlawn Organization (TWO)/The Woodlawn Organization

  UAW Local 600, 106

  Ukrainian community, 24

  Ukrainian Village neighborhood, 299, 305

  underground economy: drug economy, 267–268; jitney cabs, 129–130; policy wheels (illicit lotteries), 70–74, 75, 105, 130; WWII and black market, 100. See also organized crime

  unemployment: in 2014, 331; Great Depression and, 53, 78; rate for black males, 266, 270, 331; recessions of 1958 and 1961 and, 172; service economy ameliorating, 287; and subsidies paid to corporations, 283–284, 369n56

  unions. See labor unions and unionization

  Union Station railroad terminal, 35

  Union Stockyards, 20–21, 20

  United Airlines, 147, 283

  United Auto Workers (UAW), 106

  United Center, 285

  United Garment Workers (UGW), 25–26

  United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), 61

  United Neighborhood Organization (UNO), 301–302, 330, 371n94

  United States Immigration Commission (Dillingham Commission), 29

  United States Post Office, 232

  United Working Families (UWF), 333

  Unity Hall, 82

  University of Chicago (UC): and backlash, turn to, 211–212; and Citizens’ Committee to Enforce the Landis Award, 49–50; economics, Chicago School of, 240; expansion of (South Campus), urban renewal and, 149, 155, 157–158, 163–164; Laboratory School (Dewey), 18, 19; sociology, Chicago School of, 3, 19, 69, 113, 153, 211, 274, 294, 343n4

  University of Chicago Medical Center (UMMC), trauma center, 335, 375n19

  University of Chicago Settlement, 44, 45

  University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), 155–156, 172, 176, 262, 301

  University Village (middle- to upper-income housing development), 301

  UNO (United Neighborhood Organization), 301–302, 330, 371n94

  uplift of African Americans: black capitalism as vehicle for, 59, 61, 64–65, 67, 69, 75, 81, 86; white gaze upon, 59

  uplift of laboring classes: beautification and, 33; cultural institutions and, 31–32; settlement house movement and, 18, 33

  uplift of the poor, mixed-income housing developments and, 310–311

  Uptown neighborhood: Asian community and, 315, 317; rainbow coalition and, 214; student movement and, 204. See also Young Lords (gang)

  urban crisis: Detroit and, 122; Englewood as poster child for, 121–122; liberal vs. conservative views of causes, 122–123; origins in 1940s and 1950s white fight against integration, 123–127, 125

  urbanism: (old) Chicago School of, 4–5, 6; Los Angeles School of, 3–4, 343n5; New Chicago School of, 4–5, 6, 344n10

  Urban League, 61, 66, 79, 85, 144, 179

  urban renewal: and R.M. Daley, 308; early downtown agenda for, 143–146; as “ethnic cleansing,” 151; Illinois state funding for, 143–144; interests favoring revitalization of neighborhoods vs. downtown agenda, 145–146, 147; Mexican community and, 176; as “Negro removal” (Baldwin), 142, 143, 310; Puerto Rican community and, 174, 228; rent increases following, 144; as warfare, form of, 151; Washington DC decisions on, 142. See also gentrification

  —CLEARANCE OF LAND (DEMOLITIONS): depressing emptiness resulting from, 172; displacement of tenants, 146–147, 309, 310; eminent domain authority for, 143; federal housing officials requiring adequate relocation plans, 146–147; and gentrification, 308–309

  —DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS AS BENEFICIARY UNDER RJD: overview, 142–143; barriers to ghetto expansion built into, 150–151, 153–155, 157, 228, 234–235; inequalities of race and class reinforced by, 143; middle-class housing developments, 227–228; “trickle-down” promises of, 142. See also downtown agenda

  —OPPOSITION TO: black residents and organizations fearing displacement, 144–145; Harrison-Halsted Community Group and, 155–157; interests favoring rehabilitation of neighborhoods vs. downtown agenda, 145–146; white residents from other neighborhoods fearing dispersal of black population, 145, 161; in Woodlawn, 157–158, 163–164

  urban services provision: R.M. Daley and cutbacks to, 282–283, 291, 293; Rahm Emanuel and cutbacks to, 325–326; and “entrepreneurial state” under RMD, 8, 13, 262–264; heat wave of 1995 and, 263–264; outsourcing of, 8, 13, 262–263; sanitation, 16, 17, 19, 23, 55, 137. See also fire department; infrastructure; police (CPD); privatization

  Urbis Orbis (café), 304

  U.S. Conference of Mayors, 264

  U.S. Department of Education, Race to the Top initiative, 326

  U.S. Department of Housing and Development (HUD), 309, 310

  U.S. Department of Labor, 198

  U.S. Steel, 21, 56

  Vallas, Paul, 269

  Velasquez, Arturo, 252

  Venkatesh, Sudhir, 310

  Ventra, 331

  Venue 1 (event center), 325

  veterans: black veterans returning, 38, 106, 109, 112; homeowner loans to, and suburbanization, 127, 140

  Vice Ladies (gang), 187

  Vice Lords (gang): Martin Luther King’s attempt to enlist in nonviolence movement, 190–195, 200; leadership of, 187–188, 196, 217–218; membership of, 186, 187, 188; and neoliberal business arrangements of crack cocaine distribution, 267–268; and police/government investigations, 197, 198–199; political aspirations of, 185–186, 188, 277; and protests for minority union membership, 236; and “rainbow coalition” of Black Panthers, 214–215; and youth services/community improvement projects, 196–200

  Victory Life Insurance Company, 62, 67

  Vietnam, immigrants from, 315, 319

  Vietnam War, antiwar protests, 204, 205, 207

  violence/racial violence: overview, 38; attributed to the working classes, 17; early-20th century and, 16, 17–18; early-20th century labor organizing and antiblack violence, 25–28, 29; early 1960s escalation of intensity of, 170; lack of protection of African Americans by law enforcement, 38, 126, 130; map of, 125; open-housing marches of MLK and, 193–194; politicians and fisticuffs, 17; postwar years and, 123–126, 125; prior to 1919 race riot, 38; Puerto Ricans as victims of, 175; racist ideology arisin
g as justification of, 218; against Harold Washington’s campaign, 248; World War II and, 110–112. See also arson and bombings; crime rates; culturalization of politics; gangs; homicide rates; police (CPD); race riots

  Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act (1994), 263, 274

  Visitation Parish, 124

  vocational training, gang youth programs and, 198

  voter registration campaigns: black mobilization for Harold Washington, 243; immigrant working class, rise in 1920s, 51; Lesbian/Gay Voter Impact, 370n80; Million Man March and, 275; 21st Century Vote, 277–278; TWO movement, 163

  voter turnout, 7, 277, 280, 334

  Voting Rights Act (1965), 188

  Vrdolyak, Edward, 242, 245, 252, 254–256, 257, 366n1

  Vrdolyak 29 bloc, 254–256, 257

  Wacker, Charles, 35

  Wacquant, Loïc, 354n52

  wade-ins, 169

  Wagner, Clarence, 134

  Wagner Act (1935), 57, 83

  Walker, William, 220

  Wallace, George, 177, 178, 210, 361n6

  Waller, Fats, 92

  Wall of Respect (mural), 219–220, 220

  Wal-Mart, 292

  war: antiwar demonstrations, 204, 205, 207; World War I, 38, 94–95. See also veterans; World War II

  War on Drugs, 218, 337

  War on Poverty (Lyndon B. Johnson), 201, 209, 263

  Washington, Booker T., 64, 131

  Washington, DC, 345n19, 366n14

  Washington, Harold: as African American politician, 241–242; antimachine activism of, 10, 243–244, 246, 255, 259, 364n55; and “City of Neighborhoods,” 294; and community participation in public policy making, 259; “council wars” during term of, 252–253, 254–256, 344n11; death of, 254, 255, 370n80; election of 1987, 256, 365n78; Latinos and, 252–254; LGBT community and, 255, 370n80; multiethnic coalition of, 249–250, 251–254, 255–257, 334; Barack Obama on impact of, 257, 258–259; the politics of identity and, 253–254; replacement for, city council choice of, 256–257; school system and, 50, 269; successes of, 255, 258

  —ELECTION OF 1983: antimachine campaigning as factor in, 246; black community mobilization for, 243–244, 249; Latino support for, 249–250, 251–252; primary, 242–244, 244; racism as factor, 245, 248–249, 365n65; and racism, cultural, 242–243, 246–248, 364n54; racist attacks as working to advantage of, 242–243, 249–250; scandals and, 249; white Democrats and machine campaigning for Republican candidate against, 241–243, 244–246; white support, 249

  water safety, Sanitary and Ship Canal and, 23

  Waters, Ethel, 66, 89

  Waters, Muddy, 118, 119, 120; “Hoochie Coochie Man,” 118; “I Can’t Be Satisfied,” 118

  Water Tower Place, 223, 286

  Watts rebellion (1965), 123, 184, 185, 186, 189, 190, 192, 196

  Weathermen, 231

  Weber, Charlie, 55

  Weber, John Pitman, 220, 362n18

  Webster, Milton, 84

  Welfare Reform Act (1996), 263, 273–274

  Wells, Junior, 301

  Wells-Barnett, Ida B., 80, 83–84

  Wells Club, 83–84

  Wells High School, 124

  “We Shall Overcome,” 162, 181, 324

  West, Cornel, Race Matters, 276

  West Devon Avenue, 315, 318, 319

  Western Electric, 28, 97, 233

  West Garfield Park neighborhood: deindustrialization and, 283–284, 369n56; police brutality protests, 184–185; Puerto Rican community and, 174; schools of, 179

  West Ridge neighborhood, 317

  West Side: ethnoracial diversity of, 173; food desert problem of, 283; and loss of University of Illinois campus expansion, 262; Mexican community and, 313; Puerto Rican community and, 173–174, 175, 358n16; and rainbow coalition, 214; TIF funds and, 331

  West Side Organization (WSO), 192

  West Side riot (1966), 191–193, 208–209

  West Side rioting after King’s assassination (1968), 138, 198, 208–209

  West Side Story (1961), 166

  West Town neighborhood: gentrification and, 299–300, 307, 317; Latino community and, 173–175, 300; racial violence in, 175

  Wetten, Emil, 55–56

  WGES (black radio station), 116

  White, Leonard D., 54

  white backlash (defensive localism/reactionary populism): antistatism of, 10, 201; and belief in victimization by liberals, 132–133; blaming marchers and protesters for police violence, 200, 210–211; civil rights movement as counterforce to, 131–132; and cultural racism, smear of Harold Washington and, 243, 249; R.J. Daley as mayor of, 135–136, 209–211, 238; machine politics and balance of, with black civil rights, 131–132; national politics of, 210; Nixon and “silent majority,” 123, 133, 209, 210; Republican “southern strategy” of, 210, 361n6; University of Chicago’s turn to, 211–212; women and, 124, 156; and WWII war industries, 104. See also culturalization of politics; racism; whiteness and white identity

  white Chicagoans: blaming marchers and protesters for police violence, 200, 210; lack of support for movement against racist police violence, 336–337; median income of (2000), 266; mortality rate of, 75; in “rainbow coalition” of Black Panthers, 214; “slumming” in the Black Metropolis, 65–66; support for Rahm Emanuel, 336; unemployment in 2014 and, 331; urban renewal and clearance of, 154–155. See also gentrification; white backlash; white flight; white gangs and athletic clubs; whiteness and white identity

  white-collar workers, making the city desirable for. See global cities/global-city agenda; middle-class

  white flight: Alinsky efforts to stop, 160; deindustrialization and, 222–223; and ghettos, transformation to, 127, 153–154; and hippie scene, 205; homeownership subsidies and, 127, 222–223; Puerto Ricans swept by, 174. See also suburbanization

  white gangs and athletic clubs, 171; as adverse to packinghouse work, 42–43; antiblack terror by, 38, 124, 126; as crime syndicate manpower, 42, 43; and ethnoracial hierarchy, 27, 43, 45; and machine politics, 41–42, 43; and 1919 race riot, 38, 40, 43, 45; and “rainbow coalition” of Black Panthers, 214. See also black gangs; gangs

  whiteness and white identity: Catholic Church policies and production of, 46; and centrality of the black ghetto, 47; consolidation of (end of 1950s), 173; ethnic slurs within, 114; housing segregation and, 47, 58; interwar era and weakening of reform organizing, 9–10, 58; Mexican community and, 175, 176; “middle-class” as euphemism for, 150; and middle-class neighborhoods, creation of, 46–47; and nationalist fervor of WWII, 114; progrowth, antilabor agenda enabled by, 9–10; “psychological wage” granted to, 110; and Second Great Migration, 114. See also culturalization of politics; politics of identity; racism; white backlash

  White Sox, 285

  Whoopee Era, 55

  Wicker Park neighborhood: gentrification of, 299, 300–301, 303–305, 307, 321, 374n130; Polish community and, 317

  Wigwams (Polish gang), 44

  Wilkins, Roy, 88

  William, Lacy Kirk, 80

  Williams, Eugene, 36–37

  Williamson, Sonny Boy, 118

  Williams, R.A., 85

  Williams, Raymond, 109

  Williams, Rufus, 271

  Willis, Benjamin, 178, 179, 180, 181, 184

  Willis, Carol, 22

  Willis Tower, 283, 362n25

  Wilson, James Q., Negro Politics, 130–131

  Wilson, Orlando, 183–184, 185

  Wilson, William Julius, 153, 274, 280, 310–311, 364n54; The Declining Significance of Race, 274–275

  Wilson, Willie, 334

  Wisconsin steel, 21

  women: affirmative action, 363n45; African-American clubwomen, 80, 84–85, 87; blues singer solidarity with black women, 90; Jane Byrne election, 242; as Chicago Housing Authority’s first director, 113; gang branches of, 187; jobs for black women, 63; jobs for Puerto Rican women, 358n16; roles in WWII, 96, 97–99, 100; urban renewal opposition by, 155–157; and white resistance to integration, 124, 156

  Wonder, Stevie
, 251

  Wong, Jimmy, 315

  Wood, Elizabeth, 113, 126–127, 132, 149

  Woodlawn neighborhood: and Catholic Church, 161–162; and gangs, 187, 188, 195; and ghetto, transformation to, 153–154, 262; mental health clinic closures, 326; police monitoring during WWII, 108; Puerto Rican community and, 173, 358n16; and school conditions, 163; TWO movement/The Woodlawn Organization, 162–164, 179, 180, 196–200; urban renewal opposition in, 157–158, 163–164

  Woodstock, 206

  Woolworth’s Five and Ten, 62

  working class: and antiblack aggression by Irish, 40–41; austerity cutbacks as most affecting, 325–326; Chicago identity as, 1–2, 13, 232; and election of 1927, 48–51; gentrification as displacing, 298–302, 311–312, 317, 371n94; military high schools and programs, 272, 368n32; school reforms as leaving behind, 270, 299; street violence attributed to, 17; uplift of, movement for, 18, 31–33. See also black cultural expression; Chicago Teachers Union (CTU); deindustrialization; gangs; labor force; labor unions and unionization; music; service economy; unemployment

  Works Progress Administration (WPA), 57

  World’s Columbian Exposition (1893), 23, 157

  World War I, 38, 94–95

  World War II: class tensions and, 99–100; consensus of support for, 94–95; defense contracts for Chicago, 95–96, 97; Detroit and, 96, 212; Flag Day (1942), 94; housing shortage in, 104, 108–109, 112; and juvenile delinquency issues, 98–99; labor unions of Chicago quiescent during, 212; mobilization by Chicago, 96–97, 99; and morale drop in Chicago, 99–100; race riots during, 101, 102–103, 107–108; racial discrimination in the war industries, 83; and whiteness/white identity, 114; and white racism, 110–112; women in the labor force, 96, 97–99, 100; zoot suiters and, 106–108

  WPA, 57

  Wright, Edward H., 76–77, 80, 84, 87

  Wright, Frank Lloyd, 47

  Wright, Jeremiah, 276

  Wright, Richard, 73, 88, 117; Black Boy, 89

  X-Chan, 276

  Yerkes, Charles Tyson, 15

  Yippies, 204, 206, 226

  YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association), 30–31, 80, 167

  Young, Andrew, 192

  Young, Coleman, 249

  Young, “Policy” Sam, 70

  Young Lords (gang), 218, 253–254; and “rainbow coalition” of Black Panthers, 12, 214, 250

  Young Patriots (gang), 214

 

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