Where the Neighborhood Ends

High School: Grades 9–12

Story

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Sources

Chicago Defender. January 1949 through December 1969.

Chicago Tribune. January 1949 through December 1969.

Abrahamson, Julia.  A Neighborhood Finds Itself.  New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc., 1959; reprint New York:  Biblo & Tannen Booksellers and Publishers, Inc., 1971.

Biles, Roger.  “Race and Housing in Chicago.”  Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 94:1 (Spring 2001): 31–8.

Bowly, Devereux, Jr. The Poorhouse: Subsidized Housing in Chicago, 1895-1976. Carbondale:  Southern Illinois University Press, 1978.

Hirsh, Arnold R. Making the Second Ghetto: Race and Housing in Chicago, 1940-1960. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.

Hunt, D. Bradford. “What Went Wrong with Public Housing in Chicago? A History of the Robert Taylor Homes.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 94:1 (Spring 2001): 96–123.

Mohl, Raymond A.  “Race and Housing in the Postwar City: An Explosive History.”  Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 94:1 (Spring 2001): 8-30.

Plotkin, Wendy.  “‘Hemmed In’: The Struggle against Racial Restrictive Covenants and Deed Restrictions in Post-World War II Chicago.”  Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 94:1 (Spring 2001): 39-69.

Reiff, Janice L., Ann Durkin Keating, and James R. Grossman, eds. The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago History Museum, 2005. www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org

Seligman, Amanda Irene.  “‘Apologies to Dracula, Werewolf, Frankenstein’: White Homeowners and Blockbusters in Postwar Chicago.”  Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 94:1 (Spring 2001): 70–95.

Smith, Preston H. II.  “The Quest for Racial Democracy: Black Civic Ideology and Housing Interests in Postwar Chicago.”  Journal of Urban History 26:2 (January 2000): 131–57.


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