Hyde Park, Chicago

b>Hyde Park (Chicago, Illinois)
align="center" colspan=3 |
align="center" colspan=3 | Community Area 41 - Hyde Park

Location within the city of Chicago
a href="/encyclopedia/Latitude" title="Latitude">Latitude
Longitude
colspan="2"|
align="top" width="115px"|Neighborhoods colspan="2"|
  • Hyde Park
a href="/encyclopedia/ZIP-Code" title="ZIP Code">ZIP Code colspan="2"|parts of 60615, 60637
tyle="border-bottom:3px solid gray;"|Area colspan="2" style="border-bottom:3px solid gray;"|4.27 km² (1.65 mi²)
a href="/encyclopedia/Population" title="Population">Population (2000)
Density
colspan="2"|29,920 (up 4.51% from 1990)
7,001.3 /km²
align="top"|Demographics width="65px"|White
Black
Hispanic
Asian
Other
width="120px"|43.5%
37.7%
4.11%
11.3%
3.39%
a href="/encyclopedia/Median" title="Median">Median income colspan="2"|$35,991
lign="center" colspan="3" style="border-bottom:3px solid gray;"|Source: U.S. Census, Record Information Services
Hyde Park is a neighborhood on the south side of Chicago, located seven miles south of the Loop; it is home to the Museum of Science and Industry and the University of Chicago. Hyde Park was founded by real estate speculator Paul Cornell (a first cousin of Ezra Cornell) in the 1850s in what was then unincorporated land south of Chicago. Although today the term "Hyde Park" is applied to the neighborhood from 47th street to 61st streets, in the 19th century the term applied to areas as far south as the 100s, twelve miles south of the Loop. The narrowing of the term "Hyde Park" was due to the southern sections of old Hyde Park becoming industrial, while the northern sections became genteel. The neighborhood's eastern boundary is Jackson Park, its western boundary is Washington Park The 1890s marked Hyde Park's emergence as a unique urban neighborhood. In 1892 the University of Chicago opened on land donated by Marshall Field, and 1893 saw the marvelous World's Columbian Exposition in Jackson Park, adjacent to Lake Michigan. The neo-classical World's Columbian Exposition, hugely popular, was the start of the Beaux Arts City Beautiful" movement. Covering hundreds of acres (a few km²) of palaces and pavilions, the only structure left from the World's Fair is Charles Atgood's Palace of Fine Arts, now the Museum of Science and Industry. Over the years, Hyde Park grew with Chicago, being annexed in the 1890s. The University of Chicago, through visionary leadership from William Rainey Harper and large sums of money from John D. Rockefeller, quickly became one of the nation's best research institutions. Many of the neighborhoods stately high rises were actually built as hotels in the 1920s. Famous Hyde Park residents have included Julius Rosenwald, Muhammad Ali, Clarence Darrow, Marshall Field, Mayor Harold Washington, and numerous figures associated with the University of Chicago. The neighborhood has produced three U.S. Senators, Paul Douglas, Carol Moseley Braun, and most recently, Barack Obama. Parts of Native Son, the Studs Lonigan trilogy, and The Jungle are set there. The neighborhood contains buildings by Eero Saarinen, Frank Lloyd Wright (the Robie House), L. Mies van der Rohe, and two rises (the University Park Condominiums in the middle of 55th) by I.M. Pei. Most of the University of Chicago main quadrangles were planned and built by Henry Ives Cobb and Charles Coolidge.
In the 1950s and 1960s Hyde Park began to suffer from the economic decline of the rest of the South Side. To protect itself, the University of Chicago sponsored one of the largest urban renewal plans in the nation. In the 1960s Hyde Park's average income soared by 70%, but its black population fell by 40%. In any case, Hyde Park avoided the fate of slums of neighboring districts like Woodlawn, Washington Park, and Oakland. Although the University of Chicago dominates the neighborhood physically and politically, Hyde Park is one of the most economically vital and desirable neighborhoods in Chicago, and an example of racial integration, in a way.

 

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