South Side Chicago
Chicago History
Segregation in Chicago
100

The "Sides" of Chicago have historically been divided by this geographical feature:

Chicago River

100

Chicago was infamously destroyed by a fire in this year:

1871

100

This trend caused different geographical and demographic sections of Chicago to be deprived of bank loans, credit, or fair interest rates:

Redlining

200

This famous musician migrated to Chicago in the early 1920s, known as a staple of both 20th century jazz and South Side culture:

Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong

200

Prior to the Civil War, a small number of Black Americans settled into this "side" of Chicago, formerly occupied by German immigrants:

North Side

200

Following the effects of segregation in Chicago, banks tended to loan approximately this many cents for every dollar invested into largely white areas: 

12 cents

300

While originally referring to the rich color of the region's soil, this term later referred to the dense population of Black Americans in the South, including South Side Chicago:

The Black Belt

300

In the time before Lake Michigan was well filtered, some unfortunate Chicagoans found this in their tap water:

Minnows

300

This set of laws affected and segregated almost every aspect of life in Chicago, including schools, parks, and even bathrooms:

Jim Crow laws

400

While initially housing an almost entirely white population in the 1930s, this area experienced a dramatic change due to "White Flight" though the 20th century:

Hyde Park

400

In 1889, this new Chicago landmark was the largest building in the world:

The Auditorium

400

Poverty issues of the 1940s caused by segregation and redlining tendencies were accentuated by this widespread economic event:

Great Depression

500

Within the South Side, this was known to be the capital of Black culture and business through the 1920s-50s, also titled "The Black Metropolis":

Bronzeville

500

The name Chicago comes from the Native American name "Chicagoua," meaning this English phrase:

"The place of the wild onion."

500

In 1919, this was an series of violent racial outbreaks, largely caused by the returning of both Black and White veterans from World   War I: 

The Red Summer

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