E. 54th Place  E. 56th Place  Blackstone Avenue  Dorchester Avenue  Harper Avenue  Kenwood Avenue  Kimbark Avenue  Ridgewood Court

The Evolution of Hyde Park
A Self Guided Walking Tour of Hyde Park Center
Click on each address or image to see an enlarged photograph of the house

 Alphabetical Index House Photos Part One | House Photos Part Two |

 
Notable Locations in Hyde Park Center

1. 5459 S. Kenwood Ave.
Brick cottages, before 1890
2. Nichols Park (opposite/west side)
200+ buildings cleared during urban renewal
3. 5420 S. Kimbark Ave.
Crate frame cottage, before 1880
4. E. 54th St. & S. Kimbark Ave., SE corner
Site of Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church
5. 1362 E. 54th St. (Murray School)
Proposed site of Hyde Park town hall
6. 5405 S. Ridgewood Ct.
Original farm house for this area, before 1890
7. 5437-39-41-43 S. Ridgewood Ct.
Brick cottages, 1882
8. 5456-58 S. Ridgewood Ct.
Companions to 5457-59 S. Kenwood Ave.
9. 5474 S. Dorchester Ave.
Frame cottage, before 1871
10. 5448-50 S. Dorchester Ave.
Frame duplex, before 1890
11. 5436-38-40-42 S. Dorchester Ave.
Companions to 5437-43 S. Ridgewood Ct.
12. 5420-22 S. Dorchester Ave.
Frame duplex, before 1890
13-- Front 5317 S. Dorchester Ave-
13-- Rear half 5317 S Dorchester-
Henry Work house, 1860, oldest house in Hyde Park
14. 5322-24-26-28 S. Blackstone Ave.
Masonry row houses, 1875
15. 5401 S. Blackstone Ave., SE corner
Site of Hyde Park M. E. Church
16. 5418-20 S. Blackstone Ave.
Frame duplex, 1887
17. 5417 S. Blackstone Ave.
Frame single family, 1868
18. 5424-26-28-30-32-34-35 S. Blackstone Ave.
Frame cottages, 1890
19. 5416 S. Harper Ave.
A"villa," 1892


Alphabetical Thumbnail index of Photos
of Hyde Park Center houses

House Photos Part One
54th Place, 56th Place, Blackstone Avenue and
Dorchester Avenue

House Photos Part Two
Harper Avenue, Kenwood Avenue, Kimbark Avenue, Ridgewood Court, Woodlawn Avenue

E 54th Place, E 56th Place and Blackstone Ave

Dorchester Avenue

Harper, Kenwood and Kimbark Avenue

Ridgewood Court and Woodlawn Avenue





This project was supported by a grant from:
The National Trust for Historic Preservation Midwest Office
Additional support came from:
Civic Knowledge Project, Humanities Department, University of Chicago
Mid Continental Development
Nikki Will Stein
Iris Frank

The research for this project was conducted by: Leslie Hudson
Sarah Blankenbaker

Hyde Park Center, the section of Hyde Park between 53rd and 55th Streets, and between Harper and Woodlawn Avenue, is the oldest part of our neighborhood. It is also the most modest, the most urban, the most "renewed" - and the least appreciated
Hyde Park Center Walking TourAfter the Chicago fire of 1871 Hyde Park Center grew quickly. Close to the Illinois Central commuter station at 53rd and Lake Park and to the 55th Street cable car line, it offered convenient and inexpensive transport for middle and lower class workers to the new jobs in the Loop to the north, the steel mills to the south and the Stock Yards to the west. Eager real estate developers built small cottages and narrow row houses on tiny lots. No valuable land was wasted on large yards or parkways to the front or on alleys at the rear. Many of these buildings were made of inexpensive wood , a practice prohibited north of 39th Street by the new Chicago fire regulations, but allowed in the independent Village of Hyde Park until it was annexed by Chicago in 1889. The style of the houses was simple and utilitarian in contrast to the Italian villas, French chateaux and English castles of the more wealthy surrounding parts of the neighborhood. Hyde Park Center offered modest houses in a dense urban setting to average working families.

Because both the houses and the residents were more modest, this section of the neighborhood was especially vulnerable to post-World War II land clearance projects. More than half of the structures in Hyde Park Center were demolished, including three churches and scores of convenient mixed-use retail/commercial/residential buildings. Most of what is now Nichols Park and the Murray School campus was once packed with small wooden and brick houses.
Much of the original Hyde Park Center remains and, although often over looked, it is a joy to explore. Notice the brickwork and stone carving, the carpentry, the arrangement of the windows, the roof gables and the porches, and notice how many different kinds of houses there are. But also listen to how these houses talk to one another, like neighbors. What can still be seen and heard on the streets of Hyde Park Center are the beautiful modest houses that nurtured the beginnings of city life for average people like ourselves.

The photography and Graphic Design for the "The Evolution of Hyde Park" was created by David Schalliol for a program offered by the Hyde Park Historical Society on March 1st of 2008. This included a presentation by Jack Spicer and the opening of a photo exhibit by David Schalliol. The photographs on this site of the Hyde Park houses were all taken by David Schalliol.

All materials collected for this project (maps, photos, documents, interviews. etc.) are housed at:
Special Collections Research Center University of Chicago Library 1100 East 57th Street Chicago, Illinois
60637-1596 773-702-8705 specialcoliections@lib.uchicago .edu
under the title: Hyde Park Center Project and are available for viewing and research.

Hyde Park Center is a project of:
The Hyde Park Historical Society
5529 S Lake Park Avenue Chicago, IL 60637
773-493-1893

Index of House Photos Part One | House Photos Part Two | Back to Front Page
E. 54th Place  E. 56th Place  Blackstone Avenue  Dorchester Avenue  Harper Avenue  Kenwood Avenue  Kimbark Avenue  Ridgewood Court


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