The Fernwood Park Race Riot was a
Race Massacre instigated by white residents against African American residents who inhabited the
Chicago Housing Authority
The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) is a municipal corporation that oversees public housing within the city of Chicago. The agency's Board of Commissioners is appointed by the city's mayor, and has a budget independent from that of the city of ...
(CHA) veterans' housing project in the
Fernwood Park neighborhood in
Chicago
(''City in a Garden''); I Will
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. Area residents viewed this as one of several attempts by the CHA to initiate
racial integration into white communities. The riot took place between 98th and 111th streets and lasted for three days, from the day veterans and their families moved into the project, August 13th, 1947 to August 16th, 1947. The
Chicago Police Department did little to stop the rioting, as was the case a year before at the
Airport Homes race riots
The Airport Homes race riots were a series of riots in 1946 in the West Lawn and West Elsdon neighborhoods of Chicago, Illinois
Illinois ( ) is a state in the Midwestern United States. Its largest metropolitan areas include the Chicago ...
. It was one of the worst
race riots
An ethnic conflict is a conflict between two or more contending ethnic groups. While the source of the conflict may be political, social, economic or religious, the individuals in conflict must expressly fight for their ethnic group's positi ...
in Chicago history.
Subsidized housing and racialized neighborhoods
During World War II
Housing projects
Public housing is a form of housing tenure in which the property is usually owned by a government authority, either central or local. Although the common goal of public housing is to provide affordable housing, the details, terminology, d ...
in Chicago emerged during the 1940s with the sole purpose of resolving the shortage of affordable homes for war-industry workers, many who were African American, as America prepared for
World War II
World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
. As Chicago proved to be a crucial steel production center for the war effort, hundreds of thousands of black workers and their families migrated from the South to Chicago in the second wave of the
Great Migration. Historian Devereux Bowly iterates some alarming statistics about public housing in Chicago that arose from 1940 census data: 1) 55,157 housing units were overcrowded (exceeding 1.5 persons per room), and 2) 206,103 housing units either had no access to a private bathroom or needed major repairs to interior structures. To answer to such dismal conditions, the CHA opened four housing projects in low income areas with high concentrations of war-industry workers: the
Frances Cabrini Homes in August 1942, the
Lawndale Gardens in December 1942, the
Bridgeport
Bridgeport is the most populous city and a major port in the U.S. state of Connecticut. With a population of 148,654 in 2020, it is also the fifth-most populous in New England. Located in eastern Fairfield County at the mouth of the Pequonnoc ...
Homes in May 1943, and the Robert H. Brooks Homes in March 1943. For families to live in these new projects, they needed to have at least one child; the family had to have one member working in a critical war industry (like steel); the family income had to total less than $2,000; and it was preferred that the family's nationality was
American.
Additional housing projects for war workers led by the
National Housing Agency
The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is one of the executive departments of the U.S. federal government. It administers federal housing and urban development laws. It is headed by the Secretary of Housing and Ur ...
and the
Federal Public Housing Authority on the far
South Side included the
Altgeld Gardens
Riverdale is one of the 77 official community areas of Chicago, Illinois and is located
on the city's far south side.
As originally designated by the Social Science Research Committee at the University of Chicago and officially adopted by the ...
project, which was constructed on a 157-acre vacant land tract in November 1943. Unlike the above projects, Altgeld Gardens contained
row houses
In architecture and city planning, a terrace or terraced house ( UK) or townhouse ( US) is a form of medium-density housing that originated in Europe in the 16th century, whereby a row of attached dwellings share side walls. In the United State ...
and backyards rather than crowded multi-story apartments. Similarly, the
West Chesterfield project homes were commissioned by the CHA and built in December 1943. A unique project, the housing units (actual homes) are built on full city lots, and following construction, the CHA required a minimum annual income as to promote eventual homeownership for residents. While each of the projects identified presented reasonable options for war workers and their families, the end of the war would present different challenges, especially along the lines of integration.
After World War II
As African American soldiers returned from the
battlefronts of Europe and the
Pacific
The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest of Earth's five oceanic divisions. It extends from the Arctic Ocean in the north to the Southern Ocean (or, depending on definition, to Antarctica) in the south, and is bounded by the contine ...
following the war, the
Chicago Housing Authority
The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) is a municipal corporation that oversees public housing within the city of Chicago. The agency's Board of Commissioners is appointed by the city's mayor, and has a budget independent from that of the city of ...
(CHA) shifted the initiative from creating housing for war workers and their families to providing temporary housing for returning veterans and their families. The shift occurred in part because of the Emergency Veterans' Re-Use Housing Program, a federal law passed by Congress in 1945 that attempted to resolve the nationwide housing shortage for returning veterans.
Elizabeth Wood, the executive director of the CHA, planned to integrate the temporary veterans' housing projects, as she had "absorbed
hespirit" of both the values of United States in its efforts to combat fascism and authoritarianism abroad during World War II, and also the energy and hope of black veterans who sought to "challenge the country to live up to its wartime rhetoric about freedom." Although the goal of integration contrasted the visions of the Democratic City Council and Illinois governor
Dwight Green
Dwight Herbert Green (January 9, 1897 – February 20, 1958) was an American politician who served as the 30th Governor of the US state of Illinois, serving from 1941 to 1949.
From childhood to early adulthood
Green was born in Ligonier, No ...
, Chicago's mayor,
Edward Kelly, was a proponent of CHA's vision for integrated veterans' housing and nondiscrimination policy.
Chicago's temporary projects were to be constructed in the fall of 1946 and set to close in July 1949. The first of these projects opened peacefully on the isolated North Side. However, the CHA's second project, the
Midway Airport Homes, resulted in mass discontent and violence prior to and after black families moved in.
Midway's fearful white working-class community reacted violently to the thought of black families entering the segregated neighborhood. Midway's white population overwhelmingly believed the space should be reserved for deserving white veterans. When the first black family moved into the completed project on November 16, 1946, a white stone-throwing mob descended upon the building. After the attack, the black family requested to move out of the Midway Airport Homes, and police had to escort the black family off the premises. White aggression and mob violence successfully preserved Midway's homogenous demographic.
Bradford Hunt argues the failure of the Airport Homes integration marked a turning point for the CHA. The "
racial liberalism" that CHA and Mayor Kelly promoted was directly challenged by white desire to uphold the racial purity of segregated neighborhoods. Chicago City Council members and aldermen also noticed Kelly's increased effort to maintain the CHA integration initiative over other mismanaged and corrupt areas of the Democratic political machine. To maintain the influence of the Democratic party in the city, key party leaders encouraged Kelly to retire in 1947. He was replaced by
Martin Kennelly, a pro-business, anti-CHA Democrat who prioritized private real estate interests and the expansion of the downtown business district.
Fernwood Park Homes
Fernwood Park is a neighborhood in the larger
Roseland community on the far south side of Chicago. Other neighborhoods in Roseland include Lilydale, Princeton Park, Rosemoor, Sheldon Heights, West Roseland, and part of West Chesterfield. In the early 1940s, the neighborhood was an ethnically mixed European immigrant community. The CHA initiated the construction of the Fernwood Park Homes, a one story project with 87 two-bedroom-units for veterans and their families. Elizabeth Wood revealed to Fernwood Park community members in May 1947 that the project would welcome white and black veterans. Since Fernwood Park was the only remaining white neighborhood in its immediate area, white residents recognized the promise of integration as a threat to the stability of their white homogenous environment.
Rioting
Unlike other race riots in Chicago history, there was no specific event or incident that sparked the rioting; Historian Arnold Hirsch suggests that the mob spontaneously organized outside of the housing project the evening after the families moved in on August 13, 1947. Scholars have estimated that anywhere from 500 to 5,000 white rioters gathered to reclaim the neighborhood. The violence lasted three full days, during which white gangs damaged property belonging to African Americans. Rioters threw stones both the residents of the project and the project itself, shattering windows, then
set fire to it. Members of the mob also pulled black people out of automobiles to beat them with clubs. Approximately 100 cars were attacked, and at least 35 black people were wounded. Police set up barricades in order to identify and isolate the area of violence, which stretched from 95th Street to 130th Street going north/south, and from Michigan Avenue to Vincennes Avenue going east/west.
Police response
Hirsch argues that police contributed to the violence against black occupants. Nearly 1,000 police officers were ordered to protect the Fernwood Park project residents, but overall, the Chicago police did little to stop or disperse organized mobs or gangs, assumedly because policemen who protected black residents were also the subject of mob violence. Additionally, the police reportedly failed to stop the motor attacks as well. Since the largest number of police officers were ordered to protect the housing project and its inhabitants, there were no available reinforcements to safeguard both the project and the black motorists. Instead of sending squad cars to the streets where violence against drivers occurred, police redirected traffic from four-lane main street Halsted Ave. to a two-lane side street only one block from Halsted, which meant that "traffic became hopelessly snarled,
ndblack motorists remained within easy reach of the mob." Thus, black drivers were especially vulnerable to mob activity.
The Chicago Police Department established units at the projects in the two weeks following the riot. Nearly 700 police officers remained in the area near Fernwood Park Homes to protect black residents from any violence, and the order of police protection was not removed for nearly six months after the riot.
Aftermath
Arrests and injuries
Only 113 people were arrested for rioting at the Fernwood Park Homes. Hirsch presents an ethnic analysis of the reported arrests, in which the largest European ethnicity represented was Dutch (26.3%); other ethnicities were German (14.7%), Irish (7.7%), Italian (6.5%) Scandinavian (5.6%), Polish (5.3%), and Slavic (4.4%).
Additionally, at least 35 black people reported injuries from white mob violence.
African American reaction to the riot
African American neighborhoods that surrounded Fernwood Park threatened to retaliate against the white mobs. Residents of Morgan Park, one of the neighborhoods that bordered Fernwood Park, and inhabitants of the Fernwood Homes threw stones at white people who walked past the project. Violence only deescalated when the
Chicago Commission on Human Relations
The government of the City of Chicago, Illinois, United States is divided into executive and legislative branches. The Mayor of Chicago is the chief executive, elected by general election for a term of four years, with no term limits. The mayor ...
and
Archibald Carey, Jr
Archibald James Carey Jr. (February 29, 1908 – April 20, 1981) was an American lawyer, judge, politician, diplomat, and clergyman from the South Side of Chicago. He was elected as a city alderman and served for eight years under the patronage ...
., an African American alderman, addressed Roseland's black population.
Additionally, the African American population in the Roseland area increased exponentially following the riot. Takei cites census data for Chicago neighborhoods to track the increase—while only 4.2% of Roseland was African American in 1940, the black population grew to represent 18.4% of the community by 1950. Statistics from the next few decades, especially 1970 and 1980, illustrate rapid
white flight
White flight or white exodus is the sudden or gradual large-scale migration of white people from areas becoming more racially or ethnoculturally diverse. Starting in the 1950s and 1960s, the terms became popular in the United States. They refer ...
from the area, as in 1970 African Americans represented 55.1% of Roseland's population, and by 1980, 97.5%.
Political response
Both the Fernwood Park riot and the Airport Homes riots highlighted white intransigence and refusal to accept black integration into white spaces. The integration objectives of the CHA "proved too fragile to withstand the prejudices, preferences, and mobility of whites" who resided in segregated communities. In response to the riots, Mayor Kennelly and Chicago City Council aimed to reduce the CHA's influence and restore the Democratic party's control over housing initiatives. Thus, new policy required that CHA gain approval from the Housing Committee of City Council before beginning construction of public housing projects. Similarly, Kennelly appointed the Chicago Land Clearance Commission in 1947, ultimately removing the CHA's ability to designate land for slum clearance and renewal. Finally, Chicago public housing moved to an open occupancy agenda rather than an integration agenda. While an integration agenda actively promoted and guided the movement of black people into traditionally white areas, an open occupancy agenda encouraged black people to select housing in any areas, but integration was not a priority whatsoever.
Chicago police disaster response reform
In just a few months after the Fernwood Park race riot, the Chicago Police Department (CPD) engaged in tactical changes to ensure faster response times to crises. Quick mobilization and Plan Five, or the disaster plan, "brought 27 squad cars to a designated location in less than fifteen minutes." Riot and civil disorder control also called for the organization of special police battalions, in which a total of 660 men and 98 police vehicles could arrive at any location in Chicago on "'short notice.'" Last and most significantly, the Chicago police promoted heavier levels of policing in areas where black people were moving in at higher rates. While these reforms improved disaster response, the department failed to address racial bias in individual officers in effective ways—human relations turned to hour-long classroom training seminars that would hopefully alter the lifelong biases of officers. Without meaningful bias training, systemic racism in the department hindered the ability of CPD to limit or end race riots.
See also
*
Englewood race riot
The Englewood race riot, or Peoria Street riot, was one of many post-World War II race riots in Chicago, Illinois that took place in November 1949.
Whites in the neighborhood rioted, attacking other whites, partially based on rumors and misinforma ...
*
Detroit race riot of 1943
*
List of incidents of civil unrest in the United States
Listed are major episodes of civil unrest in the United States. This list does not include the numerous incidents of destruction and violence associated with various sporting events.
18th century
*1783 – Pennsylvania Mutiny of 1783, June 20 ...
References
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Notes
{{Chicagoland Riots
African-American history in Chicago
White American riots in the United States
1947 riots
1947 in Illinois
Riots and civil disorder in Chicago
August 1947 events in the United States
History of racism in Illinois