When people talk about segregation in Chicago, they are mostly referring to the black south and near west side, and to a lesser extent the hispanic near-southwest and Little Village areas.
Look closely at the map on this thread, and match it up to a Chicago neighborhood map. Look at the border between Beverly (where I grew up) and Gresham and Brainerd. Look at the borders around Hyde Park. Look at the border between Austin and Oak Park (where I live now). For that matter, look at Lawndale vs Little Village. The borders are sharp, they follow regular lines, and generally involve a 90+% majority black neighborhood on one side.
There are a bunch of reasons this happened:
* The Great Migration, during which Chicago was a giant magnet for rural black southerners
* Redlining, the overtly racist/segregationist practice of refusing home loans to black families in "non-black" neighborhoods
* The construction of the Ryan, which displaced black families who ended up moving to places like Englewood
* The construction of the CHA high rise housing projects, which were concentrated in areas that would eventually become majority-black
* The subsequent flight of white families from places like Englewood, which went from 10% black immediately after WW2 to 98+%(!) black in 1980
It's important to note that with the possible exception of Beverly, which really is a white Irish enclave, the non-black non-hispanic neighborhoods in Chicago aren't intolerant, and have black representation roughly in line with their representation in the population as a whole. If you live in Avondale or Rogers Park or Lakeview, it probably doesn't look at all segregated.
Also, Chicago isn't the most segregated city in the US.
Thank you for responding. I just feel that "racial segregation" are the wrong words to use when describing this map. and yes the reasons you have posted are for the most part true. They are now a little outdated but they were things that happened in the past that have contributed to our present. I would like to believe that chicgoans have made many strides in certain areas of the city to become more diverse. But who knows. If we continue to try we can hopefully change our present to a better future.
Look closely at the map on this thread, and match it up to a Chicago neighborhood map. Look at the border between Beverly (where I grew up) and Gresham and Brainerd. Look at the borders around Hyde Park. Look at the border between Austin and Oak Park (where I live now). For that matter, look at Lawndale vs Little Village. The borders are sharp, they follow regular lines, and generally involve a 90+% majority black neighborhood on one side.
There are a bunch of reasons this happened:
* The Great Migration, during which Chicago was a giant magnet for rural black southerners
* Redlining, the overtly racist/segregationist practice of refusing home loans to black families in "non-black" neighborhoods
* The construction of the Ryan, which displaced black families who ended up moving to places like Englewood
* The construction of the CHA high rise housing projects, which were concentrated in areas that would eventually become majority-black
* The subsequent flight of white families from places like Englewood, which went from 10% black immediately after WW2 to 98+%(!) black in 1980
It's important to note that with the possible exception of Beverly, which really is a white Irish enclave, the non-black non-hispanic neighborhoods in Chicago aren't intolerant, and have black representation roughly in line with their representation in the population as a whole. If you live in Avondale or Rogers Park or Lakeview, it probably doesn't look at all segregated.
Also, Chicago isn't the most segregated city in the US.