1919Main MenuTimelineProhibition is RatifiedThe 18th Amendment, which prohibited "the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory," was ratified on this day.Seattle General StrikeTens of thousands of workers in Seattle joined a five day strike that would be followed by waves of labor unrest across the nation. In the next two years almost four million workers across the U.S. went on strike.8th Illinois Regiment Returns from WarThis all African American unit fought in France during the First World War. Soldiers from the 8th returned to Chicago and marched down Michigan Ave in February 1919.The Red ScareA wave of labor unrest and persecution of radicals and those deemed un-american shaped the political climate in 1919.365th Infantry ParadeThe 365th all African American infantry unit returned to Chicago in March 1919 after fighting in France. Wartime service gave soldiers new perspectives that shaped their views of events in Chicago in 1919.Mayor Thompson Re-electedWilliam Hale Thompson is re-elected Mayor of Chicago.Red SummerIn dozens of cities African American communities were targets of white mob violence that left untold numbers of people dead, injured, and displaced.19th Amendment Approved by CongressCongress approves the 19th Amendment, guaranteeing women the right to vote.Treaty of VersaillesTreaty of Versailles is signed in Paris, ending World War I and creating the League of Nations.Wingfoot Air Express CrashWingfoot Air Express, a dirigible operated by Goodyear Tire, caught fire and crashed into the skylight of the Illinois Trust and Savings Building at LaSalle and Jackson.Eugene Williams DrownedRiots erupted after an African American swimmer was stoned to death by a white man on the beach.Angelus Building RiotViolence broke out at the Angelus apartment building (3501 S. Wabash), the only white occupied apartment building on an all-Black city block, in a largely Black neighborhood.Mayor Requests State MilitiaMayor William H. Thompson called for activation of the Illinois state militia.Housing Conditions and SegregationHow can housing conditions and segregation in 1919 help us understand the riots?Black Migration to ChicagoHow can migration patterns in 1919 help us understand the riots?Labor Conflict and RaceHow can labor conflicts in 1919 help us understand the riots?Communist Party USA FoundedThe 1918 October Revolution led to the rise of a Left Wing who valued revolutionary socialism within the Socialist Party USA. The Left Wing was unable to gain control of the Socialist Party and split off to form the Communist Party USA.The Great Steel StrikeU.S. Steel Corporation workers in Chicago joined iron and steel workers across the country in a strike that shut down half of the nation's steel industry.White Sox Play World SeriesThe Chicago White Sox played in the World Series against the Cincinnati Reds.About the Exhibit
Looting during the 1919 Chicago Race Riots
12019-07-24T14:03:17+00:00Kate Flynn7a93418b93b9db509597a67ae6311be88dcb38d6131plain2019-07-24T14:03:17+00:00ICHi-065486Jun Fujita negatives collection, Chicago History MuseumKate Flynn7a93418b93b9db509597a67ae6311be88dcb38d6
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12019-07-24T14:03:17+00:00Housing Conditions and Segregation3How can housing conditions and segregation in 1919 help us understand the riots?image_header2019-07-25T15:39:49+00:0007/31/1919By the end of 1919, close to one million African Americans had left the South. In the decade between 1910 and 1920, the Black population of Chicago grew by 148 percent. Factors such as the rapid migration to Chicago, low housing stock, and racist policies and actions that maintained a rigid color line worked together to create a situation in which African American migrants were forced to compete for housing in Chicago’s already crowded neighborhoods. After the U.S. Supreme Court declared racially based housing ordinances unconstitutional in 1917, many white residential neighborhoods found a way to maintain the color line by creating local contracts that required white property owners to agree not to sell to African Americans. These agreements, known as restrictive covenants, would remain legal until the Supreme Court struck them down in 1948. Restrictive covenants led to the development of what some historians have called “Black metropolises” or the “Black Belt.” In Chicago, the Black Belt was situated in the South Side, stretching from Twenty-Second Street to Fifty-First Street. With such a large population confined to under thirty blocks, overcrowding was a major issue, as numerous families inhabited small dwellings that were already old and dilapidated. Many of these apartment buildings lacked basic plumbing and usually only had one bathroom per floor. By 1934, a census estimated that Black households contained on average seven individuals, while white households on average contained four. Since the buildings were so overcrowded, building inspections and garbage collection were below the minimum mandatory requirements for healthy sanitation, contributing to a 16 percent higher infant mortality rate in the Black Belt. Racial strife would continue to rise as ethnic whites in the surrounding neighborhoods of the Black Belt refused to allow African Americans to reside in their neighborhoods.