Kenwood, located on the south side of Chicago, Illinois, is one of the official Chicago Community Areas. Flag Seal Nickname: The Windy City Motto: Urbs In Horto (Latin: City in a Garden), I Will Location Location in Chicagoland and northern Illinois Coordinates , Government Country State Counties United States Illinois Cook, DuPage Mayor Richard M. Daley (D) Geographical characteristics Area City 606. ...
Kenwood boasts some of the largest homes in the city, including the residence of Louis Farrakhan. According to the City of Chicago historical signs found on streetlights throughout the neighborhood, Kenwood was once one of the most elite nighborhoods in all of Chicago. Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. ...
Kenwood is bisected by 47th Street, which marks a dramatic socio-cultural and architectural boundary. North Kenwood suffered significant depopulation and attendant decline of the housing stock and retail base, bottoming out around 1990, although the area has been gradually redeveloping since then. South Kenwood fared this period rather better, escaping middle-class flight in the 1970s due to the efforts of the Kenwood Open House Committee to have the area zoned single-family homes only, halting a trend then underway to apartment and rooming-house conversion. In the real estate boom of the mind-2000s, houses sold for in excess of two million dollars, and long vacant lots were redeveloped with high-end luxury houses.
On the southern end of Kenwood between Woodlawn and Dorchester, is the small private park Madison Park (Chicago). Madison Park is one of only three remaining private parks in the City of Chicago. Madison Park, Hyde Park (Dedicated 1869) That Madison Park is an unusual and unique place is obvious even at a casual glance-a hundred and thirty year old ribbon of lush parkland bordered by peaceful residences, an island of serenity in the heart of a busy city. ...
But then again if you have an AB from Chicago and the only sources you cite in support of your premise are the slanted opinions of the New York Times editorial board and Right Watch, you have probably not read or been exposed to Frederick Hayek, Aaron Director, and Milton Friedman, AM’34.
As a professor of geology at Chicago, Bretz turned the geological world upside down with his 1920s theory on how some 15,000 square miles of the inland Pacific Northwest was carved into complex canyons, coulees, rock, mesas, and deep pothole lakes.
I seek personal recollections from his students (Bretz taught at the U of C from the teens to 1947) and invite anyone who studied under Bretz, accompanied him on field trips, or otherwise had contact with him, to contact me by e-mail: emuranch1@netzero.com; phone: 509/235-2057; or mail: P.O. Box 501, Cheney, WA 99004.