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Chicago and the Civil Rights Movement

Linda Zabors

Timeline of slavery in the United States and in Illinois

1619 Indentured Servitude is initiated in the Jamestown colony by the Virginia Company. Laborers immigrating to the United States pay off the cost of their passage and room and board by working for several years under harsh conditions. They are afforded some rights and sometimes are granted land or property when their time is up.

The downstate Illinois Salt Mines use indentured servants, many of which are freed or runaway slaves.

Slavery increases in popularity as a source of cheap labor

Mid-1700s Slavery is practiced by the French in the Louisianna Territory which includes what is now the midwest.

1818 Illinois enters the United States as a Free State

1819-1965. Illinois Black Laws prohibit free blacks from voting, taking legal action against whites, or bearing arms. Blacks in Illinois are assumed to be slaves unless they hold a Certificate of Freedom

1850 The Fugitive Slave Law is passed. Escaped slaves are denied a trial by jury; it becomes illegal to help a slave escape capture.

Abraham Lincoln is elected President of the United States.
The American Civil War begins

1862 Lincoln Signs the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing slaves in the United States

1865 The Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution is passed, outlawing slavery in the United States

Jim Crow Laws instituted.


Martin Luther King, Jr. in Chicago

1963

August 28, 1963. March on Washington

Many Chicagoans participated locally or traveled to Washington D.C. for this event. Washington D.C. is where Dr. King deliver his famous “I have a Dream” speech.

There is a traveling exhibit which features a virtual reality experience of the March on Washington “I Have a Dream” speech. It is currently (as of 2022) showing at the DuSable Museum in Chicago.

1964

June 21, 1964. Illinois Rally for Civil Rights at Soldier Field

“We have come a long, long way in the civil rights struggle, but let me remind you that we have a long, long way to go. Passage of the civil rights bill does not mean that we have reached the promised land in civil rights.”

http://archives.nd.edu/about/news/index.php/2014/illinois-rally/

July 2, 1964. The 1964 Civil Rights Bill was signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson

1966

January 2, 1966

Martin Luther King, Jr. moves his family to an apartment on the West Side of Chicago near Douglas Park at 1550 S. Hamilin.

July 10, 1966. Freedom Sunday rally at Soldier Field and march to City Hall

30,000 in attendance in spite of 98F temperatures. He calls for a “just and open city,” fair housing, desegregated schools, employment opportunities, and an end to police brutality.

"This day we must declare our own Emancipation Proclamation. This day we must commit ourselves to make any sacrifice necessary to change Chicago. This day we must decide to fill up the jails of Chicago, if necessary, in order to end slums.

"This day we must decide to register every negro in Chicago of voting age before the municipal election. This day we must decide that our votes will determine who will be the mayor of Chicago next year.

"This day, henceforth and forever more, we must make it clear that we will purge Chicago of every politician, whether he be negro or white, who feels that he owns the negro vote rather than earns the negro vote."

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-martin-luther-king-jr-1966-speech-chicago-20160706-story.html

Following the rally, he and a crowd marched to City Hall. The following day he met with Mayor Richard J. Daley.

August 5, 1966. Marquette Park March

Martin Luther King, Jr. leads a march in the Marquette Park neighborhood and is met with an angry white mob that throws bricks and bottles at the protesters. King is hit in the head with a rock.

“I have never seen, even in Mississippi and Alabama, mobs as hateful as I've seen here in Chicago.”

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-martin-luther-king-jr-1966-speech-chicago-20160706-story.html

August 28, 1966. The Daley-King Agreement

The Daley-King agreement on "open housing" in Chicago is considered a precursor to the Civil Rights Act of 1968.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-martin-luther-king-jr-1966-speech-chicago-20160706-story.html

1968

April 4, 1968 Martin Luther King, Jr. is assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee

Riots break out in cities across the country

Chicago renames South Park Way as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive

Civil Rights Act of 1968, more commonly known as the Fair Housing Act,was passed by Congress on April 10, and President Lyndon B. Johnson signed it on April 11, 1968, just one week after King's death.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-martin-luther-king-jr-1966-speech-chicago-20160706-story.html


Source
https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-martin-luther-king-jr-1966-speech-chicago-20160706-story.html