Images of America: Hyde Park features vintage images of this famous
IIlinois park.
Since the early twentieth century, Hyde Park has been known as a refuge
and incubator for intellectuals, artists, novelists, poets, and
freethinkers. Its best known institution, the University of Chicago,
drew many of these persons close to its boundaries with the promise of a
steady diet of conflicting ideas and lofty conversations. Throughout the
first few decades of the twentieth century, Hyde Park went through a
steady period of growth, both in residents and the construction of a
dense network of walk-up apartment buildings and commercial facilities
that offered a stark contrast to the more bucolic atmosphere of Hyde
Park before the Columbian Exposition of 1893. By the late 1940s, parts
of Hyde Park were showing signs of blight, as the area continued to
house larger numbers of migrants from other depressed areas of the
United States and programs of deferred or nonexistent maintenance began
to have irreversible effects on the built environment. Images of
America: Hyde Park, Illinois, focuses most of its attention on the
period after World War II, all the way through the creation of the Hyde
Park-Kenwood Urban Renewal Project, the first major urban renewal
project in the United States.