This weekend I completed The 1919 Chicago Race Riot Route, a bicycle ride presented by People For Bikes, the Newberry Library, SRAM and ABUS to benefit Blackstone Bicycle Works, a bike shop serving underserved neighborhoods in Chicago. Aside from raising money to support an important cause, the route is meant to educate about one of the most violent, tragic events in our city's history that remains unknown to many. The ride took me from the place whether the rioting began along Chicago's lake front and into the nearby neighborhoods of Bronzeville and Bridgeport, home to friction points between white and Black residents.
My impression from the ride, which I did on a sunny, crisp and windy early October morning, was of harsh contrasts offered by what remains, and what does not, from that time long ago. Many of the landmarks commemorating Black contributions in the area are small, new and/or nonexistent. On the other hand, markers of white supremacy and out and out racism remain obvious.
The ride begins at the Eugene Williams Marker which notes the approximate location where a white beach goer killed a Black child who was deemed to have come too close to the white bathing area. The marker, dedicated in 2009, consists of a rock adorned with a plaque. I had probably passed it many times riding on the path without ever noticing it was there. When I came to it during my ride this weekend two garbage cans sat next to it, partially shielding it from view.
The Eugene Williams Marker at the start of the route. |
I continued on to the front gate of the Union Stockyards, work at which had compelled many African Americans to journey from the South, particularly Mississippi, to Chicago in search of work.
I rode from there back east to see the spot where the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s began. In 1955, a young boy from Chicago, Emmett Till, was savagely murdered by white supremacists in Mississippi after supposedly whistling at a white woman. Upon his body's return to Chicago his mother made the difficult decision to have an open casket funeral for her son so that the whole world could see what racial hatred had done to her boy. Jet Magazine published the photos which fueled the start of the push for civil rights which exploded during the 1960s and which led to passage of the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act in 1964. The viewing of Emmett Till's body took place at the Roberts Temple Church of God In Christ at 4021 South State Street. The building is still there. Today the church not only looks run down, it is run down. Designated a Chicago landmark in 2006, the building is in such bad shape that there are noted concerns about it's structural integrity. I imagine that at least the outside of the church looks much like it did in 1955.
Onward I rode to the next location, a marker commemorating the great journalist, Ida B. Wells. There was a time when she was arguably the most famous Black woman in American. She was one of the founders of the NAACP. During her time in Chicago she helped expose the horrors of lynching in the South and school segregation in Chicago among many other important activities. Surely, there would be a sizable memorial to her, a tribute that would rival the soaring tribute to Douglas Stephens I had seen earlier on my ride. It was not to be, though. The City of Chicago has seen fit to commemorate her incredible achievements and contributions with another rock with a plaque. It is unimpressive to say the least, and it sits in the corner of a large empty lot that was the location of the notorious Ida B. Wells Homes, a rough and dangerous housing project that existed from 1941 to 2011.
The final destination on the route lay ahead. I rode several block north to the Victory Monument at 35th Street and Martin Luther King Drive. This was perhaps the only physically impressive tribute to contributions made by Black people I saw on my ride. Though placed in the middle of the road, the memorial is apparently the only one in the State of Illinois that commemorates Black service during World War I. Every Memorial Day a ceremony is held at the monument.
I strongly recommend this ride to anyone interested in understanding the 1919 Riot and the contributions and travails of African Americans in Chicago. It seems that not only must we learn about what happened 100+ years ago, but we must appreciate how much of that vile legacy continues to this day. Those who would deny the continuing existence of systemic racism should perhaps consider why it is that the Roberts Temple Church of God In Christ sits in disrepair while the Hamburg Athletic Club remains intact, or why Douglas Stephens in honored with a soaring marble monument while Ida B. Wells is remembered with a plaque on a stone. The route I rode does not contain answers but the questions posed by the sights, and lack thereof, along the way are numerous.
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