HYDE PARK TOWNSHIP, COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS

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'Hyde Park Township, Cook County, Illinois' is a former civil township in Cook County, Illinois, United States that existed as a separate municipality from 1861 until 1889 when it was annexed into the city of Chicago. Hyde Park Township Keating, Ann Durkin Its borders are Pershing Road (formerly 39th Street) on the north, State Street on the west, Lake Michigan and the Indiana state line on the east, and 138th Street and the Calumet River on the south (see map in footnote). Annexations and Additions to the City of Chicago Keating, Ann Durkin This region comprised most of what are now known as the South side of Chicago including the entirety of the following community areas: Hyde Park (41), Kenwood (39), Woodlawn (42), South Shore (43), South Chicago (46), East Side (52), Hegewisch (55), Avalon Park (45), Calumet Heights (48), South Deering (51), Burnside (47), Pullman (50), and Riverdale (54) as well as the Southern part of Oakland (36) and the eastern parts of Grand Boulevard (38), Washington Park(40), Greater Grand Crossing (69), Chatham (44), Roseland (49), and West Pullman (53).
During its brief history it developed from unpopulated wildlife to a largely developed residential, commercial and resort community. However, due to infrastructure limitations, legislative incentives and the lure of better municipal services it, along with numerous adjoining townships, agreed to be annexed into the city of Chicago.

Contents
History
Notes
References

History


The University of Chicago was established in Hyde Park two years after annexation.

The township was founded by Paul Cornell, who paid for a topographical survey of the lakefront south of the city in 1852.Pacyga, Dominic A., Chicago Journal, "Hyde Park - from the 1830s to the beginning of Urban Renewal," pp. 5-7, November 25, 1981. In 1853, following the advice of Senator Stephen Douglas, he bought of speculative property between 51st Street and 55th Street and set about developing the first Chicago railroad suburb. Graveyards of Chicago Oak Woods Cemetery Sawyers, June Skinner, ''Chicago Portraits'', "Paul Cornell", pp. 56-7, Loyola University Press, 1991, ISBN 0-8294-0701-4. This area was south of the mouth of the Chicago River and south of downtown Chicago. In the 1850s, Chicago was still a walkable urban area well contained within a radius of the center. Commuting Conzen, Michael P. He selected the name Hyde Park to associate the area with the elite high class neighborhoods of New York and London.[1] By 1855 he began acquiring large land tracts, which he would subdivide into lots for sale in the 1870s. Greater Grand Crossing Best, Wallace
The World's Columbian Exposition of 1893 was held in the recently annexed Hyde Park.

In 1837, The City of Chicago incorporated, and by the 1870s the surrounding townships had followed suit. After 1850, Cook County was divided into basic governmental entities designated as townships as a result of the new Illinois Constitution. Townships Keating, Ann Durkin The Illinois's permissive incorporation law empowered any community of 300 resident citizens to petition the Illinois legislature for incorporation as a municipality under a municipal charter with more extensive powers to provide services and tax local residents. Government, Suburban Teaford, Jon C. Hyde Park Township was created by the Illinois General Assembly in 1861 within Cook County. Governing the Metropolis Orum, Anthony This empowered the township to better govern the provision of services to its increasingly suburban residents. The city offered better services, such as improved water supply, sewerage, and fire and police protection, which led to several neighboring municipalities to seek annexation. Hyde Park Township, however, had installed new waterworks in 1883 just north of 87th Street. Nonetheless, the majority of voters in 1889 supported annexation, in large part, because of the city’s water system for fire prevention. It was annexed by Chicago in 1889 after the township government became too unwieldy. After the annexation that resulted from the June 29 1889 elections Chicago was able to leverage efficiencies as the largest United States city in area and second largest in population. Annexations Cain, Louis P. The township has no current governmental structure or functions, other than being used by the Cook County Assessor's office for taxation valuation and record keeping purposes. Reassessment Notices for Hyde Park Township Mailed However, traditionalists still view the boundary as important. In fact, the Hyde Park Historical Society offers middle school and high school awards with eligibility based on the historical boundaries.[2]
When first created the township had only 350 residents. The creation of the Union Stock Yards in 1865 changed the evolutionary path of Hyde Park and the neighboring Lake Township, which became the industrial center while Hyde Park became the middle class enclave. By the late 1860s Hyde Park included about 3000 residents. The population of the township grew from 15,716 to 85,000 between 1880 and 1889.
Hyde Park was the site of the Columbian Exposition of 1893. It is the location of the University of Chicago (founded in 1891).

Notes


1. Hyde Park Community Collection
2. 2005 Hyde Park Historical Society Neighborhood History Awards

References



★ Keating, Ann Durkin. Building Chicago: Suburban Developers and the Creation of a Divided Metropolis. 1988.

★ Miller, Donald L. ''City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America'' pp. 282-284; 292.

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