Ashburn

Far Southwest Side

      Prayer Points

  • Praise God for the ethnic diversity in the community. Pray for cultural sensitivity and continued peace among the residents.

 

  • Pray for the local high school which, though under-resourced, brings together young people from many socioeconomic backgrounds.

 

  • Praise God that this community has not experienced the instances of violence and gang activity of neighboring communities.

 

  • Pray that these patterns of safety would continue in Ashburn. A once vibrant church presence has waned in recent years. Pray for a renewed focus on the part of the body of Christ.

      Ethnic Breakdown

  • Asian (0.8%)
  • Black or African American (49.2%)
  • Hispanic or Latino (31.5%)
  • White (17.6%)

And let our people also learn to engage in good deeds to meet pressing needs . . . - Titus 3:14

 

Neighborhood Background

Following Ashburn’s annexation to Chicago in 1893, railroads were built in hopes that the community would flourish. However, Ashburn was slow in development, and by 1894, only a few homes and residences were added. Chicago’s first airport, Ashburn Flying Field, was opened in 1916, which became a training camp for Signal Corps during World War I.

 

By this time, Ashburn’s population had grown to 1,363. The Municipal Airport (now Midway) then opened in 1927 in a neighboring community, and Ashburn Field closed in 1939, later becoming a suburban style mall. Although the population of Ashburn shrank down to 731 during World War II, the automobile and post-WWII baby boom led to rapid growth in the community, with the population peaking at 47,161 in 1970.

 

The majority of the population was white until a new racially mixed neighborhood, Maycrest, formed. During the 1960s, neighborhoods integrated with the help of Greater Ashburn Planning Association (GAPA), which worked to minimize racial strife over school desegregation. Ashburn has maintained an extremely high homeownership rate, with retirement housing to help families age in the same place.

information courtesy of Moody Publishers

"Chicago Neighborhood Prayer Guide" by Dr. John Fuder with Elizabeth Koenig

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