Kenwood

South Side

      Prayer Points

  • There has been a recent influx of young professionals into the neighborhood. Pray for cultural sensitivity and a healthy interaction with the community residents that have been there for a long time.

 

  • Kenwood is one of the communities affected by the Chicago Public School’s restructuring with schools closing in this neighborhood. Pray for the children impacted by these decisions and needing to adapt to a different neighborhood.

 

  • Thank God for community organizations that are committed to the greater well-being of the neighborhood. Pray that God would bless the work they are doing in Kenwood.

      Ethnic Breakdown

  • Asian (0.1%)
  • Black or African American (71.8%)
  • Hispanic or Latino (1.0%)
  • White (16.6%)

Woe to you...you have neglected...justice and mercy and faithfulness. - Matthew 23:23

Neighborhood Background

This area was first settled in the 1850s by inhabitants hoping to separate themselves from the hustle and bustle of downtown Chicago. Many of Chicago’s prominent residents lived in the area and the community continued to prosper through the 1890s. However, once the “L” reached Kenwood in 1907 the population increased greatly along with smaller living accommodations.

 

The population continued to increase into the 1930s when the community was starting to show signs of deterioration and many existing apartments were subdivided. The transient community was moving either out of the area or into the northern part of community, while the southern part was populated with an influx of African Americans from the southern part of Chicago.

 

To assist with the transitions in the neighborhood, the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference was established in the late 1940s in order to maintain a stable and integrated neighborhood. Fortunately, Kenwood benefited from the urban renewal funds from the Community Conference and the designation of historical districts and development of new residential construction. In the 1990s, the creation of charter schools also led many families to move back to the community.

information courtesy of Moody Publishers

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

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