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the neighborhood is best known for a lively hipster community of artists and musicians; however, gentrification has recently brought some of the yuppie population into the area. One bumper sticker reads, "Stop Bucktown before it Lincoln Parks." The borders of the neighborhood are generally accepted to be Ashland to the east (at 1600 W), the above-grade Bloomingdale Line to the north (at 1800 N), Division to the south (at 1200 N), and Western Avenue to the west (at 2400 W). These boundaries are not hard and fast, and may change slightly over time. Both the East Village and Ukrainian Village are to the south, Humboldt Park is to the west, and Bucktown is to the north. Wicker Park is also the setting of a 2004 film by the same name. It is also a primary source of inspiration for the Skinny Puppy album Too Dark Park . Transportation Hubs in Wicker Park. Train. Blue Line, Damen Stop, Division Stop. Bus. Milwaukee, Ashland, Wester, Division, Experssway. 90/94. aka. Kennedy Expressway. |
______________________ At the end of the 19th century, the area was known as "the ethnic Gold Coast" and Hone was known as "Beer Baron Row," as many of Chicago's wealthiest brewers built mansions there. In the 1890s and 1900s, immigration from Poland and the completion of the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Lines greatly boosted the population density of West Town, especially in areas east of Wicker Park; the corner of Division, Milwaukee, and Ashland retains the moniker "Polish Triangle" to this day, and the exiled government of Poland met in Wicker Park during World War I.
After World War II, many Poles moved to newer, less crowded housing further northwest, and Wicker Park became more ethnically diverse with an influx of Puerto Rican immigrants. Some urban renewal projects were undertaken to combat "urban blight" in some parts of the neighborhood, but disinvestment continued at a rapid clip. Chicago and Wicker Park reached a nadir in the 1970s, a decade when the city overall lost 11% of its population; during the 1970s, hundreds of insurance arsons were reported in Wicker Park, and many small factories in the area (many in woodworking) closed or moved away. Efforts by community development groups to stabilize the community through new affordable-housing construction in the 1980s coincided with the arrival of artists attracted by the neighborhood's easy access to the Loop, cheap loft space in the abandoned factories, and distinctly urban feel. |
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Search other Chicago Neighborhoods - Surrounding Bucktown Neighborhoods; Wicker Park, Bucktown, East Village, Ukrainian Village, Logan Square, Noble Square, River West, River North, West Loop, South Loop. |
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