Prairie Park (East Chicago)

Prairie Park is a neighborhood in the Indiana Harbor section of East Chicago, Indiana. It is bounded on the north by U.S. 12 (Columbus Avenue), and on the south by Indiana 312 (Chicago Avenue).[1] To the west, it looks across Elm Street at the Washington Park neighborhood, and to the east it is bounded by the Cline Avenue expressway and industrial northern Gary beyond.[1]

Prairie Park
Neighborhood
Coordinates: 41°38′N 87°26′W
Country United States
State Indiana
CountyLake County
CityEast Chicago
Population
 (2010)[1]
  Total812
Time zoneUTC-6 (CST)
  Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)
ZIP code
46312
Area code(s)219

As of the 2010 United States Census, Prairie Park had 812 residents, of whom 46.2% were African American and 48% were Hispanic.[1] The population was down from 946 in 2000.[1] There are approximately 300 homes in the neighborhood.[2]

Prairie Park is known as one of East Chicago's more diverse and affluent neighborhoods.[3] It is home to the Block Middle School, Washington Elementary School, and the main building of the East Chicago Public Library.

History

Prairie Park is one of East Chicago's newest neighborhoods, having been built between the 1960s and 1990s.[1] Like Sunnyside to its north, Prairie Park has suburban-style curved streets, in contrast to the conventional street grid found elsewhere in East Chicago and neighboring cities.

Beginning in the 1960s, the neighborhood was built in three stages on land previously owned by Inland Steel.[2] The development, originally planned to include 600 homes,[4] was managed by the Purdue-Calumet Development Foundation.[2]

The neighborhood was originally intended to house the city's elites.[2] To that end, restrictive covenants prohibited building any homes worth less than $14,000.[2]

References

  1. East Chicago Parks and Recreation Department (2013-04-02). "East Chicago, Indiana 5-Year Parks and Recreation Master Plan". Archived from the original (DOC) on 2013-09-03. Retrieved 2017-11-21.
  2. Sharon Porta (1992-11-08). "Neighborhoods. Prairie Park was built for East". Times of Northwest Indiana.
  3. Khalilah Annette Shabazz (2015). Black Women, White Campus: Students Living Through Invisibility (PDF) (Ph.D. thesis). Indiana University.
  4. Alfred H. Meyer; Diane Heidtmann Paetz (1961). "Manufactural Geography of East Chicago-Whiting, Indiana (A Study in Geographic Rehabilitation)". Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science.
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