yep, my mom was from Roseland, dad was from Brainerd, I lived here my whole life, 47 years, me and my brother used to hang out at beer can beach, south of the Calumet Guard station, and that Mexican place on the skinny corner, 95th & Ewing, Hegewisch Records, remember the original 13315 S Brandon.
News reporters and writers are not normally from Chicago, so how would they know, they just go where ever they get hired or transfered
Chicago's Southside is twice as big as the Northside
Altgeld Gardens is at 134th, Hegewisch about 138th, ever have a Downscope at Skippers Marina on Vernon ave, the northside only goes up tp Howard 7600 north
2007-01-02 06:45:35
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answer #1
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answered by lepke 4
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Calumetman, your name implies you know the answer to your question...
The Southeast side adjacent to the Indiana boarder is part of the Southside (which is roughly half of the city, the southern half).
There are no real rules for neighborhoods, but if you were to follow the Skyway it would take you through Woodlawn, South Shore, South Chicago, Calumet Heights and East Chicago.
My mother grew up in the South Chicago neighborhood, and I have heard her refer to the "East Side," meaning the southeast side, but I do not hear that reference very often.
The news has a habit of just giving general geographic descriptions, west, northwest, etc., without any real formal distinction (where does northwest end and west begin?). The neighborhood names are more specific, but the boundaries can change, smaller sub-neighborhoods can evolve (ie Wrigleyville is part of Lakeview), and on the South Side, the neighborhoods are pretty big, so you usually want a more specific description.
One note, there has been a recent move by some developers to start calling the area bounded by Wacker, Michigan, Randolf and the Lake the "New East Side", not be confused with the East Side or as you are calling it, the Southeast Side.
2007-01-02 03:53:54
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answer #2
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answered by Waldeck 3
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The North, south, east and west sides of the city are actually determined by the official dividing line of the city located at State and Madison. Madison is the dividing line for north and south in the city and State St. is the dividing line for east and west. If you go to State and Madison, you'll see that the building numbers get higher as you move away from this intersection in any direction. This is handy way of determining where a certain building or address is located (For instance, if an address is 1600 W. Madison - or 1600 W. anything for that matter - you know that the building is located 16 blocks west from State Street. And if it is 1600 N. state, you know it is 16 blocks north of madison, etc.)
As for the Southeast side, the neighborhoods have names line hegewisch, Deering and South Chicago. Check the website below for more info.
2007-01-02 03:51:06
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answer #3
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answered by bodinibold 7
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Even Chinatown is on the Southside, as is the University of Chicago. I grew up in Roseland and the Pullman District and often visited Beverly. Had friends from Woodlawn and Washington Park. I don't think that Evergreen Park or Blue Island are technically in Chicago, maybe south suburbs. It's been a long time since my residence there, but even then, the news media wasn't much interested in our far south side events. The Pullman district was named for the factory complex (now an historical area) that manufactured Pullman railroad sleeping cars. It was aone time essentially a self-sustaining factory "village."
2007-01-02 20:51:36
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answer #4
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answered by expatturk 4
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There's a neighborhood called "East Side," down near the Indiana border.
The terms "North Side," "South Side" and "West Side" have to do with their location relative to the forks of the Chicago River.
2007-01-01 20:04:13
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answer #5
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answered by YabanciKiz 5
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nicely, you have have been given a Sox avatar so i bypass to assert of direction you will desire to look at Bridgeport -- although Bridgeport isn't inevitably "different." it continues to be oftentimes white with a becoming Latino inhabitants. lower back of the Yards may well be a sturdy community for you because it somewhat is totally different. alongside those lines, Brighton Park/Armour sq./McKinley Park are additionally sturdy neighborhoods so which you would be able to think approximately. you would be able to additionally want to think approximately Bronzeville. It would not have the coolest racial split you're searching for, even inspite of the shown fact that it somewhat is a working classification/center classification community that has been thoroughly reinvented interior the final countless years and there's a becoming white inhabitants there. lots of large new house and house homes and property values are on the upward push. in case you want to bypass added south, Hyde Park/Kenwood may well be neighborhoods you want to think approximately. sturdy luck.
2016-10-19 08:01:11
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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; Chicago refers to south loop and west loop areas because if they went east of downtown they would be in lake Michigan-I have never heard anything with east in it in referring to downtown Chicago , not even east suburbs-only water there!
2007-01-01 08:25:17
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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