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  1. The Ida B. Wells Homes consisted of rowhouses, mid-rises, and high-rise apartment buildings, first constructed 1939 to 1941 to house African American tenants. They were closed and demolished beginning in 2002 and ending in 2011.

  2. The Ida B. Wells Homes consisted of row houses, mid-rises, and high-rise apartment buildings constructed to house African American tenants. They were demolished beginning in 2002 and ending in 2011.

  3. Named after Wells, the Ida B. Wells Homes were a series of rowhouses, mid-rise and high-rise apartment buildings, constructed in 1941 to house Black families in the heart of the Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago. When the homes first opened, more than 18,000 families applied to live in the 1,600-unit complex.

  4. Named after Wells, the Ida B. Wells Homes were a series of rowhouses, mid-rise and high-rise apartment buildings, constructed in 1941 to house Black families in the heart of the Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago. When the homes first opened, more than 18,000 families applied to live in the 1,600-unit complex.

  5. These town homes were built in 1874 and were the home of many Chicago wealthy elites that proudly called this place home. In the 1920s the white elite began to move out as lower income black families moved in, soon after the town homes began their earliest stages of decline by the 1930s.

    • Who built the Ida B Wells Homes?1
    • Who built the Ida B Wells Homes?2
    • Who built the Ida B Wells Homes?3
    • Who built the Ida B Wells Homes?4
  6. Oct 30, 2020 · Ida B. Wells Homes was a public housing project of the Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) located in the Bronzeville neighborhood in the South Side of Chicago. They were constructed between 193941 as part of the Public Works Administration and demolished from 2002–2011.

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  8. Oct 27, 2018 · The development would be the largest of the demonstration developments built under President Franklin D. Roosevelts Public Works Administration and the first such development in Chicago to include a city park with a playground and playing fields.