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Chicagoareaproject company history timeline

1934

Begun in 1934, CAP was founded on the concept that every neighborhood has the leaders it needs to solve its own problems.

1935

1935, and photocopies of articles concerning juvenile delinquency and the Chicago Area Project.

1940

The area was one of the low-rent districts of Chicago (Romano, 1940). It had been a place of first settlement for various immigrant groups and successively occupied by the Irish, Germans, Swedes, Italians, and Negroes from the American south.

As they grew older, the Owl-Indians incorporated as a social athletic club and sponsored various athletic and social programs (Romano, 1940). They played baseball, basketball, and other sports, and also sponsored picnics, dances, and neighbourhood parties.

Chicago Area Project (1940) North Side Community Committee Collection.

In Bell, M (ed) Dealing with Delinquency: Yearbook of the National Probation Association 1940.

In 1940, leaders on Chicago’s near northwest side approached Shaw.

1942

Annual Report of the West Side Community Committee 1942.

Shaw C and McKay H (1942) Juvenile Delinquency and Urban Areas.

1943

"The Area Project" (History of Chicago Area Project after 10 Years), 1943-11-09, Folder 8, Box: 1, Folder: 8.

William Foote Whyte (1943), a noted sociologist from the University of Oklahoma, challenged this position after observing the work of the North Side Civic Committee.

1944

An article in Harper’s Weekly in 1944 eloquently sums up CAP’s achievements:

1946

Chicago Daily Tribune (1946) Widow reveals Nate’s flight from Assassins.

1950

Ferguson O (1950) Report of the Chicago Federation of Community Committees presented at the 19th Annual State Conference on Youth and Community Services.

1951

After defeating the Aiellos, the Capone Syndicate recruited members of Little Sicily’s Gloriana Gang, a notorious group of burglars and holdup men, to distribute alcohol in the area (Chicago Crime Commission, 1951). The gang derived its name from its leader, Charles Gloriana.

Kobrin S (1951) The conflict of values in delinquency areas.

1952

Chicago Daily Tribune (1952) Raid hoodlum hangout, seize 27 on west side.

Chicago Federation of Community Committees (1952) Federation Newsletter 1:1.

Waterford Jones reorganized an existing group that became the Beatrice Caffrey Youth Service in 1952, in honor of a local teacher who was a volunteer.

1954

Saint Philip Benizi (1954) Golden Jubilee Book.

1959

Kobrin S (1959) The Chicago Area Project: A 25 year assessment.

1961

Kobrin S (1961) Sociological aspects of the development of a street corner group: An exploratory study.

1966

Kramer C (1966) Chicago Daily Tribune.

1967

Davis A (1967) Spearheads for Reform.

1968

Suttles G (1968) The Social Order of the Slum.

1977

Sorrentino (1977) tied these social athletic clubs to machine politics describing how local precinct captains would provide “help” through their “political contacts” whenever a club member was in trouble.

1981

In 1981, the state legislature failed to approve the budget of the Commission on Delinquency Prevention.

1983

Vecoli R (1983) The formation of Chicago’s Little Italies.

The Chicago Area Project can trace its roots to the Institute for Juvenile Research. It provided the first systematic challenge, by sociologists, to the dominance of psychology in public programs for the treatment and prevention of juvenile delinquency (Schlossman and Sedlak, 1983).

1984

In 1984, Chicago Area Project, one of the most remarkable social experiments in modern urban America, celebrated its 50th Anniversary.

1986

CAP Executive Director David E. Whittaker was appointed in 1986.

1992

Phase two, the William Green Homes, would add an additional eight buildings to the housing complex that came to be known as ‘Cabrini Green’ (Chicago Daily Tribune, 1992). The people of Little Sicily felt betrayed.

1993

Daniel “Moose” Brindisi was assigned to the committee by the Illinois Department of Public Welfare and served as the committee’s director until his death in 1993, a period of fifty years.

Crimmins J (1993) Chicago Daily Tribune.

1995

Career Development Training & Employment Services (CDTES): Since 1995, CDTES provides direct employment services to SNAP & TANF eligible customers and low income, and under-employed individuals to help them achieve both economic and personal prosperity.

2010

Similar evidence was provided by a local community leader who revealed that people on Taylor Street were afraid to vote against the gangsters for fear of violence (Romano, 2010). Residents believed that there was no police protection and that the police could not be trusted.

Lombardo R (2010) The Black Hand: Terror by Letter in Chicago.

2012

In 2012, Chicago Area Project received the “President’s Award for Distinguished Contributions to Justice” from the American Society of Criminology.

2017

In 2017 Chicago Area Project hosted a large delegation of officials from the middle eastern countries of Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, and Bahrain.

2020

Entering the 2020’s, CAP is well-positioned to continue leadership in assisting developing community organizations and helping build stronger, safer, more responsive communities.

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Founded
1934
Company founded
Headquarters
Chicago, IL
Company headquarter
Founders
Clifford Shaw
Company founders
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Chicagoareaproject may also be known as or be related to Chicago Area Project, Chicagoareaproject and The Chicago Area Project.