Clarence Darrow Community Center Records

An inventory of the collection at the University of Illinois at Chicago




Collection Summary

Creator:Clarence Darrow Community Center (Chicago, Ill.)
Title:Clarence Darrow Community Center Records
Dates:1954-1970
Abstract: The collection contains records dating from 1954 to 1970 including committee reports, correspondence, budgets, programs, photographs, newspaper clippings, annual reports and a scrapbook. The materials pertain to the administration of the community center and its programs.
Quantity: 8 linear feet
Identification: CDCC

Administrative history of Clarence Darrow Community Center

The Clarence Darrow Community Center (originally the Ryder Community Center) was established to serve the Garfield Ridge community in the city of Chicago. The center began in 1953 as a response to perceived needs of the residents of the Leclaire Courts public housing development. Leclaire Courts, low-rise housing for 616 primarily white families, was opened in 1950 in a relatively undeveloped area on the western edge of the city. The area had no established recreational and social service facilities but a Community Council coordinated the activities of several volunteer organizations, which sponsored clubs and activities for residents of Leclaire Courts. The experiences of the teen Swing-In Club, organized to hold weekly socials, convinced Community Council members of the need for a group work agency with trained social workers.

At the suggestion of Dr. Curtis Reese, Dean Emeritus of the Abraham Lincoln Center, the Community Council appealed to the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee to establish a permanent community center. At their August 1953 meeting in Andover, Massachusetts, the Service Committee agreed to sponsor the project. Space was leased from the Chicago Housing Authority at 4410 S. LaPorte and the new center was incorporated in January 1954, and dedicated June 20, 1954. It included a kitchen, library and several multi-purpose rooms. The center was named for Dr. William H. Ryder, a well-respected Universalist minister who worked in Chicago prior to 1900. To ensure community involvement an autonomous, bi-racial, local Board of Directors was created. Board members served one-year terms and were responsible for policy, budget, personnel, and fundraising. Rev. David Cole, minister of the First Universalist Church was the first board president. The initial staff consisted of Rev. Donald Thompson, acting Executive Secretary, a Program Director, and several volunteers. Irene Smith, a trained social worker, became the first Director. Volunteers supplemented the center's small paid staff.

The Ryder Community Center was committed to providing meaningful social and educational activities for the neighborhood, fostering independence and self-reliance, strengthening family life and promoting physical and mental health. The center was non-sectarian and its services were rooted in the belief that social group-work enriched the life of the individual and created harmonious relations with others. The Unitarian Universalist Service Committee saw the Center as a "pilot project" to prove the possibility of amicable relations among diverse national and racial groups.

In its first year, several existing community programs were co-sponsored and many new activities begun. The primary focus was on involving young people from the community in clubs and classes. The center was also the site of several community festivals and parties. Legal aid, physician referrals, and employment assistance were available. Later, a summer day camp for younger children was begun and the center held dances, parties, movies, and athletic activities.

In 1960, a second building at 4340 S. Lamon, about a block away from the original center, was leased from the CHA. The organization changed its name to the Clarence Darrow Community Center and the original building became known as the Ryder Building while the new building was called the Darrow Building. The new building housed administrative offices, a large canteen, a craft shop, a Thrift Shop, a small meeting room, and a kitchen. In the 1960s, the Center offered club groups, game rooms, movies, a glee club, arts and crafts activities, and field trips. The day camp continued to be a popular summer activity. The center also offered referral services for children with special needs, family referrals to casework agencies, a birth control clinic in cooperation with Planned Parenthood Association, legal advice, and counseling for teens on jobs, unwed parenthood, and delinquent behavior. The center advocated for the community on public school issues and efforts to get a public library and swimming pool. After passage of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 (War on Poverty), the center participated in VISTA (Volunteers In Service To America), the Job Corp, and the Neighborhood Youth Corp.

The Unitarian Universalist Service Committee and the Community Fund of Chicago provided funding. The center was also affiliated with the Chicago Federation of Settlements and Community Centers and the Welfare Council of Metropolitan Chicago. Benefits were held to supplement funding. In 1962, the Clarence Darrow Commemorative Committee began organizing an annual Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, which included entertainment and the presentation of humanitarian awards for civic and social endeavors. Recipients included Studs Terkel, Charles Percy, and Representative Abner Mikva. Proceeds went to the center.

The focus of activities increasingly pointed towards fostering better relations among neighborhood residents. In the 1950s, the population of Leclaire Courts became primarily African American while white residents bought new single-family homes surrounding the housing development. Of the 224 families served by the Clarence Darrow Community Center in 1961, only 14 were from outside the housing development. Among the efforts to involve residents from the surrounding community was the creation of home groups that met in basements, garages, and kitchens. In cooperation with the CHA and the Illinois Youth Commission, tenants were organized into the Citizen's Improvement Committee to upgrade neighborhood safety and maintenance.

In 1966, to augment their services, the Clarence Darrow Center signed an affiliation agreement with Hull House Association, the social service agency that carried on the work of the original settlement house on Halsted Street. The agreement, which took effect January 1, 1967 allowed the Clarence Darrow Community Center to keep its corporate identity, its funding sources, and it relationship with the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee but merge its staff and budget. The records in this collection end soon after this affiliation.


Scope and Contents

This collection documents the administration of the Clarence Darrow Community Center from its establishment in 1953 until approximately 1969, with a concentration on the mid-1960s. The collection includes correspondence, meeting minutes, annual reports, newspapers and clippings, photographs, programs, tickets, scrapbooks, and receipts. Materials are in reverse chronological order. The materials were arranged in series by the cataloger:

Series 1: Administrative records

Series II: Affiliations

Series III: Board of Directors

Series IV: Correspondence

Series V: Executive Director

Series VI: Financial records

Series VII: Newspapers and newsletters

Series VIII: Photographs

Series IX: Programs

Series X: Publicity

Series XI: Staff

Series XII: Subject files

Series XIII: Scrapbooks


Restrictions

Restrictions on Use

Case files and personnnel records are restricted.


Index Terms

This record series is indexed under the following controlled access subject terms.
Subjects:
Clarence Darrow Community Center (Chicago, Ill.)--Archives.
Community centers--Illinois--Chicago--Sources.
LeClaire Courts (Chicago, Ill. : Housing project)--Sources.
Hull-House and Settlement House History


Administrative Information

Custodial History

Materials in this collection were donated to the University of Illinois at Chicago, Main Library, Special Collections, on July 8, 1971.


Detailed Description/Box and Folder Listing

Series I: Administrative Records

BoxFolder
11Administrative records - Corporate Records, 1954-1968
2Administrative records - Ryder and Darrow Centers annual reports, 1954-1963
3Administrative records - Ryder and Darrow Centers By-Laws, 1955-1966



Series II: Affiliations

BoxFolder
14Affiliations - Chicago and National Federation of Settlements, 1955-1969
5Affiliations - Chicago Federation of Settlements, 1965-1969
6Affiliations - Chicago Federation of Settlements, Neighborhood Youth Corps, 1969
7Affiliations - Chicago Housing Authority annual reports, leases, correspondence, 1954-1966
BoxFolder
28Affiliations - Chicago Housing Authority, 1966
9Affiliations - Chicago Housing Authority, 1965
10Affiliations - Chicago Housing Authority, 1963
11Affiliations - Chicago Housing Authority, Summary of Workshop Sessions, 1959
12Affiliations - Community Fund correspondence, 1966
13Affiliations - Community Fund financial reports, 1966
14Affiliations - Community Fund correspondence, 1965
15Affiliations - Community Fund financial reports, 1965
16Affiliations - Community Fund financial reports, 1964
17Affiliations - Community Fund financial reports, 1963
18Affiliations - Housing Information, 1955-1964
19Affiliations - Hull House Association, 1963-1970
BoxFolder
320Affiliations - National Federation of Settlements, 1969
21Affiliations - Resource Agencies, ca. 1953-1969
22Affiliations - Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, 1966
23Affiliations - Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, 1965
24Affiliations - Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, 1964
25Affiliations - Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, 1963
BoxFolder
426Affiliations - Welfare Council of Metropolitan Chicago - policies, 1958-1969



Series III: Board of Directors

BoxFolder
427Board of Directors - Fact Finding Committee RESTRICTED, 1970
28Board of Directors - member lists, 1965-1970
29Board of Directors - Ralph Loeff, President, newspaper clippings, 1969
30Board of Directors - members certificates, 1968
31Board of Directors, 1966
32Board of Directors, 1965
33Board of Directors, 1964
BoxFolder
534Board of Directors, 1963
35Board of Directors, 1962
36Board of Directors - Rev. David Cole, President, 1953-1960
37Board of Directors - Rev. David Cole, President, case report for Roy Casney [RESTRICTED], 1960
38Board of Directors, 1956 and earlier
39Board of Directors - case reports [RESTRICTED], 1956 and earlier



Series IV: Correspondence

BoxFolder
540Correspondence - incoming, 1969-1970
41Correspondence - outgoing, 1969-1970
42Correspondence - incoming, 1968-1970
43Correspondence, 1960/1969
BoxFolder
644Correspondence, 1966
45Correspondence, 1965
46Correspondence, 1964
47Correspondence, 1955-1961
48Correspondence, 1956-1957



Series V: Executive Director

BoxFolder
649Executive Director, Fred Hubbard - correspondence, 1968
50Executive Director - reports, 1961-1966
51Executive Director - speech, n.d.



Series VI: Financial records

BoxFolder
752Financial records, 1968
53Financial records - audit, 1966
54Financial records - budget, 1966
55Financial records - contributions, 1966
56Financial records - United Settlement Appeal, 1966
57Financial records - budget, 1965
58Financial records - contributions, 1965
59Financial records - finance Committee, 1964-1965



Series VII: Newspapers and newsletters

BoxFolder
760Newspaper clippings, 1957-1969
61Newspapers - Le Clarion, Community News, 1967-1969
62Newsletters - Le Claire Home Journal, Le Claire Councilor, 1954-1960



Series VIII: Photographs,

BoxFolder
863Photographs, n.d.
64Photographs - Clarence Darrow Center, n.d.
65Photographs, slides, n.d.



Series IX: Programs,

BoxFolder
866Programs - Author and Celebrity Party, 1961
67Programs - Authors Party, 1963
68Programs - Bowen Country Club applications, camper control cards, 1969
69Programs - Case file of Patricia Duck [RESTRICTED], 1961-1963
70Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1965
71Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1965
BoxFolder
972Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1964
73Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1964
74Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1964
75Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1963
76Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1963
77Programs - Clarence Darrow Commemorative Evening, 1962
BoxFolder
1078Programs - Club policy forms, n.d.
79Programs - Community Newspaper Workshop, 1965
80Programs - Day Camp Records RESTRICTED, 1967
81Programs - "Hair" Benefit, 1969
82Programs - Josetta Williams, club reports RESTRICTED, 1967
83Programs - Neighborhood Youth Corps, 1965-1966
84Programs - Program Committee, 1966
85Programs - Program Committee, 1965
86Programs - Program Committee, 1964
87Programs - Program Committee, 1963
88Programs -Sally Gibbard report [RESTRICTED], 1964
BoxFolder
1189Programs - Senior Citizens, 1965-1969
90Programs - VISTA, 1965-1966
91Programs - VISTA - trainee evaluations [RESTRICTED], 1965-1966
92Programs - War on Poverty, 1964-1966



Series X: Publicity

BoxFolder
1193Publicity - Ryder and Darrow Centers, n.d.
94Speech, n.d.



Series XI: Staff

BoxFolder
1196Staff meetings, 1969
97Staff - personnel policies, job descriptions, 1955-1966



Series XII: Subject files

BoxFolder
1197Subject files - Community Library, 1964
BoxFolder
1298Subject files - School issues, 1962-1964
99Miscellaneous, 1966
100Miscellaneous, 1965
101Miscellaneous, n.d.



Series XIII: Scrapbooks

BoxFolder
13102Oversize - Scrapbook, 1956-1970
103Oversize - Scrapbook continued, 1956-1970
104Oversize - Scrapbook, 1955-1970
105Oversize - Scrapbook continued, 1955-1970
106Oversize - Scrapbook continued, 1955-1970
107Oversize - Scrapbook continued, 1955-1970
108Oversize - Scrapbook continued, 1955-1970