See more of Chicago Heights through this video here >>> (available on Monday at 10am ET) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-iCqw0eV1CEQ.html - Sorry for sucking. The house that I highlighted towards the end, 2606 Chicago Rd isn’t Al Capone’s former home. That houses address also is not “2606 Chicago Road.” I saw a source that Al Capone used to live in a “Victorian style mansion” at 26th and Chicago Road, so I assumed that it was the lone Victorian style home at 26th and Chicago Rd. Problem is, that the house I was looking for no longer stands and was on the southwest corner of the intersection, rather than the house that I highlighted which is on the northwest side of the intersection. Al Capone apparently had at least one other address in Chicago Heights too. - Now with that over with, carry on! Chicago Suburbs Playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLkAKbwTlGHeILgN75aeaBe0EHvhBHyagP American Hoods Playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLkAKbwTlGHeLYlKLyBm1dGc7MRpNhCBZX Illinois Playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLkAKbwTlGHeKoOBxconpFSyUSO32NKREy Help me grow my 2nd channel! www.youtube.com/@chrishardenarchives ==================================================================== EVERYTHING THAT I USE IN THE FIELD: Main Camera: amzn.to/3iS4vvF Side Cameras: amzn.to/2WuCYIs Media Mod for Camera: amzn.to/3j7CMGF Lav Mic: amzn.to/3lsMkz9 Drone: amzn.to/3ITcKBV SD Cards: amzn.to/3C2co9O Camera Mounts: amzn.to/2UXVR6p Cables Required for Longer Recordings: amzn.to/3BYnr3Q Computer: amzn.to/3787b2j External Hard Drive: amzn.to/3lb23Tf WHAT I USE AT HOME: Computer: amzn.to/3rKIdiN Sound Mixer: amzn.to/3C15Ubx Microphone: amzn.to/2VaCjvo Microphone Accessories: amzn.to/3v7A35Z INTERACTIVE MAP that shows you all of the places that I've made videos on: (Doesn't always work on mobile devices. Will always work on PC.) www.google.com/maps/d/u/2/edit?hl=en&mid=1Lhzf04ocimPu-ROkg4cfXEYEvKMNnlI5&ll=34.29834970801405%2C-91.53765609999999&z=5 SOCIAL MEDIA & CONTACT INFO: Email: ChrisHardenYT@Gmail.com On Twitter: twitter.com/Chris_Harden55 On Instagram: instagram.com/c_harden7 On Facebook: facebook.com/ChrisHardenYT DISCLAIMER: Links included in this description might be affiliate links. If you purchase a product or service with the links that I provide I may receive a small commission. There is no additional charge to you. As an Amazon Associate I do earn a small commission on qualifying purchases. As always, thank you for supporting my channel!
This is sad and amazing! I was born at St James hospital where my father was a physician. St Agnes for two years. I remember the Lincoln Theatre and Karelia Korn shop. I’m very proud of my beginnings and my Italian heritage. Thanks for the drive past my house and for getting my family reminiscing about some very good wholesome times. ❤
The Hill was where a lot of Mob lived. That would be their primary home, then there would be a weekend home somewhere in Indiana or Wisconsin usually. The really rich Wise Guys would also have a large "Winter Home" someplace warm, like Florida or Arizona or California.
that tunnel they run underground start from the snack- bar > right off of Wentworth and Lincoln Hwy. all the way to Chicago... even in Steger... ( this fool need to learn from those Who knew ) 😮...
I live on the far west side of Chicago Heights. First home, just bought it 2 years ago, it's just me, so far living here has been ok. It's rare, but obviously more often than it should be, I do hear gun shots in the area. The way they're being fired though, sounds more like they just want to drive the neighborhood cost down, not actually shooting at anyone. It's happened about 3 times in my 2 years here, but otherwise it's a very quiet neighborhood with very little shady activity, all things considered. My neighbors are friendly and talkative, we look out for one another, there are several abandoned houses in my neighborhood but like my house, they are slowly getting renovated one by one so hopefully this attracts decent buyers like myself. The city is currently in the middle of a very ambitious replacement of the storm sewers in the area resulting in resurfacing and re-curbing some much needed roads, so this helps beautify the area a little bit. They've already done the road in front of my house and it looks and feels fantastic. I can only hope things improve over the years since I've put my money into it, but I know not to fully count on it, I'll just do my part as a trouble-free, working-class resident occupying at least one property.
The problem with the Heights is the city taxes on businesses. They've been climbing too fast over the last 15 years. One long time restaurant finally pulled out and relocated to Monee. The owner said she didn't want to move and missed the steady patrons, but had no choice? There just wasn't any profit anymore
Chris your video is spot on concerning The Heights and Ford Heights, IL. I lived in both towns but got the heck out of there in 1971 right after I graduated from Bloom High School. I lived in an Eastside tenement house and then the Projects aka The Bronx in Ford Heights. The gangs invaded the area in the late 60s and by the 1970s factories began to move out of the area. A mixture of gangs, unemployment, poverty, crime and political corruption made this place unlivable for me. I remember police corruption was so prevalent that I actually grew up thinking gambling and prostitution was not illegal because it was not enforced. I still have fond memories of my Alma Mater Bloom Township High School and I will always be a Trojan.
Chicago Heights certainly isn't what it used to be but this video spends most of iits time on blighted east side. Even the "near west side" doesn't reflect the city adequately. I noticed you spent a lot of time in the same blocks. I grew up in Homewood, just north of CH, and lived nearby most of my life. (Nearby Park Forest has an interes ting history as well.) I wish Chris had driven down more of Lincoln Highway, Dixie Hwy from Holbrook to Rt. 30, and Joe Orr Rd. It doesn't all look like this video. I do enjoy your videos Chris, none the less.
Agreed, my young adults & I have been living off of Vollmer Rd & Dixie highway for about three years. We love it.The homes are nice, I don't think I've heard gun shots at all,no abandoned buildings, the neighborhood is diverse & pretty quiet. Neighbors are nice,everyone seems to mind their business & are courteous of their neighbors. My family & I have always been assets to communities we've entered so we feel safe here. We have no complaints.
I don't where this fool was driving the first 10 or 15 mins...whoever hired him > he ain't even over 40 yrs < don't hav a clue about the Hgts ... Wow ! 😅
Exactly. He only spent time south of Lincoln highway. The part of Chicago Heights that’s in pretty bad shape. He didn’t go north of Lincoln highway. I live in that part of Chicago Heights. Our school district is even different from the east and south Heights. Chicago Heights is way bigger than what he’s showing.. As a matter of fact, Marion catholic , the high school he showed, is in the better part of the Heights, in my neighborhood. Now what would have been a dope video, would have been to show the difference between how one part of the same city can look completely different from the other . But I guess he only wanted to present the destitute part of Chicago Heights. other than that, I appreciate most of his videos.
Thank you for this video. I live in Chicago heights and I am a history lover. Thanks for finally clearing up the mystery that the historical marker stone in the center of town is meant to commemorate the location of the first cabin in the area. I drive past that thing almost every day but I never knew what it was because it is in a wooded area with high traffic, no sidewalks and no parking so you can't really walk up to it to see what it is. I even looked online to try to find out what it was supposed to be and couldn't so thank you for the information. Also, I live in a VERY old house with a large basement and I am intrigued about the thought of my home potentially being part of the history of Al Capone and prohibition.
That would be so cool if you could find out anything about your house. Hard to dig stuff up like that sometimes but maybe you'll come across something cool one day!
Nicely done Chris, however I would have included a minute or two on St. James Hospital that served the Chicago Heights community for 108 years. Closed in 2018 and demolished in 2019.
My young adults & I have been living off of Vollmer Rd & Dixie highway for about three years. We love it.The homes are nice, I don't think I've heard gun shots at all,no abandoned buildings, the neighborhood is diverse & pretty quiet. In summer months the neighbors might have backyard parties every now & then, which is cool. Gives us a slight "city feel" at home & they don't bother anyone .Neighbors are nice & everyone seems to mind their business & are courteous of their neighbors. My family & I have always been assets to communities we've entered & never liabilities.We feel safe here. We have no complaints. We only go where we need to go & back home. I don't think I've ever been to some of the areas in CH you highlighted. Thanks for the history on CH💞
My family on both sides is from Chicago Heights. My grandparents never left that town and I’m grateful for that because the Heights was “home.” I went to school at St. Agnes and drove down Chicago Rd. everyday. My grandfather Giulio Filippi owned a barbershop, his brother (great uncle) Robert Filippi was the school principal at Grant Elementary, (uncle, my mother’s brother) Brian Filippi was Cpt. of Chicago Heights Fire department. My family was and is proud to be from the Heights. 🇮🇹♥🇮🇹 Respectfully speaking, you drove through the “armpit” of the town. Lol In highschool, Arnold St. and Sunrise apts is where we went to buy weed (sorry Ma).🤭 There were so many people outside that area in the late 90’s. I’m honestly surprised you were not pulled over😅. One thing is for certain is Chicago Heights has the BEST fireworks on the Fourth and is home of the BEST Italian sausage ever!! Shout out to Dino’s and D&D’s!♥ Chicago Heights is really big, hopefully you were able to see the homes and buisnesses in the better parts of town. Thanks for sharing and God bless!🙏🏼
went to Grant in the 1950's...the old Grant on 26th Street...played tons of softball there after school...played hardball in a field that my friend's father turned into a baseball field for us that was located across from the 'new' Grant school on Miller Ave...that father was married to the Vera Emory shown in the photo with Capone at 27:30 of this video...spent a lot time at their home growing up, playing hockey in their basement, swiping homemade wine from kegs in that basement and playing football in a lot between their house and old Grant school...great memories...my dad, sometime in the early 1930's, had a softball game in that same lot when some of the 'boys' showed up...he said some of them joined in on the game including Machine Gun Kelley...
I went to Marian Catholic in the late 80’s early 90’s, and no joke, bought a case of beer with my football jersey on… but with a fake ID at Dino’s!! Those were the days! lol
Born at St James, lived on Halsted for a number of years. Moved out long ago but a lot of childhood memories. Pilatto and Tocco kept the streets safe. You should read a book called "The Boys in Chicago Heights" Organized crime was in Chicago Heights before Al Capone. That book I mentioned tells the story
My grandfather use to talk about Tocco when he came home from work. From what I understood, he was a real pos. His wife was the first mob wife ever to testify against her husband.
I was born in the heights at St. James hospital in 1977 and it was thriving. My father worked at Ford. Then we moved to Matteson in 86. My parents moved to the Heights in 1965. Things have really changed but I do have family that still live on the Westside. My family also owned a building on the Eastside but it burn down long time ago.
Its a damn shame nobody respects where they live,throwing garbage out the window on the ground not cutting their grass,not keeping up with anything that involves work and this is the outcome. Then everybody wants to say im rascist and this and that,I was born in Gary Indiana which was also a huge thriving town and now look at it. Its just facts,my best friend is black so dont come at me with that race card bs.have a nice day brother,lock your doors and keep it cocked and locked
Commenting as I watch, but I grew up in Homewood and went to Marian Catholic HS in the heights and ran around that area in the late 80’s and 90’s. Both of my daughters were born and my grandma recently passed away at St James Hospital. I even had surgery there as recently as 2018. I was shocked when I went down there within the last 6 months to find that the hospital was completely gone and was reduced to a vacant corner lot. It was truly sad to see a bit of history removed…
Pretty much Chicago Heights, Park Forest, Richton Park, Harvey, Markham, Steger are all town with high crime rates now. Pretty a town you wouldn’t want to live in. My brother lived in Chicago Heights at the beginning of 2000 and it wasn’t too bad but all these towns lost companies and took a turn for the worse. The demographics of each town pretty much says it all. Crime data puts all these towns as bad places to live. It’s ashame how towns with a great history start falling apart. I wish there was away to get these towns back on track. Ford Heights will dissolve itself over the next 10-20 years because it’s just falling apart year after year.
@@tombeveridge7453 It's rather apparent he doesn't like to bring up demographics. He says Bloom HS is to be avoided like the plague, the school is 2% white.
@@Dimi374 Early 2000, the place to be was Bogarts Steakhouse. If that’s the place, a friend of mine that I worked with downtown owned it. It was always a good time there and my buddy was a super chill dude.
As a 15 year old kid, we snuck out of the house with some buddy's in his moms car. It's 12 o'clock at night, non of us even hsd a driver's license! But we all got in "The Vagabond Lounge", a fully nude strip joint and drank beers! Fun times, although as a Grandpa now I wouldn't advise that activity now 😅? This was in the mid 70's
The high school has a 500-pound globe of the world ( made of cherry wood), one of five built in World War II. I saw that while back. Today, only three of the five original globes can be found. There are very few high schools in country that has such direct artifacts of WWII history as Bloom does. …”couldn’t be prouder”
1963 Bloom graduate and I echo your thoughts...My Pop was in the first classes when 'new' Bloom was opened...he said he and fellow classmates had to carry their desks from old Bloom, later to become the Chicago Heights police station, to the new building...under the old school was the 'Morgue' where on Fridays, in the 50's and 60's, after football and basketball games, dances were held...
I was born at St. James in the early 70's and grew up one town over in Park Forest, which has also slid down from what it was. It's a shame, growing up there was fantastic. You never had to worry about much of anything relating to crime and always felt safe.
Great video, really got a feel for what it was and what it is today. South Cook County seems very blighted and overall dangerous. I think you may find great historical pasts in places like Melrose Park, Stone Park, and Maywood Illinois, also Former mob run towns that have changed.
South Cook County is not, "very blighted and overall dangerous". There are some places that have experienced blight but there are also many lovely neighborhoods and many beautiful homes. It's the Blue Collar Suburbs. Where most Americans come from. What would you expect?
Hi Chris, I've enjoyed your videos for years and grew up on the north side of Chicago Heights west of Prairie State College. Growing up in that area was idyllic like a Leave it to Beaver neighborhood. Showing that area would have been a bit more of an honest review since it is still decent. Da Heights is a smaller version of Pittsburgh now.
I appreciate you doing this. The issues with these areas and the abandonment are the property taxes. It's the same issue in Ford heights, Park Forest, Rivderdale, and Harvey. This will soon be the same problem in Dolton,and Markham.
A rainy Friday night, cheap wine, mac and cheese with shrimp, and a 40 minute Chris Harden video. The only way it could be better is a 2 litter of the Dew.
Have driven rte 30 thru CH to my son's farm near Joliet, was shocked and anxious to get past that stretch. Strange, b/c surrounding towns are not so bad. For example, when I lived in Chi Gold Coast 2002, I had friends in nearby Crete... such a nice little town
I live in Crete. I love it here. Rural, quiet, picturesque, safe. Reminds me of Andy Griffiths, Mayberry. Luckily, it's so far away from the city of Chicago that no one wants to drive out here.😊
Exactly. Chicago Heights/Ford Heights is the worst stretch along Route 30, period. It's not a safe area at all. You can get Sauk Trail off of 30 and bypass the ghetto, if you ever go back to Joliet.
It may be that high but these people don’t pay a dime and haven’t for 25 years plus . This is why these cities are broke.!and this current administration has sent all the jobs overseas and to China .
You got to remember people couldn't afford to send their kids to a private school. Plus your only looking at one side of the town. I'm proud to come out of Chicago Heights and proud of my parents that raised 3 great kids especially living in Da Heights.
The 'Bloom High School' you show did not open in 1900...it opened in 1934...my Pop says he had to carry his desk from the 'old' Bloom when the new school opened (he was 16 at the time)...at 32:37 of the video is the field house that was built when I first entered Bloom...I had that honor to be the first student to have his rear-end pushed through one of the windows that formed a dome around the field house...I'm so proud of my achievement...the principal didn't agree...
Most definitely. Im in South Chicago Heights. I too am a homeowner here. All of my neighbors are very cool, to themselves, we speak occasionally, and its very quiet over here. We're right after the forest preserve by Steger down sauk trail. I used to think this area Park Forest. I wish they'd fix our side a lil better like they did on Lincoln Hwy. For the most part, its pretty calm and no drama whatsoever.
Yep ! he try to sound like < and kill their grandaug < he'll I seeing video after videos of white folks not only killing the whole family but the dog * and cat * and even the neighbors dog * < so who ever hired him are like those others ride from city to city from state to state ...saying the same thang " oh what a shame " "blk folks" 😅😅😅😂
I would love to see you do one on Harvey. I think Harvey has the most interesting story, and hustory than Chicago Heights, but Chicago Heights is second IMO
@@bufordmaddogtannen5164Yea, i used to live there. Went to Caroline Sibley. Its becoming trashier every day though, just like the shit hole Dolton. I lived there too, and went to Lincoln middle school as well as Thornridge High. All of those areas are failing.
I was born in St James Hospital in 1962 lived there til 1980. I’m really sad that everything is gone now but I have great memories of growing up in the Heights.
"The Hill" oh that brings back found memories lol. Damn Enzo's closed. Brother please tell me Jimmy's is still open lol, and why didn't you highlight it lol
It's funny that he only stuck to the East side of the Heights. I guess there is no north side. Show the whole picture to the people, not just a sliver. Not everyone is avoiding Bloom Township high school
Jerry Colangelo lived on the Hill and went to Bloom. Also big time gangster in the 70 was Albert Tocco. We moved to Chicago Heights in 1969 from Texas when my Dad got a job at Ford motor company. I lived there until 2010. I lived in the Hill area.
@@jerrydethomas8058 No, I believe it closed down by the time I turned 21. They raised the drinking age when I turned 18. My Dad drank at Keynote on 22nd street and sometimes at 3 Star.
I move to Chicago hts in 1966 and also got a job at ford stamping.moved back to Texas 20 years ago. I never forget paying city 700.00 cause I sold my home and moved out of the hts
When I was a kid we lived in Harvey and thought of Chicago Hts as a lower-income town, yet that period, the 60s was a high water mark for both towns. And now look at them: Chicago Hts. almost as bad as...Harvey. That whole area once provided nice homes for working class families at good prices and plentiful, well-playing jobs back in the day. Illinois politics is the problem. Chicago and Springfield are like adjacent black holes, sucking up people's hopes and dreams, and shaking them down for everything they're worth. The whole state is like that, except for a few college towns. Chicago and Springfield are doing well simply because the bureaucrats are doing well. They do well because Illinois is a Neomarxist-controlled state of kleptocracy.
Let us be real, what killed all of the South Suburbs including Chicago Heights? It was the same thing that killed Roseland, Dolton, Harvey, Glenwood,, Hazel Crest, Park Forest, Park Forest South, East Chicago Heights, Sauk Village Glenwood, and on and on. It was a culture that refused to assimilate. Nothing more, nothing less. Taking care of a house, yard, neighborhood or in general pride in town. Not me and I don’t care people did this, period. No one else is responsible. The last one out shut the lights off.
You left out the old St James hospital that was on US 30 and Chicago Road. That's where my grandma past in 2010. Are you going to do Bolingbrook video soon?
Attended my 50th reunion of Bloom Township High School in 2003. The event was quite enjoyable, held at Flossmoor Country Club. My family in the early 50s lived in Steger. I drove through both towns, and noted the evidence of severe social and economic decay. I didn't get out of the car during my "tour", and wouldn't recommend anyone else doing so. Kinda sad update.
Holy shit... those roads there are brutal....Clearly, Chicago heights is another shining example of a rust belt city that lost its manufacturing/jobs and lots of its population. Add white flight that leaves only the poor population still there, equals what you see in lots of these rust belt cities.. Sad.
NAFTA destroyed or relocated everything but the heavy industry that just can't be moved and undercut that with wage arbitration. How do you compete with slave labor and zero regulation?
White fight happened cause people moved in to what they built and destroyed it by not cutting their yards,robbing and killing eachother,selling drugs,gangbanging,letting shit fall apart and not ever fixing shit all the while hating on the white man who built the place and made it so damn beautiful and such a nice place to live,just like Gary Indiana,Detroit Michigan,but you see what happened when the whites left,just utter lack of respect and pride for their own city,you cant rep the hood your from if all you did was tear it down. Sorry for the rant,I love all people just wish we could all have the same pride and respect level as their was in the begginging,and stop blaming the white man who pays taxes for low income houseing and food stamps,whites dont get a free check at the first of the month,aint no checks cashed places in white areas. Prove me wrong. Peace and love to all the people whi cherish their roots.
The picture at 24:28 is the corner of 26th Street and Chicago Road. There's an empty gas station there now where that house stood. I was just there in that area yesterday.
The entire south side is shot. Most people who could, left for Indiana or other areas. All of it was nice from the Calumet River all the way to the Kankakee River. Illinois just plain has been run into the ground by Democrats.
i grew up in an excellent Chicago Heights neighborhood in the 70's between Vollmer Rd and Joe Orr road. it was the typical Leave it to Beaver type neighborhood. the opening of Sears mall in park forest and Lincoln mall in Matteson, destroyed Chicago heights. City planners & politicians were corrupt and didn't care about the future of Chicago Heights
@@Zathrian451 I will say this: I grew up and came of age in Richton Park in the 60s & 70s and lived in the Heights in the 80s. My "stomping grounds" as it were, included those two plus all the surrounding towns/villages. The blight that has overtaken these areas just breaks my heart; even the Rich Township high schools - East, Central, and South are "gone." Truly, you can't go home again. But it's nice to reminisce with those who shared the same place and time.
@@Zathrian451 Yes. I graduated from South in 77. They've changed the name, the mascot, and the purpose. It is now Rich Township High School Fine Arts and Communications Campus and the mascot, which used to be The Stars, is now The Raptors. Rich Central is also renamed and repurposed. It is now Rich Township High School STEM Campus. Everything about it is gone. There are no athletic, no mascots, no activities, no band, no nothing. Apparently there is some kind of 'transitional' campus also on-site. Rich East bit the dust completely just a few years ago. All of this news has been hard for me to take; I imagine so for many of our classmates and alumni.
@@The_best_days_are_yesterdays this guys YT Channel has 2 video drive throughs of current Chicago Heights. i grew up there between 1968 and 1980 and 44 years later it is definitely 3rd world country now. Chris Harden's Travel Archives - A Town That's Hanging Onto What's Left | Chicago Heights, Illinois
West of Chicago Hts is the small village of Olympia Fields, where R Kelly used to reside. I lived in that neck of the woods briefly during the 90s. The decline has already started but wasn’t as blight as today.
My brother lived in Park Forest and used to run into R from time to time at Walgreens, believe it or not. he also lived downstairs from one of R's songwriters he had in his stable. that was back before anybody knew the shady sh!t he was into. I didn't meet him until 2002 but that was at the "Ali" premiere downtown. By that time, things about his freaky fetishes were beginning to leak out. (Sorry for the pun)
Wow, I heard you mention Chicago Heights in your Riverdale, IL video introduction. 😢 My family lived in nearby Steger, IL in the 1970's & early 1980's travelling through or to Chicago Heights frequently.❤
Steger was wonderful then and Eastview school was almost magical. Totally agree with you. We moved to Arizona in 1982 and people said that when they noticed things starting to slip.
@@KyleRokuWhat an amazing place to grow up! My parents still own property there. Definite changes...unfortunately. My brother & I attended Parkview Elementary. Eastview: Did you have Mrs. Zaijcek for 5th Grade?
I wish I could travel time and be disguised as a wealthy congressman or a senator and convince America to not de-industrialize and at the same time buy up all the undeveloped land around our major cities. And just never offer it for sale. Every single city it’s the almost the same sad story. It really darkens one’s perception of our nation. How can all of this be healed? It would take trillions of dollars to restore all of our cities. - Also is the currently B-list suburb of Dolton in the works???
it's simple. he said it in the 50's or 60's the public housing destroyed cities.... govt destorys everything it touches. the crime made everyone leave. giving "free" shit and destroying a culture is what happened.
Glad you took time to expose these towns.l was born in Harvey, then eventually the Heights for 8 yrs. Blue Island isn't far behind. So glad texas called 42 yrs.ago.
Just another example of Gov Pritzker turning his back on a community in need . The poor people who needs the help the most . Illegal immigrants are more important and that is wrong .
Yeah, he says Illinois is progressive and darn proud of it. He doesn't get it and is happy making good people criminals simply for exercising their 2A rights. Meanwhile people are using guns to rob, steal, carjack, and injure/kill innocent people and his counterparts just let criminals go free. Before anyone counters that please keep in mind that crime is out of control here. Crime is severely underreported with the new laws passed recently. I'd leave tomorrow if I didn't have family here.
I worked at a railroad car plant from 78 to 85. It was a scary place for an 18 year old but once you learned the rules and how to stay out of trouble it was fine. We went to an Italian liquor store and bar called the goats club where the owner could so.ehow cash every everyone's checks. Thousands and thousands of dollars . Most of the town was run by the mob with many shady businesses and a lot of guys would be broke The next day. And yes there were tunnels
I've never been to Chicago, but I'm sure it's not the only City that's decaying. I watch these clips of places like this, along with cities in Mississippi and across the USA and wonder, when will our own government put some of those billions of dollars in our own communities instead of shipping all that money to OTHER COUNTRIES? We always helping others, yet don't do squat for ourselves. That's US. 🇺🇸
I really want to see you do Madison Wisconsin. It would be so interesting to see which areas you would choose to go through. I know its hard to get to so many places but it would be cool to see. Thanks for your hard work making these vidoes.
28:47 😂😂😂😂 this section right here is nuts because my uncle says he got pissed "living in nem BURBS" ma people came in then I moved out cus for every 6 goods you have 2 bads sooner or later the bad out grow the good
My husband and I purchased a house that resides in the 60411 zip code in 2018 however our area does not look like this. I have been told that it is because our area is considered "Un-incorporated Chicago Heights". It's in the area of Marian Catholic, which is why I'm curious to know why that area of Chicago Heights was NOT covered in this video of Chicago Heights.
Born in the Heights in 66. Grew up living all over the Heights. Lived on the Hill, Main Street, by Wilson Grade school. Moved out at 10 but still lived nearby. I started working at Bloom Trail when I was 20. Worked there for 36 years. I'm surprised you didn't talk about the Vagabond Lounge and its mob connections. My mom worked there for years as a dancer and bar tender. Owned by an Italian obviously.,"Papa Joe" Barrett. Watching your video was definitely a walk down memory lane.
I drove through Chicago Heights on US 30 back in 2021. Looked extremely depressing and ghetto (at least the east side of the city did). Thats why I distinctly remember it.
Grew up in Frankfort , Illinois about 10-15 miles west of the Heights. US Route 30 (Lincoln highwa)and US 45 (LaGrange Road)are the crossroads. In the 60's this was a farm community but my dad always said that Capone would store liquor in barns in and about town.
Interesting yet sad video on my old hometown. I was born in a hospital in east hazel crest. My family lived on west main street. My grandfather owned a music store (IJ Reynolds) on chicago street. (Dixie Hiway?). He closed the store in the 70s and moved to Florida saying " I got tired of having a gun shoved in my face. My aunt and uncle owned a bar on chicago street called Dick and Lauries for a few years. Used to be a nice little town.
@@tonymac2855 when the jobs and industries left towns like Chicago heights, is exactly when they started going downhill. And exactly when those who could afford to leave actually left… If that’s not true… then explain to me why the Italian left at the same time that the jobs and industries started drying up??? Or Am I supposed to believe that was just a mere coincidence???
Hi I drew up the Far West side of chicago heights and some of your information about Chicago Heights is wrong the grandparents that murder their granddaughter happened in Park Forest IL not Chicago Heights
Thanks for doing all this, Chris! I consider it mandatory viewing. If we can get fusion going, the world's outlook should brighten a great deal It seems to me that there's plenty of space for everyone....
As far as the Ford plant goes, the mob was still here in The Heights in 1987, seemed like everyone knew someone who could get them a job or get them out of trouble lol. As a kid, I used to buy dime bags on Arnold street.