Sep 27th 2025

Walking Tour: Lincoln Park and the Young Lords

@ DePaul Art Museum

935 W Fullerton Ave, Chicago, IL 60614

Opening Saturday, September 27th, from 2PM - 3PM

On view through Sunday, February 8th

Join us for a historical walking tour of Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood led by Derek Potts, Instruction and Outreach Archivist at DePaul University. Covering approximately 1.5 miles, the tour will highlight key sites of activism and community organizing, with a focus on the influential history of the Young Lords Organization (YLO) and the urban renewal efforts of the late 1960s.

This program is supported by DePaul’s Vincencian Endowment Grant and the Center for Latino Research, in partnership with DePaul University’s Special Collections and Archives.

Register: https://events.humanitix.com/walking-tour-lincoln-park-and-the-young-lords

Image credits: A member of the Young Lords writes in chalk as a family looks on during a Puerto Rican heritage festival at the Armitage Methodist Church, 1969.ST-40001976-0057, Chicago Sun-Times collection, Chicago History Museum.

 

About the Exhibition

Tengo Lincoln Park en mi Corazón: Young Lords in Chicago explores the Young Lords Organization’s (YLO) trajectory in the Lincoln Park neighborhood amidst gentrification and urban renewal, which displaced the vibrant Puerto Rican community of the 1950s and 1960s. Originally a street gang, the Young Lords transformed into a prominent civil rights organization. The exhibition explores the origins of the movement, emphasizing the concept of counter-mapping as a means of activism and community empowerment. Counter-maps are cartographies that reveal the knowledge and resistance of communities, challenging historical displacement and invisibility imposed by traditional maps.
The exhibition features archival materials, historical artifacts, photography, murals and prints, with works by Carlos Flores, Ricardo Levins Morales, and John Pitman Weber. It also includes newly commissioned work by Sam Kirk and a central multimedia installation by Arif Smith with Rebel Betty, inviting visitors to engage with one of the most influential movements in Latinx civil rights history, rooted in the everyday struggles of a Chicago neighborhood.
One of the most significant acts of resistance occurred in May 1969, when the Young Lords occupied the Stone Administration Building at McCormick Seminary, now DePaul’s School of Music North Building. The site, one of the few remaining in Lincoln Park directly tied to the YLO, is now marked by a public plaque recognizing their activism. It anchors the exhibition’s focus on place-based memory and the political legacy of the Young Lords in Chicago.​
Tengo Lincoln Park en mi Corazón: Young Lords in Chicago is curated by DePaul University Professor Jacqueline Lazú and organized by DePaul Art Museum.

 

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