theGrio

Back to the Top

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Home
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • The Dish
  • Health
    • Ask Dr. Ty
    • Black Men’s Health
    • Black Women and Breast Cancer
    • Back to School Health
  • Living
    • Travel and Leisure
    • Living Forward
    • Books
  • Politics
    • Perry on Politics
  • Sports
  • News
    • Good News
  • Opinion

News

Soul food disappearing in Chicago as blacks leave

by theGrio | September 6, 2011 at 1:21 PM
Comments
Print
Chicago_Soul_Food.jpg

Related Posts

  • Jennifer Hudson to headline Taste of Chicago
  • Occupy Chicago: 130 arrested in city park protest
  • Michelle Obama returns to Chicago for food summit
  • Food pantry truck stolen from Chicago church
  • Fox may bring back Showtime's 'Soul Food' TV series

CHICAGO (AP) — Duct tape covers a large crack in the premier booth at Hard Time Josephine’s Cooking, where waitresses call you “sweetie” and customers come for the steaming shrimp bisque and homemade peach cobbler that leaves a hint of cinnamon on the tongue.

Not long ago, such an eyesore at one of Chicago’s top soul food restaurants would have been unthinkable. Despite the name, times were good: Chicago was a bustling center of black America and people in the neighborhoods savored southern-style cooking.

But in the past 10 years as the city lost more than 17 percent of its black population, one soul food place after another has closed and the surviving few like Josephine’s are struggling. A tradition is dying in a place where southern cooking came north in the major social migration after World War II.

“People used to stand outside the door to get in,” recalled Josephine Wade, who has operated the restaurant in the Chatham neighborhood for more than two decades. “It’s nowhere near like that. Each year it’s very, very difficult to be in business.”

The decline is a symptom of the changing identity of a city where blacks have been the largest racial group for decades, making up more than one third of the population.

Now, a visit to one of the traditional spots like Josephine’s seems like a step back into the past. Pictures of the Rev. Martin Luther King, the city’s first black mayor, Harold Washington, and soul diva Patti LaBelle cover the walls, along with pictures of Josephine herself, an Arkansas native and onetime maid who wound up running restaurants all over the city’s South Side.

The sweet aroma of fresh waffles and salty fried chicken — family recipes passed down through the generations — hang in the air. No soda is served, only sweet tea.

“The fried chicken is succulent. It’s fresh, got that southern flavor,” said Eve Lowe, 59, who comes every Sunday for the brunch buffet of chicken and dumplings, greens and lemon pound cake.

“It’s really a lot more than food,” said Audria Huntington, 81, who frequents Josephine’s for the liver and onions or chicken and waffles. “Basically, you have the roots of your culture in the restaurant.”

But places like Josephine’s — located in a sagging building off a busy commercial stretch— may number only a half dozen now, having gradually given way to fast food, healthy food and imports like Cajun cuisine, along with the pressures of a bad economy. Also, more middleclass residents are moving to the suburbs, some retirees are heading “home” to the South and others are pursuing the economic lures of the Sunbelt, reversing the historic wave that brought southern blacks pouring into Chicago for jobs in industry.

The Chatham neighborhood on the South Side shows the change. The rows of once-classy homes in the black middle class neighborhood, including a brick cottage that was home to gospel legend Mahalia Jackson, are now pocked with boarded up boarded up windows and vacant properties. Other traditionally black neighborhoods have suffered even more as the population loss and foreclosure crisis have left behind weed filled lots.

One of the most popular soul food restaurants in town, Army & Lou’s, closed this year.

“When you lose your base, your foundation, the next generation isn’t there to keep it going,” said former owner Harry Fleming. “It’s losing a real strong sense of heritage.”

Army & Lou’s, which opened in 1945, was famous both for its juicy fried chicken and its role in politics. The city’s first black mayor, Harold Washington, was a regular in the 1980s. It wasn’t unusual to see the Rev. Jesse Jackson, his son, Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., or Rep. Danny Davis eating there.

Earlier this year, the South Side lost Izola’s, known for its seafood. The year before it was Edna’s, a West Side establishment patronized by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Also gone are the longtime Gladys’ Luncheonette, a popular musicians’ hangout with great banana pie, and Soul Queen.

Other cities have great soul food but it’s hard to imagine Chicago, with its special role in black culture, without its thriving soul food scene, said writer Adrian Miller, who is traveling the country researching a book about soul food. In a recent visit to the city, “There was a key element missing,” he said. “There was a hole in my soul.”

Increasing health consciousness has also played a role. Soul food, often fried and made with full-fat ingredients, has gotten a bad rap in recent years.

Also, fewer soul food places means distributors no longer make deliveries so the cost of supplies has gone up. At Josephine’s, Wade keeps the place going by patching cracks with duct tape, disguising holes in table cloths and washing the linen herself.

She can’t do much to help the sagging building; there aren’t enough customers.

“It’s just not here,” she said.

__

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.

  • cross_racial.jpg
    Next Story:

    Cross with racial slurs left on man's lawn

  • Ndour.jpg
    Previous Story:

    Senegalese singer Ndour calls for more famine aid

Filed in: News, Top Stories | Related Topics: Chicago, Cities, Food, Josephine Wade, Josephines, Population, Restaurants, Soul Food
  • Learn about our User Panel

    Read More
  • New Stories on theGrio

    • Blogging While Brown conference coming Friday to New York City Blogging While Brown conference coming Friday to New York City
    • The top 5 rap lyrics of the week The top 5 rap lyrics of the week
    • Victim’s mother spends 20 years fighting police brutality Victim’s mother spends 20 years fighting police brutality
    • Paula Deen admits n-word use, but denies racism Paula Deen admits n-word use, but denies racism
    • Goodie Mob together again
    • Mariah Carey and Nicki Minaj reuniting?
    • Frederick Douglass statue unveiled
    • Living with Sickle Cell: An inspirational journey
  • What Your Friends Are Reading

  • More from theGrio

More Stories on theGrio

Top News

Politics

  • Pro-choice activists with the National Organization For Women hold a vigil outside the U.S. Supreme Court on January 23, 2012 in Washington, DC. T(Photo by Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images)

    House takes up far-reaching anti-abortion bill

  • Jesse Jackson Jr. wants to serve prison time before wife

  • First lady inspires youth of Ireland

  • Obama rejects Bush comparisons

» Read More in Politics

Business

  • This May 1, 2013 file photo shows Jay-Z at "The Great Gatsby" world premiere at Avery Fisher Hall in New York.  (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file )

    With Samsung, business is booming for Jay-Z

  • Jay-Z announces new album

  • Dunkin' Donuts: Workers who endured racist rant will be 'honored'

  • Greene Scholars seeks to place black youth in STEM jobs

» Read More in Business

Living

  • Attendees at the Boston Prostate Cancer Educational Symposium, June 16, 2013

    Churches saving lives, not just souls

  • Climate change vs. black America

  • Serena Williams works teeny bikini on Miami Beach

  • Daughter inspires mom's natural hair care company

» Read More in Living

Inspiration

  • Ethel “Ellie” Hylton

    Woman graduates with highest GPA at Harvard

  • Ne-Yo: Fatherhood 'means being there'

  • Adele honored by Queen Elizabeth II

  • Man finds father through Facebook

» Read More in Inspiration

Entertainment

  • Kanye West (Getty)

    Kanye's 10 career defining songs

  • Vin Diesel talks new 'Riddick' film

  • 'Dark Girls' set to debut on OWN

  • Scott Disick plays 'American Psycho' for Kanye

» Read More in Entertainment

News

  • Law enforcement officers check a vehicle at a roadblock Tuesday Feb. 12, 2013 near Big Bear, Calif. A man police believe to be the fugitive ex-Los Angeles officer wanted in three killings was barricaded inside a burning cabin Tuesday after a shootout in this California mountain town that left one deputy dead and another wounded. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)

    Surfer shot at during Dorner hunt files lawsuit

  • 911 call debated at Zimmerman trial

  • Mom seeks help to find son's killer

  • Chicago teen fatally shot by cops

» Read More in News

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Politics
  • Living
  • Video
  • Inspire
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise with TheGrio
  • About
©2013 NBCUniversal
Powered by WordPress.com VIP