Fair Housing in Skokie, 1961-1971 Digital Archive
Title
Abstract
This digital collection consists primarily of documents from Skokie’s Human Relations Commission (SHRC) and its efforts in the 1960s to ensure open, non-discriminatory housing policies in Skokie during a time in which Black people in Illinois, and in the country at large, were fighting to have their civil rights upheld.
Historical Background:
Beginning in the summer of 1965, the North Shore Summer Project (NSSP) assessed the willingness of homeowners in ten suburban Chicago “North Shore” communities to rent or sell their properties to any potential buyer, regardless of race or ethnicity, highlighting the need for progressive action in Skokie to ensure that real estate brokers were not discriminating against potential home-buyers on the basis of race.
The Skokie Human Relations Commission (SHRC) was established in 1961 with a mission to promote discrimination-free housing in Skokie. The “Skokie Plan,” a public awareness campaign begun in 1965, was the SHRC’s attempt to avoid the need to codify fair housing law in Skokie. The promotional effort was deemed successful in educating citizens about fair housing, but ultimately, a legal remedy was necessary to guard against nondiscriminatory real estate practices. The Skokie Fair Housing Ordinance was passed by the SHRC on October 1st, 1967, and then by the Skokie Board of Trustees on October 9th, 1967. It was enacted into law on January 1st, 1968.
Prior to this, in 1963 Chicago became the first city in Illinois to pass a fair housing ordinance during a time when only 3 cities and 12 states had fair housing laws. Although fair housing laws were proposed in the Illinois legislature over a period of several years, none were ever passed. This lack of a statewide ordinance made the efforts of small, local communities like Skokie all the more important.
The federal government passed the Fair Housing Act in April of 1968, which made discriminatory housing practices illegal across the nation beginning in January of 1970. Though the passage of a federal law was a significant stride forward for equitable housing, the necessity to provide equitable and fair housing persists and now encompasses a wide range of issues including age, race, ethnicity, religion, gender, and sexuality. These records from the SHRC and the Skokie Fair Housing Ordinance can be used to gain a better understanding of where the fight for fair housing began and where it might go in the future.Scope and Content of this digital collection:
Skokie’s collection contains correspondence, reports, minutes, promotional materials, pamphlets, statements, and other pertinent documents created by the Skokie Human Relations Commission (SHRC) during the process of drafting and enacting the Skokie Fair Housing Ordinance of 1967. The records span the approximate years of 1961-1971. Many are the personal papers of Donald P. Perille, late co-Chairman of the SHRC and member of the Skokie Board of Trustees, who generously donated his papers for this project, while other documents were donated from the Village to the Skokie Historical Society. The original documents now belong to the Skokie Heritage Museum.
Online Exhibit:Our online exhibit walks you through selected documents from this digital collection and tells the story of the establishment of the Skokie Human Relations Commission and its successful effort to enact a fair housing ordinance in Skokie.
Temporal Coverage
Relation
- Collection: Fair Housing in Skokie, 1961-1971 Digital Archive

Letter from Herman S. Bloch to John Matzer, March 23, 1971
Letter from John M. Ducey to Donald P. Perille, April 4, 1966
Letter from Donald Rumsfeld to Donald P. Perille, May 16, 1966
Three letters from Hal M. Freeman to Donald P. Perille, May 1966
Letter from Edward Marciniak to Donald P. Perille, April 17, 1967
Letter from Curtis Heaston to Donald P. Perille, April 18, 1967
Letter from Cecil A. Partee to Donald P. Perille, April 21, 1967
Letter from Donald S. Frey to Donald P. Perille, May 3, 1967
Letter from Herman S. Bloch to Donald P. Perille, August 14, 1971
Letter to Herman S. Bloch and Donald P. Perille from Niles Township Human Relations Council, August 24, 1967
Letter to Harvey Schwartz from Sidney E. Morrison, August 31, 1967
Letter to Harvey Schwartz from Donald P. Perille, September 1, 1967
Letter to Harvey Schwartz from Herman S. Bloch, September 6, 1967
Letter to Dr. Herman S. Bloch from Niles Township Human Relations Council, September 12, 1967
Written statement of the North Suburban Organization for Fair Housing on the Skokie Plan
Statement to the Skokie Village Board of Trustees on the Skokie Plan, October 31, 1966
Letter to Niles Township Human Relations Council members regarding the Skokie Plan, January 16, 1967
Statement by Donald P. Perille to the State Senate Committee on Registration and Miscellany with cover letter, April 11, 1967
Letter from Skokie Valley Council of Parent-Teacher Associations regarding Senate Bill 155
Letter from Neil J. King to the Skokie Human Relations Commission, April 11, 1967
Letter from Rabbi Karl Weiner to Dr. Herman S. Bloch, August 21, 1967
Letter from Rabbi Sidney J. Jacobs to Dr. Herman S. Bloch, August 23, 1967
Statement of the Niles Township Human Relations Council in Support of a Fair Housing ordinance for the Village of Skokie, August 24, 1967
WIND Radio editorial supportingopen occupancy legislation in Skokie, October 10, 1967
Statement by C. Irvan Cochran to the Skokie Human Relations Commission, July 18, 1967