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The Maxwell Street Market: Fading Chicago Landmark Fights Recession on Economy’s Frontlines

By Ben Craig, Len Kody and Nicholas Moroni

Bobbie Henry, of Chicago, began selling handmade jewelry and art pieces at the original Maxwell Street Market in 1976. She relocated to the new Maxwell Street Market, on Canal, in 1994.­ Today, she has a booth on a prime spot at the market’s latest location, on Desplaines, just north of Roosevelt.

Henry’s next move is a commentary on the market’s current, diminished state and its uncertain future. “Another thing that’s fading me out of this,” Henry explained, “is I’m going on eBay with most of my art.”

Many of the people who bought and sold goods at the original market say that its current incarnation, sanctioned and organized by the City of Chicago’s Mayor’s Office of Special Events, hardly measures up.

“I was selling leather clothes and bags [on Maxwell, and on Canal]. I would make 3,000everySunday.”Henrylamented,“Now,Ionlymake3,000 every Sunday.” Henry lamented, “Now, I only make 3,000everySunday.”Henrylamented,Now,Ionlymake200 or $300.”

Longtime Maxwell Street patron Frank Kam remembers the old market before “the university took over.” It had “the smell of polish sausage and onions floating around.”

Sal Villarreal, a Streets and Sanitation worker who works the present-day market, remembers going to the Maxwell Street Market when he was younger, in the 1970s, and said it was “a lot more livelier than this.”

“The feeling of the city is gone with this market,” Villarrea explained. “This is the smallest I’ve seen the market.”

“The other market was better,” he concluded.

A Rich Chicago History

“Maxwell Street was one of the only places I knew where people socialized across race and class,” said Roosevelt University Economics Professor Steve Balkin. Balkin led an opposition movement against UIC’s city-backed demolition of the area where the original Maxwell Street Market once operated.

The market began in 1871, and was largely comprised of poor, Eastern European Jews, according to the book, “Voices of America: Jewish Maxwell Street Stories.” It soon became, and would remain, a melting pot of cultures, following the northern migration of southern blacks in the early 1900s, as the book notes.

For decades, people came to “Jewtown” (a term that many claim has no prejudicial undertones, and was used widely throughout the market’s history) to haggle for bargains or to supplement their incomes by selling goods of all kinds.

Some feel the market was also a supposed breeding ground for the sale of stolen merchandise. “It’s a problem with any flea market,” Balkin said. “Were there crooks on Maxwell Street? Yes. Are there crooks in the city council? Yes.”

Tradition in Trouble

Fewer people come to shop at today’s market, according to data from the Office of Special Events. The sprawling individualism of the old market is gone, and with it, the overall freedom.

“I miss the freedom,” said vendor Vince Hernandez, of Chicago, as he haggled with a prospective customer over the price of 1,000 feet of packaging tape.

Bobbie Henry agrees. “This is too organized and too monopolized,” she lamented.

Rick Brunious, whose days as a street merchant date back 50 years, stood behind a row of Kirby 2000 Limited Edition vacuum cleaners propped up on a table while he spoke. At the old Maxwell Street Market, Brunois slept overnight to reserve his spot – that survival-of-the-fittest type behavior was necessary in order to operate there – as other vendors would steal the spots.

Today, the spots are assigned and vendors pay 65,weekly,tohawktheirgoods,morethandoublethe65, weekly, to hawk their goods, more than double the 65,weekly,tohawktheirgoods,morethandoublethe25 cost at the old market. The increased overhead squeezes vendors in an already tight economy.

Parking is also a major issue. Merchants and patrons who drive are now forced to pay to park at nearby privatized pay boxes, or at UIC’s parking garage – deterrents for many people searching for a bargain at the market.

And, in addition to Maxwell Street Market’s sparse parking, Internet auction sites like eBay could pose a very real threat to the survival of flea markets, vendors said.

“It’s not good,” said Brunious of the day’s business. He has a dark outlook on the current Maxwell Street Market’s future prospects. “This is going to be gone,” he said.

As the sellers and their clientele opt for alternative avenues of commerce, a rich part of Chicago’s history may disappear on a little stretch of concrete next to the Dan Ryan Expressway.

“This is valuable property,” Brunious observes. “It’s near the Loop and then you got all these vacant buildings.”

He continues, “If they’re vacant, they’re going to knock them down one day. And then you know what they’re going to do. We probably won’t be here.”

Reason for Optimism

However, where some remain dismal about the current economic climate, other vendors, like Vince Hernandez, see opportunity.

Hernandez works a booth piled with several roles of tape. “We should be okay,” he said. “I just sold a guy two cases of shrink wrap because he’s buying a foreclosed home. That’s going to be some business.”

And Hernandez believes he is well placed, at the Maxwell Street Market, to observe the economy’s inevitable recovery.

“When people start buying houses, they’re going to buy tape to paint, they’ll buy tape to move. Everybody needs tape,” he said. “When they start buying more tape, I’ll know the economy is getting better.”

He added, with unwavering optimism, “Believe me. I’ll know.”