South Deering · Cook County · IL
About the community
South Deering is Community Area 51 on Chicago's far Southeast Side, bounded roughly south of 95th Street and west of the Calumet River, with Lake Calumet occupying a substantial portion of its interior. It sits about 13 miles southeast of the Loop and is, by total acreage, the largest of Chicago's 77 official community areas, yet its population is modest, around 14,210 as of 2023, because much of the area is industrial land, natural wetlands, or parks. The neighborhood takes its name from Charles Deering, an executive of the Deering Harvester Company, which later became International Harvester, the corporation that owned the Wisconsin Steel works along Torrence Avenue. That mill, originally the Joseph Brown Iron and Steel Company founded in 1875, was the economic engine of the community for over a century before Envirodyne Industries shut it without notice in March 1980, leaving roughly 3,300 workers without final paychecks or pension benefits. The Trumbull Park Homes, a low-rise Chicago Housing Authority development built in 1937 and 1938 as a New Deal project, stands within the community and became the site of a documented racial crisis beginning in 1953, when a Black family was placed in what had been an all-white project and white residents responded with months of organized violence requiring a sustained police presence into 1954. The residential portion of South Deering clusters in the northeast corner, anchored by the Jeffery Manor subdivision, platted in the 1920s and built out from 1947 onward, which offers a distinctive stock of post-war bungalows, duplexes, and ranch-style homes along curving, suburban-style streets. For buyers priced out of the broader Chicago market, median home prices in the South Deering area have trended around $130,000 to $135,000, making it one of the most affordable homeownership options available within city limits.
Largest community area
At roughly 10.7 square miles, South Deering is the largest of Chicago's 77 official community areas by land area, yet holds only about 14,210 residents as of 2023.
Steel mill heritage
Wisconsin Steel, founded on this site in 1875 as Brown Iron and Steel and later owned by International Harvester, employed thousands before Envirodyne closed it without notice in March 1980, leaving 3,300 workers without pay or pensions.
Affordable single-family homes
Median home sale prices in South Deering have tracked around $130,000 to $135,000, with Jeffery Manor bungalows, ranches, and duplexes offering entry-level ownership well below the Chicago citywide median.
Jeffery Manor subdivision
Built from 1947 onward for returning World War II veterans, Jeffery Manor features curved streets, wide lots, ranch-style homes, and Georgian-style brick two-flats, an unusually suburban streetscape within city limits.
Trumbull Park Homes
A Chicago Housing Authority low-rise development at 2437 E. 106th St., built in 1937 and 1938 as a New Deal Public Works Administration project and designed by architect John Holabird.
Parks and natural areas
Trumbull Park with its fieldhouse and pool anchors the neighborhood, while nearby Calumet Park on the lakefront and the 300-acre Big Marsh bike and wetland park expand outdoor options dramatically.
CTA buses and Metra nearby
Several CTA bus routes serve South Deering, including the Jeffery Jump, and the Metra Electric South Chicago Branch station nearby provides rail access to Millennium Station downtown.
Lake Calumet and wetlands
Lake Calumet occupies a large share of the community area's interior, and the surrounding wetlands plus nearby Wolf Lake at the Illinois-Indiana state line offer fishing, birding, and boating.
Living in South Deering today means settling into one of Chicago's quietest and most affordable far-southeast pockets, far from the density and noise of the central city. The residential portion hugs the northeast corner of the community area, and Jeffery Manor, bounded roughly by 95th Street, Torrence Avenue, 103rd Street, and the railroad, is the most desirable subarea, its curving streets and modest brick bungalows giving it a feel closer to a south-suburban town than a Chicago neighborhood. The median household income was about $37,000 as of 2023, and home prices in the $120,000 to $140,000 range make ownership accessible to first-time buyers who might be priced out elsewhere in the city. The population of roughly 14,210 is predominantly Black and Latino, with a median age near 37, and because much of the community area remains industrial, open, or wetland, the residential blocks feel notably uncrowded.
The open land that surrounds South Deering's residential core is both its limitation and one of its assets. Trumbull Park at 2400 E. 105th St. provides the neighborhood's anchor green space, with fields, four baseball diamonds, basketball and tennis courts, a fieldhouse, and a seasonal outdoor pool. Just beyond the community area's eastern edge, Calumet Park offers 182 acres of lakefront, beach access on Lake Michigan, a boat launch, and athletic facilities. Big Marsh Park, a 300-acre reclaimed industrial site, has grown into a nationally recognized mountain-bike park and wetland reserve, with the Ford Calumet Environmental Center providing programming and trail access, and Wolf Lake and the William W. Powers State Recreation Area at the Illinois-Indiana state line add fishing, boating, and birding within a short drive. The commute picture is more complicated, since Walk Score rates South Deering as car-dependent, and while several CTA bus lines serve the neighborhood and the Metra Electric South Chicago Branch provides direct rail service to Millennium Station, most residents depend on a personal vehicle, with the drive to the Loop taking 30 to 45 minutes in normal traffic.
Neighborhoods
Browse the listings above. Detailed neighborhood pages with market stats, school info, and lifestyle take-downs land here as we roll them out.
Around town
A handful of the places people who live here actually use. Not a directory.
Trumbull Park and Fieldhouse
South Deering's neighborhood park at 2400 E. 105th St. offers a fieldhouse with gyms and a fitness center, a seasonal outdoor pool, four baseball diamonds, basketball and tennis courts, and a playground.
Calumet Park and Beach
Just east of South Deering, this 182-acre lakefront park offers a sandy beach on Lake Michigan, a boat launch, athletic fields, and a historic fieldhouse with recreational programming.
Big Marsh Park and Ford Calumet Environmental Center
A 300-acre reclaimed industrial site featuring nationally recognized BMX and mountain-bike tracks, pump trails, wetland walking paths, and an environmental center with bike rentals and nature education.
William W. Powers State Recreation Area at Wolf Lake
Located on the Illinois-Indiana state line, Wolf Lake offers fishing, boating, and birdwatching across a quiet natural landscape that feels worlds away from the area's industrial history.
Calumet Fisheries
A James Beard America's Classics smokehouse at 3259 E. 95th St., open since 1928, serving smoked salmon, sturgeon, and sablefish from a one-room shack at the 95th Street bridge, a genuine Chicago institution.
Southeast Chicago Historical Society
This community archive documents the steel-mill era, the Trumbull Park years, and the daily lives of working-class residents through photographs, oral histories, and public programming.
How South Deering got here
South Deering's story begins in 1875, when the Joseph Brown Iron and Steel Company established a mill along Torrence Avenue near the Calumet River, drawing Irish, Welsh, English, Swedish, and German laborers to a settlement quickly nicknamed Irondale. Community leaders renamed the area South Deering in 1903, by which time International Harvester had acquired Brown's mill and begun building a larger facility called Wisconsin Steel to supply steel for its tractors and combines. Accompanying industries added jobs and shaped the landscape, and the area boomed through World War I and the 1920s, with production surging again during World War II when mills ran around the clock. Wisconsin Steel operated in a paternalistic mode, and workers voted to form their own independent union rather than join the larger national organizing committee. That loyalty eventually worked against them. In 1977, burdened by unfunded pension liabilities, International Harvester sold the mill to a subsidiary of Envirodyne Industries, and on March 28, 1980, Envirodyne shut the plant without notice. Roughly 3,400 workers lost their final paychecks, their health benefits, and substantial portions of their pensions, and a worker-led committee pursued litigation for nearly seventeen years before recovering a fraction of what was owed.
The Trumbull Park Homes, low-rise brick buildings at 2437 E. 106th St. built in 1937 and 1938 as the last of three Public Works Administration projects in Chicago, were maintained as a racially segregated white project through the early 1950s. In July 1953, the Chicago Housing Authority assigned an apartment to a Black family whose application had not been flagged by intake staff, and within days white residents and organized groups launched nightly attacks on the home. The violence intensified that fall when the CHA moved in additional Black families, and at the peak of the response the Chicago Police Department deployed up to 1,000 officers to maintain order, with Black residents unable to safely use the adjacent Trumbull Park without police protection for years. Novelist Frank London Brown, himself a resident during those years, published a fictionalized account, Trumbull Park, in 1959. Civil rights legislation in the 1960s gradually opened access to housing and jobs, while white flight accelerated and families relocated to suburbs like Calumet City and South Holland. The closure of Wisconsin Steel in 1980 and nearby U.S. Steel Southworks in 1992 removed the economic foundation entirely, leaving large tracts of industrial land that are still being assessed and remediated decades later.
The questions buyers actually ask
The questions I get most from buyers shopping South Deering. If yours isn't here, text 815-355-0582, same-day reply.
Your local agent
Most agents will list anything. I focus on the places I actually know, and the things that move value here don't show up in the MLS write-up: which streets and buildings hold demand, what the HOA or assessments really cover, how the comps read once you account for condition and location, and where buyers consistently want to be.
When you're ready to tour or list, you want someone who has read the last 50 closed comps in this specific market, not a national average, and can tell you what they actually mean for your price. That's how I work. Text or call any time, and I'll give you a real take, not a brochure.
Thinking of selling?
Not a Zestimate. A real CMA from someone who's sold this neighborhood, knows the floor plan premiums, and can tell you which upgrades the buyer pool here actually pays for.