Note to self, be truthful, even when it hurts. Make love and pray often, eat healthy. Never reveal your true financial status. Read lots of books. Add color to everything you touch. And give without expecting anything in return.
The first name every Chicagoan should know: Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, the “Father of Chicago."
A man of African descent, he became the first known settler in the area that became the city of Chicago. He married a Potawatomi woman, Kitiwaha (Catherine), and they had two children.
According to records, the property included a log cabin with two barns, a horse-drawn mill, a bakehouse, a poultry house, a dairy, a smokehouse, a fenced garden and an orchard. At his trading post, DuSable served Native Americans, British and French explorers and spoke a number of languages.
“He was actually arrested by the British for being thought of as an American Patriot sympathizer,” Julius Jones, curator at the Chicago History Museum told WLS, but Du Sable beat those charges.
In Chicago today, a school, street, museum, harbor, park and bridge bear his name. The place where he settled near the mouth of the Chicago River is now a National Historic Landmark, part of the city’s Pioneer Court.
#ChicagoHistory ☑️