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  1. Jean Baptiste Point du Sable (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ batist pwɛ̃ dy sɑbl]; also spelled Point de Sable, Point au Sable, Point Sable, Pointe DuSable, or Pointe du Sable; [n 1] before 1750 [n 2] – August 28, 1818) is regarded as the first permanent non-Native settler of what would later become Chicago, Illinois, and is recognized as ...

  2. Aug 24, 2024 · Jean-Baptist-Point Du Sable (born 1750?, St. Marc, Sainte-Domingue [now Haiti]?—died August 28, 1818, St. Charles, Missouri, U.S.) was a pioneer trader who founded the settlement that later became the city of Chicago. He is considered the “Father of Chicago.”

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Feb 3, 2022 · Before the Chicago City Council voted to rename Lake Shore Drive in June 2021, recognition for Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable was sprinkled throughout the city: a high school, an outdoor statuary bust, and the DuSable Museum of African American History located on Chicago's South Side.

  4. Jun 29, 2021 · A stamp issued by the United States Postal Service in 1978 features Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable (circa 1745-1818), the first non-Indigenous settler of an area called Eschikagou, now...

    • Nora Mcgreevy
    • Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable
    • Benefited from Biracial Background
    • Accepted by Potawatomis
    • Managed Trading Post
    • Books
    • Online

    The African-American explorer Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable (c. 1745-1818), despite a long period during which his contributions were minimized, is now recognized as the founder of the city of Chicago. In the 1770s, du Sable and his wife established a farm and trading operation on the north shore of the Chicago River, near Lake Michigan. The swampy...

    The early facts of du Sable's biography are not completely clear, and even a correct spelling of his name is uncertain and may well be impossible to establish definitively, inasmuch as he lived much of his life in places where full literacy was rare. He was probably born in the port town of St. Marc in western Haiti, which was then the French colon...

    Over time, like some of the other French hunters who lived among Native Americans, du Sable became more and more involved in Indian life. He learned to speak the Potawatomi language and those of several neighboring tribes. Du Sable is said to have met the great Ottawa chief, Pontiac, and to have served as his emissary to the Midwestern tribes Ponti...

    Du Sable remained technically a British prisoner until the end of the war, but he impressed Michigan's British governor, Patrick Sinclair, and he was apparently held under a kind of house arrest. He was even given a commission to manage a British trading post, the Pinery, and he may have served as an unofficial monitor of the military activities of...

    Cortesi, Laurence, Jean du Sable: Father of Chicago, Chilton, 1972. The Devil May Care: Fifty Intrepid Americans and Their Quest for the Unknown, edited by Tony Horwitz, Oxford, 2003. Notable Black American Men, Gale, 1998. Reed, Christopher Robert, Black Chicago's First Century, University of Missouri Press, 2005.

    “1779: Jean Baptiste Point DuSable,” Chicago Public Library, http://www.chipublib.org/004chicago/timeline/dusable.html(February 1, 2008).

  5. Feb 12, 2007 · Jean-Baptiste-Point DuSable, a frontier trader, trapper and farmer is generally regarded as the first resident of what is now Chicago, Illinois. There is very little definite information on DuSable’s past. It is believed by some historians that he was born free around 1745 in St. Marc, Saint-Dominique (Haiti).

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  7. Chicago was Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, a Negro. But there were others before him, and their works, though not enduring, at least contributed to the making of Chicago. The first knowledge we have of the Chicago Portage, and hence of Chicago, comes from Father Jacques Mar-quette's journal,4 wherein he describes the return trip with