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Jean Baptiste Point du Sable becomes the first permanent settler in Chicago.
1773
Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable, the first permanent settler of Chicago, purchased the property of Jean Baptiste Millet at Old Peoria Fort. Du Sable was born in St. Marc, Haiti, in 1745, the son of a Frenchman who had emigrated to Haiti from Marseilles, France, and a Black enslaved woman. Du Sable was educated in France and later worked in his father's business in New Orleans in 1765. When the Spanish occupied Louisiana that same year, Du Sable and an associate, Jacques Clemorgan of Martinique, left for the French-settled areas of the upper Mississippi River. They stopped in St. Louis, where they carried on a successful fur trade with the Indians for two years. Later, Du Sable and Clemorgan moved farther north into Indian territory and lived with the Peoria and Potawatomie tribes. At the same time, Du Sable participated in fur trapping expeditions, which carried him to the present sites of Chicago, Detroit, and Ontario, Canada. In 1772, Du Sable decided to build a fur trading post on the Chicago River near Lake Michigan. A successful trading center grew around the post and the Chicago settlement developed. After Illinois came under the jurisdiction of the United States, Du Sable sold his property and returned to Missouri, where he died in 1818.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.