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      • In 1800 Du Sable sold out and moved to Missouri, where he continued as a farmer and trader until his death. But his 20-year residence on the shores of Lake Michigan had established his title as “Father of Chicago.” His site on the Chicago River was made a National Historic Landmark in 1976.
      www.britannica.com/biography/Jean-Baptist-Point-Du-Sable
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  2. Aug 24, 2024 · In the West Indies the survivors were “seasoned”—taught the rudiments of English and drilled in the routines and discipline of plantation life. Jean-Baptiste-Point Du Sable was a pioneer trader who founded the settlement that later became the city of Chicago.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Point du Sable is first recorded as living at the mouth of the Chicago River in a trader's journal of early 1790. By then he had established an extensive and prosperous trading settlement in what later became the City of Chicago.

  4. Feb 3, 2022 · DuSable became instrumental in negotiating and preserving peace among several tribes after Pontiac’s War and death. By 1778, DuSable had established himself in the area that would become Chicago and, in that year, married Kitihawa, a Potawatomi woman also known as Catherine.

  5. Feb 12, 2007 · DuSable migrated north, up the Mississippi river, later settling in an area near present-day Peoria, Illinois. He also lived in what is now Michigan and Indiana as well during the 1770s.

  6. Jul 10, 2023 · Sometime in the mid-1780s, Jean-Baptiste Pointe DuSable, a Black man from Saint-Domingue, and his Potawatomi wife, Kitihawa, settled with their family on a swampy site near Lake Michigan called Eschecagou, “land of the wild onions.”

  7. Aug 8, 2011 · Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable died at his daughter’s house on August 28, 1818, and was buried in the local Catholic cemetery. His gravesite remained unmarked until 1968.

  8. Jun 29, 2021 · DuSable, Kitihawa and their two children only resided by the Chicago River for about a year. In 1800, the family sold their property and traveled west to St. Charles, Missouri, where DuSable...

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