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  1. Jul 15, 2021 · He was Chicago's first city entrepreneur. He was the first real estate developer. And he was a proponent of multiculturalism," said Etzer Cantave, president of the DuSable Heritage Association ...

  2. Kitihawa Point Du Sable (also known by her Christian name, Catherine) [1] was a Potawatomi woman who, with her husband Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, established the first permanent settlement in what is now the city of Chicago. [2] By the late 1700s, Kitihawa and her husband had set up their farm and trading post on the Chicago river.

  3. Mar 30, 2023 · She was the wife of explorer Jean Baptiste Point DuSable, and in some's eyes, a co-founder of Chicago. Her story is not often told. There are no exhibits, no statues, or books about Kitihawa ...

  4. Nov 15, 2021 · All we know about Kitihawa’s early life is that she was born a member of the Potawatomi Nation, probably in the 1750s in what is now Illinois. We do not know what she looked like or what she sounded like.We surmise that she married the French trader Jean Baptiste Point Du Sable in a Potawatomi ceremony in the 1770s ….

  5. Kids Encyclopedia Facts. Kitihawa Point Du Sable (also known by her Christian name, Catherine) was a Potawatomi woman who, with her husband Jean Baptiste, established the first permanent settlement in what is now the city of Chicago. By the late 1700s, Kitihawa and her husband had set up their farm and trading post on the Chicago river.

  6. Feb 12, 2007 · Jean-Baptiste-Point DuSable (1745-1818) Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, History of Chicago, Volume I (Illinois: Self-published, 1884) by Alfred Theodore Andreas. 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 ...

  7. Feb 24, 2024 · Jean Baptiste Point DuSable Or Haitian Secret Agent in the Old Northwest Outpost 1745-1818, has been a helpful tool in her research. Joseph talked about the oral traditions that kept DuSable’s memory alive for centuries and the people who honored those traditions. “It is Black and Indigenous people, largely, who keep his story alive ...