Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Robbins, IL. Cook County, 17 miles south of the Loop. Robbins is the oldest majority-black suburb in the Chicago area and one of the oldest incorporated black municipalities in the United States. Robbins is also characteristic of semirural black suburbs that developed in the United States during the Great Migration .

    • Robbins, IL
  2. Jun 25, 2016 · 1897—Chicago Street Name Origins. Turn of the century street sign. Chicago Tribune, October 16, 1887. Chicago Tribune, June 10, 1897. In Andreas’ History of Chicago is an article devoted to the street nomenclature of the city which is of the greatest interest to the old-time residents of the city. The article takes up at length the more ...

  3. People also ask

    • Addison Street
    • Ashland Avenue
    • Armitage Avenue
    • Belmont Avenue
    • Cermak Road
    • Clark Street
    • Clinton Street
    • Clybourn Avenue
    • Damen Avenue
    • Dearborn Street

    Wikimedia Commons // CC BY 4.0 Named for British physician Dr. Thomas Addison, who, according to Chicago Magazine, "was a shy, brilliant British physician whose devotion to studying the adrenal glands was rewarded when his name was attached to a hormonal deficiency, Addison’s disease." Addison committed suicide in 1860, and his connection to Chicag...

    This avenue used to be called Reuben Street, and the name "Ashland" comes from the Kentucky home of Henry Clay, a moniker seemingly bestowed by a Chicago developer who was a transplant form Kentucky. That developer was either Samuel J. Walker or Henry Hamilton Honore—no one can pinpoint for sure, but both men were Kentucky transplants to Chicago wh...

    Armitage may have been named for Thomas Armitage, founder of the American Bible Union, or for a mysterious A. Armitage, a Chicago mason who may have been the father of Alderman Edward R. Armitage. Little is known about A. Armitage, other than the fact that he was listed as a masonin Chicago in 1849. One story postulates that the avenue was named fo...

    This gets its name from the Battle of Belmont, an 1861 encounter that marked Ulysses S. Grant’s first time in command during a Civil War battle.

    Wikimedia Commons// Public Domain Cermak Road is named in honor of Anton Cermak, the Czech-American mayor of Chicago in the early 1930s. He essentially created the Democratic party machine in the city, and was assassinated less than two years into his first mayoral term. Cermak died either as part of a failed assassination attempt on president-elec...

    Wikimedia Commons// Public Domain This major thoroughfare is named for George Rogers Clark, a Revolutionary War general who led the Illinois Campaign and notched victoriesover multiple British strongholds throughout the area. The street was named after the general in 1833. Before that, it was known as Green Bay Road because it went north all the wa...

    Wikimedia Commons// Public Domain Clinton Street honors DeWitt Clinton, the nineteenth-century mayor of New York who was responsible for the Erie Canal, a project that hugely aidedthe commercial growth of Chicago.

    The avenue takes its name from early Chicago settler Archibald Clybourn. He built the first slaughterhouse in Chicago; slaughterhouses in the Windy City became a dominant industry and would later earn infamy when Upton Sinclair set his novel The Junglein one, sparking a movement in favor of increased oversight for food processing. Clybourn also ser...

    Damen Avenue honors Catholic priest Father Arnold Damen, who was born in Holland in 1815. After studying in St. Louis, he moved to Chicagoin 1857 and founded Holy Family Church and St. Ignatius High School. He died in 1890, and in 1927, what was then called Robey Street was renamed for him.

    Wikimedia Commons// Public Domain Dearborn shares the name of nearby Fort Dearborn (demolished in 1857), both so called to honor Revolutionary War hero General Henry Dearborn.

  4. Robbins, Illinois. Location of Robbins in Cook County, Illinois. /  41.64306°N 87.70806°W  / 41.64306; -87.70806. Robbins is a village southwest of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States. The population was 4,629 at the 2020 census. [2] Darren E. Bryant is the current mayor of Robbins.

  5. Nov 3, 2015 · During World War II, the triangle made up by North Avenue, Clark Street, and Ogden Avenue was designated as a "neighborhood defense unit" by Chicago's Civil Defense Agency. After the war, the ...

    • how did robbins il get its name without a church map of chicago1
    • how did robbins il get its name without a church map of chicago2
    • how did robbins il get its name without a church map of chicago3
    • how did robbins il get its name without a church map of chicago4
    • how did robbins il get its name without a church map of chicago5
  6. Robbins, IL. Robbins was incorporated on December 14, 1917 and named for Eugene S. Robbins, a white real estate developer who laid out the village's early subdivisions. The village's founder and first mayor was Thomas J. Kellar, who noted in an early interview "Our people in Robbins are mostly people who get tired of the white fights and the ...

  7. Nov 3, 2017 · Belmont – Speaking of unrelated to Chicago, this name comes from the November, 1861 Battle of Belmont in northern Missouri. An unimportant battle, its only distinction is that it was the first combat test in the Civil War for Ulysses S. Grant. Ashland is also named after a non-Chicago place: Henry Clay’s ash tree-dotted Kentucky estate.

  1. People also search for