St. Nicholas of Tolentine Boulevard
Linda Zabors
100th Anniversary St. Nicholas of Tolentine Parish
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222 W Merchandise Mart Plaza
Chicago, IL, 60654
312-380-9883
Chicago's honorary brown street signs, days, and commemorative honors; the who, what, where, when and why. Honorary Chicago guide book, maps, biographies, history, trivia, tours, and gifts.
100th Anniversary St. Nicholas of Tolentine Parish
Read MoreMarc Levy - football coach
Read MoreSokoni Karanja means “A person from across the sea with knowledge” in Swahili. He founded the Centers for New Horizons in Chicago, a social service in the Bronzeville neighborhood to restore it as self-sufficient community with pride in its African and Black American history. He was inspired by Malcolm X, Julius Nyere, and the Black Metropolis of the 1920s. In the early 1970s he lived in and traveled around Tanzania building communities and schools. He was the Assistant Dean of Students at Brandeis University. He has been recognized as an expert in childhood and community development.
MacArthur Foundation Genius Grant
University of Chicago, Adlai Stevenson Fellow
Goldin Institute, Chicago Peace Fellow, Washington Park
Alumni:
Brandeis University, Urban Policy, PhD
University of Cincinnati, Master of Community Planning
Atlanta University, Master of Social Work
University of Denver, Master of Psychology
Washburn University
Ft. Scott Junior College
Topeka High School
Approved: October 2016
Ward: 3
Alderman: Dowell
Neighborhood: Bronzeville
b. 1940 Lathan Johnson. Topeka, Kansas
Honorary street sign for Dr. Sokoni T. Karanja founder-Centers for New Horizons social service agency in Bronzeville pic.twitter.com/G5ZT5kV04A
— Alderman Pat Dowell (@AldPatDowell3rd) October 31, 2016
Michelle Fire is the owner of Big Chicks lounge and gallery in the Uptown neighborhood, and Tweet, the breakfast place next door. When she started, the space was an old-man’s bar frequented by the residents of nearby subsidized housing. When the artwork, entirely of women, went up the LGBTQ clientele started showing up to drink, eat, and dance. Big Chicks earned the reputation of being a very welcoming and accepting place for everyone. In recent years it has made the list of best neighborhood bars, best gay, and best lesbian bars. In 2018 it was featured in Bon Appetite.
Ward: 48
Alderman: Osterman
Neighborhood: Uptown
YouTube playlist: Big Chicks. Honorary Chicago
Bernie Wong, founder of the Chinese American Service League, CASL. Honorary Bernarda "Bernie" Wong Way was dedicated in the Chinatown neighborhood in 2016.
Read MoreWard: 2
Alderman: Haithcock
Neighborhood: Cultural Mile
Join us for special tours around Chicago during the Triathlon and other special events
Read MoreAugust 13,2016 is the Saturday that you have to come out for! This is something absolutely worth seeing. I feel as though this particular parade is children based. It’s all about displaying why school is so vital to the youth. For 87 years the Bud Billiken Parade has brought the community together to uphold all types of things that are positively beneficial for the children. Being in one of the parades because I academically excelled in grammar school made me realize that events like this helps remind children that what they do in school does not go unnoticed. It is very entertaining. You see kids of all ages doing something that they worked very hard on. From choreographed dances to other things such drill teams, you won’t be upset that you attended.
This years theme for the parade is “Uniting the Community Through Education for 87 years” and the grand marshall is Katherine Y. Branch!
There is a new start time for the 2016 parade. It starts at 9:00 a.m. and ends at 12:30 p.m. Not an early person? Don’t sweat it! The Bud Billiken Parade is also televised! You can watch the whole parade in the comfort of your own bed with just a click of a button. Tune in to channel 7 (ABC 7 Chicago), Saturday morning and watch everything unfold.
The Chicago Defender is basically how this all started. It was founded by Robert Sengstacke Abbott on May 5, 1905. The point behind the Chicago Defender was to bring light to African American issues. In the year of 1921 the Chicago Defender Jr was produced. This was a section for children! The editor was a young man that goes by the name of Robert Watkins. He was known as Bud Billiken. This section also included an application to Bud Billiken Club. It was named after the Billiken, which is the guardian angel to children according to a chinese legend. In the year of 1929 that is when the parade was born. The main reason for including a parade was to give underprivileged youth to be in the spotlight for once. Let them know that they are important as well. From then on it has flourished into something huge!
Daniel Capuano was a fireman who died in the line of duty.
Read MoreHonorary Chicago Guidebook featured this week at Barnes & Noble on State and Elm.
Pick up your copy and go sign hunting this summer!
@HonoraryChicago is our new staff pic. Stop by the store today to grab your copy. #HonoraryStreets #bnmidwest pic.twitter.com/bzFxUKt6T4
— BN State and Elm (@BNStateElm) May 2, 2016
Barnes & Noble at State and Elm
In 1868 General John A. Logan, Senator for Illinois, issued an order which established Memorial Day as a day of remembrance for the soldiers lost in the American Civil War. In recent years it has come to include the lives lost in wars and armed conflicts everywhere.
On Memorial Day each year the Chicago Cultural Mile Association hosts a wreath laying ceremony at the Logan equestrian statue in Grant Park near 9th Street in recognition of General John A. Logan's order which initiated the Memorial Day observance which later became a national holiday.
Join Honorary Chicago for a short tour before the ceremony.
The WOOGMS parade has been a tradition in the Lakeview neighborhood for more than 50 years. The motto is "Everyone marches, no one just marches." Join the Lakeview neighbors and the Jesse White Tumblers and Drum Corp on this and every Memorial Day and Labor Day.
If you have not yet experienced the new riverwalk which follows the south bank of the Chicago river along Wacker Drive, Memorial Day is a fitting time to take in the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial which is on the riverwalk just east of State Street.
The largest Memorial Day observance in the City is held on the Saturday before Memorial Day. It starts as a wreath laying ceremony at Daley Plaza which leads into a parade down State Street.
In the spirit of the original observance most Cemeteries remain open on Memorial Day.
Here are a two in the Chicago area that have notable Civil War burials.
Rosehill Cemetery is the final resting place of fourteen Union Army Generals and hundreds of soldiers from the Civil War. Part of the administration building houses a Civil War museum.
Oakwoods Cemetery is the location of monument and burial site of thousands of Confederate soldiers who were prisoners of war at Camp Douglas.
More from Honorary Chicago - the who, where, and why of Chicago's brown honorary street signs. Join us for a tour. Get the book.
Jesse White is the longest serving Secretary of State in Illinois (1999-2023), 24 years; Cook County Recorder of Deeds (1993-1999); a member of the Illinois General Assembly (16 years). He served in the Chicago Public Schools for 30 years; he served in the Army and in the Illinois National Guard. He also played minor league baseball for the Chicago Cubs. While in college in Alabama, Martin Luther King, Jr. was his pastor.
Before his political career, he was best know for his performance troupe, the Jesse White Tumblers, which he formed in 1959 to teach urban youth the value of athletics and staying in school. His athletes are required to maintain a C-average or better grades and away from alcohol, drugs, and tobacco. More than 18,000 youth have come through his program. In retirement from politics he is still actively involved with the Tumblers.
Veteran: Army 101st Airborne Division
Alum
Alabama State University (College) and Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity
Lincoln Park High School (Waller High School)
100 West to 800 West Division Street
Ward: 42
b. June 23, 1934 in Alton, Illinois
Near
Jesse White Field House
412 West Chicago Avenue
Source
http://jessewhitetumblingteam.com/
WGN-TV Interview: https://youtu.be/yKPimx-0plg?si=emMZjORZar2mNK5i
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesse_White_(politician)
Illinois Organ and Tissue Donation Program. https://youtu.be/cw54o9HjSrY?si=aHG1ERRtB37Amtgh
John Logan was a Major General in the American Civil War and served under General Ulysses S. Grant, for whom Chicago's Grant Park is named. After the war he served as Senator of Illinois in the US Congress. He and his fellow veterans in Congress established Memorial Day as a Federal holiday to remember the soldiers who died during the war.
After the end of the Civil War several streets and towns in the United States were named in his honor including: Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood and Logan Boulevard.
His nickname was "Black Jack Logan" and he was not an abolitionist early in his political career. However, when announced in 1861 that he would join the Union Army under President Abraham Lincoln, whom he had originally opposed, Logan's declaration helped secure Illinois as a free state. After the war he returned to his seat in the US Congress and became well known for supporting the rights of former slaves and of women, and for establishing services for veterans of the Civil War and their families.
He had been a Vice Presidential candidate but his campaign ticket lost to President Grover Cleveland in the 1884 election. John Logan aspired to the US Presidency and was in line for candidacy, but he did not live to see the next election cycle.
The Logan Museum is located in Murphysboro, Illinois where John Logan was born.
On May 3, 1868 Logan's General Order 11 established May 30, 1868 as the first observance This was three year after the end of the Civil War. In later years it came to represent soldiers lost in all wars and armed conflicts.
General John Logan's order suggested that it be a day where people would decorate the graves of the fallen soldiers with flowers. It was originally known as Decoration Day.
The red poppy came to be associated with Memorial Day. It symbolized the sacrifice and blood spilled on the battlefield. Observers might wear the red poppy on Memorial Day or use it to decorate the graves of soldiers. In 1922 the Veterans of Foreign Wars organization began using the red poppy to raise awareness and to solicit financial support. The tradition of the red poppy spread. In the US and in parts of Europe the red poppy became associated with fundraising for causes related to fallen soldiers, their families, and the orphans of war. To this day some organizations give red poppies as tokens of appreciation for charitable donations.
The original order also noted that citizens are free to create their own methods of remembrance and memorial.
Feature post: 5 Ways to Observe Memorial Day in Chicago
The Chicago Cultural Mile Association host a wreath laying ceremony at the John A. Logan statue in Grant Park near 9th Street every year on Memorial Day.
Honorary Chicago gives tours of Logan Square and the Cultural Mile to commemorate Memorial Day.
On Sundays during the summer this tour will depart from the Logan Square farmer's market
On other days it will depart from the Illinois Centennial Monument at Logan Square
About the Logan Square neighborhood
About the Andersonville neighborhood
About this neighborhood
Even when the river isn't green you can still enjoy our tour.
The Chicago Cultural Mile is the section of Michigan Avenue from the Chicago River on the north to Roosevelt Road on the south. The Cultural Mile is filled with great Chicago institutions such as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Orchestra Hall, The Art Institute of Chicago, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Millennium Park, Grant Park, The Spertus Museum, The Auditorium Theater, the Fine Arts Building and many others.
The Second Friday of each month the Chicago Cultural Mile tour will depart the Fine Arts Building.
The Memorial Day tour will depart from the Logan Memorial in Grant Park.
Check out the other events taking place on the Chicago Cultural Mile on the Second Friday of each month
Millennium Park Garages discounts for Second Fridays
This tour may include all or part of the Millennium Park tour
About the South Michigan Avenue neighborhood
Past Events
Friday, August 12th 6pm will be a special free edition of the Cultural Mile tour which marks the end of our summer internship season. The tour coincides with the 2nd Friday open studio event at the Fine Arts Building and the 20th annual Summerdance across the street in the park. The tour will last approximately one hour, cover less than a mile of walking, and take place outdoors and indoors depending on the weather. This event is hosted with the Chicago Streets and Beyond Photography Group.
This Magnificent Mile tour departs from the historic water tower on Michigan Avenue