Marv Levy Way
Linda Zabors
Marc Levy - football coach
Read MoreUse the form on the right to contact us.
You can edit the text in this area, and change where the contact form on the right submits to, by entering edit mode using the modes on the bottom right.
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.
Filtering by Category: profile
Marc 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 MoreDaniel Capuano was a fireman who died in the line of duty.
Read MoreJesse 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
Richard Cotovsky was the founder and Artistic Director of the Mary-Arrchie Theater Company, established 1986, a Chicago storefront theater in the Uptown neighborhood.
Read MoreAlexander Esteban was three-year old who was killed by a drunk driver while walking with his 72-year old grandfather, who was also seriously injured.
Read MoreWalter Sojka established and ran the Walter L. Sojka Funeral Home in the Eckhart Park neighborhood for more than 60 years.
Read MoreJoseph Caldwell established Tailorite Cleaners which has been family owned and operated for more than 50 years.
Read MoreJoel Hall - Awakening the dancer in everyone's soul.
Posted by Honorary Chicago on Friday, December 4, 2015
Congratulations Joel!
Honorary Joel Hall Way is outside his dance studio at 5965 N. Clark Street
"A small group of thoughtful people could change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has." -- Margaret...
Posted by Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth on Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Visit Honorary Joel Hall Way outside the Joel Hall Dance Center
Joel Hall is a dancer, choreographer, instructor and director of the Joel Hall Dance Center.
Read MoreJewel Stradford Lafontant in 1946 was the first African-American woman to earn a law degree from the University of Chicago. While a student she led protests and took legal action against local restaurants that discriminated against black patrons.
She began her legal career at the Legal Aid Society. In 1963 she won a case before the Supreme Court defending her client against a forced confession while in police custody. This was one of the cases which led to the 1966 adoption of the Miranda warnings to protect the rights of the accused.
Jewel Lafontant ascended to high ranks in the US government. In 1955 President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed her assistant US Attorney for the Illinois Northern District. She went on to become the highest ranking woman in President Richard Nixon's administration as US Deputy Solicitor General in 1973. In 1989 President George H. W. Bush appointed her ambassador-at-large for refugee affairs at the State Department.
Jewel Lafontant was on Ebony Magazine's list of the 100 most influential black Americans. She was also on the board of directors of several large companies and institutions. She served in leadership positions with the Chicago National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
The City of Chicago honored her with Jewel Stradford Lafontant Day in Chicago September 17, 2011 on the occasion of the dedication of her honorary street sign Jewel Stradford Lafontant Way.
Jewel Stradford Lafontant-Mankarious, April 28, 1922 – May 31, 1997.
Born in Chicago
Oberlin College
University of Chicago Law School
NYT Obituary http://www.nytimes.com/1997/06/03/us/jewel-lafontant-mankarious-lawyer-and-us-official-dies.html
Lee Sandlin. A Chicago writer, essayist for the Chicago Reader and contributor to national publications. Author of several books
Read MorePhoto: Honorary Chicago
Read More