Source of the place names in the U.S. city of Chicago, Illinois.
Place Name | Source | |
---|---|---|
Adams Street | John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the United States | |
Thomas Addison, English doctor, discoverer of Addison's disease[1] | ||
John Peter Altgeld (1847-1902), Governor of Illinois from 1893-1897. | ||
Named for the Andersonville School, which in turn was named for Reverend Paul Andersen Norland[2] | ||
Col. William Archer, the first commissioner of the Illinois and Michigan Canal | ||
Named for Archer Avenue (see above) | ||
Thomas Armitage, founder of the American Bible Union[3] | ||
Artesian Avenue | A productive artesian well on the corner of Chicago Avenue and Western Avenue | |
Ashburn | The community served as a dumping ground in the 1800s and turn of the last century for ashes collected from Chicagoans' fireplaces and coal-fired furnaces.[4] | |
Ashland Avenue | The Ashland estate of Kentucky statesman Henry Clay | |
Austin | Businessman and real estate speculator Henry W. Austin.[5] | |
Avalon Park | Named for the Avalon Park Community Church, formerly called Pennytown after a shopkeeper. | |
Back of the Yards | Named for its location near the Union Stock Yards. | |
Balbo Drive | Named after Italian Politician and former Marshal of Airforce, Italo Balbo. | |
Beach Avenue | Real estate developer E. A. Beach | |
Battle of Belmont | ||
Led to Blue Island, a ridge of land that appeared to be an island to pioneers | ||
Early settler Jessie Bowman sold lots that he did not own, then fled | ||
Claimed to be for a bridge over the Illinois and Michigan Canal, although there is no evidence that the bridge ever existed.[6] | ||
Either for the cattle market in Brighton, Massachusetts, or for Brighton Racecourse in England | ||
Named for the New York City Broadway, formerly known as Evanston Avenue.[7] | ||
The creek derives its name from the gases bubbling out of the riverbed from the decomposition of blood and entrails dumped into the river in the early 20th century by the local meatpacking businesses surrounding the Union Stock Yards. | ||
Residents kept goats in their yards | ||
General Ambrose Burnside | ||
Calhoun Place | Not, as is commonly believed, for U.S. Vice President John C. Calhoun, but rather John Calhoun, who published Chicago's first newspaper, the Chicago Democrat.[8] | |
Calumet is a Norman-French, colonial-era word often used by colonists for a Native American ceremonial pipe | ||
Refers to the sparrows who fed in the stockyards and railroad cars in the late 19th century. The name may also refer to youth gangs in the neighborhood, who were known as "wild canaries".[9] | ||
Refers to the original name of Garfield Park. | ||
Slain Chicago mayor Anton Cermak (formerly 22nd Street) | ||
A French rendering of the Miami-Illinois name shikaakwa, meaning wild leek.[10] [11] [12] | ||
Roman statesman Marcus Tullius Cicero[13] | ||
George Rogers Clark | ||
Clinton Street | DeWitt Clinton | |
Clybourn Avenue | Archibald Clybourn, the first police constable of Chicago | |
Columbus Drive | Christopher Columbus[14] | |
Constance Avenue | Konstanz, Germany | |
The county in which Chicago is situated was named after Daniel Pope Cook, who served as the second U.S. Representative from Illinois and the first Attorney General of the State of Illinois | ||
Cottage Grove Avenue | A small cottage in a charming grove.[15] | |
Damen Avenue | Father Arnold Damen, founder of St. Ignatius College Preparatory School[16] | |
Dearborn Park and Dearborn Street | named for Fort Dearborn which was built on the present day site of Chicago, which in turn was named for General Henry Dearborn, American Revolutionary War veteran and Secretary of War under Thomas Jefferson. | |
John DeKoven (founder of Northern Trust) | ||
Deming Place | Frederick Deming, a subdivider in 1860 | |
Named by developer John Lewis Cochran after Devon station on the Main Line north of Philadelphia.[17] | ||
Beer brewer and alderman Michael Diversey | ||
Anna and Frederick Douglass[18] | ||
Andrew Dunning, a real estate speculator[19] | ||
Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, first non-native resident of Chicago.[20] | ||
Refers to the edge of the North Branch of the Chicago River | ||
Refers to the edge of Lake Michigan | ||
Elston Avenue | Alderman, soap manufacturer and banker Daniel Elston.[21] | |
Englewood, New Jersey | ||
Euclid Avenue | Euclid, Greek mathematician | |
Fabyan Parkway | George Fabyan, millionaire businessman | |
Fairbanks Court | Nathaniel Kellogg Fairbank, Chicago industrialist | |
Fillmore Street | Millard Fillmore, thirteenth President of the United States | |
Foster Avenue | Doctor John H. Foster (1796-1874), member of the Chicago Board of Education. | |
Melville Fuller, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court | ||
Fullerton Avenue | Alexander N. Fullerton (1804-1880), lawyer and lumber magnate, who arrived in Chicago in 1833[22] | |
Fulton Street | Robert Fulton | |
Franklin Street | Benjamin Franklin | |
See below | ||
The centerpiece of a three park and interlinking boulevard system, the 185acres park (formerly Central Park) was renamed to honor twentieth President of the United States James A. Garfield after his assassination in 1881. Garfield Boulevard and the Garfield Park Conservatory are also named for him. | ||
George Street | Settler Sam George sighted the last bear in Chicago at the corner of Adams and LaSalle Streets in 1834. The bear was promptly killed by another settler, John Sweeney. | |
Gladys Avenue | Gladys Gunderson, a member of the Norwegian-American family that formed a successful 19th-century Chicago real estate firm, S. T. Gunderson & Sons. Gladys Park is also named for her. Another city street, Langley Avenue, and city park is named for another relative, Esther Gunderson Langley.[23] | |
Grace Street | Named after the Lutheran Chicago Theological Seminary[24] (1890-1908) located at Clark/Addison to Grace/Sheffield. It is located at 3800 north and just north of Wrigley Field. The street is named after a core principal of the Lutheran Reformation and not after Mark Grace (Cubs player 1988-2000). | |
Named for a statement by Thomas J. V. Owen, the first Town President of Chicago, who said "Chicago is a grand place to live."[25] | ||
Ulysses S. Grant, eighteenth President of the United States. Originally named Lake Park, it was renamed for Grant in 1901. | ||
Greenview Avenue | Greenview, Illinois | |
William Ogden named it for William and Caleb Halsted, brothers from New York who developed parts of the Loop | ||
Harrison Street | William Henry Harrison, ninth President of the United States | |
Adolph Hegewisch, who laid out the town of Hegewisch which is now part of the 10th Ward of Chicago | ||
Hirsch Street | Also Hirsch High School; rabbinical scholar Emil Gustav Hirsch[26] | |
Honore Street | For Henry Honoré, developer and father of Bertha Palmer | |
Howard Uhr, who donated the Howard Street right-of-way to Chicago | ||
Hoyne Avenue | Named after Thomas Hoyne, who was elected to be mayor of Chicago, but was never allowed to take office | |
Gurdon Saltonstall Hubbard, who arrived in Chicago in 1818.[27] | ||
The park and a boulevard are named for Alexander von Humboldt, a German naturalist and explorer | ||
Named by developer Paul Cornell to evoke the wealth of both Hyde Park, New York and Hyde Park, London.[28] | ||
Named after civil rights activist Ida B. Wells. Formerly called, Congress Parkway | ||
Irving Park Road | Washington Irving | |
Jackson Boulevard | Andrew Jackson, seventh President of the United States | |
Andrew Jackson, seventh President of the United States | ||
Named for R. J. Jarvis.[29] | ||
Jefferson Street | Thomas Jefferson, third President of the United States | |
Jeffery Boulevard | Edward T. Jeffery, Chief Engineer of the Illinois Central Railroad[30] | |
Keating Avenue | William H. Keating | |
John H. Kedzie (1815-1903), an attorney who developed the North and West Sides of Chicago and parts of Evanston. He helped establish the Republican Party in Illinois.[31] | ||
Kewanee Avenue | A lek for Prairie chickens called "Kewanee" in the Winnebago language was located there | |
Kimball Avenue | Walter Kimbell, landowner and subdivider; City Council changed the spelling | |
Kimbark Avenue | Seneca Kimbark, member of the first Board of South Park Commissioners | |
King Drive | Martin Luther King Jr.
| |
Kinzie Street | John Kinzie, who settled near the river in 1804. | |
Tadeusz Kościuszko, Polish-Lithuanian soldier who fought in the American Revolution.[33] | ||
A highway running parallel with and alongside the shoreline of Lake Michigan, which connects many of the city's lakefront parks. The downtown portion opened as Leif Ericson Drive in 1937 and was also called Field Boulevard but in 1946 was renamed Lake Shore Drive. | ||
Named for Lake Michigan[34] | ||
See above entry for Gladys Avenue | ||
Sieur de La Salle, an early explorer of Illinois | ||
Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth President of the United States. This is one of the few diagonal streets in Chicago. Prior to Lincoln's assassination the street was known as Little Fort Road as it led to the town of Little Fort, now Waukegan, Illinois | ||
Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth President of the United States. Originally Cemetery Park, then Lake Park, it was renamed for Lincoln following his assassination in 1865. | ||
Gen. John A. Logan | ||
Loomis Boulevard | Horatio G. Loomis, one of the organizers of the Chicago Board of Trade in 1848 | |
James Madison, fourth President of the United States | ||
Malden Street | Fort Malden, a British fort known as the main entry point for slaves fleeing to freedom in Canada via the Underground Railroad. Now a part of Amherstberg, Ontario, the fort was originally named the town of Maldon.[35] [36] | |
Dr. Philip Maxwell, one of Chicago's first surgeons | ||
Medill Avenue | Named after Joseph Medill, owner of the Chicago Tribune. | |
McClurg Court | A. C. McClurg, Chicago publisher | |
McKinley Park | William McKinley, twenty-fifth President of the United States | |
Named for Lake Michigan[37] | ||
Battle of Midway | ||
Midway Plaisance | The central path (Middle Way) connecting Washington Park to Jackson Park, built for the World's Columbian Exposition. Plaisance is from the French for Pleasant. The name midway has been adopted for the portions of amusement parks where rides and games are set up. | |
Mies van der Rohe Way | Named after German-American architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. | |
Algonquin word for "the Land."[38] | ||
Monroe Street | James Monroe, fifth President of the United States | |
Normal Avenue | For the Chicago Normal School (now Chicago State University) | |
Was the northern boundary of the city when the street was named.[39] | ||
Named for the oak tree.[40] | ||
William Butler Ogden, first mayor of Chicago | ||
Edward "Butch" O'Hare, World War II flying ace and Medal of Honor recipient | ||
Named for the state of Ohio, which means "beautiful river."[41] | ||
Peoria Street | Peoria, Illinois, the oldest European settlement in Illinois. | |
General John J. Pershing (formerly 39th Street) | ||
Plzeň, a city in the Czech Republic | ||
Ping Tom, Chicago Chinatown businessman and civic leader.[42] | ||
Polk Street | James K. Polk, eleventh President of the United States | |
Named for the Illinois prairies.[43] | ||
Casimir Pulaski, Polish military commander during the Revolutionary War; formerly Crawford Avenue, named after Peter Crawford, an early area landowner. | ||
Pullman Palace Car Company | ||
Quincy Street | John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the United States | |
named for Randolph County, Illinois as was part of the original plot of Chicago. | ||
Ridge Boulevard/Avenue | Runs along a ridge formed by Lake Michigan | |
Pioneer settler Philip Rogers | ||
President Theodore Roosevelt (formerly 12th Street) | ||
Named for Dr. Benjamin Rush, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Rush Street dates back to the 1830s incorporation of Chicago. | ||
St. Louis Avenue | The street and St. Louis Park are named after Louis IX of France | |
St. Clair Street | Named after Revolutionary War General Arthur St. Clair and Governor of the Northwest Territory | |
Sauganash, and Caldwell Avenues | Half-Potawatomi Chief Sauganash, also known as Billy Caldwell | |
Sedgwick Street | John Sedgwick, Civil War general | |
Seminary Avenue | Possibly named after the Chicago Lutheran Theological Seminary located at Clark/Addison to Grace/Sheffield (1890-1908). | |
Subdivider Joseph Sheffield | ||
Philip Henry Sheridan, Civil War general | ||
Sibley Boulevard | Known as 147th Street (Sibley Street in Hammond, Indiana only) | |
Southport Avenue | Led to Kenosha, Wisconsin, which was formerly named Southport | |
Originally State Road, its intersection with Madison Street marks the base point for Chicago's address system. North of the Chicago River, this was formerly called Wolcott. | ||
George "Cap" Streeter | ||
Leads to Stony Island, a ridge of land that appeared to be an island to pioneers | ||
Taylor Street | Zachary Taylor, twelfth President of the United States | |
Throop Street | Amos G. Throop, a Chicago lumberman | |
Named for Civil War General Joseph T. Torrence. He led the Chicago militia during the Great Railroad Strike of 1877.[44] | ||
Named for local subdivider Patrick L. Touhy who was the son in law of Philip Rogers. | ||
Van Buren Street | Martin Van Buren, eighth President of the United States | |
Vincennes Avenue | Fort Vincennes, Indiana | |
Wabash Avenue | Wabash Railroad | |
Charles H. Wacker, chairman of the Chicago Plan Commission, who pushed the idea of a double decked roadway along the Chicago River. | ||
Waller Avenue | Robert A. Waller, founder of Buena Park | |
Warren Boulevard | General Joseph Warren, American Revolutionary war patriot and doctor. | |
Washington Park | George Washington, first President of the United States, formerly known as Western Division of South Park, also Park No. 21 | |
Washington Street | George Washington, first President of the United States | |
Wentworth Avenue | Long John Wentworth, mayor | |
William Wells, soldier | ||
Was the western boundary of the city when the street was named.[45] | ||
Whipple Street | Henry Benjamin Whipple (1822-1901), Episcopal bishop | |
Wicker Park | Named for Charles G. Wicker and Joel H. Wicker. | |
Wilson Ave | John P. Wilson, lawyer and donator to Children's Memorial Hospital | |
Wolcott Avenue | Dr. Alexander Wolcott, Jr. (1790-1830), first physician in Chicago, trader, served as Chicago's US Indian Agent from the late 1810s through the late 1820s. Until 1939, the road was Lincoln Street. | |
Wrightwood Avenue | Edward Wright, a subdivider and an attorney | |
Wrigleyville | Named for Wrigley Field, in turn named for William Wrigley, Jr. |