“This encyclopedic study will be of tremendous use to students of African American history and the history of nineteenth-century Chicago. Christopher Robert Reed has gone through old newspapers (including hard-to-find African American papers), oral histories, and a range of archival sources to provide an extraordinary overview of African American life in Chicago from the moment Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable settled his family by the Chicago River at roughly the location where present-day Michigan Avenue crosses it to the point in 1898 when African American troops marched out of the city on their way to fight in the Spanish-American War. The result is a complex look at a long and complicated history.”—Journal of American History
“Reed's exploration of nineteenth-century black progress in Chicago helps us better understand the social and economic underpinnings that shaped the well-documented rise of the black metropolis of the tweniteth century.”—American Historical Review
“A magisterial contribution to African American urban history.”—The Journal of African American History
“An invaluable contribution to the field. It provides much clearer insight into the prehistory of black Chicago and resurrects the stories of people and institutions that laid the foundation on which current African American Chicagoans reside and work. More an encyclopedia than a textbook, Reed's book will no doubt challenge all of us to rethink wht we know about the early days of black life in a northern city.”—Lionel Kimble, H-Net
“This is a brilliant study. It is the first that provides a comprehensive historical assessment of black life in an American city and is an easy read. The story comes through in a way that we do not find in other studies where theoretical constructs and social science methodologies drive the narrative, as opposed to the reality of the historical experience itself….The illustrations are absolutely great and enhance the [volume]. With Reed’s book, history comes alive.”—Juliet E. K. Walker, University of Texas at Austin, author of The History of Black Business in America
“If you have African-American ancestry in Chicago, you'll want to devour this book from cover to cover.”—Family Tree Magazine