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John Jones
Dominique Butler In 1816 John Jones was born a free man in Green City, North Carolina. Little is known about Jones's youth. It is known that his mother was a black woman who used the surname of Jones, and his father was a German named Bromfield. Jones moved from North Carolina to Memphis, Tennessee, then finally to Chicago in 1845. It was here that Jones started his well-known tailoring shop at 119 Dearborn Street in Chicago.
While he was in office, he did what he thought was necessary to make the community a better place to live. While in office, he helped secure the law that abolished local segregated schools. After his term, Jones continued to run his tailor shop until he died. Following his death, the Chicago Tribune reported that he had been the most prominent black citizen in the city. Jones's tailoring business was operated until 1906 by his son-in-law, Lloyd G. Wheeler, the first black to pass the Illinois Bar. As one historian noted, "John Jones is buried in Graceland Cemetery where Alan Pinkerton, Dr. C. V. Dyer, and other abolitionists lie close to him in death as they stood with him in life." Because of Jones and his contribution to end the Black Codes, African-Americans gained the right to vote, testify in court, and serve on juries. Today where his tailoring shop once stood, now stands the State of Illinois Building. John Jones is an important figure in Illinois history who will be long remembered.—[From Lerone Bennett, Jr., The Shaping of Black America; Charles L. Blockson, The Underground Railroad; Harold F. Gosnell, Negro Politicians; Alton Hornsby, Jr., Chronology of African-American History; Langston Hughes and Milton Meltzer, A Pictorial History of the Negro in America; Robert P. Howard, Illinois; Robert M. Sutton, The Heartland; Dempsey J. Travis, An Autobiography of Black Politics.]
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