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| 1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION |
| 2 | | WHEREAS, Lewis E. Isbell was born into slavery in Floyd |
| 3 | | County, Kentucky on March 17, 1819, was emancipated in 1825, |
| 4 | | and was an early settler in Edgar County, where he lived from |
| 5 | | 1825 until 1838; and |
| 6 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Isbell traveled to Chicago in 1838 as an |
| 7 | | early pioneer and was one of the first Black residents after |
| 8 | | Jean Baptiste du Sable; he became the second barber in the |
| 9 | | city, establishing what he said was "the biggest and the best" |
| 10 | | in Chicago; and |
| 11 | | WHEREAS, Becoming a prominent barber in Chicago, Lewis |
| 12 | | Isbell operated his shop at the prestigious Sherman House |
| 13 | | Hotel for 25 years, shaving many prominent men throughout his |
| 14 | | career, including Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. |
| 15 | | Grant, United States Senator Stephen Douglas, and Chicago |
| 16 | | Mayors William B. Ogden, John Wentworth, and John P. Hopkins; |
| 17 | | and |
| 18 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Isbell continued his trade as the "Dean of |
| 19 | | Chicago Barbers" for well over 50 years and was recognized by |
| 20 | | the American Barbers Association; and |
| 21 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Isbell would try his success at other |
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| 1 | | passions of his as well, becoming a photographer, community |
| 2 | | leader, and later owning a dining room; and |
| 3 | | WHEREAS, On July 4, 1847, Lewis Isbell gained extensive |
| 4 | | notoriety for his victory in a three-way foot race at |
| 5 | | Merrick's Racetrack between a Native American, a man on |
| 6 | | horseback, and himself; and |
| 7 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Isbell joined the American Anti-Slavery |
| 8 | | Society in 1839 and quickly became a force in assisting |
| 9 | | freedom seekers, fighting for the abolition of slavery, the |
| 10 | | repeal of Illinois' Black Laws, and broad Black equality, |
| 11 | | later representing Cook County at the 1850, 1853, and 1856 |
| 12 | | Illinois "Colored Conventions"; and |
| 13 | | WHEREAS, A member, conductor, and one of the leaders of |
| 14 | | the Chicago Underground Railroad, Lewis Isbell used his |
| 15 | | extensive networks and ties to prominent businessmen to |
| 16 | | successfully transport nearly 1,000 freedom seekers through |
| 17 | | Chicago and onto Canada; and |
| 18 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Isbell was nearly killed by a slave hunter |
| 19 | | in 1857 after refusing to disclose the location of freedom |
| 20 | | seekers in Chicago, leading the slaver to draw his revolver |
| 21 | | and fire four shots, all of which missed; and |
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| 1 | | WHEREAS, In 1863, upon the personal recommendation of |
| 2 | | Chicago Tribune owner Joseph Medill and then-Governor Richard |
| 3 | | Yates, Lewis Isbell was commissioned by Secretary of War Edwin |
| 4 | | Stanton to serve as a general recruiting officer of "colored |
| 5 | | troops" in Illinois and Wisconsin during the Civil War, |
| 6 | | ultimately recruiting for the 29th Regiment; and |
| 7 | | WHEREAS, Hailed as a "great unknown Chicagoan", Lewis |
| 8 | | Isbell died in Chicago on October 13, 1905 and was buried in a |
| 9 | | still-unmarked grave at Mount Olivet Catholic Cemetery; |
| 10 | | therefore, be it |
| 11 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE |
| 12 | | HUNDRED FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that |
| 13 | | we declare October 13, 2025 as Lewis Isbell Day in the State of |
| 14 | | Illinois. |