SALUTE TO GEORGE BLAKEMORE ON THE OCCASION OF HIS 80S BIRTHDAY
WHEREAS, should you have occasion to attend a meeting of a Chicago or Cook County legislative body, there is a good chance that you have seen and, more importantly, heard the oratory of George Blakemore, an outstanding and diligently concerned citizen who has recently joined the ever-expanding ranks of this city's octogenarians; and
WHEREAS, on February 19, 1942, George started life as the second eldest of five children and only son born to George and Ellen Blakemore in Butler Place, a public housing apartment complex in Fort Worth, Texas built by the WPA during the Franklin Delano Roosevelt administration. His family moved out when he was three years old. George Blakemore Sr. worked on the railroads and later became the owner of several businesses including a pool hall, shoeshine parlor, and a gas station. His mother was also in business, owning property that she rented out in addition to her duties as a stay-at-home mom and housewife; and
WHEREAS, young George had all manner of odd jobs, from a summer of picking cotton to a being a busboy, a dishwasher, a shoeshine man, and convention circuit worker. Since George came from a long line of educators including sisters, uncles and an aunt who started a privately-owned Black elementary school in Fort Worth, it was only natural that he followed his family into the field of education. He began his teaching career as a high school political science and history teacher in Fort Worth Texas. He taught political science in a high school in Oklahoma City Oklahoma before migrating to Chicago, Illinois. George continued his teaching career as a political science teacher in the Chicago public school system; and
WHEREAS George also inherited his family's entrepreneurial spirit as a street vendor on Maxwell Street. His drive and determination took him all over the nation, selling goods and wares from coast to coast. However, for the past 30 years, George has worked as ...
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