- Gurdon Saltonstall Hubbard
Gurdon Saltonstall Hubbard (
August 22 ,1802 inWindsor, Vermont , –September 14 ,1886 inChicago, Illinois ) was an American fur trader, insurance underwriter and land speculator. Hubbard first arrived inChicago on October 1, 1818 as avoyageur . He went on to buildChicago 's first stockyard and help foment a land boom for Chicago in the East.Early life
Hubbard was born in Windsor, Vermont to Elizur Hubbard and Abigail Sage Hubbard. When his father, a lawyer, lost his money around 1812 in speculative ventures, he took the family north and settled in Montreal. In 1818, Hubbard was indentured to
John Jacob Astor 'sAmerican Fur Company for five years at $120 per year.cite book | last = Miller | first = Donald I. | authorlink = Donald I. Miller | title = City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America | publisher = Simon & Schuster | date = 1996 | location = New York | pages = 51 | isbn = 0684801949]Hubbard first arrived in Chicago in 1818 as a member of a brigade led by Antoine Deschamps.cite book | last = Miller | first = Donald I. | authorlink = Donald I. Miller | title = City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America | publisher = Simon & Schuster | date = 1996 | location = New York | pages = 48-9 | isbn = 0684801949] Hubbard carried an introduction to
John Kinzie , a trader in Chicago, whose son, Morris, had befriended Hubbard. Although Hubbard eventually became a major booster of Chicago and one of its leading citizens, he wouldn't make his permanent home in the city until 1834.On several trips throughout Illinois, he became the adopted son of Chief Waba of the
Kickapoo and marriedWatseka , niece of Chief Tamin of the Kankakee. After he walked for 75 miles in a single night to warn the town of Danville of an impending raid by Indians, he earned the nickname "Pa-pa-ma-ta-be," or "Swift-Walker." When a local Indian tribe questioned his ability to perform this feat, he challenged their champion walker to a race. Hubbard's challenger lost by several miles and was unable to move the next day. Hubbard seemed to be unaffected.cite book | last = Heise | first = Keenan | authorlink = Kenan Heise | coauthors =Ed Baumann | title = Chicago Originals | publisher = Bonus Books| date = 1990 | location = Chicago | pages = 5-8 | isbn = 0933893949]Life in Chicago
Upon settling in Chicago in 1834, Hubbard purchased a cabin near
Lake Michigan from Billy Caldwell and beame one of the village's first trustees.cite book | last = Sawyers| first = June Skinner | authorlink = June Skinenr Sawyers | title = Chicago Portraits | publisher = Loyola University Press | date = 1991 | location = Chicago | pages = 127-8 | isbn = 0829407014]In the 1830s, Hubbard served in the Illinois General Assembly. While there, he advocated ending the
Illinois and Michigan Canal at theChicago River instead of theCalumet River .In Chicago, Hubbard became a leading figure in the
fur trade and opened the first meat packing plant in Chicago as part of his work to supplyFort Dearborn with meat. In support of this business, he built the first warehouse, known as "Hubbard's Folly," in Chicago on the south bank of the Chicago River, near modern dayLaSalle Street .Building his fortune in meats and furs allowed Hubbard to enter into the insurance business, and he was the first underwriter in Chicago. Following the
Great Chicago Fire in 1871, he was nearly bankrupted by the insurance payments he had to make, but he was able to survive the set back.Hubbard was the owner of the "Lady Elgin", a steamship which was rammed by a schooner and sank in 1860. Although Hubbard accepted insurance money for the loss, he never abandoned ownership of the ship, which was discovered in 1989. 1860 also saw Hubbard elected alderman of Chicago's 7th Ward.
In the late 1860s, Hubbard began work on his autobiography and had produced an 800 page manuscript which was destroyed in the
Great Chicago Fire . Following the fire, he set to work to reproduce the manuscript, only completing it up to 1829 at the time of his death.After the fire
Hubbard recovered from his financial setbacks following the Great Chicago Fire, but his health began to deteriorate. In 1883, he became ill and in 1884, he had his left eye removed. The following year, his right eye was removed. Hubbard died on September 14, 1886 and was buried in
Graceland Cemetery .References
Further reading
*Hamilton, Henry R. "The Epic of Chicago". Willett Clark, 1932.
*Hubbard, Gurdon S. "The Autobiography of Gurdon Saltonstall Hubbard, Pa-pa-ma-ta-be, "The Swift Walker". Lakeside Press, 1911.
*Wendt, Lloyd. "Swift Walker: An Informal Biography of Gurdon Saltonstall Hubbard".Regnery Books , 1986. ISBN=0895265818.
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