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			 Barack Obama, who rose from community 
			organizer to senator to president during his time in Illinois, was 
			the top pick in online voting conducted as part of the celebration 
			of the state’s 200th birthday. 
 He was followed by Black Hawk, the Sauk warrior who fought American 
			expansion into Illinois, and Chief Keokuk, a rival who gave up land 
			to avoid bloodshed as settlers arrived.
 
 The top five also includes Harold Washington, Chicago’s first 
			African-American mayor, and Patricia Roberts Harris, the first 
			African-American woman to become an ambassador or serve in a 
			presidential cabinet.
 
 "This list reminds us that Illinois would not be what it is today 
			without hard work and sacrifice by people of all races, religions 
			and orientations,” said Governor Bruce Rauner. “We should all be 
			grateful for the trailblazers honored here by voters in the Illinois 
			Top 200 project."
 
 The Top 200 project lets Illinoisans vote every two weeks on the 
			state’s most inspiring leaders, greatest inventions, top businesses 
			and much more. By the state’s bicentennial on Dec. 3, voters will 
			have chosen 10 favorites in 20 different categories – the Illinois 
			Top 200.
 
 Voting in the next category, top leaders, is underway at 
			www.IllinoisTop200.com. The nominees include Abraham Lincoln, Ronald 
			Reagan, Jane Addams and Ida B Wells.
 
 Here are the top 10 “minority trailblazers” chosen in online voting:
 
 1. Barack Obama – Obama was the first African-American 
			president in U.S. history. He started as an Illinois legislator and 
			then was elected U.S. senator in 2004. He came to national attention 
			that year with a powerful speech at the Democratic National 
			Convention. Four years later, he won the presidency.
 
 2. Black Hawk – The Sauk warrior sided with the British 
			during the War of 1812. Twenty years later, after being forced out 
			of Illinois, he led hundreds of people back during the brief “Black 
			Hawk War.” He also produced the first Native American autobiography.
 
 3. Chief Keokuk – Keokuk was a Sauk chief and rival to Black 
			Hawk. Convinced that armed resistance was futile, he negotiated with 
			U.S. officials during a series of removals of Native Americans from 
			northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin.
 
 4. Harold Washington – Washington was the first 
			African-American mayor of Chicago, a victory the Democrat achieved 
			despite opposition from many white leaders in his own party. He won 
			re-election but died just months into his second term.
 
			
			 
			
 5. Patricia Roberts Harris – A Mattoon native, Harris was the 
			first African-American woman to serve as an ambassador. As secretary 
			of Health, Education and Welfare under President Carter, she was the 
			first African-American woman in a president’s cabinet, making her 
			the first to enter the presidential line of succession.
 
 6. Minnie Minoso – Minoso was the first Latino superstar in 
			major league baseball. Born in Cuba, he became the game’s first 
			black Latino player when he debuted in Cleveland on April 19, 1949. 
			He was traded to the Chicago White Sox in 1951, becoming that team’s 
			first black player.
 
 7. Steve Chen – Born in Taiwan, Chen came to the U.S. at 15, 
			attending the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy and then the 
			University of Illinois. Three years after graduation, he changed the 
			world of video by co-founding YouTube.
 8. Jean Baptiste Point du Sable 
			–Du Sable was the first non-indigenous settler to take up permanent 
			residence where Chicago would later spring up. Of African descent, 
			he was a frontier trader, trapper and farmer.  
			
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9. Cardiss Collins – Collins was the 
first African-American woman from the Midwest to win a seat in Congress. She was 
the first woman and first African-American named to the leadership post of 
Democratic whip-at-large.
 10. Jesse Jackson – Jackson began his civil rights activism as an aide to 
Martin Luther King Jr., who put him in charge of Chicago-based Operation 
Breadbasket. Out of that grew the organization now known as Rainbow/PUSH. He ran 
for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1984 and again in 1988.
 
 “Everyone in Illinois can take pride in the men and women on this list. In 
different ways and different eras, they stood up for their beliefs, put their 
talents to work and tried to make the world a better place,” said Alan Lowe, 
executive director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. 
“President Lincoln wanted to expand ‘the family of freedom.’ Barack Obama 
reaching the White House was a tremendous step in fulfilling Lincoln’s vision.”
 
 
 
 The nominees who did not make the top 10 were Claude Barnett, founder of the 
Associated Negro Press; Roland Burris, the first African-American to hold 
statewide office in Illinois; African-American congressman Oscar Stanton De 
Priest; gay-rights pioneer Henry Gerber; John Jones, the first African-American 
elected to political office in Illinois; Black Panther leader Fred Hampton; 
economist Abram Lincoln Harris Jr.; football player Joe Lillard; Larry McKeon, 
the first openly gay Illinois legislator; “Free” Frank McWorter, the former 
slave who founded a town; Carlos Montezuma, the first Native American man to get 
a medical degree; early Japanese immigrant Michitaro Ongawa; and John W. E. 
Thomas, the first African-American elected to the Illinois legislature.
 
 The Illinois Top 200 is a joint initiative of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential 
Library and Museum, The (Springfield) State Journal-Register and the Illinois 
Bicentennial Commission.
 
 The remaining categories are top leaders and unforgettable moments. Everyone is 
invited to suggest possible nominees in each category by using the hashtag 
#ILtop200 on social media.
 
 The presidential library and museum uses a combination of rigorous scholarship 
and high-tech showmanship to immerse visitors in Lincoln’s life and times. 
Visitors can see ghosts come to life on stage, watch TV coverage of the 1860 
Presidential election, roam through the Lincoln White House, experience booming 
cannons in a Civil War battle and come face to face with priceless original 
Lincoln artifacts.
 
 The library holds an unparalleled collection of Lincoln books, documents, 
photographs, artifacts and art, as well as some 12 million items pertaining to 
all aspects of Illinois history.
 
 For more information, visit 
www.PresidentLincoln.illinois.gov.
 
 ABOUT ILLINOIS BICENTENNIAL
 On Dec. 3, 1818, Illinois became the 21st state in the union. The Illinois 
Bicentennial is a yearlong celebration of what has been BORN, BUILT & GROWN in 
the state and a reminder of why we are #IllinoisProud. Citizens are encouraged 
to participate in the celebration by visiting www.illinois200.com and using the 
hashtag #IllinoisProud. Partners and event and project managers planning 
activities in 2018 can apply to become an official part of Illinois Bicentennial 
by visiting the PARTICIPATE page at www.illinois200.com.
 
				 
		[Christopher Wills] |