There were a number of cabins and taverns on Wolfe Point because this area was relatively dry compared to the lakeside buildings. These homes and businesses were owned by both Native and non-Native people, including Alexander Robinson, or Che-che-pin-quay. Robinson was born to an Odawa mother and Scottish father, so like Billy Caldwell, he excelled at navigating both Native and American worlds and was a key negotiator in the 1829, 1832, and 1833 treaties. He married Archange Oulimette’s sister Catherine Chevalier (Potawatomi) in 1826. Catherine was the daughter of Marianne (Potawatomi) and François Chevalier and the granddaughter of Potawatomi leader Naunongee, which meant she was connected to one of the most notable Indigenous and fur trade families in the western Great Lakes. Their home and trading post had frequent visits from Native people like Billy Caldwell until the 1833 Treaty of Chicago forced them out of the area. As part of the 1829 treaty, a plot of land was reserved for Robinson on the Des Plaines River where he moved in the 1830s and lived until 1872. It was the only Potawatomi “reservation” in the area in the post-removal period. His family remained connected to the land until the mid-1900s.
Alfred Theodore Andreas, History of Chicago: From the Earliest Period to the Present Time (Chicago: A. T. Andreas, 1884), http://archive.org/details/historyofchicago01inandr.
Juliette M. Kinzie, Wau-Bun, the “Early Day” in the North-West (New York: Derby & Jackson, 1856).
Nehemiah Matson, “Sketch of Shau-Be-Na, a Potawatomi Chief,” in Wisconsin Historical Collections, Volume VII (Wisconsin Historical Society, 1876), https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/whc/id/7778.
Terry Straus, ed., Indians of the Chicago Area (Chicago, Ill: NAES College, 1990).