Sam Cooke Honored In Chicago Street Naming Ceremony: Sam Cooke Way
LEGENDARY RECORDING ARTIST AND CHICAGO NATIVE SAM COOKE HONORED IN CHICAGO STREET NAMING CEREMONY: SAM COOKE WAY
Chicago, IL –
Had he lived, Sam Cooke would have turned 80-years-old in January of
this year. His life and legacy were celebrated with the naming of 36th Street, Chicago, Illinois as Sam Cooke Way on Saturday, June 18. The location of Sam Cooke Way in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood, is birthplace to some of Chicago’s
most talented artists in music and the associated arts. It is where the
Cooke family settled after migrating from Clarksdale, Mississippi in
the early 1930’s, initially residing at 3527 Cottage Grove Avenue and
later moving to 724 E. 36th Street. Young Sam Cooke attended the
neighborhood’s DoolittleElementary School and, in 1948, graduated from Wendell Phillips High School. The unveiling of the new Sam Cooke Way street
sign took place with the participation of the office of 4th Ward
Alderman Will Burns, 3rd Ward Alderman Pat Dowell, Sam Cooke’s younger
brothers L.C. and David Cooke as well as other Cooke family members,
legendary radio personality and “Mayor of Bronzeville” Herb Kent, Cook
Country Commissioner Jerry Butler (himself a soul music legend, who
proclaimed June 18, 2011 as Sam Cooke Day in conjunction with the street
naming ceremony), and Chicago Blues Museum CEO Gregg Parker and well
over 400 Sam Cooke fans and fellow musicians.