
As with many cities there are several explanations for the city name. Everyone agrees that Chicago is a Native Amerian word. Ann Durkin Keating writes in the
Encyclopedia of Chicago, "The name "Chicago" derives from a word in the language spoken by the Miami and Illinois peoples meaning 'striped skunk,' a word they also applied to the wild leek (known to later botanists as Allium tricoccum). This became the Indian name for the Chicago River, in recognition of the presence of wild leeks in the watershed.
When early French explorers began adopting the word, with a variety of spellings, in the late seventeenth century, it came to refer to the site at the mouth of the Chicago River."
There are other theories. In 1929 Lloyd Lewis and Henry Justin Smith wrote in
Chicago: The History of its Reputation:
"Just why they called it "Chicago' is disputed. On the banks of the creek grew a weed, a sort of wild onion or garlic which the red man named "Chickagou." One tribal word for "playful waters" was "Shecaugo," another word meaning "destitute" was "Chocago" and, to some redskins, the word "Shegahg" meant "skunk." A word that sounded like "Chi-cago" was also used by the Indians to describe thunder, or the voice of the Great Manitou or the Mississippi River- Also in the late 1700's there was an Indian chieftain named "Chicagou." In general the word was interpreted as applying to a bad smell. :
"Most meanings had one thing in common, observed Edgar Lee Masters [A Tale of Chicago], one of the region's prominent literary figures in times to come, in one form or another they stood for "strength."
Early historian
Juliette Augusta Magill Kinzie (wife of John Harris Kinzie, the son of
John Kinzie) addressed the issue in
Wau-bun: The Early Day in the Northwest published in 1856:
The origin of the name Chicago is a subject of discussion, some of the Indians deriving it from the fitch or polecat, others from the wild onion with which the woods formerly abounded; but all agree that the place received its name from an old chief who was drowned in the stream in former times. That this event, although so carefully preserved by tradition, must have occurred in a very remote period, is evident from an old French manuscript brought by General Cass from France.
In this paper, which purports to be a letter from M. de Ligney, at Green Bay, to M. de Siette, among the Illinois, dated as early as 1726, the place is designated as "Chica-goux." This orthography is also found in old family letters of the beginning of the present century.
www.chicagohistoryjournal.com/2008/03/how-chicago-got-its-name.html
Mar 26, 2008 – But, the origin of the name may not be quite that simple. In 1929 Lloyd Lewis and Henry Justin Smith wrote in Chicago: The History of its ...