Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago TikTok historian eyes home base for tour company with city grant

- BY MARIAH RUSH, STAFF REPORTER mrush@suntimes.com | @mariahfrus­h Mariah Rush is a staff reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times via Report for America, a not-forprofit journalism program that aims to bolster the paper’s coverage of communitie­s on the South and

Auburn Gresham native and Chicago historian Shermann “Dilla” Thomas has been producing bite-sized history lessons for audiences on TikTok, where he has garnered over 1 million likes and nearly 100,000 followers.

He’s also expanded his classroom from social media to chartered bus tours around South and West Side neighborho­ods to share the history and beauty in communitie­s he loves.

A grant announced by Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday will give Thomas a home base for his Chicago Mahogany Tours. The funding from the city’s $40 million commitment in Community Developmen­t Grants is part of the Chicago Recovery Plan.

Mahogany Tours is one of 61 groups that will receive money as part of the announceme­nt. The grant money ranges from $12,000 to $5 million “to support neighborho­od vitality, economic developmen­t, community wealth-building, public health and local planning goals,” the mayor said Wednesday in a news release.

“Two of my highest priorities as mayor are funneling resources into communitie­s that have gone far too long without and removing barriers for residents who have too often been shut out from opportunit­ies to obtain upward mobility,” said Lightfoot. “Through the Community Developmen­t Grant program, we are able to make good on both of these commitment­s while simultaneo­usly driving our city’s equitable economic growth.

Thomas said he was excited to come from the “best neighborho­od in the city” and to be changing negative narratives about certain spaces through the grant funding. Based in Auburn Gresham, the tour company will receive $30,000.

During his bus tours, Thomas offers his extensive knowledge of the city, its design/ architectu­re and neighborho­ods including Bronzevill­e, Bridgeport and North Lawndale. His motto? “Everything dope about America comes from Chicago.”

“What we’re hoping to do is do our part in changing spaces,” Thomas said. “You change spaces — you make them more inclusive for everyone around. You also show the vitality of those spaces.”

“So what we’re going to do is get a storefront and then we’re going to show that there’s tourism to be seen in all of our neighborho­ods, not just downtown,” Thomas said to a thunderous applause. “We’re gonna take kids from every single Chicago neighborho­od and we’re going to show them why every single thing dope about this country comes from Chicago.”

This is the third and final round of Community Developmen­t Grants for 2022, and the 61 finalists were picked from more than 600 applicants. Twenty-six of the businesses and organizati­ons selected are on the South and West Sides of the city.

Other finalists include Bennett Place, a South Shore apartment complex aiming to create an eatery plus a ghost kitchen and food incubator.

Other projects focus on housing, entertainm­ent, youth services, health and wellness, retail and cannabis production.

Constructi­on for the grant projects is anticipate­d to wrap up in the next 18 to 24 months.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Shermann “Dilla” Thomas’ tour company, Chicago Mahogany Tours, will receive $30,000 from a city grant to establish a home base for his company.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES FILE Shermann “Dilla” Thomas’ tour company, Chicago Mahogany Tours, will receive $30,000 from a city grant to establish a home base for his company.

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