Born on August 4, 1901, Armstrong had a difficult childhood. His neighborhood was so dangerous, it was called the Battlefield. And his family didn’t have much money.
“He grew up without any shoes on his feet,” says Ricky Riccardi. He works at the Louis Armstrong House Museum in Corona, New York. “He sometimes didn’t know where his next meal was coming from.”
To help support his family, Armstrong took jobs selling newspapers and collecting junk. He left school in the fifth grade.
But Armstrong’s dream was to make music. He was living in the right place at the right time. In the early 1900s, a new style of music was born in New Orleans: jazz. Armstrong was surrounded by the sounds of jazz coming from local clubs. He taught himself to play the basic notes on the cornet, an instrument that’s similar to a trumpet. When he was 10, Armstrong and three friends would sing on the streets of New Orleans. People dropped coins in a hat for the boys.
“Early on, the seeds were planted that music might be his way out,” Riccardi says.