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Monthly Archives: December 2023

The Old Mill

Posted on December 29, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Grain Elevators .

This old mill stands the River Raisin in Dundee. It was built in Alfred Wilkerson in 1848 with a dam made out of logs. It was built as a grist mill to grind grain. In 1910, the mill was sold to the Dundee Hydraulic Power Company, which built a concrete dam and converted it into a power plant to provide electricity for the community.

About a decade later, Detroit Edison acquired the building and abandoned it. It stood empty for several years and was slated to be torn down when Henry Ford purchased it in 1935. He retrofitted it with a new generator for his factory. He had plans for establishing village industries across America but that ended with his death in 1947. The plant was sold in 1954 to Wolverine Manufacturing Company and they converted into a paper mill. In 1970, Wolverine sold the old mill to the city of Dundee for on dollar. After restoration it now serves the community as a museum.

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The Forgotten Town Near The Falls

Posted on December 27, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Ghost towns, upper peninsula .

I saw this old shack or house or whatever it was not far from the waterfalls I stopped to visit. Looking on the map I show both the town of Dixon and Forest Lake on the map and it is not far from Au Train Falls. I am not sure if this is the last remaining structure from the town. It was first named Dixon when it was founded in 1890 by the Cleveland Cliffs Company which did a lot of mining of iron ore throughout the Upper Peninsula. It got a post office in 1915 but then it changed names to Forest Lake in 1921. The days of mining and lumbering are long gone and the area is mostly outdoor recreation used by hunters and fishermen and fisherwomen.

If you love exploring the Upper Peninsula or reading about its unique places, I hope you will take a look at my new book LOST IN MICHIGAN’S UPPER PENINSULA available on Amazon HERE

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The School in the Park

Posted on December 20, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Uncategorized .

This old school house sits in Topinabee in the appropriately named School House Park. I could not find much info about the old school other than the township owns it and hope to get the money to restore it or convert it into a library or something. It is a nice looking building, and at least it has a new roof to keep it from getting water damage. For now it sits next to the playground and picnic area waiting for a day when it can be used.

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The Thompson Home

Posted on December 18, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Detroit, Iconic Buildings .

thompson home Detroit michigan

David Thompson, a wealthy Detroit businessman, died in the early 1870s, leaving his estate to his wife Mary with instructions to establish a charitable institution. In 1874, Mary Thompson allocated $10,000 to build a home for aged women. However, construction did not start until nearly ten years later when land was purchased and Mary commissioned George D. Mason of the firm Mason & Rice to design the home.

Mason designed a four-story home measuring 60 by 90 feet with private rooms for forty women. For a number of years, the Thompson Home was a prestigious retirement home for wealthy widows. Sun rooms were added to the original structure in 1914, living quarters for the staff were added in the 1950s, and a five-bed infirmary was constructed in 1964. However, the number of residents declined in the 1960s and 1970s, and the home closed in 1977. Wayne State University bought the building and remodeled it, and in 1980 WSU’s School of Social Work was installed in the building.

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The City Hall and the Propeller

Posted on December 15, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Iconic Buildings, upper peninsula .

Lake Linden Michigan city hall

 

The village of Lake Linden in the Keweenaw Peninsula suffered a devastating fire in May 1887, which affected 75% of the structures. Although the frame village hall survived, city fathers believed that a new fireproof structure with space for a fire station would be in the best interests of the community. In 1901, the village asked architects for designs, and chose one submitted by Charles K. Shand of Calumet. The Hall was built by a local contractor, L. F. Ursin, and opened in 1902, serving as village offices, fire station, polling place, and public meeting hall.

A propeller from the Lady Be Good, an American B-24 Liberator lost in the Libyan Desert in April 1943, is on display in front of the village hall. Crewmember T/Sgt. Robert E. LaMotte of Lake Linden was a radio operator aboard the aircraft. His remains were found in the desert in 1960.

The Lady Be Good mysteriously disappeared without trace on its first combat mission during World War II. The plane, from 376th Bomb Group, had been on a bombing raid to Naples on April 4, 1943 when it was lost. Although the aircraft was thought to have crashed into the Mediterranean Sea, with the loss of its nine-man crew, it was eventually found 440 mi inland in the Libyan Desert in 1958. The remains of all but one of its crew have been recovered.

It was accidentally discovered by an oil exploration team from BP in 1958. Investigations concluded the crew failed to realize they had overflown their air base in a sandstorm possibly assuming the moonlight reflecting over the wavy sand dunes that they were still flying over sea. After continuing to fly south into the desert for many hours well beyond their ETA, they bailed out when the plane’s fuel ran out. The survivors then died in the desert trying to walk to safety.

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The Ghost Town of Stratford

Posted on December 13, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Ghost towns .

About five miles west of Higgins Lake along N. 13 Mile Road is a wooden sign for the long gone town of Stratford. The town started in 1897 when  the Thayer Lumber Company purchased 13400 acres of virgin red and white pine The railroad laid tracks to the lumber town and hauled the logs out for twelve years. The population of Stratford grew to about 1200 people and had a hotel, general store and several saloons.

By 1908 the surrounding trees were gone and the workers and citizens abandoned the town. The region was purchased by the state in 1937.  Nothing remains of the town but memories and signs placed to mark the location of some of the buildings. Down the road about a quarter mile is an ORV/snowmobile trailhead parking lot. Location of the town is a nice place to check out and wonder what it must have been like living there more than a century ago.

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The Tunnel Explosion

Posted on December 11, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places, people .

On December 11, 1971 an explosion ripped through a tunnel being constructed under Lake Huron. 21 men were killed instantly and one worker died ten months later. The tunnel was being dug under Lake Huron for a new water source for Detroit. The tunnel stretched out 5 miles from the shore near Fort Gratiot a few miles north of Port Huron. During the digging the crew struck a pocket of methane gas and was ignited by a spark.

A memorial stands in Fort Gratiot County Park and bears the names of the 22 men that died that tragic December day. The tragedy resulted in stronger mining safety regulations and enforcement. It was one of the deadliest industrial accidents in Michigan history. The project was eventually completed and supplied and the 80 miles of water mains supply Detroit with 400 million gallons of water per day.

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Camp Pori

Posted on December 8, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places, upper peninsula .

deep in the Ottawa National Forest on the west side of the Upper Peninsula is the location of Camp Pori. It was a CCC camp during the depression and then used as a prisoner of war camp during World War II. After the war the camp was used by Michigan Tech as a training ground for its forestry students. The camp closed in 1954 and all of the buildings were removed. The only thing remaining is a sign. Nothing from the camp stands today, but sometimes it is more about the journey then the destination. It is a nice drive through the forest to see this historic sites location.

If you love exploring the Upper Peninsula or reading about its unique places, I hope you will take a look at my new book LOST IN MICHIGAN’S UPPER PENINSULA available on Amazon HERE

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The Fieldstone Schoolhouse

Posted on December 6, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Schools .

This old building sits a few miles away from Beaverton. With the framework at the top I am assuming it was a schoolhouse at one time. It is a beautiful looking building made with fieldstone. I could not find any info about it and it sits on private property next to someone’s house.

P.S. I know this is a page about places in Michigan but if you love the USA and reading about the other interesting places I visit outside of the Great Lakes State. I hope you will take a look at my Lost In The States website HERE. I also have a new book I just published, Lost In Illinois is now available on Amazon HERE

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Going to the Movies with the Purple Gang

Posted on December 4, 2023 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Uncategorized .

The violent and ruthless Purple Gang in Detroit was in control of the liquor that came in from Canada across the Detroit River into Michigan. If you wanted a good quality bottle of spirits from the distilleries in Canada you have to deal with the Purples. Two influential members of the Purple Gang, Sam Bernstein, and Louis Fleischer lived in Albion during Prohibition. They would meet with clients that took the train from Chicago to Albion at the Bohm theater. They sat in the balcony under the projector window to discuss business. The noise from the movie and projector would cover the sound of their conversations. Prohibition has ended and the Purple Gang is gone, but the stories still linger along with the historic buildings in downtown Albion.

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