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Category Archives: Churches

Ghost Town Church

Posted on November 3, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in autumn, Churches .

The town of Wildwood shows up on the map near Indian River. Not much is standing in the town. A few houses and this old church. I posted a photo of it a few years ago when it was in rough shape, you can see it HERE. It’s nice to see someone is taking care of the old church and put a fresh coat of paint on it.

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The Most Peaceful and Secluded Chapel in Michigan

Posted on October 17, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

Hidden among the pine trees far away from any large city or even a paved road is a small chapel. It was built as a memorial in the 1960s by George Mason’s family. After his death in 1954, Mason willed his land to the State Of Michigan. His property consisted of Almost 1500 acres on the south branch of the Au Sable River.

George Mason was the CEO of Kelvinator and then chairman and CEO of American Motors Corporation. He was an avid outdoorsman and purchased the property somewhat located between Grayling and Mio. He enjoyed the tranquility and solitude fishing in the river. He specified after his death he wanted the property is to be used as a game preserve and camping is not allowed. The area is known as the Mason Tract and has 8 miles of hiking paths and is maintained by the DNR.

A dock along the Au Sable River allows canoers and kayakers to access the chapel from the river. I reached the building by taking an un-named two-track a couple of miles to a small parking area. It was a short hike to the somber little chapel where you could listen to the babbling waters of the Au Sauble flow past. If you decide to drive to the chapel, I recommend a truck or SUV with high ground clearance. I never had to put my Jeep in four-wheel-drive, but I did splash through a lot of water holes and soft sand.

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The Old Steeple in Niles

Posted on October 6, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

This old brick church stands tall towering over the homes in Niles, The historical marker tells some of its story.

The Roman Catholic Church in Niles traces its origin to the Indian Mission established at nearby Fort St. Joseph in the late 1600’s. Reestablished at Bertrand, three miles south of Niles, in the 1830s, the mission moved into town in 1849 and was renamed St. Francis’s. In 1866 the cornerstone of the present building was laid and on December 11, 1870, the church was dedicated to St. Mary. Designed by Rufus Rose of Niles with later modifications by Father John Cappon, the church was completed in 1890 with the construction of the gothic tower. Father Cappon, known as the “parish’s greatest benefactor,” was a Belgian-born priest who served as pastor for over thirty years. He gave generously of his large personal estate for many parish improvements.

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The Little Wooden Church

Posted on September 22, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

I saw this little wooden church in Palmer southeast of Ishpeming in the Upper Peninsula. The town of Palmer was established in 1872 and is named after mining executive L.C. Palmer. Which makes sense because there is an enormous mine just outside of town.

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Central Methodist Church

Posted on September 1, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

This United Central Methodist Church is in downtown Muskegon and has a historical marker in front of it that reads:

The first Protestant society in Muskegon began as a mission station served by itinerant preachers. In 1843 the Reverend M. Warring held Muskegon’s first service in Martha Ryerson’s boardinghouse. Deacon Abner Bennett, a black lay preacher, and his wife, Mary, a former servant of President James K. Polk, formed the White Lake Sunday School. Bennett frequently preached in Muskegon. This church was formally organized on November 20, 1856.

In 1859, Muskegon Methodists built their first church at Clay and Jefferson streets. Congregationalists met in the church, which also served as the county court. In 1887 a larger church was built on the same site. The present Neo-Gothic-style church, built in 1928-1930, was designed by denominational architect, Thoralf M. Sundt of Philadelphia. This Indiana limestone church seats 1,000 people and the tower rises 100 feet.

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The Church On The Lake

Posted on August 25, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

This beautiful brick and stone church overlooks Lake St. Clair in Gross Point Shores. By the 1790s, French priests were ministering to farmers living along the lake. In 1825, Father Francis Badin dedicated a log church to St. Paul near the Lake in present-day Grosse Pointe Shores. In 1850 a frame chapel was erected on the current site. Built in the 1890s, during Father John Eisen’s pastorate, the present French Gothic-inspired church was designed by Detroit architect Harry J. Rill. The first mass held in the church was Father Eisen’s funeral in 1899.

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The Old Chruch in Frankfort

Posted on August 4, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

Standing among the historic homes in Frankfort is this beautiful old historic white church. In 1871 the members of First Congregational Church of Frankfort built this church with its eighty-seven-foot-high steeple on land donated by the Frankfort Land Company. The company’s manager, Eugene B. Frost, was a charter member of the church. Donations from Frankfort residents and a loan from the Congregational Church Building Society financed the $5,000 building cost. The church completed the rear addition, built to house offices and Sunday school classrooms, in 1960.

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Zeba Mystery Church

Posted on July 21, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches, Forgotten Places, upper peninsula .

Not far from the town of L’anse is the small town of Zeba and close by is this little church. It stands along the shoreline of Lake Superior’s L’anse Bay Lake Superior. I am sure it was a church with the cross proudly mounted to the top of the steeple. Other than that I don’t know anything about it. I can only imagine it has seen some beautiful sunsets over the bay and some ferocious winter snowstorms all while holding services inside for funerals, weddings, and baptisms.

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The Middle Village Church

Posted on July 14, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

By the 1740s, French Catholic missionaries had come to the area near Good Heart, known to the Odawa as Waganakising which means Middle Village, to minister to local tribes. Later, missionary work was taken up by others, including Bishop Frederic Baraga, who dedicated a church at this site on August 1, 1833. The present St. Ignatius Church was constructed in 1889 to replace one destroyed by a fire that same year on Easter Day.

If you take the scenic drive down M119 through the tunnel of trees be sure to take the road next to the Good Hart General Store to go to Middle Village. Next to the church is a paved footpath that leads to a platform which overlooks Lake Michigan.

I received my first shipment of Lost In Michigan Volume 3. Many of you have asked about them and I happy to finally have some in stock. They may be gone soon until the next shipment so if you want to order one you can get them HERE or from Amazon HERE

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The Museum Church

Posted on June 23, 2019 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Churches .

I see many old churches, especially in a town where the population has declined, for sale or abandoned by their congregation. It is nice to see one repurposed and saved from the wrecking ball like this church that now serves as the Elk Rapids History Museum.  The historical marker in front of it reads:

In the late 1850s traveling pastors began to conduct Methodist services in Elk Rapids and nearby communities. First Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in the early 1870s. Services were held in a former school and then a former courthouse. The Rev. John W. Hart, who became pastor in 1899, decided the church needed a permanent building. In 1901 the congregation purchased architectural plans created by Benjamin D. Price and his son Max C. Price, Philadelphia architects who contracted with the Methodist Episcopal Board of Church Extensions to design a variety of plans for small, rural churches. These plans were made available to congregations nationwide through mail order catalogues. The church purchased the land for its new building in August 1901

Construction on this auditorium-type church began on October 29, 1901, with a cornerstone-laying service. Locally made yellow brick forms the walls. The Kinsella Glass Company of Chicago produced eight of the 13 Gothic stained-glass windows, which also served as memorials to early church members. The total cost of the building and lot was $8,250. On August 10, 1902, the Reverend William Dawe of Detroit dedicated the church building. In 1971 the church was renamed First United Methodist Church, a name it bored until it closed in 2011. The building was then donated to the Elk Rapids Area Historical Society, which converted it into its headquarters and a history museum. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.

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