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Category Archives: Historic Places

The Old Jail in Cheboygan

Posted on July 19, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places .

This old building stands a few blocks south of downtown Cheboygan and block off of M-27. The words COUNTY JAIL are still chiseled in the block above the door. This old building built in 1880 served as the Cheboygan County sheriff’s residence until 1969. In the late 1800s many drunken and rowdy lumbermen sobered up in the jail. The inmates often did chores in exchange for their bed and meals prepared by the sheriff’s wife. By 1911 the jail was inadequate and a two story addition was added to the original building. It was supposed to have 8 cells on each floor, but due to safety regulations, the second floor was never finished. The county used the jail until 1969 when a new modern jail was built to replace it. In 1972 the building became a museum ran by the Historical Society of Cheboygan County.

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The House at the Junction

Posted on June 10, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places, Houses .

This is the old Hewitt house built in 1929. It stands in Cambridge Junction Historic State Park along US-12 near Brooklyn. The house is now used as a visitor’s center.

I have more about Hewitt, Walker Tavern and Cambridge Junction in my recently released Volume 6 available HERE

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VFW National Home

Posted on May 17, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places .

Between Jackson and Lansing near the town of Eaton Rapids is the VFW National Home. Designated as a Michigan historical landmark the home has been taking care of veteran’s families for nearly a century.

In 1923 the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) initiated a plan to build a national home for the families of deceased and disabled American veterans. The following year a Jackson, Michigan, cattleman made his Ingham County ranch available for the site of the home. A complex of buildings was erected on the property. Since the facility provided homes for families outside of Michigan, it received support from veterans groups across the country, who donated money for the construction of “cottage” residences. The VFW sought to keep families intact, furnish a homelife similar to that enjoyed by other American families, and teach self-sufficiency and independence. This remains the only privately funded home for veterans’ children and grandchildren in the United States that is national in scope.

When the Veterans of Foreign Wars announced that it would build a national home for the widows and orphan children of veterans, support poured in from across the country. Initial funding was created following the 1922 Yankees-Giants World Series. Umpires halted the tied second game due to darkness. A controversy resulted, which inspired the baseball commissioner to donate the series’ first game’s proceeds to the nation’s war veterans, and the VFW received twenty thousand dollars. Between 1925 and 1930 residential “cottages” were constructed with funds from state veterans organizations. Each house was designed as an individual home. These houses created a neighborhood environment for their residents. The National Home honors the contributions and sacrifices of America’s veterans.

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The Speakeasy In The Park

Posted on May 8, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places, Parks .

McCourtie Park sits in Somerset Center along US-12. It is mostly known for its ornate concrete bridges. Before it was a park it was a sprawling estate owned by William Herbert Lee “Herb” McCourtie who built a mansion and the bridges on the property. The large mansion was razed years ago and the estate is now open to the public as a county park.

One interesting feature of the park is a rather unappealing looking structure cut into the hillside. It was built as a garage by McCourtie but also used as what he called the “Rathskeller,” (German for a beer hall that was underground or in a basement). Inside was a fully functional English-style bar, with brass foot rails, hand hewn ceiling beams, leaded windows and dark oak-paneled walls adorned with swords, spears and shields. A swinging door led to a card room that was rumored to be the site of all-night poker parties, one reportedly attended by Henry Ford

Because McCourtie enjoyed partaking in the consumption of alcoholic beverages during prohibition the rathskeller had a 10 foot by 10 foot vault with a hidden entrance to the outside. It is believed to be used for stocking the vault with bottle of liquor. There are even rumors that Al Capone has visited the rathskeller. I am not sure how much of it is true but the old garage still remains in the park. Too bad the old mansion did not survive.

For more about the concrete bridges you can read my post about them HERE

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Meinhardi Museum

Posted on April 21, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places, Iconic Buildings .

I saw this old historic building next to the White Lake Area Chamber of Commerce in Whitehall which was an old train depot. It building was built by Dr Meinhardi where he practiced medicine and operated an apothecary (pharmacy), It was originally located in front of his house on 811 South Mears Avenue in 1903. In 2011, the building was moved to its present location and became a museum, depicting what Dr Meinhardi’s office may looked like in the 1900s. Artifacts are from same time period.

The building is open to visitors from Memorial Day to Labor Day and follows the same hours of operation as the Chamber of Commerce.

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Pioneer Log Cabin

Posted on April 8, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places .

This old log cabin was built south of Cassopolis with logs donated by local citizens. It was built in 1923 to honor the pioneers that settled in the area. It was meant to be a temporary structure for a Pioneer Day celebration, but it has stood next to the shores of Stony Lake for almost a century. It operates as a museum during the summer months.

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The Two Story Outhouse

Posted on March 29, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places .

Down the road from the Cedar Lake post office is a strange looking two story building. It is a replica of a historic two story outhouse that once stood at this site. A two story building stood in front of it and a bridge when from the second floor to the top floor of the privy. The building burned down and the outhouse collapsed from decay a few years ago. The owner of the property built this replica as a reminder of the old two story outhouse.

Please note it sits on private property but you can see it from M-575 (Academy Road) or the Fred Meijer Hartland Trail which passes nearby.

You can see a photo of the original outhouse in my post HERE

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The Michigan Pyramid

Posted on March 27, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places .

The town of Kewadin sits at the northern end of Elk Lake. North of town next to the Cairn Highway is a stone pyramid also known as a cairn. It’s a Scottish term used to describe a man-made stack of stone used as a monument. On the front of the monument is a plaque dedicated to Hugh J. Gray “Dean of Michigan’s Tourist Activity.”  The cairn was built in 1938 using stones from all of Michigan’s 83 counties with their name inscribed on the stone. Wexford County’s stone is a block of rubber from the tire factory that was located in its borders. My favorite is Huron County which is a small grindstone most likely from Grindstone City at the tip of the thumb.

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The Odd Foundation

Posted on March 1, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places .

In the southwest town of Berrien Springs is a collection of historic buildings. They include a courthouse, log cabin and sheriff’s residence. Next to the sheriff’s house is an odd shaped foundation and it is what remains of a unique jail. Inside a square brick building the jail. Built in 1870, back when Berrien Springs was the county seat, this jail’s design was inspired by Auburn New York which pioneered the humane treatment of prisoners.

The building was a square brick building but inside the 24 jail cells (16 on the first floor and 8 on the second)  were arranged in a circle. It was two stories tall and in the center was a sky light and a vent for lighting and fresh air. After the county seat moved to St Joseph in 1894 the jail was left abandoned. In 1916 it was demolished. This replica foundation and cells stand as a reminder of the unique jail that once stood here and is now part of the Courthouse Square maintained by the Berrien County Historical Association.

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Town of Michigan

Posted on January 26, 2022 by Mike Sonnenberg Posted in Historic Places .

Michigan officially became a state on January 26th 1837. One of the most influential cities in Michigan is the state’s capital city of Lansing. Strangely, when Michigan first became a state Lansing was not much more than swampland. Michigan’s constitution required the state have a permanent capital ten years after it acquired statehood.   The temporary capital was in Detroit, but many representatives wanted somewhere more central in the state.  Several cities including Jackson, Marshall, and Ann Arbor lobbied hard to be the new home of the capital.

James Seymour, a land speculator with a mill in what is now North Lansing, campaigned for Lansing Township. He argued that it is equidistant from Detroit, Monroe, Mt. Clemens, and the mouths of the Grand and Kalamazoo rivers. In 1847, after voting fifty one times, out of frustration they finally agreed the permanent capital would be in Lansing township. The densely wooded and marshy township had less than one hundred residents when it was chosen.

The citizens of Michigan were highly skeptical of the new plan, many even though it was a joke. In the beginning, the city did not even have a name. The location was simply known as the “Town of Michigan” when it was first platted. A wooden two-story building was quickly erected to serve as the state capital. Many of the legislators and representatives had to sleep on the upper floor of the new capital or in people’s private homes while governing the young state. In April the state legislature considered naming the capital Pewanogowink, Swedenborg, or El Dorado, but chose Lansing.

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