Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Grand Rapids' Debt To Thomas Dwight Gilbert



I'll bet you've driven or walked by the bust of Thomas Dwight Gilbert in Fulton Street Park hundreds of times, but have you ever wondered who he was and why he merited a bust in the center of Grand Rapids?

Postcard from the author's collection.

Thomas Dwight Gilbert is a name all who live in Grand Rapids should know as well as that of John Ball, though his memory has been pretty much forgotten.  That could be because he had no dependents to carry on his name, though his brother, Francis Backus Gilbert, did have a few children who lived to adulthood.

Thomas came to Grand Rapids in 1855, after living and working for a time in Grand Haven, and immediately started being influential in this young city.



"CITY NATIONAL BANK.
The City National Bank was organized February 17, 1865, about one year after the organization of the First National Bank. Thomas D. Gilbert was its first and only President, and J. Frederic Baars its first and only Cashier. The permanency in office of these two men is of itself sufficient evidence both of the stable character of the institution and of its officers. The first Board of Directors was composed of the following gentlemen: William B. Ledyard, Thomas D. Gilbert, Ransom E. Wood, Moses V. Aldrich, Henry Fralick, Ransom C. Luce, George Kendall, James M. Nelson, James Miller. The capital was increased to $100,000. This capital was increased to $200,000 in 1867 (when its deposits were about $250,000), and in 1871 to $300,000. Among other well known names of our business men who served on its Board of Directors are: Noyes L. Avery, John W. Peirce, Julius Houseman, Francis B. Gilbert, Lemuel D. Putnam, John C. Fitz Gerald. The City National Bank Charter expired in 1885. Its history as an active financial institution continued just twenty years. It met with some losses, unavoidable in so long a history, but its successful record will long be remembered by those who were fortunate enough to be numbered among its stockholders and patrons. It gave to the stockholders unusually fine dividends, average some 14 per cent per annum during its last ten years, and at the closing up paid back the face value of its stock and 85 per cent additional. It gave liberal encouragement to the business interests of the city and was always a favorite place for the conservative dealer. It built in 1869 and thereafter owned and occupied by the National City Bank, its immediate successor. It should have been heretofore said that the City National Bank succeeded to the business of Messrs. Ledyard and Fralick, both of whom took a prominent place in the management of the new institutions, the latter remaining upon its Board during its entire history.


NATIONAL CITY BANK.
This is the successor of the City National, by reorganization when the charter of the latter expired, and its incorporation dates from January 22, 1885, with a capital stock of $500,000. Officers – Thomas D. Gilbert, President; Julius Houseman, Vice-President; J. Frederic Baars, Cashier; Edward H. Hunt, Assistant Cashier. Directors – Thomas D. Gilbert, Julius Houseman, Noyes L. Avery, John C. Fitz Gerald, Ransom C. Luce, George G. Briggs, Henry Fralick, Constantine Morton, J. Frederic Baars, George Kendall, T. Stewart White, Lemuel D. Putnam, Charles H. Hackley. The only change in this list has been the accession of Philo C. Fuller as a Director in place of Charles H. Hackley. It has been quite as successful as was its predecessor, its deposits having grown to upward of $1,000,000. The City National Bank was made a United State Depository in 1865, and that, and this National City Bank, has remained such ever since."


Here are short bios of Thomas and his brother Francis.


THOMAS D. GILBERT is one of the pioneer settlers of this valley, of which he has been a resident fifty-five years. He was born in Greenfield, Massachusetts, December 13, 1815. His father was General Thomas Gilbert, and his mother was Harriet A., daughter of Ebenezer Arms, of that town. The educational training received by Mr. Gilbert was that of the common schools and at Deerfield Academy. In 1830 he entered a store as clerk, remaining there about five years. In June, 1835, he came to Grand Haven, Michigan, where there were then only about half a dozen settlers, and soon after, with others, engaged in operating one of the first sawmills started in this valley. The financial revulsion of 1837 left that adventure with but little to show beyond the experience gained therein. In 1843 he embarked in mercantile and warehousing business at Grand Haven with his younger brother, the late Francis B. Gilbert of this city. In 1850 the brothers engaged largely for those times in the lumber trade and in lake shipping, an enterprise which proved successful and profitable, in which they continued for some five years. In 1855 they removed to Grand Rapids, and after two years of travel at home and abroad the subject of this sketch took up his permanent abode here. He became a stockholder in, and in 1860 was made Secretary and Treasurer and Managing Director of the Grand Rapids Gas Light Company, which positions he still holds. In 1865 he was elected President of the City National Bank, to the present time. Besides his stock in that corporation he has financial interests in other business enterprises, among them the Michigan Trust Company, and several of the manufacturing enterprises that have made Grand Rapids what it is.

In official life Mr. Gilbert has rendered the public much excellent service. In 1841-42 he was Sheriff of Ottawa County.  In 1861-62 was Representative from this city in the State Legislature, and served upon the House Committees on Ways and Means, and on Banks and Incorporations. At that time the finances of the State were in such condition that its resources were taxed to the utmost to meet the extra demands of the United States for war purposes, and Mr. Gilbert's judgment and influence proved valuable in shaping needed legislation. In 1863 he was elected Member of the Board of Regents of the State University, and was retained in that position until the close of 1875 – twelve years – an office without compensation other than payment of necessary expenses. During the entire time he was Chairman of the Finance Committee, a position requiring much time and labor in attention to its duties. On that Board his services, in behalf of education and of the University, of which the State is so justly proud, were a great value. He has also served several years as Member of the Board of Education of this city. Upon the organization of the Board of Public Works, in May, 1873, he was appointed a member thereof, and was its President five years. During that time the City Water Works system was established and put in operation under the direction of the Board; and much other work in the way of public improvements was accomplished. He has also served two and a half years as Alderman of the Second Ward. In official positions he has ever been found watchful and alert in regard to the public interests, and faithful to its trusts.

Mr. Gilbert married, in November, 1871, Mary A., daughter of the late Rev. Abel Bingham, who for upward of thirty years was a missionary among the Indians (first with the Senecas near Tonawanda, N.Y., six years, and afterward at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., where Mrs. Gilbert was born), and who died in this city November 26, 1865, aged 79 years.

During his twenty years at Grand Haven, Mr. Gilbert was not only active and energetic in business, but interested in noting the growth and progress of that town and this valley; as is shown by items relating to shipments to and from that port, furnished by him to the weekly newspapers of Grand Rapids from time to time in that period. And in the thirty-five years of his residence in this city, he has been continuously identified with some of its leading enterprises. His life work is built into the development of this region. As a man and citizen he enjoys the confidence of its people. Public spirited, he has taken an interest in the public weal. Naturally generous and benevolent, fortunately has means have enabled him often to be liberal, as is shown by contributions to the public schools, and to various benevolent and charitable associations and enterprises; several of which receive notice as historical items in other pages of this volume.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


FRANCIS B. GILBERT was born at Greenfield, Mass., May 25, 1818; came to Grand Haven, Mich., in 1837; to Grand Rapids in 1840; returned to Grand Haven in 1844; came again to Grand Rapids in 1855, and resided here until his death, May 25, 1885. He was a man of affairs, successful in business, upright and esteemed. For much of the time in business interests he was intimately associated with his brother, Thomas D. Gilbert. He was President of the Grand Rapids Gas Light Company for more than a quarter of a century, and was also connected with banking.

Harvey J Hollister wrote the above sections on the banks, and Albert Baxter wrote the biographies.  Both appeared in Baxter's History of Grand Rapids, 1891, in the chapter on Banking.


Being childless, and possessing money and compassion, Thomas Gilbert wanted to encourage the schoolchildren of Grand Rapids to study hard and achieve great things.  He established a fund to award medals and prizes for outstanding students of English.  Later the distribution of funds was mutually changed to purchase scientific equipment and textbooks for the schools.


The old stone school.

"THE GILBERT FUND.
Eminent among the citizens whose energy and business ability have made Grand Rapids one of the prominent and flourishing business centers of the country, is Thomas D. Gilbert, whose efforts in the promotion of the welfare of the schools also are well known and deserving of historic recognition. In the minutes of a meeting of the Board of Trustees held at the office of Ball & McKee, February 7, 1860, the following letter is recorded:
               
Grand Rapids, January 20, 1860 

To John Ball, Wilder D. Foster and other Trustees of Union School District Number One in the city of Grand Rapids: 

Gentlemen--Herewith I send you my bond for the sum of two thousand dollars, bearing date the first inst. and payable in five years from date with interest annually. I donate this amount to you and your successors in office, or such other persons as may be in your stead elected or appointed to manage the public schools of the city, in trust for the following purpose: The income from this fund I wish to have distributed among the meritorious scholars of the public schools of the city, under the direction of yourselves and your legal successors in office, in honorary rewards for scholarship, regular attendance and good conduct. The condition of the donation is that all the scholars, in all the public schools in the city, shall have an opportunity, under the rules that may be prescribed for the distribution of the income of the fund, to compete for the prizes or medals to be awarded.                                 

I am, very respectfully,
                                           
Your obedient servant,
 Thos. D. Gilbert 

P. S.--I recommend that proficients in English studies only, be rewarded from the income of this fund, and that a fair proportion of it be distributed among the Ward Schools.
                   
Thos. D. Gilbert. 

 The Trustees accepted with thanks the generous donation of Mr. Gilbert, and pledged themselves to carry out the intentions of the donor to the best of their ability. The interest on the fund was thereafter apportioned among the three districts of the city--District Number One, Number Two and Number Six--in proportion to the number of children of school age in each. By mutual agreement between the Board and Mr. Gilbert the fund has not been used, as at first intended, in the granting of rewards and medals for excellence in scholarship, but has been applied toward the purchasing of reference books and scientific and other apparatus for the schools; Prof. Strong and other experienced teachers considering this disposal of the income from the fund to be more beneficial than the other. Thus was founded what has ever since been known as " The Gilbert Trust Fund." 
Baxter, Public Schools, Chapter 26

Postcard, early 1900's. 
About 1904, looking West down Fulton St on the left and Monroe on the right.


As the Civil War was winding down, a group of citizens wanted to honor the service of their soldier friends and relatives by erecting a monument.  Some money was raised, not nearly enough, and the project languished for some 20 years, the funds being looked after by Thomas Gilbert, until more money was obtained and a monument purchased and installed downtown in Triangle Park.  Women were included on this monument at the insistence of Mary Bingham Gilbert, Thomas' wife.  Thomas also made the presentation address.

"SOLDIERS' MONUMENT
Among the many monuments, that from time to time have been erected by citizens and comrades to carry the honor of soldiers down to further ages, and perpetuate the memory of services rendered and sacrifices made by those who served their country in the time of her need and danger, the comely and stately one here described is worthy of a prominent place. The Kent County Soldiers' Monument Association was organized February 13, 1864, while our soldiery were in the very heat of the struggle for the preservation of the Union. The original incorporators were: Truman H. Lyon, Peter R. L. Pierce, Alfred X. Cary, George W. Allen, Eben Smith, Jr., Henry Grinnell, Thomas D. Gilbert: Henry Fralick, Wilder D. Foster. First officers: President, Thomas D. Gilbert; Treasurer: Ransom C. Luce; Secretary, Eben Smith, Jr. It was started on the dollar membership plan, and local societies were organized in the townships of the county; the proposition being to raise a fund of $5,000 for the purpose of erecting a monument to the memory of the soldiers of Kent county who died while serving the United States in the then pending war. Calls upon the purses of the people were at that time so numerous and urgent that but slow progress was made. Six hundred members brought $600 to the fund, when interest in the project flagged and nearly died out, and further action was held at abeyance for about twenty years, except the careful investment by Mr. Gilbert and Mr. Fralick of the fund in hand. Finally plans were solicited and a contract made with the Detroit Bronze Company, in 1885, for a monument to cost $3,500, to be in readiness for unveiling and dedication at the Annual Reunion of the Army of the Cumberland, held in Grand Rapids, April 16 and 17, 1885. Mr. Gilbert becoming personally responsible for any balance that might be needed when the work should be done. Success crowned the effort, and a great concourse of people were present to rejoice at the consummation of the work. The cost of this monument and its surroundings was $4,150. In connection with its payment is a striking illustration of the cumulative property of money judiciously invested. The original $600 with its increment of interest had grown to be $2,223. Then of the subscription raised to entertain the veterans of the Army of the Cumberland there was a surplus of $750, which was turned over to the monument fund. The balance needed — $1,117 — was provided by private subscription. 

The Soldiers' Monument is so placed in the triangular park at the intersection of Fulton, Division and Monroe Streets that the statue of the soldier at the summit of the shaft, faces northwest. The basin surrounding the base of the monument is sixteen feet in diameter and circular in form, built of native stone, surmounted by a coping of sand stone. The monument proper rests upon a base of native stone cut in the from of a Greek cross. From this rises the bronze base of the structure, ornamented in appropriate designs, with medallion portraits of Lincoln, Grant, Farragut and Garfield, and inscribed thereupon are the names and dates of the following engagements, all of which were participated in by Kent County soldiers: Fort Sumter, April 12, 1861; Fort Donaldson, February 16, 1852; Monitor and Merrimac, March 9, 1862; New Orleans, April 24, 1862; Atlanta, September 2, 1862; Yorktown, April 4, May 4, 1862; Fair Oaks, May 31, June 1, 1862; Vicksburg, June 22, July 4, 1863; Appomatox, April 8, 1865; Mobile, March 30, April 12, 1865; Stone River, January 2, 1863; Port Royal, January 1, 1862. This section has a height of seven feet from the stone base.

The next section is square in form, having on the front side in bas relief a scene representing a woman giving aid to a wounded soldier and the inscription "Woman's Mission of Mercy" — probably the first recognition in the history of soldiers' monuments of the work of women. The idea of doing so in this case was conceived by Mrs. Thomas D. Gilbert, and embodied in the plans by the committee. 

The other three sides of this section have three inscriptions.
"A Government of the people, by the people and for the people." — Lincoln
"The Union must and shall be preserved." — Jackson
"Let us have peace — This is a Nation." — Grant
"The war for the Union was right, eternally right." — Garfield.

Upon the next section, on the front, is the inscription, "In honor of the soldiers from Kent County, 1861-1865. Erected 1885." Above is a draped shaft upon which is the life-sized figure of a soldier in the uniform of a private, and standing at parade rest. Around the pedestal on which the statue stands are: "Petersburg," "Winchester," "Mission Ridge," "Antietam."

The height of the monument from the ground to the top of the soldier's cap, is thirty-four feet. It is one of the most elaborate, up to that time, made of this material, "white bronze," which is believed to be indestructible, and is of a rich gray color. When the water is turned on jets play from cannon peeping out of miniature embrasures into the lower basin, while four draped cherubs spout water into the upper basin. The park was formally set apart for this monument and fountain November 25, 1884, by action of the Common Council."
Baxter, Cemeteries, Chapter 36


When more cemetery space was needed, Thomas Gilbert stepped in with donations of land and a Cemetery Association to look after things. 


Boulder marker stoneat Fulton Street Cemetery from Author's collection.

"FULTON STREET CEMETERY
July 9, 1838, the Trustees of the Village purchased of James Ballard six acres of ground comprising what is now a part of the Fulton Street Cemetery. The purchase price was $300. It was to be reserved and used expressly as a cemetery for the Village of Grand Rapids, one-third of it for the Roman Catholics, and was to be kept in order and repair at the expense of the Village. Twenty years later this ground was found too small for the needs of the then rapidly growing city, and additions were made to it of parcels adjoining, by deeds of Thomas D. Gilbert and others, in 1862, 1863 and 1864. In the early part of 1868, the "Fulton Street Cemetery Association of the City of Grand Rapids"  was incorporated, under the law of the State relating to such associations, by the owners of lots in that cemetery, and the following officers were elected: President, Thomas D. Gilbert; Clerk, James B. Willson; Treasurer, J. Frederic Baars; Sexton, John Suttle; Directors, L. R. Atwater, A. Lamont Chubb, Alonzo Platt. At the same meeting by-laws were adopted and an assessment of $600 was levied on the members for the improvement of the grounds. Since that time they have been well cared for by this association. The present officers are: President, George W. Sones; Secretary and Treasurer, J. F. Baars; Sexton, John Ringold. The grounds with their alleys and carriage ways are well laid out and carefully and neatly kept, and in them are a considerable number of handsome and costly monuments. The trees and shrubbery, judiciously and tastefully trimmed, give the place much the appearance of an attractive park. The area of this cemetery is nearly twelve acres."
Baxter, Cemeteries, Chapter 36

Fulton Street Cemetery on Find-A-Grave
Map of Fulton Street Cemetery on Kent County Michigan GenWeb Project

John Ball and wife Gravestone from Fulton St Cemetery, courtesy MLive

Another of Thomas Gilbert's pet projects was, of course, Fulton Street Park, previously called Court House Square, and, later, Veteran's Memorial Park. 


From Ruger's 1868 panoramic map of Grand Rapids, Library of Congress.  Note both Triangle Park and Fulton Street Park.

1862 - "A tree-planting association was organized in the Third Ward and did good work in setting shade trees on the parks and contiguous sidewalks. Thomas D. Gilbert was prominent in this movement, and at the expense of the city one hundred trees were set on the public square, and a fence put around it and painted. "
Baxter, Chapter 11

The trees included oaks, hickories, and maples.  Thomas Gilbert maintained the park and fence and even plowed it and planted oats and potatoes in 1865.








Postcard from the author's collection.

Postcard from the author's collection.


The Union Benevolent Association (UBA) Hospital was another of Thomas Gilbert's interests.  In its early days, when funds were scarce, he bailed them out of their debt for the property.  Later he headed the committee to build a new hospital, designed by S J Osgood, and dedicated in 1886.


Postcard from the author's collection.

And from the other side. . .

Engraving from Baxter, p 353.

Soon after Thomas and Francis came to Grand Rapids they moved into the former Bostwick house on Cherry Street that I wrote about here.  Thomas and Francis Gilbert lived there for a time before the Morrises bought it.  They were listed there in the 1859 City Directory.

Did you happen to notice the house way up in the corner of the large Fulton Street Park picture?  The one with the belvedere?  This large Italianate was supposedly built by James Gallup in 1865, although Henry Martin was listed in the 1859 city directory as living on this corner.  This house is now called the McCabe-Marlowe House, after subsequent owners, and is now owned by Grand Rapids Junior College.  




I believe that this picture, looking down towards Fulton Street Park in the middle of the picture under the trees, is taken from the belvedere of that house.

Click on it to see full size.
Next door to that house was this one, built by Francis Gilbert, at the foot of John Street.  This house was left to Francis' daughter, Harriet Isabella, who married Philo Carroll Fuller.  A history of the house can be read here.


From Google Maps

Thomas lived with his brother and his first wife, Caroline.  Caroline died in 1869, but by then Thomas had moved into the St Denis Boarding House* at 122 Monroe, living there before and after his marriage to Mary A Bingham in 1871. In 1878 he started building a house across the street from Francis, and moved in by 1882.  His wife lived there after his death, and until her death in 1910. 


From Grand Rapids As It Is, 1888.



Page from "Grand Rapids in Stereographs 1860 - 1900" by Thomas R Dilley.


From Google Maps
Somebody added dormers (and removed the beautiful round window).  Not integrated very well, either.

Here is the family of Sophia Haskel Bingham Buchanan on the porch with Angie Bingham Gilbert.  Some of her sister's family lived in the house with Angie and after her death. (She is in front of the pillar.)  Information about the house from the Heritage Hill Historic Association can be found here.

From Ancestry.com Boye Family Tree of Sarah Boye.

Both of these houses were within two blocks of Fulton Street Park, making an easy walk for Thomas to tend to his park.  You can see Francis' house in the upper middle on Lafayette St across from John St.  (It is more widely known in Grand Rapids as the Philo Fuller House, after it's second owner.)

From Ruger's 1868 panoramic map of Grand Rapids, Library of Congress.

Later, between the two houses shown on the 1868 Ruger map, above, another house was built for another of Francis' daughters, Katherine, and her husband, John C Holt.



The Gilbert family is buried, most appropriately, at Fulton Street Cemetery, in Grand Rapids, Michigan.


Photo by Richard Howell on Find-A-Grave.

*The St Denis Hotel is shown in the 1868 Ruger map, below.  See how close it is to Thomas' beloved parks.


 From the 1888 Sanborn map.

From the 1895 Sanborn map.

The Gilbert brothers had bought the St Denis Hotel property in 1868 and Thomas was living there, then, according to the city directory.  Later it was developed into The Gilbert Building.

Monday, November 10, 2014

Samuel Field Perkins, Shoes and Leather

Perkins, S. F., Shoe Store and Tanner, Monroe St.
PERKINS, WOODARD & CO., Shoe Store and Tanners, Monroe St.
So reads the entry for Samuel Field Perkins in the 1856 Grand Rapids Business Directory.

Baxter has this to say on page 104 of his "History of the City of Grand Rapids, Michigan".


Samuel was carrying on the family trade, as learned at his father's side in Woodstock, Vermont.


From "History of Woodstock, Vermont", by Henry Swan Dana, 1889, p 119.

The Gaius Perkins home in South Woodstock, Vermont, built in 1831, courtesy Google Maps.


On page 494 of Baxter, we find the following account of Samuel's trade.  Also mentioned is Charles Taylor, the subject of a previous post.


Here is the site of the Perkins and Woodward Tannery on Mill Street to the left of the East Side Canal, from the Henry Hart map of 1853.

The site where Samuel and Mary built their house is shown above on the corner of Pearl Street and Greenwich Street, Lot #8.  Subjects of previous posts who also lived on the same block are William Haldane, Dr Charles Shepard, and Dr Lemuel Putnam.

Looking down Pearl Street East, either from the tower in William Haldane's back yard or the Ledyard Building, after 1879.  The house in the middle with front facing Ionia is Byron Ball's.  Next coming forward is Samuel Perkins'.  Across the street is the new Post Office building.
You can see this house from the other direction at the top of this page, right behind the right steeple of St Mark's Church.

Looking West down Pearl Street about 1910 at the cross of Ionia. On the right is the Post Office fence.  The house on the corner was built about 1842 by Samuel F and Mary D Perkins, and lived in continuously by the family until demolition after 1913.  The space occupied by the Michigan Trust Company once held the homes of George H Foster, Charles D Preston, George Smith, and William Haldane.  On the next corner, Pearl and Ottawa, is the Ledyard Building with its beautiful roofline.


 The Grand Rapids Herald, Wednesday Morning, December 24, 1913. 

Dies In Home She Occupied 70 Years 
Mrs. Mary Perkins, Pioneer Resident of City, Was near Centenarian. 
Sentiment Was Strong 
Business Interests Encroached Upon Modest Homestead But Could Not Prevail Against Life-Long Wish. 
Caring more for her modest home than a palatial mansion and watching year after year the steady and relentless encroachment of business interests, the one great wish of Mrs. Mary D. Perkins, 94 years old, had its fulfillment when she died yesterday within the walls of the Perkins homestead at Ionia avenue and Pearl street.
Mrs. Perkins was a pioneer resident and the widow of Samuel F. Perkins one of the city's earliest and well known business men. She was a native of Ithaca, N.Y. and came to Grand Rapids from Ohio in 1840. Samuel F. Perkins became a resident of Kent county in 1837 and was one of the first members of the "old Settler's Society of Kent County." Shortly after her marriage, Mrs. Perkins took up her residence in the house in which she died.
Contrast Afforded. 
For 70 years Mrs. Perkins resided in the little one story and a half frame structure. The building never failed to attract the attention of visitors to Grand Rapids because of the contrast afforded and a tender story of sentiment was usually unsuspected by the passing pedestrian. Towering 10 stories high to the west of the Perkins homestead is the Michigan Trust building. Directly across Pearl street is the Y.M.C.A. which has already outgrown its quarters and will have a larger and more handsome home. Across Ionia and on the corner Mrs. Perkins noted the building of a handsome new federal building. Within a half block two of the largest furniture exposition buildings were erected.
One of the these, the Furniture Exposition building, abuts upon the Perkins lot, which extends along Ionia avenue for a distance of about 140 feet. Between the Perkins lot and the Trust building another vacant lot is located of about the same size.
Lot Valued at $80,000. 
Within the rapid growth of the city, enterprising real estate men and financiers have looked upon the Perkins lot as being one of the most valuable in the city, and repeated efforts have been made to acquire the property. When hotel building talk was at its height a short time ago, Dudley E Waters procured an option on the corner, the price being fixed at $80,000. With increased building activity in the business section the value of the real estate grew year after year and as an investment, the modest little home did not yield new revenue, but it did afford solace to the pioneer woman who could not bear to leave the spot so dear to her heart. She has been in excellent health, considering her advanced years, until a few years ago, when she became ill.
Mrs. Perkins is survived by a son, Gaius W Perkins, president of the Perkins Lumber company; two grandsons, Charles F and Gaius W Perkins Jr., and two first great-grandchildren, Voigt and Pauline Perkins.
Funeral services will be held at the home of her son, 241 Fountain street this afternoon at 2:45 o'clock. Burial will be in the Fulton street cemetery.

The unlovely view, today.

Samuel Field Perkins and Mary Desire McIntyre married 4 September 1842, according to Albert Baxter, p 623.  Samuel died 14 February 1866 and is buried in Fulton Street Cemetery, as was Mary.
Son, Frederick Barker Perkins, a grocer, born 13 June 1843, died a suicide 2 April 1890, married with one son.  The family lived in Albany, New York before moving back to Michigan.
Son, Charles Dunham Perkins died at the age of two years and is buried in Fulton Street Cemetery.
Son, Gaius William Perkins started the Grand Rapids School Furniture Company in 1887 and moved it to the West Side, Broadway, between 9th and 10th.  He was an active and influential member of the Grand Rapids Board of Trade, a director of several banks, an officer of the Citizen's Telephone Company in 1906, and a board member of the Grand Rapids and Lake Michigan Transportation Company.
He married Emma Louise Pike, a daughter of Abram W Pike, and had Charles Francis, 11 June 1870, who married Amanda N Voigt; Frederick Louis, 1 August 1872, died 14 March 1875; and Gaius William Jr, born 30 January 1879, and married Jessie Eunice Watkins 3 March 1913.  Gaius William Sr died 23 April 1934.

Here is the house Gaius Perkins built for himself, courtesy of Grand Rapids As It Is, 1888..  A lot different than the one he grew up in.  Built in 1881, in 1883 it was listed as 183 Fountain, later changed to 181 Fountain, then 241 Fountain in 1912.  
In 1891 the house had a beautiful wraparound porch.  Windows have been added and dormers enlarged.  This from Baxter's.

In 1917 it was extensively remodeled, and today the front door is on Lafayette and it is listed as 111 Lafayette.
Picture courtesy of Heritage Hill.org.  This link gives history of the house to 1971.


Here is a little more on Samuel's father Gaius Perkins, from The Family of John Perkins of Ipswich, Mass:Complete in Three Parts (Google eBook), George Augustus Perkins, 1884.

Pp95-6
339 Gaius (Wm. 246, Abraham 152, Abraham 64, Isaac 12, John 2, John 1) was born in Lyme, Conn Sept 9, 1778. 
He removed to Hartland, Vt., and afterwards to South Woodstock, Vt., in 1801.  There he married Eunice Field, June 26, 1804. She was born Feb. 12, 1785, and died June 25, 1858. He carried on an extensive business of tanning and shoemaking in South Woodstock for many years and died there March 3, 1870.
He was an ardent supporter of institutions of learning and contributed largely towards the establishment and support of an academy in South Woodstock.  We quote the following in relation to him from Prof W. R. Shipman.
“Major Gaius Perkins died in South Woodstock, March 3, 1870, aged ninety-one years and six months. His long life was not more remarkable for the number of its days than for the wonderful preservation, to its very close, of the faculties and spirit of youth. He was not, indeed, exempt from the weariness of age, but not one of his senses was materially impaired; his judgment remained adequate to the transaction of business, while his heart was as young as ever; and his interest in passing events, whether of the neighborhood or the nation was undiminished.
Naturally social, he was to the last a genial companion for all, and his beautiful old age was a perpetual joy to the home in which children's children rose up to call him blessed. His favor was extended to all good enterprises, and be always heeded the injunction to ‘follow after the things that make for peace.’
A life-long and active Universalist, his venerable form was, until very recently, familiar in the gatherings of the denomination far and near. He made the first and largest subscription in Vermont for the Green Mountain Central Institute, (Now the Green Mountain Perkins Academy), and gave more than any others to sustain our school at South Woodstock. It was hardly too much to say that, as his last days were his best so like the evening twilight were his lingering years. Honored and loved by a multitude of friends, his memory will long be cherished in their hearts, while he, departing from the earth at peace with man and God, and now, united with the great company of the redeemed, shall dwell forever in the mansions of the blest.”

Children of Gaius and Eunice Field Perkins were:
510 Samuel Fields, b May 12,1805; d Feb 14,1866.
511 Adeline, b Aug 18,1807; unm’d; d Feb 19,1830.
512 Marcia, b March 1,1809.
513 Frederick, b Oct 18,1810 d March 23,1868.
514 Charles Dunham, b March 23,1813.
515 Edward, b April 9,1815; unm’d; d in 1882.

P 132
510 Samuel Fields, (Gaius, 329  William, 246  Abraham, 152  Abraham, 64 Isaac, 12 John, 2,  John, 1) was born in South Woodstock, Vt., on Sunday, May 12, 1805. He married Sept. 4, 1842, Mary Desire McIntyre who was born in Hector, Tompkins County, NY, Feb. 25, 1819. She was the daughter of Thomas and Desire (Barker) McIntyre. He was from Deerfield, Mass., and she was from Connecticut.
Soon after he became of age he removed from South Woodstock, Vt. to Plattsburg, NY, where he resided one or two years; thence to Lockport, NY, and from there to Detroit, Mich., about the year 1832, where he remained until 1836. He then removed to Grand Rapids, Mich., and settled there permanently. Here he established himself in the boot and shoe business and built a tannery, which he conducted during the remainder of his life. He died Feb.14, 1866.

Children of Samuel F and Mary (McIntyre) Perkins were:
697 Frederick Barker, b June 13, 1848.
698 Charles Dunham, b Nov 13, 1845; d May 13, 1847.
699 Gaius William, b July 16, 1847.

P 157-8
697 Frederick Barker (Samuel F, 510 Gaius, 329 William, 246 Abraham, 152 Abraham, 64 Isaac, 12 John, 2 John,1) was born in Grand Rapids, Mich., June 13, 1843. He married Agnes J Wishart, Nov.1867. He resided in Grand Rapids until 1874, when he removed to Albany, NY, where he now lives. He is engaged in the grocery trade.

Child of Frederick and Agnes (Wishart) Perkins was:
817 Edward Wllllam b Jan 22, 1872.


699 Gaius William (Samuel F, 510 Gaius, 329 William, 246 Abraham, 152 Abraham, 64 Isaac, 12 John, 2 John,1) was born in Grand Rapids, Mich., July 16, 1847. He married Sept 9, 1869, Emma Louisa Pike, of Grand Rapids. He is engaged in the hide, wool and fur trade in Grand Rapids.

Children of Gaius and Louisa (Pike) Perkins were:
818 Charles Francis, b July 11, 1870.
819 Frederick Louis, b Aug 1, 1872; d March 14, 1875.
820 Gaius William, b Dec 30, 1878.

The Green Mountain Perkins Academy in South Woodstock is still there, now a museum.

Frederick Barker Perkins returned to Grand Rapids after 1880 and died a suicide at the age of 47.  He had been a tanner and a grocer.

Gaius William Perkins started the Grand Rapids School Furniture Company which became American Seating Company.



From "The Men Behind the Guns in the Making of Greater Grand Rapids", p 174-5.

OK, so now I want to know what a "Hoo Hoo" is. (see above)  Here is a description and the ritual of membership, which includes the kissing of a cat statue's butt.  It is not a very serious fraternal organization.  Wikipedia also has this.

Monday, September 15, 2014

"Tanner" Taylor and the Cold Brook

Charles Watters "Tanner" Taylor bought several acres of property on the east side of the Grand River around the Cold Brook, north of the city of Grand Rapids in 1839.  He promptly set up his own little village of manufacturing and hostelry, running a tannery, from whence he acquired his nickname, a hotel, a grist mill, and a lumber mill.


The little buildings above the word Cold Brook are Charles Taylor's house and hotel.  The mill is to the right.  There is a large cemetery between Cold Brook and Wallbridge Streets, with Cemetery Street on the left and Livingston Street on the right.  Cemetery became Taylor Street by 1876.

"In 1836-37, Dwight and James Lyman built a grist mill on Coldbrook, a little above where now is the railroad station. A man named Fish, and after him John C. Stonehouse, were millers there. In 1838 some gypsum grinding, for plaster of paris, was done at that mill. Afterward some wood turning machinery was operated in connection with it, and Charles W. Taylor put in a second set of stones. The stream did not furnish sufficient power to run it steadily in dry seasons, but this became a popular custom mill, and flour from it for home use always found ready sale. In 1861-62 it was operated by Asahel Hubbard. Some years later its use became unprofitable, and the flouring apparatus was removed. February 28, 1880, the building was blown down in a gale."
From Chapter XXXIX, Flouring Mills, Saw Mills and Lumber, 
Grist Mills, Baxter's History of the City of Grand Rapids, 1891.


"Like the woolen factory, which died for lack of sheep, the pioneer tannery, established by Tanner Taylor (as he was familiarly known) upon Cold Brook, was started before there were any cattle. Nevertheless, Mr. Taylor pluckily tanned everything there was for many years, including sheep’s pelts, deer hides, horse hides, and some say woodchuck skins; and so much leather as he was able to produce was of first class quality. But the business finally died for want of material, having been a great help in its time to the early settlers, and a typical pioneer industry in the persistent pluck with which it was carried on in the face of hopeless circumstances."
From 1889 BUSINESS BEGINNINGS.HOW THE BUSINESS OF GRAND RAPIDS BEGAN AND GREW , Pioneer Pluck and Enterprize-A History Of Remarkable Achievements in the Face of Difficulties-A Story That the Old Settlers are Justly Proud Of. (Grand River Daily Eagle - 25 December 1889)  

Here is the Taylor house as illustrated in Baxter, p 763.



By 1857 the area looked like this, when Charles sold it to the City of Grand Rapids:
The big reason for all the changes can be seen from the lower right to the upper middle:  The Detroit and Milwaukee Railway, which was put through in 1858.  The cemetery has disappeared and the area has been platted for housing and industry.  There are dams for the saw mill, middle, and the grist mill, right, forming two holding ponds.  The tannery has a system of canals diverting the stream for water power.

"DETROIT, GRAND HAVEN AND MILWAUKEE The first railroad incorporation within the old Northwest Territory was that of the Pontiac and Detroit Railroad, chartered by the Territorial Legislative July 31, 1830. Five years were allowed to complete the line, but, the corporators failing to carry out their projects, a new corporation, that of the Detroit and Pontiac Railroad Company, was chartered March 7, 1834. In 1835 contracts were let for clearing the line at the Detroit end, but the progress of construction was slow. In 1838 the State loaned to the company $100,000, and before the end of May in that year the road was in operation for a dozen miles. At first the cars were operated by horse power, and on wooden rails. It was opened to Pontiac in July, 1839, and as late as 1845 the cars ran on what was called the strap rail. The Detroit and Pontiac Railroad Company, chartered March 7, 1834, and the Oakland and Ottawa Railroad Company, chartered in 1848, were consolidated April; 21, 1855, under the name of the Detroit and Milwaukee Railway Company, to construct a road from Detroit to Grand Haven, a distance of 180 miles. The line west of Pontiac was completed by this company November 22, 1858, reaching Grand Rapids early in July, and the first through train from Grand Haven to Detroit passing here September 1, 1858. Trains between Grand Rapids and Detroit began running July 12, 1858. In 1860 the property was sold under foreclosure, and a reorganization under the name of the Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad Company was effected. In 1873 the new company made default in the interest on its bonds, and the road was put into the hands of C. C. Trowbridge as Receiver, April 11, 1875. September 4, 1878, it was sold to the bondholders, and in November the company was reorganized as the Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway Company. From the west this road crosses the lines of the Chicago and West Michigan and Grand Rapids and Indiana about half a mile north of the city limits, and crossing Grand River, bears in a southeasterly direction to the depot on Plainfield avenue and East Leonard street; thence, skirting the hills past Highland Park, leaves the city line on the east near Waring and East Bridge streets. An average monthly pay roll of $3,500 is distributed among sixty employes. Eight passenger trains are run daily. This road ever since its construction has been operated in connection with a daily line of steamers across Lake Michigan, between Grand Haven and Milwaukee. It has also made connections with steamboats plying between Chicago, Grand Haven and Muskegon. The principal officers of this railway, up to 1889, have been, since its opening to Grand Rapids: Presidents--C. J. Bridges, 1858 to 1863; C. C. Trowbridge, 1863 to 1878; S. Baker, 1878 to 1880; Frances D. Grey, 1880 to 1882; since 1882, Joseph Hickson. General Superintendents--W. K. MuirS. R. Calloway, each for a brief period; since August, 1884, W. J. Spicer has been General Manager. Secretaries--1861 to 1864, W. C. Stephens; 1864 to 1866, Thomas Bell; since January, 1866, James H. Muir. Agents at Grand Rapids, in succession--A. B. Nourse, A. M. Nichols, J. C. McKee. W. Wallace, J. W. Orr, and since November, 1882, F. C. Stratton."


The above picture and caption appeared in Etten's A Citizen's History of Grand Rapids, Campau Centennial September 23 - 26, 1926 but I copied the picture from Robert Kline's website containing scans of the Public Museum of Grand Rapids' photo collection.

 (1870) "The view up river from the hill.  First Leonard street bridge, built in 1858.  Right foreground, old Ionia street school.  Behind the school tower is Tanner Taylor's tannery and just beyond C. C. Comstock's famous "row," first multiple apartment in city, built to house negroes who worked in Comstock mills."

Notice how dilapidated the tannery is in 1870, without a roof.  Taylor's house would be out of the picture on the right. 

This excerpt from Baxter explains why:  "Charles W. Taylor came in 1839, and began the tanning business in a small way at Coldbrook, a short distance from the river, which he continued at the same place nearly thirty years. His tannery was burned three times, by each of which disasters he suffered a loss of upward of $10,000--first on December 16, 1851, again February 5, 1856, and the third time May 31, 1867, after which he discontinued the business."

By 1876 the mill pond has been filled in.

Charles' first wife, Lovina, died 25 October 1864, as published 26 October 1864 in the Grand Rapids Daily Eagle.
Taylor, Lovina, 52 yrs., 25 Oct , 1864, Hb-Charles W., Grand Rapids, MI, GRDE, 26 Oct 1864

He married again to a woman much younger.  From the Grand Rapids Daily Eagle, 18 January 1866.
"Taylor, Charles W., Grand Rapids, MI, Long, Martha Ann, Rockford, ILL, 13 Nov 1865, Rockford, ILL, GRDE, 18 Jan 1866"

Charles W Taylor and his second wife, Martha Ann Long Taylor, have moved to Big Dry Creek, Fresno, California by 1880.  He is listed as retired.  His three sons, Oliver N, Ethan A and Henry Clay have moved from Grand Rapids, Oliver and Henry to Mason County, and Ethan to Nelson Township.

From Kent County GenWeb Site.

By 1888 the city has added a pumping station to the head of Cold Brook.


This picture shows the pumping station and the tannery, which has been rebuilt and re-roofed by someone.  Even though there is now city water for plumbing, notice all the little outhouses.  Wonder if they are now garden sheds?

1894 Polks.  I wish I had a picture of page 17.
By 1895 the tannery is "Vacant and Dilapidated" and both the Taylor home and hotel are gone.  According to Baxter, the house was still on the corner in 1891.

Here is that same area today courtesy of Google Maps.  The area of the cemetery is now some sort of game court.
~~~~~~~
Tanner Taylor also owned another piece of property that would prove to be troublesome.  Lot 1, block 1, of the Campau plot.
"TAYLOR, Chas W. & Lovina (w), Grand Rapids, Grantor. Daniel Ball, and Chas Babcock,Grand Rapids, Grantee. Convey Lots 1 in Blk. 1, Campau Plat, Grand Rapids.
3 Sep 1852 Liber R Pg. 397, 398"


It is the farthest building in the row on the right hand side.  (One window above two.) Sweet's Hotel behind it.  Photo from Robert Kline's site.  According to Baxter, this was a boot and shoe, or leather store:  "The leather store of Mr. Taylor was at an early day by the foot of Monroe street, and later on Canal near Bridge street;"

Here is the corner with the buildings removed.  Sweet's Hotel on the left, City National Bank on the right.  Photo from Robert Kline's site.

Tanner died in California and is buried in Fresno.  I didn't find the grave of either of his wives.