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INDEX FOR
CENTENNIAL INTERESTS
MONROE COUNTY HERALD
NEWSPAPER
Published by the
MONROE COUNTY DRY CAMPAGIN
COMMITTEE
GEO. E. LANG, Manager and Editor
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| MONROE COUNTY CELEBRATES
CENTENNIAL NEXT YEAR |
| A Paper issued in the form of
a souvenir edition presenting historical and
descriptive matter regarding the County, boosting
the Centennial for the next year, and offering
for the consideration of its voters some facts
regarding an important matter to be decided by
their ballots on Tuesday, November 7th, 1916. |
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| TREATY OF 1783
In 1783, by the
Treaty of Paris, at the close of our
Revolutionary war, Great Britain ceded to the
United States all the rich and extensive
territory known as the Northwest Territory - the
most valuable part of the vast territory wrested
from France just twenty years before.
The Indians
disregarded the treaty between England the United
States as they had, twenty years before that
between France and England, they had taken no
part, and had not been consulted, in the making
either. They continued their depredations
on the white settlements, encouraged by the
English commandant and instigated by English fur
traders.
We see, therefore,
that this country was really a part of the
British Province for twenty years, from the close
of the French and Indian War with England in
1763, to the close of our Revolutionary war in
1783. Yet England usurped jurisdiction
thirteen years longer, for it was not until 1796
that the United States acquired possession of
Detroit and what now constitutes the county of
Monroe.
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| WAR OF 1812 This part of Michigan was a
portion of New France up to the year 1763, when
it came into possession of the British and was
actually held by them until 1796, although
nominally transferred to the United in 1783, at
the close of the Revolution. By Hull's
Treaty of Detroit, in 1807, the Indian titles to
lands in the county were extinguished, except
nine sections of land upon the Macon reserved for
the above four tribes. Encouraged by the
British these Indians became unfriendly and
during the War of 1812, the eastern part of the
county became the scene of bloody
hostilities. Marching to the relief of
Detroit Gen. Winchester, with 1,000 Kentucky
troops, was surprised January 22, 1813, by
British and Indian allies and suffered almost
crushing defeat; nearly all being killed and
captured. The scene of the battle and
the terrible massacre, was on the banks of the
Raisin, about a mile east of the site of
Frenchtown, but as the river was frozen it
extended southward as far as the poor soldiers
succeeded in eluding their savage pursuers.
Gen. Winchester, who was spending the night at
the cabin of Col. Francis Navarre, was himself
captured and taken to Fort Malden, Canada.
"Remember the Main" is but a paraphrase
of the Kentuckians, "Remember the
Raisin" used later as a battle cry. In
1818 the bones of the unfortunate troops were
collected and buried with honors at Detroit in
the Protestant burying ground. In 1849 they
were transferred, along with others from t he
battlefield, to Frankfort, Kentucky. The
disgraceful surrender of Detroit in August, 1813,
was followed within less than a month of the
glorious naval victory of Commodore Perry and the
stars and stripes floated over city. five
times had the flag changed within the half
century.
Monroe has
"Remembered the Raisin" by erecting two
beautiful monuments. One in honor the Ken
[paper torn] the southern part of the city
and the other on the banks of the Raisin in the
northeastern part of the city, opposite the River
Raisin paper Co.
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| "BOOZE" THE
CAUSE OF THE MASSACRE OF THE RAISIN - 1813
Robert Navarre
with Peatt Navarre, who were enlisted in the
cavalry, with others that could be pressed into
the service, were with their ponies and French
trains used in transporting the wounded prisoners
that had escaped the tomahawk and scalping knife,
to Sandy Creek, three miles north of the river
Raisin, where Colonel Proctor, with his army,
encamped the first night after the
surrender. The same night Colonel Navarre
dispatched his son with Mrs. Navarre and eleven
children on a French train, for safety, to
Detroit, and as they passed the quarters of
Colonel Proctor on Stony Creek, could distinctly
see the drunken. Indians scalping the
wounded American soldiers and their inhuman and
barbarous manner of accomplishing it, by cutting
with a butcher knife a circle around the crown of
the head, and then placing one foot on the neck,
with their hands in the hair, by main force
peeling the scalp from the head.
Colonel John
Anderson resided, at the time of the massacre, on
the site of the homestead of the late Judge
Warner Wing, who married the daughter of Colonel
Anderson; directly opposite the old building, was
occupied by the Colonel as a fur and Indian
trading store, liberally supplied with goods
adapted to the wants of the Indians, together
with an abundant supply of "fire
water." When the news reached him of
the capture of General Winchester and his forces,
knowing well the barbarous habits and customs of
the savages, especially when under the influence
of liquor, he hurried to the cellar of his tore,
where his liquors were stored, and knocked in the
heads of his whiskey barrels, then concealed
himself under the plates of a neighboring barn
for two days. The Indians burst in the
doors, ransacked his store, then prostrated
themselves on their breasts in the cellar and
filled themselves with whiskey. When
besotted, drunk and wild, they repaired to the
residence of Colonel Anderson and with the most
unearthly yells and whoops, emptied the scalps
they had gathered in bags on the parlor floor,
and dancing around the room, slapping the
bleeding scalps against and bespattering and
disfiguring the walls and ceiling. Mrs.
Anderson was in the room adjoining, seated on a
large chest containing the money and valuable of
her husband. the Indians threatening with
upraised tomahawks and knives, commanded her to
rise up. She, having often traded with the
Indians, speaking fluently their language, raised
her voice to the highest pitch, and pointing her
finger, with the expression: "Shame, shame,
so many Indians fight one squaw!" was by the
interference of two resolute Indians, left
unmolested and retained her treasures.
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| NAMED AFTER JAMES
MONROE Monroe
County was named by General Lewis Cass in honor
of James Monroe, who soon after became president
of the United States. it appears that Cass
and Monroe were devoted friends. That fact
is substantiated by General Cass being appointed
to an honorable position in Monroe's cabinet.
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| COL. FRANCIS NAVARRE
WAS FIRST SETTLER [Page Torn] ... arrived upon the
bank of the River Raisin, known by the Indians as
"Namet Cbyi" which river takes its name
from the great number of wild grapes (raisins)
that were then growing in profusion on its
banks. In 1785 he purchased from the
Pottawatamie tribe of Indians, then in
possession, their title to the farm on the south
bank of the River Raisin and built the first log
house, which was subsequently occupied as the
headquarters of General Winchester at the time of
the massacre on the River Raisin, in the winter
of 1812-1813; now the site of the elegant mansion
of the late Dr. A. J. Sawyer.
It was not until
1784, four years later, that over one hundred
families of Canadian Frenchmen arrived and
founded Frenchtown upon the north bank of the
Raisin just opposite Monroe. The same year
other French families settled upon the creek to
the north and south. During the same year a
goodly number of families settled upon Sandy
Creek three miles north; Stony Creek, five miles
north; and Otter Creek five miles south of the
river Raisin. it was at this time that
Colonel Francis Navarre, riding on his pony,
following the Indian trail, brought from Detroit
seven scions, about the size of ones little
finger, of the French pear which has since become
famous for their delicious fruit, a number of
which are now vigorous and healthy, and yielding
annually from thirty to forty bushels.
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| AMERICAN FLAG IN
MICHIGAN FIRST RAISED AT MONROE First American flag on
Michigan soil in Frenchtown by Captain Porter,
1796. Site of River Raisin block house
occupied by american troops. Burned by the
British Captain Elliott under order of Colonel
Proctor, August 1812.
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| WHISKEY AND INDIANS
Bedford was
settled by the French and among the first was
Benj. Soulier. The first American settler,
as is supposed, was a man by the name of Owen,
who built on section 4, town 9 just in the
present limit of the township (Milan) in
1820. After him a family by the name of
Sibley occupied the same house and traded with
the Indians, selling whiskey and other
articles. One night they wanted some
whiskey, not having it, they stabbed him.
His wife was sick, but got out of bed, and went
four miles for assistance. In the mean
time, he crawled off and hid under the military
bridge across Half-Way Creek, where he was found
in the morning when assistance came. He
then left, and in 1830 or 1831, Silas Smith
settled in the town, on the same farm occupied by
Owen and Sibley, took out his patent therefore in
the Detroit land office. He moved into his
house December 13, when the roof was only half
completed. The farm has not gone out of the
family since it was so platted.
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| FRENCHTOWN - First Twp.
Organized Frenchtown was established by Gen.
Lewis Cass, May 4, 1818 and comprised all its
present limits and including Ash and
Berlin. Its present western boundary was
defined April 12, 1827. Stony Creek was
made its northern boundary March 11, 1837.
March 5, 1850 its northern boundary [paper
torn] the exception of 1 and 2.
February 14, 1859 its present boundary was
established by adding sections 1 and 2 to Ash
township. the first election was held at
the home of Francis Lasalle 1827. It
derived its names from the little village
Frenchtown on the north bank of the River Raisin
and which was founded by French settlers.
Brest at once time
a thriving village within the limits of this
township was founded by French settlers and
without a doubt was named after Brest in France
from which place some of the early settlers may
have come. The original plats of the
village extended for a few miles each way from
Stony Creek and was only outdistanced by the
thriving city of Monroe. its plat was made
June 7, 1836. All remains of this village
today is the name and a couple of stores.
Steiner is a small
trading post in the western part of the township
on the P.M. railroad and was named after Wm.
Steiner of Monroe.
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| MONROE - Second
Township Was created by an executive act of
General Lewis Cass, May 4, 1818 and comprised
practically its present territory. its name
came from the little village Monroe on the south
bank of the Raisin.
The greater part
of its history is identified in the history of
Monroe.
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| ERIE - Third Township
Created by
executive act of Gen. Lewis Cass, May 4,
1818. its first western boundary was a
north and south line extending through the
present village of Erie to the state line below
Toledo. April 12, 1827 it included the
present township together with LaSalle, Bedford
and Whiteford. In 1831 LaSalle was taken
away and in 1834 Whiteford, in 1836
Bedford. it gets is name from the lake
which it borders.
The First
settlement in Erie was Bay Creek and in 1819
there was a considerable community and wanting a
place to worship built a Catholic church with a
thatched roof.
The
village of Vienna was plated Dec. 28, 1835.
Precisely who the
first white settler was, or when he came is not
known, but Father Hennepin was unquestionably one
of the first visitors to these shores, and
Colonel John Anderson, Daniel Mulhollen and Henry
Disbrow were the first American settlers at the
Raisin River. The first two came before the
ware of 1812, the latter the year following.
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| RAISINVILLE - Fourth
Township Created by executive act of General
Louis Cass, May 5, 1818, and included all the
western part of the county. Sept. 10, 1822
it included all of the county west of Eric,
Monroe, and Frenchtown townships. its
present limits were defined April 12, 1827 but
had jurisdiction over the territory which
subsequently became Exeter, London, Milan,
Dundee, Summerfield and Ida. it gets its
name from the River Raisin. Nearly all the
farms in this township ar on the original French
or private claims.
It was claimed by
the early settlers and surveyors that the jug of
whisky determined the length of these claims thus
making a regular length. The surveyors when
staring out in the morning were given a jog of
"Fire Water" and they continued to
survey till the contents were exhausted, thus the
longer the whisky lasted the longer the claim.
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| SUMMERFIELD - Fifth
Township Was organized out of
Raisinville including Dundee and Milan, October
21, 1829 and was first called Flumen and November
5th, 1829 the name was changed to Summerfield.
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PETERSBURG
Petersburg, a
thriving village in this township was named after
Richard Peters, one of the early pioneers.
The original plat was made Aug. 1, 1836.
The village was settled in 1824 by John N.
Wadsworth, Richard Peters, Elihu Ward, Charles
Peters, the first white child born in Summerfield
on March 17, 1826.
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| LA SALLE - Sixth
Township Was created out of Erie July 31,
1830 and defined its western boundary as the old
west line of Erie. March 4, 1831 it was
discovered that 2½ rows of sections had been
omitted and which were added making the present
township.
LaSalle township
was settled about the year 1790 there being at
Otter Creek, in 1794, 22 families. It was
named after a man by the name of LaSalle who had
a store in the banks of Otter Creek at the time
of its organization.
Winchester is the
name by which the station is known on the P.M.
railroad which railroad crosses the identical
spot where Gen. Winchester camped with his army
on the way to Monroe in 1813. Winchester
was platted April 6, 1836 but the lines are
scarcely followed today.
Another historical
mark, the Harrison Oak which stood up to about
two years ago when it was cut down, a short
distance south of otter Creek along the Monroe
and Toledo turnpike. Gen. Harrison camped
with his army on his march through the county in
those early days.
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| LONDON - Seventh
Township London originally included
three townships and was organized out of
Summerfield and Raisinville, June 13, 1832, with
the exception of the row sections along the west
line of the present township. The mistake
was discovered and corrected March 7, 1834.
It was named after London, England, the
birthplace of an army officer, who was living in
the vicinity at the time. Its present size
was established March 26, 1836.
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OAKVILLE
Oakville a number
of years ago was a thriving village, the plat
being recorded Feb. 19, 1835. It gets
its name from the profusion of scrub oak which
were in the community in the early days.
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| WHITEFORD - Eighth
Township Eighth Township - Organized
March 7, 1834 and was first extended into Ohio
including Sylvania. David White was elected
supervisor at the first election and was the man
after whom the township was named.
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OTTAWA LAKE
Ottawa Lake is the
only village of any consequence in the township
and [page torn] building of the first railroad in
this part of the county.
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| BEDFORD - Ninth
Township Taken from Erie by
legislative act March 23, 1836. The first
election was held at the home of Levi Lewis in
1836. William Dunbar being elected
supervisor. the origin of the name is
obscure.
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TEMPERANCE
Temperance
is a little town in Bedford Township which was
platted on a farm belonging to one of the
Anstead's and in all the deeds that were made out
the temperance clause was added forbidding the
sale of intoxicating liquors for a period of 99
years and as a consequence the town was not long
in choosing a name. One time an intoxicated
man was riding on one of the trains through the
county and asked the conductor how far it was to
Temperance, whereupon he was told to "quit
his drinking." The first plat of the village
was laid out March 1, 1895.
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SAMARIA
Samaria
is another little town which had its beginning at
the advent of the Ann Arbor railroad. The
name originated in a peculiar way. Two
prominent young people Samuel and Mary Weeks who
were good entertainers and well liked among the
young people, who wen wanting a good time would
suggest going over to Sam and Mary's, and when
the town wanted a name we have
"Samaria" as a result of the two
original names.
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LAMBERTVILLE
Lambertville
was first called West Erie and known as a village
as early as 1835, the name Lambertville is
associated with one of the early settlers by the
name of Louis Lambert. The plat however was
not surveyed until Aug. 13, 1888.
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| MILAN - Tenth Township
Milan was
established out of London, March 23, 1836, by a
legislative act. The origin of its name has
not been known but is probably named after the
city, by the same name in Europe.
In 1833 the post
office was opened with Bethuel Hack, it was known
as Farmers or Tollenville. In 1834 David A.
Woodward was appointed and in 1836 the name
changed to Milan although up to 1859 it was
called Tollenville. Woodward's mill and
Milan at which time the name was officially
changed to Milan by order of the Postmaster
General.
West Milan was
opened as a post office in 1859 with John C. Cone
as postmaster. In 1880 Wabash railroad was
opened through and the station was called Cone
and the following year the name of the postoffice
was changed to correspond.
East Milan or
Reeves Station was opened as a postoffice in
1866. September 1, 1887 the Postmaster
General issued an official order changing the
name of the postoffice from East milan to Azalia.
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| EXETER - Eleventh
Township Taken from London by legislative
act, March 26, 1836. The first election was
held in April 1836 and Gilbert Palmer was elected
supervisor and who named the township after his
birthplace, Exeter Co. New York. Geo. J.
Coppernall was from the same place.
The village of
Maybee within this township is a direct outgrowth
of the building of the Canada Southern
railway. The large amount of timer adjacent
to the site first developed the manufacture of
charcoal, and a small village sprang up around
the kilns and side track. Its original site
was on the farm of Abraham Maybee and from this
the place took its name.
Scofield another
little village in this township was the direct
outgrowth of the building of the railroad.
Simon Scofield who had a large sawmill at this
point is the one after whom the village was
named.
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PORT LAWRENCE
Was a township in
the disputed Ohio strip and which lost to this
county when the boundary line dispute ended on
the submission Michigan as a state to the Union,
January 26, 1837. The original plat of the
city of Toledo which was known in the early days
as Port Lawrence, is still recorded in the
register of deeds office in the county of Monroe.
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| ASH - Twelfth Township
Ash
was carved out of Frenchtown by a legislative
act, march 11, 1837 and comprised more than all
its present territory including Berlin. Its
southern boundary was Stony Creek until March 5,
1850, when the present southern line was
established with the exception of sections 1 and
2 which was added to Ash, February 14,
1859. its present shape was assumed when
Berlin was created Dec. 19, 1867. its name
came out in a peculiar way when a meeting was
called at Oldport at the home of John M. Beaubien
to talk over the establishment of the
township. Arba Ash, who held an appointment
from the state to help organize counties and
townships was present at this meeting. Ash
was a man who could doze off into dreamland at a
minutes notice and especially, when in a warm
room. He was thus sleeping when the name
for the new township was under discussion.
John G. Hood one of the pioneers of this vicinity
made an effort to arouse him and get his
opinion. When upon awakening, he brauled
out his own name as if answering to a roll
call. the men were amused and the incident
brought the suggestion of "Ash" as the
name for the new township. The first
election was held in 1837.
It is
an excellent farming country. Until the
introduction of railroads, this township was
sparsely settled and heavily timbered; now
comprises many of the most productive farms in
the county.
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CARLETON
The
village of Carleton was laid out in April 1872 by
Daniel A. Matthews and Charles A. Kent. The
original plat comprised 80 acres, 80 acres were
added shortly afterward by D. A. Matthews and
William Hickok. The village was named by
Mr. Matthews after Will Carleton, Michigan famous
poet at the time and it is not at all unlikely
that his poem, "Over the Hills to the
Poorhouse" which about this time had
attracted so much attention was the medium which
let Mr. Matthews to admire Will Carleton.
Will Carleton has visited the village on three or
four occasions and was pleased to note that he
had been remembered in this kind way. The
first building erected was the Matthews House, a
two-story building of good size, on the railroad
crossing. Saw mills, a stave mill, heading
works were early introduced in this
village. It is yet one of the thriving
little towns of the county.
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GRAFTON
Grafton was a
little village in Ash township started in 1835
and named by Solomon Littlefield, after his birth
place, Grafton, Rensselaer county, NY and was
progressive until the two railroads in 1872 and
1873 crossed the township of Ash and established
the village of Carleton at the junction.
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| IDA - Thirteenth
Township Created by legislative act March 11,
1837 and was taken out of Raisinville and a piece
of Summerfield. When the organization of
the township was progressing a woman friend
capable of assisting in such a matter was called
in. When these men were racking their
brains for a name, some one suggested naming it
after Mrs. Ida M. Taylor, who had been so
untiring in her services. She lived with
her husband on the banks of the River Raisin, the
home had been built in 1834 and which stood until
about 3 years ago. She died young, as the
marble slab in the London cemetery will
reveal. Hiram Carney was elected the first
supervisor. The firs plat of the village
was recorded Nov. 6, 1868. The township has
been made practically by its drainage system.
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| DUNDEE - Fourteenth
Township Organized March 31, 1838 out of
Summerfield. The original plat was made
Nov. 12, 1833. The first white child born
within the limits of the township was R.P.
Ingeroll and who is still living in the
village. The origin of the name is
evidently associated with some of the early
Scotch settlers and whose birthplace probably had
been Dundee, Scotland. This is the second
town of the county and a thriving
village.
There is one
little village in the western part of the
township by the name Rea, which was founded by
William Rea, one of the pioneers of the
community.
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| MONROE CITY- September
4, 1817 The
town (village) of Monroe, according to a plan
therefore laid out into lots, streets, commons
and public squares, on the farm of Joseph
Loranger, and some adjacent ground on the borders
of la Riviere aux Raisin, and was reported by
John Anderson and Wolcott Lawrence, August 11,
1817, to the executive of the territory, was
organized and established Sept. 4, 1817, by
proclamation of William Woodbridge, secretary of
the territory, and was made the permanent seat of
justice for Monroe county. It was
incorporated as a village by regular act of
incorporation, April 12, 1827. It was
incorporated as a city, March 22, 1837. It
had five wards, afterwards three, and now has
four.
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| BERLIN- Fifteenth
Township Berlin was the last township
organized in Monroe county and was a part of Ash
till December 19, 1867 which date becomes its
birthday. It was named by Frederick
Niedermeier after Berlin, Germany in honor of the
city of his birth. John Strong was the
first supervisor in 1868 and was followed the net
year by Mr. Neidermeier.
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| NEWPORT Newport now known as
Oldport was founded by William White and
Louis LaDue and was named Newport by Mr. White
after his birth place, Newport, NH, and for many
years run a store on the banks of Swan
Creek. With the coming of the railroads the
village gradually follwed the line of
travel. The plat of Oldport was laid out
July 5, 1835.
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