Calendar

Apr
30
Sun
1824 : Congress Appropriates $10,000 To Survey Road Between Detroit and Chicago
Apr 30 all-day

Congress appropriated $10,000 to survey a road between Detroit and Chicago. The Territorial Road or Great Sauk Trail is now US12.

Source : Historical Society of Michigan

1871 : Fielding Yost Born, Future University of Michigan Football Coach
Apr 30 all-day

Fielding Yost sitting side.jpg

Yost in 1902

Fielding Harris Yost (April 30, 1871 – August 20, 1946) was an American football player, coach and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at: Ohio Wesleyan University, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, the University of Kansas, Stanford University, San Jose State University, and the University of Michigan, compiling a college football career record of 198–35–12. During his 25 seasons as the head football coach in Ann Arbor, Yost’s Michigan Wolverines won six national championships, captured ten Big Ten Conference titles, and amassed a record of 165–29–10.

From 1901 to 1905, his “Point-a-Minute” squads had a record of 55–1–1, outscoring their opponents by a margin of 2,821 to 42. The 1901 team beat Stanford, 49–0, in the 1902 Rose Bowl, the first college football bowl game. Under Yost, Michigan won four straight national championships from 1901 to 1904 and two more in 1918 and 1923.

In 1921, Yost became Michigan’s athletic director and served in that capacity until 1940. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1951. Yost was also a successful business person, lawyer, and author; but he is best known as a leading figure in pioneering the development of college football into a national phenomenon.

Fielding Yost’s first contract called for U-M to pay him a $2,300 salary and required him to coach the team “to the best of his knowledge and ability” beginning in September 1901 “and continuing until the last game is played.”

1901 Michigan Football Team

Source :

Fielding H. Yost wikipedia entry

1921 : Annie Edson Taylor Dies
Apr 30 all-day

Annie Edson Taylor image

Annie Edson Taylor, a Niagara Falls daredevil, died on this day.

On October 24, 1901, Annie Edson Taylor, a teacher of dance and physical culture in Bay City, Michigan, became the first person and the only woman to survive a ride over Canada’s Niagara Falls in a barrel. Seeking a new career that would earn her fame and fortune, Taylor plunged over the falls in a specially designed barrel and suffered no injuries. She called herself “the Queen of the Mist” and toured around the nation with a replica of her original barrel.

Source : Michigan Historical Calendar, Clarke Historical Library at Central Michigan University.

1925 : Governor Alexander Groesbeck Requires 5-Day Waiting Period for Weddings
Apr 30 all-day

To the chagrin of St. Joseph, Michigan, Governor Alexander Groesbeck announced on April 30, 1925 he was putting an end to instant marriages in Michigan, requiring a five day waiting period after a license was issued before a wedding could legally take place.

From the end of the 1800s through the summer of 1925, thousands of couples from Chicago would elope by steamer to St. Joseph for quickie marriages, making St. Joseph the Las Vegas of this period.

However, the new law would not take effect until August 27, allowing the summer brides ample time to tie the knot before the new waiting period took effect.

Source : Colleen Burcar, It Happened in Michigan (Guilford, CT : Globe Pequot Press, c2010)

1935 : Depression Era Walkathon Concludes in Jackson
Apr 30 all-day

How long will someone walk for $1,000 in cash? During the Depression, it was 88 days, four hours, 20 minutes and 30 seconds.  It began on January 31; it concluded on April 30, 1935, more than 12 weeks.

In 1935, an interstate walkathon was sponsored by the Regent Cafe, 218 E. Cortland St., Jackson, Michigan. The grueling event drew 42 couples and four individuals.

The winning pair was team No. 6, consisting of Tommy McGeer of Detroit and Jackie Airgood of Pontiac. The pair hoofed around the former Elks Temple, 312 S. Jackson St., the building that is now the Jackson County Courthouse. Walkers circled the dance floor while the spectators kept watch from the surrounding balcony.

For the full article with picture, see Susanne Weible, “Walkers strolled around dance floor for 88 days”, Jackson Citizen Patriot, September 29, 2008.

1954 : Detroit Metropolitan Airport’s First Passenger Flight Takes Off
Apr 30 all-day

On April 30, 1954, following several ceremonial speeches, a London-bound DC6B “Great Lakes Clipper” sped down a lone runway past a skinny control tower and climbed into sunny skies as the first passenger flight to lift off from Wayne Major (now Metropolitan) Airport.

Source: Mich-Again’s Day

1967 : Detroit’s Belle Isle Love-In
Apr 30 all-day

Movie Clip

John Sinclair, Joe Mulkey and Billy Reid of the Detroit Artists Workshop after obtaining the license to hold the Love-In from the City of Detroit at Police Headquarters at 1300 Beaubien in the spring of 1967. - PHOTO BY LENI SINCLAIR

John Sinclair, Joe Mulkey and Billy Reid of the Detroit Artists Workshop after obtaining the license to hold the Love-In from the City of Detroit at Police Headquarters at 1300 Beaubien in the spring of 1967.

It was April 30, 1967.

The Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper” album was to be released in just one month, celebrating love, peace, and flowers. But beating it to the punch was Detroit’s Belle Isle Love-In, kicking off the infamous 1967 “Summer of Love”.

News media at the time described it with words like ‘drug-laden’… ‘protests’… ‘rebellion’… ‘rioting’… ‘stoners’… and an ‘uprising’.
It was, in reality, very peaceful. At least for six hours.

So what defines a love-in?

Dancing, colorful clothing, all races getting along, music, peaceful protesting, painted faces, meditating, gifts, beads, artwork, loving, balloons, food, long robes, chanting, flowers, bare feet, candy, touching, and yeah, some drugs here and there.

Announcement in the Ann Arbor Sun, April, 1967

Announcement in the Ann Arbor Sun, April, 1967

The 1967 love-in was arranged by John Sinclair and other members of the Detroit Artists Workshop, who were granted a permit by the police to hold the event. Of course, the police sent their own troops in to make sure everything didn’t get too out of control. Thousands of kids – hippies, non-hippies, bikers, straights, you-name-it…all began arriving that morning…approximately 8,000 of ’em. Traffic was backed up for miles and it took drivers over an hour just to get across the bridge. Compared with the 2000s, it seems so amazing that all these different kids got along. Yup…..bikers, hippies, and kids of all races got along together just fine.

Plus, music was being provided by The MC5.

Hours later, as night began to fall, the police brought out the shotguns and riot gear to get everyone off the island. This was the only blot on an otherwise peaceful, pleasant day for those involved.

Sources :

John Robinson, “FLASHBACK: The Detroit Love-In at Belle Isle, 1967 “, 99.1 WFMK Blog, February 17, 2021.

Michael Jackman, “Fifty years ago this weekend: The Belle Isle Love-In“, The Metro Times,  April 28, 2017.

The Belle Isle Love-In of Detroit” courtesy of Detroit Artists Workshop.

1980 : State of Michigan Bails Out Chrysler
Apr 30 all-day

The state loaned the nearly bankrupt Chrysler Corporation $150,000,000 in an attempt to save the jobs of thousands of Chrysler workers. With union cooperation and new designs including the K-car and the minivan, Chrysler returned to profitability and repaid all its state and federal obligations.

Source : The Historical Society of Michigan

More about Chrysler’s bailout from Encyclopedia Britannica.

1992 : Arthur Ashe receives honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Kalamazoo College
Apr 30 all-day

Photo of Arthur Ashe at Kalamazoo College

Only weeks after the news broke that tennis star Arthur Ashe had contracted the HIV virus as a result of blood transfusions in the early 1980s, he came to Kalamazoo to receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree. He had first come to Kalamazoo in 1958 to compete in the USTA Boys’ National Tennis Tournament, and was champion of both tennis and human rights for many years. Ashe received his degree at a private College dinner on April 30, 1992.

Source : BeLight : the ezine of Kalamazoo College

2013 : Spartan Men’s Tennis Team Invited to NCAA Tournament For First Time
Apr 30 all-day

The Spartans received an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament Tuesday evening and will face Tulsa in the first round on Friday, May 10 in Waco, Texas. It marks MSU’s first appearance in the 64-team NCAA tournament in its 100-year program history.

Source : Brian Calloway, “Spartan men earn 1st ever NCAA tourney berth”, Lansing State Journal, May 1, 2013.