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May
19
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1898 : Emma Genevieve Gillette, Michigan Conservationist, Born
May 19 all-day

Emma Genevieve Gillette, conservationist, photo courtesy of Michigan Archives

Emma Genevieve Gillette, distinguished Michigan conservationist, was born in Lansing on May 19, 1898. She attended Michigan Agricultural College, now Michigan State University, and was the only woman graduate in the college’s first landscape architecture class in 1920.

During the early 1920s, she developed a close friendship with P.J. Hoffmaster, superintendent of state parks (1922-1934) and later director of the Department of Conservation (1934-1951), now Department of Natural Resources. Hoffmaster enlisted Gillette in scouting the state for areas of land having state park potential, an assignment which the nature lover took as her life’s work. Beginning in 1924, she helped locate and raise public support and funding for state parks at Ludington, Hartwick Pines, Wilderness, Porcupine Mountains, and what was to become the P.J. Hoffmaster State Park as well as Kensington Metropark and the national lakeshores at Sleeping Bear Dunes and Pictured Rocks.

To assist in garnering public support for her projects, she founded and was president of the Michigan Parks Association, a group that was instrumental in passing a $100-million state bond issue for parks and recreation in 1969. Gillette herself labored on the proposed bond issue for a period of 10 years. She was also mainly responsible for securing federal funding for the Michigan state parks system in the mid-sixties, arguing that substantial numbers of park users were from out of state and that these users should share in the cost of upkeep of the state system.

Gillette led the drive to create the Motor Vehicle Permit which provided needed funding for Michigan’s state park system.

During this period, she was also appointed by President Lyndon Johnson to serve on the President’s Advisory Committee on Recreation and Natural Beauty, neither the first nor the last of many such assignments. As late as 1981, she also served on the Wilderness and Natural Areas Advisory Board of Michigan by appointment of the governor.

The Gillette Sand Dune Visitor Center at P.J. Hoffmaster State Park stands as a tribute to this woman whose determination helped to preserve the state’s natural heritage for future generations to enjoy. It might justly be said of Gillette: “If you seek her monument, look about you.”

Sources :

“Michigan conservationist Genevieve Gillette”, Michigan in Pictures, March 13, 2008.

Gillette Natura Association At P. J. Hoffmaster State Park

For more information, see Miss E. Genevieve Gillette, landscape architect : a memorial volume, 1898-1986 / compiled by Miriam Easton Rutz, assisted by Gladys Beckwith ; contributions from Sandy McBeath & Earl Wolf ; illustrations by Gwen Frostic. Lansing?, Mich.] : Distributed by Michigan Women’s Studies Association, 1986. 58pp.

“Genevieve Gillette, Lady of the Parks”, Michigan History Magazine, September/October 2001.

Consider Genevieve Gillette, a woman who scouted land and park locations for her friend P.J. Hoffmaster. Gillette led the drive to create the Motor Vehicle Permit which provided needed funding for Michigan’s state park system. It took a woman of remarkable creativity to link together the great outdoors and vacation getaways with the auto industry that drove Michigan’s economy. Colleen Steinman, “Where are Michigan’s leaders?”, The Center for Michigan, November 16, 2007.

1903 : Buick Motor Company Incorporated in Detroit
May 19 all-day
The division’s founder, David Dunbar Buick was building gasoline engines by 1899, and his engineer, Walter L. Marr, built the first automobile to be called a Buick between 1899 and 1900. But Buick traditionally dates its beginnings to 1903. That was the year the company was incorporated  on May 19, 1903.

The division’s history has been exciting from the beginning. Buick recovered from near-bankruptcy in 1904 to become the No. 1 producer of automobiles in 1908 –surpassing the combined production of Ford and Cadillac, its closest competitors.

Buick was the financial pillar on which General Motors –today the world’s largest automaker — was created.

The rest of the story

In 1903, the Buick Motor Co., then headquartered in Detroit, was one of the least promising of the hundreds of tiny automobile companies across the country.

Its founder had produced only two cars in three years of trying. David Buick though an inventor of merit, generally was considered a dreamer. The company was in debt, its engineer had just left, and the firm’s financial backer wanted to bail out.

David Buick, born in Scotland Sept. 17, 1854, and brought to the United States at age 2, had been a successful plumbing inventor and manufacturer in Detroit when he turned his attention to gasoline engines in the late 1890s. He started a succession of companies: Buick-Auto-Vim and Power Co. (1899), Buick Manufacturing Co. (1902) and Buick Motor Co. (Incorporated May 19, 1903), all in Detroit.

These companies produced engines for power boats and stationary applications. And by 1901 a horseless carriage, referred to in letters as “The Buick Automobile,” was in existence. David Buick tried to sell it that year to his former engineer, Walter Marr, for $300. Marr held out and got it for $225. Marr had, in all probability, built the car for Buick.

Buick and his engineers argued often. Marr later said he worked for David Buick three times, and each time the company had a different name. But between Buick, Marr and another engineer, Eugene Richard, the sensational valve-in-head engine was developed. It was powerful, reliable, and developed more horsepower with its displacement than other engines of like size then on the market. Eventually the entire industry would make use of the principle. But in 1903, David Buick had neither the manpower nor money to fully develop it.

That year, Buick’s financial backer, Benjamin Briscoe, Jr., sold his interest in Buick to a group of wagon makers in Flint, Mich., 60 miles north of Detroit. Eighteen years later, Briscoe observed that Buick’s success story was “so fraught with romance that it made the Arabian Nights tales look commonplace.”

On September 11, 1903, James H. Whiting, manager of the Flint Wagon Works, announced that wagon works directors had brought the Buick company and planned to move it — bag, baggage and David Buick — from Detroit to Flint. A one-story brick factory on W. Kearsley Street in Flint was in operation, building engines, by December. On January 22, 1904, Buick Motor Co. Of Detroit was dissolved and on January 30, 1904, Buick Motor Co. Of Flint was incorporated.

Flint, an old lumbering center, was already known as “The Vehicle City” — but not for automobiles. It had become a center of horse-drawn carriage production for several decades.

In the summer of 1904, the company built the first Flint Buick. Walter Marr, back again as chief engineer, and Thomas Buick, David Buick’s son, took it on a test run to Detroit and back July 9-12. The test was so successful that Whiting’s group ordered production to start. Buick began production with the Model B that summer and built 37 cars by the end of 1904. When the company ran into financial problems that fall, Whiting turned to one of Flint’s other carriage builders for help.

The man was William C. “Billy” Durant, Flint’s carriage “king.” Grandson of a Michigan governor, Durant had gotten into the vehicle business almost on whim. One evening in 1886, he saw an attractive horse-drawn road cart on the streets of Flint. The next night, he took the train to Coldwater, Mich., where the cart was manufactured, and bought the rights to build it. That year he started the Flint Road Cart Co. By 1900, the firm, renamed the Durant-Dort Carriage Co., was the largest producer of horse-drawn vehicles in the country.

Durant didn’t particularly like automobiles — he was no different from most carriage men in that opinion. But he was a strong supporter of Flint, and he knew a “self-seller” when he saw one. The Buick, he observed, drew plenty of attention because it could climb hills and run through mud like no other car he had ever seen. If automobiles could be this good, he thought, then maybe it was time to switch from the horse-and-buggy business to automobiles.

Once Durant made the decision, Buick’s success was assured. No one could raise money, sell products and plan big organizations like Billy Durant. He went to the 1905 New York Auto Show and took orders for 1,000 Buicks before the company had built 40.

He moved Buick assembly briefly from Flint to Jackson, Mich., in 1905 (building more than 700 Model Cs there that year) while he gathered money from Flint banks and businessmen to build the largest assembly facility in the country on Flint’s north side. He persuaded Charles Stewart Mott (later a GM director for 60 years) to move his axle business from Utica, N.Y., to Flint to build axles for Buick. He promoted Buicks across the country, using Durant-Dort carriage outlets and salespeople as the nucleus of a giant distribution system.

He created a racing team — with stars such as Louis Chevrolet and Wild Bob Burmann — that won 500 trophies from 1908 to 1910.

The success of Buick engines was evident on the race tracks (including 1909 successes at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in its inaugural year — two years before the Indy 500 started), and in endurance tests across the country and around the world. Buick was the only car to complete a 1,000-mile Chicago to new York relay race in 1906; a Buick was the first car to travel across South America, driven from Buenos Aires, Argentina, over the Andes to Santiago, Chili, in 1914. Buicks won hill-climbs across the country — including one in 1904 with one of the first 40 Buicks ever built.

In 1908, with production totaling a little more than 8000, Buick led the country in production. Durant had made the transition from the biggest seller of buggies to biggest seller of automobiles. And, on Buick’s success, Durant created a holding company that year. He called it General Motors.

Durant first engaged in merger talks with other producers in the low-price field, including Henry Ford and Ransom Olds, who then headed REO.

Then, when those talks failed, Durant created GM as a holding company Sept. 16, 1908, and quickly pulled first Buick, then Oldsmobile, into the organization. Then he added Cadillac and Oakland (forerunner of Pontiac) and dozens of parts supplier businesses — including AC Spark Plug, which he helped create with Albert Champion (whose initials formed the division’s name).

Durant became financially overextended as he pulled more than 30 companies under the GM umbrella in 1908-10. He lost control of GM to a financial group in 1910. He and Louis Chevrolet developed the Chevrolet company the following year, and Durant used Chevrolet to regain control of GM in 1915-16. Ironically he succeeded, as GM president, Charles W. Nash — whom Durant had hired into his carriage business and later helped make president of Buick.

Nash had brought Walter Chrysler to Buick as works manager. Durant retained Chrysler and made him Buick president, though Chrysler later resigned in a dispute with Durant. In 1920, Durant resigned as GM president in a short depression during which he was again overextended in the stock market. According to Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., who in 1923 became GM president, Buick’s strong reputation and financial position was a major factor in pulling the corporation through the period.

Buick’s star climbed steadily during the roaring twenties, with production reaching more than 260,000 units in 1926. The car’s reliability was world famous. In 1923, the famous writer-traveler Lowell Thomas used a Buick in the first automotive expedition into Afghanistan. Two years later, Buicks won trophies in a series of Leningrad-to-Moscow endurance and reliability runs — beating more than 40 cars from throughout the world.

Also in 1925, a Buick was taken around the world without a driver — to show the reliability of Buick’s and GM Export’s service operations worldwide. The car, driven by dealer representatives in various countries, went to England, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Egypt, by trans-desert convoy to Damascus, Baghdad and Basra, through India and Ceylon, across Australia, and then from San Francisco to New York.

A Buick magazine of the ’20s routinely reported such events as a hill-climb victory in Africa, winning a tug-of-war with an elephant, a trek through New Zealand, and the Sultan of Johore with his Buick in the Far East. In addition to U.S. production, Buicks were built in Canada (a result of an early agreement with the McLaughlin Carriage Co. Family). And, in those decades before World War II, Buick components were shipped to such countries as Spain, Belgium, England, Australia — even Java — where assembly was completed. In 1929, Buick opened a sales office in Shanghai, China.

Being a maker of premium automobiles, Buick was harder hit by the great depression than most of its competitors. In 1933, production plummeted to a little more than 40,000 units. By late that year, Harlow H. Curtice, the 39-year-old president of AC Spark Plug, was tapped by GM to bring Buick back to its former greatness.

A super salesman in the Durant mold, Curtice brought power and speed back to Buick. In 1934, the small Series 40 was launched. It gave exceptional performance for its price of $865. Production that year topped 78,000.

Next he issued a simple challenge to Harley Earl, GM’s design chief, who always drove Cadillacs. Curtice’s challenge: “Design me a Buick you would like to own.” The result was the 1936 line which added Roadmaster and other successful names to the Buick stable: Special, Super, Century, Limited. That year production was close to 200,000. Buick, said a GM executive, was “off relief.”

Buick continued to break ground in styling and engineering until it turned to World War II military production Feb. 2, 1942. During World War I, Buick had built Liberty aircraft engines and Red Cross ambulances (the division today displays a letter of thanks from Great Britain’s then minister of munitions, Winston Churchill, to Durant for war production). In World War II Buick helped make Flint an “arsenal of Democracy” by building aircraft engines, Hellcat tank destroyers and other military hardware. Buick was awarded more than 30 separate military contracts and Buick-built material could be found at virtually every fighting front.

After the war, Buick expanded its facilities under Curtice, who in late 1948 became a GM executive vice-president, a job that led to the GM presidency a few years later. But despite the fact his responsibilities now included all the car and truck divisions, he never really left Buick or Flint. He maintained his home in that city and never owned any other make of car but a Buick.

Curtice was succeeded by Ivan L. Wiles, his comptroller at Buick. The postwar period was a great era for Buick in styling, engineering and sales. Sales rose rapidly, to 550,000 in 1950, to 745,000 in 1955. The first torque converter automatic transmission, Dynaflow, was introduced on the 1948 Roadmaster; a high-compression V-8 was introduced in 1953. Buick’s famous vertical-pillar “toothy” grille, introduced in 1942, became more massive in the postwar era. “Hardtop convertible” styling was introduced on the 1949 Roadmaster Riviera. Buick’s famous “portholes” came along that same year.

These styling innovations are attributed to Buick designer Ned Nickles. However, Edward T. Ragsdale, Buick manufacturing manager and later general manager, helped inspire the hardtop convertible styling. Ragsdale noticed that his wife Sarah always ordered convertibles, but never put the top down. She said she liked the styling but didn’t want to muss her hair. The basic styling innovation was to eliminate the center side pillar. Buick built 4,000 hardtop convertibles in 1949, the first of hundreds of thousands it would produce over the next few years.

But in the late 1950s, Buick went into another tailspin because of a combination of unpopular styling, product problems, and an economic recession that helped make small cars popular. From a high of nearly three-quarters of a million cars in 1955, sales plunged to fewer than a quarter of a million units in 1959.

In 1959, Buick changed the names of its entire product line, discarding Special, Century, Limited and Roadmaster in favor of LeSabre, Invicta and Electra. Under a quality-committed new general manager, Edward D. Rollert, the Special name returned on a compact car with an aluminum V-8 in 1961. The following year, Buick offered the first production V-6 in the Special, which was named Motor Trend magazine’s “Car of the Year.” Its upper-series cars were also new that year and sales climbed to more than 450,000. In 1963, the Riviera, today considered a modern classic, was introduced.

Buick sales continued to rise through the 1960s and hit a record 821,165 in the 1973 model year. But the bottom fell out again with the oil embargo late that year, and sales totaled fewer than 500,000 in both 1974 and ’75.

Buick rebounded. The division re-introduced the V-6 and continued to develop economical engines and attractively designed cars that become ever lighter and more innovative. And when the U.S. auto industry as a whole was severely hurt by the high gasoline prices of the early 1980s, Buick actually increased its market penetration significantly. Among its most heralded models during this period was the first front-wheel-drive Buick, the 1979 Riviera S Type with turbocharged V-6 engine, named Motor Trend’s “Car of the Year.”

Buick broke sales records in both 1983 and 1984 — with more than one million Buicks sold worldwide in ’84 — and had its second-best sales year in history in 1985. Also in 1985, Buick-powered cars won the pole position and the second spot in qualifying for the Indianapolis 500 — the first time since 1931 that an American production-based car had won the Indy 500 pole. Although those cars did not finish the race itself, the qualifying success was a strong indication that Buick’s high-tech engines were highly competitive on the race tracks of America. Buick engines powered 11 of the 33 cars in the 1990 Indy 500 — more than any other manufacturer — and in 1992 won the pole position again with a record-setting performance. Al Unser Sr. Finished third in a Buick-powered car.

Buick’s 1986 and 1987 Regal Grand National, and a limited-edition 1987 GNX, were widely acclaimed as the quickest American-built cars. They were powered by intercooled and turbocharged versions of the 3.8L V-6.

One featured car for ’86 was the front-wheel-drive LeSabre, built at “Buick City” in Flint. Buick City, an innovative project strongly backed by then-General Manager Lloyd E. Reuss as well as UAW Local 599, was built inside walls of old buildings in Buick’s former Flint complex which formed the cornerstone of General Motors. It is a state-of-the-art assembly facility, completed at a cost of more than $350 million in the fall of 1985.

In 1989, Buick City was No. 1 in North America and No. 2 in the world in quality rankings by J.D. Power and Associates, an independent market research firm. That year LeSabre was ranked as No. 1 in North America and No. 2 in the world among 154 domestic and imported models in Power’s Initial Quality Survey. It was the first in a long list of Buick successes in various independent surveys. The division promoted its success by advertising Buick as “the new symbol for quality in America.”

Defining Buick’s future direction, Edward H. Mertz, who became general manager in 1986, said Buick would provide automobiles with qualities that made them famous — “premium American motorcars” that would be substantial, distinctive, powerful and mature. Buick would emphasize its position of providing upscale cars — the most American of all GM cars — and would continue to emphasize smooth power and high performance along with rich detail and comfortable accommodation. As Buick moved into the 1990s, Park Avenue, Park Avenue Ultra and the return of Roadmaster brought that direction to reality.

In the 1991 model year, Buick led all automakers, domestic and import, in market share improvement and sales volume improvement in the U.S. market.

In 1991 and ’92, the elegantly redesigned Park Avenue won numerous “best car” awards, including “Best American Car Value” by Intelli Choice, Inc., an independent market research firm.. Roadmaster was a hit, with 40,000 sales in its first full year on the market. And the redesigned ’92 LeSabre won plaudits from both the press and the public. In late 1992, LeSabre was named Family Circle magazine’s “Domestic Family Car of the Year.”

Buick was serving notice that it would continue to enhance its reputation for product leadership.

Source:  Lawrence R. Gustin, Buick Motor Division (1st 90 Years) : A Brief History,  1993

1930 : World’s First Known Identical Quadruplets Born in Lansing
May 19 all-day

Carl A. Morlock for Constable

When Sarah (Sadie) Morlok gave birth to four identical quadruplets at Lansing’s Sparrow Hospital on May 19, 1930, the blessed event was splashed in papers around the world. Everything about them was news-bite size. The quads were named Edna A., Wilma B., Sarah C. and Helen D., for “Edward W. Sparrow Hospital.” The middle initials indicated their birth order.

Under the strange logic by which the public bestows its largesse on a freakishly fertile couple, provided all the births happen at once and the parents are white, a slew of benefactors stepped up to help the family. Mayor Laird Troyer hired the girls’ unemployed father, Carl Morlok, to the vacant office of city constable. A local dairy donated milk. The city leased a home to the parents for a year for free.

Morlok quadruplets, age one year, sit in their custom four-seater carriage - 1931 black and white photo

When Morlok stood for reelection in 1931, the cute curls of the quads made it a landslide. The proud papa, who was working as a part-time janitor a year earlier, took 37 of 39 precincts. Elections do have consequences. Thousands smiled and said, “Awww.” Morlock would serve as City Constable for 16 years.


The Lansing quadruplets were local celebrities in the 1930s.

Morlock Quadruplets: Lansing, undated

For the full article, see Lawrence Cosentino, “The chair, the babies and the mayor’s ties; ‘Lansing Votes’ meanders through six moments in the city’s history”, Lansing City Pulse, January 29, 2014.

1968 : Al Kaline Reaches The Top of the Tiger’s All-Time Home Run List
May 19 all-day

Al Kaline Wins Batting Title With 200 Hits in 1955, Youngest Player To Do So

On May 19, 1968, Al Kaline hit the 307th round tripper of his career, putting him at top of the Tigers all-time home run list. It came in the sixth inning of a game a Tiger Stadium against the Washington Senators. The Tigers took the nightcap of the doubleheader, winning 7-0.

Source : Detroit Historical Society Facebook page

2015 : Michigan Capitol Dome Undergoing Restoration
May 19 all-day

The historic Michigan Capitol building, constructed in the 1870s, has a new look for summer: scaffolding rings the dome toward the top of the 267-foot spire.

That scaffolding, which has taken more than a month to erect, is the first phase in a $6.4 million exterior restoration project expected to be finished by November.

For the full article, see Jonathan Oosting, “Michigan Capitol dome surrounded by scaffolding during largest renovation project in decades”, MLive, May 19, 2015

2020 : Edenville Dam Collapses; 10000 Forced to Flee Homes
May 19 all-day

Wixom Lake is barren following the May 19 collapse of the Edenville Dam.

Following heavy rains over 36 hours on Sunday and Monday, the Edenville Dam in Gladwin County failed Tuesday, forcing evacuations of roughly 10,000 residents as water rushed into the Tittabawassee River. Located 20 miles northwest of Midland, the dam had been cited for years with safety violations

Following the Edenville Dam collapse, the Sanford Dam downstream overflowed as well.  $200 million in damages ensued to more than 2,500 buildings in Midland, Gladwin and Saginaw counties.   Most of the buildings were not located in flood zones so did not have flood insurance.

Sources : Bridge.

 

May
20
Sat
1835 : Detroit Common Council Votes for Progress, Approves First Underground Sewer for Detroit
May 20 all-day

A committee of the Detroit Common Council recommended that a stone-and-brick “grand sewer” be built to replace an unsightly and unsanitary series of open ditches that ran through the city. The full council agreed, and a year later, Michigan’s first underground sewer was built at a cost of $22,607.

Source : Michigan History

1927 : Charles Lindbergh, First Nonstop Solo Transatlantic Flight
May 20 all-day


 

Detroit native Charles Lindbergh became the first person to successfully complete a nonstop solo transatlantic flight when he landed the Spirit of St. Louis in Paris on May 21, 1927.

He left the Roosevelt Field airstrip on New York’s Long Island, 33.5 hours before. By the time he landed about 3,600 miles later (1,000 of it through snow and sleet), Lucky Lindy was a worldwide celebrity.

Tens of thousands of people greeted the 25-year-old when he touched down at the Le Bourget air field at 10:22 p.m.

Source : Zlati Meyer, “Lindbergh soars to aviation mark”, Today In Michigan History, Detroit Free Press, May 19, 2013.

1927 : The First Mac Wood Dune Scooter Ride
May 20 all-day

According to Mable Wood, Malcolm “Mac” Wood took her on her first dune scooting ride in a Model A Ford on May 20, 1927 following a torrential 3-day downpour that packed down the sand over on the Silver Lake sand dunes.

She remembers the date well because it was the same date that the newspapers announced that Lone Eagle Lindbergh had conquered the Atlantic, flying nonstop to Paris. And she clipped the article to add to one of her scrapbooks. However, it was also the date that her husband took her on a spin noticed by the neighbors on the other side of Silver Lake, who came over to investigate. In his excitement, Mac took them for free rides as well.

Well since automobiles normally get stuck in the loose sand on the dunes, Mac had some figuring to do before he actually started his business of providing dune scooter rides for paying customers. By the early thirties, a business had been born, a welcome addition for all the tourists that visit the sand dunes along Lake Michigan….

The rest of the story:

Way before modern dune buggies, the only way to cruise Michigan’s sand dunes in style was to board a hunk of metal at the Flora-Dale Resort near Mears, Michigan (located between Ludington and Muskegon on Silver Lake).  By 1930, resort owner Mac Wood designed and perfected the first of his famous “dune scooters”, converting a Ford Model A into a four-seat dune buggy.  Rides cost a whopping 25 cents.

The scooters were eventually upgraded in the 1960s to a much sturdier model based on a Studebaker Champ pickup truck, and then again in recent years to the current incarnation: a 20-person, four-wheel drive “Dune Cruiser” sporting aircraft tires.

Both the 1930s- and 1960s-era scooters are now housed in a museum at Mac Wood’s Dune Rides. 

Yours truly had the pleasure of catching a Mac Woods Dune Cruiser ride from the Flora-Dale Resort (Ed and Dolores Bauer purchased the Flora-Dale Resort in 1960 and ran it until 1996) for a picnic and an excursion on the dunes  years ago.  Sadly, since 1996, Flora-Dale has been sold off and subdivided for vacation cabin lots, but Mac Woods Dune Rides are still going strong.

Spotted in Found Michigan, July 6, 2012.

Emily Rose Bennett, “A vintage look at Mac Wood’s 87 years of riding the Michigan dunes“, MLive, July 12, 2017.

Also see The Story of Mac Wood

Mac Woods Facebook Page

Scooterville, U. S. A. / by Mable C. Wood as told to Douglas J. Ingells. Grand Rapids : Eerdmans, [1962]

Dune rides are also available in Saugatuck.

1942: Glenn Miller Song Immortalizes Kalamazoo
May 20 all-day

Glenn Miller recorded “I’ve Got a Gal in Kalamazoo” on May 20, 1942.

The song would resonate with women — as well as swing dancers of both genders — far beyond southwestern Michigan.

Since 1996, the song has been a regular pregame offering of the Western Michigan University Bronco Marching Band, according to Cheryl Roland, a spokeswoman for the school, which is based in Kalamazoo.

And when the marching band releases a CD of its classics or performs in a season-concluding concert, the tune is always one of the highlights.

Source : “This week in Michigan history … ‘I’ve Got a Gal’ got its rhythm from Kalamazoo”, Detroit Free Press, May 20, 2012.

Glenn Miller and His Orchestra Perform I’ve Got A Gal in Kalamazoo via YouTube