Calendar

Apr
9
Sun
1912 : Detroit Aldermen Determined to Put Bad Bars Out of Business
Apr 9 all-day

According to the Warren-Cramlon Law of 1909, no city should have more than 1 bar per 500 residents. According to the latest census, Detroit should have no more than 1000 bar rooms, but in fact has 1550 bar licenses. And there is no indication the number will go down since there have already been more applications this year than in 1911.

REDUCE THE SALOON NUMBERS HERE. Detroit Free Press, April 9, 1912.

BAD BARS TO CEASE EXISTENCE: HERMAN WARTELL’S “ANNEX” AND SIMILAR NOTORIOUS SALOONS WILL BE PUT OUT OF BUSINESS BY COUNCIL COMMITTEE. REFUSE LICENSE NO MATTER WHO ASKS ALDERMEN DETERMINED TO EXCLUDE PLACES OF EVIL REPUTATION, DESPITE CHANGES OF NAME, OF OSTENSIBLE APPLICANTS. Detroit Free Press, April 9, 1912.

Other news from the Detroit Free Press, April 9, 1912:

WOMEN TALK TOO MUCH: BOSTON DOCTOR SAYS CHATTER MAKES THE DEARS NERVOUS.

GIRL’S PARENTS FOIL ELOPERS: INDIANAPOLIS SWEET 16 AND U. OF M. GRADUATE TRIPPED ON LICENSE AT ST. JOSEPH.

TAKES HAIR TONIC FOR COLD: (ASSISTANT PROSECUTOR) “WILLIE” HESTON SWALLOWS RESTORER BY MISTAKE; GOES HOME ILL!.

Note : The Main Library now provides the MSU community online access to the historical Detroit Free Press from 1858 through 1922.

1948 : Michigan Legislature Worried About Communists at MSC
Apr 9 all-day

On April 9, 1948, Michigan State College President John Hannah announced that no groups or individuals on the campus are admitting that they are Communists. Hannah and S. E. Crowe, dean of students, were subpoenaed by state Sen. Matt Callahan (R-Detroit) to appear before his Michigan Senate Un-American Activities Committee, which conducted its meetings behind locked doors, and only allowed a few reporters to attend.  (The Michigan Attorney General was barred.)

Hannah stated communists could not be barred from enrolling because MSC does not ask political affiliations on applications for enrollment.  Since the state of Michigan recognizes communist candidates on its election ballots, MSC is not going to ban any such group, but since a group would have to get faculty sponsorship, it was unlikely any such group would ever form.

Crowe said the Spartan Citizens League, formed a year ago when the American Youth for Democracy was banned on campus, contained some “liberal thinkers.”  As far as college authorities are able to determine, he, said, the meetings are mostly concerned with “long hair” art, music and literature.

Sources:

MIRS News Service.

“Official Says MSC Has No Known Reds”, Detroit Free Press, April 10, 1948, p.4.

Owen C. Deatrick, “No Danger of Red Groups Starting at MSU, Hannah Says”, Detroit Free Press, April 13, 1948, p. 14.

2017 : Red Wings Host Last Game at the Joe Louis Arena
Apr 9 all-day

The Red Wings closed out its 38-year residency at Joe Louis Arena with a 4-1 victory over the New Jersey Devils in front of 20,027 raucous fans, who hurled a reported 35 octopuses on the ice during the game – a unique Red Wings tradition that dates to the early 1950s.

For the full article, see Bill Shea, “Red Wings, under a flurry of octopuses, bid farewell to Joe Louis Arena with 4-1 win over Devils“, Crain’s Detroit Business, April 9, 2017.

Dan Holmes, “19 Reasons We’ll Always Remember The Joe“, Detroit Athletic Company Blog, April 8, 2017.

Apr
10
Mon
1882 : Cora Reynolds Anderson Born, Trailblazer
Apr 10 all-day
Image may contain: 1 person, closeup

Cora Reynolds Anderson, born on April 10, 1882,  was the first woman elected to the Michigan House of Representatives, serving one term from 1925 to 1926. She is also believed to be the only Native American woman elected to the Michigan House or Senate.

While in the House of Representatives, Anderson concentrated on public welfare issues and chaired the Industrial Home for Girls Committee. She was particularly interested in public health issues, especially the fight against alcoholism and tuberculosis. Prior to her term, she had organized the first public health service in Baraga County and was instrumental in securing the county’s first public health nurse. She also became actively involved in the Michigan Grange and served as the Upper Peninsula officer.

Anderson was educated as a teacher at the Haskell Institute in Lawrence, Kansas, which is known today as the Haskell Indian Nations University. She taught school in the Upper Peninsula for several years. At a time when minorities, including Native Americans, were subjected to considerable economic and social discrimination, Anderson’s determination to attend college and return the benefits of her education to her community was notable. Her role as educator, legislator, and public health reform leader aided the Native American community as well as the whole of society.

Both the Anderson House Office Building in downtown Lansing and the recently opened Cora’s Cafe inside are named after her.

Sources :

Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame.

Rep. Dianda Honors Cora Anderson, Michigan’s First Female State Rep, Michigan House Democrats Blog, December 8, 2016.

“Women’s History Month: Cora Anderson, first in state house”, Lansing State Journal, March 23, 2014.

Photo source : Michigan Historical Review Facebook Page, April 10, 2017.

1882 : Famous Female Highwheeler Bicyclist Visits Detroit
Apr 10 all-day

Detroit, April 10-15, 1882

Elsa Von Blumen Aboard a Highwheeler.  Sometimes called a “Bone Shaker”, “Velocipede”, “Penny Farthing”, and “Ordinary”.

In the late 1870s women’s bicycle racing was developing into a popular spectator sport.  The first  exhibitions and/or races were held in France, but soon spread to the United States and then England.  Though some denounced the ladies as common showgirls, they were in fact highly trained and motivated athletes.  The press covered many of these events and helped make the female riders stars of the cycling world.   And the ladies were willing to compete in whatever fashion that guaranteed publicity and/or prize money, whether it be against  themselves, male cyclists, pedestrians, or even trotting horses.

In such a vein, Ms. Elsa Von Blumen (a pseudonym for Caroline Kiner) visited Detroit in April 1882 for an exhibition, promising to ride 1,000 miles in six days, something she’d accomplished in Pittsburgh back in December.   A custom velodrome (bicycle track) —  perhaps the first in Detroit — was built inside the former Music Hall for the occasion.

More About Van Blumen

According to the Auburn Bulletin, Tuesday, February 22, 1887, recycling an article from the Oswego Palladium, “Von Blumen was born in Pensacola, Florida, October 8, 1859 and moved to Albany, N.Y., in the following year. Her maiden name was Carrie Kiner. In 1865 she lived in Oswego. The cold winters, common to all cities upon the great chain of lakes, proved too severe for her delicate frame. She rapidly declined, and was pronounced by several physicians to be in the first stages of consumption. By the advice of friends, she undertook a course in physical exercise, often walking five or six miles a day, together with light exercise with dumb-bells and clubs. The beautiful results were soon manifest. She became possessed of extraordinary powers of endurance, and showed herself capable of undergoing prolonged exertion without injury. About six years ago she moved with her mother and sisters to Rochester, where she has since resided at No.75 Munroe avenue.”  For a short time, she was married, but the brief experience did not end happily and she soon returned to bicycle racing as a pursuit.

Von Blumen first made a name for herself as a pedestrian racer, which was also a popular sport at that time. There were plenty of endurance walking races, including six-day races in places like Madison Square Gardens and even Detroit.  While endurance racing was challenging, she eventually switched to highwheeler bicycle racing to help support her mother and younger sisters with prize money and appearance fees.

On one such occasion, on May 24, 1881, about 2,500 people gathered at Rochester’s Driving Park to watch the 21-year-old Von Blumen take on a race horse named Hattie R. They cheered as she beat the horse in two out of three heats.


Elsa Von Blumen racing Hattie R from Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper.

Sue Macy, author of the book “Wheels of Change” says she was “one of the first competitive female athletes in the United States” — a role model for girls and young women at the start of the suffrage movement.

She told Bicycling World in 1881, “I feel I am not only offering the most novel and fascinating entertainment now before the people, but am demonstrating the great need of American young ladies, especially, of physical culture and bodily exercise. Success in life depends as much upon a vigorous and healthy body as upon a clear and active mind.”

Her Detroit Endurance Event

Her visit to Detroit in 1882 didn’t start out well. She contracted a mild form of smallpox (called varioloid) shortly after arriving and was confined to the “pest house.” The case was very light and she soon recovered according to city’s Board of Health report.

To promote her race, images of her were posted at store shops around town. She offered a special invitation to other women.

Her plan was to ride for 91 hours at 11 miles an hour on a track that was 15 laps to a mile. The track was surveyed by the Assistant City Surveyor for accuracy. Chairs were arranged inside the track for spectators. There was a band to play music whenever she rode.

The Free Press downplayed her chances simply based on her appearance, “115 pounds, apparently not possessed of any of the physical characteristics essential to the successful accomplishment.”

She began her Detroit ride on Monday, April 10th, 1882 at 1 AM wearing a steel-gray suit trimmed with bullion fringe. She bowed to the crowd, got on her silver highwheeler bike, and the band started to play. She rode 35 miles in 3 hours before stopping for a two-hour sleep break. At the end of the first day, she’d ridden 140.

She mostly lived out of a Music Hall dressing room, ate three regular meals along with beef tea with crackers and some sips of port wine.

On Tuesday, she rode nearly 60 miles in the morning. Mr. Snow from the Detroit Bicycle Club rode with her for nine miles and crashed “in fine style” per the Free Press. The event manager also offered any local bicyclist $100 if they could match her miles for the final four days. She rode another 100 miles before the day was over.

Wednesday saw a slower pace at just over 10 MPH. Local ride “Robinson” was on the track riding behind her and hoping to win the $100 challenge. She finished the day with just over 449 miles.

Von Blumen continued on Thursday with another 70 miles by 3pm. The Free Press reported her looking “pan and wan, but as determined as ever.” She confidently stated that she would finish, but her nurse did mention her feet were getting cold. They had resorted to using a battery (!) to restore the blood circulation. She ended the day with 583 miles.

Because of the highwheeler’s design, taking a “header” was always a possibility.

Friday’s low moment occurred when a spectator stepped on the track and caused her to crash over the bars.  She was thrown up against the steam heaters, hurting her head, and bruising her right leg from hip to ankle. She was carried to her dressing room and everyone thought she was quitting. Not so. She was back on her bike in 30 minutes, dizzy, weak and riding slow. While she ended the day with 707 miles, Robinson was now 7.3 miles ahead of her.

She started riding on Saturday still sore from the previous day’s crash yet got in 46 miles by noon. Her pace quickened. She had 800 miles by her dinner break. Many Detroiters began filling the Hall to watch, but especially women.

At 11:58 PM she got in 850 miles and the crowd burst into enthusiastic applause. As she stopped, so did the orchestra It was an impressive endurance feat, but especially given her illness before the event began.

Robinson did out ride Von Blumen over the four days by just thirteen miles, earning himself the $100 prize.

Financial Troubles

Although the event drew a fair number of paying spectators, it still lost $400.  To help pay off her debt, Detroit citizens arranged a benefit race at Recreation Park. Von Blumen would race in a 5-mile time trial event and two 5-mile races against some horses. The Detroit Bicycle Club would also hold races for its members. There was a 25 cents admission.

But before the event took place, her doctor during the 1,000 mile attempt claimed he was owed $121 dollars and the police seized her bicycle.

Fortunately a sympathetic officer let her ride her bicycle and she beat both of the horses before a good number of onlookers.

Another benefit was held a week later where Von Blumen rode a 7.5 miles race against three horse relay team doing 15. She won by a mile, literally.

It appears she departed Detroit for Grand Rapids during the couple weeks that followed and probably stopped at other locations to race as well.  In 1886, she rode 367 miles in 51 hours in a race at Rochester’s Convention Hall against a pair of men. They took turns riding, but she beat them without needing a partner.  She continued bicycle racing until highwheeler bicycling went out of style.

A sketch of Elsa Von Blumen with her high-wheeler bicycle from 1885. Source- Local History & Genealogy Division, Rochester (NY) Public Library
A sketch of Elsa Von Blumen with her high-wheeler bicycle from 1885 courtesy of the  Rochester (NY) Public Library, Local History & Genealogy Division

It doesn’t appear she came back to Detroit, but she certainly left her mark. There’s little doubt her event inspired many Detroit women and girls to take up bicycling, but especially after the safety bicycle became popular in the 1890s.


Elsa von Blumen on a safety bicycle from Wheels of Change by Sue Macy.


Early Detroit Bicycle Shop showing both highwheelers and safety bicycles (Detroit News).

In 1896 Susan B. Anthony noted that “the bicycle has done more for the emancipation of women than anything else in the world.”  The bicycle craze helped kill the bustle and the corset, and instituted “common-sense dressing” for women and increased their mobility considerably.

Sources :

Sue Macey, “Elsa Von Blumen & Detroit’s first indoor bicycle track”, m-bike.org , January 26, 2018.

Further Reading: An interesting interview with Elsa Von Blumen about a “very funny incident.” It was published on the front page of the Detroit Free Press on April 28, 1882.

A Vintage Ride entry from the Webster Museum

Caroline Wilhelmina “Elsa Von Blumen” Kiner Roosevelt (1859-1935) entry from Find a Grave.

Mike Fishpool, “Lady Racers: The Origins of Women’s Cycle Racing“, Playing Pasts, June 25, 2018

Kentucky Wheelmen

Wheels of change : how women rode the bicycle to freedom (with a few flat tires along the way) / Sue Macy.  Washington, D.C. : National Geographic, [2011]  Take a lively look at women’s history from aboard a bicycle, which granted females the freedom of mobility and helped empower women’s liberation. Through vintage photographs, advertisements, cartoons, and songs, Wheels of Change transports young readers to bygone eras to see how women used the bicycle to improve their lives. Witty in tone and scrapbook-like in presentation, the book deftly covers early (and comical) objections, influence on fashion, and impact on social change inspired by the bicycle, which, according to Susan B. Anthony, “has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world.”

Bicycle : the history / David V. Herlihy.  New Haven : Yale University Press, [2004]  During the nineteenth century, the bicycle evoked an exciting new world in which even a poor person could travel afar and at will. But was the “mechanical horse” truly destined to usher in a new era of road travel or would it remain merely a plaything for dandies and schoolboys? In Bicycle: The History (named by Outside magazine as the #1 book on bicycles), David Herlihy recounts the saga of this far-reaching invention and the passions it aroused. The pioneer racer James Moore insisted the bicycle would become “as common as umbrellas.” Mark Twain was more skeptical, enjoining his readers to “get a bicycle. You will not regret it–if you live.” Because we live in an age of cross-country bicycle racing and high-tech mountain bikes, we may overlook the decades of development and ingenuity that transformed the basic concept of human-powered transportation into a marvel of engineering. This lively and engrossing history retraces the extraordinary story of the bicycle–a history of disputed patents, brilliant inventions, and missed opportunities. Herlihy shows us why the bicycle captured the public’s imagination and the myriad ways in which it reshaped our world.

1897 : Airship Mania Breaks Out in Michigan
Apr 10 all-day

Back in 1896-1987, the country was besieged with weird objects in the sky, that the media dubbed “airships.”

These sightings began in California, and from there spread across the country until it hit Michigan.

On the evening of April 10, 1897, the first Michigan airship sighting occurred in Alma. The next night, residents in Benton Harbor reported seeing airships floating over Lake Michigan for about 15 minutes before they faded out of sight. Witnesses from Benton Harbor and nearby St. Joseph claim these objects had flickering blue, red, and green lights.

The next Michigan report came from Black Lake near Holland, who claimed to have actually seen this ‘machine.’ More claims poured in: notably, Battle Creek, Charlotte, Comstock, Hart, Hudson, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Mendon, Middleville, Niles, Olivet, and Pavillion.

Townspeople began claiming to find bits and pieces of these machines, like a wheel and a letter dropped from the sky.

When Lansing residents started saying they saw this airship, the identity of these ‘lights’ ended up being just ‘fire balloons,’ paper balloons with candles to generate hot air to make them float. Afterward, anyone who boasted about seeing these UFO’s were immediately ridiculed…but the sightings continued throughout the state. Saginaw, Manistee, Marshall, Marquette, Saline, and Flint were among the latest cities where these mysterious ships were reported to be seen.

The few who say they actually saw the airship said it looked like a blimp, was around 100-300 feet long, and had wings that flapped like bird wings. One particular hard-to-believe sighting involved an actual landing in Reynolds, Michigan. Just like in the film “The Day The Earth Stood Still,” a very tall alien exited the airship and greeted the earth inhabitants.

Most of these were possibly just faked reports, with people wanting to cash in the notoriety that others across the country were receiving. Or was there actually some weird aircraft over Michigan? In 1897, yet?

California and most states that lead to Michigan all had claims of seeing this strange airship as it/they headed eastward across the nation. You can find out more about this in “Michigan and the Great Mass Hysteria Episode of 1897” by Robert E. Bartholomew by CLICKING HERE.

Read More: John Robinson,Michigan’s First UFO Sighting, 1897 , 99.1 WFMK, November 19, 2019.

1965 : DeZwaan Windmill Dedicated in Holland
Apr 10 all-day

 

DeZwaan windmill at Windmill Island Gardens

Every Holland schoolchild knows about DeZwaan, the 200-and-some-year-old Dutch windmill dismantled and reassembled in Holland in 1965.

However, the story you’ve heard is just the beginning.

“That story is much more fascinating, complicated and interesting than you would have believed,” Holland’s miller Alisa Crawford said.

For her new book, “DeZwaan: The True Story of America’s Authentic Dutch Windmill,” released this month for the historic machine’s recent golden anniversary in Holland, Crawford traveled to the Netherlands and delved into corners of DeZwaan’s history previously unknown, including just how old the windmill really is.

“This windmill is a lot of things,” Crawford said. “It’s a working machine; it’s a historical structure; it’s a symbol of Dutch heritage; it’s a workplace.”

The mill was formally dedicated on April 10, 1965 in Holland by Michigan Governor George Romney and Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands. They were pulling on a rope attached to a piece of wood symbolizing the release of the brake on the mill. Things went wrong when they brought down the timber instead. Fortunately no one was hurt.

Sources:

“Windmill De Zwaan more than just a symbol of Holland City’s roots; Reassembled in U.S. as a tower mill forty years ago”, courtesy of Wikipedia and GoDutch.com.

Andrea Goodell, “DeZwaan Windmill celebrates 50th anniversary”, Detroit Free Press, May 9, 2015.

Kathy Warnes, “De Zwaan-The Swan- Windmill Immigrates from Holland to Holland”, Meandering Michigan History.

Take a Look Inside DeZwaan Windmill in Holland, Michigan“,  Pure Michigan, April 22, 2014.

1989 : Original Sparty Outfit Resides in MSU Museum
Apr 10 all-day

Michigan State University Museum has this original Sparty costume in its collections. It’s very popular during collection tours.

Source : MSU Archives Tweet, April 10, 2019

2016 : Rev. Nicholas Hood Sr. Dies, Detroit Civil Rights Activist
Apr 10 all-day

Political leaders representing the City of Detroit, the State of Michigan and the halls of Congress reflected Monday on the life and contributions of the Rev. Nicholas Hood Sr., who served the Detroit community in the political and religious arenas for several decades.

Rev. Hood served on the Detroit City Council for 28 years, according to his biography on his church’s  website, before retiring in 1993. Elected to the council in 1965, Rev. Hood worked  to help economically disadvantaged, those who were discriminated against and developmentally‑disabled adults.

Rev. Hood also founded Cyprian Center in honor his daughter, Sarah Cyprian Hood, according to his biography, to help developmentally‑disabled adults. Rev. Hood has served on many governing and advisory boards including the advisory board of the Federal National Mortgage Association, the Detroit Economic Development Corp. and the Hannan Foundation.

Hood himself dealt with with a childhood spinal deformity that was corrected through extensive surgery and therapy at the Children’s Hospital of Indiana after he graduated from high school in Terre Haute, Ind., where he was the last of eight children born to Orestes and Daisy Hood, according to an an online autobiography.

He wore a steel body brace on his upper body during his freshman year at Purdue University, where he majored in biology and chemistry in preparation for entering medical school.

It was at Purdue, Hood wrote, that his career plan changed. He said he spent  his spare time working with a Methodist student group on building bridges across the racial divide in rural, white churches in northwest Indiana, and he decided to make that his life work. He later spent a year studying liberal arts at North Central College in Naperville, Ill., from which he was the first African American to receive a degree. He enrolled  at Yale University Divinity School in 1946 and graduated in 1949.

His first assignment was as pastor of the Central Congregational Church in New Orleans, and  was one of the founding members of the Southern Christian Leadership Council, where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. served as leader.

In 1958, Hood moved to Detroit to become senior pastor at Plymouth Congregational Church. His son, the Rev. Nicholas Hood III, is its current pastor and senior minister.

At the church, the senior Rev. Hood created a housing ministry and spearheaded the building and development of the 230-unit Medical Center Courts apartments in 1963, according to his biography. In 1975, Rev. Hood led the construction of the Medical Center Village Apartments, which consisted of 450 apartments, town homes and high‑rise building for senior ­citizens.

On October 16, 2016 a street sign honoring the Rev. Hood was unveiled at St. Antoine and Canfield.

For the full article, see Katrease Stafford, “Rev. Nicholas Hood Sr., religious, civic leader, dies“, Tresa Baldas, and Matt Helms, Detroit Free Press, April 11, 2016

James David Dickson, “Renamed street honors former pastor, civic leader Hood“, Detroit News, October 16, 2016

James David Dickson, “Street sign dedication ceremony for Rev. Nicholas Hood, Sr.”, The Detroit News, October 16, 2016

2017: Pistons Host Last Game at the Palace of Auburn Hills
Apr 10 all-day

April 10, 2017 : For the second night in a row, metro Detroit will bid farewell to a sports arena. On Sunday, it was the Detroit Red Wings playing their final game at Joe Louis Arena. Tonight, the Detroit Pistons host the Washington Wizards at 8 p.m. for the last game at the Palace of Auburn Hills, ending a 29-year tenure. The teams will share new Little Caesars Arena beginning in September.

For the full article, see Bill Shea, “After 29 years, Pistons say goodbye to the Palace tonight“, Crain’s Detroit Business, April 10, 2017.