On December 4, 1823, Territorial Governor Lewis Cass wrote Secretary of War John Calhoun warning him that the British were continuing to provide presents (government welfare) to Indians residing in Michigan. Although the British were officially forced to give up any claims to Michigan by losing the War of 1812, they would continue to meddle in Michigan internal affairs until at least 1829.
Source : Pasty Central Day in Michigan : December 4
For more information about Lewis Cass, see Bill Loomis, “Lewis Cass, the titan of Michigan’s early years”, Detroit Free Press, June 28, 2014.
The Battle of Windsor Historical Marker in front of Francois Baby House, Hiram Walker Historical Museum in Windsor Ontario
“Early on December 4, 1838, a force of about 140 American and Canadian supporters of William Lyon Mackenzie crossed the river from Detroit and landed about one mile east of here. After capturing and burning a nearby militia barracks, they took possession of Windsor. In this vicinity they were met and routed by a force of some 130 militiamen commanded by Colonel John Prince. Four of the invaders taken prisoner were executed summarily by order of Colonel Prince. This action caused violent controversy in both Canada and the United States. The remaining captives were tried and sentenced at London, Upper Canada. Six were executed, eighteen transported to a penal colony in Tasmania and sixteen deported.”
The Battle of Windsor was part of a plot by Patriots in 1837 and 1838 to seize the portion of Ontario between the Detroit and Niagara Rivers and place them under control of the United States of America.
Sources :
Battle of Windsor Wikipedia Entry
The Patriot War by the Michigan Department of Military and Veteran Affairs.
The patriot war, [electronic resource] by Robert B. Ross. Pub. in Detroit evening news, 1890. Revised by the author for the Michigan pioneer and historical society. Access limited to the MSU community.
Baptists opened Michigan Central College in Spring Arbor on December 4, 1844. It was the first in Michigan to grant degrees to women.
Nine years later, the college was moved to Hillsdale and reorganized as Hillsdale College.
Hillsdale was the first American college to ban racial, religious and sexual discrimination in its charter. It was the second to grant 4-year liberal arts degrees to women.
Mainly because of professor and preacher Ransom Dunn’s efforts, Hillsdale managed to survive the Civil War; 80% of colleges founded before the war did not.
Hillsdale’s students who fought in the Civil War received high honors, too. Of 400 Hillsdale students who joined the Union Army, four won the Medal of Honor from Congress and three became generals.
As a result of Hillsdale’s antislavery reputation and its role in shaping the Republican Party, many speakers such as Frederick Douglass and politician Edward Everett visited the school.
Source : Historical Society of Michigan and Emily Hopcian, This Week in Michigan History, Detroit Free Press, December 2, 2007, B.4.
Dr. Alfred Day Hershey won the Nobel Prize in 1969 for his pioneering work.
Hershey was born in Owosso on Dec. 4, 1908. He lived his first four years in Owosso, then moved with his family to Lansing, where he graduated from the old Lansing Central High School before attending Michigan State College of Agriculture & Applied Science (now MSU), where he received a B.S. degree in bacteriology and a PhD. in chemistry. Following graduation, Hershey served on the faculty and as a researcher (1934-1950) at Washington University in St. Louis, MO, and later as a researcher (1950-1972) and Director of the Genetics Research Unit (1962-1972) at the Carnegie Institution’s Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island, New York.
In 1952, Hershey and his lab assistant discovered, demonstrated, proved and confirmed that DNA carries the genetic Code of Life. Lauded as one of the greatest discoveries of the modern age, it serves as a foundation for advances in over 100 branches of biology, medicine and anthropology.
Hershey made additional discoveries, including the growth stages of viruses, spontaneous mutations in viruses, viral hybridization, the chemical later identified as messenger RNA, the genetic volume of viruses, how to weigh DNA, how to accurately divide and break DNA, and that some DNA is single-stranded and some circularized.
For his achievements, Hershey, already a PhD., was made an Honorary Doctor of Science by the University of Chicago (1967), and an Honorary Doctor of Medical Science by Michigan State University (1970). Additionally, Hershey was elected to the National Academy of Sciences (1958), was co-winner of the Albert Lasker Basic Medical Science Award (1958), was winner of the Kimber Genetics Award (1965), and in 1969 was co-winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology for “discoveries concerning the replication mechanism and the genetic structure of viruses.”
In 2018, Owosso historian Fox, with financial support from current state Rep. Ben Frederick (R-Owosso) and former state legislator William S. (Bill) Ballenger, produced a 212-page application for a Michigan Historical Marker to honor Hershey. It was approved by the State of Michigan. This was a full half-century after Hershey had been honored with a House Concurrent Resolution (#277) passed unanimously by the Michigan Legislature back in 1969.
On May 20, 2019, Hershey, The scientist who discovered that DNA carries the genetic Code of Life, will be honored today with a Michigan Historical Marker at his birthplace in Owosso, Michigan.
Source : Bill Ballenger Report, May 20, 2019.
Burton Memorial Tower was erected during the 1935-36 school year and was formally dedicated on December 4, 1936. It was created as a memorial to former President Marion Leroy Burton, who served as president at UM from 1920-25. According to UM, The Charles Baird Carillon in the tower is the third or fourth heaviest in the world. It sits atop the tower, containing 53 bells cast in 1936 by the John Taylor & Co. Bellfoundry in Loughborough, England. The largest bell, which strikes the hour, weighs 12 tons, and the smallest bell, 4 1/2 octaves higher, weighs 15 pounds. In 2011, the carillon underwent a complete restoration, returning the original highest two octaves of bells and the original clavier. The public can keep track of what songs are being played during 30-minute recitals, which are performed at noon every weekday when classes are in session. You can follow happenings with the tower on Twitter and Facebook.
Check out additional coverage of the University of Michigan Bicentennial here.
For the full article, see “Get rare historic look inside UM’s iconic bell tower“, MLive, February 26, 2017.
Every great sporting event — actually, every great event period — has its breakthrough, watershed moment. That instantaneous dividing line between the way they used to do stuff and the way we do it now. Like Oct. 22, 1879, when Thomas Edison brought the first incandescent light bulb to life. Or Sept. 5, 1906, when St. Louis University quarterback Bradbury Robinson threw football’s first legal forward pass.
Then there is December 4, 2010, when those first two moments came together and a light bulb revelation concerning a football toss forever changed a most-American of contests.
That’s when a 20-year-old woman from Grand Rapids, Michigan, walked onto the field of the Georgia Dome and won the Dr Pepper Tuition Giveaway by pumping seven out of 10 footballs into a giant replica soda can … and did so by launching those oblong spheres two-handed. Her football form wasn’t Tom Brady passing for paydirt. It was more like LeBron James finding a teammate on the break.
This weekend, for the 10th consecutive year, those ginormous Dr Pepper cans will once again stand in the end zones of the Power Five conference title games. A pair of combatants will stand at the 5-yard line, hoping to fill those cans with as many footballs as humanly possible before the 30-second clock expires. The winners will receive $100,000 scholarships, the latest checks cut by Dr Pepper (the grand prizes have varied in value from year to year), out of a grand total of $10 million and counting.
Thanks to that trailblazer from 2010, those winners will perhaps achieve their glory via nonconventional throwing mechanics. The internet will absolutely complain about that fact. And he or she who dared to offend the internet by winning that way will absolutely not care.
“What did you ask? Did I change football history?” Nikki Boon says with a laugh. “Is that what happened? OK, I’ll take that. Because maybe I also helped change some people’s lives that night. I know that night changed my life forever.”
Boon is on the phone from Nashville, Tennessee, where she is living out her dreams and fulfilling the promise that she made to America on national television that night in 2010 to change the world through music. You might have heard of Kane Brown, the country superstar whose sophomore album just debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard country charts. Boon is Brown’s day-to-day manager and is busy planning his upcoming tour.
But before we get to that, let’s go back to find out how we got to a halftime world of scholarships won and social media timelines set ablaze via shovel passes and shot-put throws.
The first edition of the Dr Pepper halftime throw took place during intermission of the 2008 ACC championship in Tampa, Florida, a matchup between Virginia Tech and Boston College that was also title-sponsored by the soft drink giant. Contestants had 30 seconds to throw 10 footballs into the replica can. Both New Jersey’s Geza Kenna III and Georgia’s Ronnie Botts went with conventional one-handed, over-the-shoulder throws. It wasn’t pretty. There was even a little heckling from the crowd. But Kenna defeated Botts 7-4, crying as he was mobbed by the mascots of the ACC.
The following year, Sarah Beth Hill, a medical student at South Alabama and — gulp — A GIRL(!) took her sweet time as she drained nine of 10 throws, taking up the entire 30-second clock while her too-hurried opponent was forced to stand and watch her finish.
“That was exactly how I taught her to do, not to get into a hurry and take her time,” says Brendt Bedsole, who coached Hill before she traveled to Atlanta for the SEC championship. These days Bedsole coaches and teaches at Spanish Fort (Alabama) High School. In 2009, he was the director of football operations for the brand new South Alabama program. Hill, who had never even held a football in her hands before applying for the Dr Pepper contest, took her father’s advice and reached out to Jaguars head coach Joey Jones, who immediately sent her to Bedsole and his former Auburn teammate Dameyune Craig. Craig said he was too busy as wide receivers coach, so Hill became Bedsole’s pet project.
“She was out on the practice field every single day, throwing it hundreds of times toward a target we made for her,” Bedsole remembers. “I would stand there with a stopwatch and keep repeating, ‘Slow down! Slow down! The other guy is going to go too fast, I promise.'”
He did indeed. Meanwhile, Hill dropped back on each pass, looking like an animation from a QB academy instructional video.
“This is good stuff,” says Duke head coach David Cutcliffe as he examines film of Hill’s efforts on YouTube. Coach Cut is one of the game’s most respected quarterback whisperers and the perpetual personal coach to the Manning boys, Peyton and Eli. “She takes a nice drop step, she brings her right arm up and cocked, her left arm as well to help aim the nose of the ball. Her eyes are locked on the target. She even has a little loose, bouncy legwork in those knees. I’m impressed. This is textbook passing right here. That’s why she won.”
“I’ve been coaching 30-plus years and I’ve never [been] more nervous or been prouder in my life than I was watching Sarah that night,” confesses Bedsole, who starts every semester showing the video of Hill’s victory to his high school classes. “I watch it back all the time. And now she’s a doctor because that money helped her pay for school. It makes me so dang proud.”
Well, Coach, does it give you a little extra pride in knowing that Hill was one of the last to win her $123,000 scholarship money by way of old-school, gridiron throwing mechanics?
“I’m sorry, what?”
Yeah, it’s all chest passes now.
“I was not aware of that. How in the world did that happen?”
It was fall 2010, when Boon saw the contest information on a Dr Pepper 12-pack carton and decided to send in her video submission. In that video, she admitted that she was a lifelong devotee of the beverage, but also explained her college situation. She was a sophomore at a small music college in Minnesota and that was fine, but her dream was to move to Nashville and enroll in the music programs at Belmont University or Middle Tennessee State. She’d told her father that’s what she wanted to do and he supported her, but they both knew they couldn’t afford it.
“On the video I told them I wanted to change the world through music,” she recalls now. “And I meant that. I think they knew that I did, because it was only two days later when they called and said I was going to Atlanta to throw footballs for a $100,000 scholarship.”
From the moment she told her friends and family about her shot, everyone in her family was all-in. The father of her then-boyfriend (now-husband) worked in construction, and he got the specs for the giant Dr Pepper can and built Boon a practice target. For several weeks she threw at least 100 balls a day at that target, recruiting her classmates as ball boys and ball girls. She watched the video of Sarah Beth Hill and mimicked those mechanics, but her 30-second results always hovered in the five-to-seven out of 10 range.
One night, during her evening duties as a hostess at Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse in Minneapolis, someone tipped off one of the regular customers about Boon’s upcoming challenge. Ray Edwards, then a defensive end for the Minnesota Vikings, suggested that she throw the football like a basketball. A two-handed chest pass, he reasoned, would be more accurate and allow her to put a little oomph behind each throw. Boon thanked him for the advice and then immediately blew it off.
“I was like, I don’t think I could do that,” she admits now. “Plus, I didn’t want to look like I didn’t know what I was doing.”
But in the days leading up to her trip south, she was still stuck in a 5-to-7 makes rut. So during her last home practice session, a friend begged her to try the Edwards method.
“I said, ‘Fine! I’ll do it once!’ And the first time I tried it I went 10-for-10. It was the first time during all those weeks that I’d gone 10-for-10.” Stunned, but convinced, she immediately shut it down, went back to her apartment and emailed Dr Pepper HQ in Plano, Texas.
“I asked them, ‘OK, what are the exact rules?'” Boon remembers. “They said, ‘It just has to go from your hands to the target. That’s it.’ I was like, OK then …”
The next day, in Atlanta, she gathered with the other finalists for a throw-off to see which two would be on the big stage 24 hours later in the Georgia Dome and live on CBS. Worried someone might steal her plan of attack, Boon stuck to convention in her warm-ups with her father. But when the eliminations began, she unleashed the chest pass.
“The Dr Pepper people were like, ‘You’re really going to do this?’ They couldn’t believe it. I looked at them and said, ‘So, we’re cool with this?’ They never had no problem with it all; they just couldn’t believe I was doing it.”
In fact, the competition section of the contest rules is the same now as it was then and only 150 words long. It says to show up on time for all events, bring no equipment, don’t wear cleats, don’t wear gloves and no third-party can assist with the throws. It also states:
Passes must pass from contestant’s hands, fully through the Target in the Can Replica, without touching the ground or any object or surface other than the Can Replica, all as solely determined by Sponsor or its judge, in order to be considered a “Successful Pass.”
That’s it.
On Saturday, as Boon stepped up to the 5-yard line and took her place beside the Dr Pepper cooler full of footballs, she thought about the challenge. She thought to herself, “If I lose, then I’ve had a great experience and I’ll win the $25,000 (runner-up scholarship money) and I’ll go back to Minnesota. If I win, then in 20 days I’ll be moving to Nashville to make my dreams come true.”
She made three in a row and five of the first six. After two misses, she paused, gathered herself and finished with two straight. Final score: Nikki Boon’s chest pass 7, Matt Fairfield’s football pass 5. Within seconds, cheerleaders with congratulations and Dr Pepper executives with a giant check for $123,000 were swarming her. While she exclaimed how the moment would change her life, the millions who had watched were exclaiming all kinds of noise about her tactics.
That started in the CBS broadcast booth, where color commentator Gary Danielson said to America, “A two-handed chest pass is going to win this tournament … who knew?” while play-by-play legend Verne Lundquist respectfully declared, “That looked like a 1955 basketball game.” Meanwhile, football fans took to Facebook and still-new Twitter to try to make sense out of what they’d just witnessed.
“The Dr Pepper people called me and said, ‘We’re going to have to change the rules because of this!'” Boon remembers. “But they didn’t change the throwing rules. They changed the game. Instead of 10 balls in 30 seconds they went with as many balls as you can throw in 30 seconds.”
The furor over football mechanics didn’t last long. The football game restarted and everyone moved on … until the next year. That’s when Katelyn Watson and Ivon Padilla-Rodriguez squared off in Atlanta and neither one of them went with a traditional one-armed throw. Watson’s full chest pass drained 10 passes, but Padilla-Rodriguez, with help from Nevada Wolfpack QB Cody Fajardo, devised a system to keep her weight and shoulders balanced out, holding one football in her left hand while throwing another with her right. They both started with five in a row before Padilla-Rodriguez won 13-10.
Ever since, the chest pass has ruled. And ever since, those who believe it’s their job to guard the gates of everything that ensures football is actually football have been appalled. Last year at the Big Ten and Pac-12 championships, University of South Dakota junior Sawyer Stevens and Fox Valley Tech’s Trent Waring were chest-pass machines. Almost immediately, they inspired a “Should the chest pass be banned in the Dr Pepper halftime contest?” discussion thread on Reddit, and both were heavily mocked across all social media platforms.
Neither contestant cared. At all. First, they’d been warned by the folks at Dr Pepper that their approaches would come with a hefty serving of digital snark. In 2016, George Fox University student Kyle Degman had been ripped for his basketball-ish tosses at the Pac-12 title game, though they were more free throw than chest pass. (Side note: Take one look at the kid’s contest entry video and you’ll see he can wing a football just fine.)
Every finals winner — and every runner-up — all sing the same chorus when it comes to questions about their technique.
“I was trying to win $100,000 to secure my future and to relieve the stress on my family trying to make my dreams come true,” Stevens said one year ago. “Besides, I’ve had plenty of perspective in my life.”
This weekend, Boon will be watching and rooting for every contest finalist. And her advice is the same for anyone lucky enough to stand where she once did, gripping a football at the 5-yard line and staring down an oversized soda can.
“For 30 seconds, don’t care what anyone thinks,” she says. “Don’t care how crazy you might look to them. Don’t care if some guy somewhere says you’re doing it wrong. However you want to do it is the right way to do it. You have 30 seconds to literally change your life forever. Thirty seconds. Who cares how you look?”
Ryan McGee, “How a two-handed football toss changed lives and championship week forever”, ESPN, November 29, 2018.
Built at Erie, Pennsylvania and commissioned in 1843, the U.S.S. Michigan spent its entire career patrolling the Great Lakes. For most of its term of service, it was the only iron-hulled ship patrolling the Great Lakes in the United States Navy. During its early years of service, the ship and its crew patrolled the Great Lakes for timber pirates. On one occasion, a timber-pirate steamer rammed the U.S.S. Michigan, but due to the U.S.S. Michigan’s iron hull, the pirate ship was disabled and captured by the U.S.S. Michigan’s crew. In may 1851, the U.S.S. Michigan also assisted in the arrest of James Jesse Strang, the leader of a dissident Mormon colony on Beaver Island in Lake Michigan.
During the Civil War, the U.S.S. Michigan continued to patrol the Great Lakes. Union officials utilized the ship to protect the Great Lakes as well as to quell civilian unrest in port cities. Authorities dispatched the U.S.S. Michigan to prevent draft riots in Detroit, Michigan and in Buffalo, New York. Following the Detroit expedition, John C. Carter, the commander of the U.S.S. Michigan, reported, “I found the people suffering under serious apprehensions of a riot….The presence of the ships perhaps did something toward overawing the refractory, and certainly did much to allay the apprehensions of the excited, doubting people.”
On multiple occasions during the war, Confederate forces hoped to commandeer the ship. In early 1863, William Henry Murdaugh, a lieutenant in the Confederate Navy, intended to capture the U.S.S. Michigan by sailing a steamship, which he would purchase in Canada, alongside the warship and commandeering the ship with Southern naval officers. Confederate authorities never endorsed the plan, and the mission did not occur.
In September 1864, Confederates actually carried out an attempt to capture the U.S.S. Michigan. The leaders of this attempt were Captain Charles Cole, a purported member of Nathan Bedford Forrest’s Confederate cavalry, and Captain John Yates Beall, a member of the Southern navy. Confederate officials hoped that these two men could free the Confederate officers at Johnson’s Island, a Northern prison camp on an island in Sandusky Bay of Lake Erie. The freed men would then proceed by hijacked railroad train to Camp Chase, a Union prison camp for Confederate enlisted men, which was located in Columbus, Ohio, where the former prisoners at Johnson’s Island would free these other inmates. The two sets of prisoners would return to Sandusky, Ohio, where they would form a new army with the 2,700 prisoners currently at Johnson’s Island and the approximately 5,000 inmates from Camp Chase. Commanded by Major General Isaac Trimble, the highest-ranking officer imprisoned at Johnson’s Island, this new Confederate Army of the Northwest would principally operate in Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan, helping other Southern armies defeat the North.
Cole was the principal ringleader of the expedition. During the summer of 1864, he entered Sandusky, posing as the secretary of the Mount Hope Oil Company of Titusville, Pennsylvania. He soon befriended several officers on the U.S.S. Michigan. Cole hoped that he and his associates could seize control of the ship and use the vessel to free the Confederate prisoners on Johnson’s Island. He also had ten Confederate soldiers successfully enlist in the 128th Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry, which served as the main force that guarded the prisoners. Cole also sought assistance from members of the Sons of Liberty, a group of Confederate sympathizers who resided in Northern states, and from Jacob Thompson, the Confederate States of America’s commissioner to the Canadian government. Beall also recruited twenty-five men to assist him in his portion of the expedition.
On September 19, 1864, Cole and Beall launched their plan. Beall and his compatriots boarded the Philo Parsons, a passenger and transport ship that principally travelled from Detroit, Michigan, to Toledo, Ohio, and finally to Sandusky, with stops at Windsor, Malden, and Sandwich, ports on Lake Erie that are located in Canada. Some of these twenty-six raiders boarded the Philo Parsons at each Canadian stop. The only luggage that these men brought onboard the ship was a single trunk, filled with revolvers and hatchets. Following a stop at Kelley’s Island, Ohio, the Confederates seized control of the ship. They ordered the helmsman to head for Middle Bass Island, Ohio, where the Southerners put the Philo Parsons’s passengers, including thirty-five members of recently discharged Company K of the 130th Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry, onshore. While the Confederates were still at Middle Bass Island, another ship, the Island Queen, came along side and tied onto the Philo Parsons. The Confederates seized this new ship, but in the process, gunshots occurred, with the Southerners wounding the Island Queen’s engineer and Alonzo Miller, a resident of Put-in-Bay, Ohio. Beall then had these two ships sail towards Sandusky, but approximately three miles from Middle Bass Island, he had his crew scuttle theIsland Queen on a reef. The Philo Parsons continued towards Johnson’s Island, where it stopped just short, in sight of the U.S.S. Michigan but disguised by darkness.
Meanwhile, Cole was onboard the U.S.S. Michigan. He was participating in a dinner with his befriended Union officers. His intention was to drug the wine, incapacitating the Union officers. Beall would then sail the Philo Parsons alongside the U.S.S. Michigan, allowing Beall’s men to jump onboard the U.S.S. Michigan, taking control of the ship. The Confederates would then use the U.S.S. Michigan to free the prisoners on Johnson’s Island.
Several factors caused the plan to fail. First, seventeen of Beall’s men became convinced that Union authorities knew of the plan and refused to participate. Beall immediately sailed for Sandwich, where he destroyed the Philo Parsons and dismissed his crew. Union officials did know of the plan, due to a prisoner, a Colonel Johnson from Kentucky, notifying his guards at Johnson’s Island. A Union officer from Johnson’s Island boarded the U.S.S. Michigan shortly before midnight, the appointed time for the attack. He approached Cole and stated, “Captain Cole, you are my prisoner.” Cole responded, “Captain–captain of what? Certainly no man will accuse me of being a soldier.” The Northern officer responded, “No. But here is a telegram saying you are a Confederate spy and are in a conspiracy to capture Johnson’s Island. It orders your arrest. We must at least take you into custody.” Thus ended Cole’s attempt to seize Johnson’s Island.
Following the Civil War, the U.S.S. Michigan continued to patrol the Great Lakes. On June 17, 1905, officials renamed the ship the U.S.S. Wolverine, as the U.S. Navy was preparing to commission a new battleship named the U.S.S. Michigan. Authorities decommissioned the warship on May 6, 1912, when it joined the Pennsylvania Naval Militia. The ship remained with the Pennsylvania Naval Militia until August 12, 1923, when a connecting rod in the warship’s port cylinder broke, ending its military career. The U.S.S. Michigan’s prow is now part of the Erie (Pennsylvania) Maritime Museum.
“U.S.S. Michigan” (2012) In Ohio Civil War Central, Retrieved August 19, 2012, from Ohio Civil War Central.
20 Years Before the Ironclads, the USS Michigan
The USS Michigan – the First Iron Ship of Her Age
Naval Warfare, December 31, 2007.
On December 5, 1858, Chief Okemos died near Portland. The Michigan Legislature honored his memory by renaming Hamilton, Michigan in his honor. Later on a Michigan historical marker was also dedicated to him and the early history of Okemos.
Although details on his life are spotty, Chief John Okemos was the nephew and a scout for Chief Pontiac, who attempted to drive the British out of Michigan by laying siege to Detroit early in Michigan’s history. Either at the Battle of Sandusky or the siege of Fort Miegs, he was severely wounded fighting on the side of the British against the Americans and bore saber scars for the rest of his life.
Later on Chief Okemos made his peace with the Americans at Fort Wayne in Detroit in 1814 and later signed the Treaty of Saginaw with Lewis Cass, the first territorial Governor of Michigan in 1819. A grave marker survives where he was buried in Ionia County, near Portland.
Sources :
Michigan Every Day.
Chief Okemos in Life and Death
Chief Johnny Okemos with pictures. (Find-a Grave)
Michigan History Magazine, volume 6
The Sebewa Recollector, June 1994, Volume 29, Number 6; “Danby Township – Grand River Heritage” from the Grand River Heritage Water Trails Assn.; The Portland, Michigan Centennial Book
Bill Castanier, “The surprise return of Chief Okemos“, Lansing City Pulse, August 28, 2009.
Marion Turner Reasoner, “When I Was a Young Girl (Chief Okemos Story)“,
Lansing State Republican, November 30, 1899. Abigail C. Rogers sister remembers Chief Okemos.
John Robinson, “The Grave Site of Chief Okemos”, 99.1 WFMK Facebook, May 28, 2020.
On December 5, 1922, James Couzens resigned as Mayor of Detroit to accept his appointment to the U.S. Senate. Couzens was appointed by Governor Alexander Groesbeck to fill the Michigan senate seat that was vacated by the resignation of Truman H. Newberry in the wake of election campaign irregularities. Couzens went on to be elected in his own right for two additional terms before his death in 1936.
Source : Detroit Historical Society
On December 5, 1933, the 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution officially repealed the National Prohibition Act, which had banned sale and consumption of alcohol since the 18th Amendment took effect in 1920.
Michigan’s own ban on booze in 1917 laid the groundwork for an extensive bootlegging and smuggling network across the Canadian border, hauling in 75 percent of all the alcohol smuggled into the U.S. during Prohibition and distributing it nationwide. Illegal distilleries in the metro Detroit area also helped keep the bars stocked. By 1929, rumrunning was Detroit’s second largest industry, netting $215 million a year. It’s estimated that there were somewhere between 16,000 and 25,000 speakeasies operating in the Detroit area before Prohibition was repealed.
Source: Wayne State University Reuther Library