Calendar

Jul
22
Mon
1908 : Fisher Body Company Incorporated
Jul 22 all-day

On July 22, 1908, brothers Fred and Charles Fisher incorporated the Fisher Body Company with financing assistance from an uncle. Within a short time, Fred and Charles brought their five younger brothers into the business. In 1919, General Motors bought 60 percent of what was then known as Fisher Body Corporation. It was dissolved into other GM operations in 1984, so GM models ceased having the familiar “Body by Fisher” emblem on their door sill plates.

Source : Detroit Historical Society Facebook page

1911 : Owasippe, Nation’s Oldest Boy Scouts Camp
Jul 22 all-day

It was 1911 when the boys from Chicago first climbed aboard a steamship to head into wilds unknown.

They were among a new breed who called themselves Boy Scouts, committed to being helpful, loyal, obedient and brave, among other virtues.

When the Boy Scouts finally disembarked in Whitehall, a world away from the bustle of city life, the townspeople lined the streets to greet them. Dressed in military-style uniforms, the boys paraded through town on their way to their new wilderness outpost on Crystal Lake about 3½ miles away.

There, among the pines, scrub oak and clear waters, they settled Camp Owasippe.

Camp Owasippe website

Owasippe Camp Reservation wikipedia entry

Owasippe Scout Reservation History

For the full article, see Lynn Moore, Owasippe, nation’s oldest Boy Scouts camp, celebrates 100th birthday, Muskegon Chronicle via MLive, July 22, 2011.

1930 : Detroit Mayor Recalled Over Corruption Charges and Ties With KKK
Jul 22 all-day

July 22, 1930 – Mayor Charles Bowles of Detroit is recalled in the first large-city mayoral recall in the United States. Charges of corruption and ties with the KKK results in his demise.

The day before the recall, the Free Press ran a front-page editorial urging readers to unseat Bowles. After the recall, the paper called it “the most remarkable political happening in the history of the city, possibly the most remarkable one in the history of any great American municipality.

Sources :

Zlati Meyer, “Detroit mayor first big-city leader to be recalled”, Detroit Free Press, July 21, 2013.

Jul
23
Tue
1872 : Elijah J. McCoy Patent Granted
Jul 23 all-day

On July 23, 1872, Elijah J. McCoy, an Afro-American inventor raised in Ypsilanti, patented the first automatic lubricator for locomotives and other machinery. His device was so effective “the real McCoy” became synonymous with anything genuine or authentic.

Many years later, McCoy would be honored again by having the first satellite office of the U.S. Patent Office names after him on July 13, 2012 in Detroit. The Elijah J. McCoy Office is located in the Stroh River Place building in Detroit.

Source : Historical Society of Michigan, Michigan Historical Calendar.

For more information about Elijah J. McCoy, see Dr. Burton W. Folsom, Remembering “The Real McCoy”, Mackinac Center for Public Policy Viewpoints on Public Issues, February 5, 1996.

Created equal : the lives and ideas of Black American innovators / James Michael Brodie.

1913 : Calumet Copper Miners Strike Children’s Parade
Jul 23 all-day

Here’s a photo from July 23, 1913 showing children marching in Calumet during the tumultuous miners’ strikes of 1913. It’s an interesting case study for our modern world given that the driver was the same driver that’s beginning to impact our labor market – automation. The excellent article Labor unions, strikes and violence in the Keweenaw: The Copper Miner Strike of 1913 – this is seriously great work by Frank Zawada’s descendent(s) – the article says that there  had been strikes in the Keweenaw in 1872, 1874, 1890 and 1893, but they hadn’t turned deadly. And then:

Around 1910, the mining companies sought to cut back the expenses of mining, and they started to consider lighter machinery such as the J. George Leyner rock drills. Leyners drills were 154-pounds heavy, compared to the 293-pound drills then in use at the mines. Not only that, but the smaller drills could drill just as much as the larger drills but with only one person to man it, instead of two.

The mining companies tried these drills out with the miners, and it was pretty unanimous; the miners didn’t like the new drills. First of all, the men complained that the drills were still too heavy for one man to carry, set up and operate. Secondly, losing a drilling partner opened up safety concerns – who would watch out for the guy alone on the drill if something should happen to him in the loud, darkened mine? Third, but related to number two, was worker concern of being displaced to a lower-paying job or of losing one’s job altogether when the one-man drills became the standard.

Discontent brewed amongst the workers in the mines, and some miners refused to use the drills. Some got into fights with the management about the drills. And some miners walked off the job or were told to leave for disobeying the new rules. Before things could get too crazy, winter set in and so the miners calmed the labor unrest. By early 1913, tensions were running at maximum capacity between workers and the mining companies on the Keweenaw Peninsula.

Read on for more about this strike that turned into one of Michigan’s most deadly labor struggles, including the Italian Hall Massacre of Christmas 1913 in which dozens and dozens of of these children lost their lives.

View the photo background big and see more in Wystan’s slideshow.

Source: “The Calumet Children’s March and the Keweenaw Miners Strike”, Michigan In Pictures, July 24, 2017.

1915 : The Newill Smith Automobile Tax Law Expected to Generate $1,750,000 in Tax Revenue
Jul 23 all-day

The Newill Smith Automobile Tax Law is expected to generate about $1,750,00 in fees for the coming year; only half of that amount will be returned to counties where it is collected. The tax will be calculated based on 25 cents tax on horsepower and 25 cents per hundred pounds of car. The ordinary Ford car should cost about $11 in taxes.

NEW AUTO TAX TO NET STATE IN FEES ABOUT $1,750,000: Only Half This Amount Will Be Returned to Counties Where Paid. ESTIMATED THAT 135,000 TAGS WILL BE SOLD IN 1916 Cost of Ford License Will Be About $11; Other Makes Higher., Detroit Free Press, July 24, 1915. [Note access to the Detroit Free Press available to the MSU community or to visitors of the Main Library.]

1932 : Jerome T. Hart , One of Michigan’s Longest Serving Senators, Born
Jul 23 all-day

July 23, 1932

Jerome T. Hart (1932-1995), was Saginaw’s state senator from 1965 to 1991, becoming one of the Legislature’s most senior statesmen before term limits were enacted in the early 1990s. The Democrat, a lifelong Saginaw resident and a former assistant to the state treasurer, held numerous leadership roles during his time in the Senate, including chairman of the powerful Appropriations Committee, and he made public education his cause. He battled diabetes all his life and suffered a stroke in 1981 but still represented his community for nearly another decade before losing the 1990 election.

In the 1982 election, redistricting put Hart in the same Senate district — the 14th — as fellow Senator Robert D. Young. Hart won the election in what was one of the most heated Senate races in the state.

Jon Cisky, who bested Hart in 1990, introduced the resolution to rename the Saginaw state office building in Hart’s honor.

Sources: The Political Graveyard, Gongwer News Service, legislative records, DTMB

Jerome T. Hart wikipedia entry

Justin A. Hinkley, “Murray who? Meet state office buildings’ namesakes”, Lansing State Journal, October 27, 2015.

1958 : Dutch Village Opens
Jul 23 all-day

On July 3, 1958, Dutch Village opened for the first time.  According to the Holland Sentinel, it only had two customers and made $12.73.

Image result for Dutch Village Celebrates 60 Years

The history of the business actually goes back further to Nelis’ grandfather, who started Nelis Tulis Farms nearly 100 years ago, growing daffodils first and shortly thereafter tulips as well to supply area markets.  After observing all of the visitors who would stop along the highway for a look, he decided to broaden the business to handle direct sales.  Then  they opened a cafe, to serve lunch so customers would stay longer.  That was how the Queens’ Inn restaurant was born.

Through the years, the business purchased an organ, added Dutch dancing and soon learned they could charge admission. It started at between 25-50 cents per car load and then went to a per person basis charging at the entrance into the park.

The original tulip farm remained in business through the years along with Dutch Village, but then, in the 1970s, Joe’s father closed the tulip farm, opting instead to focus full time on Dutch Village.

In December 2017, the Queens’ Inn and the windmill on top of it were taken down and today, the business now includes everything from a petting zoo and 90-foot zip line all the way to a Dutch chair swing ride and a rentable event space.

Special events scheduled for the 60th anniversary.

Source: Austin Metz, “Dutch Village Celebrates 60 Years“, Holland Sentinel via U.S. News and World Report, April 2, 2018.

1967: Detroit Race Riot Begins
Jul 23 all-day

 

A massive race riot erupted in Detroit. The summer of 1967 was a turbulent time in American history. The Detroit rioting began near 12th Street and Clairmount in a predominantly African-American, overcrowded, and low-income neighborhood. Early on the morning of July 23, Detroit police officers raided a “blind pig,” which was an establishment that illegally sold alcohol after hours. A crowd gathered as those arrested were put in a police wagon. Riots erupted and quickly spread. Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh asked Michigan’s governor, George Romney, to send in the State Police. Eventually, Romney called in the National Guard. After eight dangerous and unfortunate days, the riot came to an end. The riot’s immediate effects were disastrous. Forty-three people had lost their lives. 1,700 stores had been looted. In all, 7,231 people were arrested and over 1000 buildings were burned. Damages to property amounted to about $50 million. As a result of this debacle, President Lyndon Johnson set up the Kerner Commission to investigate the causes of civil disorder in American cities. New taxes were eventually adopted to bring increase revenue for education, welfare, and other government services. In 1972, a state lottery was also established to help raise money and alleviate the dire conditions of inner-city living.

Sources:

Ben Cosgrove, Detroit Burning : Photos from the 1967 Riot, Life, July 22, 2012.

Sidney Fine, Violence in the Model City: the Cavanagh Administration, Race Relations, and the Detroit Riot of 1967, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1989 and/or Hubert G. Locke, The Detroit Riot of 1967, Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1969.

Michigan Historical Calendar, Courtesy of the Clarke Historical Library at Central Michigan University.

Vimeo Video, 33 minutes, Original footage was filmed by WXYZ TV-7, and ABC affiliate in Detroit, Michigan. The footage was donated to the Michigan State Police for training purposes. The State Police have since donated it to the Archives of Michigan for permanent preservation.

2014 : Helen J. Claytor Dedication in Grand Rapids
Jul 23 all-day

On July 23, 2014, Helen J. Claytor was honored by the dedication of a bronze statue, one of a series of influential figures immortalized at sites around the city as a part of the Grand Rapids Community Legends Project. Ms. Claytor (1907 – 2005) was an educator, civil rights activist, and the first African American president of the Grand Rapids YWCA and the national YWCA. Read more about her life.

Source : Greater Grand Rapids’ Women’s History Council Calendar.