Willard Historical Images

Oldest frame house in Battle Creek

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.other 2012-02-04_jfr en_US
dc.coverage.temporal Battle Creek. Michigan, circa ??? en_US
dc.identifier.other LPC-027-010-001 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.willardlibrary.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/13545
dc.description Postcard showing a photo of the oldest frame house in Battle Creek. Typed on back: The oldest house in Battle Creek. Originally stood on the Bromberg site, Monument Square. Now stands near Michigan Central stockyards, on Locust street. (Old Time Picture #47) From: Everts, L. H. & Co. History of Calhoun County, Michigan... Philadelphia: Everts, 1877, p. 81. The first frame house, properly speaking, was that erected by John V. Henry, in the old Gardner settlement, which is about five miles from Battle Creek. he built a goodly-sized frame structure out there, intending it for a tavern, in 1834, but never covered or utilized it. The frame was removed to Battle Creek in 1836 by Isaac Merrett, who placed it on the site now occupied by the American hotel. It was used for a number of years by Lowry & Hewitt as a tavern, probably having been thus used about 1840. In 1837 Judge Tolman W. Hall erected a frame dwelling-house on the lot next east of the American hotel, which now constitutes the back part of the Bristol house, being the first fram residence built on Main street. en_US
dc.format.medium b&w postcard en_US
dc.language.iso En en_US
dc.subject Houses en_US
dc.subject People en_US
dc.subject Hall, Tolman en_US
dc.subject Henry, John V. en_US
dc.title Oldest frame house in Battle Creek en_US
dc.type Image en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search Willard Historical Images


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account