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The first settlement of Kalamazoo county dates back to 1828. In the. fall of
that year, Bazil HARRISON with his family of sons and
daughters, with a desirable collection of household goods, arrived on Prairie
Ronde and settled on the timbered marsh by the side of a little lake, which he
called after his name. Harrison was born in Maryland; went when young to
Virginia, then to Pennsylvania, then to Clark county, Ohio, and in his 58th year
came to Michigan where he lived till August 30, 1874, dying at the great age of
103. He was a nephew of Benj. Harrison, one of the signers of the Declaration of
Independence, and cousin of President Harrison. He was a model pioneer, and
lived loved and respected by all. He was our first county judge. He is the hero
of one of Cooper's most thrilling stories -- the Bee Hunter. With Judge Harrison
came his son-in-law, Henry WHIPPLE, and a man named DAVIDSON;
and in the following winter, Abram J. SHAVER, a very
eccentric character and Erastus GUELFORD; and to the new
settlement were added William DUNCAN, Christopher BAIR,
George BROWN, Abner CALHOUN, John INSLAY,
and others; so that by the spring of 1830 there was a circle of settlers about
the border of Prairie Ronde, and at the island in Schoolcraft, numbering some
sixty families, including Dr. Nathan N. THOMAS, E. Lakin
Brown, Delamore Duncan, Dr. David E. Brown, Henry and Pelick STEVENS,
Abial
FELLOWS, Stephen HOYT, Rev. Benj. TAYLOR,
Jas. BAIR, Robert TRAKES, E. H. LOTHROP, G. V. N. Lothrop,
and others, arrived. A township organization, the first in the. county, was
formed, and on the 4th of April a meeting was held at the house of Abram
Calhoun, at which Edwin H. Lothrop (brother of G. V. N., Lothrop, of Detroit)
was elected supervisor, Hosea B. HUSTON township clerk,
and the other offices filled. In June, 1829, Titus BRONSON
came to the site of the present village of Kalamazoo, and soon built a shanty,
preempting a large share of the plain upon which the village is located, the
little hamlet being named Bronson, after its founder. In 1830, a man named
Nathan Harrison, son of Bazil, settled on the banks of the river near the foot
of Main street. Soon after came Wm. HARRIS, William
MEAD, and Elisha HALL. Supplies were
obtained from the French trader whose "post" was on the east bank of
the Kalamazoo river, where is now the site of the Riverside Cemetery. In 1831,
Dr. Jonathan ABBOTT, David S. DILLIE,
Elias and John Mead, Hosea B. Huston, Rodney SEYMOUR, Gen.
Justis BURDICK, and Cyren Burdick. On Gull Prairie, in
1830, a colony from Ohio, headed by Col. Isaac BARNES, was
located, from which came in after time some of the most prominent men in the
county, though
Prairie Ronde has given its share and more of eminent citizens. This Gull
Prairie colony consisted of Col. Isaac Barnes, Win. GIDDINGS,
John Barnes, Seldon NORTON, James
PORTER, Orville Barnes, Cornelius NORTHROP,
Hazael HOAG, Orlando Mead, David S. Dillie, Wm. LOGAN,
Wm. JONES, John F. GILKEY, Mumford ELDRED,
Jr., Levi S. WHITE, Calvin White, Samuel Brown, Simeon MILLS,
Isaac BRIGGS, Philip GRAY, Philip COREY,
Samuel BOYLES, Win.
PLUMMER, and A. S. PARKER.
By an act of the Legislative Council of the Territory, approved October, 29th
1829, the boundaries and name. of Kalamazoo county were fixed and by an act
approved November 4th, 1829, "the counties of Kalamazoo,, Branch, Barry,
and Eaton, and all the country lying north of township four north of the base
line, west of the principal meridian, south of the county of Michilimackinac and
east of the line between ranges twelve and thirteen, and of Lake Michigan where
said range line intersects tile lake, shall be attached to and compose a part of
the county of St. Joseph.''
By another act approved the next day, viz.: November 15th, 1829, "the
counties of Kalamazoo and Barry and all the country north of the same, which are
attached to and compose a part of the county of St. Joseph shall form a township
by tile name of Brady, and the first township meeting shall be held at the house
of Abram J. Shaver in said township." The first township organization of
this region was named Brady, and ante-dates the subsequent and simultaneous
formation of Arcadia and Brady townships within the county limits.
By an act approved July 30, 1,830, the eight townships constituting the north
half of the count y were organized as one township under the name of Arcadia,
and the eight townships constituting the south half were similarly organized
under the name of Brady.
By all act approved also on the 30th day of July, 1830, 'Kalamazoo county was
organized and to it were attached, for judicial purposes, the counties of
Calhoun, Barry, and Eaton. Bazil Harrison, Titus Bronson, and Stephen Hoyt were
the first judges of its county court, and Wm. Duncan was its clerk, all having
been, commissioned by Governor Cass tile same year. By the provisions of the act
the first term of the county court was held at the house of Abram J. Shaver
located on the west side of Prairie Ronde, on the "third Monday of
October" of the same year, and by a provision of the act permitting it, its
sessions were adjourned to the school house near John Insley's, in Brady
township, also on the west side of Prairie Ronde. The second term of the court,
however, was held at Kalamazoo. In January, 1831, the county seat was located,
by commissioners appointed by Governor Cass at Bronson, and this location was
officially confirmed by proclamation of Stevens T. Mason, Secretary and acting
Governor, on the 12th day of May, 1831. The precise location of the court house
is thus described in the report made by the commissioners to Governor Cass.
"A spot was selected on all eminence near the center of the southwest
quarter of section fifteen, town two south, of range eleven west, owned by Titus
Bronson, Esq." "Mr. Bronson has agreed," says the report,
"to lay out a village and place upon the proper records a plan or map
thereof, duly acknowledged with tile following pieces of land properly marked
and set apart in said map or plan for public use, viz.: One square of sixteen
rods for the court house; one square of sixteen rods for a jail; one square of
sixteen rods for an academy; one square of eight rods for common schools; one
square of two acres for a public burial ground and four squares of eight rods
each for the first four religious denominations that become incorporated in said
village agreeable to the statute of the Territory."
By an act approved June 29th, 1832, the township of Richland was set off from
Arcadia and made to consist of the four townships now called Richland, Ross,
Comstock and Charleston, and its first election was held at the house of Caleb
Eldred, who recently died, venerable in character and in years. On March 7th.
1834, the township of Comstock was set off from Richland, and made to consist of
what is now Comstock and Charleston, and also of Climax, set off from the
township of Brady. Its first election was held at the house of James Bennett.
Comstock's first settlers Wm. TOLLAND, Nathaniel MATTHEWS,
Ralph
TUTTLE, Sherman CUMMINGS, George TOWNSEND,
Caleb ELDRED, Samuel PERCIVAL, Hiram MOORE
and others in 1830 and Horace H. COMSTOCK and others in
1831.
March 2d, 1836 the name of the township of Arcadia was changed to Kalamazoo.
March 23d, 1836, the township of Pavilion was set off from the original Brady
township, and was made to consist of what is now Pavilion and Portage, and its
first election was held at the house of Moses AUSTIN.
The township of Pavilion was first settled in 1834 by Caleb VORCE,
soon followed by Chester JOHNSON and Elijah SMITH,
and at the same date Prairie Ronde, as it no remains was also set off from
Brady, and its first election was to be held (for so reads the act) "at the
house of Abram J. Shaver." It has therefore the honor, first of all the
townships in the county, of being thought able to stand alone.
March 11, 1837, Cooper was set off from old Arcadia, -- now Kalamazoo, --
township, and was made to consists of what are now Cooper and Alamo. Its first
election was held at the house of Elijah WOODWORTH. Cooper
(named for the novelist) was first settled in 1834 by dr. D.E. DEMMING,
and in the following year he was followed by Allen SMITH, Jas. FERGUSON,
Patrick BUNBERRY, Mason MATTHEW,
Joseph SKINNER, Ephriam DELANO,
Barney EARL, and others. All the foregoing townships were
organized by acts of the Territorial Legislature. In 1837 Michigan was made a
State; and by an act passed by the State Legislature and approved December 30,
1837, Climax was set off from Comstock, and its first election was held at the
house of Daniel B. ELDRED.
Mach 6th, 1838, Alamo was set off from Cooper, and its first election
was held at the house of Seth C. WHITLOCK. The first in
Alamao were Solomo CASE, Wm. FINCH,
Julius HACKLEY, the Messrs. Whitlock, Robt. DENSMORE,
Mahlon EVERETT, and George KIRTLAND
all in 1835. The first in Brady settled in 1835, and were Lorenzo STOWELL,
Benjamin TUTTLE, Bradley WILLIAMS, Elisha DOAN.
Portage was set off from Pavilion and its first election was held at the house
of Elijah ROOT. In 1830 Portage became the home of HERRING,
MEAD, and HARRIS, and were followed in 1831 by Jonas WOODARD,
John E. HOWARD, the COOLEYS, Caleb SWEETLAND,
the EASTLAND s, Moses AUSTIN, and his sons Wm. G. and
Benj. F. Charleston was set off from Comstock and held its first election at the
house of Wm. Earl. Charleston was first occupied by Wm. Earl in 1831, and among
those that soon followed were Wm. Harrison, LOVELL and
Hiram MOORE, Wm. Eldred, Robert BURDICK, Robert and Jos. WHITFORD
And Asa GUNN. Texas was set off from old Brady, and its
first election was held at the house of Albert G. TOWERS.
The township of Texas was settled about 1834 and 1835 by Wm. HARRIS, Eli DOUGLAS,
the RIX family, O.C. HILL, A.G.
Towers, John J. HOWARD, James WEED, the
MCELROY s, HOPES, WAGERS, LUCES,
and others.
March 21st, 1839, Ross township was set off from Richland and its first election
was held at the house of F. D. Pierce. Ross was entered in 1831 by BARNES
and LAKE, and soon after they were followed Horace H. PECK,
George TORRY, Dr. U. UPJOHN, and
others.
March 22, 1839, Oshtemo was set off from Kalamazoo, and its first election was
held at the house (for so says the act) of "Mr. Lake." In 1829-30
Enoch HARRIS, a highly intelligent and respectable colored man, made the first
settlement of Oshtemo. Elias and Anthony COOLEY soon
following, also John HASEALL, Niel HINDS,
Clark KELLOGG, Isaac and Wm.
GIBBS, and Benjamin DRAKE, the.
latter being the first settler on Grand Prairie.
February 16th, 1842, the name of Brady township was changed to Schoolcraft and
the two towns now called Brady and Wakeshma were set off from the former
organization of Brady, or what was left of it, and to them was given the
original township name of Brady, and its election was held at the house of
Robert JENKINSON. Wakeshma, by an act approved March
25th, 1846, was set off from Brady, and held her first election at the house of
Jacob J. Gardner. Wakeshma was the last to be settled and organized, but it is
now no laggard, having already passed in wealth and population several of its
older sisters. Among its first settlers were Jacob J. GARDNER.
Benj. ATWOOD, and S. FREYDENBURG.
In 1834 Mr. Henry GILBERT removed the "Michigan
Statesman" from White Pigeon to this place, and changed its name, to
"Kalamazoo Gazette." In 1838 the "Kalamazoo Whig" was
established, and soon gave place to the "Western Banner" that lived
and throve during the campaign of 1840, and soon after flitted existence. In
September, 1844, the "Kalamazoo Telegraph" was established by H. B.
Miller (now Buffalo Miller of Chicago), and in November of the same year Geo.
Torry became a part owner and editor, remaining connected therewith till 1850.
The railroad was finished to this place early in February, 1846, at which time
Kalamazoo contained a population of nearly 3,000. The college was established
here in 1838, - first as a branch of the State University, and afterward as a
college under Baptist auspices.
The early settlers of the county were men of intelligence and enterprise, with
such leaders as caused schools and the amenities of older counties to spring up
abundantly. Hosea B. Huston established the first store in Kalamazoo village in
1831, Hon. E. Lakin Brown and Thaddeus Smith being his partners, the main store
of which this was a branch having previously been established at Schoolcraft.
Dr. ABBOTT was first postmaster and physician. General
Justus Burdick, Lucius LYON, and Thos. C. SHELDON
early became joint proprietors of Kalamazoo village. They, with Hon. H. G. WELLS,
E. L. Brown, and the Smiths of Schoolcraft and Prairie Ronde, did much to lay
broad and deep the foundations of the county in the way of advancement and
civilization. In 1834 the land office was removed to Kalamazoo, and the village
grew rapidly under the influence of the land speculation. T. W. 'WILLARD,
Theo. P. SHELDON, Lawrence VENDERWALKER, Cyrene and
Justus Burdick, Hosea B. Huston, the late Gov. RANSOM
and Sam. H. RANSOM, A. T. PROUTY, Horace STARKWEATHER,
Alex.
CAMERON, Stephen VICKERY, Abraham EDWARDS,
the ATLEES, Emor HAWLEY, Frederick BOOHER,
Cyrus LOVELL, Henry GILBERT, H. H. COMSTOCK, John HASCALL,
Anthony COOLEY, Caleb
SWEETLAND, Caleb SHERMAN, Rev. Mr. ROBE,
the first minister here, Robt. MCINTOSH, Titus Bronson,
Deacon HEYDENBURK, John P. MARSH,
Rev. Cyrus WOODBURY, Cvrene Burdick, Rev. Jeremiah HULL, L. H. TRASK, F. W. CURTENIUS
all the men composing the colony at Gull Prairie, and settlers in other parts of
the county, contributed their full share to the early opening of the wilderness
here and making its fame known abroad. The Kalamazoo House was opened in 1832.
Several stores were soon after established. Mechanics of various sorts located
here and found plenty to do; the soil yielded abundantly, and prosperity shone
upon the colony till after the land speculation in 1835, ‘36, and ‘37, and
here was one of its liveliest centers. Courts were established. Such lawyers as
Gov. Ransom, Chas. E. STUART, Joseph MILLER;
Jr., Cyrus LOVELL, N. A. BALCH, and others found work and
fees in the wide circuit of that date, embracing nearly all of western Michigan.
The growth of Kalamazoo county has not been rapid, but it has. been steady and
healthful. The population is now 32,284, and its people are as thriving and
prosperous as in any county in the State. The land is very fertile, the timber
is abundant, the character of the buildings and the improvement of the farms is
first class, and the model farmers of Michigan live here. There are three large
villages, Kalamazoo, Schoolcraft, and Galesburg, and several smaller ones like
Augusta, Yorkville, Gull Corners, Ashland, Climax, etc. Kalamazoo village has
now a population of 13,000, and is steadily increasing. Verily the pioneers in
looking back over the 40 years they have spent in this land may well feel proud
of their efforts, their labors, and their influence, in beholding the high state
of civilization, the excellent condition of society, and the material wealth and
prosperity which Kalamazoo county now possesses.
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