Michigan: Michigan Historical Commission
Page 7 of 74 — Showing results 61 to 70 of 737
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIW6_honolulu-house_Marshall-MI.html
Abner Pratt settled in Marshall in 1839 and in the 1850s became Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court. In 1857-59 he was United States Consul to the Sandwich (Hawaiian) Islands. Returning home, he built this house in 1860 to recreate the island atmospher…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIWA_howard-f-young-postmasters_Marshall-MI.html
(Front)Howard F. Young (1889-1934), a native of Allegan, designed this Marshall post office building in 1932. Young studied engineering at the University of Michigan and was involved in construction work in Albany, New York, Detroit and Kalamazoo. His inter…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIWB_isaac-e-crary-and-john-d-pierce-state-school-system_Marshall-MI.html
(Front)When attorney Isaac E. Crary came to Marshall in 1832 from Connecticut, he became fast friends with another transplanted easterner, the Reverend John D. Pierce. Interested in government and education, these two men in 1834-35 planned Michigan's publi…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIWC_isaac-e-crary-house_Marshall-MI.html
Michigan's first congressman lived here from the early 1840s until his death in 1854. Located on lots one and two, original plat, lower village, the house was a wedding gift from his father-in-law, Judge Abner Pratt. Arriving here in 1831, Crary was a membe…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIWD_james-a-miner_Marshall-MI.html
James A. Miner, born in Marshall in 1842, began studying law in Clinton, Iowa, in 1860. Completing his studies in Marshall, he was admitted to the Calhoun County bar in 1863. There he was circuit court commissioner (1866-1870) and prosecuting attorney (1870…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIWE_john-d-pierce-homesite_Marshall-MI.html
On this foundation stood the log house of the Reverend John D. Pierce. Born in New Hampshire, Pierce moved to Marshall in 1831, where he founded the Congregational church. In 1834 he and Isaac Crary designed Michigan's school system, and from 1836 to 1841, …
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIWF_lieutenant-george-a-woodruff_Marshall-MI.html
(Front):Lieutenant George A. Woodruff (1840-1863) graduated early from West Point because of the start of the Civil War. Young Woodruff served valiantly with the Army of the Potomac. At Gettysburg he was mortally wounded while defending the center of the Un…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIWI_marengo-pioneer-cemetery_Marshall-MI.html
This site on Territorial Road was a gift of Seeley Neal (1778-1862) from 640 acres acquired from the government in 1831. Neal, a veteran of the War of 1812, built the first log house in the township. His was the first family to locate in the settlement late…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIXP_marshall_Marshall-MI.html
Founded in 1831 by Sidney Ketchum and settles from New York and New England, the town was named in honor of Chief Justice John Marshall. Townsmen Isaac Crary and the Rev. John Pierce planned in 1834 the innovative Michigan public school system. Marshall's e…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMIXQ_mary-miller-hillside_Marshall-MI.html
(Front)This house, built for local attorney Henry W. Taylor and long owned by the Schuyler family, was also home to Mary "Mazie" Miller (1871-1941) and her husband, Craig. An outspoken suffragette and Republican political activist, Miller was an early presi…