THE SEBEWA RECOLLECTOR Bulletin of the
Sebewa Center Association (Ionia County, MI);
JUNE 1996, Volume 31, Number 6. Submitted with written permission of Editor
Grayden D. SLOWINS
SURNAMES: SEDORE, TASKER, SCHNABEL, SHOTWELL, GRENIC, HILLEY, ELDRIDGE, McLEOD,
SLOWINSKI, GIERMAN, KELLAND, LOCKWOOD, WILLIAMS
RECENT DEATHS:
PHYLLIS JANE SEDORE, 77, wife of Neil, mother of Linda AUSTIN, Elroy & Frank
SEDORE, sister of Malcolm & Marshall TASKER, daughter of Roy TASKER & Rose
SCHNABEL, daughter of Margaret SHOTWELL & Peter SCHNAUBEL, son of Marina GRENIC
& Martin SCHNABEL, son of Regina & Anton SCHNABEL Sr.
MADONNA A. HILLEY, 72, mother of Terry, Tom, Linda, Jack & John, sister of
LaVern & Lawrence ELDRIDGE, Marie WICKHAM, Madeline BUEHLER & Margaret GENDER,
daughter of Pearl McLEOD & Eddie ELDRIDGE, son of Jay ELDRIDGE & Sophia
SLOWINSKI, daughter of Louis SLOWINSKI, son of Daniel SLOWINSKI Sr. & Anna
SCHNABEL, daughter of Regina & Anton SCHNABEL Sr.
MEMORIAL FOR ROBERT WILFRED GIERMAN:Saturday, May 18, 1:30 PM at Rosier Funeral
Home in Sunfield, then committal of ashes at Sunshine. Park at HUGGLER’S , next
driveway east, and walk thru woods or ride shuttle to site of service.
(Photos on front of this issue of GOGEBIC COUNTY COURTHOUSE,
BESSEMER, MI. which was built of Lake Superior red sandstone in 1888, and of
ONTONAGON COUNTY COURTHOUSE, ONTONAGON, MI.)
BIOGRAPHY OF CLARENCE BUDINGTON KELLAND by Walt LOCKWOOD:
He was born July 11, 1881, in Portland, in a little house close to the sidewalk
just beyond the southwest corner of Powers Park, last occupied by the PROCTOR
family and later burned by the fire department. He lived the next 10 years or so
at 230 S. Lincoln Street, where his mildly eccentric, cigar-smoking,
four-times-married Grandmother BUDINGTON was a counter-balance to his narrowly
religious mother in his upbringing. His mother ran a millinery store down town.
His father, Tommy, seemed to have a variety of occupations.
Early in his career, Clarence Budington KELLAND was a successful journalist with
the Detroit News. He became editor of the American Boy in 1907 and built it into
the leading juvenile magazine of its day. In 1913-1915 he was lecturer on
juvenile literature and writing at the University of Michigan. From the 1920s
through the 1950s KELLAND was one of the most widely read and highest paid
authors in America. He published 60 novels and more than 200 short stories in
his 61 years of writing. He saw his books adapted to radio and movies, and lived
to see some of them on television.
He turned out 10,000 words each week and published a body of work amounting to
more than 10 million words. His comic Yankee characters endeared him to millions
of readers of the old American Magazine and Saturday Evening Post. Booth
TARKINGTON & F. Scott FITZGERALD may have been more celebrated, but a new serial
by KELLAND in the Post caused the greatest stir. Sinclair LEWIS, Ring LARDNER,
and others put down the small towns; but KELLAND stayed and stood for the common
man and the sanctity of the individual.
He also defended the cause of free enterprise against FDR and “the blighting
hand of the New Deal”. It was not rampant materialism that was rendering America
a wasteland, it was that “life-term candidate” and the insidious socialism of
his programs. KELLAND served as Republican National Committeeman from Arizona
1940-1958, and was Executive Director of the Party for a term. He returned to
Portland in 1929 for the village homecoming, and in 1944 when he was leading the
Presidential campaign of New York Governor Thomas E. DEWEY, a small-town boy
originally from Owosso, MI.
When he wrote of Portland, he recalled those years from the beginning of the 80s
to the middle of the 90s, before speed came into the world – as the serpent came
into Eden – and destroyed tranquility forever. “I was born in an era and a
locality where leisure was almost as immoral as dishonesty, and every time I
loaf for a day I have to rub liniment on my conscience.” Yet, according to
KELLAND, “Mother was the only person in Portland who was ever in a hurry. I do
not think I ever knew a more ambitious person nor one so bent on improving the
state of her family morally and financially”.
Recalling summer Sundays, sitting before church beside his father on the porch,
he wrote, “We would listen to the grasshoppers and birds singing Sunday songs,
and the trees would be green and the roses red and white. We waited, rather
stiff and sweating in our best clothes, and a breeze would move the long grass.
Then would come the music of church bells, the Baptist, the Congregational, the
Methodist, each with its own recognizable tone. And the bells would spread their
sound through the trees and into the house with placid dignity, summoning the
several sects to worship. “Maybe you did not like to go to church and were
apprehensive about the length of the sermon, but those bells made perfect a
sensation of peace and serenity.”He wrote of long days at the swimming hole at
Butternut Island in the Grand, of fishing in the summer and nutting in the
autumn. He remembered the cracker barrel in McCLELLAND’S or WOODBURY’S General
Store, and how the men who gathered around were identified by their vocations:
Depot STEVENS, Banker ALLEN, and Druggist CRANE. Nightly his self-educated
father read to him aloud from books not standard children’s fare: Shakespeare,
Scott, Dickens, Thackery and the like. He developed early a feeling for romantic
adventure and Tom Sawyer.
“I was born and brought up in a narrow environment”, he said. “It was one which
did not make allowances. Black was black, and white was white, there was no gray
or mauve or tan.” Such was the nature of his works. Bad guys were soundly
punished. Virtue, courage, pluck, and persistence were rewarded. The hero &
heroine lived happily ever after. There were no moral ambiguities. American
individuality and free enterprise emerged triumphant.They burned the home in
which he was born – a potential national shrine – two years before his death on
February 18, 1964. Burning it down got rid of a lot of rats. Clarence Budington
KELLAND would have appreciated the sneer in that dogged common sense. END
Ask your librarian to locate a copy of THE STEADFAST HEART by
Clarence Budington KELLAND. The story is pure fiction. The names are
recognizable as those of local families, but mixed and matched to protect the
survivors. The descriptions of Portland geography and scenery (called Rainbow in
the story) are amazingly accurate for the 1890s and as we knew them in the
1930-1950s.
In Chapter Three, page 22, he wrote: “The Village of Rainbow was in a valley, as
all villages should be, with a clean (before sewers), rapidly-running river
passing through its midst and cutting it into the East Side and the West Side.
In Rainbow housewives baked bread, cookies and fried cakes. Picket fences
persisted, and in spite of the municipal waterworks, the knowing still carried
their pails to JENKIN’S well for the coolest, sweetest water which ever passed
down a throat. There was a square at the eastern end of the bridge, where there
was a town pump surrounded by an iron railing, and where, on a Saturday night,
the band gave its weekly concert.
Main Street paralleled the river, one row of stores dangling their hind legs in
the water. Across the river was a grist mill, a planing mill, a manufactory of
woodenware and the secondary hotel. The railroad depot was half a mile away,
reached by Lafe’s ‘bus’.”
EDITOR Following were pages with “A photograph of Clarence Budington KELLAND in
the public library at Portland” and of “KELLAND’S boyhood home at Portland
burned in 1962. His second home still stands at 230 Lincoln St. in the same
town. At right, his mother at 22. She ran a millinery shop in Portland.”
ALLEN M. WILLIAMS, 1892-1979:
IONIA – Allen M. WILLIAMS, long-time Ionia County Engineer, pioneer of modern
road building, and the man who invented the roadside picnic table, died Sunday
afternoon in an East Lansing nursing home.
He was 87 years old and had been ill since suffering a stroke late this winter.
He had been confined to a nursing home in East Lansing for several months.
Services will be held Wednesday at 11 a.m. from the First Methodist Church of
Ionia.
WILLIAMS served as engineer-manager of the Ionia County Road Commission from
1919 to 1957 and under his supervision Ionia County built the roads and
developed the all-seasons road maintenance system that won a national award and
was often cited as a model.
WILLIAMS was also for many years an officer and manager of the Ionia Free Fair.
He founded and developed Bertha BROCK Park, the Ionia County Airport, and was a
founder of Ionia County Memorial Hospital. He served numerous professional and
charitable organizations as president, officer and member.
The achievement for which WILLIAMS became most widely known, nationally and
internationally, was as the inventor and designer of the roadside picnic table.
The site of the first table, at the intersection of Morrison Lake Road and Grand
River Avenue, in Boston Township, was awarded an historical marker in 1964.
EARLY YEARS……
WILLIAMS was born in Ludington on January 26, 1892. He graduated from Ludington
High School in 1912 and entered Kalamazoo College. He transferred to The
University of Michigan and graduated with a degree in civil engineering in 1916.
After graduation from Michigan, he was employed by Western Hydro Electric Co.
and Pruden Wheel Works, both in Detroit. He joined the Michigan State Highway
Department as a project engineer in 1918. In conjunction with a 50 million
dollar highway bond issue in 1919, he drafted the state’s first complete highway
map.
WILLIAMS came to Ionia in 1919 as engineer-manager of the Ionia County Road
Commission, about the same time the late Fred. W. Green, later Governor of
Michigan, became a member of the county road commission. Between 1919 and 1927,
WILLIAMS continued as project engineer for the state highway department as well
as serving as engineer-manager of Ionia County roads.
Between 1919 and 1925, WILLIAMS designed and oversaw the construction of the
first Ionia County roads on rights-of-way wider than the standard 66 feet, some
of the first such roads built in Michigan. During his first years at the road
commission, he also pioneered in the use of the straight-blade snow plow, as
substitute for the standard V-plow, thereby eliminating traffic tie-ups by
reducing roadside snowbanks and facilitating snow removal.
GREEN VIEW POINT……
Williams conceived and developed GREEN View Point. Located on what was then
M-21, GREEN View Point, named for Gov. GREEN, was the first trunkline scenic
turnout. WILLIAMS arranged for the purchase of the land from John WINWRIGHT,
landscaped the plot, and designed the marker.The turnout is about 175 feet above
the level of Grand River and provides long vistas along the river valley. For
many years, before they were common, this turnout attracted visitors from
considerable distances, especially in the fall. (The brass marker honoring Fred
W. GREEN was removed by vandals a number of years ago.)
Another major undertaking was reorganization of Ionia County Road Commission
operations, including the design of its garage at 169 E. Riverside Drive, Ionia.
Prior to the opening of the Riverside Drive garage, road commission equipment
and vehicles had been housed on South STEELE Street and elsewhere. Officers were
located in the basement of the Ionia County Court House. The Riverside Drive
facility was opened early in 1928.
FIRST ROADSIDE TABLE……
The first roadside picnic table, WILLIAMS recalled later, came into existence
because he and his family enjoyed weekend drives and picnics. While many
locations, he said, were inviting, there were often only stumps, at best, to
serve as tables.
He designed a table in 1929 and had Jacob MOORE, a road commission employee,
construct it, using planks salvaged from old guard rails. He had it placed at
the Boston Township location – Grand River was then new U.S. 16 and a major
state traffic artery – and if soon proved popular with motorists.
He had some additional tables built and placed in other locations in Ionia
County. After letters of appreciation were received by the State Highway
Department in Lansing, B. C. FINNEY, then chief of highway maintenance,
investigated and found WILLIAMS was “his culprit”.
After congratulating WILLIAMS and asking not to be the last to know next time,
FINNEY ordered additional picnic tables from the road commission on WILLIAM’S
design. Over the next five years, the road commission built more than 1,000
picnic tables for the state and ceased only when the demand became too great for
it to handle.
BERTHA BROCK PARK……..
Work on GREEN View Point apparently whetted William’s interest in parks. With a
good deal of negotiation and with fundamental assistance in time and money from
Ionia County Fishing and Hunting Club, WILLIAMS started development of Bertha
BROCK Park in 1931 and continued supervision until his retirement.
He told the Ionia County Board of Commissioners in November 1978, one of his
last public appearances. “Frank Harkness worked with me on the park. We never
cut a tree unless both of us agreed it was necessary. We wanted to keep it a
‘wildwood’ park.”
IONIA COUNTY AIRPORT….
In 1954, with Federal aid available, WILLIAMS originated the idea of an Ionia
County Airport and the county board of supervisors agreed. He directed the
development and construction of airport facilities and remained its manager
until his retirement.
Elected president of the County Road Association of Michigan in 1934, WILLIAMS
contributed to the passage of the Hayden-Cartwright Act, providing federal aid
for local highways. He also led a successful fight in Michigan against the
attempted reduction of the gasoline tax from three to two cents per gallon and
limitation at that rate, through a proposed constitutional amendment.
WILLIAMS recognized the gasoline tax as a major source of highway funding and
believed in it as a form of use-taxation. The gasoline tax permitted tax levies
on real property for highways to be discontinued in Michigan.
NATIONAL AWARD……….
In 1940, WILLIAMS won the first place award in the BETTER ROADS magazine contest
for excellence in county road management. The competition was open to all
counties in the United States in the 20,000 to 50,000 population classification.
The award brought many highway builders and supervisors to Ionia County to
inspect the local system.
During the 30 years between 1927 and 1957, Williams and the Ionia County Road
Commission gained a wide reputation for excellence in trunkline maintenance,
particularly in speedy snow removal and ice control. The road commission was
among the first county commissions in Michigan to hold a contract with the state
Department of Highways for trunkline maintenance and has kept its contract since
1925.
WILLIAMS was twice an announced candidate for state highway commissioner when
the post was elective and partisan. He announced his candidacy in 1941 but the
Republican nomination went to his friend, LeRoy SMITH, Wayne County engineer,
who was defeated.
WILLIAMS announced again in 1943, but the Republican nomination went to another
friend, Charles M. ZEIGLER who was elected.
OFFICES HELD……..
WILLIAMS was elected president of the Southern Michigan Road Commissioners
Association in 1953. He was elected president of the American Road Builders
Association (ARBA), county and local roads division, in 1955. He organized and
presided over its national highway conference, in Gatlinburg, Tenn. in 1955.
Re-elected president of ARBA for a second year in 1956, WILLIAMS organized and
presided over its national conference on Mackinac Island that year. More than
1,000 engineers from all over the U.S. came to see and hear about the Mackinac
Bridge, then under construction.
In 1956, WILLIAMS became active in the West Michigan Tourist Association, was
named to its board, and continued active in its work until his death.
He was named a life member of the Michigan Engineering Society in 1969. Active
well into his 80s, WILLIAMS addressed the Michigan Asphalt Paving Association in
1975, showing movies of Ionia County road operations in the 20s and 30s.
STATE HONOR……
In 1976, WILLIAMS was named “Michigan Tourist Ambassador” by Gov. William G.
MILLIKEN, in recognition of his “outstanding contribution to Michigan’s travel
industry, in particular the picnic table”.
In 1977, he addressed the Michigan Highway Engineers conference, sponsored by
the Michigan Department of State Highways and Transportation, for the last time.
On Nov. 21, 1977, WILLIAMS cut the ribbon opening the last section in I-96, 12
miles of the JEFFRIES Freeway in Detroit. He was invited to do so because he had
been project engineer on the last gap of U. S.-16, completed in 1926, and had
cut the ribbon then.
HOSPITAL FOUNDER…….
Under appointment from Clarence S. JOHNSON, then mayor of Ionia, WILLIAMS did
fundamental work in establishing the Ionia County Memorial Hospital. He served
as chairman of the Board of Trustees and administrator for the hospital, from
1943 to 1949.
He was variously director, secretary-manager and president of Ionia Free Fair
Association, between 1938 and 1964, serving 12 terms as president. Under his
direction, brick removed from Ionia’s Main Street were used to build part of the
fence around the Fairground’s race track.
WILLIAMS was past president of the Michigan Association of Fairs and
Exhibitions; of the Southern Michigan Fair and Racing Circuit; of Ionia Rotary
Club, and of the Ionia Boy Scout Council.
SURVIVORS……
WILLIAMS is survived by seven children: Miss Kathleen WILLIAMS of Midland and
Mrs. Honor BARIT of Indian Wells, Calif., Richard of West Bloomfield, Ben of
Lansing, Keith of Traverse City, Robin of Gaylord and Colin of Saranac.Fourteen
grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren also survive.
The mother of the WILLIAMS children, Mrs. Esther ACKERMAN WILLIAMS, died Dec.
21, 1970. WILLIAMS married Mrs. Hazel WILLIAMS of Ludington, the widow of his
brother Harold, in July 1972. The second Mrs. WILLIAMS died in March 1979.
The family will be at the LEDDICK Funeral Home Monday
from 7 to 9 p.m. and Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Memorial funds have been established for The University of Michigan College of
Engineering Scholarship Fund and for the Ionia County Historical Society.
Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery, Ludington. – R.C. GREGORY