Waterford Village, Michigan Explained

Waterford Village
Location:Oakland County,
Oakland County, Michigan
Coordinates:42.7°N -83.4056°W
Built:1818
Added:August 10, 1979[1]
Refnum:79001167
Designated Other1:Michigan State Historic Site
Designated Other1 Date:June 18, 1976 [2]

Waterford Village is an historic community in Waterford Township, Michigan. First settled in 1819, the village is located in the northernmost part of the township along Dixie Highway, on the southeast shore of Van Norman Lake.

History

In 1818, Alpheus Williams and his brother-in-law, Captain Archibald Phillips, entered the first land purchase for $2.00 an acre. Archibald Phillips and Alpheus Williams purchased 161.4 acres in what would become Waterford Village, Michigan.[3]

In 1818, Mr. and Mrs. Alpheus Williams, their four daughters and two sons, along with Captain Archibald Phillips and Major and Mrs. Oliver Williams, with their eight children, set out to settle Oakland County.

In 1818, the Oliver Williams family established the first farm settlement in the county on the banks of Silver Lake.

Archibald Phillips and Alpheus Williams continued on northward about nine miles to where the Clinton River crossed the old Saginaw Trail. This area would become Waterford Village. Here the first house of the village was built by Alpheus Williams on the north bank of the river across from the south corner where Grand River Street met the Saginaw Trail. Williams and Phillips also built the first dam where the Clinton River crossed over the Saginaw Trail and erected the first saw mill there.

In 1844, Dr. George W. Williams (b.1793-d.1845) built the first gristmill in Waterford on what later became Mill Street. George was no relation to Alpheus or Oliver.[4]

Early pioneers owning land tracts in the village in 1872 include:[5]

Business owners in the village in 1872 include:[6] [7] [5] [8] [9]

Historic district

Waterford Village was designated a Michigan State Historic Site on June 18, 1976, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 10, 1979.[1]

Geographically, the historic district includes Dixie Highway, a block north and south of Andersonville Road, then Andersonville Road between Dixie Highway and Airport Road, then south on Airport Road to the railroad tracks.

Included in the historic district are also the original houses and buildings on Dubay Street, Pontiff Street (originally Pond Street), and Steffens Street.

Main streets

Cemetery

In 1826, Waterford Village's first cemetery was deeded by Captain Archibald Phillips to Governor Lewis Cass for burial purposes.

The first burial there was Olivere Williams (son of Alpheus Williams) who died at the age of 17 on June 9, 1820.

Alpheus Williams died July 9, 1828, at age 62 and his wife, Abigail, died September 5, 1826, at age 58. Both Alpheus and Abigail are buried there.[13]

The cemetery today is called the Waterford Village Cemetery. It is located at the end of Clippert Street off Dixie Highway.

There are fifty-two graves in the cemetery.[14] Two graves are unknown and one gravestone is unreadable.

General store

The first store in the village was the home of Alpheus Williams where he kept a few shelves of staples. After his death, the land exchanged hands many times. In 1837, Merrick and Bruce purchased it and built the first established store next to the original home of Alpheus Williams on the north bank of the Clinton River on Dixie Highway.[15] The store remained in operation for many years.

Circa 1857, Horace Huntoon (b.1837-d.1897) and a young handyman named John A. Griffen (b.1841-d.1917)[16] built a general store in Waterford Village on the southwest corner of Andersonville Road and Dixie Highway (now 5799 Dixie Highway).[17]

The general store had nine different proprietors between 1857 and 1927:[17]

The general store housed everything needed for the village and surrounding community. From dry goods and tools to certain foods, patent medicines, household utensils, fancy jewelry, material for clothing, shoes, hats, cracker barrels, and even hard candy and a small selection of toys.

James R. Jones had the first telephone in the village installed in his store.

The Waterford General Store also had attractions for the local residents and the summer vacationers as well. The second floor of the store had a roller skating rink for a time and also was used as a theater for a period. James R. Jones and his wife Isabelle actually lived above the store for a while.[17]

The general store was the heart of the community. The store served as a meeting place for friends, who swapped stories and debated politics

The storekeeper knew the latest news and often served as the Justice of the peace, and the village Postmaster. In 1865, John G. Owen became the first postmaster in Waterford Village.[22] When zip codes were introduced in 1963, Waterford's zip code became 48095.

The store was idle for a few years in the early 1900s, but the second floor was used as a justice court, and a dance hall.[23]

In 1927, Henry Ford purchased the store from August V. Jacober for $700. The store was moved and currently stands in Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan.[24] [3] August Jacober built another store in the same location in Waterford Village and ran it until 1957.[25]

Hotel

In 1841, Stephen Besley (d.1869) began construction on a hotel at 5805 Saginaw Trail (Dixie Highway). Besley sold the hotel to Daniel R. Lord (d.1883) who sold it to William Bradt (b.1827-d.1888) by 1872, who named the hotel Bradt's Exchange. The hotel was also named the Waterford Exchange, and the Waterford Hotel. It served as a stagecoach stop for over 60 years.

On December 31, 1890, the Waterford Exchange Hotel caught fire, causing the death of local resident Jeremiah G. Ganong (b.1802) on March 20, 1891, from smoke inhalation.[26] The hotel was repaired and re-opened for business.

In 1970, the hotel was demolished after having been closed for several years.[27]

Railroad

In 1851, the railroad was completed through Waterford. The original Waterford train depot[28] was opened shortly after the railroad was completed. Built by the Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway, a subsidiary of the Grand Trunk Railroad, the depot stood on the northwest corner of the tracks on Depot Street (later called Airport Road).[12]

The Waterford depot was 33.29 miles from Detroit and 155.02 miles from Grand Haven, Michigan. Two miles to the south of the Waterford depot was the Drayton Plains depot. Two miles north of the Waterford depot was the Clarkston depot, and just one mile north of the Waterford depot was the Windiate Park depot.

Because of the railroad, the Waterford area, with its many lakes, quickly became a summer resort community and drew large numbers of vacationers from Detroit and other cities along the railway line.[13]

The original Waterford depot was built in the late 1850s. It was replaced in the early 1900s with a second depot on the same location. That depot was abandoned in 1959 and burned down due to an electrical fire in November, 1979. It was never rebuilt.

Church

In 1869, a Baptist church[13] became the first church built in Waterford Village.[27] It later became a Methodist church.

The church is still standing at 5860 Andersonville Road near Dixie Highway. It was renovated in 1976 after being purchased by Waterford Township.

Baseball

Michigan was one of the leading suppliers of men during the Civil War and many of those men went on to fight in battles in the East and South. While they were in service, they learned the east coast game of baseball (then spelled Base Ball) and brought it home with them.

Around 1887, Waterford Village started a baseball team. The team was named the Lah-De-Dahs.[29] They played other teams from Detroit, Dearborn, Mount Clemens and beyond. They would travel by the train to play their away games.[30] The Lah-De-Dahs were reincarnated in the late 1900s as the Greenfield Village Lah-De-Dahs and play vintage base ball, wearing vintage uniforms, throughout the country today.[31]

School

In 1901, the first school was established in Waterford Village on Steffens Street and Andersonville Road. In 1910, the wooden school burned down but was rebuilt.[32]

In 1927, a two-story brick building was built at 4241 Steffens Street.[3] The elementary school was renamed Waterford Village School.

In 2014, Waterford Village School, the oldest in Waterford Township, was closed. The Waterford School District briefly turned the school into four preschool classrooms and a Michigan Works department, before demolishing it in December 2021.

Tavern

In 1922, the Old Mill Tavern was built by Louis Dorman (b.1895-d.1976) in Waterford Village.[13] It was located at 5828 Dixie Highway where the road crosses of the Clinton River. It was the most popular restaurant in Waterford Village for over a half century.

The tavern was destroyed by fire in 1982 and was never rebuilt.

Newspapers

The first newspaper to serve Waterford was The Oakland Chronicle, which began publishing May 31, 1830, by Thomas Simpson. It was the fourth newspaper to be established in Michigan. It ceased on April 22, 1831. The equipment was sold to John R. Williams and his uncle, Joseph Campau, who moved it to Detroit to start the Democratic Free Press, which became the Detroit Free Press.[33] [34]

Since then, several local area newspapers have served Waterford residents.

Notable people

Notes and References

  1. http://focus.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/79001167 NRIS
  2. Web site: Home . michmarkers.com.
  3. Web site: Waterford Historical Society | History.
  4. Book: An Account of Oakland County / Edited by Lillian Drake Avery. 2005.
  5. Web site: Waterford Township and Independence Township, Atlas: Oakland County 1872, Michigan Historical Map.
  6. Web site: Beardslee Family - Person Page 4.
  7. Web site: Newsletter February-March 2010. waterfordhistoricalsociety.org. 21 September 2023.
  8. Web site: Archived copy . 2016-05-24 . 2016-06-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160624035743/http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~miwatgs/GenieNotes/GenieNotesV11/V11%20NUM%201_Jan2015.pdf . dead .
  9. Web site: Business notices. waterfordmi.gov.
  10. Dixie Highway Association (1922). Outline of the Dixie Highway (Map). Scale not given. Dixie Highway. Retrieved March 14, 2009
  11. Barnett, LeRoy (2004). A Drive Down Memory Lane: The Named State and Federal Highways of Michigan. Allegan Forest, MI: Priscilla Press. pp. 192–3. .
  12. file:///C:/Users/Owner/Downloads/waterfordvillage.pdf
  13. Web site: Waterford Township Historical Timeline | Waterford, MI. waterfordmi.gov.
  14. Web site: Village aka Waterford Village Cemetery Headstones, Waterford Township, Oakland County, Michigan. www.usgwarchives.net.
  15. Web site: Waterford Historical Society | History. www.waterfordhistoricalsociety.org.
  16. Web site: Search Results for World records.
  17. Web site: J.R. Jones General Store - the Henry Ford.
  18. Web site: Horace Huntoon 1809-1884 - Ancestry®. Ancestry.com.
  19. Web site: Huntoon Descendants Report (Generation 6) .
  20. Web site: Archived copy . 2016-05-11 . 2016-06-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160604215624/http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~miwatgs/GenieNotes/GenieNotesV12/V12%20NUM%201_Jan2016.pdf . dead .
  21. Web site: News @9 rebroadcast. 16 February 2012.
  22. Web site: Home . waterfordhistoricalsociety.org.
  23. Web site: Waterford Historical Society | Museums.
  24. Web site: Playle's: Elias Brown General Store - Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan - Store Item# HOMERBOB26724 . 2016-03-03 . 2016-03-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160306185215/http://www.playle.com/listing.php?i=HOMERBOB26724 . dead .
  25. Web site: Waterford Historical Society | Museums.
  26. Book: Genung, Ganong, Ganung Genealogy: A History of the Descendants of Jean Guenon of Flushing, Long Island. 499 . jeremiah g. ganong michigan. . A.W. Heinrich's Printing Company . Nichols. Leon Nelson. 1906.
  27. Web site: Home . waterfordhistoricalsociety.org.
  28. Web site: Station: Waterford, MI . 2016-06-29 . 2017-05-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170510100647/http://www.michiganrailroads.com/RRHX/Stations/CountyStations/OaklandStations/WaterfordMI.htm . dead .
  29. Web site: Greenfield Village's Vintage Baseball Team Prepares for 20th Season. 6 June 2013.
  30. Web site: Events. 16 February 2023 .
  31. Web site: Historic Base Ball 1867 Style - Events - The Henry Ford. www.thehenryford.org.
  32. Web site: Waterford Board of Education OKs closing 4 elementary schools. 21 March 2014.
  33. Web site: Detroit Free Press | Detroit Historical Society.
  34. Web site: Library of Michigan - LIBRARY OF MICHIGAN.
  35. Web site: Pontiac Genealogy (In Oakland County, Michigan).
  36. Web site: Pontiac bill poster.
  37. CLARKSTON NEWS 1932-1979 2007-2011
  38. Web site: Bob Seger Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.