The Plank Road
Plank roads evoke the mystique of days gone by, but those old wooden planks held little charm for travelers.
Explore " wyce" with insightful episodes like "The Plank Road", "Ride the Greyhounds", "Frozen Water Mains", "Turkey Day Football" and "Halloween Mischief" from podcasts like ""Glance at the Past", "Glance at the Past", "Glance at the Past", "Glance at the Past" and "Glance at the Past"" and more!
Plank roads evoke the mystique of days gone by, but those old wooden planks held little charm for travelers.
In August of 1924, four new Fageol Safety Coaches premium passenger buses were added to the Grand Rapids Greyhound fleet, offering daily service.
Bitter winter cold bedeviled Grand Rapids water workers, at great expense to customers.
By 1900, high school football was firmly entrenched as a Grand Rapids Thanksgiving tradition.
Boys will be boys!
In 1931, Grand Rapids opened a tourist camp at North Park with Grand River frontage.
In 1866, young Conrad Swensberg opened the Grand Rapids Business College & Telegraphic Institute, the ancestor of today's Davenport University.
Grand Rapids' first post office was established in 1832 along the banks of the Grand River at Bridge Street. Post master Darius Windsor oversaw its growth under less-than-favorable conditions.
The 40 acre development south of Hall St. and between Jefferson and Madison Avenues became a commercial hub at the turn of the 20th Century.
Remembering the bygone days of a favorite community landmark: the corner drug store.
In 1916, Harry H. Gardner "The Human Fly" caused a stir in Grand Rapids with his death-defying feats.
Wildcat bankers and failed banks made for shaky finances for 19th century Grand Rapids citizens.
Grand Rapids artist Gert VanHouten became a well known WWI cartoonist publishing under the byline 'GERT'.
Before the movies, many Grand Rapids residents got their entertainment at the vaudeville theatre "The Empress", an early burlesque locale.
A 1907 postcard series published in Grand Rapids, MI by the Reed Tandler Company featured Harry H. Wickham aka "Mr. Rover", a fellow who perhaps took his title too literally.
Grand Rapids first Catholic school opened in 1853, educating area students for 137 years.
Michigan followed Maine's idea for prohibition in 1853, but, it was found impossible to do enforce this ideal in Grand Rapids. By 1870, Grand Rapids housed 58 saloons and five breweries. Women's organizations for prohibition, were an understated part of keeping alcohol out of Michigan. Under the leadership of Abigail Hastings of Lansing, she formed the Michigan Women's Christian Temperance Union to fight for the ban of alcohol.
William R. Fox began the Fox Machine Company in 1885. It's principle products were machines for the wood working industry. Fox later collaborated with Glenn Barrett to create a typewriter. Every part of the machine was made in Grand Rapids. There were three types of typewriter: blind, visible, and portable size. Foreign sales were an important part of his income. The Russian government had at one time place an order for 500 machines. Fox was forced to close his doors in 1920 after being sued by the makers of the Corona for supposed patent infringement.
In 1916, Mother Mary Elias and her Carmelite Sisters, were forced to flee the bloody Civil War happening in Mexico. After living in Havana, Cuba; New Orleans, Louisiana; and St. Louis, Missouri; Bishop Henry Joseph Richter invited Mother Mary Elias and her sisters to live in Grand Rapids. The Nuns enjoyed a simple life, spending most of the day in silence.
The Detroit, Grand Haven, and Milwaukee railroad provided the first rails to Grand Rapids, in 1858, and the only rails until 1869. After the Civil War, Grand Rapids was given a land grant to subsidize the construction of rails between Petoskey and Fort Wayne, Indiana. The rail between became known as the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad (GR&I). The Rails were demolished in 1961 to make way for US-131.
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