Ypsilanti's Water Tower with cuppola before it was removed for safety reasons. |
Once the Village of Ypsilanti was chartered by the Michigan Legislature in 1832, growth was steady. But the cholera epidemic of 1836 in Detroit forced Ypsilanti residents to take drastic measures prohibiting travelers from entering their town. Local militiamen were stationed at Bowen’s Tavern three miles east of the village on Chicago Road.
When a stagecoach from Detroit was stopped and barred from entering
the village, the teamster attempted to run the blockade when a militiaman shot the lead horse in the head. The horse fell but was
only stunned. The lead ball glanced off his skull. The horse was helped to its
feet and the angry driver stubbornly pressed forward. The news of the
stagecoach incident traveled quickly filling passengers with apprehension. A
detour around the village was quickly established and mail service was
interrupted. Ypsilanti remained cholera-free, but outsiders were left with the
lasting impression that the village was unfriendly and dangerous.
Michigan Central Depot |
Michigan Central train service
was inaugurated on February 2, 1838. Ypsilanti was connected to the rest of the state and became the economic hub for the area’s growing agricultural concerns. The
coming of the railroad divided Ypsilanti into two distinct commercial
districts. The West Side of the river was dominated by downtown merchants on the Chicago road. The
East Side had the train station and developed Depot Town catering to train passengers and
light manufacturing.
The State Legislature chartered Michigan State
Normal College in 1849 to be the first teacher training institution west of the
Alleghenies. Its mission was to “normalize” public school instruction and
set educational standards throughout the state. The college was constructed on Ypsilanti’s high ground on the West Side and eventually became Eastern
Michigan University.
Ypsi-Ann Trolley |
Electricity began powering the city in 1887, and a
new water-pumping station made possible Ypsilanti’s most prominent feature, the
Water Tower, built across from the Normal College. In 1890, the
popular Ypsi-Ann steam-driven trolley made travel between the two college
towns possible. The Normal College was attended mainly by young women, and the
University of Michigan was attended mainly by young men. It was said that the
weekends brought a rough parity between the genders. Because the steam-driven
trolley cars were loud and scared the horses, the trolley line was soon electrified. In
1898, the Ypsi-Ann connected to Detroit’s Interurban to the east and Saline and
Jackson to the west.
Meanwhile, the East Side developed dams and river races
along the Huron to power a wool carding factory, a flour mill, grist mills, an underwear factory, a
cabinetry shop, and a carriage manufacturer. With the discovery of mineral springs
on the East Side in 1882, several sanitariums were established said to cure cancer, rheumatism, skin ailments, and even "women's trouble." Ypsilanti shipped mineral soap, distilled salts, and carbonated mineral water nationwide.
Specializing in long underwear with a flap in the back. |
The First National Bank of Ypsilanti was founded in 1864 by Daniel L. Quirk, Cornelius Cornwell, and Asa Dow. These were boom times for Ypsilanti. Many of the city’s most
successful entrepreneurs built their mansions along the
western bluff of the Huron River looking down at what was once Godfroy’s on the Pottawatomie and a gathering place for Native Americans. The Daniel L. Quirk mansion would eventually become the Ypsilanti City
Hall; the Asa Dow mansion would become the Ypsilanti Historical Society, and the
John and Mary Ann Starkweather mansion would become the Ladies Library
Association.
Higland Cemetery Memorial |
The Ypsilanti community knew hardship and uncertainty before. Their
first major disaster happened on March 28, 1851, a great fire destroyed much of
downtown. The wooden buildings were soon rebuilt in brick. Ypsilanti’s second
disaster occurred April 12, 1893, when a cyclone tore through town. Power lines
went down, trees were uprooted, and homes were carried away with their belongings. The community came together and rebuilt once again. Ypsilanti was always able to rally
and rise above its afflictions.
Heavy security during Torch Murder trial. |
But train stations during the Depression were magnets for the displaced and the shiftless. The decade of the 1930s were lean and desperate times for many. In 1931, three unemployed vagrants were out drinking one night searching for someone to rob. They came upon four Ypsilanti teens "parking" south of Ford Lake near Tuttle Hill. The teens were terrorized before being shot to death; then, their bodies were placed in the car, moved to another location, and doused with gasoline. When the bodies were found, they were unrecognizable. The three murderers were quickly captured, convicted, and sent to Jackson prison under heavy guard to prevent a lynching.
As disturbing as the Torch Murders were, the isolated murder of
a seven-year-old boy found frozen under the Frog Island footbridge in 1935 gripped the conscience of Ypsilanti residents like nothing
had before. Every parent warned their children to avoid Depot Town, especially since the murderer of Richard Streicher, Jr. was still at large.
Harry Bennet's Role in the Torch Murders: https://fornology.blogspot.com/2013/12/harry-bennetts-role-in-ypsilanti-torch.html
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