CHAPTER
HISTORY
The
Coldwater Chapter of the DAR was organized
in January 14, 1916, at the home of Mrs.
Sigmund Wing in Coldwater, Michigan. At the time
there were 24 members-at-large of the DAR in
the area. In March 2019, we changed our name to US 12 Heritage Trail Chapter to recognize the beauty found along this historic route from the east to west coast of Michigan.
Our
US 12 Heritage Trail Chapter is growing, and we welcome prospective members from our communities.
We have
many very interesting programs planned for
next year and would welcome new members and
visitors to our meetings.
Our
meeting locations are divided between
Coldwater and Hillsdale.
CITY HISTORY
Branch County was a primeval
wilderness little more than one hundred fifty
years ago, inhabited only by the Potawatomie
Indians.
While it is true that there were
trading posts within the limits of what's now
Branch County as early as 1825, the first actual
white settler appears to have been Jabe Bronson,
who made his home in 1828 in the locality now
bearing his name - Bronson. It should be borne
in mind that the entire population of Michigan
in 1820 was less than 9,000, and not much more
in 1828.
However, the old Indian trail
between Detroit and Chicago (now the Chicago
Road or U.S. 12) saw great numbers of pioneers
passing this way, bound for Illinois and other
parts of what was then the "far west". The
presence of the Indians deterred many who would
otherwise have settled here.
It was in the year 1821 that
Chief Topinabee and his people sold to the
whites what is now the County of Branch and a
vast area besides, though they still continued
to occupy it as before, supposedly on
reservations. One reservation was a tract six
miles square, called Mikkesawbee, and located in
parts of the present Quincy and Coldwater
Townships. But the Native Americans roamed
everywhere, to hunt and fish as they chose, in
what seemed to them a paradise, for the woods
abounded in deer, wild turkeys, pigeons,
squirrels, and other varieties of game. While
the many lakes and streams swarmed with the
finest fish; and walnuts, butternuts, hickory
nuts, hazelnuts and numerous berries were to be
had in great abundance for the gathering. The
deed conveying this goodly land to the
government was signed by Topinabee followed by
Wawenickamack, Mayonchee, Atchwemuckquee and
numerous braves then prominent in the councils
and affairs of the Potawatomies.
There were quite a number of
beautiful prairies, notably at Coldwater,
Bronson, and Girard; but the great bulk of this
region was covered with splendid forests of
beech, maple, walnut, hickory, whitewood, elm,
oak, and other trees. Untold millions of lumber
feet of these trees were cut by the early
settlers, piled in log heaps and burned in order
to clear the land. Many streams wandered through
the forests, and there were some ninety lakes,
large and small, in what is now Branch County.
In the year 1829 Branch County
was laid out and so named by the Territorial
Legislature of Michigan. It was first attached
to Lenawee County and later to St. Joseph for
judicial purposes. The name was given in honor
of John Branch of North Carolina, Secretary of
the Navy in President Jackson's cabinet at that
time.
The year 1830 saw little hamlets
spring up at Coldwater and Bronson, while a
tavern was established at Quincy - all on the
Chicago Road. Due to the lack of highways, the
settlements at the junction of the Coldwater and
St. Joseph Rivers (Union City) and on the former
stream at Hodunk were made several years later,
although Girard Prairie had a few white settlers
soon after Coldwater's inception. Both Coldwater
and Girard had quite pretentious Indian villages
when the white man came.
From this time on, settlement
proceeded rapidly, as shown by the fact that
Michigan's population increased from 31,639 in
1830 to 212,267 in 1840. But, Branch County's
early "boom" did not come until the Potawatomies
were removed to Kansas in 1840. Further impetus
was also given by the building of the Michigan
Southern and Northern Indiana Railroad across
the county in 1850.
The county seat was first at
Masonville, on the east bank of the river, in
the west part of the present city of Coldwater,
but was soon transferred to the ambitious
village of Branch, which held that honor from
1831 to 1842, when Coldwater won the coveted
plum after an exciting and most memorable
contest.
The county's separate existence
dates from the year 1833, and its population
increased steadily until 1900, when we numbered
nearly 28,000 people. The official 1990 census
is 41,502.
The County of Branch now has two
incorporated cities. Coldwater and Bronson; also
three incorporated villages: Quincy, Sherwood,
and Union City. Each has its own industries and
sources of wealth and prosperity, by no means
the least of which is the splendid agricultural
country adjoining. The communities of Batavia,
Girard, and Kinderhook are not incorporated; and
to these may be added several smaller hamlets
about the county.
Branch County citizens were
deprived of their venerable old Courthouse in
1972 when a disastrous fire destroyed the
building on the night of December 5th. The fire
gutted the second floor, and much water damage
resulted to the lower floors. The extent of the
damage required that a new building be
constructed as it was not economical to restore
the historic old building which was built in
1887 at a cost of $50,000.
After the initial shock of
relocating the many county offices in various
parts of the City of Coldwater, the Coldwater
State Home and Training School (now the Lakeland
and Florence Crane Correctional Facilities)
provided one of the buildings on their grounds
as a temporary courthouse. Although the space
was cramped, the business of the county
continued while the Board of Commissioners
planned for a new courthouse.
After almost three years in
temporary quarters, a new courthouse was
finished and stands on the site of the old
building. January 1976 was moving month, and the
dedication took place in March of that year. A
time capsule was placed in a "cornerstone" in
the west wall, three feet north of the main
entrance, and five feet above the floor, and
many mementos, past and present, were sealed
therein.
The new courthouse was built at a
cost of 1.9 million dollars, being paid for by a
bond issue voted by the people of the county.
The well-known clock tower on the
old courthouse was sorely missed by the citizens
of the county. Due to the effort of a group of
volunteer citizens, a new Clock Tower, situated
on the southwest comer of the current courthouse
grounds, was dedicated on July 30, 1988. The
original bell and clock from the first clock
tower were restored for use in the new tower.
The project was completely funded by donations
of time, talents, and money from the citizens of
Branch County.
City History compiled by Charles N. Hill
Coldwater Chamber of Commerce from materials of
Brown-Facklam; Conover; Luedders Directory;
"Mich. in 4 Centuries", Blad; etc
Courtesy the City of Coldwater
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Last updated:
September 14, 2019
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