GOVERNMENT AND SCHOOLS

PICKFORD TOWNSHIP OFFICERS FROM 1916 TO 1972

Supervisors

Weldon Pickford  1st Supervisor
Sam Roe  2nd Supervisor
George Watson  from 1916 to 1919
William McDonald  from 1920 to 1921
George Watson  from 1921 to 1923
William Miller  from 1924 to 1928
George Tabor  1929
William Millet  1930
George Tabor  1931- 1932
Mervin Rye  1933-1935
Elliott Hancock  1936-1972
Ories Huyck  1972

Clerks

Ernest Nixon  1916 - 1922
Otto Graham  1923 - 1958
James Storey  1958 - 1972
Gerald Harrison  1972

Justice of Peace

William McDonald  1916
William Batho  1917
James Allen  1917
Fuller Cowell  1918
Dudley Aldrich  1919
William Hart  1920
William Batho  1922
William Miller  1923
Fuller Cowell  1923
William Hart  1924
William Batho  1925
Fuller Cowell  1926
William Anderson  1927
William Hart  1928
William Batho  1929
Fuller Cowell  1930
William Anderson  1931
William Hart  1932
John Thompson  1933
Clayton Morrison  1934
William Hart  1940
Roy Smith  1941
Elmer Haines  1941
Clayton Morrison  1942
William Miller  1943
John Thompson  1945
Elmer Haines  

Law changed 1955 - Justice of Peace no longer on Township Board - two trustees elected.

Gerald Harrison James Storey
Jack Slater Elmer Haines
James Hill Bert McKiddie

Treasurers

Ford Beacom 1916
Fred Green 1917- 1918
John Shobbrook 1919 -1920
Garfield Graham 1921- 1922
Ford Beacom 1923- 1924
Robert Harrison 1925- 1926
Roy Smith 1927- 1928
Dudley Aldrich 1929- 1930
Mervin Rye 1931-1932
Dewey Morrison 1933-1934
Lorne Steele 1935-1970
Valarie Sanderson 1971-

Present Township Board (1972)

Supervisor Orris Huyck
Clerk Gerald Harrison
Treasurer Valarie Sanderson
Trustee Bert McKiddie
Trustee James Hill

MARQUETTE TOWNSHIP

Mr. William Rutledge, who married Betsy Ross one of the first settlers, came over from Canada to live in Marquette Township in 1882 with three children. One of his children was John T. Rutledge, whose sons are Elmer and Leonard. Other early settlers were Bob Beacom, Hugh Leach, William Wise, and the Nettletons. William Wise built the first house. Barney Nettleton moved in with Orville Bawks' great-great-grandfather in Chippewa County. Soon afterward he built his home in Marquette Township with the nearest neighbors two miles away.

Marquette Township established a township board on April 12, 1886. The first supervisor was William Wise. The first clerk was John Taylor who lived where Clifford Taylor now keeps his car. The second supervisor was Thomas Morrison who held the office for 44 years. If he worked for a day he would get $1.50 and for a week he got $7.50. He lived where Bob Wilson lives now. The third supervisor was George Stirling who lived where Frank Zwolinski lives now. Sam Nettlelon was the first Justice of the Peace and William Rutledge was the second. Justice of the Peace for the third year was Charles W. Henry. George Blair was the first Treasurer. Mr. William Miller was clerk for a long time. Mrs. Janet Slater was clerk for 30 years and the office was held by Leola Reich from 1966-1972.

Denny was second Treasurer. Robert Wilson has been treasurer for many years. Russell Cottle was Supervisor for 22 years. He retired in December, 1969. His son Elliott became Supervisor. The present Supervisor is Elliott Cottle. Marjeen Wise will become clerk in 1973.

In 1949 caucus meetings were still being held. In 1951 they changed to a Primary Election. Later they abolished the Justice of the Peace and started having two trustees.

All roads were owned by townships and supported by taxes. Many men worked on the road a day or so in order to pay for their own taxes. Everybody's cows used to roam along roads end eat the grass, but gradually the township passed laws to fence in cattle.

The first school was built in 1882 and they had school in it then, but the chimney was not built until 1893. The first teacher was Wesley Aldrich. There were several one-room country schools in Marquette Township which children attended through the eighth grade. But in 1954 these schools were closed and the children of Marquette Township attended Pickford Public Schools.

POST OFFICE

The Andrew Wilson family came to Pickford in 1880. C. W. Pickford was in his General Merchandise store, which was located where the Pickford Twp. Hall now stands, described as Lot 1 Box 1 of C. W. Pickford's first addition to the village of Pickford. F. H. Taylor was the bookkeeper and Postmaster was A. W. Taylor.

In 1893 Andrew Wilson was awarded the Post Office which his daughter, Clara Wilson Green, operated. It was in a building across the street from where A. W. Taylor had his shoe store. F. H. Taylor came to the Post Office and asked Clara if she thought they could get a daily mail service between Sault Ste. Marie and Pickford. Through their contacts with the Postal Department in Washington, the first daily mail service was established between Sault Ste. Marie and Pickford. William Dynes was the mail carrier.

Other carriers following Mr. Dynes were George Tabor, George Wilson (assisted by Allie Pauley, Ham Hamilton, J. H. Roe, and many others), and V. L. Lipsett, and Wilson again. Then came Robert Walker and Harold Garfield and Otto Graham and the Miller Brothers. Some of the Postmasters were William Beacom, George Watson, F. J. Smith, and Merrill Hillock and present postmaster is Harry Smith.

While F. J. Smith was Postmaster, the building that housed the Post Office burned. A small, crude building was built next to the present site. Between the time of the burning and the building of the new site, the Post Office was located in Lipsett Hardware. The present Post Office was built in 1961 and started operations in its new site in February 1962.

PICKFORD SCHOOL HISTORY

The first school began in Pickford in the year 1880 when Miss Emma Pickford, later Mrs. Pascoe taught a group of children in a log building on the cornet lot where the former County Garage now stands. This, however, was not an organized school. About 1882 a school board was organized and a building erected on the northwest corner of the farm now owned by John Stirling, Jr. Some of the earliest Board Members were William Best, Richard Rye, C. W. Pickford, and William Gough. The first teacher in the organized school was Miss Millie Earl, later Mrs. A. W. Taylor. About 1886 that building was moved to the site where the garage owned by Morrell Thompson is now located.

About this same time the Kennedy school south of Pickford was started. Also 2.5 miles north of Pickford the school known as Roe School opened. In 1895 the Roosevelt or Lindberg (as it was later called) School was built. Other schools in the vicinity were Blairville, built about 1890, Cowell, Maple Ridge, Stirlingville, Munuscong Bay, Fairview, Sunshine, Tripp, Kelden, Pleasant Park, and Dunbar in 1915.

About 1900 there were more children than the one-room building would accommodate and plans were made for a four-room school. In 1903 a fraction of Marquette Township was added to the Pickford School District and the four-room frame building was erected. Mr. Dave Beacom was a member of the Board at this time. Then in 1909 the Ninth and Tenth Grades were added with Miss Budd as teacher. In 1911 the Township District System was changed to the Unit System and a board of five trustees was elected. In the year 1917, the frame building burned to the ground and the students were moved into buildings around the village for the remainder of the year.

Then in the spring of 1917 a bond issue was voted for the building of a new two-story brick building, but there was strong opposition and the bond issue was voted down. Then the Board rented the upstairs of Fred Taylor's hardware store and divided it into four classrooms and the students attended school there for two years. Mr. Schuyler was Principal when the school burned and Mr. McCullogh was hired the next year. He was the first man to organize a basketball team and Harold Taylor was Captain.

Then in the spring of 1920 a bond issue was passed and a one-story four-room building was erected on the site where the present elementary school is located. On February 19, 1922, this building went up in smoke and Pickford was without a school again. Not only that, the people had a big debt on their hands. Fortunately, there were enough public-spirited citizens to roll up their sleeves and start out again on a drive for another $20,000. When this issue was passed, the present two-story elementary building was erected on the same foundation on which the burned building had been standing.

Mr. F. J. Smith was Secretary of the Board of Education during those two building programs and deserved a vote of thanks for the many hours he put in for the welfare of the community's children.

Sandwiched between these two bond issues was another event of considerable importance in the story of improved educational services in Pickford. In 1921 Pickford became a 12 grade school and a class of six students graduated in 1922.

In 1922 the first Superintendent, Mr. George Newman, a Pennsylvania Dutchman, was hired. He remained until 1931. While in Pickford he married Miss Ann Demerest, a primary teacher. He is no longer living.

The members of the first graduating Class were Clayton Morrison, Etta Warren, Lucille Beadle, Minerva Hughes, Olive Rye, and Charles Cowell. Three of these are still living in Pickford: Clayton Morrison, Minerva Hughes (Mrs. John Wise), and Olive Rye (Mrs. Clifford Taylor; Etta Warren (Mrs. Henry McFadden) now lives in Detroit. Lucille Beadle (Mrs. Carl Howell) now makes her home in Flint. Charles Cowell recently retired as Principal of McKinley School and lives in Sault Ste. Marie. In 1957 the Class of 1922 held a reunion at the time of the dedication of the new school and marking the 35th Anniversary of their graduation. All members and spouses and Mr. Newman and his wife were present. In May 1972, they held their Golden Anniversary Reunion and again all members and their husbands or wives were present with the exception of the McFaddens of Detroit.

In February 1922, the school was destroyed by fire, so classes were held in different places in town. C. W. Beamer, Superintendent of Sault High, was the guest speaker at the graduation exercises in May.

In 1923 Pickford High School was put on the University of Michigan approved list.

In 1927 the Pleasant Park School closed for one year. Art Ames drove a closed sleighbus. Harry McConkey brought those who couldn't be accommodated on Mr. Ames' bus. The next year they reopened their school for three years.

In 1930 the Roe and Maple Ridge schools north of Pickford closed, a bus was purchased, and the students brought into the village school. The Kennedy School (south of Pickford) has also been closed and those children transported to Pickford.

Gradually the other schools were closed, the last being the Blairville in 1945 and the Cowell School in 1943 from Marquette Township. They became part of Pickford School District in 1954.

From 1931 to 1933 Mr. D. L. Benfer was Superintendent. From 1933 to 1937 Mr. Eino Honkanen was Superintendent.

In 1936 Pickford became a Rural Agricultural School District. Shop work was added to the course of study and with a few other changes in the program, more attention was possible for the educational program of those who did not go on to college. At the same time these changes did not interfere with the efforts to continue to improve the program of those who were planning on college entrance.

With the transportation of more and more children to the village school in Pickford, it soon became apparent that a new building was needed. Since it was the middle of the Depression, every resource was tried in an effort to get government help. When these attempts failed, a building and site fund was established and a sum of $15,000 was eventually accumulated. With the help of a $30,000 bond issue passed by the voters of the township, contracts were let in 1937, and the new building completed in 1938.

As had frequently happened in such building programs, the actual costs exceeded the original estimates, and the Board of Education soon had a $20,000 debt on its hands. When a second bond issue to take care of this obligation was turned down, members of the Board signed their personal notes in payment for some of the work.

Members of the Board of Education at the time the high school building was constructed were Mr. William Stevenson, President; Mr. George Raynard, Secretary; Mr. Clayton Morrison, Treasurer; Mr. W. F. McDonald and Mr. David Batho. Mr. E. A. Bowers was Superintendent of Schools.

The building was constructed by MacDonald Construction Company, Bowd-Munson Company were the architects, with Robert E. Dodd as associate architect.

From 1937 to 1945 Mr. E. A. Bowers, a graduate of the University of Illinois and former Principal from 1926 to 1929, was Superintendent. In 1945 Mr. Jack Malette of Sault Ste. Marie advanced from Principal to Superintendent, remaining until 1954. Mr. Max Hamilton, graduate of Western Michigan University, M. A. from Michigan State University, was Superintendent from 1954 to 1956. In 1956 Mr. Webster Morrison, High School Principal and Head Coach, became Superintendent. Mr. Morrison received his B. S. Degree from Northern Michigan and his M. A. from the University of Michigan.

On March 25, 1955, the taxpayers went to the polls and defeated a bond issue for an addition and remodeling by a vote of 180 in favor and 196 against. In 1956 the voters approved the addition to the school which was to be a gymnasium, locker room, lavatories, an office for Superintendent, High School Principal's office. Extensive remodeling and new central heating plant were also included. The first game in the new gymnasium was with the Brimley Bays on February 12, 1957, which the Panthers won.

The new building was dedicated on May 24, 1957. The Morrison Gymnasium was dedicated to Clayton Morrison, a school board member. Other memorials dedicated at that time were the glass doors on the exhibit case in the main corridor in memory of Miss Eleanor Olsen, Kindergarten teacher for many years. This was given by her sisters and many friends. The scoreboard is in memory of Bernard Morrison by the Quinnell family.

The southeast bleachers were presented to the school by the Pickford Amvets in 1959.

Pickford High School Athletic Association

The Athletic Association was organized by C. L. McCullogh in September, 1917. Basketball, track, and baseball were the first sports. Tennis was started, but never became popular. Some of the boys in that first association were Clayton Morrison, Arthur Smith, Dave Watson, Ralph Anderson, and Roy Watson.

The girls also had a basketball team. In 1920 Elizabeth Cowell (the late Mrs. Oakman Kennedy) was president of the association. Both boys' and girls' teams represented Pickford at the County Basketball Tournament. Girls receiving letters in 1920 were Etta Warren, Elizabeth Cowell, Minerva Hughes, Reta Kerr, Wilma Crawford, Etta McDonald, and Ruth Hart. In 1924 Margaret Miller (Mrs. Otto Watson) was captain.

During the years the sports changed. Six-man football was added in 1947 with Jack Malette coaching. Eleven-man football was started in 1951. Track was dropped in 1941 and not resumed until 1952. In 1955 cross-country became a varsity sport.

In 1925 the Little Five Conference was organized with Pickford, Rudyard, Brimley, DeTour, and Soo Jr. High teams competing. In 1938 it became the Little Six with Hulbert coming into the conference. In 1941 Cedarville entered, making it the Little Eight. Hulbert dropped out in 1947 and Loretto was admitted. In 1957 Engadine was admitted to the Little Eight Conference and it became the Little Nine. In 1959 the Sault Bees dropped out to make it the Little Seven again.

In 1945 Mr. Webster Morrison joined the faculty and was coach of basketball and baseball. In 1948 he assumed the duties of football coach. In 1952 he reorganized track and acted as coach. Mr. Morrison became Superintendent of the school in 1957.

Championships

Football: 1950, Co-champions. 1951, 1952, 1955, 1957, and 1965. Conference Champions. 1953, 1954, 1956 finished in second place.

Basketball: 1947-48, Conference Champions. 1948-49 and 1951-52 were District Champions. 1953-54 were Conference, District, and Regional Champions. In 1964 were District and Regional Champions. In 1965 were Conference Champions and advanced to the State Finals before losing by three points to Covert. Kenneth O'Connor was the coach. In 1971-72 the Panthers were again District Champions.

Baseball: 1948-49, 1949-50, 1950-51, 1951-52, 1957-58, and 1964-65 were Conference Champions.

Track: 1952-1972, Regional and Upper Peninsula Final Champions. This is the most consecutive championships any team in Michigan has won in any sport.

Cross-Country: Upper Peninsula Champions in 1955, 1957, 1958, 1964, 1968, 1970, 1971 and 1972.

Pickford High School Band

The Pickford Band was organized under the direction of Mr. George Neumann in 1927 with the following 16 members:

Jack Ames Ennis Bumstead Beulah Harrison Norman Smith
Cecil Ames George Kirkbride Mike McCarron Glenn Smith
Alvin Carr Kenneth Kirkbride Jack McCarron Aldren Taylor
Earl Clegg Orville Hopkins Keith Smith Chas. Wonnacott

The first performances were made in the Grange Hall and the Cameron Theatre. The band played for the P.T.A., basketball games, the Pickford Fair, and "The Biggest Little Fair In Michigan," the Stalwart Fair.

HISTORY OF STALWART

People first came to Stalwart around 1880. The first five settlers and their families were Richard Hanna, John Scott, Phillip Waybrant, R. G. Crawford, and John Johnson. They got farms by homesteading them. When there were enough settlers to organize a community, the people decided to set up a post office. The first names chosen were either Lincoln or Garfield, but there were already destinations with such names in Michigan, so the Post Office Department suggested Stalwart and that was the name they kept.

There is believed to have been a post office before 1890, but no record has been kept. The first recorded postmaster was John McKenzie in 1890 through 1894. Thomas Fargrave was next from 1894 to 1900. Then his son, Thomas Rothwell, bought and kept it until 1925. In 1925 Chester Crawford became postmaster. In 1946 his son, James C. Crawford, took over and is the present postmaster. A grocery store has always been operated along with the post office. William Tolberth opened the first gas station in Stalwart when he was postmaster.

Other places of business in Stalwart were a blacksmith shop at what is now the cornet of M-48 and the Bill Crawford farm. John McKenzie was the owner in 1888 before he had the post office. George Henry had a blacksmith shop on the opposite side of the road from 1909 to 1920.

A sawmill was run by steam and owned by Alfred Cotton near Robert O'Brien's before 1900. In 1900 Mr. Cotton moved his mill to Diamond Springs corner. James Storey had a shingle mill on the other side of the Springs.

Al Tripp had a sawmill in Sand Ridge in 1913. In 1940 James Storey started another shingle mill and saw mill on the East Branch of the Munuscong River, two miles east of Diamond Springs.

Russell Sims opened a gas station in 1935, later adding a grocery section. In 1956 he sold it to Mason Storey, who later sold it to John Williams.

STALWART SCHOOL

Around 1898 the children of Stalwart first went to the Stalwart District school located on the Tripp farm about one mile south of Diamond Springs Corner. This school was later called the Tripp School.

In those days the children and teacher had to walk to and from school, but now transportation is provided for them. They did not have school nine months of the year as we do now. School started around the 15th of April and ended the last of June, then started again in September and ending in the latter part of November when the cold weather set in.

In 1899 the country was divided into Townships, so the children of Stalwart and Raber Township had classes above the old post office in Stalwart. Mr. Edward Brown was the teacher there at that time. Meanwhile a new school was being built by Robert Kinghorn. This school was a frame building 24' x 30'. It was completed in time for school to open in September of 1900 and classes were held there the full nine months.

Some of the families sending their children to this school were the Forgraves, Martins, Crawfords, O'Neils, Kinghorns, and Halls. Edith Sprig, Mr. Holt and Mrs. Maltas were some of the teachers that taught in the Stalwart School. Their salaries were about $30 a month.

In 1941 it was decided to sell the old school house and buy a larger one from Cedarville and have it moved to the present location about a quarter mile south of the Stalwart post office. Bernice Crawford, Robert Beacom, and R. B. Crawford were the teachers for eight years, followed by Mrs. Ford Bawks. The Stalwart School was closed in 1956 and the students transported to the new Raber School and then to Pickford.