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We're Moving to the Brand New Detroit Historical Society Blog
We’re Moving to the Brand New Detroit Historical Society Blog
Thank you for following us on this platform. Don’t worry—our backlog of posts has been carried over.  Visit our main website for new posts at https://detroithistorical.org/blog. Among the brand new posts added to our new page are: The First State In and the First State Out The J.L. Hudson Department Store Collection The Society’s Most Requested Images Haunted History: The Crow New posts are…
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Know Your Hats: A Quick History of Men’s Hats 1790 to Present
Know Your Hats: A Quick History of Men’s Hats 1790 to Present
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The Detroit Historical Society Collection is home to approximately 1,800 hats: Men’s, women’s, children’s, winter, summer, military, formal, casual, etc. These function as a critical part of the larger Costume and Textile collection which, at 20,000 artifacts strong, is the single largest grouping of objects in our holdings. A good chunk of the 1,800 hats were sold from Detroit department stores…
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Pandemic: Detroit’s Deadly History
Pandemic: Detroit’s Deadly History
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The latest virulent health threat affecting our world seems new to most of us. The Ebola, SARS and MERS outbreaks were recent, but distant. Flu scares never cut this deep. So, in our collective memory, the mass closure of all public spaces is unique. “Novel” you might say.
Among Detroit’s many, many stories there are tragic tales of devastating epidemics, mass self-isolation, unintended…
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Lions, Bears, the Red Grange Trophy, and a Thanksgiving Football Mystery
Lions, Bears, the Red Grange Trophy, and a Thanksgiving Football Mystery
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This time of year the Detroit-centric internet is full of Detroit Lions Thanksgiving Game facts.
Here are some more:
The first Thanksgiving Day football game for a professional Detroit team was in 1934 against the Chicago Bears. “Professional” is the key word here as the University of Detroit had been playing games on Thanksgiving no later than 1919.
While the Dallas Cowboys have also…
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June 11th marks the anniversary of the Great Fire of 1805--a blaze that consumed most of Detroit’s buildings.  The diorama pictured on this postcard was originally installed in the downtown Hudson’s location, along with 13 other scenes, to commemorate Detroit’s 250th anniversary in 1951.  After their initial display period, Hudson’s donated the dioramas to the Detroit Historical Museum.
View the entire series of diorama postcards in our online collection.
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On April 10, 1922, the Detroit Fire Department made a ceremonial final run of it’s horse-drawn fire apparatuses along Woodward Avenue.  Several of the older engines and hose carts, followed by modern trucks, made their way through downtown along Woodward where they were met by the firefighters’ band at the Michigan Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument.  The parade lasted a brisk 5 minutes.
Ned, a 14 year veteran, was the most senior member of the department’s four-legged contingent, and was recognized with a special sign during the parade.  After the run, he, along with the rest of his team retired to greener pastures on Belle Isle.
Explore more photos and other materials from the Detroit Fire Department through our Online Collection.
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On April 8, 1956, the Department of Street Railways ran its final streetcars along the last remaining line in the city--Woodward Avenue.  The D.S.R. had been gradually converting its lines to bus service beginning in the late 1930s.  The top photo shows a PCC-style streetcar on that final day of service, near Moss Street in Highland Park.  The sign on the car’s side reads, “The Last Streetcars Operating in Detroit.. Welcome New Woodward Buses.”  The bottom photo of the Detroit Historical Museum was snapped from the window of the final streetcar as it passed.
Regular streetcar service returned to Woodward Avenue with the opening of the QLine in 2017.
Find more images and other materials related to the history of streetcars in Detroit through our Online Collection.
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Photographer Carla Anderson captured these group portraits of children in southwestern Detroit during her involvement in the Documenting Detroit project, c. 1975.
Browse Anderson’s other work, as well as that of the rest of the Documenting Detroit photographers through our Online Collection.
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The steel frame of the Durant Building (re-dubbed the General Motors Building shortly after its completion, and currently known as Cadillac Place) rises above New Center in this c. 1920 photo.  The factory in the middle-ground on the left is that of the Cadillac Motor Car Company.
Find more photos of Cadillac Place in our online collection.
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This dramatic night time view of the Detroit Edison Conners Creek electric power plant is dated March 29, 1954  The plant’s two distinctive clusters of smokestacks were a local landmark along the city’s eastern riverfront, and were nicknamed the Seven Sisters and the Two Brothers.  In 1996 the Seven Sisters were demolished.
Find more photos of the plant and it’s famed stacks in our online collection.
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Elizabeth O'Sullivan and the 1935 Detroit Tigers
Elizabeth O’Sullivan and the 1935 Detroit Tigers
“Take me Out to the Ball Game” Lyrics by Jack Norworth, 1908
Even people who can sing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” in their sleep might not know that the song is about Katie Casey, a girl who was “baseball mad” and would rather go to a game with her beau than out on the town Saturday night.
Elizabeth O’ Sullivan was Detroit’s answer to Katie Casey.
A new addition to the DHS collection is a…
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Donuts, cookies, and pies are among the offerings photographed behind the counter of a Sanders location in this c. 1980 photo.
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The c. 1950 group portrait at the top shows the “Maple and St. Aubin Usher Board” of St. John C.M.E. Church.  The congregation was founded in 1917, and in the years since held its services in several locations around the city, including the former site of St. Mark’s English Lutheran Church at the corner of Maple and St. Aubin Street (now the site of the Dequindre Cut).  In the 1950s, St. John C.M.E. moved from St. Aubin to its current location at Woodward and Blaine (as seen on the second image)--the former North Woodward Congregational Church.
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You may be familiar with the annual Belle Isle Ice Tree that appears each winter on the northern side of the island.  The tradition actually has roots that go back to downtown Detroit in 1900.  It began on the median of Washington Boulevard, at Michigan Avenue, where the rocky fountain installed on that site would be allowed to run all winter long, producing a tower of ice.  On particularly chilly years, the fountain was said to have grown as tall as 60 feet!
Sometime before the 1930s, the practice has moved to Belle Isle.  The initial location on the island was a spot to the west of the Belle Isle Bridge, however soon after it was moved to the vicinity of Vista Drive--the location of the modern Ice Tree.
The practice was so popular as to inspire a similar effort in Evergreen Cemetery beginning in 1925.
Find more images of the ice fountains through our Online Collection.
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This year the Detroit Historical Society was given a set of Santa Bears spanning 1985 to 2005.  Beginning in 1985, the stores under the Dayton-Hudson umbrella (later Marshall Field's) released a new bear each holiday season, clad in a themed outfit.  Above are the original 1985 Santa Bear, the 1987 Miss Bear, the vacation-themed 1993 Santa Bear, and the 2004 ski patrol Santa Bear.  Visit our online collection to see the entire set; you might even spot an old friend.
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This photo of a Christmas display inside of the downtown Hudson’s location comes from our Davis B. Hillmer collection.  See more photos of holiday displays shot by Hillmer in our Online Collection.
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The impressive Second Empire-style Godfrey Block stood downtown on the west side of Woodward Avenue between State Street and Grand River Avenue.  The building was designed by Mortimer L Smith, and completed in 1871.  In December of that year, several stores in the Godfrey Block sought to drum up holiday business with newspaper advertisements that described the building as “Santa Claus’ headquarters.”
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