DiscoverThe End of the Road in MichiganNorth Adams, Michigan: From Legendary Strength to Early 20th-Century Progress
North Adams, Michigan: From Legendary Strength to Early 20th-Century Progress

North Adams, Michigan: From Legendary Strength to Early 20th-Century Progress

Update: 2025-08-06
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This episode traces North Adams, a Hillsdale County village that grew up along the rails and wired itself for the future. We open with the town’s most retold story—blacksmith Henry Taylor, a former slave who became a respected tradesman and was said to carry his anvil and once walk off with a potbelly stove. From there, we move down Main Street to Maccabee Hall, Barden’s Hotel, and C. J. Knapp’s store, then over to the 1912 Municipal Lighting Plant that brought electric light to homes and storefronts.

We also cover a tough year: April 23, 1927, when sparks from a chimney ruined the village school. Classes shifted to Town Hall, the Odd Fellows hall, and the Congregational Church while a new building was planned. A 1927 newspaper snapshot rounds out daily life—about 500 residents, three churches, a 12-grade school on the University of Michigan list, a library of 900 books, and a full block of shops and services.

A production of Thumbwind Publications
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North Adams, Michigan: From Legendary Strength to Early 20th-Century Progress

North Adams, Michigan: From Legendary Strength to Early 20th-Century Progress

Thumbwind Publications