Casapar II |
Caspar III |
Jackson H.S. 1922 |
Casapar II |
Caspar III |
Jackson H.S. 1922 |
Methodist Church (now Democrat Headquarters) |
On Sept 27, 1886 two couples were married in a double ceremony at the Hastings Methodist Church.
They were Fred & Lucille Otis and William & Mattie Havens. Lucille was sister of William Havens. Mattie was cousin to Fred Otis. The Havens had their farm just up the road from the Otis place on Glass Creek.On Sunday Sept 26, 1936 they celebrated their 50th wedding anniversaries. The whole community helped them celebrate. It made the news in the Battle Creek Enquirer and the Detroit Free Press!
Otis and Erway couples 1936 |
The Otis lived in the same home in Rutland Township for the last 48 years. Fred was born in Rutland Township and Luella was born in Washtenaw Co. Their family in 1936 consisted of 10 children, 25 grandchildren, and 2 great grandchildren.
William was born in Jackson Co 72 years ago; Mattie born in Rutland Twp. They had 3 children, 6 grandchildren, 2 great grandchildren. Their farm was in adjacent Hope Twp.
In celebration they held an open house for friends Sunday afternoon and evening. As pointed out in the Free Press, anybody in either family was to some extent related to anyone in the other family!
Neither couple left Michigan more than once in their married lives. The Havens once visited Wisconsin and the Otises on Sunday drove to Indiana.
A visit to Rutland Township cemetery on M-43 just NE of Hastings shows the deep roots of these families, together in the township for all eternity. There is a nice aspect to having so many family and friends around one in death, isn't there.
Fred and Luella had a large family as was common in the Otis family known for their fecundity far back in the Vermont/Quebec days. In 1910 they posed for photo. I note how the women all wear white, and managed to keep it immaculate looking having no modern washing conveniences; clearly they were better skilled at doing wash than many of us nowadays. Robert was born a year after this photo was taken.
Mildred Gruensch |
Norm and Millie at the Otis Farm Sanctuary |
His name came up in my research on Baker and Haehnle Sanctuaries. It warranted further investigation as his was the only name to come up in two sanctuaries.
Lawrence Harvey Walkinshaw was born on the family farm in Convis Twp 1904. After graduating from Olivet College he went on to University if Michigan getting his dentistry degree in 1929. He had his practice in Battle Creek until 1968.
The Walkinshaw family has a long history in the township starting with his great grandparents James Honorable and Jemina Walkinshaw. Both born in Scotland and in 1842 immigrated to Marshall, Michigan. They moved to a small farm in Convis Twp. The lineage goes James, Charles, Beaton who married Eva Marie Grinnell and from whence came Lawrence. The plat map shows many Walkinshaws living around the Sanctuary area. So Larry knew this landscape well from his youth. Additionally he actively birded in the area east of Jackson that became the Haehnle Sanctuary.
The draw for him were cranes. He leaves a legacy of distinguished ornothology. His distinguished career is covered in this account of his work: IN MEMORIAM: LAWRENCE HARVEY WALKINSHAW, 1904-1993 (unm.edu). Not only did he provide valuable research on cranes, but also Kirkland warblers and field sparrows. He saw the cranes restored but the prairie chicken disappear.
Sadly, there is no sanctuary named for him. It can't be said that he left a greater legacy than those who legacy was to have purchased land.
While the rest of his ancestry is buried in Austin Cemetery, Convis Twp, the doctor and his wife Clara Mae Cartland are buried in Holt, MI. For 40 years he did Christmas Bird Counts in Battle Creek then another 20 years of counts in Lakeland, Florida.
A debit is owed to Larry for his ornithological legacy and the beautiful places he helped people become aware of their unique value.
The Otis's of Glass Creek
This appeared in Vol. IV Issue 6 Nov/Dec 2006 edition of The Dragonfly (publication of Michigan Audubon Otis Sanctuary)
Around 1855 three Otis brothers, Feril, Philander, and Parshal came to Glass Creek in South West Rutland Township. Of all their hundreds of descendants, only Robert (Bob) H. Otis, grandson of Parshal and son of Fred and Luella Otis, still lives in the area, on the family farm. Gone are Feril and Philander, their farms now part of the State Game Preserve, the fine, big houses, their large families scattered. The name lives on in Otis Lake and Otis Lake Road. The site of the old Otis Schoolhouse is lost in second growth forest.
Parshal Otis did not settle down immediately but worked in the lumber camps north of Grand Rapids. In time he married Betsey Foreman by whom he had four sons: Fred (our father), Clarence, Delbert, and Ray. They lived on Otis Lake Road, the spot marked now only by a great, spreading lilac bush.
In 1880 they moved east of Glass Creek to a farm consisting of a great marsh along the creek, the rest glacial hills. Here, in 1886, our father married Luella Havens and took on the farm, the mortgage, and the care of his aging parents. And here their children were born, all twelve of them.
It was against the advice of his anxious uncles that our father determined to make a go of farming those hills. But he loved that marsh and those hills and they were his.
In the early years he taught country school in the winter term, and he could always add to the farm income doing things for neighbors, which they couldn't. He could hang paper, work with concrete, butcher - whatever was needed. He was a good salesman too, and he sold hand powered washing machines, home lighting equipment, milking machines, furnaces, silos, plaster, stock in several creameries.
Fred Otis was a good farmer, and because he respected the land it cooperated with him. With good farm practices he built up his soil until it produced crops of which he could be and was, proud.
Bob, like his father, loved the marsh and the hills and all the creatures that live there. He, too, was a good farmer but gave it up to be a carpenter and skilled worker with wood.
Larry Holcomb is a retired wildlife biologist who grew up in Olivet. He hunted, fished and roamed the lands that became Baker Sanctuary. He studied at MSU where he received a PhD; later he became a Certified Wildlife Specialist with the Michigan DNR. In 2008 this 476 acre property called Big Marsh Lake was up for sale. It borders Baker Sanctuary on the east. Big Marsh Farm has forested and prairie uplands along with 140 acres of wetland. The Holcombs purchased it. In 2017 working with Southwest Michigan Land Conservancy, they secured a conservation easement for this special property. The Holcombs have another property just the other side of I-69 on which they previously placed conservation easement.
Mabelle Isham was a wildlife rehabilitator and Michigan Audubon board member. She owned 80 acres, Shagbark Trails, next to the sanctuary. Her daughter inherited the property and sold it to Audubon in 2016.
Farm Silos - glazed & concrete block The original land patents for the acreage that became Otis farm was first sold in 1856, fairly late...