From the Collection

Cadillac Square

Old City Hall

 

If the Shoe Fits

While the DHS artifact collection is primarily centered around metro Detroit objects, there is a significant collection of Native American material from throughout the Great Lakes region. As the ancestral home to more than a dozen different tribes, the Great Lakes were a source of food, transportation, clothing, shelter, and trade for thousands of years. With the establishment of Detroit came manufactured trade goods. One of the more common trade items among American Indians were glass beads.

Remembering Martin Luther King, Jr.

In recognition of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, we would like to share this powerful image of “The Great March on Detroit,” led by the Reverend himself down Woodward Avenue on June 23, 1963. That same day he delivered an early version of his famous “I Have a Dream” speech. This picture was likely taken from the First National Building and, looking north, we can see 1001 Woodward in the early phases of construction on the corner of Michigan Avenue.

Perpetual Day

While examining photos of Detroit around the turn of the last century, we frequently noticed strange towers which taper from a single pole at the base into a very tall latticed structure.  Seldom is the entirety of one in view.  Initially we took them to be utility poles supporting the city’s electric streetcar, telegraph, or phone lines.  After doing some digging we discovered that these were actually “

No Stranger to Precious Cargo

[slideshow]This cane with an ornate gold-plated handle was recently found at the Dossin Great Lakes Museum. While the golden handle is certainly the most eye-catching feature, the humble wood below has quite a story to tell—it was once part of a steamship called the Independence. Built in Chicago in 1843, the 118 foot long Independence was the first propeller-driven ship built on Lake Michigan and eventually the first steamship to operate in Lake Superior.

Don't Forget the Stove City

Detroit had been considered a center of industry long before Charles Brady King built and drove the city’s first car in 1896.  One of our previous claims to fame was as a stove manufacturing capital.  The “Big Three” of those days consisted of the Michigan Stove Company, the Detroit Stove Works, and the Peninsular Stove Company, but they were by

1891 National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic

In honor of Veterans’ Day, we have unearthed a series of cabinet cards depicting the 1891 National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic in Detroit.  As the Civil War was just twenty-six years past, the organization’s ranks were sizable, as was the turn out of the crowd.  This first photo of

Back to School

Ah, it’s fall—a time to take in the changing of the leaves, discretely do away with the leftover Halloween candy, and, of course, settle into a new school year.  Recently I was fortunate to be able to work on a box in the Documenting Detroit Collection

Washington Boulevard

This past week, postcards have been the primary focus of the digitization team’s efforts.

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