Below are articles or summaries of articles that have appeared in the Niles Daily Star as part of the "Silverbrook Legacies" series.

Youthful dreams lost at sea

What an adventure it might have been!

Even in today's shrinking globe, what young woman freshly graduated from secondary school would not tremble with excitement at the prospect of an ocean trip to continue her studies abroad? Imagine how thrilled Anna Eisner, 19, of Niles must have been as she prepared for the trip of her life.

However, it takes little imagination to feel the deep sorrow of her parents when the large slab, engraved in both English and German was first laid across the large, horizontal vault – her final resting place – in Silverbrook Cemetery less than three months after her adventure was to begin.

The young woman described in the Niles Republican of June 24, 1875, as "one of the brightest as well as one of the most modest and unassuming young ladies of her class," never got to begin her European classes. Her ship never docked.

Click here for the full article on the Niles Daily Star website

Published April 26th, 2008

Reddick family were early Entrepreneurs

Today, working in a global economy is something we take pretty much for granted.

When John B. Reddick traveled from Germany to Niles in 1831 to engage in the clothing business, little did he know his son would one day create a business with considerable trade exported to England and Australia.

Reddick married Nancy Emmons of Kentucky in 1832 and they had three children: Louise, John L. and William A. Louise, born in 1834, married Mahlon A. Smith of Coldwater in 1858 and gave birth to Carmi R. Smith in 1862. Her son went on become a member of the State Legislature from Berrien County Second District in 1898.

Smith served as mayor of Niles in 1903 for a short period then resigned. He was also postmaster and continued his political aspirations in 1924 as a delegate to the Republican National Convention.

Click here for the full article on the Niles Daily Star website

Published August 23rd, 2008

Lighting the way

When one thinks poetically of a lighthouse keeper, imagining tends to lean to that of a solitary man standing in the top deck of a tall white and red lighthouse perched on a craggy piece of rock at world's end.

A close look at Thomas Fitzgerald dispels such a vision quickly.

Thomas Fitzgerald was born April 10, 1796 in Germantown, New York. He served in the War of 1812 and was injured at the Battle of Lundy's Lane which took place at the site of present day Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada.

It is not exactly clear how or why Fitzgerald made the transition from New York to Indiana however www.politicalgraveyard.com shows that from 1825 to 1827 he served in the Indiana State legislature.

He then was a probate judge there in 1829.

Fitzgerald made the transition to St. Joseph, where in 1832, he was appointed lighthouse keeper at St. Joseph.

Click here for the full article on the Niles Daily Star website

Published January 17th, 2009

The man behind the name 'Garden City'

John Gipner made Niles "The Garden City"

"Old John is dead … at the ripe old age of ninety-five…but the fame he brought to Niles lives on … and will for some time we suspect."

The preceding transcript was a portion of a news item carried by WNDU-TV when John Gipner died at his 921 North St. home at 1:45 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 10, 1957, after being ill for about a year. The words were also used in a special edition of the Niles Daily Star in 1961 celebrating its role in the city.

John Gipner was the kind of man everyone wanted to know.

The Star article described him as one who looked "as if he had just stepped out of a book of German fairy tales." Fairly short, with a long, white flowing beard and tiny spectacles, Gipner was born in Germany on June 24, 1861 and came to Michigan in the 1890s.

Click here for the full article on the Niles Daily Star website

Published April 18th, 2009

A mansion sat by the banks

One can only imagine the impact the big house by the river would have made. This certainly was not the cottage image of 'over the hill and through the woods to Granny's house' one might think of stumbling on amongst the trees.

While most of this series focuses on individuals buried in Silverbrook Cemetery, we are constantly aware of the legacy left us by the residents of that hallowed ground. Each stone represents the life of people who once walked our streets, welcomed others to their shops and manned our factories.

Sometimes their contribution is not glaringly relevant to our lives today. In other instances, however, there has been a past collective effort for the good of our community which still is vital to our lives here and now.

Such is the case with the story of Pawating Hospital. Pa-wa-ting: "crossing of the river." Much has changed since the days the lands were occupied by their original native population and yet the mighty St. Joe still hurries under Broadway Bridge and past the doorstep of the property on which was restored the great home that became known as "Castle Rest."

A Star article on the property from March, 25, 1961 stated, "Three treaties and an Act of Congress preceded the building of a luxurious brick mansion which later was to become Pawating Hospital, on the eve of Christmas 1925."

The first owner of the property after the treaties with the Potawatomi natives was Obed P. Lacey who sold the land to G. A. Colby the owner of Colby's Lower Mill at Dowagiac, who also owned a mill in Niles.

The Colby family eventually passed the land on to William Wallace Dresden, a highly accomplished pianist who moved here from Chicago in 1896. At the time, Dresden took of possession the home that had been unoccupied for a period of approximately 17 years, according to the article and Dresden restored the home at what is described as "considerable expense."

It was from that point on the home became Castle Rest, "a home of elegance and gracious living."

Following Dresden's death in 1924, the land and buildings were acquired by Mr. and Mrs. Plym from Dresden's daughter and granddaughter.

This was not the first site chosen for a hospital in Niles. In May of 1921, steps were taken to organize a Niles Hospital Association. A meeting was held at the Niles Public Library to discuss the purchase of the J. G. Mansfield property at 202 S. Lincoln Ave., known as the old Krick or Makepeace property, for a hospital site.

At that time a committee comprised of Carmi R. Smith; W. H. Parkin; Mrs. D. S. Scoffern; Mrs. F. J. Plym; C. E. White and J. E. French was joined by P. B. Friday, J. Walter Wood and E. E. Woodford. Lawyers Charles E. White and W. N. Burns were hired to draft articles for incorporation for a hospital capitalized at $50,000 with stock having a par value of $10. The organization of the hospital association, however, did not actually materialize until 1925.

The Mansfield property was offered with a week's option at $6,000. Thoughts at the time were to renovate the property into a 20-room hospital. The option ran out.

By 1925 a new site for the hospital was under consideration. A survey was done to determine the cost of remodeling Castle Rest to be an "efficient nucleus for a hospital."

"Incorporators of the hospital association were Mrs. F. J. Plym, M.S. Rudisill, L. H. Hamilton, A. W. Hudson, Harry L. Margetts and Charles White.

The entire Niles community joined forces to raise the money necessary for purchase of Castle Rest and its remodeling, through events including a pageant for a hospital queen, won by a Miss Rose Schieicher in October 1925.

By October 26, 1925 the hospital association had a fund of $9,251.51 from two fall festivals, two fashion shows, other gifts and $322.65 that came in the form of payment of rain insurance taken on one of the festivals that it seems was indeed rained out.

On November 27, 1925 the first set of plans submitted by W. W. Elwood, a South Bend architect were reviewed for the proposed remodeling of Castle Rest on which a six-month option had been taken at what the paper reported was referred to as "an attractive price."

The Pawating Hospital opened its doors to serve Niles in November 1926.

A photo, accompanying the article of 1961, shows the original home with a southern addition, the current emergency room. An article abstract, published in 1993 by the Health Forum in Hospitals and Health Networks, by Rhonda Bergman states that "Pawating Hospital a 174-bed facility in Niles MI, avoided financial disaster by merging with 300-bed Mercy Memorial Medical center in St. Joseph, MI to create the Lakeland Regional Health System.

"The merger has improved billing, marketing and human resources at Pawating, and has enabled the hospital to update equipment and renovate its facilities. An alliance between the two hospitals and health insurance provider resulted in the development of a preferred-provider health insurance program."

It also foretold of the construction of a 20,000 square foot medical office building in 1994. The stated operating income of $1.9 million in 1992 was up from a 1990 loss of $111,961.

Today Lakeland Health Care describes itself on its website as "a not-for-profit, community-owned system of care serving the southwest Michigan region of Berrien, Cass and VanBuren counties. In addition to the three hospitals, the system includes walk-in clinics, long-term care, home care, laboratory and radiology services, rehabilitation and other services throughout the region. Lakeland also offers health, safety, wellness and prevention events, classes and programs throughout the year."

For more information on Friends of Silverbrook with regards to memberships and work days to help restore and catalog the monuments or to book a presentation on the group or this series of articles contact: Friends of Silverbrook Cemetery c/o 508 E. Main St. Niles MI 49120, Tim and Candace Skalla at 684-2455, wskalla@sbcglobal.net or contact Ginny Tyler at 445-0997, SPHINX1974@aol.com.

 

Published May 30th, 2009