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Fall 2012 Docket.p65 - Berrien County Historical Association

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Vol. 28, No. 3 <strong>Fall</strong> <strong>2012</strong><br />

Signature Event ~<br />

“Little Sure Shot”: Annie Oakley<br />

Join us on October 25 at the Lake Michigan College<br />

Mendel Center for a special dinner and program!<br />

The History Center at Courthouse Square brings<br />

sharpshooting legend Annie Oakley to the Lake Michigan<br />

College’s Grand Upton Hall for our <strong>2012</strong> Signature Event<br />

this October.<br />

The evening starts with music and a social hour at<br />

6:00 p.m., followed by dinner, door prizes, a silent<br />

auction and a program from Annie Oakley. Advance<br />

reservations are required; call (269) 471-1202 for tickets.<br />

“Little Sure Shot,” portrayed by Kim Hanley of<br />

Philadelphia, numbered among America’s most famous<br />

American celebrities. With partner William “Buffalo Bill”<br />

Cody she became the world’s first international superstar.<br />

Actress Kim Hanley in a one-woman show as Annie Oakley Continued on page 3


Page 2<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> <strong>County</strong> <strong>Historical</strong><br />

<strong>Association</strong> Board and Staff<br />

Margaret Poole, President<br />

Robert Sykora, Vice President<br />

Sara Bell, Treasurer<br />

Emily Foster, Secretary<br />

William Ast III<br />

Gary Campbell<br />

Ted Chamberlain<br />

Robert Feldman<br />

Frances Porter Snyder<br />

Robert Myers<br />

Kristen Patzer Umphrey<br />

Board of Directors<br />

Don Gillespie<br />

John Kamer<br />

Marian Tripplett<br />

Michael Wood<br />

Staff<br />

Executive Director<br />

Curator<br />

Museum Store Manager<br />

BCHA Mission Statement<br />

The mission of the BCHA is to collect, preserve, and interpret the<br />

history of <strong>Berrien</strong> <strong>County</strong> through exhibits, tours, publications,<br />

and educational and community outreach programs for public<br />

benefit.<br />

Learn more about the BCHA by visiting www.berrienhistory.org.<br />

The <strong>Docket</strong><br />

<strong>Fall</strong> <strong>2012</strong>, Vol. 28, No. 3<br />

The <strong>Docket</strong> is published quarterly by the <strong>Berrien</strong> <strong>County</strong><br />

<strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Association</strong>, 313 N. Cass Street, P.O. Box 261,<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> Springs, Michigan 49103. (269) 471-1202.<br />

Editorial Staff<br />

Frances Porter Snyder, executive director<br />

Robert C. Myers, curator<br />

Kristen Patzer Umphrey, museum store manager<br />

The <strong>Docket</strong> is a benefit of membership in the BCHA. Annual<br />

membership dues to the BCHA are: $20 for individuals, $30<br />

for families, and $40 yearly for institutions. Supporting<br />

memberships are: $40 Contributing, $50 Sustaining, $100<br />

Patron, and $500 Benefactor.<br />

© <strong>Berrien</strong> <strong>County</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Association</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Dear Friends,<br />

Director’s Comments<br />

By Frances Porter Snyder<br />

Color season is upon us. Many of us look forward to<br />

the beautiful maple trees sharing their splendid red and gold<br />

leaves. We know that our clear blue skies, gorgeous trees and<br />

cool days will give way to “Old Man Winter.” Somehow, we<br />

still revel in the joys of the autumn season.<br />

At the History Center at Courthouse Square, we try to<br />

enhance every season with special exhibits, programs and<br />

events. In September, we enjoyed our “Smoky Mountain<br />

Holiday” motor coach tour. It was so much fun to catch up with<br />

friends who have traveled with us before and to become acquainted<br />

with new companions. We hope both will travel with<br />

us again as new acquaintances soon become old friends. We<br />

enjoyed beautiful sites, excellent food and great comradeship.<br />

What more could we ask?<br />

Our annual signature fund raising event is October 25,<br />

<strong>2012</strong>. This year, Annie Oakley will be our special guest. “Little<br />

Sure Shot,” as she was known, will share what it was like to be<br />

the first American female superstar as a performer in Bill Cody’s<br />

Wild West Show. The evening includes a social hour with live<br />

music, a great dinner prepared by Mendel Center chefs, door<br />

prizes, a silent auction and a special program with Annie Oakley,<br />

portrayed by Kim Hanley. Advance reservations are required.<br />

Please call Kristen at the History Center for tickets at (269) 471-<br />

1202. Every ticket includes a tax deductible donation that will<br />

be used for History Center programs. You may also donate an<br />

item for the silent auction. The auction is lots of fun and also<br />

generates income for the History Center. Call Kristen for more<br />

information.<br />

Courthouse Square will participate in <strong>Berrien</strong> Springs’<br />

“Kindle the Christmas Spirit” on December 6, <strong>2012</strong>. Everyone<br />

is welcome to join in the fun. There will be music, a treelighting,<br />

horse and wagon rides and many other activities. The<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> Springs Trinity Lutheran School will perform in the<br />

1839 Courthouse at 6:00 p.m.; afterward, the Trinity Lutheran<br />

Praise Team will lead a carol sing along in the courtroom. Most<br />

businesses will offer free refreshments and gifts for kids.<br />

Everyone is welcome to attend the event.<br />

This colorful season is always filled with sports events,<br />

back-to-school activities and hopefully, some time to just look at<br />

the glorious color around us. We hope you will have time to<br />

attend “Annie Oakley: Little Sure Shot” and later, “Kindle the<br />

Christmas Spirit.” As I close, I am reminded of the State of<br />

Michigan’s official motto: If you seek a pleasant peninsula,<br />

look about you. Look about you. There is beauty everywhere.<br />

Francie<br />

Frances Porter Snyder<br />

Executive Director


Aim at the high mark and you will hit it. No, not the first time, not the second time and<br />

maybe not the third. But keep on aiming and keep on shooting for only practice will make<br />

you perfect. Finally you’ll hit the bull’s-eye of success. ~ Annie Oakley<br />

Page 3<br />

Annie Oakley was born Phoebe Ann Mozee on August<br />

13, 1860, the daughter of Ohio Quakers. Her father died in<br />

1866 and although Annie’s mother remarried, her stepfather<br />

soon died too. Poverty forced Annie’s mother to place her and<br />

her older sister in the Darke <strong>County</strong> (Ohio) Infirmary in the<br />

spring of 1870. She was soon “bound out” to a local family to<br />

help care for their infant son, on the false promise of fifty cents<br />

a week and an education. She endured two years of near-slavery<br />

with a family that abused her mentally and physically. She<br />

returned to her own home in 1872 after her mother had married<br />

for a third time.<br />

Annie’s talent with a rifle began to develop when she<br />

was a child. She started shooting and hunting by age eight to<br />

help support her family, selling game animals to local residents<br />

as well as restaurants and hotels in southern Ohio. She managed<br />

to pay off the mortgage on her mother’s farm when she was just<br />

fifteen years old.<br />

In 1875, traveling show marksman Francis E. Butler<br />

placed a $100 bet with Cincinnati hotel owner Jack Frost that<br />

he, Butler, could beat any local fancy shooter. Frost set up a<br />

shooting match between Butler and Annie. Butler lost the<br />

match on the 25 th shot but gained a wife: he began courting<br />

Annie, and they married on August 23, 1876.<br />

Annie and Frank began performing together and joined<br />

Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show in 1885. Their fellow performer<br />

Sitting Bull gave the diminutive five-foot tall Annie the nickname<br />

“Watanya Cicilla,” which Buffalo Bill translated as<br />

“Little Sure Shot” in his public advertisements.<br />

Annie toured Europe, where she performed for Queen<br />

Victoria, King Umberto I of Italy, Marie François Sadi Carnot of<br />

France, and other heads of state. In one exhibition, Oakley<br />

knocked the ashes off a cigarette held by the newly crowned<br />

German Kaiser Wilhelm II. After the outbreak of World War I,<br />

Oakley wrote a letter to the Kaiser requesting a second shot. The<br />

Kaiser did not reply.<br />

Ever-growing fame made Annie Oakley America’s first<br />

female superstar. In her most famous trick, she repeatedly split a<br />

playing card, edge-on, and put several more holes in it before it<br />

could touch the ground, while using a .22 caliber rifle at a range<br />

of ninety feet.<br />

Oakley pioneered the idea of women serving in combat<br />

operations for the United States Army when she wrote a letter to<br />

President William McKinley just before the Spanish-American<br />

War to offer the services of a company of fifty women sharpshooters<br />

in the event of war. McKinley turned her down, but<br />

Theodore Roosevelt named his volunteer cavalry the “Rough<br />

Riders” after the “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West and Congress of<br />

Rough Riders of the World” in which Annie was a major star.<br />

Oakley was badly injured in a railroad<br />

accident in 1901. She recovered after five spinal<br />

operations, but left the Buffalo Bill show and in 1902<br />

began a quieter acting career in a stage play written<br />

especially for her, The Western Girl. Oakley played<br />

the role of Nancy Berry and used a pistol, rifle and<br />

rope to outsmart a group of outlaws.<br />

Annie also spent her time and money promoting<br />

women’s rights and other causes. Her shooting<br />

expertise only increased with age, and in a 1922<br />

shooting contest the sixty-two year-old Oakley hit<br />

one hundred clay targets in a row at a range of 16<br />

yards.<br />

Annie died in Greenville, Ohio, at age sixtysix<br />

on November 3, 1926. A devastated Francis<br />

Butler simply stopped eating and died just eighteen<br />

days later. Representatives settling Annie’s estate<br />

discovered that she had spent her entire fortune on<br />

her family and her charities.<br />

Oakley was inducted into the National<br />

Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth,<br />

Texas. Her remarkable life was celebrated in the<br />

1946 Herbert and Dorothy Fields musical Annie Get<br />

Your Gun.


Page 4<br />

Smoky Mountain Holiday Tour<br />

We had a wonderful time on our motorcoach tour<br />

of historic Kentucky, Tennessee and the Great Smoky<br />

Mountains. Aside from rain on one day the weather was<br />

ideal. We toured some fantastic sites and ate far more<br />

than was good for us!<br />

We offer a motorcoach tour every fall and are<br />

already considering next year’s destinations. Possibilities<br />

include historic sites in North Carolina or a tour of Pennsylvania.<br />

All of our members receive a booklet in early<br />

spring that details the upcoming trip, so keep an eye out<br />

for information about our next adventure.<br />

Our gang!<br />

Touring Belle Meade Plantation in Nashville<br />

We went onstage at the Grand Ole Opry during our backstage<br />

tour, and then returned in the evening for the show<br />

DaWayne and Betty Biastock with daughters Karol Cochran and<br />

Janet Ambrose in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park<br />

Bob and Jan Thoner pose beside one of the monuments in<br />

the Chickamauga National Military Park


Page 5<br />

Enjoy our Local History!<br />

The Heyday of Hinchman ($18.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

Greetings from Benton Harbor ($27.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

Locomotives Along the Lakeshore ($24.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

Greetings from St. Joseph ($27.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

Greetings from <strong>Berrien</strong> Springs ($21.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

Greetings from Buchanan ($24.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

<strong>Historical</strong> Sketches of <strong>Berrien</strong> <strong>County</strong> ($23.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

Twin City Trolleys ($8.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

The Story of Buchanan, a history ($14.95) Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

SPECIAL: Greetings from Buchanan & Story of Buchanan Quantity: _____ Total: $__________<br />

Get both for $29.95<br />

Subtotal $__________<br />

Discounts (Library 20%/Member 10%) $__________<br />

State sales tax (6% for Michigan orders only) $__________<br />

Shipping ($4.95 for 1 book, $1.00 each additional book. $__________<br />

TOTAL $__________<br />

Save on shipping and pick up your books from the History Center Store!<br />

SHIP TO:<br />

Name:______________________________<br />

Address: _________________________________<br />

City: ____________________________________<br />

State _____________ Zip ___________________<br />

Tele: _______________________________<br />

Make check/money order payable to:<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> <strong>County</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> Assn.<br />

P.O. Box 261, <strong>Berrien</strong> Springs, MI<br />

49103. (269) 471-1202.<br />

For Credit Card orders (Visa & MC)<br />

Credit Card # ______________________________<br />

Expiration Date: ___________________________<br />

Name on Card : ____________________________<br />

Signature: _________________________________<br />

Join the History Center Today!<br />

Name: ____________________________________________________________________________ Phone: _________________________<br />

Address: _________________________________________________________________________ Fax:____________________________<br />

City: _______________________________________ State: _______ Zip: _____________________ E-mail: _________________________<br />

Membership categories:<br />

Basic<br />

Supporting<br />

[ ] Individual $20 [ ] Contributing $40<br />

[ ] Family $30 [ ] Sustaining $50<br />

[ ] Institutional $40 [ ] Patron $100<br />

[ ] Benefactor $500<br />

Additional donation $ ___________________<br />

Amount Enclosed: $ ____________________<br />

Please make checks payable to the <strong>Berrien</strong> <strong>County</strong><br />

<strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Association</strong> or<br />

Please charge my credit card: (Circle one)<br />

MasterCard<br />

Visa<br />

Card Number: ________________________________<br />

Expiration Date: ______________________________<br />

Join now and take immediate advantage of<br />

members’ discounts on our publications!<br />

Mail or fax to: BCHA, PO Box 261,<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> Springs, MI 49103<br />

Phone: (269) 471-1202 Fax: (269) 471-7412


Page 6<br />

Back in Print!<br />

The Heyday of Hinchman<br />

The History Center at Courthouse Square has<br />

issued a reprint edition of the popular book The Heyday of<br />

Hinchman, by Beverly Campbell Pottle. The 67-page<br />

book includes dozens of photographs of people and places<br />

in the hamlet of Hinchman, located a few miles north of<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> Springs. It includes endnotes, a bibliography, and<br />

index; an appendix lists all the students of the Hinchman<br />

School and the years of their attendance. Photographs in<br />

the book come from the History Center’s own collections<br />

as well as many private collections.<br />

The Heyday of Hinchman was originally published<br />

in 2006 and has been out of print for several years.<br />

It chronicles the history of the settlement that was named<br />

for Hiram and Susannah Hinchman, who moved to <strong>Berrien</strong><br />

<strong>County</strong> in the 1830s. Although little more than a crossroads<br />

village, it boasted a church, school, store, creamery,<br />

and a post office. The Milwaukee, Benton Harbor and<br />

Columbus Railroad built a depot in Hinchman in 1897<br />

when it extended a line from Buchanan through <strong>Berrien</strong><br />

Springs and north to Benton Harbor.<br />

The book retails at $18.95 and can be purchased<br />

from the museum store, located at the History Center, 313<br />

North Cass Street in <strong>Berrien</strong> Springs. History Center<br />

members receive a 10% ($1.90) discount per book.<br />

Museum Store hours at the History Center are 10-5 Monday-Friday. The new book can be purchased through<br />

mail order at an additional cost of $4.95 for shipping and handling. Michigan residents should add $1.14 for sales tax.<br />

Orders should be sent to the History Center at Courthouse Square, PO Box 261, <strong>Berrien</strong> Springs, MI 49103. Telephone<br />

orders at (269) 471-1202 can pay with Visa or Mastercard.<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> History on WAUS Radio<br />

If you enjoy local history, tune in to WAUS Radio<br />

in <strong>Berrien</strong> Springs every Tuesday. Andrews University’s<br />

classical music station broadcasts <strong>Berrien</strong> History every<br />

week at 90.7 FM , airing at three times: 6:55 a.m., 7:55<br />

a.m. and 6:05 p.m. The programs are written and presented<br />

by History Center curator Robert Myers.<br />

Each program runs about three minutes and covers<br />

a particular topic of local history. Recent topics have<br />

included the filming of the motion picture Prancer in<br />

Three Oaks, the Bell Opera House in Benton Harbor, and<br />

the Illinois, Indiana & Iowa Railroad that ran from Galien<br />

to St. Joseph.<br />

If you live outside the southwest Michigan area,<br />

you can still listen in via Live Stream on the Internet. You<br />

can find WAUS at www.waus.org.


Page 7<br />

Curator’s Corner<br />

Recent Donations<br />

Clark Equipment Co. souvenirs . . Mary M. Addison-lamb<br />

Baby cradle, 1885 . . . . . . David, Debra & Richard Bartz<br />

Wedding dress, graduation dress. . . . . . . . Joellen Bellaire<br />

photographs, 1887 county atlas<br />

Map of St. Joseph, ca. 1860 . . . . . . . . Marcia M. Fleming<br />

Courthouse key, 1838 . . . . . . . .<br />

Fort St. Joseph Museum<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> Springs photographs . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wayne Hall<br />

Telephone receiver, ca. 1940 . . . . . . . .<br />

Richard Kubsch<br />

World War I photographs, papers . . . . Patrick G. McIntosh<br />

St. Joseph brewery bottle, . . . . . Patrick & Maxine Walsh<br />

business directory, city planning book<br />

Patrick McIntosh donated this framed photograph of his father,<br />

Pvt. George McIntosh of St. Joseph. George, a Glenlord resident,<br />

served as a Michigan “Polar Bear” in Russia immediately after<br />

World War I (see below).<br />

Michigan Polar Bears<br />

Some of George McIntosh’s Polar Bear buddies stage a<br />

boxing match in Russia.<br />

McIntosh<br />

(arrow)<br />

poses with<br />

the Polar<br />

Bears on a<br />

log bridge in<br />

Russia.<br />

George F. McIntosh of Glenlord enlisted to fight<br />

the Kaiser, but wound up battling Bolsheviks. He joined<br />

the army in 1917 and served with the 310 th Engineers in<br />

the 85 th Division. The 85 th , composed mostly of Michigan<br />

and Wisconsin men, went to Arkhangelsk, Russia, in 1918<br />

to reinforce British troops already there. Officially the<br />

American North Russia Expeditionary Force, the outfit<br />

gained fame as “The Polar Bears.”<br />

The expedition had three objectives: prevent<br />

Allied war material stockpiles in Archangelsk from falling<br />

into German hands; rescue the Czech Legion, then<br />

stranded along the Trans-Siberian Railroad; and defeat the<br />

Red Army and reopen the Eastern Front against Germany.<br />

In the process, the Polar Bears would also halt the spread<br />

of communism.<br />

The expedition’s offensive ground to a halt in the<br />

Russian winter, and in 1919 the Polar Bears returned<br />

home. American forces lost over 110 men in battle,<br />

another 30 missing, and 70 deaths from disease, mostly<br />

due to the Spanish Flu. Pvt. George McIntosh returned<br />

home safely and was mustered out in July 1919.<br />

The History Center thanks George McIntosh’s son,<br />

Patrick, for his donation of rare photographs of the Polar<br />

Bear Expedition.


Non-Profit Org.<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

PAID<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> Springs, MI<br />

PERMIT NO. 38<br />

Post Office Box 261<br />

<strong>Berrien</strong> Springs, MI 49103<br />

CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED<br />

Continuing and Upcoming Events<br />

Ongoing: The Marxochime Colony: Music for the<br />

Masses. Exhibit at the History Center. 10 a.m. - 5<br />

p.m., Mondays - Fridays.<br />

October 25: “‘Little Sure Shot:’ Annie Oakley.”<br />

6:00 p.m. at the Lake Michigan College Mendel<br />

Center. Our Signature Event features the legendary<br />

star of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. Dinner and<br />

program $75 per person, $500 for a table for eight.<br />

Advance reservations only.<br />

December 6: Kindle the Christmas Spirit in <strong>Berrien</strong><br />

Springs. 5-9 p.m. Thursday.

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