Manistee County, Michigan Genealogy

United States &gt; Michigan &gt; Manistee County

County Courthouse
Manistee County Courthouse 415 Third Street Manistee, MI 49660 Phone: (231) 723-3331

Parent County
1840--Manistee County was created 1 April 1840 from Mackinac County. It was attached to Mackinac, Ottawa, and Grand Traverse Counties prior to organization 13 February 1855. County seat: Manistee

Places/Localities
Arcadia Township

Bear Lake Township

Brown Township

Cleon Township

Dickson Township

Filer Charter Township

Manistee Township

Maple Grove Township

Marilla Township

Norman Township

Onekama Township

Pleasanton Township

Springdale Township

Stronach Township

Neighboring Counties

 * Benzie
 * Grand Traverse
 * Lake
 * Mason
 * Wexford

Cemeteries
This cemetery is located about 4 miles north of Bear Lake on US 31. It was given to the township by Rev. George B. Pierce, one of the first settlers in the area.

Local Histories
Pleasanton Township, Manistee County, MI

I am Linda Holm and I have researched my family farm located in the center of Pleasanton Township, Manistee County, MI. The following is an article I have created:

The LaMont Family Barn 1884-2008

A History of the original owner, its construction And ownership to the modern day.

Chapter 1 Rev. George B. Pierce, 1860’s For over 123 years a barn in northern Michigan has withstood elements, changed owners, and even changed addresses but has remained a valuable working asset to the community. The land area of the present LaMont Family Barn was originally, in 1862 called Brown Twp, Manistee, Michigan. Soon after, in 1864, this area was reassigned as part of Bear Lake Township. Finally in the winter of 1867 the exact same plot of land became designated as Pleasanton Township, Manistee Co. MI, which is its current address. It is thought that the first white homesteader to set foot in present day Pleasanton Township was Reverend George Barren Pierce. He was a Presbyterian minister and teacher. Virgin forests covered the land and much of the forest floor was covered with ground hemlock as high as a man’s head and so dense one could not walk through it without cutting it down. It is felt that he came to the area before 17 Sep 1863 as on that date he entered a land entry for Section 15, Town 24 North, Range 15 West, Manistee Co, MI. There was an old Indian Trail that George followed. This trail was established as the Allegan, Muskegon, and Grand Traverse State Road or Old State Road in 1861. It was not until 1870 that the road was completed. State Road is now the popular US31. It must have been inspiration that prompted Rev. Pierce to stop where he did along the trail. Late the first night here as Rev. Pierce knelt in prayer at the foot of a giant hemlock tree at what is now the center of Pleasanton Township, he voiced his hope that he would be privileged to establish a place of worship to God and pledged to give some of his land for a church. (This was carried out after his death. 12 Dec 1892) Eventually a log cabin was built about 1864 and a communal well was dug on the Pierce property. Judd Calkins and his parents homestead near Arcadia. Judd in his booklet, The Autobiography of a Barefoot Boy remarked: “One of the first things the new settlers had to do was to dig a well for the neighborhood. Since George Pierce was the first settler and had the first home, the first well was dug behind his home. The men had to dig down about 80 feet through sand. As they went down, they put in a hemlock casing to protect them and hold the well. At the bottom, they found clay and by digging out some of it, a reservoir was made to hold a supply of excellent water. A pulley was placed over the well and a heavy wooden bucket was attached to each end of the rope.”  (The LaMont family’s electric-powered well is at this exact spot.) Rev. Pierce fulfilled his pastoral duties right from the beginning. Pleasanton’s first recorded marriage and funeral both were at the Pierce home. George B. Pierce was the first postmaster and his home the first post office when a branch office was established 24 Sep 1864. (It closed in 1882 and reopened several times). The Pierce homestead is also thought to have been a stage stop as well. Only a few settlers trickled in until the year 1865 when this region was opened to homesteading. Then a great influx of homesteaders came, principally young men freed from their soldier duties by the end of the Civil War. The log home of George Pierce would have many bedrolls spread on the floor at night as men passed through seeking their fortunes in the wilderness. With the opening up of the land, wild animals produced problems for the settlers as the deer were so thick they were a nuisance. As patches of peas and other grains were unfenced in the early years many times the men watched their young crops at night to shoot at or scare off the deer. Hunting was good and the meat gained enabled the settlers to have plenty of food. It was a lot of work to clear the land, build a frame home, and plant the crops so it was a while before Rev. Pierce had time to build a permanent barn but events would eventually unfold where a barn became a necessity not a luxury.

Steve Herald curator of the Manistee County Museum has a newspaper article that tells about an event that happened on the Pierce family homestead. “In the fall of 1883 at about 10 o’clock Mrs. Pierce heard a noise in her pig pen where she had two fine pigs. As she started out with a lantern, one of the pigs was squealing for dear life. There was a large black bear in the pen helping himself to some pig steak. When Mrs. Pierce held the lantern to see what the matter was, the old bear jumped out and she could have touched him. Needless to say, the bear was very angry for being disturbed. Mrs. Pierce then ran to her neighbor Jake Snyder, about 80 rods away and told him. Almon Mallison and sons were visiting Jake and the men started to capture the old bruin with dogs. When they arrived at the pen, they could hear him only a short distance off, growling terribly. They found a pig with its leg broken and badly bruised so it had to be killed. The other pig jumped the fence and got away. They tried to capture the old bruin but the night was so terribly dark that he got away.”

In the area of Pleasanton Township was a 16-year-old boy, Franklin Logan Wallace who was a distant relative of the LaMonts. He once told a family member George LaMont, (Roscoe’s brother) that when he was 16 years old, he worked for Rev. Pierce to build the barn. Franklin was born in 1868 so he was 16 in 1884. Thus it is believed the barn was built in 1884 probably at Mrs. Pierce’s insistence as she didn’t want to tangle with another bear. The barn was built a few yards from the community well. Nearby, off to the south of the barn in a grove of trees, was the original Pleasanton Twp. Cemetery. The Times &amp; Standard, August 18, 1877 remarked about the Pleasanton Cemetery: “There is a good cemetery, well fenced, handsomely laid out and decorated with young native trees, although no elegant monuments yet adorn its peaceful mounds.” Later this area was part of our farm’s pastureland. The trees made a pleasant resting area for the cattle during the hot summer sun. Now there is no trace that the cemetery was there. It was moved across Old State Road, at the curve, near the current church that Rev. George prayed for years before. It is thought that the cemetery property was originally owned by Rev. Pierce. Besides the church and cemetery, a third piece of land was given to the Grange in 1879 from the south-west corner of his homestead. The original Grange Hall was destroyed by lightening in 1977.

Chapter 2 How the barn was originally built and later renovated.

In 1884 it was time to build a barn. By this time a frame home was probably completed. So George Pierce, his sons, Frank Wallace, a 16-year-old youth, and probably others, constructed the barn. The barn was build from hemlock because it was abundant, cheap and on his property. It was cut and sawed into lumber. Several saw mills were close by as the demand for lumber was great. The barn’s original foundation was made from large stones and blocks of wood, probably hemlock. It was a prairie-style barn 30 feet by 34 feet with a hay loft. Two inch by six-inch boards framed the barn. One inch by twelve inch hemlock boards covered the outside. Then a second set of one inch by twelve inch boards staggered covered the cracks of the first layer. The outside of the barn was made of a double thickness of boards to be wind and snow proof. What makes this barn so original is that it is not a post and beam barn that was common in that area. The original barn roof was probably wooden shingles as that was normal method of construction in those days. The original barn had room for 3 or 4 cows tied to the manger. Another pen was for loose livestock depending on what needed housing; horses were stabled there, also calves and pigs. To the right of the main door was installed a smaller set of white doors. Roscoe LaMont put in these doors so he could store his tractor in the open pen area when it wasn’t used for animals. Eventually, a garage was built for the tractor and the barn was used for hay and animals.

Chapter 3 Hervey Ashton LaMont

Rev. George Pierce died about 1892. The surviving widow, Mary Pierce, and her family lived on the farm. Eventually she married a Mr. Holden. The children Mary, Kent, and Jessie all moved west. Only Paul B. Pierce and his wife, Lola, remained in Michigan having moved to the city of DeWitt. The house and barn both fell into disrepair. Years passed and in 1929 the Arcadia Furniture Company acquired the property. Hervey Ashton LaMont worked for the Arcadia Furniture Factory in their store during the winter. In the cold weather the land owners would log off their land. During this time they could purchase whatever they needed on credit at the store and then in the spring, the company paid them for their logs minus any credit purchases. Before his marriage to Florence Haney, Hervey had purchased 40 acres on Lumley Road from Samuel and India Bartlett for $800. He bought the back forty acres from Wm. Foltz through the Arcadia Furniture Co. The company bought the land and timber. Hervey was to harvest the timber and deliver it to the railroad as payment for the land. He took the logs to Malcolm, the nearest railroad crossing, to be loaded on the train. This was quite an undertaking but he had four boys to help him. His daughter, Ila, said she was very impressed by the amount of logs waiting to be taken to Arcadia by the Starkie Railroad. Later Hervey made an agreement to log off the Pierce farm at Pleasanton Center. The Furniture Factory owned the land and he would pay for it by harvesting the logs for the factory. He grew corn on the land. One real mild winter he ploughed every month for the year “just to say that I did it.” There was an old frame home on the property when Hervey Ashton made arrangements to purchase the farm after 1929. If he would have had more money, he might have put a roof on the house and it could have served as a home for future generations. Hervey pastured his cattle on the old Pierce farm. On June 1, 1936 on a beautiful Sabbath morning, Ashton herded his cattle to the pasture at Pleasanton Center. For some reason the cows went beyond the gate that leads the pasture and went up towards the church. Ashton rushed ahead of them and turned them back around. Charlie Cermack saw what was happening, so he opened the gate. The cows eventually went into the pasture like they should have. When Ashton rushed up to turn the cows around, he must have had a stroke which caused him to lie down on the ground leaning up against a fence post. He was later found and taken home but he died about a week later. After the death of Hervey Ashton LaMont, his wife Florence could not make payments on the farm. The old Pierce farm finally came up for Tax Sale as the furniture factory was going out of business.

Chapter 4 John Roscoe “Ike” LaMont buys the farm and its barn

When Roscoe, Hervey Ashton LaMont’s son, heard that the farm was going up for tax sale he immediately wanted the farm. Recently he had met a wonderful woman, Frances Rogers, at a Grange Hall activity and he was beginning to think about his future. Roscoe and Frances were married November 18, 1943. On March 8, 1944 Roscoe and Frances purchased the farm with the help of the Arcadia Furniture Factory owner Henry Starkie. Roscoe and Frances lived with his mother on the original farm on Lumley Road about one-half mile from the old Pierce farm. Jim, a brother, was coming home from WWII and would operate the old home place with his mother, Florence. Roscoe felt the need to provide a home of his own for his new family. After purchasing the land for $350 Roscoe built their present home very near to the same foundation as the Pierce’s home but Roscoe’s had smaller dimensions. A walnut fell into the old cellar of the Pierce home and grew. This tree still lives today so we know where the old Pierce foundation line was. What is very unique is that Franklin Logan Wallace, although an old man at the time, helped Roscoe build the home just as he had helped Rev. Pierce build the barn years before in 1884. Franklin died in 1958. The barn built so many years ago, was about to crumble just as the frame home did. To preserve the barn Roscoe raised the barn as the old foundation of stones and wooden blocks had decayed. He put concrete blocks and cement footings around the foundation of the barn but run out of money so he put two by six inch hemlock planks on top of the blocks. Even with this work, much of the barn was still in contact with the earth and thus decayed. Eventually he put concrete where the cattle, pigs, etc. were housed. The author of this history was born on June 18th, 1945 about the time Roscoe and Frances were building the house and preserving the barn. As a teenager I remember mowing and raking hay while Dad was off working. I remember helping put loose hay in the hay mow where Roscoe had cut a door into the back side of the barn. I also have milked my fair share of cows in my time as my parents sold cream. I have memories of butchering days when we had a large iron pot for boiling water. I also remember that we killed chickens in the barn during a bad snow storm, so we would have food to eat. With all the timber, each fall was the time to cut wood as we heated with wood. Maple Sap was collected in the spring and made into maple syrup. Roscoe sold it and had his own label to put on the jars. In addition to corn and hay, Dad had 20 acres of sour cherry trees when sour cherries were so popular in Northern Michigan. Many hours were spent spraying the trees and burning to protect the cherry flowers from frost in the spring. We even housed the migrant workers which picked the cherries, in our garage. Over the years the barn was painted many times the typical red with white doors and trim. The Leathermen boys helped Roscoe put new metal roofing on the south one-half of the roof. Later the north side of the roof would get a metal roof put on by Dave Schaffer, a local contractor. More concrete floors where poured in 1969. The big front door opening and the door to the hay mow area. were in the original barn. Years later a second small door was cut in the back side of the barn so loose hay could be lifted into the barn by hay fork. In 2004 this opening was sealed off by Ray Girven, Bud Middleton and Harvey LaMont. No trace of the hole can be seen thus restoring the barn to its original beauty. Roscoe LaMont died 15 Jan 2002. His widow, Frances LaMont, now lives on the old Pierce farm. Their son, Harvey, named after his grandfather, Hervey LaMont, and his wife, Colleen, live nearby. He now manages the farm with his mother and cares for the buildings. The original large white barn doors and track was rebuilt in 2005. Harvey LaMont repaired most of the boards except for one busted plank thus leaving one hole that can be seen in the pictures. Harvey preserved the hole that had been there “forever” according to his sister, Elaine. Thus the various barn cats can come and go as they please. The farm is put into crops each year by a local farmer. The barn is still in working and serviceable condition. The harnesses and other horse tack are still hanging on the pegs where it was put many years ago. The barn is mainly used for storage now with many items right where Dad ( Roscoe) left them. Years passed and the 2” by 6”planks Roscoe put down on the blocks deteriorated to the point that restoration needed to be done. In November 2007 the barn was again raised by Roscoe’s son Harvey, Terry Howes, and David Holm, his brother-in-laws, with the help of Randy Eberhart, a mason. More cement blocks were put in place and other damaged areas were repaired. Besides painting and normal repair, we hope the barn is secure for another 123 years! It truly is an historical monument to the hearty pioneers who settled our wonderful state of Michigan so long ago.

Vital Records

 * Michigan Birth Registrations, 1867-1902 -- Free name indexes and images at FamilySearch Record Search. Records include such information as name of child, birthdate and place, if still-born, illegitimate or twin, gender, race and record number.
 * Michigan Marriage Registrations, 1868-1925 -- Free name indexes at FamilySearch Record Search. Records include such information as names of bride and groom, date of license, ages, race, residences, birthplaces, occupations and names of the fathers of the bride and groom.
 * Michigan Death Registrations, 1867-1897-- Free name indexes and images at FamilySearch Record Search.  Records include such information as name of deceased, date and place of death, gender, color, marital status, age in years, months and days, disease or apparent cause of death, birthplace, names and occupations of parents, and the date the record was made.

Family History Centers

 * Introduction to LDS Family History Centers

Web Sites

 * USGenWeb project. May have maps, name indexes, history or other information for this county. Select the state, then the county.