Sunday, January 30, 2011
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
Masonic Hall - 1
Interior of the Masonic Lodge that occuptied the third floor of the building referred to in some pictures as the Masonic Block, located on the southeast corner of Broadway and Hammond Street.
Note - Regarding the Masonic Lodge ...(from the publication titled "Historical Industrial and Social Record of Peerless Union City Michigan" edited, compiled, and published by Tom F. Robinson in March 1903) reads: Of Union City are most comfortably fixed as regarding lodge rooms. Masonic block was built some thirty years since, and the entire third floor is devoted to the uses of the four Masonic lodges which hold meetings therein. The rooms have been refitted within a few years and include lodge rooms, reception apartments, dinin-room, and kitchens.
Masonic Hall - 2
A second interior postcard of the Masonic Lodge that occuptied the third floor of the building referred to in some pictures as the Masonic Block, located on the southeast corner of Broadway and Hammond Street.
Note - Regarding the Masonic Lodge ...(from the publication titled "Historical Industrial and Social Record of Peerless Union City Michigan" edited, compiled, and published by Tom F. Robinson in March 1903) reads: Of Union City are most comfortably fixed as regarding lodge rooms. Masonic block was built some thirty years since, and the entire third floor is devoted to the uses of the four Masonic lodges which hold meetings therein. The rooms have been refitted within a few years and include lodge rooms, reception apartments, dinin-room, and kitchens.
Murdock and Dickerson Hardware
This postcard is at the corner of Hammond Street and Broadway. Stores identified in the picture are the Murdock & Dickerson Hardware Store, L. D. Balcom Dry Goods, and George F. Minto Company. Would guess the year to be after 1915.
Masonic Block
The picture in this postcard is of the Masonic Block as a reference to the corner building where the Masonic Lodge was located. The picture was taken in the 1910 time frame.
Note - Regarding the Masonic Lodge ...(from the publication titled "Historical Industrial and Social Record of Peerless Union City Michigan" edited, compiled, and published by Tom F. Robinson in March 1903) reads: Of Union City are most comfortably fixed as regarding lodge rooms. Masonic block was built some thirty years since, and the entire third floor is devoted to the uses of the four Masonic lodges which hold meetings therein. The rooms have been refitted within a few years and include lodge rooms, reception apartments, dinin-room, and kitchens.
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
American Express/Post Office
Monday, January 17, 2011
Sower's Band
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Union Hotel
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Union City Jubilee, September 25, 1908 - #6
Note - The most likely event Union City would have been celebrating on September 25, 1908 would have been surviving the flood that devastated the town on March 8, 1908. The Broadway bridge was washed away, possibly the celebration was that the new bridge had been erected?? The postmarks on the postcards that celebrate the Jubilee are first seen in October of 1908. I am assuming the festival being celebrated on September 25, was in 1908.
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Band Playing in front of the Union Hotel
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Union City Jubilee, September 25, 1908 - #1
Note - The most likely event Union City would have been celebrating on September 25, 1908 would have been surviving the flood that devastated the town on March 8, 1908. The Broadway bridge was washed away, possibly the celebration was that the new bridge had been erected?? The postmarks on the postcards that celebrate the Jubilee are first seen in October of 1908. I am assuming the festival being celebrated on September 25, was in 1908.
Union City Jubilee, September 25, 1908 - #2
Note - The most likely event Union City would have been celebrating on September 25, 1908 would have been surviving the flood that devastated the town on March 8, 1908. The Broadway bridge was washed away, possibly the celebration was that the new bridge had been erected?? The postmarks on the postcards that celebrate the Jubilee are first seen in October of 1908. I am assuming the festival being celebrated on September 25, was in 1908.
Union City Jubilee, September 25, 1908 - #3
Note - The most likely event Union City would have been celebrating on September 25, 1908 would have been surviving the flood that devastated the town on March 8, 1908. The Broadway bridge was washed away, possibly the celebration was that the new bridge had been erected?? The postmarks on the postcards that celebrate the Jubilee are first seen in October of 1908. I am assuming the festival being celebrated on September 25, was in 1908.
Union City Jubilee, September 25, 1908 - #4
Note - The most likely event Union City would have been celebrating on September 25, 1908 would have been surviving the flood that devastated the town on March 8, 1908. The Broadway bridge was washed away, possibly the celebration was that the new bridge had been erected?? The postmarks on the postcards that celebrate the Jubilee are first seen in October of 1908. I am assuming the festival being celebrated on September 25, was in 1908.
Union City Jubilee, September 25, 1908 - #5
Note - The most likely event Union City would have been celebrating on September 25, 1908 would have been surviving the flood that devastated the town on March 8, 1908. The Broadway bridge was washed away, possibly the celebration was that the new bridge had been erected?? The postmarks on the postcards that celebrate the Jubilee are first seen in October of 1908. I am assuming the festival being celebrated on September 25, was in 1908.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Circus Parade - 1901
Note - Roy Barton Cline was born on 29 May 1877 (birth record lists his given name as Leroy) to James Lewis and Maryette "Barton" Cline in Union Township. He married Nellie M. Mowry in Coldwater on 04 Dec 1901. Roy and Nellie had two children, a son Lewis and a daughter Marjorie. Roy died on 17 June 1949 and his wife Nellie died on 05 December 1938. All four are buried in the Riverside Cemetery in Union City in Section 7A.