| Titus
Bronson: Founder of Kalamazoo
1788-1853
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Source: Labadie's Souvenir of
Picturesque Kalamazoo, 1909, page 2. |
Like many pioneers of southern Michigan, Titus Bronson was
a New Englander. Born in Middlebury, Connecticut, in November 1788,
Bronson moved west in 1821 to Tallmadge, Ohio, where he learned
to grow seed potatoes and earned his nickname "Potato
Bronson." He moved on to Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1824,
but returned to his hometown two years later to marry Sally Richardson.
Bronson went back to Tallmadge with his family, but soon ventured
out alone, returning briefly to Ann Arbor, then following
an old Indian trail west to become the first white settler in Kalamazoo.
He arrived here on 21 June 1829. Living in a crude hut constructed
of tamarack poles, he spent the summer and fall of 1829 preparing
to establish a permanent settlement. After spending the winter with
friends in Prairie Ronde (present-day Schoolcraft), Bronson returned
to Ohio to bring his family and friends back to Michigan.
In June 1830, Bronson bought the land where downtown Kalamazoo
is now located, using money he had earned from selling potatoes
he had grown in Ann Arbor. According to legend, had it not been
for the intervention of his wife Sally, he might have exchanged
it all for $100 and a gun. Bronson and his brother-in-law, Stephen
Richardson, officially entered the plat for the Village of Bronson
at the county register's office on 12 March 1831. Two weeks later,
Governor Lewis Cass selected Bronson as the site of the county seat,
which encouraged the development of the little community. Bronson
donated some of his own land for the construction of a courthouse,
school, cemetery, jail and for the park which still bears his name.
He also built a log house to replace his original hut.
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Source: Labadie's Souvenir of
Picturesque Kalamazoo, 1909, page 2. |
Titus Bronson was a public-spirited, patriotic, and generous man,
but he also was outspoken against intemperance and politics, which
frequently put him at odds with his fellow settlers. Careless in
dress and appearance, he also was said to have a peculiar walk,
moving in fits and starts. Once during a local court session, Bronson
was caught whittling at a window sill in the courtroom, and later
was fined for stealing a cherry tree from another settler. Both
incidents fueled the growing discontent in the community against
him. In March of 1836 his enemies succeeded in changing the name
of the village from Bronson to Kalamazoo. Hurt by that, and finding
the rapidly expanding community too constricting, he left Kalamazoo.
He wound up in Davenport, Iowa, where he lost his wealth through
a land swindle in 1842, the same year his wife died. After living
in Illinois for a short while, Bronson returned to Connecticut and
died a broken man in January 1853. His headstone appropriately reads:
"A Western Pioneer, Returned to Sleep with his Fathers."
Despite Titus Bronson's personal flaws and eccentric behavior,
he nonetheless played a critical role in the founding and early
development of Kalamazoo. He was, after all, the pioneer who had
the vision to recognize the site of a future city. Soon after he
first arrived, a visitor remarked to him that in twenty years, only
his hut would mark the location of his village. Agitated by this
criticism, Bronson replied that in thirty years, a thriving city
would exist. Titus Bronson was more right than he could have imagined.
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Photographed by Alex
Forist, 2005.
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For further information, we suggest
these sources:
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History Room Name File: Bronson, Titus. |
| H 921 B869ke |
Kekic, Nick. A Fine Place for a City: Titus Bronson and
the Founding of Kalamazoo. Kalamazoo: Oak Opening Press,
1984. |
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Williams, Ethel W. "Ancestry of Titus Bronson,"
Michigan Heritage, v.5, no.3, Spring 1964, pp.105-108. |
Written by Kris Rzepczynski, Kalamazoo
Public Library Staff, 1998. Updated 28 September 2005.
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