| Carder-Van
Deusen House:
527 West South Street
(now Hospital Hospitality House)
|
The house at 527 W. South Street
(left), as it appeared when the Van Deusens lived
there. |
|
Source: Picturesque Kalamazoo,
1909. |
|
The
following material is from the
1973 Initial Inventory of Historic Sites and Buildings in
Kalamazoo and
was made available for use here by the Historic Preservation
Coordinator of the City of Kalamazoo. See Introduction
to an Initial Inventory... for details about how the
survey was conducted.
527
West South Street R-4
Edwin Carder--Dr. Edwin Van Deusen House
| location: |
527 West South Street |
| designation |
Edwin Carder--Dr. Edwin Van Deusen House |
| date: |
1866 |
| style: |
"Colonial" revival remodeling of
earlier Italian
villa style |
As
the Civil War ended, Isaac Moffatt, called "General" by
his friends, sold his modest home on South Street to Edwin Carder,
a successful furniture dealer looking to move from his home on
Walnut Street to the fashionable area on the west side of the
village. Carder razed the old Moffatt house and built an elaborate
Italian Villa on the site. Much of it is visible beneath later
face lifting. The basic block of the house with its tall narrow
windows topped with ornamental hoods, the projecting bay on the
right side with its classic pilasters, and the massive door itself
belong to that earlier era of postwar affluence.
Carder came to Michigan in the
1830's, but didn't settle in Kalamazoo until 1848. He succeeded
almost immediately, combining the furniture business with
undertaking. He and his family lived in a succession of homes in
the area of Rose and Walnut Streets, then decided to move up to
South Street, where they would live for the next decade and then
move again. The 1870 Census-taker found him at forty-nine, living
on South Street with his English-born wife, Sarah, and four
children, with an estate listed at nearly $60,000.
In the spring of 1876, the local tax
assessor credited Dr. Edwin Van Deusen with the property, Dr. Van
Deusen made several changes to the front facade, adding
particularly the massive front portico to give the whole building
the fashionable "colonial look" popularized by the
Philadelphia Centennial of 1876. Van Deusen turned the title of
the property over to his wife, Cynthia, in 1878. In that same year
he retired from the post he had held for more than twenty years as
Superintendent of the Insane Asylum, and moved into the home he
would occupy until his final illness almost twenty years later.
Van Deusen had graduated from
Williams College before he was twenty and earned a Master's degree
there three years later. He then went on to the College of
Physicians and Surgeons in New York in 1848, finishing there two
years later. He became Superintendent of the Michigan Asylum for
the Insane in 1855, though the legislature had not yet established
it.
When Kalamazoo was named the site,
Van Deusen made several trips here and in the fall of 1858, moved
to the new hospital on the edge of the village. Under his
direction it formally opened a year later, and he continued as
Superintendent until failing health brought on retirement in 1878.
During that time he pioneered in practical care of the mentally
ill, particularly in working to abolish restraints and in
establishing the “colony" system. He was especially
interested in recognition of early symptoms of mental illness, and
in his research and writing, said a later Superintendent
of the hospital, he "struck a blow for preventive medicine
which has made us his debtors for all time".
Though for a time, as the Gazette would later note,
"he lived the quiet life of literary leisure at his pleasant
home in Kalamazoo," he soon turned to professional and
philanthropic activities. He served from 1881 to 1885 on the
Michigan State Board of Corrections and Charities. He was a steady
member of St. Luke's Episcopal Church and gave the rectory
building for that parish. He also donated heavily at the time that
Bronson Hospital was established. In addition, he supported the
Children's Home and provided the massive building for Kalamazoo's
Public Library. At this death in 1909, the Gazette gave
major coverage to testimonies and memorials and called him
"the greatest philanthropist of Kalamazoo County".
Upon Van Deusen's death, the home passed to F. Ford
Rowe, who occupied it in 1910 according to the city directory.
Rowe was then President and General Manager of the
Gazette--Telegraphy
Company according to one directory entry, he continued to live
there until about 1924, when Donald Osborne and his wife, Myra,
moved in. Mrs. Osborne kept the house when her husband died a few
years later, living there until the 1950’s.
527
West South Street R-4
Edwin Carder--Dr. Edwin Van Deusen House
|
Location: |
27 West South Street |
Maps: 1853 |
earliest hse. |
| Designation: |
Edward H. Van Deusen House |
1861 |
earliest hse. |
| Date: |
1866 earlier home on site |
1873 |
Edwin Carder on E 1/2 3 |
| style: |
"Colonial" revival
remodeling of earlier home b. in 1867 as Italian Revival
villa style |
1883 |
seems to show |
| 1890 |
hse. E1/2 of 3 |
|
Kalamazoo County Tax Rolls |
| 1865 |
Isaac Moffet or Moffatt |
E 1/2 of lot 3, sec.16 |
300 |
10.33 |
| 1866 |
undetermined |
E½
of lot 3 |
|
|
| 1866 |
Isaac Moffatt, personal |
|
800 |
|
| 1866 |
Edwin A. Carder, personal
(in
1865, Carder homestead on W.
Walnut) |
|
3,000 |
|
| 1867 |
E. A. Carder, Homestead |
E 1/2 of lot 3, sec. 16 |
1800 |
64.89 |
| 1868 |
E. A. Carder |
E 1/2 of lot 3 |
1800 |
75.75 |
| 1869 |
E. A. Carder |
E 1/2 of lot 3 homestead |
1700 |
80.33 |
| 1870 |
E. A. Carder |
" |
3200 |
62.94 |
| 1871 |
E. A. Carder |
" |
3000 |
55.20 |
| 1871 |
Carder & Gilbert
(furniture) |
stock |
10,000 |
|
| 1872 |
E. A. Carder |
E 1/2 of lot 3, homestead |
3000 |
47.80 |
| 1873 |
E. A. Carder |
E 1/2 of lot 3 |
3000 |
44.55 |
| 1873 |
E. A. Carder & Sons..(1st
use) |
stock of Furniture |
10,000 |
|
| 1874 |
E. A. Carder |
E 1/2 of lot 3 |
3000 |
53.25 Myron Carder Undertaker |
| 1875 |
E. A. Carder |
E 1/2 of lot 3 |
2800 |
66.84 |
| 1876 |
E. A. Carder |
No homestead listed |
|
|
| 1873-1875 |
Edward H. Van Deusen |
personal property, no homestead |
5000 |
|
| 1876 |
E. H. Van Deusen |
E 1/2 of lot 3, sec.16 |
2800 |
|
|
|
N 9/16 of A of 2 |
700 |
|
| 1877 |
E. H. Van Deusen |
E 1/2 of lot 3, N 9/16 of 2 |
3800 |
|
| 1878 |
Mrs. E. H. Van Deusen |
" |
3800 |
|
| 1879 |
same |
|
7500 |
(city-wide assessment Jump) |
| 1880 |
same |
|
7000 |
|
|
|
personal |
16,000 |
|
Kalamazoo
City Directory
1878, E. H. Van Deusen Asylum
1881
“
59 South
1883
“
527 South
1885--1907
“
“
1908
Vacant
“ “
1909
1910
F. Ford Rowe
527 South
U.S. Population Census Rolls:
1870
-- Edwin A. Carder, 49, Furniture dealer 28500 real, 30000 pers.
b.-Conn.; Sarah, 48, b. England; Myron 25, Furniture; George 20,
apprenticed to upholsterer; Abbey, 17, at school, Sarah, 7.
1880 -- Dr. Edwin H. Van Deusen,
51, Physician, B. NY; Cynthia, 44, wife, b. NY; Mary J. 12,
adopted, at school, b. Michigan. 2 servants.
This report was converted from a typewritten
document to a digital text document in September 2004. Other than
punctuation and spelling corrections, and the addition of BOLD
type site address and names, no changes were made. Minor
formatting changes were made for use on this website, but the text
was not altered. Original survey dated 1973.
|
For further information, we suggest
these sources:
|
| H 720.9774 H838 |
Houghton and O'Connor, Kalamazoo
Lost and Found. Kalamazoo Historic Preservation
Commission, 2001, page 229. |
| |
"A Different Kind of
House," Business Digest, March 1989, pages 32-36. |
| |
History Room Subject File: Houses
- Kalamazoo - South, W., 527. |
| H 720.9774 S355 |
Schmitt, Peter J. Kalamazoo:
Nineteenth-Century Homes in a Midwestern Village. Kalamazoo
City Historical Commission, 1976, pages 112-113. |
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