| Bazel
and Martha Harrison:
Kalamazoo County's First Family
 |
|
Kalamazoo Public Library Photo
P-647 |
Although
the majority of early Kalamazoo County settlers came from New York,
a significant number arrived from the south. Among these was Bazel Harrison, who led the first party of white settlers in the
county. Harrison was born in Maryland in 1771. His family
moved first to Virginia, then to Pennsylvania, where Harrison worked
in a distillery in his early years. At the age of 19, he eloped with
Martha Stillwell over the objection of her mother, and they moved to
Ohio. Mrs. Stillwell's worries were for nought. Bazel and Martha
were married for nearly 70 years.
After
their son Elias explored southern Michigan in 1827 and returned with
glowing reports, the Harrisons
left their farm in Springfield, Ohio, and arrived in Prairie
Ronde in November 1828 with a
contingent of twenty-one persons, including eight of their 17 children,
several grandchildren and a handful of neighbors. In the caravan were also three
cows, fifty head of sheep, hogs, horses and oxen. The trip
took more than a month, but when they arrived, they were happy with
what they found. The settlers were reported to have said, "perhaps the eye of man has rarely rested
on a more beautiful natural landscape than was presented by Prairie Ronde."
They
camped the first night on the southern edge of the prairie, in what
is now Schoolcraft. After making inquiries about a source of
water, the local Pottawatomis led them to a site on the northwest
side of Harrison Lake, so named in their honor. There they
built a log cabin, and later a frame house, and there Bazel and
Martha remained until the end of their long lives.
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|
Judge Harrison's home. |
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Standard Atlas of Kalamazoo County, 1910,
page 127 |
The
small colony gradually increased in size. By 1830 the families
of Abner Calhoun, Abraham Shaver, Erastus Guilford, David Beadle
and others brought the population of the area to over sixty
families. That December the first township meeting was held,
at which Bazel Harrison was elected one of three Commissioners of
Highways. In 1831, Governor Cass commissioned him, along with
Stephen Hoyt, to be an associate judge of the district that would
soon be known as Kalamazoo County. He held this position
until 1834 and was forever after known as Judge Harrison. He was
said to have inspired the character of Ben Boden in James Fenimore
Cooper's book, The
Oak Openings, or, The Bee-Hunter.
Martha
Harrison died in 1857. By the time Bazel died in 1874, at the age of
103, their descendants numbered 220 persons, many of whom lived in
this area. Their oldest son William was the first settler of
Charleston Township. Another son Nathan operated the first ferry
over the Kalamazoo River in what is now downtown Kalamazoo.
Bazel and Martha are both buried in Harrison Cemetery in Prairie
Ronde Township.
In
1955, students from Kalamazoo Valley Community College led an
archaeological dig to identify the original location of the Harrison
homestead. With help from John Crose, Harrison's great-great-grandson, the area was marked and the dig begun. By the end of the
excavation, several thousand artifacts were retrieved,
including pennies dated 1842 and 1865, the pendulum from a clock, a
peppermint bottle, and fragments from clay pipes. These
artifacts revealed specific information about early building
materials and styles of living in Kalamazoo County. All the
items are now housed at the Kalamazoo Valley Museum.
|
For further information, we suggest
these sources:
|
H 977.4
M62 |
"Biographical sketch of
Judge Bazil (sic) Harrison," Michigan Pioneer
Collections, volume 11, pages 200-216. |
| Magazine |
Praus, Alexis A. and Paul
Millikan. "Finding Bazel Harrison's Log Cabin," Michigan
Heritage, Winter 1970, volume 12, pages 61-68. |
| |
History Room Name File: Harrison,
Bazel. |
| Fiction |
Cooper, James Fenimore. The
Oak Openings, or, The Bee-Hunter. Amsterdam: Fredonia
Books, 2003. |
Written by Martha Lohrstorfer, Kalamazoo Public Library staff,
June 2006. Updated 3 July 2007.
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