May Family
2023.50.39
SDHS NL InsertsFamily History1830 Settlement, pioneer era
Winthers, Sally
Digital data in CatalogIt
May, Frederic HenryDutcher, William Fuller 1800-1861Dutcher familyIra Chaffee (ship) 1867Hutchinson, J. Edward 1914-1985May, William Augustus 1850-1935
This information was OCR text scanned from SDHS newsletter supplements. A binder of original paper copies is catalog item 2023.50.01
Everyday Life in May, Michigan from SDHS newsletter insert, page 97 [In a recent newsletter we wrote about the May family, early settlers in Douglas, and the settlement of .May north of Saugatuck that was named for Frederick H. May, the man who named Douglas and was later involved with several railroads in Allegan County. May was an early watering stop for the railroad and from 1895 to 1902 had its own post office. Tire following letter was received from Esther Defouw who grew up in May, and has some interesting stories about life as a small town shopkeeper.] I am very interested in the history of May, Michigan. My father bought the grocery store there in 1930. He had the store and peddle wagon for many years. I think he closed it in 1953. On November 1 l, 1940, a wind storm took the roof off the old buck house and they rebuilt the house on the same foundation and it is still there, the store was taken down in the 1970s. My son still lives there on 52nd Street. I lived there till 1948, when I was married and now live just around the corner to the west on 147th Avenue, also called Fourteenth Street. In 1953 my parents made the old store into an apartment for my brother who was attending seminary at Calvin College in Grand Rapids. After he graduated he moved away and became a chaplain in the Navy. My father died in 1966, my mother in 1974. It was a very difficult life when we had the store. They didn't have electricity, had a gas lamp in the store that had a cloth mantle. In the house we had kerosene lamps. There was a coal stove in the middle of the store. Father started his peddle wagon with a team of horses, later he had trucks. He went on a different route every day. He stopped at all the farm houses and they traded eggs for groceries. On his truck he had the sign: GERRlT ROOM GROCERY No Long Waits and No Short Weights May, Mich. They had everything in bulk so every evening they had to weigh everything. I put in 5# and 10# or smaller bags: sugar, brown sugar, rice, oatmeal, even tea and coconut (they were just in the small bags). They didn't have heaters in the truck so he had a small kerosene stove to keep the groceries from freezing. Just chains on the tires as the roads were plowed very often then. Mother made little cloth bags and put salt in them to use on the windshield to keep the frost off. My brothers and sisters often talk about May, Mich. We wish we knew more about it. Written by Esther Defouw
11/09/2023
01/07/2024