Traverse City Record-Eagle

Record-Eagle 150th Anniversary

January 4, 2009

Founding Father: Perry Hannah

Hannah dedicated his life to helping Traverse City grow and thrive

"The life of Perry Hannah has been the history, for half a century, of Traverse City and the Grand Traverse region."

-- Evening Record
Aug. 17, 1904

Thomas Bates spoke for the whole town in his tribute to the city's legendary father the day after the funeral.

Perry Hannah drew his final breath at 7:15 a.m. on Aug. 13, 1904, at his Sixth Street mansion, three days after going into a coma following a paralytic stroke and just a month short of his 80th birthday.

Within minutes, flags dropped to half-staff as the news spread across town that Saturday morning. Workers draped Hannah & Lay Mercantile Co. in crepe. The mercantile was closed the day of the funeral, but Hannah's Traverse City State Bank had to stay open until noon because of a state law that required banks to open at least a portion of all days except Sundays and holidays.

For three days after his death until his funeral on Aug. 16, the Evening Record relived Hannah's life, doled out funeral information, listed pall-bearers and printed tributes from other places to the city's father.

Perry Hannah's story is, in fact, the story of Traverse City's first half-century. He planted it, nurtured it and benevolently controlled it through his visionary leadership, his insight, business savvy, money and donations of land.

City fathers don't live forever -- at least in physical form. Perry Hannah's legacy, however, still ripples throughout our lives. Almost half of the Record-Eagle's top 10 stories of the last 150 years can be traced to him.

He helped open the remote Grand Traverse region to the "outside," and the company he and A. Tracy Lay started in 1852 made Traverse City a regional hub for retailing, industry and land development in less than 30 years.

"Perry Hannah, more than anyone else, is responsible for what Traverse City is today," local historian Steve Harold said.

Legacy of firsts

Hannah, Lay & Co. operated the first schooners and passenger boats that plied local waters to Chicago. It had the first and only retail store in Traverse City until 1860. In 1883, it opened its mercantile, known as the Big Store, at Union and Front streets, considered one of the most elegant stores north of Grand Rapids. It was also the city's first brick-block building.

Hannah and Lay organized the city's first bank, The Banking House of Hannah, Lay, in 1878. He likely would have been appalled by our plastic economy; Hannah always refused to sell on credit, saying it increased costs for customers. Local history writer Robert Wilson, author of "Grand Traverse Legends," said that policy helped spare Traverse City from some of the effects of national recessions and panics.

Hannah had a hand in almost every economic development for decades. He played a pivotal role in getting the Newaygo-to-Northport state road in 1859 when he served as president of a state committee that selected road routes.

In 1872, Hannah inspired local leaders to invest in the Traverse City Rail Road Co., and to build a 26-mile spur from Walton Junction to Traverse City. Seven years later, he bought and refurbished the six-year-old Park Place Hotel and was the first to envision a local tourist-summer resort economy.

In the early 1880s, the governor appointed him to the panel that selected the location of the new state asylum to be built in northern Michigan. Perry Hannah shrewdly made sure Traverse City was selected by selling the state land he owned, then buying the timber that grew on it from the state for at least twice his selling price, Harold said.

Hannah gave land to churches, local government, schools and he encouraged people in business to set up their own, often competing businesses. One was J.W. Milliken, father of James T. Milliken and grandfather of the future Gov. William G. Milliken.

The asylum, later renamed a couple of times, also had its own spin-off effects, chronicled in the life of James Decker Munson, its superintendent from 1885 until 1924. In the 1920s, Munson headed a fundraising campaign for a new general hospital that was named for him when it opened. Today, that hospital has grown into Munson Medical Center, while the adjacent state hospital grounds are part of a massive redevelopment project called the Grand Traverse Commons. The project includes apartments, restaurants, a nursing home called the Grand Traverse Pavilions and assisted living facilities, as well as shops.

Retirement concept dismissed

Hannah believed in a diversified economy and was highly interested in agricultural matters. Nor did he appear to understand the concept of retirement -- in 1903, the year before his death, he became was one of three partners in the Traverse City Canning Co.

On June 20, 1903, barely a year before his death, he set the granite cornerstone of the Traverse City State Bank, just across Union Street from Hannah, Lay's "Big Store." Today, that building is the home of Fifth Third Bank.

Hannah also sent his farm manager William Ingersoll to Saginaw and Bay City that year to investigate whether sugar beet farming would be a good farming and business prospect for this region. Ingersoll returned with a favorable report. Hannah then had 20 acres planted on his farm, and the local newspapers published a lot of sugar beet stories that year.

Hannah was one of several area pioneers who planted trees on the grounds of the new Grand Traverse Courthouse in a local Arbor Day celebration in April 1903. He reminisced in a courthouse gathering afterwards about the first time he saw the area in May 1851, and the trip he took up one side of the Boardman River and down the other looking for pine lands.

He found them. Hannah, Lay & Co. would cut more than 400 million board feet along the banks of the Boardman over the next three decades. By 1889, the firm's timber lands totaled 50,000 to 60,000 acres.

"I little thought then that I should be planting in half a century hence a shade tree on these grounds, where nothing but solid forest then stood," he said in the speech reported in the April 24, 1903, Evening Record.

"Today we have a beautiful growing city of 12,000 inhabitants with railroads, telephones and electric wires to numerous villages surrounding us, which notes the wonderful progress made in this part of Michigan," he said.

"If I should be allowed to remain here another half century, then fly way to the Spirit World, I am certain I should still be watching Traverse City grow, and wishing to know that its people were prosperous, happy and contented ... ."

Text Only
  • After looking back, we look to the future

    In this last installment of the Record-Eagle's year-long 150th Anniversary History Project series, native son Bill Milliken ponders the future, including the question: What will the Traverse City area be like in 2159?

    Continued ...
    Nov 8, 2009 7:14 am 9 Photos
  • Derek Bailey: Cooperation is key

    I am excited and optimistic in thinking about my predictions for the area and Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians for the next 150 years. Clearly, we live in one of the most beautiful areas of Mother Earth. The GTB Tribal Nation has grown exponentially as an area and tribe over the last 29 years. We must now sustain and channel that growth.

    Continued ...
    Nov 8, 2009 7:12 am 1 Photo
  • George McManus: Manage resources

    The Grand Traverse Region is blessed with abundant renewable natural resources, which properly managed, will remain for the next 150 years and beyond. The community of the future depends on what direction the citizenry and leadership decide to take and external influences over which they have no control.

    Continued ...
    Nov 8, 2009 7:11 am 1 Photo
  • Marsha Smith: Listen to each other

    The Grand Vision has shown me that the people of this region love it here and have a commitment to building a better future. We care about what happens here and we care about the future. My main concern is that we sometimes forget about all things we hold in common and focus more on what keeps us apart.

    Continued ...
    Nov 8, 2009 7:11 am 1 Photo
  • Joe VanderMeulen: Plan for six generations

    We need to look forward across six or more generations of people to see 150 years into the future. What wonderful changes there may be, if we choose wisely, just get lucky, or some of both. Of course, we face many threats to our security and survival. The risks of deadly pandemics, global climate change and unimaginable wars are real.

    Continued ...
    Nov 8, 2009 7:10 am 1 Photo
  • November 2, 2009
  • Women helped build Traverse City

    Women helped build Traverse City's library system, schools and hospital. They lobbied for clean water and clean streets. They were concerned about the needy, child labor, reforestation, international peace and the right of women to vote. They did this largely through two local women's clubs -- the Ladies Library Association and the Traverse City Woman's Club.

    Continued ...
    Nov 2, 2009 6:17 am 4 Photos
  • TC's early women leaders

    Thirteen women who influenced early Traverse City are profiled.

    Continued ...
    Nov 2, 2009 6:15 am
  • October 31, 2009
  • TC history exhibit visits TADL

    The Record-Eagle's traveling exhibit of Traverse City and newspaper history will be on display throughout November at the Traverse Area District Library on Woodmere.

    Continued ...
    Oct 31, 2009 9:30 pm
  • October 19, 2009
  • Loraine Anderson: TC's 1925 earthquake

    Earthquakes are rare in Michigan, but Traverse City residents definitely felt the earth move beneath their feet and watched electric ceiling lights sway overhead on Feb. 28, 1925. "EARTHQUAKE HERE FIRST EVER FELT: Dishes Rattle, Chairs Rock, Smokers 'Swear Off' and People in High Places Come Down," Record-Eagle headlines shouted after tremors rattled the city at 8:27 p.m. that Saturday night.

    Continued ...
    Oct 19, 2009 7:00 am 1 Photo
  • October 5, 2009
  • Water Wars: Advocating for 'public trust'

    It was a busy summer on the water front for Great Lakes advocates in what environmentalists and others are calling "The Water Wars."

    Continued ...
    Oct 5, 2009 6:18 am 3 Photos
  • October 3, 2009
  • R-E editorial decries water diversion

    Record-Eagle concern about Great Lakes water diversion dates to the early 1900s, including a Jan. 14, 1925, editorial about the U.S. governments challenge of Chicagos right to divert Lake Michigan water without consulting its neighbors.

    Continued ...
    Oct 3, 2009 9:55 pm
  • Summary of summer Great Lakes water issues

    Great Lakes water issues this summer included the following.

    Continued ...
    Oct 3, 2009 9:55 pm
  • September 28, 2009
  • 150 Years: Bay served as sewer, water supply

    The Boardman River in Traverse City wasn't a pretty sight at the turn of the last century. It was a city sewer, and it flowed into West Bay, the source of the city's water supply.

    Continued ...
    Sep 28, 2009 7:18 am 7 Photos
  • August 10, 2009
  • 150 Years: Cartographer maps settlements

    Helen Hornbeck Tanner, a Beulah summer resident and historian of Great Lakes American Indians and cartography, created a new historical map of the Grand Traverse region that traces early American Indian and white settlement.

    Continued ...
    Aug 10, 2009 6:39 am 2 Photos
  • July 27, 2009
  • Loraine Anderson: Tracking Titus

    Harold Titus has been one of my favorite Traverse City historical characters since I read "Timber," his 1922 novel, last year. He intrigues me for many reasons. Part of his mystery is that he is virtually unknown today. He is "new" local history.

    Continued ...
    Jul 27, 2009 8:06 am 1 Photo