Traverse City Record-Eagle

Columns

May 30, 2009

Op-Ed: Some Mich.-themed reading material

Well, the auto companies are in trouble, Michigan is heading for a new budget crisis and let's not even talk about the state's highest-in-the-nation unemployment rate.

You just can't think about that stuff all the time. Summer is approaching, and you ought to take at least one good book along to the beach or on your fishing boat. Fortunately the University of Michigan Press has just published two spellbinding books about two fascinating events in Michigan history.

"The Bath Massacre: America's First School Bombing" ($18.95, paperback) is a must read for anyone who likes true crime stories -- or who thinks senseless mass killings are a modern phenomenon. Andrew Kehoe had been all but forgotten, but he is one of the most mysterious and chilling killers in U.S. history.

Kehoe was a 55-year-old farmer who lived near Bath, a town about ten miles from Lansing. He worked in his fields in a suit and tie, something as bizarre then as it would be now. He had a prickly personality and few friends, but he was very handy and an expert electrician.

When he volunteered to do maintenance work at the gleaming new Bath Consolidated School, the trustees were pleased. What they didn't know is that he was methodically packing the school with explosives. On May 18, 1927, Kehoe calmly woke up and murdered his wife. He then burned down his own farm, carefully tying up his horses to make sure they'd burn to death.

Then, the school blew up. Kehoe drove up to the school in a truck he'd packed with explosives, called the superintendent over -- and blew both men and several onlookers into eternity.

He left behind 45 corpses, three times the number at Columbine, and a hand-lettered sign that said simply "Criminals are made, not born." Author Arnie Bernstein did his best to answer the question: Why did he do it? His conclusion: Nobody knows.

"The Toledo War: The First Michigan-Ohio Rivalry" (Paper, $24.95) is, for the history fan, an even better read. Most people know vaguely that Ohio and Michigan fought a "war" of sorts over Toledo, back in 1835. But author Don Faber shows that much of what many of us thought we knew about it was dead wrong.

Michigan, in fact, had a clear right to the "Toledo Strip," based on the Northwest Ordinance. But presidential and power politics got in the way.

"Never have I known of a case of which all the right was so clearly on one side, and all the power so overwhelmingly on the other," said former President John Quincy Adams.

Ohio was already a powerful state and Michigan a mere territory, and President Andrew Jackson wanted to deliver Ohio to the Democrats in the next election. So Michigan lost. It did, however, achieve statehood. The war's other myth, that Michigan got the Upper Peninsula as a consolation prize, is half true.

Michigan already had the eastern half; the western half was thrown in. Writing this book was clearly a labor of love for Faber, a retired editor of the Ann Arbor News.

While the topic is serious, he is a fine writer, and his descriptions of the "fighting" are fairly hilarious. True, a Toledoan named Two Stickney stabbed a Monroe County deputy sheriff in the side before fleeing back to Ohio. (The man lived.) But otherwise, the action was straight out of the Three Stooges.

Incidentally, if you are wondering why Two Stickney was named Two, it is because his father named his older brother One. If you want to know what their sister was named, you'll have to buy the book. Oh, all right. She was named Indiana, naturally.

But The Toledo War is worth a read anyway.

Just wondering

Everyone in Michigan keeps wondering why President Obama hasn't appointed Gov. Jennifer Granholm to a major job. The question should be, why should he?

She has scarcely shown a record of major accomplishment. Nor does she have the sort of distinguished legal record as a prosecutor and attorney general that would qualify for a major judicial appointment. Plus, she was a Hillary Clinton supporter who was a party to the disastrous attempt to rig Michigan's primary last year.

The president has now appointed an entire cabinet, including three choices for commerce secretary, and Michigan's governor has been left waiting. Best guess is that if she gets a Washington job, her title will have "deputy" or "under" attached to it.

Text Only
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  • Op-Ed: Reform falls on deaf ears

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  • Monday, February 6, 2012
  • Garret Leiva: This could change your life

    We live in a world where schemers, dreamers and spammers stuff our email inbox with can’t-miss deals and Nigerian bank windfalls. I, for one, can earn $50,000 in the next 90 days or enter to win a free iPad2. The best part is these wishful dreams can come true without any effort.

    Continued ...
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  • Sunday, February 5, 2012
  • Giants on Cruz control

    Once again, the Giants come in as the underdog and once again I think they leave with the Vince Lombardi trophy.

    Continued ...
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  • Northern People: Hay in Texas in nick of time

    Hay donated by Dick Olds of Olds' Paradise Farms in Kingsley arrived at Rick Petersen's farm in the northeast Texas town of Wills Point in the nick of time.

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  • On Poetry: Knitting, like love, has a fringe

    Even if this winter's been mild, we've had plenty of chances to appreciate our knitted scarves, shawls, and sweaters. I think the hand-knitted ones are the warmest, holding all that personal care and attention in their fibers.

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  • Jack Lessenberry: Overcoming the Morouns

    Americans are justifiably outraged whenever a lawmaker is caught taking bribes or misusing public funds. But what do you suppose the voters' reaction would be if it were discovered that one very rich family was trying to buy off the Legislature solely for their own financial gain? What if that family spent millions on what amounted to legalized bribes to successfully block a project that virtually every corporation in the state agreed was essential to Michigan's economic future? We are talking about the family of Manuel J. "Matty" Moroun, the 84-year-old billionaire who owns the aging Ambassador Bridge.

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am
  • James Cook: Bet against Belichick?

    There's one big reason the pick is New England. Remember 2008?

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am
  • George Weeks: Granholm has new gig

    Over the last half-century, most Michigan governors upon leaving office have gone into or sought another form of public service. The last one, Democrat Jeniffer Granholm, is blazing into the public light with a sprightly talk show gig on California-based national cable TV.

    Continued ...
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  • Reflections: Images on the pond

    With the cat asleep on my lap, I stared at the flames dancing in the fireplace and my mind drifted back to a long-ago summer afternoon spent with my father.

    Continued ...
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  • Saturday, February 4, 2012
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    Q: My "tween" is always saying "Everybody does it" or "Everybody says it." I know this is an excuse to try to get her own way or get things she wants, but I'm really getting tired of hearing it. Where does this end? — Frustrated Mom

    Continued ...
    Feb 4, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • Thursday, February 2, 2012
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    Continued ...
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  • Amish Cook: Feverish boy still dervish

    Kevin, 6, is home from school today. He has been running a fever since yesterday morning.

    Continued ...
    Updated Feb 7, 2012 10:38 am
  • Op-Ed: 'Turnaround plan' for Michigan

    Business Leaders for Michigan, a group of some of the state's most progressive, far-seeing corporate chiefs, has released a new 2012 Michigan Turnaround Plan — and it's worth checking out.

    Continued ...
    Feb 2, 2012 7:54 am 1 Photo
  • Wednesday, February 1, 2012
  • Dennis Chase: Family tradition continues

    College football recruiting has changed dramatically since Shane Bullough went through the process nearly 30 years ago.

    Continued ...
    Feb 1, 2012 7:28 am 1 Photo
  • Monday, January 30, 2012
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    The winter of 1957-58 was a doozie. I was in fourth grade. Snowbanks were higher than school bus windows along sections of the back roads.

    Continued ...
    Jan 30, 2012 7:19 am 1 Photo
  • Garret Leiva: Electrifying Super Bowl

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    Continued ...
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  • Sunday, January 29, 2012
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    Continued ...
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    Continued ...
    Jan 29, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo