Bir Tercinta: Orang Jerman, Yankee, dan Larangan di Ann Arbor, Michigan

Orang Jerman telah lama menikmati dan memuliakan alkohol. Ketika misionaris Irlandia Columbanus pertama kali bertemu dengan orang Jerman pada awal abad ketujuh, dia melakukan ritual pengorbanan bir.

Bahkan setelah orang Jerman menjadi Kristen, sebagian besar pemimpin agama mengikuti pandangan alkitabiah tentang alkohol sebagai bagian dari karunia Tuhan. Martin Luther menyukai bir dan anggur: dia kadang-kadang mabuk, dan dia menggunakan lagu-lagu minuman populer untuk beberapa himnenya.

Begitulah tradisi di belakang pendeta misionaris Frederick Schmid, yang datang ke Michigan pada tahun 1833 untuk merintis jemaat di antara para imigran Jerman di negara bagian itu. Tetapi Schmid, yang mendirikan Zion Lutheran Church dan Bethlehem United Church of Christ, dengan cepat mengetahui bahwa pendeta lokal lainnya memiliki sikap yang lebih ketat terhadap alkohol. Merasa jijik dengan preferensi yang meluas akan minuman keras dan kebiasaan mabuk-mabukan, banyak yang menganjurkan larangan langsung minum.

Pada Juni 1834, Schmid didekati oleh seorang pendeta Presbiterian setempat. Akankah Schmid menggunakan otoritasnya untuk membujuk orang Jerman Ann Arbor untuk mengikuti prinsip pertarakan Presbiterian, yang tidak hanya melarang alkohol tetapi bahkan kopi dan teh?

Schmid menjawab bahwa seorang Kristen tidak perlu tunduk pada kuk seperti itu. Orang-orang dengan Roh Kudus di dalam diri mereka tidak akan minum terlalu banyak atau menyalahgunakan karunia Allah. Yesus, tambah Schmid, minum anggur.

Bentrokan budaya yang dimulai hari itu akan berlangsung hampir satu abad. Orang Jerman tiba di Ann Arbor di tengah gerakan pertarakan yang hebat di antara orang Amerika kelahiran asli — yang akan memuncak pada Pelarangan nasional pada tahun 1920.

Kebanyakan pemukim Jerman melihat hal-hal seperti Schmid. Sikap mereka diabadikan dalam konstitusi Gereja Betel Freedom Township, di mana hanya minuman keras yang dikutuk. Di halaman gereja ada batu nisan dengan tanggal “31 Februari”. Menurut mantan pendeta Roman Reineck, keluarga petani akan mengunjungi pemahat batu saat dia bekerja. Mereka akan membawakan sari apel keras atau anggur, dan di penghujung hari, tanggal itu tidak penting.

Di kota-kota, di mana orang Jerman mayoritas, sosialisasi seperti itu tidak terlalu diperhatikan. Tapi kecintaan orang Jerman terhadap alkohol adalah masalah yang jauh lebih besar di Ann Arbor. Antara tahun 1868 hingga 1918, direktori kota mencatat 221 tempat berbeda yang mendistribusikan alkohol, lebih dari setengahnya dimiliki oleh orang Jerman-Amerika.

Edith Staebler Kempf (1898-1993) bercerita tentang salon abad kesembilan belas yang dijalankan oleh Charlie Behr. Profesor, pengacara, dan petani Jerman yang kaya pergi ke sana. Behr juga menyajikan makanan, dan menurut Kempf, tidak pernah ada keributan.

Yankees-Michiganders yang keluarganya berasal dari New England atau New York State-mungkin mengabaikan orang Jerman yang menjual bir ke orang Jerman lainnya. Tetapi populasi siswa Ann Arbor adalah masalah yang berbeda. Sebagian besar mahasiswa UM pada masa itu berasal dari keluarga Yankee dan dibesarkan di keluarga Metodis, Baptis, atau Presbiterian, di mana teetotalisme diberlakukan. Sendirian di Ann Arbor, beberapa menikmati kebebasan yang baru mereka temukan—termasuk kebebasan untuk minum.

Pada awalnya, University of Michigan terus mengawasi mahasiswa. Mereka tinggal di kampus, memiliki jam malam jam 9 malam, dan diharuskan menghadiri kapel wajib dua kali sehari untuk mendengarkan khotbah yang diberikan oleh anggota fakultas, yang sebagian besar adalah pendeta Protestan yang ditahbiskan.

Itu berubah ketika Henry Philip Tappan mengambil alih sebagai presiden universitas pada tahun 1852. Tappan telah mengunjungi universitas riset di Prusia, dan dia mulai merekrut fakultas berdasarkan beasiswa, bukan afiliasi gereja. Tappan juga menghapuskan asrama universitas karena ingin mahasiswa lebih mandiri dan tinggal di luar kampus, seperti mahasiswa di Eropa.

Tappan sendiri minum anggur saat makan, dan dia tidak peduli jika siswanya minum bir. Dia memang berbicara menentang semangat yang disuling, tetapi ini hampir tidak memuaskan fakultas dan bupati yang lebih konservatif.

Bebas dari otoritas orang tua dan universitas, para siswa beralih ke kecanduan alkohol. Pada tahun 1856, gerombolan mahasiswa menyerang tempat minum Jerman dalam “Perang Belanda”. Konflik dimulai ketika Jacob Hangsterfer mengeluarkan dua siswa gaduh dari aula birnya. Mereka kembali malam berikutnya dengan teman-teman bersenjatakan pisau dan pentungan. Ketika Hangsterfer menolak untuk menyajikan minuman gratis kepada mereka, para siswa membuka tong dan tong serta menghancurkan furnitur dan kaca.

Segera setelah itu, enam siswa memanjat melalui jendela di hotel dan salon Henry Binder dan mengambil minuman untuk diri mereka sendiri untuk pesta dansa Jerman. Binder hanya bisa menangkap salah satu siswa dan menyandera dia. Yang lain mendapat bala bantuan dari kampus. Ketika Binder meminta $10 untuk minuman yang dicuri, para siswa menyerang dengan alat pendobrak. Dengan dinding bata runtuh, Binder memasang anjing besarnya pada para siswa. Tetapi anjing siswa membunuh anjing Binder. Kemudian para siswa pergi untuk mengambil senapan yang mereka gunakan dalam latihan militer — dan pada saat itu Binder dengan bijak melepaskan tawanannya.

Dipanggil di karpet oleh para bupati, Tappan menekankan persyaratan berkelanjutan universitas untuk kapel harian dan kehadiran di gereja hari Minggu, serta bukti lain dari tubuh siswa yang bermoral. Dia juga menyerukan penegakan peraturan kota baru yang melarang penjualan alkohol kepada anak di bawah umur dan orang yang mabuk. Namun tahun berikutnya, seorang mantan siswa meninggal setelah minum di salon Binder dan kamar temannya.

Tappan bergabung dengan penduduk kota yang berpikiran sederhana dalam menekan dewan kota untuk secara informal menyetujui bahwa tidak ada izin minuman keras yang akan diberikan di sebelah timur Division Street, menciptakan “garis kering” untuk melindungi area kampus. Tapi Tappan kehilangan poin dengan bupati ketika dia menolak untuk mengambil sumpah pertarakan pribadi. Meskipun dia mengangkat universitas ke tingkat nasional sepuluh kali lipat pendaftaran, meletakkan dasar sekolah hukum dan teknik, dan banyak lagi — para bupati lebih peduli dengan anggapan kegagalan moralnya. Mereka memecatnya pada tahun 1863.

Sebagai pengganti Tappan, para bupati mengangkat seorang menteri Metodis dan profesor bahasa Latin, Erastus Haven. Gereja Presbiterian menjadi tuan rumah pelantikan Haven. Pada upacara tersebut, seorang bupati menjelaskan secara rinci perilaku “berdosa” Tappan.

Presiden Haven, bagaimanapun, tidak lebih beruntung mengekang siswa kota yang gaduh. Pada tahun 1867, dia memberi tahu Asosiasi Perpustakaan Wanita bahwa Ann Arbor “dipermalukan di seluruh negeri” sebagai “tempat pesta pora dan mabuk”. Pada tahun 1871, tersengat oleh perkelahian, keributan malam hari, dan lelucon yang merusak, pemilih Ann Arbor memilih seorang anggota fakultas universitas sebagai walikota. Silas Douglas segera meminta wali kota memperingatkan salon-salon bahwa peraturan penutupan hari Minggu yang telah lama diabaikan akan diberlakukan.

Konflik Ann Arbor tentang alkohol akhirnya menjadi perhatian seluruh negara bagian. Cabang Michigan dari Women’s Christian Temperance Union mengeluarkan selebaran pada tahun 1881 yang mengecam salon kota karena membuat pria “biadab”. Selebaran itu mencantumkan nama tiga puluh tujuh penjaga salon, sebagian besar dari mereka adalah orang Jerman-Amerika, dan berpendapat bahwa “Ann Arbor akan lebih baik secara moral, sosial, intelektual, dan dalam segala hal, jika daftar pria yang sangat panjang dan menjijikkan ini mau. salah satu dari mereka meninggal karena cacar dalam minggu depan.”

Pada tahun 1887, Michigan memberikan suara pada usulan amandemen konstitusi negara bagian yang melarang pembuatan dan penjualan alkohol. Bangsal Kedua Ann Arbor yang sangat Jerman (sekarang Old West Side) menolaknya sepuluh banding satu. Bangsal Keenam yang didominasi Yankee dan universitas memberikan suara tiga banding satu. Itu kalah tipis di seluruh negara bagian.

Pasukan kesederhanaan Ann Arbor akhirnya mencapai beberapa keberhasilan pada tahun 1902, ketika daerah kering informal di sekitar universitas menjadi bagian dari piagam kota. Pada tahun 1908, sebelas kabupaten Michigan telah memberlakukan peraturan Larangan lokal, dan setiap tahun semakin banyak kabupaten yang bergabung dengannya. Pada tahun 1916, pemilih Michigan kembali mempertimbangkan amandemen Larangan terhadap konstitusi negara bagian. Bangsal Kedua masih memberikan suara tidak, hampir dua banding satu, tetapi Ann Arbor secara keseluruhan memilih Larangan, begitu pula negara bagian.

Almarhum Ernie Splitt mengenang para inspektur pemerintah yang tiba di Michigan Union Brewery di Fourth Street pada hari negara bagian mengering, 1 Mei 1918. Menurut Splitt, semua orang minum, bahkan para inspektur. Kemudian “sisa bir dituangkan ke saluran pembuangan. Itu adalah hari paling menyedihkan dalam hidup saya.”

Gerombolan Michiganders menuju Ohio untuk mendapatkan minuman keras, memimpin gubernur Michigan untuk memerintahkan pasukan negara bagian untuk berpatroli di perbatasan. Mobil-mobil yang mengabaikan penghalang jalan ditembaki, dan gubernur terpaksa mengumumkan darurat militer terbatas. Seorang penumpang ditembak di leher ketika seorang pengemudi gagal berhenti untuk polisi di jalan raya di luar Ann Arbor. Namun setelah dilakukan penggeledahan di dalam mobil tidak ditemukan minuman keras.

Pada tahun 1918 kongres menyetujui Amandemen Kedelapan Belas, yang melarang pembuatan, penjualan, atau pengangkutan minuman yang memabukkan. Itu diratifikasi oleh negara bagian pada awal 1919 dan mulai berlaku pada Januari 1920.

Larangan memang mengurangi minuman keras, terutama di kalangan kelas pekerja, di daerah pedesaan, dan di kampus-kampus. Tapi itu memiliki efek sebaliknya di antara Anglos kaya.

Pembuat minuman keras dan perusahaan minuman ilegal sebagian besar mengabaikan bir dan anggur, malah berkonsentrasi pada minuman keras yang lebih menguntungkan. Koktail menjadi chic.

Diperkirakan 400 hingga 600 kotak wiski dibawa dari Kanada melintasi Sungai Detroit setiap malam. Sebagian besar kemudian dibawa ke Chicago, biasanya melewati Washtenaw County dalam perjalanan.

Suatu malam yang dingin di bulan April tahun 1927, petugas polisi Ann Arbor William Marz dan Erwin Keebler menghentikan sebuah mobil di pusat kota. Pengemudi tidak memiliki registrasi, jadi Marz berdiri di papan lari mobil untuk mengarahkannya ke markas polisi sementara Keebler mengikuti di belakang dengan mobil patroli mereka. Di dekat markas, salah satu penumpang mengeluarkan pistol dan menembak lima kali melalui jendela, meledakkan Marz ke trotoar. Mobil melaju. Untungnya, Keebler bersikeras agar Marz mengenakan rompi antipeluru.

Ketika polisi meningkatkan upaya penegakan hukum mereka, para gangster menggunakan keuntungan mereka yang sangat besar untuk membeli mobil yang lebih cepat dan lebih banyak senjata. Warga biasa takut terjebak dalam baku tembak. Mereka memasang stiker bendera Amerika di kaca depan mobil mereka dengan tulisan, “Jangan Tembak, Saya Bukan Pembajak.”

Dengan petugas penegak hukum yang frustrasi oleh para pembuat minuman keras, mereka menyerang pria kecil di Ann Arbor, Restoran Jerman Metzger. Pada tahun 1929, pemilik Bill Metzger dikutip karena menjual sari keras dan ditempatkan dalam masa percobaan selama lima tahun. Dia didenda $100 dan tidak bisa meninggalkan negara bagian tanpa persetujuan pengadilan. Dia, kendaraannya, bisnisnya, dan rumahnya dapat digeledah kapan saja tanpa surat perintah. Untuk mencegah kejadian fermentasi sarinya di masa mendatang, dia tidak bisa lagi menjual sari apel sama sekali.

Selama tahun 1920-an, bahkan orang non-Jerman pun mulai mempertanyakan Larangan. Mereka menyadari bahwa mereka hanya mengganti bar yang dibenci dengan speakeasy dan babi buta dan mulai berpikir bahwa pendekatan Jerman moderat, minum bir dan anggur, mungkin baik-baik saja.

Dalam pemilihan presiden tahun 1932, Franklin Roosevelt mencalonkan diri sebagai kandidat basah. Sebagai salah satu tindakan pertamanya, kongres baru mengesahkan Amandemen Kedua Puluh Satu, mencabut Larangan. April itu, Michigan menjadi negara bagian pertama yang meratifikasinya. Pada bulan Mei, penjualan dan konsumsi alkohol kembali legal di Ann Arbor.

Pabrik Bir Michigan Union dibuka kembali sebagai Pabrik Bir Ann Arbor. Kurt Neumann, penduduk lama “Kota Kubis”, sebutan untuk Old West Side, mengenang bagaimana orang-orang dari lingkungan itu mampir, mengisi gelas langsung dari keran, dan duduk sambil mengobrol dan minum. Sayangnya, penduduk setempat lainnya tidak setia pada “Ann Arbor Old Tyme”, “Creme Top”, atau “Town Club” -mungkin karena semuanya adalah bir yang sama, hanya dengan label yang berbeda. Tempat pembuatan bir ditutup untuk selamanya pada tahun 1949.

Pada tahun 1960, pemilih lokal akhirnya mengizinkan bar menyajikan minuman keras. Pada tahun 1964 mereka mengganti garis kering berusia seabad dengan pulau kering yang lebih kecil di sekitar universitas, dan pada tahun 1969 bahkan itu dihilangkan. Ann Arborites telah mencabut sisa-sisa terakhir perang salib Yankee melawan alkohol.

Artikel ini awalnya muncul di Ann Arbor Observer untuk September 2009. Lebih lanjut tentang sejarah Ann Arbor, termasuk foto, bir, dan lainnya, dapat ditemukan di situs web: http://www.celticgerman.com

The History of the Sebewaing, Michigan Sugar Factory

One of the men destined to join the ranks of Michigan’s pioneer sugar barons was John C. Liken. He was nearly 70 years old when the idea struck him and already rich beyond the dreams he probably had when he carved barrel staves for a living as an indigent immigrant in New York more than fifty years earlier. By 1900, he operated a big business in a small town that referred to him as the town father because his enterprise created the jobs that brought people to the town.

His annual sales during the years preceding 1900, in modern terms, equated to about $7.5 million. In a combination of enterprises that employed two hundred people, he operated four saw mills primarily engaged in manufacturing barrel staves, many of which he shipped to Germany, two flour mills, a major retail outlet for hardware, dry goods, groceries, and drugs which in 1884 employed nine clerks.

Liken’s enterprises were headquartered in a small town in Michigan’s “thumb”. The town was Sebewaing, a small collection of rustic homes nestled on the east shore of the Saginaw Bay some twenty-five miles northeast of Bay City. Its residents were day laborers who worked at one of Liken’s establishments or on one of the surrounding farms, or fished in the great Saginaw Bay that lapped the shores within walking distance of the town.

Sebewaing borrowed its name from the Chippewa word for crooked creek and some of its wealth from the abundant fishing in the bay. Not long before the 19th century came to a close, nearby forests fell to swift axes, making room for German settlers who quickly set about the twin tasks of removing stumps and planting crops.

Liken, a native of Lower Saxony in northwestern Germany met Wallburga Kunkle, the woman who would become his wife, in Binghamton, New York. She was a native of Bavaria and bore the name of a canonized nun who traveled to Germany from England in 748 to perform good works. St. Wallburga became the patron saint of plagues, famines and a host of other discomforts, including dog bites. John Liken had arrived in Binghamton after working for his passage aboard a sailing vessel.

After the birth of their fourth child, Emma, in 1864, who joined her siblings, Mary, born in 1856, Hannah born in 1858, and Charles, born in 1859, John and Walburga moved the family to Sebewaing, a Lutheran settlement that was attracting fishermen, farmers and timber men. The town’s population upon his arrival in 1865 was insufficient to proclaim it a village, but with the arrival of John Liken, that was about to change. He established a sawmill where he made barrel staves. Later, he would develop retail outlets, a creamery, granaries, and ships, incorporating in one person a source for all the goods and services required by the local farming community. The cream and crops, he placed on boats and shipped some thirty miles along the Saginaw Bay shoreline to Bay City, a bustling and growing city where the daily demand for groceries grew apace with its burgeoning population. In was in this connection, shipping, that he became acquainted with ship owner Captain Benjamin Boutell and it was through Captain Boutell that he would learn about sugar opportunities.

The hamlet grew into a village and the town folk began to think of Liken as the town father. Having brought two daughters and a son into the community, who like their father were all of good form, good health, and good cheer, it wasn’t unexpected that the Likens began to add substantially to the population. Mary took for a husband, Richard Martini and a few years later, Hannah allowed a youthful Christian Bach to turn her head (In later times, Christian adopted his middle name, Fred as his given name of preference. He appears in the Michigan sugar chronicles authored by Daniel Gutleben as C.F. Bach.) Charles and his wife, Elizabeth settled into the community to take up management of his father’s affairs.

John Liken had departed his Oldenburg home at the age of eighteen after completing a four-year apprenticeship in the cooperage trade. He would have known of sugar beets because of that experience and certainly would have been aware that men from his homeland had been enjoying some success with them in Michigan’s Bay County where three factories were then in operation and one more was underway and yet another was under construction in Saginaw.

Altogether, a total of eleven beet factories would soon pour sugar and profits into Michigan towns if one believed the hoopla created by railroads and others who would profit from the construction of factories. The excitement that had been stirring farmers and investors across the state seeped into Sebewaing. Liken saw no need to drum up support by the usual methods, holding town meetings, enlisting editors of local newspapers, hiring bands and front men to call upon the farmers. He was convinced of the need for a beet sugar factory and since a good portion of the local wealth resided in his coffers, he saw no need to persuade others to take up the cause. The Likens possessed sufficient resources to build a factory.

He formed an ad hock committee consisting of his son Charles, Richard Henry Martini, the husband of his daughter Hannah, and daughter Mary’s husband, Christian Fred Bach. All three had held important positions in Liken’s enterprises for many years and all were in their late 30’s, thus steeped in experience. In addition, the three resided next to one another on Center Street in Sebewaing, with Martini at Number 69, Charles next door at 68, and Bach at Number 67, thus the trio could convene at leisure and without formality. Should he and his committee approve the idea, the plan would go forward without the usual sale of stock to community members. It did not require a great amount of research on the part of the committee. They had plenty of arable land at their disposal. The Liken family controlled one thousand acres on their own account that combined with others, eliminated a need for a rail line to convey beets to a factory situated on Lake Huron’s shore. They had the financial capacity.

John C. had been generous. Each of his daughters and his son enjoyed full-time servants in their homes and each was well enough off to invest in the new sugar company on their own account and each had demonstrated managerial ability over a long period of time. They had every attribute needed for success in the new industry save one…experience in sugarbeets. News of the activity in Liken’s headquarters leaked into the community at large and inspired some farmers to plant beets, although a completed factory was nearly two years in the future. Those beets, when ready for market, were shipped to Bay City for processing.

Thinking to add the missing ingredient to an otherwise perfect equation for success, John Liken invited Benjamin Boutell and a few of his trusted friends to join in the endeavor. As a consequence, in a short time Liken learned first-hand, how the camel’s nose under the tent fable came into existence. Boutell, no doubt delighted that his expertise was in greater demand than his money, quickly enlisted men of wealth and experience. Among them was John Ross, who would soon become treasurer of the German-American Sugar Company, the last of four beet sugar factories built in Bay County. Next, came lumbermen Frederick Woodworth, William Smalley and William Penoyar, and a ship owner named William Sharp. When men of the stature of Ben Boutell and Penoyar signaled their interest, the floodgates opened; more men of wealth clamored for a stake in the new company. A pair of Saginaw attorneys Watts S. Humphrey and Thomas Harvey climbed aboard as did George B. Morley, legendary grain dealer and banker. Rasmus Hanson, a wealthy lumberman from Grayling, and future president of the German-American Sugar Company, bought in as did William H. Wallace, a quarry operator in nearby Bay Port.

Unwittingly, Liken in attracting investors from Saginaw and Bay City, brought together two distinct groups which could be described as two separate circles of influence. Boutell’s circle consisted of Bay County investors, Woodworth, Ross, Smalley, Sharp and Penoyar. George Morley’s circle included James MacPherson, Humphrey, Harvey, and William H. Wallace, all Saginaw residents, although Wallace was a native of nearby Port Hope and had been a long term resident of Bay Port, a village snugging the shoreline thirteen miles northeast of Sebewaing. In the wings was Ezra Rust, a wealthy Saginaw resident who had won a fortune in the lumber industry. While all of the Bay County investors had lumber interests, of the Saginaw group only MacPherson had a lumber background. The two circles would take up the sport of in-fighting once the new company got underway.

Representatives of what amounted to three distinct groups, Boutell’s Bay City contingent, Morley’s Saginaw faction, and John Liken’s family, gathered in Watts Humphrey’s Saginaw office in July 1901 to take up the matter of organization. Humphrey’s fame would come not from sugarbeet processing but from the fact that his then 12-year old son, George M. Humphrey, would one day achieve stature as the Secretary of the Treasury under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, serving from 1953 until 1957.

Wasting no time, the organizers had at hand, four representatives of construction firms specializing in building beet processing factories. They were Fuehrman & Hapke, E. H. Dyer, Kilby Manufacturing, and Oxnard Construction. It was expected that as soon as the shares were taken up by the attendees, a contract would be awarded to one of the four bidders. To Benjamin Boutell and his Bay City group, there was only one bid of any interest to them and that was the one from Kilby Manufacturing for $900,000. The price was a hefty $1,500 per ton of beet slicing capability, nearly double the $850 per ton price tag of the Essexville factory and almost $600 more per ton than the price for the German-American Sugar Company factory that was currently under construction. Oxnard’s bid of slightly more than $1,800 per ton (including, as usual, a Steffens process) and Dyer’s next to the lowest bid of $1,416 per ton were beaten out by Fuehrman & Hapke’s winning bid of $1,320 per ton for a total price of $792,000.

The first order of business called for the election of officer and directors, a normally placid affair when the company founders knew one another as well as did the gathering in Humphrey’s office. Representatives of each of the three main shareholder groups secured positions. Bay City lumberman, W. C. Penoyar was given the presidency, while Sebewaing’s Christian Bach took on the vice-presidency, and the Saginaw group saw William Baker and Thomas Harvey took the secretary and treasurer seats. Benjamin Boutell and William Wallace joined the executive committee. At the top of the agenda was the matter of deciding on the winning bid for the factory’s construction, which would be, as usual, a full turnkey operation. That’s when the temporary alliance between Bay City, Huron County, and Saginaw County investors fractured.

Boutell’s crowd, said the low bid made no difference, they would accept none other than the one submitted by Kilby. To the Saginaw group, this was tantamount to drawing a line in the sand. They believed firmly in awarding the contract to the lowest bidder. Accordingly, the Sebewaing-Saginaw representatives who controlled three of the officer positions, ignoring the fact that Boutell and his friends controlled 45 percent of the company and that a member of their faction just secured the presidency, gave the nod to Fuehrman & Hapke. Boutell and company recoiling from the suggestion that anyone except Kilby would build a factory in which they had invested, cancelled their stock subscriptions, resigned their positions and withdrew from the board of directors.

When the dust settled, Boutell and his co-investors were out and the Saginaw contingent held the controlling interest at 55 percent with control divided between the Morley and Rust families. The Rust family headed by Ezra Rust would leave its mark on the City of Saginaw in the form of a city park and a major thoroughfare bearing its name. Ezra’s confidence in the sugar industry may have stemmed from a stint he served as an engineer in a Cuban sugar mill during his youth. Morley held 5,000 shares in his own name, while various members of the Rust family held 4,000 shares. Family members and friends of John Liken held 45 percent.

The sudden withdrawal of Bay City investors necessitated a second election. The presidency went to Thomas Harvey. John Liken’s son-in-law, Christian Bach, retained the vice-president’s post and a seat at the director’s table. Liken’s son, Charles, accepted an appointment as treasurer but did not win a board seat. William F. Schmitt, a minor stockholder and Christian Bach’s sister Emma’s suitor, became secretary. In time and after having been tested by fire, he would prove that his advancement was owed entirely to his skill, not to his relationship to the Bach family. In 1906, he took charge of the Sebewaing factory which he then guided for six years before leaving the company for a senior position with Continental Sugar Company. Directors, in addition to Harvey and Christian Bach, included William H. Wallace, Watts Humphrey, George Morley, James MacPherson, who replaced Benjamin Boutell, and Richard Martini.

The appointed contractor for the factory’s construction, Henry Theodore Julius Fuehrman, normally addressed as Jules, arrived from New York where he had constructed a similar factory at Lyons and before that, Pekin, Illinois. He appeared in September for the groundbreaking ceremony. With him was his partner, Theodore Hapke who won high regard from area farmers of German extraction because of his knowledge of sugarbeets and his ability to explain the subject in the mother tongue.

Fuehrman had been closely involved with the construction of a beet factory in Grand Island, Nebraska, which to his good fortune happened to be in the place after Germany that he called home. He was the only son of Henry and Tulia Fuehrman of Brunswick, Germany. Beginning at the age of fourteen, he served an apprenticeship in the mason’s trade. After deciding to prepare himself for the duties of an architect, he devoted himself to the study of architecture in different polytechnic institutions throughout his native land. When twenty years of age, he entered the Germany Army, serving one year, and in 1882, he emigrated to America where after spending two years in Chicago he settled in Grand Island. There he accepted a number of commissions, including the design of the city hall, a church, a university, and eventually the Oxnard beet sugar factory in Grand Island.

Fuehrman’s success attracted the prestigious architectural firm of Post & McCord, the firm that built the roof over Madison Square Garden and the large iron frames for the skyscrapers that dotted Broadway and Wall Street and in 1931 would construct the world’s tallest skyscraper, the Empire State Building. Post & McCord partnered with the equally prestigious American Bridge Company, thus the Sebewaing factory’s formation was destined to be of solid construction. With William H. Wallace serving on the board of directors, the question of whether the foundation was going to be made of solid stones or the new building material, concrete, was resolved without discussion. The stones came from Wallace’s quarry, thirteen miles distant where they were carved by his expert workmen into squares that conformed to the architect’s specifications. Crushed stone from the same source made roadways for hauling equipment and later, beets to the factory. Already the community was enjoying the fruits of the presence of a sugar factory, improved roads and a richer economy as workers discovered gainful employment on the many work crews needed to fashion a factory that would soon win recognition as one of the largest of its kind in the nation.

Emile Brysselbout, Fuehrman and Hapke’s newest partner, was also on hand. Brysselbout’s credentials included the recently constructed Charlevoix, Michigan sugarbeet factory and he had supervised the construction of the Essexville factory.

The cornerstone was laid on October 21, 1901 but the absence of qualified engineers delayed construction. Experienced construction engineers had become a premium in a nation that suddenly could not have enough beet sugar factories. Twenty-five beet sugar factories were constructed between 1900 and 1905 of which ten were in Michigan. Adding to the difficulties was Fuehrman’s absence. He had departed for Dresden, Ontario to construct a similar factory for Captain James Davidson, a Bay City magnate who had decided to dedicate a portion of his wealth to the beet industry.

By appearances, Davidson’s contract held greater importance for Fuehrman than did Sebewaing’s. William Wallace, noted for always taking a firm hand where one was needed, approached Brysselbout with the insistence that Joseph Eckert be hired. Eckert was a man with a can-do reputation and one who would tolerate no obstacles in the path to his goal. Eckert had just finished an assignment at Mendall Bialy’s West Bay City Sugar Company where he had increased productivity more than one-third.

Gutleben relates that when Eckert arrived in Sebewaing, he found nature busy at the task of reclaiming the site. Weeds and wild flowers occupied the space intended for a factory. The few columns that had been erected on Wallace’s stone foundations were poised as if ready to fall to earth. Worse, there was no gear on hand to correct the steelwork in place or to install the balance of it. Fuehrman promised a steam engine but its delivery would have to wait until the steel erection work in Dresden was finished. It was April. The farmers wanted to know if they should plant a beet crop. “Plant ’em!” exclaimed Eckert who then placed an order for the delivery of a steam engine to be charged against Fuehrman & Hapke’s account. Wallace backed the credit. Fuehrman’s complexion turned the color of spoiled liver during his next visit; he fired his innovative engineer for insubordination. Wallace accompanied by Brysselbout turned the decision around in a hurried meeting with Fuehrman.

One of the advantages of having Brysselbout and Eckert on staff was their ability to draw men of similar skill. Brysselbout, inspired by Eckert’s enthusiasm and unquestioned role as chief project engineer after Fuehrman’s failed effort to fire him, secured experienced and highly educated operators, men like Hugo Peters, an 1898 graduate of Leipzig University who would become Sebewaing’s first factory superintendent. James Dooley soon followed. He carried a reputation for practical application of scientific principles and a cool head during emergencies. Eckert attracted outstanding engineers such as Eugene Stoeckly and Pete Kinyon, a master at erecting the steal grids that became the frames for the factories. Nearby farmers, long experienced with neighbors William Wallace, “Bill” to all, and John Liken, both hard driving can-do business leaders, had full confidence that a factory would stand in their midst at harvest time, as promised. They set about planting the second sugarbeet crop in Huron County with results that would prove fortuitous for themselves and for the investors.

When the trees began to blaze red and orange and cool dawn breezes dried the morning dew before farmers stepped from their doors, the county’s first sugarbeet crop waited in neat soldiery rows for men, women and even children to approach them. A lifter, a device designed to loosen the beet from earth’s hold, operated by the farmer, would proceed across the field at a walking pace. Harvesters would follow, pulling the beets from the ground then knocking two of them together to loosen soils and then casting them into a pile to await topping. Eventually, automated motor driven machines would perform the task, a task enhanced by pre-topping and then cleaning of the beets via a shaking system and dumped into waiting trucks. But for now, it was brute work.

On October 10, 1902, it was done. The main building sixty-seven by 258 feet and five floors comprising approximately sixty thousand square feet, made of brick and filled with the most modern equipment available to the industry, opened for business. In a town where the average home consisted of fewer than seven hundred square feet of space, it was an awesome presence. It was one of the grandest and largest buildings constructed in the American Midwest up to that time.

It was agreed that only one man in all of Huron County deserved the honor of delivering the first load of beets to the factory, the man whose dream set off the chain of events that led to the magnificent building now standing at the end of the town’s main street. He was John C. Liken. His family had gathered round two months before on August 9, to celebrate his seventieth birthday and now at an age beyond that which men commonly set aside for the cessation of physical labor, he guided a team of four horses drawing a gaily decorated wagon brimming with sugarbeets onto the scales. The Liken family, standing beside the constructors, Bill Wallace and a contingent from Saginaw, applauded the advance of the high-stepping horses and the contented Mr. Liken. Within the week, Hugo Peter conducted an operational test, allowing only water through the factory to test the readiness as well as the harmony of the equipment. After making a few adjustments to correct weaknesses detected during the water test, he ordered the slicing of beets to begin on October 27.

The farmers delivered beets containing 13.23 percent sugar of which they harvested nearly seven tons to the acre. According to Gutleben’s history, the factory yielded more than 91,000 hundredweight of sugar on an extraction rate of seventy-one per cent giving it returns greater than from the West Bay City’s factory, the Essexville factory, the Bay City Sugar Company and certainly Benton Harbor, Kalamazoo, and the first year of operation at the Caro factory. The operational results mirrored those of the Kilby built Alma factory. Financial results, however, were far greater because the 48,250 tons of beets delivered by Sebewaing growers exceeded by two-hundred fifty percent the 19,100 tons delivered by Alma growers for that factory’s first campaign. Sebewaing growers delivered the greatest number of beets delivered to a single factory up until that time, loud evidence of the confidence Huron County farmers placed in Wallace, Liken, and Bach, confidence, as events revealed, that was not misplaced. Estimated profits for Sebewaing’s first year of operation approximated $140,000, 26 percent on sales and providing a 17 percent return on investment.

Soon, two important personages representing the American Sugar Refining Company called on Bill Wallace. They were Henry Niese, head of operations and W. B. Thomas from the company’s treasury department (Thomas would become president of American Sugar Refining on December 20, 1907 following the death of Henry O. Havemeyer earlier that month.). Their mission was to scout candidates for admission to the Sugar Trust. The visit occasioned a significant change in the company’s make-up when Charles B. Warren, a Detroit attorney who represented the interests of the American Sugar Refining Company arrived shortly afterward to offer an investment of $325,000. The company issued an additional thirty-five thousand shares of stock of which he acquired 32,500; other shareholders each increased their stake by approximately 8.3 percent, effectively giving Warren a 50 percent interest in the company with the other half in the hands of the Liken family (24 percent) and Morley’s Saginaw investors (26 percent).

The bloom of youth still graced the cheeks of Charles Beecher Warren when he appeared in Sebewaing like a godsend to drop what would amount to in current dollars nearly seven million dollars in a start-up company managed entirely by local investors. His youth disguised a young man bearing a sound education and a steely resolve to make something of himself. Before his time passed, he would become the US ambassador to two nations (Japan in 1921 and Mexico in 1924), write the regulations for conscription during World War I, head a major law firm and direct the affairs of a number of corporations.

In 1903 when visiting Sebewaing, however, he resembled not so much the power broker and respected lawyer he would become but instead, a pleasant young man with a pocket full of cash. He was fresh from Saginaw where he persuaded the owners of the Carrollton factory to take his cash in exchange for a 60 percent stake in the factory that came into existence when Boutell’s Bay City crowd parted company with the Sebewaing investors. He would, over the course of a few years, dispense more than three and half million dollars in Michigan alone ($60 million in current dollars) while acquiring sugar companies that would immediately report to the New York office of the American Sugar Refining Company-not bad for someone who had been taking rooms in a boarding house situated near Cass Avenue in Detroit in 1900.

His rise to power began six years earlier when he was appointed associate counsel for the US government in hearings before the joint high commission in the Bering Sea controversy with Great Britain. The matter concerned England’s perceived right to harvest seals notwithstanding the United States opinion that extinction would surely follow that practice. By 1900, he was a partner in the law firm of Shaw, Warren, Cady & Oakes a Detroit firm representing a number of banks and manufacturing firms, chief among them the American Sugar Refining Company. A few years hence, he would adopt the title of president of Michigan Sugar Company, a position he would hold for 19 years in addition to the presidency of a sugar company in Iowa and another in Minnesota. During that same time period he returned to the international arena once again where his carefully watched performance won accolades from imminent lawyers in Europe and America. This time, he appeared on behalf of the United States before the Hague tribunal to resolve a dispute between the United States and England concerning North Atlantic fishing rights.

The son of a small town newspaper editor, Robert Warren, he listed Bay City as his birthplace, but because of the nature of his father’s profession, moved from time to time while growing up, always within Michigan. He graduated first from Albion College then attended and graduated from the University of Michigan before attending the Detroit College of Law where he graduated LL.B. At the Detroit College of Law, he studied under Don. M. Dickenson and then joined Dickenson’s firm when he was admitted to the bar in 1893, the year he graduated. A few years later, he joined John C. Shaw and William B Cady in organizing a separate law firm, a firm he would eventually head throughout his career. Early on, displaying an understanding of the value of macro management, he tended to see to the installation of experienced managers and then leave them unmolested as they carried out the day to day requirements of conducting business.

Much as Caro served as a training ground for factory operators, Sebewaing acted as a school for factory managers who were sent throughout America to beet and cane factories owned by American Sugar Refining Company and others. Hugo Peters moved on to Dresden to oversee James Davidson’s operation and then took similar positions in Idaho, Utah, California and even the West Indies. In 1920, Peters turned his attention to spectro-photometric analysis for the US Bureau of Standards, making serious contributions to color analysis. Jim Dooley stayed on as manager at Sebewaing for a few years then headed operations for all of Michigan Sugar Company when it came into existence in 1906. Wilfred Van Duker, Sebewaing’s first chief chemist, dedicated the larger portion of his career to improving cane milling in Hawaii. There, he eventually managed four sugar estates. Richard Henry Martini became General Agricultural Superintendent for Michigan Sugar Company and Henry Pety moved on to Utah for a superintendency before returning to Michigan to manage the Mount Pleasant factory. The Sebewaing factory continued to expand by adding physical structures and equipment in the form of diffusion towers, automated affairs that replaced the older battery operations, evaporators, modern centrifugals, storage bins and other equipment that caused the daily beet slicing capacity to gradually expand from 600 tons per day to more than 5,000 tons per day.

Sources:

Estimated profits for the first year of operation: Records did not survive. The author determined an estimated profit by applying an estimated selling price of $5.12 for each one hundred pounds to the total hundredweight available for sale and then deducted costs estimated at$3.57 per one hundred pounds.

GUTTLEBEN, Daniel, The Sugar Tramp – 1954 p. 182 concerning purchase of sugar factories by the Sugar Trust, p. 177 concerning organization of Sebewaing Sugar and operating results, printed by Bay Cities Duplicating Company, San Francisco, California

MICHIGAN ANNUAL REPORTS, Michigan Archives, Lansing, Michigan:

Sebewaing Sugar 1903, 1904

Sebewaing Lumber, 1901, 1904

Bay Port Fish, 1901

Saginaw Courier Herald, July 11, 1901 – reporting on the meeting of stockholders of the newly formed Sebewaing Sugar Company.

Portrait and biographical album of Huron County:

John C. Liken, Christian F. Bach, Richard Martini

U.S. Census reports for Sebewaing, 1900, 1910