See also
1 George Schuyler HODGES1 (1864-1953) [374]. Born 3 Mar 1864, Hodges House, Pontiac, MI.1,2 Marr Agnes Idalene BACON 14 Feb 1888, Washington, DC.1,3 Died 11 Apr 1953, Pine Lake, MI.2 Buried 14 Apr 1953, Oakhill Cemetery, Pontiac, MI.2
From the weekly Pontiac Bill Poster and other Pontiac newspapers.
June 10, 1885 - "Geo. S. Hodges is here from California greatly improved in helath."
October 6, 1886 - "George Hodges started on Monday for Minnesota."
February 15, 1888 - "George S. Hodges gets married today."
January 16, 1889 - "Last week Tuesday, Mr. Geo. S. Hodges, of Pine Lake, was made the happy father of a nine pound baby girl."
June 20, 1890 - "Geo. S. Hodges, of Orchard Lake, has just been granted a patent on water color paints, something novel and of great use to artists."
December 5, 1890 - "Mr. George Hodges expects to sail with his family for Southern France Dec. 10th, where he will pursue his art studies."
June 17, 1892 - "George S. Hodges and Mr. Tracy obtained a patent on an improved camera, and since Mr. Hodges has been in Paris he has made arrangements with a large manufacturing establishment in that line, to place the camera on sale in France, Germany, Russia and Italy, the patentees receiving a commission on the sale."
1894-12-14 - "Three of the landscape paintings of Mr. George S. Hodges appear at the exhibit of the Association of Artists now being held at Hanna and Noyes galleries. These paintings are pronounced by art critics to be conspicuous for excellence in this, one of the best art exhibits Detroit has had in years."
1895-12-19 - "Geo. S. Hodges and family will spend the winter at Ocean Springs, Mississippi."
1896-05-15 - "Geo. S. Hodges is building three new cottages on the north bank of Pine lake."
1897-02-26 - "Geo. S. Hodges has returned from the south."
1897-03-12 - "Geo. Hodges and family have returned from the south. He has some fine paintings that he has made of southern scenery.
1900-06-27 - "George Hodges, of the Martin Halfpenny Vehicle Company and George Hilsendegen, of Detroit, are preparing to conduct a big carriage manufacturing business her. They will locate on the Osmun property adjoining the tracks of the Air Line."
1901-09-26 - "By Ald. Holser: Whereas, the conditions imposed upon the city of Pontiac in the deed from George S. Hodges and Schuyler G. Hodges, of block 6, Hodges addition, have not been fulfilled and Whereas, It is not deemed advisable to expend any money on said premises for the purposes of a public park, Resolved, That the Mayor and Clerk be and they are authorized to execute and deliver to George S. Hodges and Schuyler G. Hodges, a quit claim deed releasing any and all claim and title of the city of Pontiac, to said block 6, Hodges addition.
1901-12-26 - "The Hodges Vehicle Co. have just shipped a large order of vehicles to the Pacific Coast. They have a number of attractive styles ready to put upon the market, among them being two new driving wagons and two stanhopes. They report an excellent outlook in the trade and an unusual demand for cushion and semi-pneumatic tires, though the standard 2-inch first quality pneumatic still leads and some of the best eastern manufacturers will put no other kind on their vehicles."
Paraphrased from "Early Michigan Inns", by Lawrence McCraken, 1943.
George S. Hodges, the grandson of Schuyler Hodges, builder of the famed Hodges House Hotel in Pontiac, spent his boyhood in the Hotel, always considered Pontiac of the days when the Hodges House shown brightest as having an interest beyond any city he had ever known. "Living in that hotel was something like living a chapter of a Dickens' novel." he recalled. "We had an array of Dickens' characters and the hotel was their meeting place." Among these were Nutter, a bowlegged Negro Sampson, who tossed 250 and 300 pound trunks to his shoulders and trotted nonchalantly to the third floor with them. "Deacon", so called because he was the most profane man in the village, drove a stage coach and his artistry with cuss words won him respect of even seasoned travelers. The hotel undoubtedly played host to many men who whose names are indelibly in the nation's history books, but the old registers were lost years ago and now there is nothing but local legend, handed down through the years to testify to the visits of the great of past years.
Abraham Lincoln made a tour of Michigan in 1856 in support of presidential candidate John Freemont. It was during this tour he is reputed to have visited the Hodges House. No doubt his visit attracted but little attention as then he was an unsuccessful Illinois politician who had but recently been unable to win the vice-presidential nomination of his party. Among those who were guests of the hotel, in addition to Lincoln, were Daniel Webster and James Fenimore Cooper, according to legend. Both visited Michigan during the time the Hodges House was most famous and it is not unlikely they tasted of its comforts.
Obituary for George S. Hodges from the April 13, 1953 Pontiac Gazette. "Pioneer in Auto Industry Dies at Pine Lake Home. (3120 Pine Lake Rd.) George S. Hodges, 89, pioneer Pontiac automobile builder, died Saturday evening at his home at Pine Lake where he had lived for 73 years. He was the son of Ira G. and Mariva Hodges, and was born on March 3, 1864, in the Hodges House in Pontiac, a hotel built by his grandfather, Schuyler Hodges. He was educated in the Pontiac Schools and Michigan Military Academy at Orchard Lake. In 1892 Mr. Hodges went to Paris where he studied art. His work was shown at Detroit art exhibits and at other prominent art showings throughout the country. He followed painting as a hobby most of his life. He was a charter member of the Scarab Club in Detroit. He also made violins and had been granted the patents on the original reflex type camera and on other inventions. He organized the Hodges Vehicle Co. which made horse drawn carriages and buggies. Around the turn of the century Mr. Hodges became secretary of the Welch Motor Co., the nucleus of Pontiac's automobile industry. This was finally absorbed by General Motors. Mr. Hodges was a close associate of Henry Ford and had many dealings with him when when Ford was endeavoring to get his auto manufacturing underway. He built the Pine Lake Country clubhouse, Rotunda Inn and several other buildings. He later sold the clubhouse and golf course to the club. He was married in 1888 to Agnes Bacon, who died in 1923. She was the daughter of Levi Bacon, chief clerk of the U.S. Patent Office at Washington. He was a member of All Saints Episcopal Church. Mr. Hodges is survived by one son and seven daughters. George S. Hodges Jr., of Lake Angelus; Mrs. Harlan S. Smith and Mrs. Clarence K. Pattersor (n) of Pontiac; Mrs. Ferris H. Fitch of Grosse Pointe; Mrs. George W. Malcomson of Arlington, Va.; Mrs. Earle W. Parcells of Grosse Pointe; Mrs. Julian A. Spottswood of Palatine, Ill. and Mrs. Donald S. Patterson of Orchard Lake. He also leaves 19 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. The funeral will be held Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. from the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with the Rev. William H. Hamm officiating. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. The family requests that flowers be omitted."
Adding to his list of accomplishments, we learn from his obituary in the Detroit Times, April 13, 1953 that he:
1) invented and manufactured pneumatic-tired buggies and racing sulkies.
2) made the first closed body for a Ford car.
3) drove the first automobile in Oakland County, a Searchmont, made in Philadelphia.
4) invented the first power lawnmower.
5) was awarded a scholarship for five years study in Europe at the expense of the French government.
6) was the only living exhibitor at a 1950 exhibition in Detroit of paintings executed in Detroit before 1900.
2 Ira Gardner HODGES1 (1829-1865) [367]. Born 28 Jan 1829, Pontiac, MI.1 Marr Mariva Larned ROSE 3 Apr 1855.1,4 Died 23 Mar 1865, Pontiac, MI.2 Cause: Threat disease. Buried 26 Mar 1865, Oakhill Cemetery, Pontiac, MI.2
Ira Hodges managed the Hodges House Hotel in Pontiac for a time. The hotel was built by his father and was called "Pontiac's Swankiest Hotel, with every convenience of it's time". The hotel was a huge brick building located on the southwest corner of Saginaw and Pike streets. With seventy five rooms and hallways wider than present day major hotel rooms, it was called the "Astor House of Michigan".
From Vital Records from the Detroit Free Press, April 2, 1865
"Hodges, Ira G., aged 36 years in this city [Pontiac] on Thursday 23rd inst. Burial on Sunday."
From The Pontiac Weekly Gazette, March 24, 1865:
"Died - In this city, on the 23d inst., of threat disease, Ira G. Hodges, aged 36 years and 2 months.".
4 Schuyler HODGES ( -1845) [369]. Marr Mary Anne WILLIAMS 20 Jan 1828, Pontiac, MI.2 Died 1845.2
8 Sanders HODGES1 ( - ) [3033].
9 Jane KNAPP1 ( - ) [3034].
5 Mary Anne WILLIAMS2 (1807-1889) [370]. Born 1807, Concord, MA.2,5 Died 21 Jan 1889, Pontiac, MI.2 Buried 23 Jan 1889.2
3 Mariva Larned ROSE6 (1830-1904) [352]. Born 4 Jul 1830, PA.6 Died 19 Nov 1904, Residence at Pine Lake, Pontiac, MI.2,6 Buried Oakhill Cemetery, Pontiac, MI.
Appearing in a Pontiac newspaper:
1869-10-20 - "Mrs. Ira Hodges started for California yesterday."
1870-05-25 - "Mrs. Ira Hodges has returned from her visit to California, looking as though that climate agreed with her. "
1876-05-10 - "Last Saturday night we were shown a Centennial curiosity at the Hodges House by Mrs. Ira Hodges. It was a species of horseshoe geranium, very large and thrifty, and for four years had always hung full of pure white blossoms. But a few days since Mrs. Hodges was astonished to see that bright red blossoms were appearing, and now the plant is hanging full of red and white blossoms, each on a separate stock, but all from the same root. Five years since the slip was sent from California by an aunt of Mrs. Hodges. All who have seen it pronounce it a curiousity in every sense of the word."
1890-12-19 - "Mrs. Mariva Hodges accompanied her son George and his family to Europe. They will spend the holiday season in London and then take up their abode in Southern France."
1892-10-21 - "Mrs. Mariva Hodges leaves for Paris the last of the month to visit her son, George, the Artist."
1894-05-18 - "Mrs. Mariva Hodges has returned from Detroit."
1894-06-22 - "Mariva Hodges is special adminstrator of the estate Virgil M. Rose."
1894-07-20 - "Mariva Hodges is administering the estate of V. M. Rose."
1895-02-08 - "Mrs. Mariva Hodges is visiting friends at Detroit."
1895-09-06 - "Miss Jennie Williams of Detroit is visiting Mrs. Mariva Hodges.".
Witness at wedding of her sister Harriet to Joseph Dows.7
6 Virgil Maxim ROSE8,9 (1808-1894) [350]. Born 1808, Manchester, VT. Marr Cordelia BAILEY 1829, New York. Died 7 Jun 1894, Royal Oak, MI.8,9 Buried 11 Jun 1894, Oakhill Cemetery, Pontiac, MI.
From Pleasant Ridge; Then and Now.
"In 1836 one of Rose's horses was stolen, and he printed posters offering a reward for capture of the thief. His descendents still have one of the posters."
From the Birmingham Eccentric, January 14, 1881 - "The hotel of V. M. Rose on the gravel road one mile from this place [RO] caught fire from a defective chimney at eleven o'clock, and burned to the ground Monday night, the family barely escaping with their lives. Loss estimated at $5,000, with no insurance."
From the Pontiac Weekly Bill Poster and other Pontiac newspapers.
1876-12-06 - "Enoch Brown, who was arrested in Detroit a few days ago for stealing three chickens from V.M. Rose, of this place [Royal Oak], was arrested before Squire Russell and sentenced to ninety days in the Detroit House of Corrections.
1877-11-28 - "Miss Josephine Newman died at the residence of V.M. Rose, in Royal Oak, Nov. 25th. The remains will be taken to Onondaga for interment."
1881-02-16 - "The Gregory brothers of New York city are stopping at V. M. Rose's."
1881-04-13 - "Virgil Rose is about to erect a new building on the grounds of the old Rose Hotel at Royal Oak."
1881-10-19 - "Mr. Virgil Rose has been erecting an addition to his barn."
1884-07-23 - "V. M. Rose is dangerously ill."
1885-08-25 - "V.M. Rose's people are making money and at the same time gaining a reputation for pure cussedness, by shutting up cattle belonging to poor people."
1885-08-25 - "During a wind storm, the other day V. M. Rose's summer kitchen was blown down and Miss Harriet Carew, received serious injuries."
1885-09-02 - "The co-partnership heretofore existing between Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox and V. M. Rose has been disolved by mutual consent."
1887--2-09 - "Circuit Court - Wm. H. Stevens vs. Virgil M. Rose, twenty days given to settle bill of exceptions and proceedings stayed."
1893-11-09 - "V.M. Rose had a cow stolen out of a field one evening last week."
1894-06-01 - "V. M. Rose has been on the sick list, but is now better."
1894-06-15 - "V. M. Rose died Thursday evening June 7th. Further notice next week."
1894-07-26 - "Mark S. Brewer and Arthur R. Tripp are commissioners on claims in the estate of Virgil M. Rose."
Obituary from the Oakland County Post, Friday, June 22, 1894.
"Died, at his residence in this village Thursday, June 7th, 1894 at 10:30 o'clock p.m., Virgil M. Rose, aged 86 years. He retired to his bed about 10 o'clock feeling exceedingly well, in fact, better than he had for some time past. He ate a hearty supper and was cracking jokes with members of the family in the early part of the evening. Mrs. C.J. Gregory, his grand-daughter had to pass by his room later in the evening and was horrified to find him dead. He had only been dead a few moments when found. Justice Stors empaneled a jury which, after viewing the remains rendered a verdict that the deceased came to his death from the effects of old age. The funeral was held at the house Monday, June 11th, conducted by Rev. A. Wood and the remains taken on the 11:45 train to Pontiac and laid to rest beside his wife, who had proceeded him by about twenty-five years. Two children are left to mourn his loss, Mrs. Harriett Dows, of Cleveland, Ohio and Mrs. Mariva Hodges of Pine Lake. The following relatives were present from a distance. Mrs. H. Dows, of Cleveland, Mariva A. Hodges of Pine Lake and Wm. Saunders of Howell. Deceased was born in Manchester, Vt., in 1808 where he lived until he was 11 years of age. He then moved with his parents to Roseville, Pa., removed from Roseville to Detroit in 1834, came to Royal Oak in 1835 and purchased a large tract of land from the government and has resided here ever since. There was seven children in his father's family, five boys and two girls, all of whom have passed away. Mr. Rose was one of the oldest pioneers in the county, having lived to see it advance from a howling wilderness in the 30's, infested by Indians and wild animals, to what it is at the present time, one of the best agricultural counties in the state."
From the Royal Oak Tribune, May 18, 1926
"The Pleasant Ridge village commission last night awarded a contract to R.D. Baker Company for the paving of Virgil Rose avenue." There is, unfortunately, no longer a street by that name in Pleasant Ridge.
12 Martin P. ROSE10,11,12 (1785-1824) [1355]. Born 6 May 1785, Manchester, Bennington, VT.12,13 Marr Rebecca LEARNED bef 1807. Died 1824.
Notes from the researcher who provided the information for Joel Rose on the World Family Tree of Ancestry.com: "BIRTH: Date is from the IGI."
Notes from Margaret Amey: "Pioneers of Bradford Co." says that Martin Rose got land in Penn. in 1815 from brother William. He had settled there in 1806 and the area was named Roseville for him. Martin died in 1824 and brother Joel adm. his estate. Rufus Lemon was appt. guardian of the children. It is possible that this Joel may have lived in the same location for awhile.
13 Rebecca LEARNED10,14 (1785-1853) [1356]. Born 20 May 1785.10,14 Marr Francis WYETH aft 1820. Died 1853.10
7 Cordelia BAILEY15 (1808-1868) [351]. Born 1808, NY.15 Died 14 Feb 1868, Royal Oak, MI. Cause: Nervous fever. Buried Oakhill Cemetery, Pontiac, MI.
14 Constant BAILEY15 (1777-1843) [727]. Born 27 Jan 1777, Haddam, Middlesex, MA.15 Marr Abigail ? bef 1801.15 Died 30 Jan 1843, Sullivan Twp., Tioga, PA.15,16 Buried Feb 1843, Bailey Family Cemetery, Rutland Twp, Tioga, PA.15
From the Tioga Eagle.
January 29, 1945 - "REGISTER'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given, to all persons interested, that Moses Crawford, Administrator of Constant Bailey, deceased, has settled and filed in the Register's Office, in and for Tioga county, his account taken upon the estate of the said deceased - that the said account will be resented to the Orphan's Court for confirmation and allowance, on Monday, February 17, 1845 at the Court House in Wellsboro. LUMAN WILSON, Register. Register's Office. Wellsboro, Jan. 13, 1845.".
15 Abigail ?15 (1776-1851) [3505]. Born 26 Apr 1776.15 Died 14 Nov 1851, Sullivan Twp., Tioga, PA.15,16 Buried Nov 1851, Bailey Family Cemetery, Rutland Twp, Tioga, PA.15
1 | "Old Oakland County Families, 1945 compiled by General Richardson Chapter, DAR.". |
2 | "Newspaper obituary". |
3 | "Obituary of Mrs. George S. Hodges (Agnes Bacon), Pontiac Gazette, May 26, 1923". |
4 | "Oakland County Marriage Record of Ira Hodges and Mariva Rose". |
5 | "1850 Pontiac census". |
6 | "Death Certificate". |
7 | "Michigan Marriage License Reports on the marriage of Joseph Dows to Harriet Rose". |
8 | "Obituary of Virgil Rose from the Oakland County Post, Friday, June 22, 1894.". |
9 | "Michigan Death Index". |
10 | "Ancestry.com World Family Tree". |
11 | "Manchester, VT Vital Records". |
12 | "Website of D.W. Brown & K.C. Rose - http://users.mstar2.net/katerose/". |
13 | "Ancestry.com World Family Tree". |
14 | "The History of Dublin, N.H. by Rev. Levi W. Leonard, 1920". |
15 | "Ancestry.com, Snow/Lyman Ancestors". |
16 | "From Bailey Family Cemetery - Sullivan-Rutland Genealogy Project". |