
VILLAGE
OF ELLSWORTH AS SEEN FROM THE EAST SIDE OF INTERMEDIATE
LAKE
This picture of Ellsworth was taken sometime between 1895 and
1912. It shows the first Ellsworth School built on High Street.
The New Orient Hotel and the large store where potatoes were stored
in the basement are also visible.
Before
Ellsworth received its present name, it was called Ox Bow. Farther
south it was called Needsmore. Louis DeLine gave it the name Ellsworth.
Colonel Elmer E. Ellsworth was DeLine's commanding officer in
the Civil War and was killed early in the fighting. Ellsworth
was a personal friend of Abraham Lincoln. In honor of his commanding
officer, DeLine named the town for Colonel Ellsworth.

DOWNTOWN ATWOOD on Us 131, date unknown
This northerly township of Antrim County, called Banks, was organized
by an act of the Michigan Legislature on March 11, 1863. The plat
map of 1910 shows schools and churches as well as roads that went
around steep hills. Two examples of such roads include Essex Road
at Peebles Road, and the Ellsworth-Atwood Road, where Bentley
Hill was skirted by going north on Friske Road, then west just
past the Doctor School and back south to the bottom of Bentley
Hill. Most of the property owners' names on this map are only
familiar to people over 50 years of age. . Elsie Timmer's Gleanings
from Ellsworth's Yesteryears tells us more about the schools within
Banks Township. ....BANKS
TOWNSHIP MAP
(from 1910 Plat Book)
Click
here to view the historical Plat Maps
Two
important sources of historical information on Banks Township
are available for readers: Elsie Timmer's Gleanings from
Ellsworth's Yesteryears (Petoskey, MI, Review Printing Company,
Inc., 1966?) and Grace Hooper's Pioneer Notes (Elk Rapids,
MI, Fen's Rim Publications, 1993.) Personal recollections of members
of the Banks Township Historical Society provide additional historical
information.
Gleanings
by Elsie Timmer......click
here to view
"A FOREWORD TO THE READER"
This history is dedicated to the former residents of Ellsworth.
. . .To those who lived here when this village was Young.
. . .And from their keen memory we learned how our pioneers strived
to conquer the forest and wilderness.
. . .To make a home, and eke out a livelihood for their families.
This is written in appreciation for the many fine friendships
acquired during my life here.
Especially do I want to mention the assistance of Mrs. Margaret
Skow Clow; Mrs. Kittie Eastcott Black McPherson; Mrs. Hazel De
Line McPhee;. Mrs. Grace Harroun McElroy; W.P. Smith; and the
late Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Best; Tracy Boss; Arthur Ruis; Mrs. Mary
Dean Moblo; also Jud Hardy..
As well as many others who gave freely of their time in suppling
me with information.
These pages of the past are written to keep alive the heritage
that is ours. Left to us by our forefathers who pioneered the
forests we now call our home - The Village of Ellsworth.
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