History Kids LET US IN! Statehood FOR MICHIGAN MICHIGAN FOR SPRING 2001

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MICHIGAN History History Kids SPRING 2001 FOR LET US IN! Statehood FOR MICHIGAN

What s INSIDE... Features: We Want In!...4 Toledo, Michigan?...9 How They Got Here...10 Coming to Michigan...12 Elsewhere in the Country...18 School Days...20 MICHIGAN History Kids Secretary of State Candice S. Miller Director, Michigan Historical Center Sandra Sageser Clark Editor Dr. Roger L. Rosentreter Assistant Editors Paul D. Mehney Carolyn Damstra Marketing Manager Kristin M. Phillips Circulation Kelley Plummer Administrative Assistant Mary Jo Remensnyder Design Holly A. Miller FOR Volume 1 Number 1 Michigan grows fast in the 1830s SEE PAGE 10 Departments: Ask the Professor...1 In the News...1 What Do You Think?...3 Clues to the Past...21 What s Wrong?...22 Brain Strain...23 Great Lakes Giggles...24 Where to Take Your Parents...25 The Michigan Historical Commission: William C. Whitbeck (president), Robert J. Danhof, Samuel Logan Jr., Keith Molin, Mark Murray and Marge Greiner provides advice on historical activities of the Michigan Historical Center, including the publication of this magazine. Copyright Michigan Department of State 2001 Michigan History for Kids is published by Michigan History magazine, which is part of the Michigan Historical Center, Michigan Department of State, 717 West Allegan, Lansing, MI 48918-1805. Phone (517) 373-3704. Periodicals postage paid at Lansing, MI. Postmaster: Send address changes to Michigan History for Kids, Michigan Department of State, Lansing, MI 48918-1805 or visit our World Wide Web page, www.sos.state.mi.us/history/mag/ mag.html. Printed on recycled paper THE EDITOR SAYS... Who is the Boy Governor and why is he on the cover of our magazine? Stevens T. Mason was only twenty-two years old when he became the leader of the Michigan Territory. In this h issue of Michigan History for Kids you will learn how Michigan wanted to be a state. It wasn t easy. But thanks to men like Mason, Michigan became the nation s 26th state in January 1837. Cover drawing by Patrick Reed.

Ask the PROFESSOR Has Lansing always been the Michigan state capital? NO. Detroit was the capital for the first ten years after Michigan became a state. In 1847 a new capital site was chosen. Many towns were considered. Detroit was rejected because it was too close to Canada, and it might be BRANDT from OKEMOS easily attacked in a war. Ann Arbor was rejected because it had the state university. Marshall was rejected because many people wanted the capital In 1848 a new white frame more in the center of the Lower Peninsula. Finally, a building was opened in landowner offered to give the state twenty acres in Lansing that became Ingham County for the capital. The area was a wilderness with no roads and few people. At first the place was the capitol. called Michigan. The name was soon changed to Lansing. Robert Thom In The NEWS Oldsmobile Heritage Center FAST FACT: In 1904 Olds sold 2,500 of his cars for $650 each. In 2000 Oldsmobile sold 266,000 cars with an average price of $22,000 each. LAST DECEMBER, General Motors Corporation said it will stop making Oldsmobile cars. This surprised many people because Oldsmobile is Americas oldest car brand. In 1897 Ransom Eli Olds of Lansing made his first car. It looked a lot different from today s cars. The car looked more like a carriage that horses pulled. It did not have a steering wheel. The driver used a control stick called a tiller to turn the car that could only go about twenty miles an hour. In 1908 Oldsmobile became part of General Motors. Since then Oldsmobile has made medium-sized cars. General Motors will stop making Oldsmobile cars because they are not selling well. Oldsmobile cars will remain popular with car collectors. Car collector Jim Wilkinshaw said, For us old guys, we will always like the old Oldsmobile. SPRING 2001 MICHIGAN HISTORY FOR KIDS 1

Introducing HI! I m Willie. You are going to see a lot of me in Michigan History for Kids. In future issues, I ll introduce you to some of my friends. You might be wondering why a wolverine is going to teach you about Michigan s past. Well, let s take a look at the wolverine and why Michigan is called the Wolverine State. WHY WOLVERINES? Wolverines never lived in Michigan. They are native to Canada. When Michigan was trying to become a state, people from Ohio called Michiganians Wolverines. The wolverine was known as a bad, vicious animal. That s what people from Ohio thought of the Michiganians who were trying to take the Toledo Strip. (Find out more on page 8.) 2 MICHIGAN HISTORY FOR KIDS SPRING 2001

We asked you... If you could invent a mascot and/or nickname for our great state, what would it be? WHAT DO YOU THINK? The Cherry State would be the best nickname because Michigan is very popular for cherries. JOSH from SHEPHERD I think Michigan should be called the Clear Water State. I think that this would be a good nickname because all of our Great Lakes are fresh water. HAYLIE from SHEPHERD The Bird State... because there are a lot of birds in Michigan like Blue Jays. JESSE from MIDLAND WOLVERINE FACTS Although wolverines may appear cute and cuddly, they really are predatory animals. One adult wolverine, with its sharp teeth, can kill a caribou an animal almost eight times as big as the wolverine. DESCRIPTION: The wolverine is short and stocky with yellowbrown fur. Two yellowish stripes run along the wolverine s sides. LENGTH: The wolverine is just over three feet long. WEIGHT: An average wolverine weighs over thirty pounds. AGE: Wolverines can live up to seventeen years. DIET: Wolverines eat small animals and bird eggs in the summer. During the winter they eat larger animals such as deer, caribou and moose. TELL US! If you lived in the 1830s, and had to move from New York to Michigan, what ONE thing would you bring with you and why? Send your response to: Michigan History for Kids Attn: What do you think? Michigan Historical Center 717 W. Allegan Street Lansing, MI 48918-1805 or e-mail: damstrac@state.mi.us SPRING 2001 MICHIGAN HISTORY FOR KIDS 3

Pat Reed W W

We On January 12, 1835, acting governor Stevens T. Mason announced that Michigan faced a crisis. Michigan s request to write a constitution had been rejected by Congress. Mason said that Michigan had a right to be a state and that we should write a constitution anyway. ant In! SPRING 2001 MICHIGAN HISTORY FOR KIDS 5

B orn in Virginia and raised in Kentucky, Stevens T. Mason came to Michigan when his father was appointed territorial secretary in 1830. Following his father s resignation, Mason was made secretary by President Andrew Jackson. He was nineteen years old. After Michigan s territorial governor died in 1834, Mason served as acting governor. Called the Boy Governor, he worked hard to make Michigan a state. To become a state, Michigan had to prove that 60,000 people lived WILLIE FACT Did you know that because of Mason s age he was nicknamed the Boy Governor? But he disliked this so much he once punched a newspaper editor who called him that. STEPS to STATEHOOD within its boundaries. Governor Mason ordered that people be counted. This counting, or census, showed that more than 85,000 people lived in Michigan. The next step was to write a constitution. A constitution sets up the basic rules for governing the state. In April 1835 delegates who had been elected by voters met in Detroit and wrote a constitution. The constitution called for the election of a governor and a state legislature. One of the hardest things to decide was who could vote in elections. In some states you had to own property to vote. But Michigan decided that every white man over 21 years old could vote if he had lived in the state 1. A territory was governed by a territorial governor appointed by the president of the United States. The governor had an assistant called the territorial secretary. When the governor was unavailable to do his job, the territorial secretary served as acting governor. 2. When a territory had 60,000 people it could write a state constitution. A constitution sets up the way a people want to be ruled. If the Congress approved the constitution, the territory became a state. Voters of the new state then selected a governor and a legislature. for six months. Women, Native Americans and African Americans were not allowed to vote. On October 5, 1835, Michigan voters accepted the constitution. They also elected Mason governor. One month later, Mason was inaugurated as Michigan s first state governor. But Michigan was still not a state. Both Ohio and Michigan claimed that they owned a small strip of land near present-day 6 MICHIGAN HISTORY FOR KIDS SPRING 2001

Toledo, Ohio. Until the struggle could be settled, Congress refused to allow Michigan to become a state. In Washington, Congress debated the manner in which Michigan asked to become a state and the issue of Toledo. Senator Jefferson Davis of Mississippi said Michigan had embarrassed itself, claiming to be a State before she could be one. Congressman John Quincy Adams of Massachusetts believed that by every law human and divine, Toledo belonged to Michigan. After much discussion Congress offered to add the western Upper Peninsula to Michigan if it would give up Toledo. At first, State Archives of Michigan Mason and most Michiganians said no. Detroiters said that the western Upper Peninsula could never be settled. It would remain forever a wilderness. But soon Mason realized that Michigan had no choice. He wrote that refusing Congress s proposal offered so little hope of gain but the certainty of permanent loss and lasting injury to ourselves and the nation. In the Stevens T. Mason was Michigan s youngest governor. He helped draft Michigan s first constitution and make Michigan a state. Election Day, 1835 Detroit Institute of Arts fall of 1836 he urged Michiganians to accept the land swap. Many agreed. On January 26, 1837, President Andrew Jackson signed a law making Michigan the 26th state. In 1840 Mason left the job of governor and moved to New York City with his new wife. He became a lawyer and fathered three children. When he was 31 years old Stevens got sick. Doctors could not cure him and he soon died. He is buried in Detroit. Today, many of the things that Mason did still affect the lives of every Michiganian including yours. SPRING 2001 MICHIGAN HISTORY FOR KIDS 7