Ulysses S. Grant's Detroit home to be moved, renovated | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Mainly Clear  8.5°C

Ulysses S. Grant's Detroit home to be moved, renovated

The former home of Ulysses S. Grant when he was stationed in Detroit as a lieutenant in the mid-1800s sits at the former Michigan State Fairgrounds in Detroit in this 2018 photo, vacant and boarded up for years. Later in 2019 it will move to the Eastern Market area, where it will become a public education and resource center. (Daniel MearsDetroit News via AP)
Original Publication Date June 16, 2019 - 7:11 AM

DETROIT - The Detroit home of President Ulysses S. Grant is being moved from the former Michigan State Fairgrounds to the Eastern Market, where it will be refashioned as a public education and resource centre.

Sandra Clark, the director the Michigan History Center, said Thursday that the two-story white clapboard house that was built in the 1830s will be renovated and established as a museum to celebrate the nation's 18th president.

"This will not be a traditional house museum," said Clark. "Our hope is to make it a place to explore Grant's life and the impact he made on Detroit while living here and in his later actions as a Civil War general and U.S. president."

Grant lived at the house with his wife, Julia Dent, from April of 1849 until May of 1850. Their first son, Frederick, was born while they lived there.

The Michigan State Housing and Development Authority has provided a grant to support the move. Clark said it could cost as much as $200,000 to get the house ready to relocate. The move is tentatively scheduled for August, but the operation to renovate and secure the property could take as long as two years.

The home was saved from demolition in 1936 when the Michigan Mutual Liability Co. insurance company bought it and presented it as a gift to the fairgrounds. The home was relocated in 1958 within the grounds to its current spot. HistoricDetroit.org says the building is being moved to make way for development on the fairgrounds, which have been dormant since 2008.

The house will be positioned in the Eastern Market among gardens and an orchard that Clark said would mirror its original setting. In a letter to Dent, Grant described "a garden filled with the best kind of fruit ... a long arbour grown over with vines that will bear fine grapes in abundance for us and to give away" including currants, plums and peaches.

Heritage Michigan, the private foundation that supports the history centre, is developing a campaign to fund the renovation and programming for the house.

News from © The Associated Press, 2019
The Associated Press

  • Popular kamloops News
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile