Highlights important events and personalities in and enquiry into the almost legendary promise Michigan has offered explorers, settlers, and developers throughout its history
As a Michigander and a lover of history, this was a great read. I've been digging into how Michigan became a state and this book really opened my eyes as to some of the important events, people, and elements involved in the journey between the beginning way back in the 1600s all the way up to Henry Ford. As a Michigander himself, Catton is able to take a biased approach. In some cases having a bias is a bad thing. In this case, it is not. He has a love for the state that someone from Ohio certainly would not. (Or any other state for that matter). The love runs deep and you see that in how the book is written. While it is a history of Michigan, it is also a story. A story told through the eyes of a Michigander who loves his state. What more could one ask?
Catton, of Benzonia, a Pulitzer winning Civil War author, was selected to write Michigan's history for the bicenntennial in 1976. A prominent author in each state took part in a national effort. He tells Michigan's History in a passionate and thrilling manner, full of humor and great stories. My favorite Michigan history book, easy to read and hits all the high points every Michigander should know.
Interesting read and lots of info I had not heard before.
Too wordy in places and could have been edited to be less repetitive- especially towards the end. I very much enjoyed the first half. I don’t know why the automobile was included; there was much detail on Cadillac and Etienne Brûlée but then the stove industry was barely mentioned with little on Ford and interstate highways. It seems the author was in a rush to the finish during the last half.
I’ve been reading this book for 13 years. It was assigned at university and it was a hard read then. I’ve lost and found it over the years, reading a few pages at a time. The content is dry, but yet preachy. I made it through the last 20 or pages by trying to imagine Tim Allen was reading to me in his “Pure Michigan” voice. I generally love books on Michigan History, but this was mostly a goid sleep aid.
I was disappointed. This book is way too general to be a real history of Michigan and is so philosophical. The author Bruce Catton also spent way too much time, in my opinion, on the very early history of Michigan and not enough on the more recent history. The last couple pages also painted a bleak commentary of Detroit and our state in more recent years. I plowed through, but all in all, I wouldn't recommend this book.
Finished my first quarantine book. “Michigan: A Bicentennial History” by Bruce Catton. 1976. Helped put the logging industry into better perspective for me. And Lewis Cass was apparently called ‘Big Belly’ by Native Americans.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
"Perhaps there was a dim awareness that the industrial age was about to break out of this wild, desolate, uninhabitable wilderness-wholly incongruous, as if Etienne Brule shoud step up to shake hands with Henry Ford. Once again, what modern America had to have in unstinted plenty was waiting here in an abundance beyond anyone's dreams. After it was found and used, everything everywhere would be different.
But the setting was strange. The past was still here, and it was impossible to avoid looking at it... "
- Pg. 112, 1976 ed.
If you find this kind of prose spine-tingling (and I, as a bit of a sentimentalist, definitely do), then this book might be for you. Present in most passages is a well-realized feel for the everyday details of Michigan history, but Catton's greatest strength lies in giving a theme to lives of Michigan's people. His is the "everlasting road" of a land that exists "less for itself than what it leads to"; the "prodigal society" that necessitates self reinvention through self destruction; the ongoing cycles of boom and bust. "Michigan" is highly narrative history, and Catton uses the flexibility of this medium well: he imaginatively frames Michigan's varied economic, natural, and political epochs, infusing these subjects with a unique and imaginative perspective
Dated (1976) but interesting reading from a master of narrative history. 19th & 20th century Michigan kind of get short changed but I find Catton's take on Michigan's history interesting. He finds parallels between the fur trade, early logging, mining, railroads & the auto industry. Basically all were predicated on the assumption that the resource that they were exploiting was inexhaustible. His predictions about the auto industry & Detroit in 1976 are rather eerie given where we're at today. But he ends on a hopeful note. Consider this quote: "It is a fatal time to lose the art of associating together. We live in a time of change, and it has a truely explosive quality coming from the new faith by which men nowadays live--the faith in man's capacity to do anything on earth that he really wants to do. Here is the strange new religion, with its own miracle workers and sublime portents. Man's ingenuity will solve every problem and surmount every obstacle, and technological prowess is at last the truly inexhaustible resource that can never be used up. Man can literally do whatever he wants to do."
50 States and at least 50 Authors 2016 Reading Challenge. MICHIGAN.
An interesting look at the history of Michigan: the explorers, the geography, the fur traders, surveying, lumbering, the railroads, and finally the auto industry. I didn't know that the flags of four different nations flew over Michigan: France, Spain, England, and the United States. I didn't know about the fight between Ohio and Michigan over their shared border and the settlement that was offered to Michigan. There was a map in the front of the book and I lived in Michigan for 22 years, but a few additional maps would have helped.