Granny Pam's Genealogical Trials and Triumphs
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This entry is part 4 of 99 in the series Deeds in the Family

I am posting information gleaned from land records in the areas where our family’s ancestors resided. You can read more about this project in the overview. You may also check my deed record listing, which I will update with each post.

I have elected to post all the deeds related to George W. Burdick and his family first.

Date: 8 Nov 1876
Liber: 4
Page: 492
Location: Wexford Co. MI
Grantor: William E. Gilbert & Maggie Gilbert his wife of Cedar Creek, Wexford, MI
Grantee: George W. Burdick of the same place
Witnesses: Ezra Harper, Lana Patridge
Type of deed: Warranty
Rec’d and recording: 29 Dec 1876, 9 a.m.
Clerk/registrar: Sturtevant
Location of land: Wexford Co. MI
Consideration: $200
Notes:
Description: An undivided 1/2 interest in lots 3 & 4 in block B in Seaman & Maqueston Addition to the village of Cedar Creek.

I left the maps here, in case you did not read yesterday’s deed. In the deed recorded on page 491, George Burdick purchased lots 8,9 and 10 and 1/2 interest in lots 3 and 4. The deeds were received in the registrar’s office at the same time, but executed consecutively. I appears that George purchased this 1/2 interest in the two lots on 8 November 1876, and the additional 3 lots and the other half of these lots on 28 Dec.

I have illustrated the location of the property in drawings from an old 1889 atlas1, Here is the overview, it can be enlarged by clicking it.

block B

After both deeds were executed, George Burdick’s holdings in block B of Seaman & Maquestons addition:

block b 8-9-10 3-4

I wonder if this needed to be cleared? Is there some other reason that George may have purchased it?

As I was wondering why George was buying up land, something crossed my mind, the 1860 census for George’s family:

Geo W. Burdick, 33, male, house carpenter, value of real estate not filled in, value of personal estate 50, born New York.
Mary Jane, 23, house labor, born New York
Susan M. 4, female
Rosanna Perkins 69, female, born New York.

Now I really wonder about George W. Burdick. Was he building something? Clearing something? Just investing? Perhaps time will tell.

  1. E.L. Hayes & Co., Atlas of Wexford County, Michigan / compiled by Eli L. Hayes from government surveys, county and township records, and personal investigations and observations (Chicago, Ill.: E.L. Hayes & Co., 1889), 21; digital images, The University of Michigan. Michigan County Histories and Atlases. http://name.umdl.umich.edu/3928170.0001.001 : accessed 2 November 2009.
  2. 1850 U.S. Census, Allegany County, New York, population schedule, Andover, page 27 (penned) p 985 (stamped), dwelling 203, family 203. Geo W. Burdick: digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 2 November 2009); from National Archives microfilm publication M653, roll 718.
This entry is part 3 of 99 in the series Deeds in the Family

I am posting information gleaned from land records in the areas where our family’s ancestors resided. You can read more about this project in the overview. You may also check my deed record listing, which I will update with each post.

I have elected to post all the deeds related to George W. Burdick and his family first.

Date: 28 Dec 1876
Liber: 4
Page: 491
Location: Wexford Co. MI
Grantor: Warren Seaman & Mary Seaman his wife of Cedar Creek, Wexford, MI
Grantee: George W. Burdick of the same place
Witnesses: Ezra Harper, Meda or Neda Moffit
Type of deed: Warranty
Rec’d and recording: 29 Dec 1876, 9 a.m.
Clerk/registrar: Sturtevant
Location of land: Wexford Co. MI
Consideration: $200
Notes:
Description: Lots 8,9,& 10 of block B and an undivided 1/2 interest in lots 3 & 4 block B in Seaman & Maqueston village plot in the NW 1/4 of Section 10 T23N, R9W according to survey on file.

I have used a map from the 1889 Wexford County Atlas1 posted on the Michigan County Histories and Atlases site to illustrate the location of block B in Seaman and Maqueston’s village plot. This is a thumbnail, you may see a larger view by clicking it.

block B

A closer look at block B reveals that lots 8-10 are conveniently located on “Seaman St.”, which is now known as Michigan Avenue. Michigan Avenue is also old US 131; the new expressway named US 131 bypassed Manton. The lots for which Burdick received 1/2 interest are located on First Street. One block north of First Street is the section line, running along the section line is  “Main Street”,  also known as 16 mile road. Until recently this road was known as M-42; but the state of Michigan has turned control back to Wexford County. The corner of Michigan and Main is the “main” downtown corner in Manton.

block b 8-9-10 3-4

  1. E.L. Hayes & Co., Atlas of Wexford County, Michigan / compiled by Eli L. Hayes from government surveys, county and township records, and personal investigations and observations (Chicago, Ill.: E.L. Hayes & Co., 1889), 21; digital images, The University of Michigan. Michigan County Histories and Atlases. http://name.umdl.umich.edu/3928170.0001.001 : accessed 2 November 2009.
This entry is part 2 of 99 in the series Deeds in the Family

I am posting information gleaned from land records in the areas where our family’s ancestors resided. You can read more about this project in the overview. You may also check my deed record listing, which I will update with each post.

The names of members of George W. Burdick’s family appear quite often in the Wexford County, Michigan deeds. The next listing for George is recorded in Liber 3 on page 326.

Date: 26 May 1876
Liber: 3
Page: 603
Location: Wexford County, MI
Grantor: George Burdick & wife
Grantee: George W. Burdick
Witnesses: Ezra Harper Justice of the Peace, Mrs. J.P. Fenton
Type of deed: Quit Claim Deed
Rec’d and recording: 16 May 1877 7 p.m.
Clerk/registrar: C.E. Manktelow, Clerk
Location of land: Wexford County, MI
Consideration: $26.54
Notes:
Description: Commencing at the northwest corner of Sec 10 T23N R9W and running east 185 ft., then south 85 ft., then west 185 ft. then north 85 ft to the start.

What is going on here? This deed is for the same property as the deed recorded in liber 3, page 326. George Burdick received by quit claim deed, on 26 May 1876, some rights to the property, and is apparently selling those rights to Jacob Sturr.

Instead of rechecking the old county history again, this time I used the subdivision maps. Using the advances search, I searched for T23N R9W. Seaman & Maqueston’s addition was one of 17 results. I was able to save a copy by printing it to PDF, I will show how to do that in a future post. However, even with out saving a copy, it was easy to read the information on the plat document:

The plat was recorded in the Wexford County office on 18 October, 1874. The plat of Seamons & Mcqueston’s addition to the city of Manton was, “Received & Filed in the Auditor General’s office August 11, 1875.” Now, what am I learning by this exercise? George Burdick never lived on this land, he obtained some rights to it, and signed them on to someone else. How does that fit into my puzzle?

My George Burdick timeline:

27 April 1827 Birth: Berlin, Rensselaer Co., NY
1850 Census: Andover, Allegany Co., NY
1855 Marriage: Mary Jane Abbott
1850 Census: Andover, Allegany Co., NY
29 March 1856 Daughter: Susie Melissa born, Andover, Allegany Co., NY
1860 Census: Andover Allegany County, New York
24 Oct 1860 Son: Fink Clement born Andover, Allegany Co., NY
24 Oct 1860 – 23 Jn 1868 Migration: New York to Pennsylvania
23 June 1868 Daughter: Mable Genevieve born, Eleven Mile, Potter Co., PA
23 June -May 1870 Migration: Pennsylvania to Michigan
27 Aug 1870 Census: Colfax, Wexford County, Michigan
11 Jan 1871 Daughter: Gertie W. born Colfax, Wexford Co., MI
12 Mar 1874 News item: The Grand Traverse Herald; Boardman, Grand Traverse County, Michigan Listed as arrivals at the Boardman River House for the week ending March 9th: (lengthy list) Geo. W Burdick, Manton.
20 May 1874 Purchased Interest: E 1/2 of the NE 1/4 Sec. 4 T23N R10W Wexford Co., MI
26 May 1876 Sold Interest: E 1/2 of the NE 1 /4 Sec. 4 T23N R10W Wexford Co., MI
1880 Census: Colfax Township, Wexford County, Michigan
8 Jan 1885 News item: the Grand Traverse Herald “Geo. W. Burdick will log quite extensively in Colfax this winter.”
1910 Census: Colfax Township, Wexford County, Michigan
24 Oct 1914 Death: Irons, Lake County, Michigan
26 Oct 1914 Burial: Colfax Township, Wexford County, Michigan

George, like many of the pioneers, is listed as a farmer on the census. However, the main business in Wexford County, Michigan during the time these deeds were recorded was logging. Farming was done in the good weather, and loggers worked in the woods during the winter. The land had to be cleared before anything could be build. Judge William Peterson, in his excellent history of Cadillac, Wexford County, said:

Travel away from the road was laborious and, at places, impossible. The height and density of the forest blocked out the sunlight so as to create a perpetual twilight,……..brush and trees were so thick that it was impossible to see more than eight or ten feet…..1

Although this quote describes the general conditions near Sherman, Wexford County’s first settlement, in 1854, it gives a pretty good idea what things may have been like in a newly settled area, even years later.

Wexford County was divided into four townships in 1870, and Colfax was comprised of 18 surveyed townships of 6 square miles each: Townships 21, 22 and 23 north of ranges 5,6,7,8,9 and 10 west. The entire 1870 census of Colfax Township, Wexford County, which included the current city of Manton and this “addition” lists 172 people, not families, but individuals.

There was no transportation to take crops to centers of population to sell them, these pioneers were not “farming” for a living, just enough to have food to eat. George Burdick was probably buying rights to timber, logging the land over, and selling the rights after he had removed what he wanted. He had probably cleared enough land on his homestead to grow food to eat, and was therefore listed as a farmer, was was most of the population.

1. Peterson, The Honorable William R., The View From Courthouse Hill: Privately printed: 1972, p 9.