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Delos L. Filer was a northern Michigan nineteenth century businessman famous for developing Manistee County and the towns of Manistee, Filer City and Ludington in the state of Michigan. He was a lumber baron, real estate developer, and philanthropist.
Biography
[edit]Early Life
[edit]Delos L. Filer was born in Herkimer County in the state of New York on September 17th, 1817. He is of Scottish ancestry.[1][2][3][4]
Education
[edit]Filer attended local public schools for his initial training. Because of his scholastic interests he soon became a teacher in the New York District School system.[1][2][3]
Mid Life
[edit]Filer had a particular keen interest in the lumber industry and merchandising early in his adult life. He left New York in 1849 and moved to Racine, Wisconsin. There he became a traveling salesman selling cigars and tobacco. Filer did this occupation for four years. His territory was Wisconsin and Illinois.[1][3][5]
Filer came to Manistee, Michigan in the fall of 1853. He became bookkeeper for the accounting firm E. & J. Canfield. Filer had already had been previously employed with the Canfields in Racine. In Manistee he earned $400 per year, which was not enough to support his family. To supplement his income to have enough money for his wife and four children he used his knowledge of medicine to work part-time in the field as a physician. He worked throughout Manistee County and the surrounding counties.[1][2][4][6][7]
Filer saved up enough money by 1858 to buy property. First he bought some land containing timber and then a half-interest in the Batchelder mill property that included a sawmill. He was successful in operating his half of the sawmill business and eventually bought out the other half-interest. Success in operating the Batchelder mill he owned outright gave him the opportunity to buy additional surrounding land containing timber. Filer then bought the McVickar estate in 1862. At this point the land he owned was around two-thirds of the present day city of Manistee.[1][5][6][7]
Filer established the firm D. L. Filer & Sons in 1866. His sons names were E. Golden Filer and Delos Warren Filer. He sold his interest in the land encompassing the future Manistee area to the firm. The firm bought 2,500 acres of land three miles from Manistee at the south end of Manistee Lake. It contained mostly timber. Here they built a double circular sawmill in 1867. It was located at the mouth of the Little Manistee River that flows into Manistee Lake. Part of the acreage was platted and became Filer City, a suburb of Manistee.[8]
Filer was a founding father of the city of Manistee through the sawmill firm. He donated land and money for building public buildings and churches to help develop the town.[4] The management of the sawmill firm was done mostly by Filer's sons.[7] The sawmill was eventually updated to produce 100,000 feet of lumber, 250,000 shingles, and 50,000 lath daily.[9]
Later life
[edit]Filer moved to Ludington in 1868. He became one of the owners of the Pere Marquette Lumber Company that organized that year. The other owners of the lumber company were Colonel John Mason Loomis of Chicago and James Ludington of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The lumber company bought for $500,000 the property previously owned by James Ludington that encompassed the future town of Ludington. This included 25,000 acres of pine timber, Pere Marquette village platted lots, a large general store, and the local sawmills. Filer was the lumber company's president.[10]
Death
[edit]Filer traveled extensively in the South and West late in his life due to failing health. He started to travel to California in the winter of 1878, but only got as far as Denver. There he became seriously ill and returned to Ludington, Michigan. After a long illness he died on July 26, 1879. He is buried in Forest Home Cemetery in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[11]
Marriage
[edit]Filer was married 3 times. His first married in 1838 to Miss SA Paine who died in June of 1839 leaving a baby daughter Mary J Filer.[11] His second marriage was to Miss Juliet Golden and their son E. Golden Filer carried on his mother's family name.[4] Juliet died in 1864 leaving four children Mary J Filer, E. Golden Filer, Frank Filer, and Delos W Filer.[11] Filer's third marriage was to Miss Mary M Pierce of Manistee on January 23, 1866, who had a daughter Grace.[11]
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Record 1895, p. 117.
- ^ a b c Hotchkiss 1898, p. 269.
- ^ a b c Powers & Cutler 1912, p. 626.
- ^ a b c d Detroit 1900, p. 475.
- ^ a b Hotchkiss 1898, p. 270.
- ^ a b Powers & Cutler 1912, p. 627.
- ^ a b c Page 1882, p. 76.
- ^ Lumberman 1905, p. 200.
- ^ Lumberman 1905, p. 201.
- ^ Page 1882, pp. 20–21.
- ^ a b c d Bersey 1905, p. 237.
Bibliography
[edit]- Hotchkiss, George Woodward (1898). History of the Lumber and Forest Industry of the Northwest. G. W. Hotchkiss & Company.
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- Powers, Perry Francis; Cutler, Harry Gardner (1912). A History of Northern Michigan and its People. Vol. 2. Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company.
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- Record, publishing Company (1895). Portrait and Biographical Record of Northern Michigan…. Record publishing Company.
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- Page, H. R. (1882). History of Mason County, Michigan: With Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Some of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers. H.R. Page.
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- Detroit, Evening news association, (1900). Men of Progress: Embracing Biographical Sketches of Representative Michigan Men. Evening news association.
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- Lumberman, The American (1905). American Lumbermen : the personal history... The American Lumberman.
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- Bersey, John (1890). Cyclopedia of Michigan:... Western Publishing and Engraving Company.
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Category:1817 births
Category:1879 deaths
Category:People of the Michigan Territory
Category:Businesspeople from Michigan
Category:Mayors of places in Michigan
Category:19th-century American politicians
Category:People from Manistee, Michigan
Category:People from Ludington, Michigan
Category:People from New York (state)