William
Leonard (1856-1937)
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William
Leonard was born June 6, 1856 on the Vandenburg Farm in East
Cooper. When his mother died, he worked for room and board and
went to school winters in Comstock. At the age of 16, he went
to Elk Rapids with his brother Thomas where they made brick
for a Mr. Follet. The following year his older brother Edward
joined him and Thomas, making brick there in 1873-1874. The
next summer, 1875, he spent making brick with his father in
Kendall. The next year, 1876, he made brick with his brother
Thomas in Cassopolis, where Thomas died in 1886.
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After that he went back to Kendall and made brick with his father
from 1877-1880. In 1881 he spent a summer making brick with Wyers
Brothers in South Haven, with a trip to Chicago in the fall. He could
have made brick there but did not want to join a union. After that
he went to Otsego and made brick for Hall and Richards for three or
four years, staying until 1883, and burning the last kiln of 22 arches
during the week of the Alpena storm.
William
came to the brickyard on the Harris Farm, five miles west of Kalamazoo
on the Kalamazoo-South Haven Railway in the fall of 1883, batching
it with his partner Ed Scott during the winter and cutting wood.
They rented the yard for three years from John Harris for $400.
The first kiln of brick went into the old Lovell Street School.
William bought Ed Scott's interest after about 1 1/2 years and bought
the yard from Mr. Harris at the end of the third year for $700 or
$900.
William
married Harriet Jane Smith, whose family owned a farm located next
to the brickyard property on what
is now called HG Avenue (at that
time it was called Brownell Rd.) on February 20, 1888. Florence,
Leon and Mabel were born in the old house in the orchard, and George
and Lois were born in the green house further east on the Harris
Farm.
The
Harris Farm brickyard was sold to the Zeeland Brick Company (owned
by Nellie Adolph's father) in the fall of 1900. William then bought
the old Dewaters Farm three miles south of Alamo and on the Alamo/Oshtemo
Townline Road one-half mile west of Liberty Street School. The Liberty
Street Cemetary was on that farm which was located on the corner
of what is now 6th Street and G Avenue.
About
1904 he bought 60 acres in Almena Swamp, north of Pollers Field
Road where Campbell Spring Brook crosses the road. The Dewaters
Farm was sold to Eugene Brown in the spring of 1908 and William
bought the Delton Brickyard, moving there in April.
William
made brick there until late summer of 1917, when his sons Leon and
George went into the Army during WWI. When his sons came home in
1919, they, along with J.D. Murdock and E.A. Barton, bought the
brickyard from William. William then bought the Chase-Polly home
located at 117 Thomas Street in Delton. Harriet died there in 1934
and William died there in 1937. Harriet Jane Kroes Olsen, greatgrandaughter
of William and Harriet, lived in this house with her family until 2005, when the house was sold out of the family.
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