Change Is Hard

…but change is certain.

Grindstone City

12 Comments

I bet you all know that Michigan is shaped like a mitten, but did you know there is a grindstone cemetery of sorts at the tip of the thumb?  Grindstone City was named in 1870 for the large grindstones that were mined and shaped there, then shipped throughout the country.  You can read more about the city in this short historical essay. (The picture above was borrowed from this website)

As a youngster I stood with my Dad along the shore of Lake Huron at the tip of Michigan’s thumb among huge grindstones that had been dumped there years and years ago.  I’ve held this vague memory for decades, and last weekend I stood in the same place again, feeling Dad with me, as my husband and I explored  the shoreline until we found the grindstones.

It amazed me that the grindstones were still resting on the shore much the way I remembered.  To think they’ve been there all these years…that I didn’t know exactly where we’d been more than 40 years ago and yet here I was again feeling the same sense of history and wonder I’d had as a kid.

I walked among the grindstones, touching the rough surfaces, the square holes in the centers, thinking about the people who had made these stones, and wondering about the reasons these particular stones had ended up as defects on the shores of the big lake.

The sun was warm on our shoulders, the water lapped peacefully near our feet, the stones offered up their stories silently.  I could easily have sat on the warm stones imagining history and remembering that trip with my Dad all afternoon.

Just another place that holds a piece of my heart.

Author: dawnkinster

I'm a long time banker having worked in banks since the age of 17. I took a break when I turned 50 and went back to school. I graduated right when the economy took a turn for the worst and after a year of library work found myself unemployed. I was lucky that my previous bank employer wanted me back. So here I am again, a long time banker. Change is hard.

12 thoughts on “Grindstone City

  1. The grindstones are really cool! How amazing that the place has been virtually unchanged since you visited with your dad years ago. You can’t say the same about too many places any more. Glad you got to go there again!

    Like

  2. How wonderful to visit a place that held fond memories for you. And how wonderful it had not changed that much. That’s a rarity. I need to go back to your link and learn more.

    Like

  3. Thanks for telling us about this place. It’s so lovely to find a place which never changes throughout the years and the most important thing is it holds the fond memory of you and your dad.

    Like

  4. How interesting. I love all the pictures of you on the rocks. Diana

    Like

  5. I did not know about Grindstone City, Dawn. When my grandparents had a cottage in Forestville (near Harbor Beach) they had a huge grindstone to sharpen knives. We used to love watching Grandpa sharpen the knives and scissors. And to move the pedal to get the wheel turning ’round and ’round.

    Glad you had such good memories of your dad.

    Like

  6. This is another fascinating place David and I visited, back when we drove his mother to a high school reunion (60th? 70th?). I had not known about the grindstones before and loved seeing them in people’s yards–visible history.

    Like

  7. It doesn’t surprise us much that so little has changed. In that part of Michigan people have to travel to it, they never travel through it. Dad remembers traveling through the UP and seeing all the copper and iron mines.

    Essex & Deacon

    Like

  8. Dawn,

    How wonderful to read how happy you are to be in GRINDSTONE. I we ( the family) just found out that our family pretty much started in Grindstone. With that said I have been trying to find the name roll for their cemetry. We have the book on Grindstone City Pioneers and loved reading about the quarry there and how our family played a part in it.
    What I would like to ask you is, is there a way to find the names of the people who are buried there?
    My parents traveled there a few years ago but never got the chance to go to the cemetry and check out the names and pay repects, any help you can give me on how to do this on-line would be a great help.

    Thank you in advance
    Have a wonderful day
    Denise Oneill Switzer

    Like

  9. Denise,

    I’m not a native of Grindstone City, we just visited it this fall. I don’t know anything about the local cemetery…but here’s a website that might add to your knowledge:

    http://files.usgwarchives.net/mi/huron/history/g65309.txt

    Like

  10. I was born and raised in Grindstone City (now a part of Port Austin Township). I was a third generation local and my Great Grandfather’s farm is a centennial farm on Hellems Road. I always took for granted what the tourists would see but was well aware of the history as the we had two teachers retired in the area. Mabel Cook was the last teacher at the Grindstone City School (my dad’s teacher) and she and her sister Norma were collectors of history. Mabel actually wrote a book about the history which can be found online. Norma gave my sister a map of Grindstone circa 1900 and it appears the shoreline was further out than it is today. There is a picture that can be found online that shows men “truing a grindstone”. My mom told me that one of her ancestors was in that picture. I can remember which it was though.

    Like

  11. We were looking for cemetery there . Family Wressel, Wallace , and Doyal ..Lillian Dale Wressel was one of twelve children and also the baby. She was born in 1903.

    Like

  12. WRESSELL. Left out one L.

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.