ASHLAND STATION, ASHLAND, GRANT STATION, GRANT, LAMBSON, ASHLAND CORNER,
DICKINSON, ASHLAND CITY AND LAKE
By Terry E. Wantz
In 1854, Ashland Township was established from parts of Brooks and
Bridgeton Townships. About one mile north-west of where Grant is now located
was a small settlement where John Betts Sr. and Charles B. Seaman operated a
tavern and a store there. This settlement was a stop on the Grand Rapids,
Northport and Newaygo Stage Line which follow the old trail past where the
Lambson School stood north to Newaygo. The settlement soon became called
Ashland Station and in 1855 John Betts Sr. established the Ashland Post
Offices in his store there.
About one half mile north of Ashland Station was another small
settlement which was called Lambson. On April 1, 1873 the post office was
discontinued at Ashland Station and on April 16, 1873 Joel Fellows
re-established the post office in his home, at Lambson, this still being
along the Grand Rapids Northport and Newaygo Stage Line. In 1872 the Grand
Rapids, Newaygo and Lake Shore Railroad had reached as far as Newaygo and this
soon brought needs of the Stage Line to an end. The mail was now being
delivered by the trains so in October of 1874, Henry H. Fellows became the
Postmaster and moved the office to his home just north of where Grant is now
located, near the railroad tracks.
In November of 1876, Mr. Fellows in order to get a store located at
this location, offered to resign his Postmastership in favor of Frank Gardner,
provided that Mr. Gardner would build a store there. With trains stopping
here to drop off the mail a small settlement began to spring up along the
railroads In 1892 they change the name of the post office to Grant Station
and in 1899 the name was again change to Grant.
About two mile east of Ashland Station was another small settlement
in about the center of the township and was called Ashland Center. Sullivan
Armstrong who had been appointed the first supervisor of Ashland Township
when it was established had a store located there. On May 6, 1879 he
established a post office in his store and was appointed the Postmaster. On
December 17, 1894, after the Ashland Post Office had change it's name to
Grant Station Post Office, Ashland Center change it's name to Ashland Pos
t Office. This office was discontinued on April 6, 1904, and the mail then
went to Grant.
Two miles south of Ashland Center was another small settlement and
this was called Ashland Corners. There never was a post office established
at Ashland Corners. Two miles east of Ashland Corners or two miles south of
Ashland (later Grant) another small settlement sprang up along the railroad
and this was called Ashland City.
In 1860, Renessalaer Brace came from New York and took up a government
land grant along the Grand Rapids and Newaygo State Road in Section 30 of
what is now Grant Township, Newaygo County. In 1862, he built a large log
structure, known as Buck Horn Tavern. In early times this was the only
stopping place between the Village of Newaygo and Grand Rapids. At times as
many as 14 covered wagons were parked around the Inn as passengers sought
rest and a night's lodging. There was a large hall in the rear where
the men slept and a large room upstairs where the women and children slept. A
large rack of deer horns from a buck shot by Wesley W. Averill hung on the
front of the tavern for many years, hence the name "Buck Horn Tavern".
On March 19, 1869, Renessalaer Brace established a post office at his
Buck Horn Tavern and Inn under the name of "Lake". A few years later the
railroad had been built to Newaygo, and with the mail coming on the trains
the Lake Post Office was moved a mile west to be closer to the tracks at
Ashland City. Mrs. Sarah Manning was Postmaster of the Lake Post Office when
the office was closed on October 2, 1908 with the mail then going to Grant.
You can see how the mail sometimes got sent to the wrong location with
four settlement with Ashland in their name. To add to the confusion, when
the Dickinson Post Office, located on the western side of Ashland Township
was established on May 31, 1888 with William Reiley as Postmaster it was
some times called West Ashland. The confusion never ended until all of these
offices were discontinued except Ashland, which was located at Ashland
Center.
Mrs. Ella Lampman was one of the comparatively few women in the United
State who had the responsibility of carrying the mail over an early Star
Route. Star Routes now comparatively rare except for direct delivery of mail
between cities, are those in rural districts farmed out by the Post Office
Department on a competitive-bid basis. They now have generally been replaced
by Rural Free Delivery routes.
Mrs. Lampman carried mail with her husband between 1893 and 1900 on
routes from Sun P. O. to Grant P. O., from Plumville P. O. to Grant P. O. and
from Ensley Center P. O. to Howard City P. O.. She was obliged to "take over"
for nearly two years in the severe winter of 1899 when her husband's eyelids
were frozen. She said that his eyes were injured so severely that he
eventually became blind.
Many roads were mud tracks then, Mrs. Lampman recalled and even corduroy
highways were most unsatisfactory in the spring and winter. Roads seldom
were cleared in the winter and often it was necessary in the spring for her
to cover her long route by horseback. Ordinarily she used a cutter in the
winter and the wagon in the summer.
The couple received from $350.00 to $400.00 a year pay at that time and
depended considerably upon carrying school teachers, hunters and other
occasional passengers and performing errands in town for the farmers on the
route in order to round out their government salary to a living wage.