Picture of Village Hall

Walking Tour Home Page-375 Depot Road-Walking Tour
(South Side of Street - Currently Village Hall, Park & Wetlands)


Picture of Village ParkBefore this property belonged to the Village, the parcel along the south side of the road as far as Lakeview Cemetery was divided into various segments held by a variety of owners. For a time part of the area was a dumpsite. A 1938 Community News item said the "rubbish dump on Depot Road will close". Ben Powell Disposal will pick up refuse instead." In 1940 the area flooded when the mill pond dam collapsed during preparation for the construction of the Ford factory on the property on the north side of Depot Road. The building which now stands on the site of 375 Depot Road, the Clarkston Village Hall & D.P.W. garage, was built in the 1970s.

In 1850 tax records listed Stark & Hirst /Hurst (future owners of the Clarkston Mills ) for the west 1/2 of Lots 1 & 2 Block 26, assessed value $320. This refers to property on the south side of Depot Road, once known as Livery Hill. The Hill is at the back of the building which still stands on the southwest corner of South Main Street and Depot Road. The assessed value would seem to indicate a building, probably a mill/foundry, on the site then. Taylor H. Stuart/Stewart & Son owned the property by 1855. 1859 records listed a "clothing works and dwelling house and John G. Owen's "warehouse" on Lot 1 or the entire corner. The warehouse was at the top of the hill on the corner of S. Main and Depot Rd. In 1860 Enos Church moved his "furnace" from a location on East Washington Street to the west 1/2 of Lots 1 & 2 Block, the back of the property. Church had a "carding mill/cloth dressing" business.

Lee Bingham, owner of the property in 1872, ran a foundry and woolen mill here. By that time B. F. Elwood was the owner of the livery/stable which stood at the top of the hill facing South Main Street. Peter Green became the owner of the livery building by 1876. The next owner of the building at the back was Clarence Paddock followed by Jasper Linabury. In the 1920s, the Belle Isle Creamery owned a piece, north by Depot road, east by Lots 1 & 2 Block 26, south by Abbey, west by Depot Road. (An item in a turn of the 20th century Oakland County Post newspaper noted that an "evaporator" was being constructed near "the old creamery". "Workmen are excavating for the new evaporator which is to be constructed near the site of the old creamery building." (6/25/1903) By October of that year the newspaper noted "Apples" were needed by Downing and Co. for the evaporator. "Apples are wanted by Downing and Company at the evaporator where the highest prices are paid." It isn't certain that this business was on the south side of Depot Road.")

Rear of South Main Street circa 1940A photo from the Henry Ford Museum Collection shows a small greenhouse with a stone foundation and a small hip-roofed barn behind the buildings which face South Main Street on the southwest corner of Depot Road. In 1932 the greenhouse was Cyrus Linabury's Shady Nook Gardens. This became the Susie Q. Greenhouse.

Rear of South Main Street circa 1940 A 1999 photo shows the general view from the Village parking lot.


Official Property Description:


Significant Property History:

[A Synopsis Of Property Transfers Derived From Abstracts
(when available) And Periodic Changes In Ownership Or
Assessed Value Derived From Township Tax Records]


Site Conceived By And Grant Funding Obtained By
Mollie Lynch, Library Director 1991-2005
Researched And Written By Susan K. Basinger
Web Pages Designed And Built By Bill And Susan Basinger
Contents ©2000 Independence Township Library
All Rights Reserved