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THOMAS KENNEDY
Nearly two score years have passed
since the time when Mr. Kennedy took up
his residence in Antrim county, and in view
of this statement it is scarcely necessary to
say that he is numbered among the early
pioneers of this section, where he has attained to marked
prosperity through his efforts in connection with the
development of
the resources of the locality, which was practically a forest
wilderness at the time when
he made his advent in the county.
Mr. Kennedy is a native of the fair
Emerald Isle and is a scion of the staunchest of old Irish stock.
He was born in
Tipperary county, Ireland, on the 2d of February, 1833, and is a
son of Edward and
Maria (Thorpe) Kennedy, who passed their
entire lives in their native land, having been
folk of sterling worth,-honest and industrious. The father was a
laboring man and
the family was in modest circumstances, as
a matter of course. The parents were devoted communicants of
the Catholic church,
in whose faith they reared their three children, Jane and Maria,
who are now married
and residing in the United States, and
Thomas, who is the subject of this sketch.
Thomas Kennedy was reared to maturity
in his native land, where he was afforded
the advantages of the parochial schools, and
he early began to depend upon his own resources. He continued to
reside in Ireland
until 1859, when, as a young man of twenty five years, he
immigrated to America, believing that here were to be had better
opportunities for the gaining of success through
personal effort. He sailed from Liverpool,
England, and disembarked in one of the
Canadian ports. He located in Hastings,
province of Ontario, Canada, where he remained about a decade,
having followed
various occupations. At the expiration of
the period noted he came to Michigan, in 1868, in the spring of
which year he took
up his residence in Antrim county. He secured eighty acres of
railroad land in Milton
township, the tract being covered with the
native timber and entirely unimproved. He
cleared a little place in the woods and there
erected his primitive shanty, which served
as his residence for a number of years, and
he then turned his attention vigorously to
the Herculean work of reclaiming his land to
cultivation, securing his first returns from
the sale of the timber cut on the place. He
now owns one hundred and eighty acres of
land, of which ninety-five are under effective
cultivation, all having been cleared by the
owner, and on the place still remain about
thirty-five acres of good timber. In addition
to general farming and horticulture Mr.
Kennedy has made the raising of live stock
a profitable phase of his enterprise, and no
further evidence of his discrimination and
progressive ideas need be asked than that
afforded in the appearance of his fine farm,
which is one of the model places of this
county, the improvements being of the best,
including an attractive modern residence and
other substantial and well equipped buildings.
In his political adherence Mr. Kennedy
is aligned as a stalwart supporter of the principles of the
Democratic party, and he has
ever taken a lively concern in local affairs
of a public nature, having aided in the material and civic
up building of the county. He has served nine years as an officer of
the
school district, was township treasurer for
five years and highway commissioner for
two years. Both he and his wife are communicants of the Catholic
church, being
members of the parish at Elk Rapids.
In the year 1859 was solemnized the
marriage of Mr. Kennedy to Miss Bridget
Hogan, who was born and reared in Ontario.
Canada, and they have six children, namely:
Patrick, Jane, Edward, James, Margaret
and Maria. The two elder sons are successful farmers of this
county, and the
youngest son is associated with the work
of the home farm.
Author:
Powers, Perry Francis, 1857-1945.
Title:
A history of northern Michigan and its
people / by Perry F. Powers ; assisted
by H.G. Cutler.
Publication
date: 1912.
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