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| Michigan's First Family Farms: Then and Now, the Tradition Lives On |
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For a young person growing up in Michigan, the days are
probably filled with going to school, spending time with friends, maybe playing
on a soccer team, and doing a few chores in exchange for a weekly allowance. It
is not uncommon for families to move to different towns or to new houses in the
same town, as families grow and prosper. It’s great to be a kid most of the
time, isn’t it?
Now imagine daily life right
around the time Michigan became the nation’s 26th state, in
1837. Most of Michigan was covered by
vast forests. In the wilderness, there
were no paved roads or railroad tracks.
With only a few scattered cities established in the state, pioneers had
to move along wagon trails, plank roads and stagecoach routes to travel through
the state. Fur trading was still the
state’s largest industry, and travelers had to be on the look-out for wild
animals, like bears and wolves.
 The Moon Log Cabin,
located at Woldumar
Nature Center in Lansing,
MI, is typical of the log
houses built in Michigan
in the mid-1800's. | Families who came to
Michigan looking for a better life could not simply shop around and buy the
house of their dreams. They had to cut down trees to build their house, and cut
more trees to clear space for crops and outbuildings for livestock. Since building a house took time, most had
to build lean-tos or rough shanties to serve as shelter until a log home could
be built. This often took years, since
the job had to be done using hand tools, horses or oxen, and logs had to be cut
and dragged to where the house was to be built. Log homes in Michigan at that time often only had one room and
maybe a loft area. Families usually all
slept, ate and played in the same room.
Improvements and additions to the home were made over the years as time,
money and supplies became available.
Houses were lit with
kerosene lamps, food was cooled in iceboxes, and rooms warmed by wood-burning
or coal-burning stoves. Families did not have today’s luxuries of electricity,
telephones or indoor plumbing. Children
worked every day on the farm, alongside their parents, feeding animals, planting,
weeding and harvesting the crops, gathering eggs and milking cows – all by
hand.
Since the land was covered
by trees, fields had to be cleared and plowed before crops could be planted.
Many thought the land could not be cultivated, but Michigan pioneer farmers
proved them wrong. Beneath the forested
land, rich soils awaited cultivating.
The land was important, because farm families had to grow most of the
food to feed their families. Supplies
and food they could not grow or make were purchased at trading posts or general
stores located miles away from the farm over rough terrain.
When Robert Zeeb’s ancestors immigrated
from New York and settled in Michigan in the late 1830s, land cost only about
$1.25 an acre. The family established a
homestead in 1836 on about 160 acres of land located near the area known today
as DeWitt Township in Clinton County.
After a year as homesteaders, the family purchased their farm and land
from the U.S. government. They were one of thousands of families who settled in
Michigan during that time, during a huge land rush referred to by historians as
“Michigan Fever.”
Like most immigrants of the time, they
probably traveled from the East Coast along the Erie Canal, which was completed
in 1825, on flatboats pulled by horses that walked along the edge of the canal.
Barges traveled around two miles an hour and cost the passengers about a penny
every two miles. When the barges reached the end of the canal at Buffalo, New
York, passengers boarded steamboats for a three-day journey to Detroit. From
there, they headed inland to settle the Michigan wilderness. These brave pioneers were Michigan’s first
farm families.
 Bob Zeeb with a photo of
his great grandparents,
Jacob and Anna Barbara
Zeeb. | Today, 167 years later, Zeeb
and his family, descendants of the farm’s original pioneer family, carry on the
family’s farming tradition, but in a much different way. Electricity, roads, modern machinery and
technological advances all make today’s family farm much more efficient than in
the 1830s.
Children on today’s family
farms still help with chores, and often have to wake up early to do chores
before school, or finish chores after dinner in the evening. Even though today’s farm kids work hard
every day to help out on the family farm, farming is much easier today than in
the pioneer days, thanks to things like running water, electricity and lights,
computer-generated farm management programs and modern machinery.

One of seven houses on
the family farm, this house
was built in the 1890's. | Over the years, the original homestead
has been expanded to include about 1,000 acres of field corn, soybeans and
wheat, and seven houses! The Zeebs also
have a few chickens and two horses, plus some farm dogs and cats. For several years, the family operated a
dairy farm, but they decided to focus on crops instead of expanding the dairy
operation. Zeeb, his wife, Virginia, three of their four children and six of
their eight grandchildren, the seventh generation of farmers on this land, all
live on the farm and play an active role in maintaining the family farming
operation.
Because the farm has been in
the same family for more than 100 years, their farm is recognized as a Michigan
Centennial Farm. For more information about Michigan Centennial Farms and the history of the Zeeb Family Farm, click here.
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