Maud Thorden
Dinner for Two
East Bay, Traverse City
Baseball, Anyone?
Grasses Along East Bay
Here's the Pitch
Pointes North at Night
All Coiled Up
Room 207, Pointes North
Bathroom Layout @ Pointes North
Beach Chairs in the Snow
Eye on the Ball
East Bay, Traverse City
The Ball's in Play
South Park
Signals
CRUNCH!
Goldfinches
Strange School
Joan
Road Race
Still Waiting for Baseball
Mulliken Elevator
Mulliken Elevator
Entropy
Snow on the Walk
It's Back!
Maud Thorden
Footprint
Fuzz
Alexandre de Grosbois-Garand
Peter Mulvey
Peter Mulvey
Valentine
Turntable
What We Went to Hear
Oreo's Got the Blanket
Taffy's Got the Chair
Taped
Nippy
Fayette
Morning Sunshine
Fayette Company Store, 1981
A Magnificent Ruin
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Railside


The tracks are still here, but the trains no longer stop, and much of the elevator complex has been demolished. Mulliken was a farm town for about a century. There was a grocery store, a lumberyard, a hardware store. A church, a school, a barber, a library, a beauty shop, a couple bars, a restaurant that served breakfast. A gas station. A post office. And this grain elevator.
The lumberyard was already gone when I moved here in 1991. This feed, grain, & seed operation closed two or three years after I took these photos. The hardware failed around 2000. The school's been gone for years, as have the hair cutters. Boyer's no longer serves gasoline, though John can still fix your pickup. The grocery's evolved into a party store, and Farmers Tavern's been a full-service restaurant since the 80s. In many ways, now, we've become a rather distant Lansing suburb. We aren't entirely commuters--a surprising number of my neighbors work as plumbers, and these days our biggest local business is a general contractor. But the farmers ship grain, and buy seed, at Sunfield, or Grand Ledge, or Woodbury.
I miss 'em.
The lumberyard was already gone when I moved here in 1991. This feed, grain, & seed operation closed two or three years after I took these photos. The hardware failed around 2000. The school's been gone for years, as have the hair cutters. Boyer's no longer serves gasoline, though John can still fix your pickup. The grocery's evolved into a party store, and Farmers Tavern's been a full-service restaurant since the 80s. In many ways, now, we've become a rather distant Lansing suburb. We aren't entirely commuters--a surprising number of my neighbors work as plumbers, and these days our biggest local business is a general contractor. But the farmers ship grain, and buy seed, at Sunfield, or Grand Ledge, or Woodbury.
I miss 'em.
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