A few years back the village government personnel moved over to the house at the corner of South Grand and Church Street, the former location of the funeral home. Niblack Funeral Home is now located on the east edge of the village on East Grand River. At that same time, this building's first floor was completely renovated to house only the offices for Handy Township.
It would have been interesting to have a photograph of this building before the work was done to see if that is when the three windows on the second floor were bricked in, or was this done years earlier?
It would have been interesting to have a photograph of this building before the work was done to see if that is when the three windows on the second floor were bricked in, or was this done years earlier?-
The Handy Township offices also take up space in the one-story building just to the north of the three-story structure. Since the renovations to the buildings and sidewalks added at the back, both the front and back entrances are a bit more user friendly for those paying their property taxes!

Aleta's Flower Shop is in the tan single-story building, with a South Grand Avenue entrance.
It is always interesting looking closely at the two-story buildings because there are so often "doors to nowhere," as I like to call them. At the far left of the picture, a boarded up door is no longer used. What was it used for before that?






. . . for us to find this . . .
The building is no longer warmed with coal, but it is curious there is still some residual left. I did a "google" search on the Marshall Furnace Company but did not have any success finding information. About the only item I found was a reference to a company by that name, located in Battle Creek, from 1872 until 1900.

Very interesting . . . cement poured into inverted whiskey barrels. And, actually, there are so many supports, it really appears very sturdy, and it must be a hundred years later!









Tomorrow's squint shot is a question -- is it a light or a doorbell?


I rattled and handled the hook and it appears to be nicely doing its job.
More shots to come of all of this hard work being done to get the school ready for students.




I'd like to thank Paul Harmon for giving me access to these floors to wander as long as I wanted to. Tomorrow's another adventure in the squint shots. Be sure to check back.

