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Mason is a small unincorporated community in Houghton County, Michigan that is the remainder of past stamp mill operations at the Quincy Mining Company Stamp Mills. Still standing and mostly occupied are 23 mining company houses, all along M-26. Mason has been dubbed by some locals "shutter town," because each house had its own distinct color of shutter. Most of the homes are painted white, and are of the same type and style. ==History== Mason was established in the late 1890s, when the new Stamp Mill was built. It originally had about 40-45 homes and from 1892-1932 had a school that went to grade 9 (Clarence Monette, Some Copper Country Names and Places) The second row of homes were located where the current ruins of the reclamation plant are. It also had a boarding house- most likely near the school as it is not listed for location in any of the maps or archival information at Michigan Tech archives. Most of the 'T' plan houses cost around $480 to build, and were constructed by Quincy Mining carpenters. During a census from 1900-1910 14 families (out of nearly 45-50 homes) had been continuously renting there. In 1915 Highway M-26 was officially named and went through Mason. In 1926 the highway was resurfaced from a gravel road to concrete. Around 1918 a sewer system was installed. Around 1920 electricity and lights were installed in all of the homes. An article from the daily ''Mining Gazette'' from 12 December 1959 claimed 125 people occupied all 25 houses in Mason. In an article "Mason....houses by the side of the road" 25 September 1981 cited "in 1900 a 2nd mill was constructed... meanwhile more larger houses were built and the first store was opened by Herman Radther in the kitchen of his home, and later a Bertha Chapell ran a store in a separate building, which was leveled by fire in 1940." During World War II Bernard Zemnick owned a small store in Mason, but it only lasted a short time due to war. Bill and Ken Nelson operated a car lot (closed around 2002-2003) on the west side of Mason starting in the mid-1950s. The two main styles of homes in Mason are the saltbox and the T-style. The T-Style had a 2 story half and a one story other half, while the Saltbox was a two story house with a long rear roof. Six saltbox homes were added in the years 1917-1918. Until recently (2002–2003), all of the homes in Mason were still owned by Quincy Development Corporation and rented. However since 2003 most homes have been sold to private owners, most of whom have been doing rehabilitation work. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mason, Houghton County, Michigan」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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