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Charles10
Whitney Carman (John9, Peter8, Aaron7,
Peter6, Gabriel5, Joseph4, Joshua3,
John2, John1) was born 16 December 1858 at
Walworth, Wayne County, New York; died 19 September 1919 in Grand Rapids, Kent
County, Michigan. He married on 27 Jun 1899 at Grand
Rapids, Kent County, Michigan to Gertrude Amanda Gay, born 6 December 1868 in
Grand Rapids, Kent County, Michigan; daughter of George and Helen (Hovey) Gay.
"C W Carman came here in 1904 and bought 1,500 acres
along the Little Bow River, paying
$3.50 and acre, and started one of Alberta's
largest wheat farms on the present site of the town of Carmangay. The name
of the town commemorates the name of C W Carman and his wife Gertrude Gay.
There son's name was Gay Carman." -
Bridging the Years, Lethbridge,
Alberta: Southern Printing Company Limited, 1968
"Charles
W. Carman,
who died September 19, 1919, is remembered as having been one of the
foremost residents of Grand Rapids. Few men possessed a greater
understanding of the needs of the community than he, and he was ready, at
all times, to take a leading part in any project, civic, educational, social
welfare or industrial, which promised to make the city a better place in
which to live. Charles W.
Carman
was born in Walworth, Wayne county, New York, in 1858, the son of John and
Electa Ann (Camburn)
Carman,
natives of that state. In 1884 Mr.
Carman
came to Grand Rapids as a science teacher in the high school which then
occupied the site of the present Junior College. His parents, farmers and
stock breeders, also came to Michigan, and settled in Fenton. After the
fathers death in that town Mrs.
Carman
moved to Ann Arbor, where she died several years later. In the year he came
to Grand Rapids, Charles W.
Carman
completed the course of study he had begun at the University of Michigan. He
continued as a high school teacher until 1897, when he went to Chicago to
become a member of the faculty of Lewis Institute, of which his brother,
George
N. Carman,
is now director. On June 27, 1899, he married Gertrude
Gay,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George
W. Gay,
of Grand Rapids. After he gave up his position with the Lewis Institute Mr.
Carman
entered engineering practice in Chicago. Later he entered the real estate
business in Chicago and western Canada and continued in this field of
activity until August, 1910. He then returned to Grand Rapids, a city which
derived much benefit from his earnest efforts along educational lines. He
became a valuable member of the board of the Grand Rapids public library and
the Kent Scientific Museum board. He was elected vice-president of the board
of directors of the Anti-Tuberculosis Society, and gave his time liberally
to these organizations. He took a leading part in the discussions pertaining
to the proposed soldiers memorial for Grand Rapids and Kent county, and was
a member of the committee named to select a site for the memorial. Though
this plan was temporarily abandoned it seems certain that the monument will
be erected later, because of the impetus given this movement by Mr.
Carman
and associates. He was also a member of the Grand Rapids art commission; one
of his dearest wishes having been to establish an art museum and a school of
industrial art in Grand Rapids. He owned much real estate and personal
property, and had large holdings in Alberta, Canada, where he founded the
town of Carmangay, named after himself and wife. He was one of the founders
of the Grand Rapids Electrical Company, and was largely responsible for the
development of the electric light and power plant in that city. He was a
regular attendant at the Fountain Street Baptist Church. Mr. Carmans death,
on September 19, 1919, was a deep shock to the community, which still mourns
his loss. He is survived by his son,
Gay
Carman,
of Grand Rapids, two sisters, Miss Mary
Carman
and Mrs. Georgie Herbst, of Ann Arbor, and a brother
George
N.
Carman, of Chicago.
Gay
Carman
was born June 11, 1902 in Chicago. He received his early education in the
schools of that city and at Carmangay, Alberta, Canada, the town which his
father founded. In 1920 he entered the University of Michigan and in 1924
graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering.
He is now employed by the Consumers Power Company of Jackson in their Grand
Rapids Plant. On June 27, 1924, he married Elizabeth Dykema, of Grand
Rapids, a daughter of Jacob and Mabel (Watrous) Dykema. Her father, a native
of Holland, was brought to the United States by his parents in 1888, when he
was not yet grown. Mr. and Mrs. Cay
Carman
reside at 1552 Franklin street." -
From the
series: Historic Michigan, Land of the Great Lakes, A third volume devoted
to Kent County, Published: Dayton, Ohio: National Historical Association,
1924, Edited by: Arthur S. White
Child of Charles and Gertrude (Gay)
Carman:
 
07/15/2007 |