The Corner of Oak and Cedar

Pictured above is a Match Safe presented to gentlemen who attended the grand opening of the Rose Brothers Department Store on October 9, 1903. The match safe was recently donated to the historical society by Dee Hawthorne of Garden.

Pictured above is a Match Safe presented to gentlemen who attended the grand opening of the Rose Brothers Department Store on October 9, 1903. The match safe was recently donated to the historical society by Dee Hawthorne of Garden.

        During the summer of 1903, Harry Rose erected a new department store on the corner of Oak and Cedar Streets. The store replaced an earlier building that stood on the same lot from November of 1900 to January of 1903, when it was totally destroyed by fire. The opening of Rose Brothers new store was eagerly anticipated by the citizens of Manistique. The celebration began on October 9, 1903 and was documented in the pages of the Pioneer Tribune.

         “Rose Bros. big store was formally thrown open to the public yesterday morning and the mammoth building was inspected by more than 1200 ladies and gentlemen who heartily expressed their admiration for the store and the stock it contained. Every visitor was presented with souvenirs. The ladies received pin trays and the gentlemen match safes. The local orchestra furnished music during the evening hours. The opening sale is continued today and, as yesterday, the store is thronged.” Read More...

Rose Bros. Fire – Jan. 5, 1903

Rose Bros 1900 (640x422)

Rose Bros. Store, Corner of Cedar & Oak – Opened Nov. 1, 1900 and destroyed by fire, Jan. 5, 1903

Source:  Manistique Pioneer Tribune, Jan. 9, 1903, page 1.

     The Rose block, one of the largest buildings in the city was totally destroyed by fire at an early hour last Sunday morning, entailing a loss with the stock it contained, of nearly $60,000.

     The fire, which without question had its inception from the furnace in the basement gained great headway before it was discovered, and on account of the tardy arrival of the fire department owing to the delay in securing a team to convey the fire apparatus to the fire, the building and contents were a mass of flame before much water was thrown and as a result not a dollar’s worth of property was saved. Read More...