The
Old Settlers Journey
to Michiganby
Marsha Stewart
The first
documentation of an
African-American
settler in Mecosta
County Michigan was
James Guy. His deed
was signed by
Abraham Lincoln.
He obtained 160
acres in Wheatland
Township on May 30,
1861. The Homestead
Act of 1862 allowed
each settler 160
acres in Michigan.
By 1873
African-Americans
owned 1,392 acres in
the three counties
of Isabella, Mecosta
and Montcalm. In
the 1860's most of
the land in Remus
was owned by the Old
Settlers..
There are "Old
Settlers" who came
from Canada via "The
Underground
Railroad." It was
the most dramatic
nonviolent protest
against slavery in
the United States
that began in the
Colonial Era and
reached its peak
between 1830 and
1865. An estimated
30,000 to 100,000
slaves used the
"railroad" to get to
Canada; many others
escaped to Mexico,
the Caribbean, and
Europe.
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