The crippled children of Michigan Hospital School for Crippled Children benefitted from the work of well-respected Dr. William E. Blodgett. Dr. Blodgett was known for his delicate orthopedic transplant work.
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02Sep
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02Sep
According to the December 23, 1919 Detroit News, then Mayor of Detroit James Couzens chose to honor his wife’s birthday with a $450,000 donation to build an annex to the Michigan Hospital School for Crippled Children in Farmington. The paper included what must have been an early architectural elevation of the planned annex. As we know now, this rendering by architect Albert Kahn was not the final design. But the final design was equally architecturally impressive.
Tags: Albert Kahn, James Couzens, Michigan Hospital School for Crippled Children
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27Aug
In 1919, then Mayor of Detroit James Couzens made a charitable gift of $1,100,00 as a birthday present to his wife for the construction and establishment of an endowment fund for the school and to build an annex to the Michigan Hospital School.
World renowned architect Albert Kahn was commissioned by Mr. Couzens to design the facility. The January 20, 1922 Farmington Enterprise announced the new Albert Kahn-designed building — the first of two which remain on the Botsford Commons campus today. That building’s keystone rests today above the door of what is now Botsford Senior Living Center. The stately building offers a fine example of traditional Albert Kahn style — the slate roof, 5 original fireplaces, and Pewabic Pottery inlays (both on the building’s exterior and in the fireplace surrounds).
A Sanford Fire Insurance map dated 1926 clearly labels the white stucco-type building as “old building” and this first Albert Kahn building as “new building.”
Research by the Walter P. Reuther Library Archive Team at Wayne State University turned up the date of the second of the two Albert Kahn-designed buildings as 1927. An amazing visit on October 13, 2008 with a woman born on teh campus in 1927 confirmed the date for the 2nd Kahn building.
Tags: Albert Kahn, James Couzens, Pewabic Pottery
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22Aug
The Farmington Observer, February 2, 1917 edition makes note that it is Fred Goers farm that Blanche Van Leuven Browne purchased and on that property where she built her hospital school.

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