When I moved to Michigan in 1980 from Dayton Ohio. I had stayed
with my sister for a few months. Before being able to find a house
of our own.
After some searching I found a two bedroom house to rent one
block from Kellogg Park. And my landlord was Jack Wilcox. We lived
in the house for eight years before moving to Westland. So I got to
know Jack very well. Besides going to his house every month to pay
the rent. He also stopped by to just to talk, or help with home
repairs.
He was the nicest man, that cared greatly about the community.
He always put what's best for Plymouth above he is own personnel
wealth. He was once offered a large sum of money for the land. To
build a Pancake house on the property. But thought that wouldn't be
right for the area. And I think he was right. I was sad to hear
when he passed way.
The Wilcox House is a Queen Ann style showplace facing Kellogg
Park in Plymouth. It was built by William F. Markham, President of
the King Air Rifle Company. It was the first of many small
manufacturers producing the toy guns which made turn-of-the-century
Plymouth the "Air Rifle Capital of the World".
Markham built the 17 room residence, not for his wife and two
children, but for a young Secretary named Phoebe he had hired
shortly after her graduation from high school. Apparently she had
qualifications in addition to her stenographic skills.
Originally, in the side yard, a continuously flowing fountain
spilled over into a large reflection pool. A pergola, gazebo and
statuary were focal points on the extensively landscaped grounds.
The grounds also proudly displayed exotic plants, unusual trees and
rare shrubs that Mr. Markham imported from around the world,
including Amabilis Peonies, and Ginkgo, Black Magnolia and Copper
Beech trees.
Markham’s wife would not agree to a divorce, so he built
the big house facing the town square and lived there quite openly
until his wife died. Even after he had married Phoebe, the
townspeople continued to reject her and she was quite unhappy. It
is reported that local mothers would instruct their children to
turn their backs to "that hussy" when they encountered her on the
streets. The shutters on the second floor of the front porch were
installed to provide more privacy because passers by would point
their fingers and hiss when they saw her relaxing in her porch
swing.
Markham sold the house to George and Harriet Wilcox in 1911 and
moved to California where he bought land that later became
Hollywood. He was very wealthy when he died in the late
twenties.
On the first day in his new home, George Wilcox took a hammer to
the wrought iron "M" (for Markham) in the grill work over the front
gate, removed it, gave it a half twist and reinstalled it as a "W"
(for Wilcox) where it identified many subsequent years of ownership
by the Wilcox family. George and Harriet raised three children in
the house, Julia, Katherine and Johnston (Jack).
During World War II, the federal government asked to use the
house as a residence for war workers. The government made it into
apartments and removed most of the special millwork and extensive
landscaping. When Jack Wilcox returned from Navy duty after the
war, he bought back the lease from the government and continued to
operate the apartments. He did most of the maintenance work himself
and was able to acquire nearby real estate with the eye to eventual
consolidation and development of this important downtown
location.
In 1985, after consulting several different developers, Jack
chose a group headed by a local friend, Buzz Ray, to build a
condominium project. Buzz and his associates lacked the ability and
experience necessary to complete a project of this magnitude. They
couldn't arrange financing and he was eventually required to resort
to painful litigation to dissolve the venture and start over with a
clear title again in 1989.
He entered into an agreement with the Marcello and Silvio
Building Company to develop the project. The exterior of the house
was redone. A new roof was put on, new redwood siding was installed
(six linear miles at 40 cents a foot), new front pillars were hand
made, thermopane windows were installed, and the original stained
glass window was reinstalled along with many new pieces of wood
trim that were copied from the originals. This project also
eventually failed.
By the late 1990’s, Jack was now over 80 years old and his
heart began to fail. He was in and out of the hospital. In 1999 he
met Tom Pomerolli who introduced him to his partner, Stan Dickson.
They presented him with a plan that perfectly matched his longtime
vision. They proposed to develop a six story condominium project
around the house which they proposed to restore to its original
grandeur as a single family residence. Jack took them at their word
and trusted that they would fulfill their promise and develop his
long awaited project, even though Jack knew that he might not live
to see its completion.
Now for the puzzle:
For the North add the last three digits the house was built to
21.325
For the west subtract the first three digits of the year jack
died from 28.272