The Ferry Seed Company was founded in Detroit in 1856. A large farm was established near the corner of East Ferry and Woodward to grow the seeds that were sold across the nation. The company continues to help plant the nation’s gardens as the Ferry Morse Seed Company but they no longer develop their seeds in downtown Detroit.
In the mid-1880s, D. M. Ferry began subdividing his farm, selling the plots to prosperous Detroit industrialists and business that had made their money in the emerging metropolis. Many of them build exceptionally attractive, large mansion along East Ferry, the homes that you see today. Shortly after the recession of the early Nineties, the area was filled with attractive homes.
Just before World War I, quite a number of Jewish professionals and business people found that they could buy homes in this East Ferry Street neighborhood, so its ethnic composition changed. After World War I, some of the Jewish home owners found that they could buy even more attractive homes on the west side of Detroit or in northwest Detroit. By the mid-1920s, another change was underway as prosperous blacks who had been confined to the Black Bottom and Hastings Street discovered that they were able to purchase impressive homes from departing Jews. Upper class blacks moved into this East Ferry Street neighborhood. The Omega Psi Phi fraternity and the Lewis College of Business are located along East Ferry.
After World War II, the Merrill Palmer Institute, then and now housed in the impressive Charles Freer home designed by Eyre, purchased several homes along East Ferry included all of those occupied by The Inn on East Ferry Street. They hoped to expand their training in education and psychology but eventually they ran through their endowment and, eventfully, merged with Wayne State University.
In the 1960s or 1970s, the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) proposed a major expansion with a large new wing to be erected on the northwest corner of their beautiful building. The area along East Ferry was seen as an ideal location for a large parking lot so DIA purchased the homes that the Merrill Palmer Institute sold. However, after the late 1960s, the DIA faced financial challenges. They allowed the homes on East Ferry to decline in anticipation of razing them but, in the mid 1990s, they recognized the futility of their expansion.
The Inn on East Ferry purchased four of the homes that had been owned by Merrill-Palmer and by the DIA and converted them into a very attractive bed and breakfast. The homes and this bed and breakfast provide an excellent example of converting century old homes into a new and, presumably, profitable use.
There are many attractive neighborhoods within the city of Detroit. The Cultural Center, the East Ferry Local Historic District and the Wayne State campus are very interesting and attractive. As you walk northeast on East Ferry toward Brush, you will realize that the preservation of the magnificent Hecker and Freer homes and the refurbishing done by the Inn on East Ferry, have been complemented by a major construction of new homes on East Ferry, but homes that are architectural congruent with the designs architects executed during the first and second Cleveland administrations.
Architects: Four homes and two carriage houses comprise the
current Inn on East Ferry. I do not know the names of the architects.
Architectural style: Primarily Late Victorian, Romanesque and Queen Anne
Construction Period: Last two decades of the Nineteenth Century
Use in 2004: Bed and breakfast
Website: www.ferrystreetinn.com
Photo: Ren Farley
City of Detroit Local Historic District: This includes East Ferry Street between
Woodward and Brush. Listed July 17, 1981.
State of Michigan Registry of Historic Sites: P 4495; Listed Valentine’s
Day, 1976
State of Michigan Historical Marker: None erected yet
National Register of Historic Places: # 80001921; Listed March 10, 1980. This
district included 22 buildings.
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