Celebrate Flint
CELEBRATE FLINT, MI!! Historical Marker Celebration, 2005.

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the south side of the historical marker at the Stockton House

A view of the south side of the historical marker at the Stockton House on Ann Arbor Street in Flint. “Stockton House” “The November 9, 1872 edition of the Wolverine Citizen newspaper reported near completion of this house for the retired army colonel Thomas Stockton and his wife, Maria.

The newspaper called it “elegant” and “among the most stylish and spacious of the first-class houses in our city.” The four and one-half-acre treed “pleasure grounds’ on which the house stood has a mineral spring that inspired the Stocktons to name their home Spring Grove. While he lived in this house, Stockton worked as a commission merchant dealing in lime, plaster, coal and stucco.

In 1921 the Sisters of Saint Joseph acquired the house and established a hospital, enlarging the building several times to accommodate growing medical needs. The house served as a hospital until 1936.”

The north side of the marker (not show) reads “Thomas B.W. Stockton” “Thomas Stockton and his wife, Maria were among Flint’s prominent early residents. Maria, the daughter of Jacob Smith- considered to be Flint’s first white settler-led the formation of the city’s Ladies Library Association in 1851.

A 1827 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Thomas Stockton (1805-1890) spent much of his military career as a topographical engineer in the Midwest. In 1834 he laid out the turnpike that linked Detroit and Saginaw. As a colonel he raised the First Michigan Infantry Regiment to fight in the Mexican War and Stockton’s Independent Regiment (The Sixteenth Michigan) in the Civil War. Captured at Gaines Mill, Virginia, in June 1862, he was held at Libby Prison for two months. Stockton left the Army in 1863 and settled permanently in Flint.”

The Flint Public Library Home Page

More information on Flint's sesquicentennial birthday in 2005.