Imagine this the President of the
United States makes his way to a tiny Michigan village to dedicate a war memorial.

He's greeted by a fellow who has turned turkey feathers into a world-wide industry
and declared "Three Oaks Against the World." Well, Edward Warren shook the hand
of President McKinley in 1899 at the Three Oaks train station and heard President
McKinley eloquently dedicate the Dewey Cannon Monument to the good people of
Three Oaks and their contribution to the Spanish-American War. The campaign
Warren waged against every other city and village in the nation to raise the most
per-capita contribution for the war effort and its veterans was yet another
victory for a most incredible businessman and benefactor.
Three Oaks was linked to the rest
of our current Harbor Country communities by the timber and bricks which were
shipped to Chicago and other Great Lakes cities. And, of course, there was the
railroad. The crews aboard The Central Michigan Railroad passing through the
village recognized there were three oak trees which appeared to be one because
of their mass and proximity.
But, back to this Warren fellow.
One day he noticed a store clerk fix a broken whale bone corset stay with a
turkey feather quill. An industry was born at that moment. Turkey feather quills
were becoming garment stays and buggy whips, as well. The Three Oaks company was
booming. The Warren Featherbone factory still stands in Three Oaks.
- By Ron Miller
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E. K. Warren Trivia
"Have you ever been to Warren Woods or Warren Dunes?"
E.K. Warren, once the second largest
landowner in the country, donated via lease, these properties to the state for
public use.
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Did you know that "the arts" thrived in
Three Oaks 100 years ago?
E.K. Warren built the Acorn
Opera House (in the lot which is now parking next to the movie theatre) and
brought world-class opera singers to perform in Three Oaks.
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