VILLAGE OF CLYDE

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Taken looking south-southeast, this 1917 photograph shows the Clyde Methodist Episcopal Church and adjoining parsonage.  The parsonage was actually built first, circa 1877, with the minister serving congregations at both Highland Station (then meeting in the Union School) and a small church on Clyde Road, west of Hickory Ridge Road.   Durant's 1877 History of Oakland County, Michigan, describes the proposed parsonage as "sixteen by twenty-two feet, with an upright wing of the same size, which will cost about twelve hundred dollars."  When the church at Clyde was built in 1885, the resident minister faced a difficult schedule: a morning and evening service at Highland Station; a late morning service at Clyde, and an afternoon service at Hickory Ridge!  The portrait is that of Alvin Riley Crittenden, born July, 1859, at Howell, Michigan, son of Alvin L. Crittenden, who was himself  an early Methodist minister in Michigan.   Alvin Riley Crittenden saw service in the Spanish-American War, then went on to edit The Livingston Reporter newspaper at Howell.  He also authored several books on local history, including History of the Township and Village of Howell, Michigan (1911) and History of the Walnut Street Methodist Episcopal Church, Howell, Michigan (1923).   He died at Howell on June 18, 1933.

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