Waters is located at the southern border of Otsego
County in Otsego Lake Township. The town was established in 1872
and was originally named Bradford Lake. Later the name was changed to
Wrights Lake and finally Waters. Henry Stephens moved his
lumbering operation to Waters in 1891.
After inheriting his
father's fortune, Henry (Tom) Stephens, III. moved to Waters in 1912 and built
his home and the largest dairy barn in the state at that time. He
also built the famous bottle fence. The barn was later converted
into the Waters Inn.
In 1927, Remi and Edna Schotte purchased 1,800 acres which encompassed
the Waters area. They donated land for the fire department, post
office and township park.
The photos below are from various sources.
Many of these pictures are on display at the Township Hall located in
downtown Waters and included in the book "Waters Michigan: The
Town With The Bottle Fence" published by the Otsego County Historical
Society.
Click
on the thumb nail below
for larger view of photo
Horses were used to haul logs from the forests to the train that
transported them to the saw mills in Waters. The man to the far left
with folded arms is James White.
The nickname for the larger locomotive was "The Bull"
This logger engine was called the
"Short and Dirty"
This
a steam engine they called a "Peanut Roaster"
It was the small train that brought the lumber from the yard to the
drying kiln and then to the planing mill
Stephens Lumber Company
Camp 11
The
Little Yard Engine at work at the Stephens Lumber Company was nicknamed
the "Dinky"
Bradford Lakes looking southeast
Foreground shows skids where logs were rolled off flat cars into the
lake
Michigan
Central Railroad depot in downtown Waters
Site was on the currently vacant log facade building north of the old
Trading Post
Residence
of Henry (Tom) Stephens which can be seen in the photo to the right with
the barn
The home was destroyed by fire in 1935
The
famous bottle fence built by Henry (Tom) Stephens in 1914-1916 on the
east side of US 27