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Blocks of
ice were cut from the pond on
Pingree, then stored in a nearby ice house for later distribution and
sale.
Schroff Family
By - Muriel Versagi, Curator
John Schroff, aged 82, is a retired Royal
Oak firefighter who was born
in Royal Oak in 1926 and who graduated from Royal Oak High
School, as did his sisters Alice and Barbara. All of them attended
Oakland School and Madison High School “until our area was annexed to
Royal Oak in 1941.” Earlier in life, he worked with his dad and
served as a radio operator in the Merchant Marine. John has provided
our museum with documents and photographs and the capsule history below.
Grandfather Paul Schroff and Wilhelmina Roediger married in Detroit, in
about 1871. John’s father, Peter, was born in Royal Oak in 1888 and
died here in 1965.
About 1912, Peter founded the Liberty Ice Company. He owned a lot near
the ice pond on Pingree, between Troy and Fairgrove, from which he cut
and sold blocks of ice. He leased “ice rights” from a Mr. Lambie and
built an ice house on what proved to be the wrong lot. The lot’s owner
refused to trade lots, so Peter moved the ice house and “started his
career as a building-mover.”
Peter’s wife, Doris, and her sister Gladys were hired as telephone
operators around 1914. The exchange was upstairs of the Lochbinler
Store and later relocated to upstairs of Robinson Lumber, at Fifth and
Main. Joined by other operators, they organized the “Hello Girls,” a
group which met to compare experiences for several years. (Our museum
has on exhibit a picture of the Hello Girls and several more
Schroff-related photographs.)
When the Grand Trunk Railroad right-of-way was relocated in about 1928,
Peter got the contract to relocate 52 houses and buildings. That
project lasted into 1931.
In 1931, Peter was elected Township Supervisor. He served one year
during which he “was responsible for installing crocks in many of the
deep ditches along some of the mile-roads.”
Before all that, John’s grandfather, Paul Schroff, had bought a farm at
the southeast corner of Eleven Mile and Campbell, in 1876, “but he
didn’t move there until 1888.” Paul owned “a farm, a hotel, and a
saloon” at Woodward and Five Mile (Davison). He maintained a menagerie
there, and he operated the “Detroit Zoological Garden” at the
corner of Michigan Avenue and Tenth.
Before labor unions, a supportive
organization called the Metropolitan
Club lobbied the state on behalf of police officers, firefighters, and
postal workers, John recalls. The organization still exists but mostly
as a social club. Retired Royal Oak firemen meet monthly, and “guys who
couldn’t get along together in their active years” discover they like
each other. John was captain from 1964 to 1988 at the Northwood Fire
Station, the future home of the Historical Society Museum.
John Schroff is a widower. His wife, nee Elinor Kraase, “came from
another long-time Royal Oak family,” he says. His interest in family
history has led him to trips to Germany, where “it’s difficult to
identify and locate the specific churches which kept the birth and
baptismal records you need.”
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