Clawson, Michigan is a small town-only 2.4 square miles. Once little more than two sawmills and a few farms, it was eventually captured by the urban sprawl of Detroit. In the years following WW-II the town rapidly grew as large numbers of homes were built for the blue collar workers needed to fuel the auto and manufacturing plants of the post-war boom. There is, however, little remarkable in that. It's the story of thousands of small towns-places from which you would expect very little. But that would be a mistake. Those two square miles wound up producing an extraordinary number of truly remarkable and gifted people. In an area smaller than what would be needed for a few good sized urban shopping centers, it somehow managed to produce a host of professional athletes, innovative business people, writers, and major players in the arts and entertainment industries. This does not include the hundreds of doctors, lawyers and other professionals-nor the tens of thousands of simple, honest, hard-working people-who got their start there. Clawson got the job done the way most small towns do-in a simple, off-hand, no nonsense, blue-collar kind of way. It represents a value system and a way of life that seems to be evaporating in our modern high-tech world. Yet, despite it all, the city remains as a symbol of everything that is right with America.
I love this little book, when I finished reading this book, I had a very good feeling - l call this feeling - nostalgic jubilance. August 17, 1960 I was born at Beaumont Hospital and exactly two weeks before that occasion, my parents, Jerry and Jenny Hawkins, moved into brand new house at 151 N. Manitou - I went on to graduate CHS class of 1978. I can not remember for sure, but I think that the author Bill Hayes might have been one of my football coaches when I played peewee football on the Clawson Mustangs in the fall of 1969?
Even though I was a member of the Clawson American Legion Post for many years, I did not know that Clawson was devasted by WW2, thirty men from Clawson died fighting in WW2 and I did not know the tragic fact that 5 guys from Clawson were killed in the Battle of the Bulge alone.
I unreservedly recommend this interesting and excellent history book for anyone that is from Clawson or anyone interested in the history and the stories of some of the people from Clawson.