In 1860 Charles Howd made the first move toward conquering
the wilderness where the Village of Breckenridge now stands. He claimed
240 acres in Section 30 of Wheeler Township, part of which later made
up the southeast portion of the Village. However it was ten years
before he occupied it permanently.When the railroad came in 1872,
he carved out a generous patch of his 240 acres to create the south
side of town, took up permanent residence and established a general
store.Daniel W. and Justin A. Breckenridge bought land near Charles
and started a saw mill. Justin surveyed a strip of his homestead land
and gave it as a right-of-way for the railroad bed. Daniel donated
plots of ground for a school site, and for the Congregational and
Methodist churches.
The Saginaw Valley & St. Louis Railroad which found its way into
Gratiot County from the east in 1872 did much to help the township
and Village out of the wilderness. The railroad company, deeming the
spot about the proper place for a station, gave the future town an
assured start. The railroad furnished the means for disposing of the
timber which constituted the main asset of the surrounding country,
and the station soon became a great shipping point for the forest
products- hoops, staves, lumber, square timber and logs.Later Sam
Brown took up the land now constituting the northwest part of the
Village. James and D. D. Brooks were the pioneers of the southwest
part of the Village. Settlers came, various business enterprises were
established and improvements continued.
Among the early business establishments was a blacksmith shop owned
by Ed Smith and a hoop factory operated by L. H. Town and Warren Crandell.
In the 1870’s a stave mill was established by two gentlemen named
Hood and Peterman.A sawmill and oar factory built by Braddock and
Son of Portsmouth in Bay County made carloads of oars from white ash
and shipped them to New England. The company did a thriving business
for a long period of time. It was later reorganized, with the elder
Braddock leaving the company. The company now consisted of Arthur
Braddock, Charles H. Howd and Hiram Sexton. After doing a profitable
business, they sold the company to Ladue and Penney of Saginaw. Unfortunately
on the morning of March 16, 1879, the factory burned, it was a total
loss and there was no insurance protection. It was presumed to have
been an incendiary fire.
The Travers Brothers established a hoop factory in the winter of 1883-84
and operated it for several years. As the lumber was cut and the land
cleared, these factories and lumber mills moved to other locations
where lumber was still plentiful.In their place came farming as a
growing factor in the economic life and by 1900 the sugar beet industry
had begun its growth with several factories in the area. A new interest
was added to the community with the organization of the Breckenridge
Auction & Sales Co. For more than a quarter of a century the livestock
auction made the Village an important outlet for the stock raised
in Central Michigan.
Through the years large agricultural elevators were raised and enlarged
to handle the harvested crops from the farms surrounding Breckenridge.
One of the most significant moves was the purchase of the Breckenridge
Bean and Grain Company by a group of area farmers. Crawford and Company
as it was known prior to 1924 had served the area for over a half
a century.The new business formed by the farmers, the Breckenridge
& Wheeler Co-op (B & W Co-op) enjoyed phenomenal growth from
75,000 bushels of storage at the purchase in 1947 to over 8,500,000
bushels when the Co-op was broken up and sold in 2001. B & W had
been a major player in agricultural service and supply in the State
of Michigan as well as a significant dealer in domestic and international
grain and edible bean markets for over forty years.
On May 19, 1873, a post office was established at Breckenridge, with
Charles Howd as its first postmaster.The original plat of Breckenridge
was surveyed by S. S. Hastings for Daniel and Mary Breckenridge on
May 4, 1874. It contained about 50 acres. Saginaw Street (M-46) still
the main business street is the south line of that track of land.A
petition from the citizens of Breckenridge, asking to be incorporated
as a village, was received on October 14, 1907 by the County Board
of Supervisors. Because of a rather vigorous protest received at that
meeting no action was taken. In January of 1908, a special committee
of the board reported in favor of the petition and it was adopted
by the board.
The first election was held at the Opera House on April 9, 1908. There
were 131 voters. Alfred F. Crawford was elected President. Three two-year
trustees, three one-year trustees, a clerk, a treasurer and an assessor
were also elected.Today, the Village population is 1,339. Residents
enjoy a modernized water system, which was installed through the help
of the Works Progress Association in 1937, using a deep well, a pump
and a water storage tank. Today the entire water output is softened
in a municipal treatment plant that was built in 1954. Since 1954
a new 200,000 gallon water tower has been built and several other
updates and services have been added to improve the system.The first
sewer system was installed in Breckenridge in 1915. Today the system
consists of a collection system, two pumping stations and two 6 acre
waste stabilization lagoons, located north of the Village.Around 1882,
a two-room school was built at the north end of Eastman Street.
Breckenridge has enjoyed the benefits of a graded school since 1893.
That is the same year that Breckenridge High School graduated its
first class. Five students received diplomas. In 1916 a new building
was erected to house the senior high pupils. It contained class rooms
and a gymnasium. Then in 1948 a bond issue allowed the building of
more classrooms. Construction was finished in 1950 on a shop-agricultural
building. In 1952 another addition was completed. In 1959 the elementary
school was built. A new Junior-Senior High School was built in 1966.
The Elementary school was expanded and a Middle School wing was added
to the high school in 1995.
The Breckenridge-Wheeler Township Fire and Rescue Department services
all of the Village of Breckenridge, Wheeler Township and a number
of other townships. The department is governed by a board made up
of two Village representatives, two township representatives and a
member-at-large. The ownership is divided on a 60-40 basis, with the
Village being the 40% partner. The department has six modern fire
trucks and a new rescue vehicle.The Breckenridge Police department
has three full time officers including its chief. Five part time officers
and seven auxiliary officers also serve. The department has two patrol
vehicles. Their office is located in the Village office.