Inscription
In 1825 Elizabeth Denison, “a woman of colour,” purchased 48.5 acres of land from Pontiac’s founder, Stephen Mack, agent of the Pontiac Company. She became Pontiac’s first black property owner, but never lived on the property. In 1827 she and her husband, Scipio Forth, leased the land to her brother Scipio Denison.
In 1836 and 1837 Mrs. Forth sold the land for $930. Elizabeth Denison was born in the 1780s as a slave in present-day Macomb County. In 1807 she fled to Canada, returning to Detroit around 1812 as a free woman. At her death in 1866, she donated money used toward the construction of Saint James Episcopal Chapel on Grosse Ile.
She is buried in Detroit’s Elmwood Cemetery. Part of Oak Hill Cemetery now occupies Elizabeth Denison Forth’s property.
Location
Sources
More markers in Oakland
Historic Green
Troy, MI
The city of Troy has set aside this area for historic structures.
Botsford Inn
Farmington Hills, MI
This historic structure was built as a home in 1836 by Orrin Weston and converted into a tavern by Stephen Jennings in 1841.
White Lake Cemetery
White Lake Township, MI
This cemetery was established by Robert Garner when his nine-month-old child, Mary, died in 1837.
Lakeville Cemetery
Leonard, MI
In 1843 Addison Township settler Ernest Mann donated one acre of land to the local community for use as a cemetery.
Detroit Finnish Co-operative Summer Camp Association
Wixom, MI
On June 21, 1925, Detroit-area people of Finnish descent purchased this land and built a summer camp where they could share the...
