A cast of characters tumbles out of the pages of this book, beginning
with the courageous settlers who tamed the wilderness. By the 1890s,
dynamic denizens of St. Joseph and Benton Harbor harvested fruit,
established factories, and opened tourist attractions. Drake and
Wallace's Silver Beach Amusement Park, with its roller coaster, fun
house, and Lake Michigan beach, attracted visitors from Chicago. So did
the curative mineral waters. Al Capone took the baths, despite their
stinking like rotten eggs. The Israelite House of David, a Christian
sect founded by Benjamin and Mary Purnell, welcomed summer visitors to
their amusement park. Despite an infamous scandal and trial involving
Benjamin, the House of David thrived for decades. The cities spawned
inventors like Augustus Herring, who flew an airplane five years before
the Wright brothers; Emory Upton, who developed an electric-powered
washing machine manufactured by a company now known as Whirlpool; and
Walter Miller, inventor of a record-changing machine manufactured by
V-M. By the 1980s, manufacturing in the area had declined, and the
cities suffered. Present-day entrepreneurs, artists, and community
activists have jump-started their return to vitality.