Maheras Mystery Tunnel

November, 2011.

Once for work I was sent to the private security-gated section of Grayhaven Island. The part where you can only reach it by dialing a number of the resident who you are trying to visit into the kiosk, and they have to buzz you in for the gate to open. While I was there I noticed what looked to be ruins of old moorings hidden in woods on the other side of the canal, so I made a mental note to check that out at some point when the leaves had fallen.

I also neglected to take a photo of the front of the former "Purple Gang house" there at 450 Keelson, so a few months later I decided that if I went to Maheras-Gentry Park on the other side of the canal from Grayhaven Island, and went into the woods there, I might be able to get a decent shot of the rear of the house.


As you can see there is a boat-well that leads right up into the house on this private island, which I'm sure came in pretty handy during Prohibition. The mansion was rumored to be designed by renowned theater architect C. Howard Crane in 1929, though I doubt that is correct. According to a website, this was a "haunted mansion with a basement that was formerly used as a sex dungeon," as featured on a December 2009 episode of the TV show Paranormal State. The link also however claims the mansion was built in 1925 by the Dossin family (who to my knowledge were not affiliated with the Purple Gang). A swingers club did operate in the house in recent years, but I don't know about a "sex dungeon."

Today the house is a rentable event space questionably called "Pirate's Cove," with a website that disagrees slightly, saying the house was built by Walter Sheetz, president of R.C. Mahon Steel Co. and sold almost immediately to Walter Dossin. According to another website, Ernest Dossin started Dossin's Food Products in 1898, out of a horse drawn cart. He expanded through the years to include other food products, and by the 1930s Dossin's Food received the bottling and distribution franchise from Pepsi-Cola for Michigan and northern Ohio. By the 1940s brothers Walter, Roy and Russell Dossin owned and raced four Gold Cup class speedboats to boost advertising for their business. All this would explain why the speedboat seen on display at the Dossin Great Lakes Museum on Belle Isle is called the Miss Pepsi. Walter Dossin and his family were deeply interested in Great Lakes Maritime History and donated the funds to create what is now the museum that bears their name.

According to the description on the Pirate's Cove facebook, the Dossin house was sold again in 1942 to Hans Aichler, a German immigrant who lived there until 1996 "and supposedly still haunts the premises." So there doesn't seem to have really been any Purple Gang history behind 450 Keelson, I think that was just something whipped up by a real estate website in order to help the house sell. Perhaps they should have went with "haunted by an ex-Nazi," but that's probably not as desirable a selling point as "used by Jewish mobsters."

One of the theories as to why the house is allegedly haunted relates to the fact that the Fox Creek Massacre occurred near here in 1712, though the Fox Creek sits at least 12 blocks east of Gray Haven. After the Fox tribe attacked Fort Pontchartrain in order to secure a British alliance, the French defenders pursued the Fox all the way to what is now Grosse Pointe, where the battle took place.

So anyway I got my photos of the Dossin house, but while I was there poking around in those woods I found some other very interesting things. There had clearly been other houses here on this side of the canal at one time, as illustrated by the presence of this ruined boat slip:


So naturally I took some more time and began poking around in the vicinity to see if I could uncover any other ruins or clues as to what used to be here.


Grayhaven Island, which was part of the Gray Haven real estate development, was named after one of Henry Ford's lieutenants, engineer Edward Gray. Gray is credited with helping Albert Kahn design the world-famous Highland Park Model-T Plant to accommodate a moving assembly-line, according to Henry Ford's needs and specifications.

According to a user on Flickr who claimed his grandfather worked for Gar Wood, Ed Gray left Ford to go into real estate and conceived the Gray Haven idea in the late 1920s. By 1931, Gray "had attracted the attention" of three prominent Detroiters who all built large homes in Ed Gray's development: Lawrence Fisher, of Fisher Body fame; William Koerber, a Prohibition era brewer; and Gar Wood, whose speed boats not only won races but "made the rum-runners happy." But as usual the Great Depression intervened, putting the grand Gray Haven vision on indefinite hold (I wrote of Gar Wood's famous exploits on the Detroit River in another post).

Eight other smaller homes were built on the island, and on the mainland along the Port Lagoon. "But Gray's dream did not come to fruition during his lifetime," since he died in 1939 "his widow had to let the remaining vacant lots revert to the city for nonpayment of taxes."


Someone's landing:


This stone wall was intriguing:


Another slip:




A wrecked...Escort wagon?


Anyway, a quick historical note on the park itself; it was originally named Algonquin Park in 1928, then renamed after Peter Maheras, one of the first Detroiters to die in combat in WWII. The "Gentry" part of the name was added in 2002, after an African-American resident who lived nearby since the 1950s and championed this neighborhood and its residents' right to have a decent park and rec center in their neighborhood, at a time when the city was known for allocating recreation funds mostly to white neighborhoods. Bronson Gentry was a janitor by trade, but also became a national horseshoe-pitching champion.

In the 1990s when city government was looking to turn this part of the riverfront into new developments catering to affluence in an effort to lure white residents back the city, Bronson Gentry again fought to preserve the park he had fought for in the '50s. Mr. Gentry died in 2003, one year after the park was named after him.


Apparently at some point the place found a secondary use as a spot to dump unwanted cars.

Nearby, obscured in the tangle of brush were two fading old wooden fenceposts, with wire fencing strung between them:


More wall foundations nearby:


It looked as if there had once been a whole neighborhood here--a street lined with houses--but they had all apparently been torn down simultaneously at some point, and the street completely covered by leaves and soil. 

The north-south street that would have come through here was Kitchener Street, but the end of it seemed to have been blocked off and abandoned when this land near the waterfront became Maheras-Gentry Park?


Another boat landing:


I didn't own a boat yet, but this area seemed like a good place to investigate while afloat. Greyhaven Island and the Dossin house again:


This slip came in rather far:


An old staircase hidden under the fallen leaves of many autumns lay nearby:




I wonder if this slip too used to have a house built over top of it...


If that was the case, it was probably a long time ago judging by the thickness of some of these trees:


Steep staircase:


Yet another fancy concrete seawall:


And another slip...






As I started making my way back to the trail leading out of the woods, a 1980s-vintage Buick Riviera appeared, that was rusting into the ground:


I used to drive one of these beasts when I was in college, which I had nicknamed the Bebop. Mechanically it was a piece of shit, but the interior and the ride quality were superb...it was like riding around in a casino cruise ship.


This ocean liner still had its 307ci Oldsmobile V8 engine intact, though the hood had been ripped open like a sardine tin, while the roof had been crushed-in like a tree might have fallen on it at some point.

A broken-off Edison pole lay on the ground nearby:


More curious was the presence of this odd hole in the ground (lower right):


A minute later, I noticed something even stranger...the hole lined up with a whole series of other collapsed sections of the ground, which seemed to imply the presence of...a tunnel?


Being a westsider, my knowledge of what used to be in this part of town is fairly limited, so I can only guess as to what kind of tunnel might've been needed here. With building excitement, I quickly followed this trench along the forest floor to see if there was anywhere with a big enough hole for me to look inside.

It wasn't long before I found an opening big enough to squeeze into.


Now this is a trip...


This section only ran about 30 feet before another cave-in blocked the way:


However another opening presented itself further up:


It appeared to continue running north up into the neighborhood, perfectly in line with the foot of Kitchener Street. This section of tunnel also seemed to run about at least 30 feet, but I couldn't see the end of it, so I went in.

Looking back toward the entrance:


I needed to light it up with a flash to see what I was looking at:


Naturally I was all too eager to ascribe this tunnel's existence to some Purple Gang-type Prohibition Era smugglery, since it seemed to give access to the Detroit River, but I clearly would need to do more research to see what used to be here on this piece of land. The tunnel's poured concrete construction looked like it could plausibly have been poured as early as the 1920s, but a more mid-century date seemed likely. It didn't seem quite weathered enough to be that old.

The end of the tunnel looked like it made a 90-degree turn to the right, but it also looked like it had once continued straight ahead but had been walled-off or oddly patched at some point:


At any rate I could go no further, so I turned back.

There did not seem to be any brackets or anything that I noticed that would suggest that this was a steam or utility tunnel; this seemed to be a pedestrian tunnel. But for what purpose? There was a small pipe on the floor:


This called for more research. As soon as I got home, I got on Google Earth and looked at the area from above to see if any outlines might present themselves, but the tree cover was just too thick:

Click for full size.
But a look at HistoricAerials.com provides us with imagery from 1973, which shows Kitchener Street definitely extending down past where it dead-ends today, and there are indeed what look like houses along it:

Click for full size.
Very fascinating.

I decided that since the internet was of little help, a look at Sanborn Maps might be a good idea since they usually show any existing tunnels, so I headed to the Detroit Public Library. The Sanborn Map for Detroit, Vol. 11, circa-1916, Sheet 24 shows nothing but undeveloped land; also, Kitchener was named Tennyson Street at that time.

The Sanborn Map for Detroit, Vol. 11, circa-1929, Sheet 93 shows a street here named "Port Drive" (not Kitchener), going all the way to the riverfront with a cul-de-sac at the south end, shown with subdivided lots all along its east side, but nothing along the west side of the street. 

Click for full size.
There are five lots with homes built on them, plus one home built on the cul-de-sac, across from what appears to be the former Gar Wood Mansion. The lots appear to have been part of the Gray Haven development. No tunnel is shown, but there is a canal seen extending up into what is now Maheras-Gentry Park. Unfortunately, 1916 and 1929 were the only maps available. 

I also did more searching online. A self-proclaimed Gray Haven historian, posting on the DetroitYes forum under the name Sumas, asserts that Gray Haven began long before Prohibition, in 1913. However, the c.1916 Sanborn map of the area shows there to be no development in that area yet (though the process of dredging and filling could have been underway). Furthermore, Ed Gray was most likely still very busy as an engineer for Ford Motor Co. at that time. Sumas also states that there were no speakeasies there, and no history of rum-running, "although the well to do enjoyed access to the river, to provide for their personal cellars."

William Koerber built his house at the end of Port Drive in 1925, facing the Detroit River across the canal from Gar Wood's mansion on Grayhaven Island. According to the "Pirate's Cove" website, the Koerber family came from Ionia, Michigan, where they founded the Michigan Brewing Company in 1912. The Koerber family closed their Ionia brewery during Prohibition and instead used their trucks to ship what they called "near-beer" from Toledo in order to stay in business, at which time they presumably took up residence here in Detroit. That's where the Purple Gang connection seems to come in; allegedly, according to this version of the story, the Purples saw them as competition, so the Koerbers closed up shop in 1923.

A person claiming to be a descendant of the Koerbers said that the house had an indoor boat well just like the Fisher Mansion, and his grandmother told him stories of the family brewery and how there was "a false wall inside the boat house" that was used to hide booze smuggled from Canada. "I walked through the home when it was still standing back in '80-'81 and sure enough the false wall and hidden room was still there." The point where the Koerber mansion used to stand has been completely reconstructed, and no trace of the Gray Haven past remains there today.

Online I unexpectedly dug up the text of an old brochure by the Government Printing Office from 1985, Know Your Riverfront Parks, A Historical and Informational Brochure. It said that at the conclusion of World War II, temporary housing for returning veterans was built on Maheras Park, and remained there until the early 1950s. Additionally, from 1953 to 1969, Maheras was used as a Nike Missile site. Very interesting; most people know about the Nike site on Belle Isle, but this was a new one on me. "Today, Maheras has no remaining military vestiges," it says.

Nonetheless I decided to make another trip to Maheras-Gentry to take a second look, and explore the southern end of the woods where I didn't go on my first visit. I didn't really find much except more dumped cars:


Late-1970s Cadillac:


Some other modern piece of crap:


As far as I could tell, no traces of any more tunnel could be seen down this way, but perhaps it just hasn't collapsed yet? I didn't go check on the stuff I saw last time in the northern end, because the mosquitoes were just going batshit crazy on me.

I did happen to see this odd barren concrete open area in the trees:


According to a website that specializes in the history of the Nike-Hercules missile system, the installation here at Maheras was classified as D-26 IFC Area, and included several structures. The "IFC" stands for Integrated Fire Control, which means that this (along with nearby D-23 IFC at Alfred Brush Ford Park) was the control site for the missile batteries that were located on the eastern tip of Belle Isle, just across the river.

It is not clear on the blueprints or aerial photos provided that there was a tunnel however, but it also looks like most of the military buildings were down closer to the river anyway. I have also explored the much more intact Nike missile base in Newport, Michigan

UPDATE:
One of my readers, "prentz," brought to my attention a new piece of evidence that may lend explanation to the mystery tunnel I found. The Detroit Public Library's Burton Historical Collection holds the architectural drawing for the Edward Gray residence at the foot of Continental Street (which is the next street east of Kitchener/Port Drive), and it shows what is labeled as a "Service Tunnel" off to the side, which held utilities such as electric, telephone, and steam heating mains. Below is a zoom detail from the photo, but you can also view the whole drawing on the DPL's website

Burton Historical Collection
Did this tunnel near Continental Street also continue on down Port Drive to the other houses in the Gray Haven development? If so, it would have existed in the 1920s, and could indeed have plausibly been "used" for certain "activities" during the Prohibition era. I also recently dug up a historic image showing this area of Gray Haven, in the Manning Brothers Photographic Collection:

Manning Brothers Photographic Collection


References:
Sanborn Map, Detroit Vol. 11, 1916, Sheet 24
Sanborn Map, Detroit Vol. 11, 1929, Sheet 93

21 comments:

  1. Update- grandpa's WWI draft registration card shows him working for Edward Gray- either Main Det Edison Conner Creek, the old Seven Sisters and Two Brothers building.

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  2. If you find this structure, this was Edward Gray's office at Grayhaven, where my grandfather worked.
    https://flic.kr/p/rDeWit

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  3. Grandpa's draft registration shows him working for Gar Wood here- at Grayhaven. https://flic.kr/p/pBDVVS
    On the 1940 Census grandpa lists his position as an Engineer and although the employer is not mentioned, what is mentioned is that it's at a private home- https://flic.kr/p/rVh1eJ

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  4. I've put all the things I've found related to Gar Wood and Edward Gray in one place now, but do have to ask my uncle about the tunnel. https://www.flickr.com/gp/rushhourphoto/4325g5

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  5. I may have found the source of your tunnel- look at the design plans for Edward Gray's home on Grayhaven, a service tunnel is shown- click on the image to enlarge that section. http://digitalcollections.detroitpubliclibrary.org/islandora/object/islandora%3A159781

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    1. Wow, excellent work! I'll edit the post to include this new piece of evidence.

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    2. prentz, I recently found a new (to me) photo in the Manning Bros photo archives, which was marked Gray Haven:
      http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y99/Burrowes/IMG_3695_zps11yshzm3.jpg

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  6. Second, my grandmother had a picture of Edward Gray's yacht- and come to find out he lived on this with his daughter (divorced from first wife Nina Myer) at the foot of Continental, according to the 1920 census. I don't know if he ever lived in the home on Grayhaven. His last address before he died was 1320 Berkshire, Grosse Pointe Park. The yacht, I confirmed the name on the side, grandma couldn't remember, so the photo would be c.1915-1919 as my grandparents moved back to Pennsylvania by 1919. https://flic.kr/p/sa3egZ

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  7. You might find some more interesting details about the tunnels and Grayhaven in this legal case from 1925- https://casetext.com/case/devos-v-gray

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  8. If my grandfather was alive, he would certainly be able to explain more about this mystery tunnel. He upgraded the engines of the rum runner's boats to allow them to outrun the "Prohibition Navy" patrolling the Detroit River. He was not a rum runner himself but was associates of them. He got out of the business when a rum runner appeared at his door step in the middle of the night shot up. Horace Dodge also had a tunnel built under Lakeshore Drive from Lake St. Clair to his mansion during that era. Sometime in the 70's (I believe that is the correct time frame), the then forgotten tunnel filled with methane gas and exploded, taking down one of the homes built above it that was developed on the property after the mansion was torn down. This wasn't Rose Terrace but built farther north and moored the yacht "Delphine" in front on the lake side (east) of Lakeshore Drive on a spit of land.

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    1. THE MANSION YOU ARE REFERRING TO AND THE TUNNEL UNDER LAKESHORE DRIVE WAS IN THE HARBOR HILL STREET AREA. HORACE DODGE'S BROTHER, JOHN WAS BUILDING A MANSION ON THAT PROPERTY OVERLOOKING LAKE ST. CLAIR. HE HAD A TUNNEL BUILT UNDER LAKESHORE DRIVE TO CONNECT TO A SMALL PENINSULA ON THE LAKE WHICH HAD A LARGE YACHT LANDING SLIP. THAT SLIP WAS NOT BUILT FOR THE DELPHINE, WHICH WAS HORACE AND ANNA DODGE'S 250 FOOTER, BUT A YACHT OF HIS OWN. JOHN DODGE DIED BEFORE HIS MANSION WAS COMPLETED. THE DEPHINE WAS MOORED BEHIND ROSE TERRACE MANSION, THE HOME OF HORACE AND ANNA DODGE. FYI HORACE SR DIED WITHIN A YEAR OF HIS BROTHER AND MRS DODGE REMAINED AT ROSE TERRACE UNTIL SHE WAS OVER NINETY YEARS OLD.

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  9. Christopher VanasscheFebruary 26, 2017 at 9:27 AM

    The owner of the 2nd to last home at 12 Port Drive was Mr. Vaughn Reid. There was a vacant lot on both sides of this home and it was the only home with a swimming pool. I believe Mr. Reid was associated with City Pattern Co. I believe his father was a director of Detroit Parks. The photos in this article are all that remains of this 3 story mansion across from the Dossin Mansion! vanasschec2@gmail.com

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  10. Remains if the other Nike Base can be found at the foot of Lennox street. There's a structure there known to us neighbor folks as the ' Handicapped Center'. For disabled kids. Before that there was an orphanage. As a kid we played in the barbed wire shores of ' Lakewood Park.'(.Alfred Brush memorial). Also the tile floors of barracks were still patched around the missile base. Tall Radar towers still stand.

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  11. As a kid in the Fifties we played and fished under what we called Fishers Bridge, the bridge was a extension of Avondale going up along side of the Fisher Mansion.
    The bridge ended what looks like the current map from 1973 witch shows 3 condos. To the left of the top of the bridge was a smaller narrower bridge going over to the residents living on a so called island as the road looks in the 1973 map. Under the bridge were about 4 to 6 cement boat wells, as the story goes Rum Runners would deliver the goods to the wells and some people would pick up the Rum. The Port Street homes were in a gated community,the very first house there would always have big Hockey games on the canal in the Winter. As a short note when I was 12 I was kicking some rocks at the end of the bridge and kicked my dads shoe into canal bellow never to be found might still be there.
    We used to go swimming at Lakewood Park at that time there was only broken cement chunks going into the water, and the fenced in structure that was there was for special needs people that they bused to the house.

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  12. I learned to skate under Fisher bridge and almost got shot on the Island,good times.

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  13. I was a Detroit News carrier for Kitchener street and Port Drive from 1962 through 1965 and we lived on Navahoe street a few blocks west. I remember getting great tips at Xmas time from the people on Port drive . One customer lived at number 7 was Mr Granger and the last house was 697 Mr Koebers house facing the river I also remember the Army Nike site and bareicks and Mr Gentry was my Boy Scout leader

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  14. Hey Doug, it's Berdine, how the hell are you? Hope you're well. I bailed from FB. email me sanctusexitium@gmail

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  15. Great stories. We use to party on the ruins of the mansion at the end of Kitchener dr. Also the Garwood boat house below the bridge. This was the early 80's I remember a lot of houses on grayhaven island back then .

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  16. Super interesting and nice work! I have to say though, my great grandfather was Hans Aichler, owner of the mansion you described. Although a fun thought/comment, my great Grandad (who I knew till he died at 99 years old when I was 15) was no nazi. He actually fought for the Kaiser in WWI as I understand it, but then moved to the USA before wwII and had many Jewish friends. Yes that tv show showed a medal that was allegedly found by the garbage can I think they said, but my dad’s aunt in that same episode didn’t recognize it and I understand it doesn’t add up with the timeline. Anyway, Great grandpa Hans was no nazi I promise you that. Still… what a comprehensive and interesting blog. Great read. Thank you for your hard work and curiosity!

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  17. My grandfather, Edward Francis Roberts, was the first vice president of manufacturing for Packard Cars. Not sure what year but he built a home on Keelson Dr. across from The Aichlers. They’re home had a boat well built under the house with access to the canal and a garage under the house from the road for the car. My grandparents had four daughters two of which lived in the Detroit area for many years. We lived in Wisconsin but always had yearly summer visits. They had a porch overlooking the canal and I have memories of everyone telling me to keep my feet flat and not to lean over the railing. My brothers who were much older could swim in the canal as I have seen in pictures. We could see Larry Fisher’s home from that porch . After my grandfather died and my grandmother was bedridden with private nurses, they sold the house and moved to the Whittier Hotel where she lived the rest of her life .
    I have special memories of that house and the surroundings . I’m 73 and can’t remember many things but Greyhaven is still in my heart !!

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