Uncover the best books on Michigan politics and government! Learn everything there is to know about the state and its history with these top-rated reads. Topics include:
Statehood & Constitution
Republican Party History
Michigan Territory Laws
Legislative Process
Local Government
State Boundary Controversies
State Government Departments
Detroit Political Issues
Detroit Government
Laws Relating to Women
History of Suffrage
The Great Lakes States Directory
The History of Suffrage in Michigan
Ann Arbor: 1898
Adams, Mary Joice
Chapter headings and subsections are: I. Historical Introduction
II. History of Special Classes – Introduction – 1. Aliens – 2. Indians – 3. Negroes – 4. Women
III. Miscellaneous – 1. Disabilities of Electors – 2. Privileges of Electors – 3. Length of Residence – 4. Gaining or Losing Residence – 5. Place of Voting – 6. School Franchise – 7. Municipal Franchise
IV. Conclusion – Appendix – Chart I. Territorial Qualifications – Chart II. General State Qualifications – Chart III. School Qualifications – Chart IV. Qualifications Proposed by the Convention of 1867 – Bibliograpy
Preliminary Report of the State Commission of Inquiry into County, Township and School District Government, State of Michigan
Ayres, Clarence L.
Detroit: 1932
Citizenship in Detroit; A Supplementary Reader in Community Civics
Barnes, C. C.
Detroit: Detroit Board of Education 1938
Local Government in Michigan and the Northwest
Johns Hopkins Studies in Historical and Political Science
Bemis, Edward W.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins 1883
Political science paper that first contrasts the different types of local government prevalent in different sections of the country. Then the author focuses on styles of local government throughout Michigan’s history as part of New France, British-ruled Northwest Territory, and after the influx of settlers beginning around 1820.
The Michigan Township Board: Its Powers and Duties
Blawie, James, and Blawie, Marilyn
Governmental Research Bureau, Michigan State University 1957
The Michigan Township: An Outline of the Structure and Functions of Township Government
Brake, D. Hale
East Lansing: Michigan State University 1962
The Government of Michigan; Its History and Jurisprudence …
Also, a Brief Outline of the Government of the United States
Brown, Charles R.
Kalamazoo, Moore & Quale 1874
Intended as a textbook for students to learn Michigan civics, this volume is still useful as a concise reference book for the structure and functions of State and local government in the 1870s. It also contains fairly brief texts of several dozen laws; including:
-Of Weights and Measures
-Of the Support of Poor Persons
-The Internal Police of the State
-Of the Observance of the Sabbath
-The Law of the Road, Conduct of Drivers
-Trespass upon Cranberry Marshes, Destruction of Canada Thistles
-Of Crimes and Misdemeanors, Treason, Murder, Duels
–Of the Protection of Game, Song Birds, and Musk-Rats
Also useful is: Encyclopedias, Almanacs & Other Library Reference Books
Outlines of the Political History of Michigan
Campbell, James Valentine
Detroit: Schober 1876
Dunbar and May found that, “James V. Campbell, Outlines of the Political History of Michigan, and Thomas M. Cooley, Michigan: A History of Governments, are of special interest because the authors were Michigan’s most distinguished jurists of the nineteenth century.” Willis F. Dunbar and George S. May, Michigan: a History of the Wolverine State, Eerdmans 1995.
“This book is well described by its title: it presents in full outline the political history of Michigan from the earliest times to the centennial year, 1876. Other topics and materials are used only in so far as they serve to illustrate the long series of political facts. Michigan is, therefore, seen under French, British, and American jurisdiction, and under American in three territorial forms before it finally became a state. The author was long a member of the state Supreme Court, and much of the history of the later period fell under his own observation. The book is a solid contribution to the history of Michigan and of the old Northwest.”
– Literature of American History; a bibliographical guide (1902)
Michigan: A History of Governments
Cooley, Thomas M.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin 1885
See the note at Campbell, Outlines of the Political History of Michigan, above on this web page.
For biographies and memoirs of early 19th century governors in the Great Lakes states, see:
– Edwards, Ninian Wirt, History of Illinois, from 1778 to 1833; and Life and Times of Ninian Edwards in Illinois History Politics & Government;
– St Clair, Arthur and Smith, William H., ed., St. Clair Papers: The Life and Public Services of Arthur St. Clair in Biographies & Memoirs in Ohio History;
– Esarey, Logan, ed., Messages and Letters of William Henry Harrison in Biographies & Memoirs in Indiana History;
– Alvord, Clarence W. ed., Governor Edward Coles in Biographies & Memoirs in Illinois History;
– Reynolds, John, My Own Times, Embracing also the History of my Life in Biographies & Memoirs in Illinois History;
– Hemans, Lawton Thomas, Life and Times of Stevens Thomson Mason in Biographies & Memoirs in Michigan History;
– McLauglin, Andrew C., Lewis Cass in Biographies & Memoirs in Michigan History
The Politics of Michigan, 1865-1878
Dilla, Harriette M.
NY: Columbia University 1912
Unpublished PhD Dissertation in Political Science at Columbia U.
Violence in the Model City: The Cavanagh Administration, Race Relations, and the Detroit Riot of 1967
Fine, Sidney
Michigan State University 2007
See our books on What is Business Administration PDF
“Report of the Governor and Judges of Michigan Territory to Congress; Detroit, Oct 10, 1805”
Historical Collections Vol 36, 1908, 100-111
Hull, William (Governor)
Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society
The title paper is preceded here by a “Prefatory Explanation” by historian Clarence M. Burton. When Michigan Territory was formed in 1805, William Hull was appointed by President Jefferson as the first Territorial Governor. Several months later Governor Hull and two of the three judges appointed as the Territorial Legislature arrived in Detroit, to encounter a scene of total destruction. The entire town, with the exception of one house, had recently burned to the ground. The residents were living in tents and neighboring farmhouses.
Governor Hull’s report to Congress describes the situation he found and the action that he and the Judges took to re-establish a new town of Detroit, in which the residents would acquire new properties. Their actions, including sale of land titles to the residents, required the approval by Congress before they could be finalized. The report also described some of the earlier legal history of Detroit under the French and British, and potential issues of property ownership that could arise for titles granted under the previous governments. Issues about title to Indian lands in several locations are also discussed.
“The Boundaries of Michigan”
Historical Collections Vol 30, 1906, 1-27
Larzelere, Claude S.
Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society 1906
Professor Larzelere, Professor of History at Central State Normal School in Mount Pleasant, traced the many changes in borders of the various territorial governments within the Northwest Territory; with special attention to changes in Michigan borders. Most of his story took place in the U.S. Congress, and follows the history of proposals, discussions and legislation that created the various territorial and state governments in the region from the early 1780s through statehood of Wisconsin in 1846. The article is illustrated with a series of maps; beginning with Thomas Jefferson’s 1784 proposed division of the Territory into states. Congress adopted Jefferson’s map but not all his suggested state names, or northern Michigan would now be known as ‘Cherronesus’ and the southern part of the state as ‘Metropotamia’. His proposal did include the name ‘Michigania’ though, for present-day central Wisconsin.
The Government of the Detroit Metropolitan Area
Leonard, J. M. and Upson, Lent D.
Detroit: Detroit Bureau of Governmental Research 1934
A volume in the Michigan Commission of Inquiry into County, Township and School District Government, by chairman Clarence L. Ayres.
A History of the Michigan State Constabulary
Michigan State Constabulary Association
Detroit: Michigan State Constabulary Association 1919
Michigan State and Local Government
McKone, William James
Lansing: Hammond 1907
Chapter headings are:
1. The School District 2. The Township 3. Township Officers 4. Elections 5. Road Making 6. Township Boards 7. Taxation 8. Villages 9. Cities 10. Counties 11. Board of Supervisors 12. Circuit Court 13. Miscellaneous County Affairs 14. The State 15. Legislative Department 16. Executive Department 17. Judicial Department 18. Court Proceedings 19. Municipal Courts 20. Probate Courts 21. General Judicial Matters 22. Educational Affairs 23. Libraries 24. Military Affairs 25. State Departments – Elective Officers 26. State Departments – Appointive Officers 27. State Boards – Ex-Officio 28. State Boards – Appointive 29. State Institutions
Daily Journal of the Convention to Form a Constitution (Monday, May 11, 1835 – Friday, June 19, 1835)
Michigan Territorial Government
In early 1835 the Acting Territorial Governor of Michigan issued an Enabling Act authorizing the people of Michigan to form a constitution and state government, in conformance with procedures laid down by the federal government. The Michigan Territorial Council, the unicameral governing body of Michigan Territory, called a constitutional convention, which ran from May 11, to June 24, 1835. This document appears to be the official record of that convention. The proposed constitution would be overwhelmingly approved by the voters in October, 1835. Statehood, which required U.S. Congressional approval, was delayed until 1837 due to a dispute with Ohio over the location of the border between the two states.
See related historical documents at: Michigan History: Documents & Collections of Records
Laws of the Territory of Michigan, comprising the acts, of a public nature …
revised by commissioners appointed by the First Legislative Council and passed by the Second Council, the acts and resolutions of the first and second councils; and the acts, now in force, adopted by the Governor and judges of the Territory; together with the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States, and certain acts of Congress relative to said Territory
Detroit: Sheldon & Wells 1827
This book of almost 700 pages appears to contain complete texts of all Territorial laws, although that cannot be verified because the introductory pages have been lost. There is an index at the back for all laws contained within.
Also see: Swan, Gustavus, A Compilation of Laws, Treaties, Resolutions … in Ohio History Politics & Government;
– Philbrick, Francis S. ed., The Laws of Indiana Territory 1801-1809 in Indiana History Politics & Government ;
– Alvord, Clarence W. ed., Laws of the Territory of Illinois 1809-1811 in Illinois History Politics & Government;
– Pease, Theodore C., The Laws of the Northwest Territory, 1788-1800 in Great Lakes History Politics & Government
Michigan State Police; A Twenty-five Year History
Olander, Oscar G.
East Lansing: Michigan Police Journal Press 1942
Reconstruction in Michigan
Perry, Stuart Hoffman
Lansing?: 1919
This is the March 1919 report of the “Michigan Reconstruction Committee”, which was appointed by the Governor to prepare a survey of post-war reconstruction problems in Michigan. It was an effort to identify economic and social issues in the state.
Township Government and the Exploitation of Timber and Wild Land Resources in Northern Michigan
Ramsdell, W.F.
Lansing: Michigan Local Government Series 1933
“The Penal System of Michigan”
The Republic Vol. 1, 1873, 394-398
Republic
Washington, D.C.
This article describes recent recommendations of a commission that was set up by Governor Bagley to reform the prison system in Michigan along principles then considered progressive.
Michigan Under British Rule: Law and Law Courts 1760-1796
Riddell, William Renwick
Lansing: Michigan Historical Commission
“The International Boundary Line of Michigan”
Historical Collections Vol 26, 1896, 597-631
Soule, Annah May
Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society
This is a fairly extensive history of the conflict and negotiation between countries over the boundary between the U.S. and Canada, and in particular that part of the boundary that borders Michigan. Many historical sources were consulted. Included are numerous hand-drawn maps that illustrate the discussion.
“The Michigan-Indiana Boundary”
Historical Collections Vol 27, 1897, 341-345
Soule, Annah May
Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society
Setting the boundary between Indiana and Michigan was a contentious issue for both governments and the populations of Indiana and Michigan. The author was a historian and provides a well-documented narrative of the issue and its resolution.
“The Southern and Western Boundaries of Michigan”
Historical Collections Vol 27, 1897, 346-390
Soule, Annah May
Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society
This thoroughly documented and well-explained history of the establishment of borders was written by a historian, and is accompanied by a number of maps and many footnotes and references.
Under the Oaks; Commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Founding of the Republican Party, at Jackson, Michigan, July 6, 1854
Comprising a History of the Party in Michigan; the proceedings of the anniversary celebration, and portraits of leading Michigan Republicans
Stocking, William
Detroit: Detroit Tribune 1904
Political Parties in Michigan, 1837-1860 …
An Historical Study of Political Issues and Parties in Michigan from the Admission of the State to the Civil War
Streeter, Floyd Benjamin
Lansing: Michigan Historical Commission 1918
This book was derived from the author’s doctoral dissertation. The Table of Contents contains beneath each of the chapter headings (listed below) a detailed outline of all subject matter in that chapter. There is a useful annotated bibliography.
-State Politics, 1835-1843
-Anti-Slavery Movement and the Organization of the Liberty Party
-Effect of Territorial Extension and the Tariff Issues
-Political Controversy Over the Mexican War
-Compromise of 1850
-Tendency of the Free Soil and Whig Parties to Unite 1848-1852
-Foreign Element in Michigan Politics
-Organization of the Know-Nothing and Republican Parties
-The Churches in Michigan Politics
-River and Harbor Improvement Issue
-Growth of Dissatisfaction in the Republican Party, 1857-1858
-Democratic Decline and Republican Advance, 1858-1860
The Facts and Historical Events of the Toledo War of 1835, as connected with the first session of the court of common pleas of Lucas County, Ohio
Way, Willard V.
Toledo: Job. 1869
For more works on the “Toledo War” (boundary dispute between Michigan and Ohio) see: Ohio History Politics & Government
See related historical documents at: Michigan History: Documents & Collections of Records
Municipal Government in Michigan and Ohio: A Study in the Relations of City and Commonwealth
Wilcox, Delos F.
NY: Columbia University 1896
A volume in the Series Studies in History, Economics and Public Law.
“The Republican Party – the True History of its Birth”
Historical Collections Vol 28, 1900, 479-481
Williams, Albert
Lansing: Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society
The author was present at the mass meeting in Jackson, MI of July 6, 1854 in which the Republican Party was formed. He describes the meeting and related political events, and confirms that Jackson, MI was indeed the site of the founding of the national Republican party. Many names of early representatives from around the state are included.