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Margaret Dunning

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Margaret Isabel Dunning
Margaret Dunning stands next to the Plymouth Historical Museum exhibit named for her. The mannequin represents Margaret when she was 30.
Born (1910-06-26) June 26, 1910 (age 114)

Margaret Isabel Dunning (born June 26, 1910)[1] is a philanthropist and benefactor of the Plymouth (Michigan) Historical Museum. She was born in Redford, Wayne County, Michigan.

Personal life

Dunning is the daughter of Charles Dunning and Elizabeth (Bessie) Rattenbury. Margaret spent her first 13 years on a dairy and potato farm owned by her father, located at the corner of Plymouth and Telegraph Roads in Redford Township, Michigan. The 156-acre (63 ha) farm had been purchased by her grandparents, who were original settlers in the area. When Charles died in 1923, Margaret and her mother, Bessie, moved into Redford and later to the village of Plymouth, Michigan. Bessie purchased property in the village and built the home where Margaret still resides. Margaret attended the country school where her father was a student, and was then sent to Dana Hall, a private school in Wellesley, Massachusetts. She returned to Plymouth in 1927 and graduated from Plymouth High School in 1929.[2] She attended the University of Michigan for two years and then studied at the Hamilton Business School in Ypsilanti, Michigan.[citation needed]

While growing up on the farm, Dunning developed a lifelong love of tinkering with old cars. She has lovingly restored several old cars that she still owns. In 1985, she donated a restored 1906 Ford Model N to the Gilmore Car Museum at Hickory Corners, Michigan.[3] She also donated a 1930 Cadillac convertible to the Museum.[4] She still drives one of her cars in the annual Woodward Dream Cruise in Detroit each August.[5]

At the age of 102, feeling a need to complete whatever she begins, she applied to University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) hoping to complete her bachelor's degree in business. Dunning was accepted, and subsequently awarded a 100% tuition scholarship, provided to her by the Fram (filter) Group (which also provided her with free car care products for the remainder of her life).[6]

Professional career

In the early 1930s, Dunning briefly worked making voltage regulators at the Phoenix Mill Ford Plant in Plymouth, a Ford Village Industries plant that employed only women.[7] She worked as a bank teller and assistant cashier for the First National Bank of Plymouth between 1935 and 1940. During that time, she was among the victims of a bank robbery.[8] The bank robber, Willard Long, was eventually caught in East St. Louis, Illinois, and extradited back to Michigan.[9] After the First National Bank, she went to work at the Plymouth United Savings Bank for several years.

In 1947, Dunning purchased Goldstein's Apparel on Main Street in Plymouth and renamed the store Dunning's. In 1950, she moved Dunning's Department Store to Forest Avenue in downtown Plymouth, about two blocks away.[10] She sold Dunning's in 1968 to Minerva Chaiken and the store became known as Minerva-Dunning's.[11]

Volunteer and philanthropic activities

File:Margaret Dunning Red Cross 1943.jpg
Margaret Dunning in Red Cross uniform, 1943.

Dunning's largest impact on the Plymouth community has been in her volunteer and charitable endeavors that began in 1942. From 1942-1945, Dunning served as a volunteer in the local American Red Cross motor pool, driving a truck.[citation needed]

In 1947, Margaret and her mother, Bessie, purchased a property and building to house the Plymouth branch of the Wayne County Library System.[12] Because of their generosity, the city renamed the branch the "Dunning Branch".[13] Today, the Plymouth District Library, no longer part of the Wayne County System, is housed in the "Dunning-Hough Library".[14]

Dunning served on the board of Community Federal Credit Union in Plymouth from 1962 to 1984, and was president of the board for 19 of those years.[15] The assets of the Credit Union increased from $1 million and one office to $40 million and six offices during Dunning's tenure on the board.[16] The Credit Union established the Margaret Dunning Scholarship Fund in 1989 in her honor for her contributions to the Plymouth community.[17] She has served on other local boards, including the Board of Directors of the Dunning Branch of the Wayne County Library.[citation needed]

In 1971, when the Plymouth Historical Society was looking for money to build a new museum building, Dunning stepped forward and donated in excess of US$100,000.[18] That donation allowed for the construction of a 15,000-square-foot (1,400 m2) building to house the historical artifacts of the community. In 1998, the Plymouth Historical Society purchased a sizeable collection of Abraham Lincoln memorabilia from Dr. Weldon Petz. By this time, the Museum was at capacity and had nowhere to store or exhibit the new collection. Again Dunning stepped forward, this time with a $1 million donation to add an additional 9,800 square feet (910 m2) to the Museum building on two floors.[19] Dunning is a permanent member of the Plymouth Historical Society's Board of Directors.[20]

In 1997, Dunning established the Margaret Dunning Foundation as a private grantmaking foundation, which also gives occasional grants to the Plymouth Historical Museum.[21]

Legacy

Dunning was in the first group of 16 individuals inducted into the Plymouth Hall of Fame, sponsored by the Plymouth Kiwanis Club, on August 11, 1980. Others inducted were some of Plymouth's founders and benefactors, including Ebenezer J. Penniman and George Anson Starkweather.[22]

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.plymouthhistory.org/findingaids/rg9findingaid.htm
  2. ^ The Plythean, 17th edition, yearbook of Plymouth High School, 1929
  3. ^ Elinor Graham, "True classic goes to Gilmore Museum," Plymouth Observer, October 31, 1985
  4. ^ Richard A. Wright, "Gilmore museums ease disappointment of rain-soaked show," DetNews.com, June 11, 2001
  5. ^ "Still Cruising at 96," Detroit Free Press, August 13, 2006
  6. ^ "102-year-old going back to college after surprise scholarship," MSNBC, September 30, 2012
  7. ^ Linda Ann Chomin, "Phoenix Mill exhibit evokes memories for local women," Hometownlife.com, May 24, 2009
  8. ^ "Bandits Enter First National Bank to Grab $6,658.28 of Plymouth Cash Early Wednesday Morning," Plymouth Mail, May 7, 1937, page 1
  9. ^ "Plymouth Bank Official Identifies Former Convict As Member of Gang Which Looted Bank of $4,428 May 5," Plymouth Mail, May 21, 1937, page 1
  10. ^ "Break Ground For City's Newest Department Store," The Plymouth Mail, October 26, 1950, page 1
  11. ^ "Business Scene Shifts for Margaret Dunning," Plymouth Observer, May 6, 1968, page 6A
  12. ^ "Mrs. Bessie Dunning to Buy Library for City," Plymouth Mail, February 7, 1947
  13. ^ "To Dedicate New Library This Sunday," unknown publication and date; article refers to the 1958 addition to the library
  14. ^ Dunning Hough Library
  15. ^ Community Federal Credit Union Newsletter, January 1984, page 1
  16. ^ "Dunning quits Credit Union," The Crier, January 11, 1984
  17. ^ Community Financial Scholarship Fund
  18. ^ W. W. Edgar, "Gift From Margaret Dunning Speeds Plans for Museum," Plymouth Mail & Observer, September 18–19, 1971, page 1
  19. ^ Jennifer Chambers, "History cramps museums," The Detroit News, January 28, 2001, page 3B
  20. ^ About the Plymouth Historical Museum
  21. ^ Margaret Dunning Foundation
  22. ^ "Hall of Fame-ous Plymouthites," The Community Crier, August 27, 1980, page 15

References

  1. Portrait of Margaret Dunning, President of Credit Union, 1965
  2. "Plymouth Family's Fortune Will Preserve Town's Past," Detroit Free Press, March 10, 1972.
  3. Diane Aretz, "Margaret Dunning: At heart a hometown girl," Your Community Crier, March 2, 2001, page 10.
  4. Chris Barnett, "Ever-ready Investing," Merrill Lynch Advisor, Premier Issue 2002, page 13.

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