This is my new earliest Eastlund Concrete stamp. It’s on the north side of East Michigan Avenue between Ferguson and Holmes.
This building was constructed in 1972, according to the city parcel records. It was a Goodyear service center which had its grand opening in March 1973, and closed sometime in the 2010s. It has stood there looking sad ever since. In 2019 the building was sold to the expanding chicken heart known as Sparrow. I don’t know what they are doing with it. It appears to have some miscellaneous junk stored in the service bays, and the windows on the retail side are covered up.
This is the earliest dated Eastlund stamp I have found, though in style it closely resembles an undated stamp I collected in front of Papa John’s. It’s on the north side of Lasalle Boulevard. Lasalle Boulevard is a strange street that has two entirely disconnected parts, one north of Lasalle Gardens and the other south of Lasalle Gardens; this is on the southern leg, in front of the last house before the street takes a dramatic curve to the south.
I can’t seem to find very much out about McNeilly Construction, the contractor that (as far as my eyes can tell) was responsible for this 1971 mark on the south side of East Kalamazoo Street between Regent and Leslie.
I notice an unusual placement of the stamp near the top rather than bottom of the slab (as seems more common).
I can find that McNeilly were located at 421 E. Maple St. The Lansing State Journal of June 15, 2004, reported that the former owner, Rolland “Barney”/”Ray” McNeilly, would be celebrating his 90th birthday on June 18. He was then living in Grand Ledge and had retired in 1986. He had moved to Lansing in 1960 and worked for Reniger Construction for a while before starting his own company. (I previously wrote about B.F. Churchill, who had also worked for Reniger, but in the 1920s.) The LSJ death notices of August 2 of the same year report that McNeilly died on July 30. I am unsure when McNeilly Construction dissolved, but it does not seem to be in business now.
Though I can’t tell you much else about McNeilly, I can tell you a bit about the address this slab is in front of, 1820 East Kalamazoo. It is currently home to the Auto Surgeon. Although they’re not my regular mechanic (I have gotten into the habit of going to the dealer for all my repairs since money got less tight for me), they are nice folks and have done some work for me before, including doing some small fixes for free.
The building was constructed in 1963, but unfortunately I’m not able to tell you who was there in 1971. My Lansing State Journal online access through my employer gives me only 1980 through 2011. The first reference to the building I can find is from 1983 when a real estate agent was advertising it for sale. On December 24, 1988, a new business notice appears for that address. To my surprise, the new business was Greg’s Bowling Supply. I was not expecting that. Sadly, Greg’s must not have lasted long. On July 28, 1990, a classified advertisement appears inviting experienced mechanics with their own tools to send resumes to 1820 E. Kalamazoo, no business name given. Afterward, classified ads for used cars at that address pop up regularly, but the name of any business located there is a mystery to me.
In 1994, the property shows up in real estate listings again, advertised as “Four bay garage, DNR approved.” Then on November 6, 1995, a new business listing appears for Dealer’s Automotive.
Meanwhile, however, the first advertisement for Auto Surgeon, Inc., shows up on October 4, 1991, but located at 615 E. Kalamazoo, the current location of another mechanic, Professional Fleet Services. Finally, the first reference I can find to the Auto Surgeon being located at 1820 East Kalamazoo is an advertisement on August 11, 1998. I moved to Lansing in June 1999, so I have only ever known them there.
For those keeping track, this is the first 1970s stamp I’ve posted, and completes my ambition of having one from every decade of the 20th century. For some reason 1970s stamps seem uncommon. 50s and 60s are very common, 80s and 90s even more so, but not 1970s. I wonder why?
There are three of these, all the same year, clustered on the north side of East Kalamazoo Street between Regent and Clemens. They aren’t all pointed in the same direction; I guess this way they can advertise to pedestrians no matter which way they’re walking.
Searching to find out more about McNamara Construction, I had a lot of hits on newspapers.com’s archive of the Lansing State Journal. I assumed it would be advertisements, as I found with Joe White yesterday. Instead these were recaps of baseball games. It turns out that the McNamara Construction team was a big deal in the Lansing City Baseball League. On August 10, 1971 – the same year this pavement was laid – the Lansing State Journal reported that McNamara needed just one more victory for a “nearly unprecedented” perfect season. I can’t say whether they succeeded, though the fact that I didn’t find an article about it suggests not. Then on August 10, 1976, the LSJ reported that “McNamara Construction crushed Petroff Realty, 13-3. in the [championship] opener, which was ended by the ‘mercy rule’ in the fifth inning.” (Meanwhile, “Regular season champion Art’s Bar” – my late, lamented hangout – “whipped Woolco Sporting Goods of Okemos, 7-2, in the nightcap.”)
According to incorporation records, McNamara was incorporated on November 13, 1956, and dissolved November 13, 1986, on their 30th anniversary. They were located at 622 South Waverly Road, which today is a Valvoline Instant Oil Change. Delta Township records indicate that McNamara sold the property to Valvoline in early 1988. The current oil change building was constructed in 1992.