• Phone
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Email
Oakland History Center at Pine Grove
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
    • Mission
    • The History of the Society
    • Board of Directors/Staff
    • Membership
    • Volunteers
    • Hours, Location, and Tours
    • Financials and Bylaws
  • Amenities
    • Pine Grove Overview
    • The Pine Grove Historical Museum
    • The Governor Moses Wisner House
    • Drayton Plains One Room School
    • The Pioneer Museum
    • Library
      • Books and Pamphlets
      • Genealogy
      • Periodicals
      • Maps and Map Resources
      • Manuscripts
      • Newspapers
      • Photographs
      • Research Requests
  • Events
    • Past Events
      • 2018 Summer Social
        • 2018 Summer Social Business Sponsors
      • Underground Railroad Historic Site Tour with Willie Payne
      • 2018 5th Annual Dinner Auction!
      • 2019 Pioneer Reunion and Social – July 27, 2019
      • 2017 4th Annual Fall Auction
      • 2017 Victorian Open House
  • Join or Donate
    • Membership and Benefits
    • Donate
    • Sustaining Donations!
  • Maps
  • Shop
    • Cart
    • Checkout
    • My Account
  • Oak Hill Cemetery
    • Save The Headstones
  • Resources
  • Links
  • Cart is empty
    $0.00View Cart
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
    • Mission
    • The History of the Society
    • Board of Directors/Staff
    • Membership
    • Volunteers
    • Hours, Location, and Tours
    • Financials and Bylaws
  • Amenities
    • Pine Grove Overview
    • The Pine Grove Historical Museum
    • The Governor Moses Wisner House
    • Drayton Plains One Room School
    • The Pioneer Museum
    • Library
      • Books and Pamphlets
      • Genealogy
      • Periodicals
      • Maps and Map Resources
      • Manuscripts
      • Newspapers
      • Photographs
      • Research Requests
  • Events
    • Past Events
      • 2018 Summer Social
        • 2018 Summer Social Business Sponsors
      • Underground Railroad Historic Site Tour with Willie Payne
      • 2018 5th Annual Dinner Auction!
      • 2019 Pioneer Reunion and Social – July 27, 2019
      • 2017 4th Annual Fall Auction
      • 2017 Victorian Open House
  • Join or Donate
    • Membership and Benefits
    • Donate
    • Sustaining Donations!
  • Maps
  • Shop
    • Cart
    • Checkout
    • My Account
  • Oak Hill Cemetery
    • Save The Headstones
  • Resources
  • Links
  • Cart is empty
    $0.00View Cart
  was successfully added to your cart.

Shop

Home/Shop/
  • Sort by: Default Order
    • Default Order
    • Name
    • Price
    • Date
    • Popularity
  • Show: 24 Products per page
    • 12 Products per page
    • 24 Products per page
    • 36 Products per page
  • Scanning Services – One Side

    Scanning services – scanning at 300 DPI, TIFF format, one side. Use of this service requires that you contact us. Generally, we’ll ask you to purchase the number of sides needed to complete your request after you’ve discussed the scans you need.

    $15.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Student Membership – Join or Renew

    Student Membership – Join or Renew

    $0.00
    Add to cart Details
  • The Bagley Lot

    Please note that a monument’s adoption must be fully funded before work begins. In the case of a lot adoption, all four monuments can be funded with one adoption. Partial donations to a lot adoption may be applied to an individual monument on the lot.

    Location 4-204

    Findagrave Memorials

    Amasa Bagley
    Nancy Bagley
    Elvira Bagley Mann
    James S Carpenter

    Donate
  • The McCracken Family Lot

    Please note that a monument’s adoption must be fully funded before work begins.
     
     
    Location 1-141
     
    Findagrave memorial for Eunice McCracken
    Findagrave memorial for Robert “Old Bob” McCracken (this monument is adopted)
    Findagrave memorial for John McCracken
     
     
    Donate
  • The Saginaw Trail: From Native American Path to Woodward Avenue

    The Saginaw Trail led from the frontier town of Detroit into the wilderness, weaving through towering trees and swamps to distant Native American villages. Presenting a forbidding landscape that was also a settlers’ paradise, the road promised great riches in natural resources like lumber and agriculture, and a future of wheeled vehicles that would make Michigan the center of a global industry. Leslie Pielack tells the story of the ancient path that transformed early Michigan and of the people whose lives intertwined with the iconic road.

    $23.99
    Add to cart Details
  • The Thomas Drake Lot

    Please note that a monument’s adoption must be fully funded before work begins.

    Location 4-020

    Findagrave memorials

    Thomas Drake

    Evelina Talbot Drake

    Laura Talbot Dwight

     

    Donate
  • Thomas Jefferson Drake

    Please note that a monument’s adoption must be fully funded before work begins.

    Location 4-020

    Findagrave memorial

    Donate
  • Until Antietam

    The life and letters of Major General Israel B. Richardson.

    $34.95
    Add to cart Details
  • Walter Ash

    Please note that a monument’s adoption must be fully funded before work begins.

    Location 4-192

    Findagrave Memorial

    Donate
  • Barn on the Move: A Grassroots Rescue

    Documenting the rescue and move of the historic 1879 Flumerfelt barn.

    $15.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Song of the Heron

    Reflections on the History of West Bloomfield. Signed copy.

    $30.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Pontiac Township 1827-1983

    A written history published in honor of the beginning of Auburn Hills – Second Edition.

    $16.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Michigan and the Civil War

    $25.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Images of America Pontiac

    Detroit’s first mayor, Solomon Sibley, and his wife, Sarah (Sproat) Sibley, were responsible for organizing a group that set out in 1818 for a plot of land 30 miles north, at the confluence of the Huron River of St. Clair (now the Clinton) and several Native American trails.

    The future town would be named for Pontiac, the warrior chief of the Ottawa Nation, best known for his “Indian uprising” of 1763 against the British at Fort Detroit and Fort Michilimackinac. Many of Pontiac’s founding fathers were veterans of the War of 1812. They named their new streets for heroic figures of those struggles: Lawrence, Perry, and Clinton.

    Two years after settlement, Pontiac became the county seat for Oakland. It would also become a mill town, railroad hub, wagon and buggy manufacturing center, the site of a state asylum, and a mecca for automotive industries. Pontiac was the nation’s leading manufacturer of trucks and buses, before and during the heyday of General Motors Truck and Coach division. The construction of the Pontiac Airport in 1928 only enhanced the city’s role in southeast Michigan. It has long been a cultural melting pot. Today Pontiac is known as the northern Woodward Avenue terminus for the annual “Dream Cruise.”

    $21.99
    Add to cart Details
  • Images of America: Rochester and Rochester Hills

    Better Description PLEASE

    $26.99
    Add to cart Details
  • Pontiac, Michigan: A Postcard Album

    An album of postcards celebrating the history of Pontiac.

    $21.99
    Add to cart Details
  • Mrs. Wisner’s Kitchen

    Recipes from historic and contemporary cookbooks – some are fun to read and most are good enough to eat.

    $10.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Soup to Nuts: Recipes from OCPHS Members and Friends of the Society

    Recipes from OCPHS Members and Friends of the Society.

    $20.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Thunder and Lightning – Poems on African American Life and Love

    This volume of poetry is the odyssey of Esmo Woods. He reveals the most intimate portions of his life, his love of family, his passionate regard for his friends and his unwavering and unshakable integrity. Typical of his modest nature, there is no reference to his being one of the greatest basketball players in U.S. History.

    $18.00
    Add to cart Details
  • Letters Home by Private Earl Tryer

    A compilation of letters written to family and friends by Private Earl Andrew Tryer during his service in World War 1.

    $15.00
    Add to cart Details
  • ←
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

Hours & Info

405 Cesar E Chavez
Pontiac MI 48342
1-248-338-6732
office@ocphs.org
Typically Tuesday - Thursday from 11 am to 4 pm. Contact us if you wish to visit outside those hours. We abide by school closure schedules for Pontiac Schools: If they're having a snow day, so are we.

In the Store

  • Michigan Haunts: Public Places, Eerie Spaces Michigan Haunts: Public Places, Eerie Spaces $22.00
  • Out of Small Beginnings Out of Small Beginnings $5.00
  • Hammering Out The Past: Prehistoric Stone Artifacts Found in Oakland County Hammering Out The Past: Prehistoric Stone Artifacts Found in Oakland County $10.00
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.

To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Website Privacy Policy

Top Links

Top Links
  • Aerial Photographs: Picturing Oakland County Through Time
  • Images: Burton Collection, Detroit Public Library
  • Maps: Sanborn Maps, Library of Congress
  • Michiganology – Michigan Historical Center
  • Oakland County Clerk – Register of Deeds: Acreage Search – Historical Land Tract Indexes
  • Research: Land Patents, Bureau of Land Management, Government Land Office Records

© 2026 Oakland County Historical Society, all rights reserved. So there.