Jeremiah Dwyer was an American businessman, industrialist, and manufacturer in Detroit, Michigan. He was associated with stove manufacturing for over five decades. Known as "The Stove King", Dwyer developed his first stove company in 1861. His firm later became the Detroit Stove Works as a joint stock company becoming a successful enterprise. That was reorganized later again with additional investors becoming Michigan Stove Company, the world's largest producer of stoves at the time. Besides running this company he was also a director of several other stove companies as well as a board member of several businesses in the Detroit area.
Early life
Dwyer was born in the borough of Brooklyn in New York City on August 22, 1837. He was the eldest child of Michael Dwyer and Mary Dwyer. He had a brother, James, and a sister, Mary. His father was born in 1800 and immigrated from Ireland to the United States when he was eighteen years old. He settled initially near Hartford, Connecticut. He moved from Connecticut to Brooklyn two years later in 1820 and obtained management work. Sometime in the mid-1830s he met and married a young lady who was from his hometown in Ireland. Their first child Jeremiah was born in Brooklyn. They moved to Michigan in October 1838 and established a farm in Springwells Township about from Detroit. In addition to English, Dwyer learned French as a young boy since most of the family's neighbors in Springwells spoke French. Dwyer's parents worked a farm where his siblings James and Mary were born. In 1848, Dwyer's father was killed after being thrown from a runaway wagon when the horses pulling it bolted after being frightened by the noise of a nearby train locomotive. Dwyer then assisted his mother in managing the family farm for two years. In 1850, his mother sold the farm and bought a home in the city of Detroit for the family.
Mid-life
Dwyer and his siblings were home schooled for a while. In his teens Dwyer worked part time for Smith & Dwight's planing mill and attended Detroit public schools. After graduating from high school he worked as an apprentice for four years in the molding trade at the hydraulic iron works of Kellogg & Van Schoick. Dwyer became a journeyman after completing his apprenticeship and worked for three years at various foundries in the state of New York learning the stove business. He then returned to Detroit and because of health issues resulting from intense work in poorly ventilated foundries, he changed fields for a while. Dwyer took employment at the Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway for about a year. In 1859, Dwyer became a foreman at the Geary & Russell Foundry in Detroit and remained there until 1861. Then with his brother James and Thomas W. Misner, they bought out a small, failing reaper manufacturer trying to make stoves. They turned the defunct manufacturer into "J. Dwyer and Company" that years later became the joint stock company Detroit Stove Works. The stock holders were Dwyer and his brother James, W. H. Tefft, and M. I. Mills. In 1871, Dwyer organized a new firm under the name Michigan Stove Company. The stock holders of this company were Dwyer, Mills, R. H. Long, George H. Barbour, and Charles DuCharme. The company grew to become the largest manufacturer of stoves in the world by 1905. George Harrison Barbour, the vice president of Michigan Stove Company, gave Dwyer the idea to construct the World's Largest Stove for the 1893 Chicago World's Fair and had his plant superintendent William J. Keep design the mammoth Garland kitchen range that weighed.
Personal
Dwyer married Mary L. Long on November 22, 1859. They had eight children, seven sons and one daughter. Their names were: James W., John M., Elizabeth B., William A., Francis T., Vincent R., Gratton L., and Emmet. Dwyer liked traveling to Europe for vacations. In Detroit his office address was at 1022 Jefferson Avenue and his residence was at 692 Jefferson Avenue. He held a membership in the Detroit Country Club. Dwyer associated with the Democratic Party and was a Catholic.
Businesses and associations
Dwyer served as a member of the Board of Estimates for two terms. He was a trustee of the Fire Department Society. For twenty-four years Dwyer was a commissioner and inspector of the Detroit House of Corrections. He was one of the founders the People's Savings Bank and a director of the Peoples State Bank of Detroit. He was a board member of Michigan Stove, Peninsular Stove, Art Stove, Buck's Stove, Michigan Copper & Brass, Michigan Fire and Marine Insurance, Security Trust, and Ideal Manufacturing of Detroit. Dwyer was known as "The Stove King" when he operated the stove companies.
Dwyer suffered various illnesses for years, which toward the end of his life caused him to withdraw from his business affairs. He died at the age of 82 on January 29, 1920. At the time of his death he had four sons and one daughter still living. They were John M Dwyer, William A Dwyer, Emmett Dwyer, Grattan L Dwyer; and Mrs Elizabeth B. Smith of Cleveland. His wife had died in 1919. He is buried in Mount Elliott Cemetery in Detroit, Michigan.