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kestrel9 ago

con't

Michigan. This was Frank Shelden's great-grandfather. His mother was Frances Pitts Duffield, a member of another famous Detroit family. Allan Shelden's dry goods fortune was invested in land, and it became Henry Shelden's fortune. Henry's sons formed the Shelden Land Co. after World War I, and subdivided and built one of Detroit's premier subdivisions, Rosedale Park, in 1925. The family history has had its effect on Shelden.

Born Francis Duffield Shelden, he spent his allowance on classical records as a child. He went to Yale for his B.A., served in the Michigan Air Guard, joined his family in land development after the service, and began getting interested in geology. "One of the reasons was that my family had been involved in petroleum exploration. I walked into Wayne State one day and said, Id like to take a course in Petroleum Geology.' They laughed, and started listing all the courses I'd have to take first as pre-requisites.

I started taking them, and I enjoyed it, and I enjoyed the people." He got his masters degree in geology, and began a flirtation with the oil business. "I got in on the St. Clair oil play," he said, when gas and oil was being found in the southeast end of the same geological formation the Niagaran reef that is the subject of so much exploration in the northwest Lower Peninsula today. He actually retained a company to drill two holes, and struck on one. Mostly, he bought mineral rights from landowners, and leased them to oil companies in return for royalties from successful wells.

He had been able to do all this starting with a trust fund he inherited when he came of age. One of the first things he did was buy a Cessna 140 when he was 21 for $1,750, and learned to fly. "My father was convinced I was ' going to go to the dogs, if I didn't kill myself first"

But he didn't squander his inheritance, and has flown thousands of miles safely since. Today he works in an office in his Ann Arbor home, and when he has to, he drives downtown to the family office in the Buhl building, a drab, efficient office with functional furniture and file cabinets, a bookkeeper and receptionist, and a tile floor. On the door, a hand-painted sign says, simply, "Shelden."

Frank Shelden says he does a bit of consulting work in the oil field, invests, tends to other affairs, and teaches undergraduate geology now and then when a local university needs him. He went as far as his oral preliminaries toward his Ph. D. in geology, but never finished his dissertation. Now, he says, his academic and ecological interest in geology remains, but he has no plans to finish his degree.

Shelden gained some attention in 1972 when he and a partner drafted plans to damn the Monroe Creek, near Charlevoix, and build 1,-300 vacation homes around the 400:acre lake that would result The plan was halted while Shelden fought citizens' lawsuits. Shelden, defended by attorney Berlage among others, won the lawsuits. But he never developed the project because of changing economic conditions and the death of his partner, he says. He backpacks, and skis.

"Ever since I was a little boy. I've been a real outdoors type of person," he says. "I feel very, very close to real conservation movements. But I have to say,

North Fox has been Shelden's for 15 years, since he bought it in 1960 from the widow of John Oliver Plank, a Northern Michigan investor who, among other things, helped develop the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island. Mrs. Plank, who was 85 in 1960 and living in San Diego, offered to sell the island to the state of Michigan. The state offered her $4 per acre the top price the state was paying at that time for wilderness land. She declined the $3,360 bid.

A friend of Shelden's in the state Department of Natural Resources told him about North Fox Island.

With his brother, Alger, Shelden purchased North Fox for $20,000 about $23 an acre. He took full control when his brother sold his interest to him eight years ago.

Today, the island is appraised at $312,000. And even if you have that kind of money, the island isn't for sale. Shelden, who describes himself as a "private investor," has fallen in love with North Fox. During a day on the island, it was easy to see why.

We landed on the airstrip, a green slash running nearly the width of the island, a grassy carpet which is the only break in the dense forest of beech and elm that covers the rest of the island. With us were Don Berlage, an assistant Charlevoix County prosecutor, and his sons Steve, 16, and Clint, 20. It was a bright morning in early November, and they were there to hunt the deer that populate North Fox.

Deer season on the mainland wouldn't open for another week. But Shelden has a "breeder permit" which allows him to raise deer on the island, and slaughter them at any time. The Berlages decided to spend the morning hunting north of the airstrip, while we went south to Shelden's cozy, glass-and-timber home, perched high on the west bank of the island, near a stand of birch. At sunset, Shelden says, the white bark of the birch trees turns golden red.

We set out to explore the south end of the island. North Fox is two miles long, and almost a mile wide at points. It narrows to a tip at the south end. We clambered down the steep west bank to a beach that is a mixture of sand and gravel. Even on a pleasant day, cloudless, with only a light, invigorating breeze, the waves roll with regularity against this west wall of the island. Along the beach, on this island owned by one man, are reminders that there is a world of millions just over the horizon: Litter. The cast-offs of the waves are diverse. A light bulb. A float from a fisherman's gill net.

"Once I found an oar," says Shelden. "I came back sometime later and found another oar, and the whole boat." And pieces of e shipwreck. Shelden points out to the west, toward the looming profile of South Fox Island five miles away. Out there, he said, lies the wreck of the Sunnyside, an iron ore carrier that went down in 1883. a 4 Leelanau township official say Shelden's property was assessed the same way as similar mainland property in the township. But that means placing a premium on lake front footage and North Fox Island has 29,474 feet of shoreline, more than bVt miles.

Yet, Shelden will no longer consider selling parcels to help finance his expenses on North Fox. He can obviously afford to maintain it without help. And he says: "I hold the island as an investment and use it for business entertainment. I get a tax break there."

Shelden says he's not a millionaire. But as a "private investor," he earns enough to rent an office in downtown Detroit, own a condominium in Ann Arbor on the Huron River, a ski lodge near Aspen, Colo., his cars, his plane, and his island.

Shelden's family goes back nearly 125 years in Detroit, to Allan Shelden (1832-1905). The. ancestral Shelden came to Michigan from New York State, founded a dry goods store, thrived, and merged with Zacharias Chandler & Co. Allan Shelden ran the business while Chandlef ran for president, unfortunately expiring in Chicago on the eve of a nominating convention that might have picked him to run.

Allan Shelden's only son, Henry, married Caroline Alger, one of the nine children of Russell A. Alger. Russell Alger was a U.S. Army hero and general, later a founder of the Edison Electric Light Co. in Detroit, Governor of Michigan (1885-87), Secretary of War during the McKinley administration and the Spanish-American War, and finally, U.S. Senator.

Perched high on the west bank near a stand of birch, Shelden's snug glass and timber home Is the Island's only human habitation. "On a calm day here," says Shelden, "you really learn what silence is. And at night, darkness."

"But it takes a peculiar sort of personality to live on an island. You have to put up with the grubbiness. Self-sufficiency, that's what island life is all about "You spend a lot of your time fiddling with malfunctioning equipment, shoveling gravel into a hole in the road, mowing the airstrip, renovating the house, chopping wood and splitting the logs for the fireplace. I maintain about five miles of dirt trails."

And he gets no help with all this, even though he pays $4,880 annually in Leelanau County taxes "I get nothing for my tax dollar. That's really my only problem. I've been crucified on taxes." His eyes light up. "If there was any way to declare unilateral independence, and separate myself from the county and the township... I've often wondered about that. I could raise money by selling my own postage stamps." Shelden is appealing a tax-reassessment which resulted in the $312,000 appraisal of his property. He doesn't deny the land has increased in value since he bought it 15 years ago, but he places the price today, with the airstrip, roads, home and other improvements at closer to $140,000.

kestrel9 ago

This is one of Frank (Francis) Shelden's pedo business partners: Gerald S. Richards

Shelden, with the help of several like-minded associates, decided to combine his interests and started Brother Paul's Children's Mission, a "nature camp" for boys aged 7 to 16, located on his tiny, isolated and uninhabited island. 

http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1977/05/15/page/20/article/father-teacher-tangled-life-of-child-pornographer

I have much more on this case, this is just a bit of background. I included the entire article from the Detroit Free Press for a couple reasons, one is that it isn't available to read on one page, and two, it shows some of Frank's Shelden's public face and personality. It's very difficult to find articles like that.

kestrel9 ago

That article makes Richards sound contrite but Cathy Broad's research leads her to believe otherwise. https://catherinebroad.blog/2014/01/13/much-sickness-north-fox-island-shelden-grossman-starchild-richards-the-franklin-scandal/

Gerald Richards was a very evil man, despite his contrite b.s. testimony to the contrary.  More on that in the next post, which will include documents from the Michigan State Police file on the CSC charges against him and Shelden from 1976 and 1977.  While Richards had some amnesia attacks during his softball session with the Senators, he was very specific when he was interviewed by the MSP.  And the file includes transcripts of some statements given by adults who remember what he did to them as children in his “clinic” in Port Huron.  He was, in addition to being a phys ed teacher at a boy’s school (go figure), a naturopath.  Apparently the filming of child rape and porn did not only take place on Fox Island—Richard’s “doctor’s” office was also used as a film set.