Background
Elijah Brush was born in Bennington, Vermont in approximately 1772, the son of Colonel Nathaniel Brish and Samantha Parker. Brush married Adelaide Askin (c 1779 – 1859), daughter of John Askin, in 1802.
Elijah Brush was born in Bennington, Vermont in approximately 1772, the son of Colonel Nathaniel Brish and Samantha Parker. Brush married Adelaide Askin (c 1779 – 1859), daughter of John Askin, in 1802.
Brush graduated from Dartmouth College and came to Detroit in 1798.
John Askin was a British subject, and when Detroit was turned over to American control, he moved across the Detroit River to Canada, leaving behind his farm, "Private Claim #1," which was immediately adjacent to Detroit. Elijah and Adelaide moved onto her father"s farm, and in 1806 the Brushes purchased it for $6000. The property eventually became known as the Brush Farm.
With careful administration, Brush increased the value of the farm and made his heirs wealthy.
In particular, in the 1850s, Edmund Brush began developing sections of the property into the fashionable Brush Park. The street names Edmund, Alfred, Adelaide, and Brush were named by Edmund after family members.
Elijah Brush was elected a trustee in 1803, appointed Lieutenant Colonel of the Territorial Militia in 1805, and appointed as mayor of the town of Detroit after Solomon Sibley"s resignation in 1806. Brush also served as Treasurer of the Michigan Territory from 1806 to 1813, and from 1811 to 1814 served as United States Attorney.
Brush was the counsel in the first case to test the right to hold slaves in Michigan.
During the War of 1812, British forces captured Detroit and Elijah Brush and other militia officers were taken prisoner. He was shipped to Toronto, but his brother-in-law, a British officer, procured his release, and Brush returned to Detroit in late 1813 when American troops retook the city. He died shortly thereafter on December 14, 1813.