“This would be a great place for a party,” Bob Byerly once wrote to University of Michigan fraternity brother Harold Jackson about Newfoundland while on a trans-Atlantic journey. “It’s strictly off-campus … and there’s plenty of ice!”
Later on that trip he followed up with a postcard from Paris. “You see the most wonderful things walking around this town leashed onto poodles,” wrote the eccentric and brilliant millionaire who passed away in July after living for decades on the east side of Big Glen Lake.
Byerly was a writer and craftsman, a musician and artist, known around town as much for the spontaneous and wild parties he hosted as he was for his secrecy. When his nephew Bruce showed up to collect Bob’s possessions, arrange a memorial service for August 8 and put the lucrative property on the real estate market, he discovered the true mystery and mystique that surrounded his uncle.
“I knew him pretty well, but he was even more eccentric than I thought,” says Bruce, a contractor who works in Idaho and California. “He had his two lives — his social life and private life, and never the two shall meet.”
“His unfinished projects were his soul — his disheveled, beautiful mind.”
The Byerly properties represent the largest chunk of real estate on the Glen Lakes ever to appear on the market at one time, says Ranae Ihme of LVR Realty, which is teaming up with Serbin Real Estate to sell the land. Two acres on nearby Fisher Lake and an acre on Glen Eden Drive have sold. Still available are the Christian House, the Byerly House and Bob’s Project House, whose listings total nearly $11 million.
The Christian House is a southern plantation-style cottage with pillars on the porch, overlooking 533 feet of Big Glen Lake waterfront, and one of the oldest standing houses on the lakes. The Christian House, built by Lee Christian, Bob’s father’s best friend, was where the famous, lavish parties were held.
“Every time he wanted to play his cornet he’d hire a band and throw a party,” says Bruce. “They were in the Christian House because he kept that house pristine. Nothing ever came out of that house (and into the Byerly House), or vice versa.”
Bruce recalls decades-old stories his parents told of immaculately dressed guests, tables adorned in linen doilies, African-American servants (whose uniforms he found hanging in the closet when he cleaned out the house), and photos of the guests sitting on the deck drinking Mint Juleps.
“The parties he used to throw were epic. He was so tunnel-visioned that he’d do anything for a huge party. He’d go out and hire the band, get it catered or cook, himself. A couple times he told people just to show up, the whole bar was all set up, and he wouldn’t even show. He’d get lost in Traverse City trying to pick up the band, and wouldn’t make it until midnight.”
“I remember one story about the leg of lamb he forgot to put in the oven. A couple gals were getting hungry because it was supposed to be a dinner party. At 10 p.m. someone walked into the kitchen and saw the leg of lamb, ready to go, but hadn’t even been put in the oven. Needless to say, it became a great midnight snack.”
Not all of Bob’s parties took place at the Christian House, though. Bruce remembers his uncle would call friends and spontaneously invite them up to Miller Hill, where he’d have swings built in the trees and a string quartet playing. To “Strings and Swings” the guests would enjoy bread, cheese and wine. “People would sit and listen to violin and cello and have these wonderful, therapeutic respites for hours on end,” says Bruce.
Or if you came to visit on a special occasion, Bob might throw you a party.
Bruce remembers a vintage 1929 American-La France fire truck that Bob used to drive. When Bruce’s brother arrived to spend a week of his honeymoon at the Christian House, Bob came whistling down the road in the fire engine with the sirens running and an entire band strapped to the side of it. “These wide-eyed musicians were playing trumpets and trombones, and hanging on for dear life,” laughs Bruce. Bob picked up the newlyweds and took them to the Burdickville Inn (now Funistrada) for a raucous party.
His passions
But as public as Bob Byerly could be during his lavish, save-no-expenses parties, his private side was even more fascinating. Next to the Christian House is the Byerly House, a four-bedroom Tudor-style chalet with 250 feet of lake frontage that was built during the Great Depression. Here, and in Bob’s Project House at nearby Tamarack Cove, the walls are covered from floor to ceiling with writing — projects that Bob envisioned at the spur of a moment, and most of which he never finished.
Very few people saw the inside of the Byerly House during Bob’s lifetime — not Barbara Siepker, who owns the Cottage Bookshop and wanted to feature it in her book, Historic Cottages of Glen Lake (Leelanau Press, 2008), and not guests who were invited to parties at the Christian House.
“He wrote on the walls, he wrote everywhere,” says Bruce. “He wrote tons of prose and poetry, and he was in the process of writing his autobiography. When I cleaned up the place there were annals and annals of his work.”
Born in Owosso, Michigan in 1925, Bob attended both Michigan State and the University of Michigan before receiving a Master’s degree in literature from Cambridge University in England and a Minor in advertising. For a time he worked for the New York City-based Omnicom Group’s BBDO, one of the top creative agencies for 30-second TV commercials. Bob and his older brother, Bud, inherited the family business of 42 discount grocery stores throughout the state.
Their father, James Arthur Byerly, had been a self-made man who left home when he was 13 and started as a bagboy in a store. He came up with the idea for a shopping cart. Rather than have the clerk get your groceries, why not give people baskets or carts to get their own groceries? You could give customers a discount. In fact, you could open discount stories. The idea was a hit, and made James Arthur Byerly a rich man. With his earnings he bought the land on Big Glen Lake, where he befriended neighbor Lee Christian.
After their father died, Bob, and Bruce’s father Bud, sold the business in 1959. The older brother headed for California while Bob settled here, though he traveled extensively and often wintered on Harbor Island in the Bahamas.
Bob’s love for music fueled his wanderlust. He played the cornet, and nephew Bruce played the harmonica. Once, they met in New York, stayed for a week at the Chelsea Hotel, and visited every jazz joint in Greenwhich Village. “He was just unstoppable,” remembers Bruce. “So much energy, always on the go, a maniac.”
On another trip to the Big Apple, Bob lost his luggage and was without his cornet, which bothered him to great lengths. He and Bruce were walking through Central Park when they came across a couple African-Americans musicians, one playing with a Pignose amplifier and the other keeping time on a trash can lid. Bruce pulled out his harmonica, and Bob found the core of a paper towel roll and turned it into an instrument. “You wouldn’t believe the sound he got out of that,” says Bruce. “We played for hours with these guys, with a little hat to collect change. Afterwards we divided the money four ways.”
He also loved the Detroit Tigers baseball team. Bob would drive downstate at the spur of a moment, pick up friends and order them along to a Tigers’ game — rarely arriving on time. During the 1984 World Series, when the Tigers beat the San Diego Padres, Bob told his workers around the house to drop their things and come watch the games. “You never know when you’ll see the Tigers in the World Series again!” he told them. (Not until 2006 would they reappear in the Fall Classic.)
When Bruce arrived this summer to clean out his belongings, he found baseballs covered in autographs from the entire Tigers’ team and a freezer full of baseball articles from old newspapers and film rolls, covered in plates of baking soda to keep them fresh. Bruce wondered whether his uncle planned to go back and read those stories for his muse.
As for his writing, Bob didn’t use desks or filing cabinets. He strung clotheslines around the Byerly House with notes and missives attached to the line with clothespins. If something had only one clothespin on it, he hadn’t yet gotten to it — it was just an idea. Two, it was growing in his mind. Three, it was due yesterday.
He sometimes taught Shakespeare classics at a local tavern in Traverse City, he wrote constantly, he owned as many as 10 typewriters, and he became obsessed with assignments. At one point, remembers Bruce, Bob became enamored with a secretive cult of people down in rural Georgia. He had trouble reaching them and even hired a helicopter to take him there before they ran him off the grounds. “It was almost illegal how he was pursuing them,” laughs Bruce. “He was more obsessed than they were.”
He wrote fantastic letters, often penned in the style of poet e.e. cummings (who wrote in lowercase). “They’d go from a stanza to down angles, backwards, using different colors, with cartoon characters and embellishments in the margins,” says Bruce. “When you got a letter from Bob, you had to sit down, open a beer and go through it.”
Bob was a poetic naturalist in the Walt Whitman style. He wouldn’t cut a tree unless it fell on his house. He was an environmentalist and a tireless advocate for preserving the Crystal River. Bob once sat in his bathtub and tape-recorded a two-hour-long tirade about the merganser duck on Big Glen Lake. He splashed around the tub while reciting all the information he’d read, then sent the tape to his nephew Tom.
His craftsmanship was just as spontaneous, eccentric and complex. Bob’s Project House is 45-years worth of unfinished, creative projects, and the home’s future owner better bring their tools, and their patience. His cedar shingles are not really shingles at all, but carved cedar routes that were hand-knot to each other. He interspersed cedar shakes to make a wavy, Hobbit-like pattern. Each piece was carved to match the next one and took probably a week to make.
Bruce says that two old Polish men worked for Bob for two decades, and he must have been the most difficult contractor they ever met. “You’d have to find a certain kind of nail or window trim. It would have to be just so,” explains Bruce. “You’d spend all day looking for it, and suddenly it’s lunch time. By the time lunch is over he’d have you off on another tangent. The next thing you know it was time to cover everything for the winter.”
Brilliant, but impractical
Bob Byerly tried married life for a time, but his eccentricity and spontaneity ultimately got in the way. In 1971 at Longboat Key resort near Sarasota, Fla., he met Ruth Conklin, then a teacher in Chicago Public Schools, who was there with her two children, Russell and Casey. He asked her to dance, and six months later they where married in Sun Valley, Idaho.
Shortly thereafter Ruth and the kids moved into the Byerly House. Now a staple in the Glen Arbor art community, this was the first time she’d ever seen northern Michigan. Bob showered the kids with adoration. He spent days designing intricate gifts and costumes for them, like the wooden turtle shell he carved for Casey. She won a competition, Ruth remembers, but she couldn’t stand up in the costume.
“He was very excited, both about me and the children,” remembers Ruth, who speaks fondly of their nearly three-year marriage. “He had so many lofty, exciting ideas, but they were very impractical. He had absolutely no sense of time. If I said it was time for dinner, he’d ask ‘what do you mean?’”
Ruth remembers that for years Bob was curious about visiting a church in nearby Northport where Marshall Collins, an African-American minister, held court. On Sundays he’d ask Ruth to prepare the children for church, and by the time they were ready, he’d moved on to some other project. “We never got there before everyone else had left,” Ruth laughs.
Similarly, the family would often take trips to Chicago. But Bob would never arrive at the airport on time. More than once, Ruth remembers she and the children sitting in the plane, looking out the windows for Bob. As the plane taxied away, she’d see him running down the tarmac chasing the plane (in the days before airport security). He’d usually come on the next flight.
“He was brilliant, but so incredibly off the wall,” she says. “You couldn’t imagine what it was like to live with him. Fascinating, but very difficult. Today he’d be diagnosed as bipolar.”
“Everything he did was the most creative thing I’d ever seen in my life. I called him a cathedral, and his ideas were the spires. He liked that.”
Nearly three years after the wedding, the kids arrived in Michigan from their father’s house, but Bob said he couldn’t handle them. They had to go. And so Ruth left, and the marriage ended.
Ruth has few regrets today. If she hadn’t met Bob, she never would have known Glen Arbor. She had been a schoolteacher when she married Bob, and she never imagined she’d do anything else. But he turned her on to pottery, down in the basement of the Byerly House. Nearly 40 years later, she’s still selling beautiful pots at Ruth Conklin Gallery on M-109.
The beginning of the end for Bob came in the winter of 2002-03 when a pipe burst in the Byerly House and a flood destroyed some of his work. He was in the Bahamas at the time, and the following spring he turned the yard into a tent city where he set up fans to dry out everything that had been damaged. Shortly thereafter, says Bruce, he fell and hurt his face. Bob spent his final days in the Maple Valley Nursing Home near Maple City.
Despite the challenges that Bob Byerly’s brilliant mind posed him, Bruce says he never dwelled on things. “He’d forget about the misfortunes and failures. The things he didn’t do were easily forgotten.”
Have stories about Bob Byerly that you’d like to share? Write to us at editorial@glenarborsun.com or mail correspondence to Glen Arbor Sun / P.O. Box 615 / Glen Arbor, MI 49636.







A tall good looking fellow entered our Traverse City architectural office one afternoon in the fall of 1962 and said “I’m Bob Byerly, I’m building a house and I have about 2000 questions to ask.” That was my introduction to one of the most unforgettable characters I’ve ever met. Bob was in fact well along with construction of an extraordinary house on one of the most desirable properties on beautiful Glen Lake. When he bought the property there was an old log cabin he planned to renovate until he discovered it was infested with carpenter ants. After tearing it down to the foundations he purchased some rough cut lumber from a nearby saw mill and began building with the aid of a couple of local carpenters. After looking at the single story rough framed structure, Bob decided it should really have a second floor so that he could create an atrium for his living area. He also felt the new house merited a uniquely shaped roof,so he and his carpenters created one with waves and valleys. All this and more had been completed before I saw it and no planning or consideration had been given to incorporation of plumbing, heating or electrical systems, nor to insulation of the freeform roof. Bob’s plan for electric heating ignored the cold winters and the need for extra heavy wall insulation. My immediate thought was that his original statement of 2000 questions was under estimated, but I was thoroughly amazed by his fertile imagination and his plans to create a suspended curving stair using treads cut from butcher blocks salvaged from his father’s chain of grocery markets, on how to incorporate a pipe organ and its console purchased from an old movie theater, and also have his carpenter (who was an artist in wood) carve images of flowers and leaves in the heavy timbers at the second floor level. Over time we made some progress with ideas to salvage the structure and incorporate some of Bob’s ideas. He was brilliant in so many ways and so highly imaginative. And on top of that, he was a terrific guy and I became very fond of him.
We did add the “Cunningham Bump” which was to house the organ pipes in the future, modified some exterior wall construction to accommodate additional insulation and develop plans for plumbing and electrical installations, but Bob seemed to loose the intensity that was driving him earlier and progress on the construction slowed appreciably. I’m sure it wasn’t money because he had assured me he had adequate funds, But for some reason he lost interest in his new house. But he later did become interested in having an accommodation in Traverse City for those times when he was in the city too late to try the drive back to Glen Lake. And in typical Byerly fashion, this was off the wall and most imaginative. He made arrangements with the local railroad to store an old caboose he had purchased on an abandoned rail siding. So my job was to design the renovation and restoration of the caboose to suit his needs including a kitchenette, bath, bedroom and small living area plus the necessary plumbing, heating and electrical services. We developed preliminary plans and talked with local agencies about this unique project. We did work out a concept that seemed to be achievable, but some things seemed to discourage Bob and the Caboose project was shelved. I was disappointed because it was another example of the fertile imagination of Bob Byerly and would have been great fun working with him on a project that seemed to have a brighter future than the Glen Lake house.
Being with Bob for the most part was great fun. He had some fantastic parties, many with a musical theme. He loved to play his trumpet, and although he would be the first to admit it, his technique was a bit rusty. But there were some pieces he couldn’t resist and loved sitting in with a jazz group playing “When The Saints Go Marching In” and similar numbers. After I had moved to southern Michigan,Bob invited us for the weekend and we stayed with him in his Glen Lake east shore house. He had a Saturday party planned to be held at the Christian House next door with a jazz session provided by the Ken Morgan Trio and local musicians. After an open bar and dinner, the music started and it was fantastic. The high light was Ken Morgan and local musician Jack Schmaltz playing tenor saxes and trying to out play one another in jazzy duets. Bob of course sat in on their rendition of the “Saints” and some other numbers, and the evening was a jazz lover’s dream. Bob later invited us for another weekend and had an entirely different musical treat for a few party guests. He had recently attended a performance at nearby Interlochen Arts Academy and was impressed by the musical abilities of the young performers, so he invited two flutists to entertain his guests. We drove from his house to a secluded area in a wooded glen overlooking Glen Lake, and while sitting on blankets and enjoying hors d’oeuvres and wine, and with the sun setting over the beautiful lake, listened to delightful flute duets. It could have been a setting for a French impressionist’s painting, but I’m sure it was a mental picture from Bob’s imaginative mind which was triggered by his Interlochen experience and which he then brought to life for himself and his guests as an unforgettably enjoyable experience.
Bob came south a few times to visit us, once to the wedding of our daughter when he missed the wedding and arrived at the reception about half way through dinner and with his dress clothes on a hanger and looking for a place to change. He was notoriously late, but I think that may have been a record. He was still a gracious guest and a great addition to the festivities. But the best time was my 50th birthday party. My wife had invited many friends and some fromTraverse City, and of course, Bob. It was a warm summer evening and the party was well along when from outside the open front door came a rendition of “Happy Birthday To You” as played on the trumpet. Bob had arrived, late again, but made the evening even more enjoyable. A few years later after we had moved to our retirement home in the Phoenix, Arizona area, Bob started coming to the area some winters to escape the Michigan chill. We saw him a number of times, but on one occasion, he called a couple of days before Christmas to let us know he was in town and wanted to get together that evening. I explained it was my wife’s birthday and we and some family were going out to dinner to celebrate. Would he like to join us? Of course, he responded so we told him the time and location of the restaurant. But as is typically Byerly, after we had almost given up on him, in he walks all smiles, and so were we because now we could order dinner. Following desert, in walks a young man with a guitar and is invited by Bob to join us. Bob had met him at a club a few nights earlier, liked his music, and as a birthday gift asked him to serenade my wife. He had cleared this earlier with the restaurant manager, so this was also entertainment for the entire dining room. No run-of-the-mill birthday gifts for a guy with his kind of creative mind. Of course we invited Bob to have Christmas dinner with us and he accepted. Most of our large family was there and presents had been exchanged that morning and Bob arrived at a respectable time. He had a marvelous time meeting our clan and all present enjoyed him immensely. The highlight though was two days later when after answering a knock on the door, in walks Bob and a helper he had hired carrying 14 pots of daises and a paper scroll. The daises were gifts for all those at the Christmas dinner and the scroll was a greeting card for everyone to enjoy. In his motel room he had created a 42 inch square piece of paper by taping together the twelve pages from an appointment calendar. Then with colored magic markers and pen and ink he created a commentary in words and images expressing his pleasure at being included in our Christmas gathering, mentioning all by name, and recalling events of the day. I’ll always keep that scroll as a reminder of the extraordinary man with the creative mind who made it and who also had a warm and loving heart that envisioned it. Truly an unforgettable person and one I feel most blessed to have been able to know and call my dear friend.
This from Sis Miller:
My cottage is in Tamarack Cove so I could see Bob’s Project House near the channel being built. One day I saw Bob in Glen Arbor. I said, “Bob, when are you going to finish your house?” He pushed up his sleeve, looked carefully at his wrist watch and replied, “What time is it now?”
We attended one of his parties in the early days. The only food I saw were big potatoes that Bob threw into the open fireplace. At 11:00 pm a moving van drove in the drive and delivered a piano. Lois Chapman, a guest at the party and an opera singer, then played and sang. I don’t believe we ever ate the potatoes!
My perspective on Bob is long one, starting almost 80 years ago when we were very young boys in Owosso, Michigan. Our families were well acquainted, living across the corner from one another and my Dad was an officer in Bob’s family business.
I fondly recall many long lazy summers at the Lake during the 30′s and the 40′s, sometimes as part of a family visit, but more often as one of group of young friends that were always gathered there at the cottage (as we called it then). There was always a gang of young boys, friends of both Bob and his older brother Bud, as guests at the cottage, involved in swimming, boating, water skiing, to say nothing of the endless and ferociously competitive games of Scrabble and Monopoly as we all grew older.
Bob went off to Cranbrook, but later we did get together again for a while, sharing an apartment at Ann Arbor and Bob was one of my groomsmen in 1948. My young bride and I stopped by the cottage to visit Bob and his mother for a couple of days as part of our Upper Michigan honeymoon.
As the years went by, and families grew, I gradually lost track of Bob, most recently visiting him at the cottage about 25 years or so ago. The clothes line storage of notes and messages throughout the cottage was, by then, a well established system and one that seemed to work just fine for Bob.
In more recent years I failed in a number of efforts to get back in contact with Bob, including a visit to the Lake a few years ago, only to find the Cottage closed up and forlorn and no one able to tell me where he had gone.
It was not until I saw this web-site last week that I finally knew something of the final chapters of his long and full life. I will never forget Bob, and I will treasure his friendship the rest of my life.
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[...]Bob Byerly’s beautiful mind « Glen Arbor Sun[...]…
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