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Michigan Jackson
Douglass Gibson came to Jackson in his early boyhood with his father A. B. Gibson, Esq., and has been for many years one of the prominent business men of the city. Mr. Gibson was for several years one of the largest dealers in iron, nails, stoves, tin-ware and hardware in general in the interior of the state, as a member of the firms of Rice, Pratt & Co. & Pratt & Gibson. In 1869 Mr. Gibson and Mr. Thomas Westren established the Interest and Deposit Bank, of which Mr. Gibson was president, which office, with an active participation in the management of the affairs of the bank, he has continued to hold to the present time.
Mr. Albert Howe Gibson, son of Douglass Gibson, succeeded the firm of Pratt & Gibson in the hardware business, in which he is still engaged,
and is one of the most active and enterprising of the business men of Jackson of the third generation.
Jackson Section 4
Page 5
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