Newberry was the uncle of U.S. Congressman
John Stoughton Newberry as well as physician John Strong Newberry.
Brother Oliver Newberry (17 November 1789 – 30 July 1860), a brother of Walter Loomis Newberry, born in
East Windsor, Connecticut. He served during the War of 1812, and also during the
Black Hawk War. In 1816 he settled in
Buffalo, New York, but in 1820 he went to Detroit, where he established himself in business. Soon after his arrival in Detroit, he secured government contracts to furnish all supplies to the numerous forts and Indian trading-posts in the northwest. He was unable to obtain suitable transportation, and was compelled to build a vessel for his own use. Afterward, he constructed other vessels during successive years until he became one of the largest owners of shipping on the lakes. In 1833, he built the
Michigan, his first steamboat and the largest one launched to that date for the lake trade. Several warehouses were constructed by him along the Detroit riverfront, where his schooners, brigs, and steamboats were loaded. He was elected an alderman in Detroit in 1831, and he was involved in the early history of Michigan railroads. For many years, he carried all of his business papers in his hat, and was rarely seen uncovered. He was known as the “commodore” of the lakes, and was sometimes called “the steamboat king.” He died in Detroit. ==References==