Visitors flock to childhood home of late president

? The procession of tourists and history buffs stretched for blocks Thursday along Union Avenue SE as people flocked to the childhood home of Gerald R. Ford.

Some came to pose for pictures in front of an American flag on the wide, wooden porch.

Dozens of others pleaded with the current owners for a tour of the house – hoping to see memorabilia that includes congressional bumper stickers from the 1970s, eyeglasses with the 1976 presidential campaign logo on them and a Christmas card the former president sent to Tim England and Rob Kent just a couple weeks ago.

“The phone and the doorbell have been ringing off the hook since we found out he’d died,” said England, 46. He and Kent bought and restored the home in the 1990s, after it had been vacant for two decades.

“What can you do but welcome them in?” England said. “Everyone’s feeling the same thing right now: to come together, to remember one of our own and what he’s done for all of us.”

With funeral events and public services beginning today, residents in Grand Rapids said their New Year’s celebration would be tempered by Ford’s somber homecoming Tuesday.

But there was also a strange giddiness Thursday at the prospect of an onslaught of mourners swarming “Furniture City.” The industry has been slumping in this town where men once carved out their fortunes by stealing their neighbors’ lumber, and Ford’s death means an unexpected financial boon for his hometown.

Officials estimated the number of visitors would top more than a quarter million, more than doubling the town’s population.

“That’s just the early guess, and we’re thinking it’s going to be far more,” said Laurie Forte, chief operating officer of the Grand Rapids Area Chamber of Commerce. “This doesn’t happen here. In Los Angeles or Chicago or Washington, D.C., this might not be such a big deal. But we’re a small town. This is a once-in-a-lifetime event for us.”

Renee Stehouwer, left, and her husband, Rob, holding their son, Gavin, 2, sign a condolence book Thursday at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Mich. The former president died Tuesday at the age of 93.

Many of the area’s hotels are beginning to fill, and florists are enlisting extra employees to create patriotic red, white and blue arrangements. But finding enough blooms to meet the demand has been difficult.

“With the Rose Parade, the Rose Bowl and Valentine’s Day coming up, you try finding a red flower. We only have 550 red carnations in all of Grand Rapids,” said Bing Goei, president of Eastern Floral & Gifts. “I’m calling suppliers in South America, California, everywhere, and telling them to get us more flowers. I don’t care what it takes. We need them here – now.”

Hundreds of Eagle Scouts, who will line the streets as Ford’s casket is taken to the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum, have been flocking to headquarters to be fitted for uniforms.

“We have some guys who became Eagle Scouts when they were teenagers, and are now in their 50s and 60s and don’t fit into their old pants,” said Michael Sulgrove, executive director of the Gerald R. Ford Council of the Boy Scouts of America. “Sales are definitely up.”

Marty Allen, a family friend and chairman emeritus of the Gerald R. Ford Foundation, said the former president would have preferred a more modest service, open only to family and close friends.

But Ford knew his funeral would bring large crowds to Grand Rapids, Allen said, and that the nation would want to take part in the proceedings. “So he stayed very hands-on with regard to planning many of the arrangements, to make this turn out the best it could for Grand Rapids and the public,” Allen said.