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| Detroit Free Press, August 18, 1897 |
As stated previously, if Elizabeth Soop was a witch she practiced in
her spare time. Her day job for many years likely consisted in aiding
her husband and family in their many business enterprises from the
Hawkins House in Ypsilanti during the Civil War, to his dining Hall on
Washington Avenue to the Cass Avenue Hotel venture which he retired from
in 1895.
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| Detroit Free Press, September 5, 1897 |
Mrs. Soop and her daughter-in-law launched the Imperial Cafe in the summer of 1897 at 214 Griswold Street. I couldn't find
much on the enterprise though there were several other Imperial Cafes
in the area during this time, as well as before and after. All seemingly
on Cass Avenue and at various addresses. Whether they were related or
not is inconsequential though it's doubtful that they were a franchise.
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| Detroit Free Press, December 24, 1899 |
I still haven't found any incidents of seances or black magic rituals by Mrs. Soop. Maybe she only became a witch after death.



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