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The Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad completed its railway through Algoma Township in 1867. Porter Hollow was an unincorporated community along this route, about 3 miles north of Rockford . At Porter Hollow the railroad built a large wooden trestle over Stegman Creek, then known as Wicked Creek.
Algoma Township is a civil township of Kent County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 12,055 at the 2020 census , which is a large increase from 9,932 at the 2010 census . The township is part of the Grand Rapids metropolitan area and is located about 10 miles (16 km) north of the city of Grand Rapids .
The department also oversees 39 medic companies. [4] There are 1,592 uniformed and 70 civilian professionals serving the citizens of Columbus, Ohio. [6] The department is accredited by the Committee on Fire Accreditation International, granted in 2007. At the time, it was the second-largest fire department with the accreditation. [7]
Titled "Fire Station # 2–3" in the 1980s [19] [20] 2015–present Station 3 Mitchell J. Brown Fire Station 222 Greenlawn Avenue In use Built on the site of CFD's administration building, training academy, maintenance building, and communications department. [19] 4 1874–1892 Flowers Engine House 479 N. High Street Demolished
During the previous council term, Lamming had been involved in an employment dispute with the township, when the council fired him as chief of its volunteer fire department for leaking details of a workers' compensation claim to Sault Ste. Marie's media. [10]
Dubreuilville is a township in the Canadian province of Ontario, located in the Algoma District. Established as a company town in 1961 by the Dubreuil Brothers lumber company, [2] Dubreuilville was incorporated as a municipality in 1977. The town is located along the Algoma Central Railway, on Highway 519, 32 kilometres (20 mi) east of Highway 17.
Unorganized North Algoma District is an unorganized area in northeastern Ontario, Canada, comprising all areas in Algoma District, north of the Sault Ste. Marie to Elliot Lake corridor, which are not part of an incorporated municipality or a First Nation. It covers 43,618.95 km 2 (16,841.37 sq mi) of land, and had a population of 6,050 in 2021. [1]
Algoma District is a district and census division in Northeastern Ontario in the Canadian province of Ontario. The name was created by an American ethnologist, Henry Rowe Schoolcraft (1793–1864), who was appointed Indian agent to the Ojibwe in Sault Ste. Marie region in 1822. "Al" is derived from Algonquin, while "goma" is a variant of gomee ...