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Road Map of Kent County, Michigan ... NovoPrint USA & Lake Superior Community Partnership (2008). ... This page was last edited on 23 August 2021, ...
The road began at Sheldon Inn at the corner of what is now Michigan Avenue and Geddes Road (named for Washtenaw County settlers Robert and John Geddes) and ended at its western-most point at the mouth of the St. Joseph River at Lake Michigan. [7] It was initially called the St. Joseph Road. [4] Corduroy road
1928-1932 and 1938-1940 Automobile Legal Association Green Book: large scale maps (not very detailed - only major routes) and major city inset maps; turn-by-turn directions can also be used to find old routings through cities; also contains rough route logs (i.e. cities passed through) for some of the longer routes in all eastern states; 1938 ...
Odilon Redon (born Bertrand Redon; French: [ɔdilɔ̃ ʁədɔ̃]; 20 April 1840 – 6 July 1916) was a French Symbolist draftsman, printmaker, and painter. Early in his career, both before and after fighting in the Franco-Prussian War , Redon worked almost exclusively in charcoal and lithography , works known as his noirs .
This site consists of three structures: theUpton Road Bridge, one of only three remaining Parker truss bridges in Michigan, the Elsie Mill Pond Dam, a rock and earth-filled dam with a concrete cap, and Kellogg Bros. & Johnson Mill Site, the foundation and associated remains of the 1865 Kellogg Bros. & Johnson grist mill.
Odilon Redon (1840–1916) Alternative names: Birth name: Bertrand-Jean Redon. ... 20 April 1840 : 6 July 1916 : Location of birth/death: Bordeaux : Paris : Work ...
At Howell the road connected with the Detroit–Howell Plank Road, establishing the first improved connection direct from the state capital to Michigan's largest metropolis. The Lansing–Detroit Plank Road was a toll road until the 1880s, and it eventually evolved into the eastern part of the modern Grand River Avenue. [28]
A detail from A New Map of Michigan with its Canals, Roads & Distances (1842) by Henry Schenck Tanner, showing Osceola County as Unwattin, the county's name from 1840 to 1843. [4] When established by the Michigan Legislature on April 1, 1840, it was named Unwattin County, [4] [5] after Chief Unwattin of the local Ottawa people. [6]