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Beach at end of Michigan, River Road, Dwight and Park streets Oscoda: July 21, 1988: Five Channels Dam Archeological District† 6051 State Route 65 Glennie: March 13, 2002: Green Pack House: 5014 N US-23 Oscoda: January 27, 1983: Ladies Literary Club Building: 316 Newman Street East Tawas: April 5, 1974: Lumbering on the Huron Shore ...
The Edward E. Hartwick Memorial Building is a 1-1/2 story rustic log structure built entirely of Michigan pine, and is one of the few remaining examples of the rustic log architecture used in the 1920s and 1930s by the Michigan State Park system. 3: M-72–Au Sable River Bridge: M-72–Au Sable River Bridge: December 9, 1999
The Winter Inn has continued to serve as a hotel until the present day, [when?] and is significant as a still-functioning example of a modest, locally owned hotel of a type once common in small towns like Greenville. It was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1979 [5] and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [1]
The Red Apple, owned by Peter Kourakos since 1984, closed in 2006. It’s been vacant ever since then and had been on the market for $2.2 million in hopes the arrival of Resorts World Catskills ...
The Red Apple Rest in March 2013, seven years after the place was abandoned. The building is now fenced off. The Red Apple Rest was a cafeteria-style restaurant on New York State Route 17, in the Southfields section of Tuxedo, New York. [1] It was a noted way station for people traveling to the hotels of the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York.
Camp Gibbs was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the latter half of 1935 [101] on land purchased by the US from the Michigan Mineral Land Company, [103] and is the only remaining CCC camp in Michigan. The camp was used from 1935 to 1941 as a Michigan Social Welfare Community Organization site to house workers employed in the forest.
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Michigan's first NHLs were designated on October 9, 1960, when three locations were chosen. The latest designation was made on January 13, 2021. Eleven Historic Landmarks in Michigan are more specifically designated National Historic Landmark Districts, meaning that they cover a large area rather than a single building. [4]