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Cedar is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Leelanau County in the U.S. State of Michigan. The CDP had a population of 102 at the 2020 census. Cedar is located within Solon Township, and lies about 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Traverse City. [3] The town is known for its Polish heritage, and is home to an annual polka ...
M-40 meets M-89, and the two highways run concurrently into downtown together on Cedar Street. At the intersection with Cutler Street, M-40/M-89 meets the western end of M-222 and M-40/M-89 turns west onto Cutler Street. The street name changes to Western Avenue as M-40/M-89 curves north and northwest, crossing the Kalamazoo River and leaving town.
It was founded in approximately 1885 by lumberman Benjamin Boughey. He named it Cedar City because it was in a cedar forest. The depot on the Manistee and North-Eastern Railroad [5] continued to be known as Cedar City, long after the post office named simply Cedar was established on August 15, 1893. [6]
Cedar Bluff is located along the Lake Michigan shore and north of 109th Avenue off Blue Star Highway (Elevation: 689 ft/210 [ 4 ] Glenn Haven Shores , also known as Hollywood , [ 5 ] is located east of the Lake Michigan shore and north of Cedar Bluff off Blue Star Memorial Highway ( 42°29′33″N 86°14′15″W / 42.49250°N 86.23750 ...
M-231 begins along M-45 (Lake Michigan Drive) in Robinson Township near the intersection with 120th Avenue. It runs due north through a mix of farm fields and forest lands in Ottawa County . [ 4 ] The highway is a two-lane, limited-access highway . [ 5 ]
M-46 is an east–west state trunkline highway in the US state of Michigan between Muskegon and Port Sanilac, terminating near Lake Michigan and Lake Huron on each end. Except for the north–south segment that corresponds with the US Highway 131 (US 131) freeway between Cedar Springs and Howard City, M-46 is practically a due east–west surface highway.
M-57 was lengthened after a western extension in late 1948 or early 1949. The highway was routed concurrently with US 131 to Cedar Springs and then west to M-37 at Kent City. [23] [24] A new routing on the eastern end was designated in late 1956 or early 1957; this routing shifted the eastern terminus out of Otisville to its current location.
The history of Grand River Avenue, and US 16 in Michigan, dates back to before the earliest settlement of Michigan by Europeans. The route has been the basis for an Indian trail, a pathway for European settlers, a state highway, a part of the US Highway System, and a section of the Interstate Highway System.