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January 31, 1985 (140 E. 2nd St. Flint: 13: William Carmer House: William Carmer House: November 26, 1982 (10448 Washburn Rd. Ortonville: 14: Volney Church-Carlos B ...
DR.1050M Modified version of DR.1050, with swept fin, one piece all-moving tailplane and available with Continental O-200-A or Potez 4E engines (as DR.1051M). [3] [8] DR.1050M1 Final version of DR.1050, with one piece all-moving tailplane and available with Continental O-200-A or Potez 4E engines (as DR.1051M1). [3]
Each drive-in campground has at least one handicapped-accessible campsite with an extended picnic table, boardwalk, pedestal fire grate, and nearby restroom; Log Slide overlook; Miners Castle overlooks (except lower overlook trail, which includes stairs and is steep) Munising Falls viewing platform, with a paved trail
The Edsel & Eleanor Ford House is open to the public for guided tours. Located on 87 acres (350,000 m 2) at 1100 Lake Shore Road in Grosse Pointe Shores, the 30,000-square-foot (2,787 m 2) house has a fine collection of original antiques and art, and beautiful lakefront grounds. The grounds include the frontage on Ford's Cove, the total Lake St ...
April 5, 1984 (4643 First Street: Columbiaville: The former train station functioned from 1893 to 1964 and was a prominent stopover to and from Detroit and Bay City.It was built by William Peter, who platted Columbiaville in 1871.
Louis Graveraet Kaufman, c. 1910. American businessman Louis Graveraet Kaufman began building Granot Loma in 1919, for use as a summer residence. He hired Marshall and Fox of Chicago as architects and employed three hundred local craftsmen, [6] and was believed to have hired local expert log builder Nestor Kallioinen to oversee the construction. [7]
Roughly E. Huron St. and S. Saginaw St. within the Woodward Ave. Loop (formerly Wide Track Dr.), Pontiac, Michigan Coordinates 42°38′13″N 83°17′35″W / 42.63694°N 83.29306°W / 42.63694; -83.29306 ( Pontiac Commercial Historic
Augustus Woodward's plan for the city following 1805 fire. Detroit, settled in 1701, is one of the oldest cities in the Midwest. It experienced a disastrous fire in 1805 which nearly destroyed the city, leaving little present-day evidence of old Detroit save a few east-side streets named for early French settlers, their ancestors, and some pear trees which were believed to have been planted by ...