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Bay City: July 19, 1956: Bay City YMCA Informational Designation 111 North Madison Avenue Bay City: August 20, 1992: Bay City Sawdust Strike Informational Designation Water and Sixth streets Bay City: May 15, 1987: Beet Sugar Industry Informational Designation 2 miles south of Bay City on M-13, in Veteran's Park: Bay City vicinity January 19, 1957
Bay City The original 1982 district was roughly bounded by Green and N. Madison Aves, 5th and 6th Sts. The boundaries were increased on December 12, 2012 (refnum 12001027) to those noted, which encompass the original boundaries.
The Center Avenue Neighborhood Residential District is a residential historic district located in Bay City, Michigan, running primarily along Center, Fifth, and Sixth Avenues between Monroe and Green Avenues, with additional portions of the district along Fourth between Madison and Johnson, down to Tenth Avenue between Madison and Lincoln, along Green to Ridge, and around Carroll Park.
3,212.77/sq mi (1,240.51/km 2) ... Bay City is a city in and the county seat of Bay County, Michigan, United States. The population was 32,661 as of the 2020 census.
The Portsmouth Lodge No. 104 was chartered the following year. Lodge members soon voted to move to Bay City, and the name changed to Bay Lodge No. 104 in 1869. The city grew, and five more lodges were spun off from the Bay Lodge. The second of these was Valley Lodge No. 189, founded in 1872 and chartered in 1873.
Bay City was founded in the mid-1840s, and the first commercial establishment began admitting customers in 1850-51. The initial commercial development in Bay City, in the 1850s and 1860s, occurred along North Water Street, adjacent to the lumbering businesses along the river.
Growth came quickly: by 1865 a plank road to Midland and a second road to Saginaw were opened, and the Third Street Bridge connecting Wenona to Bay City was constructed. By 1866 Wenona had over 1000 residents, and in 1867 a railroad line was laid, and the first brick building on Midland Street was built.
Medor and Joseph Trombley, both French-Canadian fur traders, settled in the Saginaw Valley in the early 1830s and purchased large tracts of land along the Saginaw River between what is now Twenty-third Street and Cass Avenue in Bay City. In 1835, they began construction on this house, hiring Nathan C. Case, a carpenter, to construct it.