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The Lawrence Andrew Young Cottage was built originally as a private residence for Chicago attorney Lawrence Andrew Young. In 1944 the Mackinac Island State Park Commission purchased the home for its original cost of $15,000. It is now used as the Michigan governor's summer residence.
Woodland Park (also known as "Woodland Park Resort") is an unincorporated community in the northern part of the township, situated mostly between sections three and four on the north side of Woodland Lake (also known as Brookings or Crooked Lake), although settlement extends around the south side of the lake into sections nine and ten.
Woodland is located in the northeastern corner of Barry County. This is a small agricultural town that is also a bedroom community to the Lansing and Grand Rapids areas. It also has its own village form of government and elementary school. Woodland was first settled in 1837 when Charles & Jonathon Galloway and Charles Haight moved here.
Woodland Township is a civil township of Barry County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 1,994 at the 2020 census . [ 3 ] The village of Woodland is located within the township.
Idlewild was founded in 1912. During this period, a small yet clearly distinguishable African American middle class – largely composed of professionals and small business owners – had been established in many urban centers, including several in the American Midwest.
Oak Park is a city in Oakland County in the U.S. state of Michigan. An inner-ring suburb of Detroit, Oak Park borders Detroit to the north, roughly 14 miles (22.5 km) northwest of downtown Detroit. As of the 2020 census, the city had a population of 29,560. [4]
The Late Woodland portion of the sequence is as follows: Riviere au Vase phase (c. A.D. 800–1000), Younge phase (c. A.D. 1000–1200), the Springwells phase (c. A.D. 1200–1350) and the Wolf phase (c. A.D. 1350–1450). [5] The Younge phase is named after the Younge site, which is the first site where pottery of this phase was excavated.
Marla Buckmaster (1980), Scott Point: A Stratified Late Woodland Site in Northern Lower Michigan, 25th Annual Midwest Archaeological Conference Terrance J. Martin (1982), Animal Remains from the Scott Point site: Evidence for Changing Subsistence Strategies During the Late Woodland Period in Northern Michigan, 86th Ann Mtg. of MI Academy of Science, Arts & Letters