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The Holton ZIP code, 49425, serves most of the township, as well as portions of surrounding townships. [ 9 ] Brunswick is a small unincorporated community in section 13 of the township at 43°25′59″N 86°2′25″W / 43.43306°N 86.04028°W / 43.43306; -86.04028 ( Brunswick, Michigan ) [ 10 ] on M-120 at the eastern boundary ...
Frank Holton Company, makers of the "Holton" trumpet, trombone, French horn, and euphonium Holton-Arms School , a private girls' school in Bethesda, Maryland, near Washington, D.C. Houlton (disambiguation)
Burlington, 5 places in Kansas, Iowa, Michigan, Vermont, and Wisconsin – Burling family (This family owned the land upon which the city in Vermont was built. The other cities derive their name from the Vermont one). [91] [93] [94] Burnet, Texas – Governor David G. Burnet [91] Burnsville, Indiana – Brice Bruns (founder) [91]
Holton was platted in 1854, when the Ohio and Mississippi Railway was extended to that point. [4] The town derived its name from Jesse Holman, the original owner of the town site. [4] A post office has been in operation at Holton since 1854. [5] On March 2, 2012, an EF3 tornado severely damaged the town of Holton and killed three people. [6]
The county that contains Holton was previously named Calhoun County for the pro-slavery South Carolina Senator John C. Calhoun. In 1859 the name was changed to Jackson County. Holton was chosen as the county seat in 1858. A frame building served as the first courthouse on the east side of the square, near the middle of the block.
Muskegon County (/ m ə ˈ s k iː ɡ ən / mə-SKEE-gən) is a county in the U.S. state of Michigan.As of 2020, the population was 175,824. [2] The county seat is Muskegon. [3]Muskegon County comprises the Muskegon, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area, which is part of the larger Grand Rapids-Kentwood-Muskegon, MI Combined Statistical Area.
Holton is a town in Marathon County, Wisconsin, United States. It is part of the Wausau , Wisconsin Metropolitan Statistical Area . The population was 873 at the 2010 census.
The city was founded in the 1880s by Swiss-German settlers, many of whom entered from Mexico.The construction of railroads in the 1890s, the All-American Canal in the late 1940s, and U.S. Route 80 in the 1920s (later converted to Interstate 8 in the 1970s) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) economic boom in the 1990s brought more people to Holtville and the Imperial Valley.