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The Gibraltar Trade Center was one of the nation's largest indoor flea markets; the location was over 600,000 square feet (56,000 m 2). In addition, some merchants set up shop outside the building, along its perimeter. On July 2, 2017, Gibraltar Trade Center Inc announced the closing of the Mount Clemens Weekend Market.
Mount Clemens: June 15, 1995: Saint Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church: 23000 Gratiot Ave, 2 blocks N of 9 Mile Rd Eastepointe: February 22, 2001: Selfridge Field: Roadside M-59 near Mount Clemens Mount Clemens vicinity September 17, 1957: Selinsky-Green House: 22504 11 Mile Road, just east of Jefferson Avenue St. Clair Shores: July 26, 1978
Mount Clemens is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 15,697 at the 2020 census . [ 4 ] It is the seat of government of Macomb County [ 8 ] and part of the Detroit metropolitan area .
On 9 January 1920, a federal grand jury in Detroit handed down an indictment of the Mount Clemens Sugar Company and President James Davidson, charging sale of sugar at the excessive price of seventeen cents per pound. [5] ”After Captain Davidson died in 1929, the Mount Clemens Sugar Company went through a number of changes of management.
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The Anton Art Center has been used for exhibitions of local, national and international artists. Art related classes are also offered to the community at the facility. As a result of a collaboration with the Detroit Institute of Arts , artwork from the museum's collection is occasionally loaned to the Anton Art Center for display.
Mount Clemens station is a historic railroad depot located at 198 Grand Street in Mt. Clemens, Michigan. Thomas Edison learned telegraphy at this station in his youth. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1981 as the Grand Trunk Western Railroad, Mount Clemens Station [1] and designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1973. [2]
On March 21, 1837, the Legislature authorized Governor Mason to contract a loan for the construction of the canal from Mt. Clemens to Rochester, a railroad from Shelby to Detroit, a railroad from Detroit across the State (the Michigan Central) and a railroad from Port Huron into the interior, to be known as the Port Huron & Grand River road.