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Bounded by Lakewood Dr, Meridian Rd, Island Rd, and West River Rd Grosse Ile: December 5, 1986: Johnson's Tavern Informational Site 35118 Michigan Wayne: June 27, 1969: Albert Kahn House† 208 Mack Avenue Detroit: December 7, 1971: Charles A. Kandt House: 22331 Morley Dearborn: July 19, 1990: Angus Keith House: 9510 Horse Mill Road Grosse Ile ...
Location of Wayne County in Indiana. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Wayne County, Indiana. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Wayne County, Indiana, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many ...
Solomon Dunham House (1852) - Wayne's first house. Substantially altered. John Warnely House (c. 1913) 32 W 245 Army Trail Road (c. 1855–59) - Solomon Dunham may have been involved with its construction. James Campbell Hardware Store (c. 1880–85) Tom Campbell Store (1904) 32 W 252 Army Trail Road - Non-contributing gas station
The Chicago Road that ran through Wayne was paved with oak logs in 1850, becoming the Detroit and Saline Plank Road. In 1867 it was changed to its current name of Michigan Avenue. In 1869, Wayne was incorporated as a village with a population of about 800 people. (In 1960 Wayne officially became a city.) [6]
Wayne County was formed in 1811 from portions of Clark and Dearborn counties. It was named for Gen. "Mad" Anthony Wayne, who was an officer during the Revolutionary War. Wayne is mainly remembered for his service in the 1790s in the Northwest Indian War, which included many actions in Indiana and Ohio. Randolph County was formed from the ...
Bill Caul (born September 2, 1942) is a United States politician, who was a member of the Michigan House of Representatives from 2004 to 2010, ...
The Christian Science congregation used the building until 1961, when they sold it to Wayne State University. Wayne State remodeled the interior to create a theatre to seat 532 people, serving as a repertory theater. [9] The building was re-christened in honor of Clarence B. Hilberry, the fourth president of WSU, and reopened in January 1964.
The Wing "Ring" Cemetery was founded by the descendants of the seven sons of Simeon Wing & Mary Allen. The seven sons (Thomas, Ebenezer, Dr. Moses, Aaron, Allen, Simeon & William) emigrated from Sandwich (Pocasset, now Bourne), Barnstable Co., Massachusetts to what was originally called New Sandwich at the end of the Revolutionary War.