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Land purchases in Canton Township peaked in 1833, and all but 14 of the 328 parcels were sold by 1836. [2] By the 1840 census, the population of Canton Township was 1081. Many families whose houses are included in this MPS were among the first wave of settlers purchasing property in Canton.
Highland Park: July 17, 1997: Highland Park Presbyterian Church† 14 Cortland Street Highland Park: August 12, 1983: Hilberry Theater: 4743 Cass Avenue Detroit: September 8, 1982: Holy Family Roman Catholic Church: 641 Walter P. Chrysler Highway Detroit: February 16, 1989: Hook and Ladder House No. 5-Detroit Fire Department Repair Shop† 3434 ...
Canton is an unincorporated community within the township, although the name often refers to the whole township itself. It is located just south of M-153 (Ford Road) at The Canton post office, first established in 1852, serves an area conterminous with the township itself—using the 48187 ZIP Code north of Cherry Hill Road and the 48188 ZIP Code to the south.
PIKE TWP. − A Canton-owned, 500-acre property in Pike Township that was home to city sewage disposal operations for roughly 50 years may become a new county park. Canton leaders are working with ...
Hampden_Park,_early_1900s.jpg (750 × 556 pixels, file size: 81 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
An estimated 400,000 people crowded the route from the Akron-Canton Airport along Cleveland Avenue NW to downtown Canton. Nearly 10,000 people showed up at the Civic Center, hoping to get inside ...
Cherry Hill, settled in 1825, [2] was an early crossroads hamlet in Canton Township. [3] The town was originally called "Ridge" (also the origin of "Ridge Road") due to its position atop the ridge shore of an ancient lake. [3] The first area church, the Cherry Hill United Methodist Church, was built in the village in 1834. [2]
Hampden Park provided a neutral venue between Cambridge and New Haven suitable for the annual Harvard-Yale game between 1889 and 1894, [27] but the 1894 edition led to such violence and injury that the match was suspended for two years. It subsequently became known as the Hampden Park Blood Bath, also known as the Springfield Massacre. [28]