History of Ann Arbor, Michigan
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The recorded History of Ann Arbor in the U.S. state of Michigan, began with settlers from various eastern states in January 1824. The original founders were John Allen (from Virginia) and Elisha Rumsey (from New York).
Their wives' names were both Ann (in the latter case, either Ann Rumsey or Ana Rumsey, depending on the text consulted). One account states that Allen and Rumsey decided to name the settlement "Annarbour," for their spouses (after discarding the alternative names Allensville and Anapolis) and for the stands of burr oak in the 640 acres (2.6 km²) of land they had purchased for $800 from the federal government.[1] The Native Americans of the region knew the settlement as Kaw-goosh-kaw-nick, after the sound of Allen's grist mill.
Rumsey died in 1827; Allen eventually became the town's postmaster, newspaper publisher, village president, and all-around promoter.
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[edit] The 19th century
Several mills, a tannery, and a general store flourished in the settlement. The general store (or tavern, again depending on the source) was painted bright red and the corner on which it was established, at Huron and Main, became known as Bloody Corners. In 1836, Ann Arbor lost a bid to be established as the state capital. However, in 1837 Ann Arbor won a bid to be the new site for the University of Michigan when it offered forty acres (160,000 m²) of land for the site.[2] The Michigan Central Railroad arrived in 1839, making the town a major regional transportation hub.
Ann Arbor became the seat of Washtenaw County in 1827, incorporated as a village in 1833, and was chartered as a city in 1851, which was also the year that John Allen died. The town became home first to large numbers of German immigrants (particularly from the state of Württemberg) and escapees from the Great Irish Famine, though Canadians accounted for the largest percentage of Ann Arbor's immigrants during most of the 1800s.
[edit] The 20th century and progressivism
During World War I, Germans became targets of animosity because of their alleged sympathy for the German state, and four professors in the University's German department were dismissed because of what was alleged by the regents to be an "excess" of faculty in the department.
During World War II, Ford Motor Company's nearby Willow Run plant turned out B-24 Liberator bombers and the population of Ann Arbor exploded with an influx of military personnel, war workers, and their families.
In 1960, Ann Arbor was the site of major speeches by both major presidential candidates, John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon. On October 14, 1960, Kennedy outlined his proposal for what would become the Peace Corps on the front steps of the Michigan Union (a plaque still marks the spot). On May 22, 1964, Lyndon B. Johnson unveiled his Great Society initiative during a University of Michigan commencement address.[3]
During the 1960s, Ann Arbor became a locus for both the American civil rights movement and the anti-Vietnam War movement. It was, for example, the site of the first major meetings of Students for a Democratic Society in 1960. After a number of protests and an extensive public campaign, the city passed its first fair housing ordinance in 1963.
In June 1969, students and protesters took over portions of South University Avenue over the course of three days of protests and rioting. However, the police, drawn from many surrounding communities, and many with their names and badges covered up, took back the streets with the use of tear gas, police dogs, and the threat of firearms. Between 1972 and 1976, the city council went through a period in which three members of the Human Rights Party (HRP) were elected and fought for several measures that at the time seemed radical, including a pioneering anti-discrimination ordinance, an ordinance reducing penalties for possession of marijuana (the famous "five-dollar pot law"), and a rent control ordinance. In 1973, HRP candidate Kathy Kozachenko was elected to the Ann Arbor city council, becoming the nation's first openly gay candidate to run successfully for elected office.
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Ann Arbor was home to many influential rock bands, such as the MC5, Alice Cooper, Iggy Pop, Brownsville Station, George Clinton, Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band, Mitch Ryder, and The Rationals. Madonna was a dance major at the University of Michigan in the late 1970s. In 1969, avant-garde jazz bandleader Sun Ra and his Arkestra spent about a month living in an Ann Arbor frat house, with poet-impresario John Sinclair and his radical White Panther Party for next-door neighbors.
Four years after leaving the White House, Gerald R. Ford – a former student and college football player at Michigan – opened his Presidential Library in Ann Arbor. His Museum is located in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The economy of Ann Arbor underwent a gradual shift from a manufacturing base to a service and technology base over the course of the 20th century, a shift which accelerated in the 1970s and 1980s. As of 1999, Ann Arbor was home to 25 research centers and libraries.
During the same period, land values have increased and the city has gentrified. Some long-time residents have been driven out by high prices.
Conservatives groups and movements have also started within the city. The Word of God, a charismatic Catholic movement of national scope, started in 1967.[4] Ann Arbor also became the site of the Thomas More Law Center, a leading religious-conservative advocacy group founded in 1999.
[edit] The 21st century
On November 2, 2004, a proposition to legalize medical marijuana was passed by a margin of 74% to 26%. Though the city attorney and police chief subsequently declared the law unenforceable, possession of marijuana for personal use has been essentially decriminalized in Ann Arbor for three decades, punishable only by a $25 civil-infraction fine and no criminal record. However, the much harsher state law applies to possession on university property (see Marijuana laws in Ann Arbor).
The same day, voters approved a Greenbelt plan: the city government would buy up large swaths of land bordering Ann Arbor to prevent sprawling development. Since then, local debate has hinged on whether (and how) to accommodate development within city limits. The Greenbelt has been particularly divisive, because if other planned measures (like increasing the city's density) stall, already high property values could rise further, pushing low and middle income residents to new exurbs beyond the greenbelt.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Chapter 1 (1824-1859): Ann Arbor/Annarbour - the Naming of Ann Arbor (2003). Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824-1974, accessed through the Ann Arbor District Library at moaa.aadl.org/PictHistory/.
- ^ Marwil, Jonathan (June 15, 1991). A History of Ann Arbor. University of Michigan Press, 13. ISBN 0-472-06463-0.
- ^ Progress and Preservation (2003). Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824-1974, accessed through the Ann Arbor District Library at moaa.aadl.org/PictHistory/1940-1974pg4.php.
- ^ From Protest to Outer Space (2003). Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824-1974, accessed through the Ann Arbor District Library at moaa.aadl.org/PictHistory/1940-1974pg3.php.
[edit] References
- Encyclopedia of Michigan. (1999). St. Clair Shores, MI: Somerset Publishers.
- Marwil, Jonathan. (1990). A History of Ann Arbor. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
- Michigan Gazetteer. (1991). Wilmington, DE: American Historical Publications.
- Schmittroth, Linda (Ed.). (1994). Cities of the United States (4th ed.). Detroit: Gale Group.
[edit] External links
- "The Making of Ann Arbor" -- comprehensive site with primary documents, hosted by the Ann Arbor District Library
- Pictorial History of Ann Arbor 1824 - 1974
- Libraries & Archives Directory for University of Michigan
- The University of Michigan - Bentley Historical Library
- Ann Arbor History, hosted by the University of Michigan