Historical Marker Search

You searched for Postal Code: 48336

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ZSL_spicer-barn_Farmington-Hills-MI.html
Built c. 1880
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ZSK_lemuel-botsford-house_Farmington-Hills-MI.html
Lemuel and Lucy Botsford were Quakers. From Salisbury, Connecticut, they moved to Lyons, New York, and in 1836 to Farmington's Quaker settlement. In 1837 the Botsfords built this Greek Revival house on what became known as Botsford Hill. The house…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ZSJ_kirby-white-house_Farmington-Hills-MI.html
This Federalist Revival House was designed by talented architect Marcus Burrowes for Kirby White, an executive of Ferry Morse Seed Company. In the 1930s Ferry Morse was the largest seed company in the world. This house is considered the work of a …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ZSI_gray-spicer-house_Farmington-Hills-MI.html
Built in 1926
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ZSH_goodenough-spicer-stable_Farmington-Hills-MI.html
Built c. 1918
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1YSQ_heeney-sundquist-funeral-home-inc_Farmington-MI.html
This plaque is issued by the Historical Society of Michigan in recognition of Heeney-Sundquist Funeral Home, Inc., founded in 1850, for more than 100 years of continuous operation in service to the people of Michigan and for contributing to the ec…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1LTX_travel-through-time-on-farmingtons-grand-river-avenue_Farmington-MI.html
Long before our everyday journeys, people traveled along this important road. This was once the Grand River Trail, a pathway Native Americans followed across Michigan before European settlement. Farmington founder Arthur Power came here along this…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1LTB_methodist-episcopal-church_Farmington-MI.html
Sixteen pioneers organized the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1829. The congregation dedicated its first church building in 1844. When that church burned in 1920, Detroit architects and church members Wells Butterfield and his daughter Emily Butter…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1LPA_the-potawatomi-indians-of-farmington_Farmington-MI.html
The Potawatomi, the Algonquin-speaking tribe most closely associated with this region, were often more friendly to the French and British than to the Americans. Religious and unwarlike, they had no permanent village here as they considered Farming…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1LMS_farmington-masonic-temple-and-farmington-township-hall_Farmington-MI.html
The building was constructed in 1876 by the Township of Farmington and the Farmington Masonic Lodge No. 151. The Township government occupied the first floor of the building until 1963 when a new Township facility was constructed. The Masonic Lodg…
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