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Native
American Chippewa and Menominee tribes lived in the Upper Peninsula and
Miami, Ottawa, and Potawatomi tribes in the Lower Peninsula when French
explorer Étienne Brulé arrived in 1620.
He named the region New France. In
1634, Jean Nicolet explored parts of the Upper Peninsula for France.
Missionaries arrived and established a mission at Keweenaw Way in
1660. In
1668, Father Jacques Marquette established the first permanent
settlement of Michigan at Sault Sainte Marie.
By 1700, missionaries had explored much of the region and built
missions and trading posts throughout both the Upper and Lower
Peninsulas. At
the end of the French and Indian Wars in 1763, England controlled most
French claims in North America, including Michigan.
Chief Pontiac led the Ottawa Indians in attacking a number of
forts this same year, killing many of the settlers. During
the Revolutionary War, settlers in Michigan favored British rule and
often raided American settlements.
At the end of the war in 1783, Michigan came under American
control.
Detroit and Fort Mackinac however, did not surrender until 1796. In
1787, Michigan became part of the Northwest Territory.
In 1805, the Lower Peninsula and the eastern part of the Upper
Peninsula became the Territory of Michigan.
Britain recaptured Detroit and Fort Mackinac during the War of
1812, and then returned it at the end of the war two years later. With
completion of the Erie Canal in 1825, American settlers now had water
transportation to the western territories.
Many moved to Michigan from the eastern states.
After five years of trying to settle a land dispute with Ohio,
Michigan became the 26th state on January 26, 1837. Michigan’s
Upper Peninsula proved to hold many valuable minerals.
In 1855, the Soo Canal was completed and minerals could be sent
to iron and steel factories along the Great Lakes.
By 1870, lumbering in the northern forests led the nation in
lumber production. No
battles were fought on Michigan land during the Civil War (1861-1865),
but over 90,000 Michigan soldiers fought in the Union Army.
The Fourth Michigan Calvary under General Custer captured
Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy on May 10, 1865. Michigan
soon became center to a new automobile industry.
In 1899, Ransom Olds started the Olds Motor Works in Detroit.
Henry Ford organized the Ford Motor Company in Dearborn in 1903.
Other plants were built in Lansing and Flint.
Detroit soon became known as the Automobile Capital of the World. The
Great Depression (1929-1939) caused hundreds of thousands of people to
lose their jobs.
A government program, The Civilian Conservation Corps, had over
100 camps in Michigan employing men to conserve and develop natural
resources.
Other public works projects were available through The Works
Progress Administration. During
both World Wars, the entire automobile industry switched to
manufacturing tanks, jeeps, airplanes, and other needed war materials.
This production helped to end the Great Depression.
In 1955, a new copper mine opened in Ontonagon.
Shipping was facilitated in 1957 with the completion of the
Mackinac Bridge, connecting the Upper and Lower Peninsulas. Racial
problems escalated in 1967.
Forty-three people were killed and over $45 million worth of
property ruined, in an eight-day riot in Detroit.
New taxes were adopted to bring increase revenue for education,
welfare, and other government services.
In 1972, a state lottery was also established to help raise money
for these purposes. The
1970s brought another recession nationwide to the economy.
With an increase in international markets, the automobile
industry slumped.
By 1980, Michigan had the highest unemployment rate in the
nation.
Gratefully, automotive sales increased in 1984 that reduced the
state unemployment. |