
Michigan Facts, State Trivia & Information
- Detroit is known as the car capital of the world.
- Alpena is the home of the world's largest cement plant.
- Rogers City boasts the world's largest limestone quarry.
- Elsie is the home of the world's largest registered Holstein dairy
herd.
- Michigan is first in the United States production of peat and
magnesium compounds and second in gypsum and iron ore.
- Colon is home to the world's largest manufacture of magic supplies.
- The state Capitol with its majestic dome was built in Lansing in
l879.
- Although Michigan is often called the "Wolverine State" there are no
longer any wolverines in Michigan.
- Michigan ranks first in state boat registrations.
- The Packard Motor Car Company in Detroit manufactured the first
air-conditioned car in 1939.
- The oldest county (based on date of incorporation) is Wayne in 1815.
- Sault Ste. Marie was founded by Father Jacques Marquette in 1668. It
is the third oldest remaining settlement in the United States.
- In 1817 the University of Michigan was the first university
established by any of the states. Originally named Cathelepistemian and
located in Detroit the name was changed in 1821. The university moved to
Ann Arbor in 1841.
- The city of Novi was named from its designation as Stagecoach Stop #
6 or No.VI.
- Michigan State University has the largest single campus student body
of any Michigan university. It is the largest institution of higher
learning in the state and one of the largest universities in the
country.
- Michigan State University was founded in 1855 as the nation's first
land-grant university and served as the prototype for 69 land-grant
institutions later established under the Morrill Act of 1862. It was the
first institution of higher learning in the nation to teach scientific
agriculture.
- The largest village in Michigan is Caro.
- Michigan's state stone, The Petoskey is the official state stone. It
is found along the shores of Lake Michigan.
- The Mackinac Bridge is one of the longest suspension bridges in the
world. Connecting the upper and lower peninsulas of Michigan, it spans 5
miles over the Straits of Mackinac, which is where Lake Michigan and
Lake Huron meet. The Mighty Mac took 3 years to complete and was opened
to traffic in 1957.
- Gerald R. Ford grew up in Grand Rapids and became the 38th president
of the United States He attended the University of Michigan where he was
a football star. He served on a World War II aircraft carrier and
afterward represented Michigan in Congress for 24 years. He was also was
an Eagle Scout, the highest rank in Boy Scouts.
- The Kellogg Company has made Battle Creek the Cereal Capital of the
World. The Kellogg brothers accidentally discovered the process for
producing flaked cereal products and sparked the beginning of the dry
cereal industry.
- The painted turtle is Michigan's state reptile.
- The western shore of Michigan has many sand dunes. The Sleeping Bear
Dunes rise 460 feet above Lake Michigan. Living among the dunes is the
dwarf lake iris the official state wildflower.
- Vernors ginger ale was created in Detroit and became the first soda
pop made in the United States. In 1862, pharmacist James Vernor was
trying to create a new beverage when he was called away to serve our
country in the Civil War. When he returned, 4 years later, the drink he
had stored in an oak case had acquired a delicious gingery flavor.
- The Detroit Zoo was the first zoo in America to feature cageless,
open-exhibits that allowed the animals more freedom to roam.
- Michigan is the only place in the world with a floating post office.
The J.W. Westcott II is the only boat in the world that delivers mail to
ships while they are still underway. They have been operating for 125
years.
- Indian River is the home of the largest crucifix in the world. It is
called the Cross in the Woods.
- Michigan has the longest freshwater shoreline in the world.
- Michigan has more shoreline than any other state except Alaska.
- The Ambassador Bridge was named by Joseph Bower, the person credited
with making the bridge a reality, who thought the name "Detroit-Windsor
International Bridge" as too long and lacked emotional appeal. Bower
wanted to "symbolize the visible expression of friendship of two peoples
with like ideas and ideals."
- Michigan has more than 11,000 inland lakes and more than 36,000
miles of streams.
- Michigan has 116 lighthouses and navigational lights.
- Seul Choix Point Lighthouse in Gulliver has been guiding ships since
1895. The working light also functions as a museum, which houses early
1900s furnishings and maritime artifacts.
- Forty of the state's 83 counties adjoin at least one of the Great
Lakes. Michigan is the only state that touches four of the five Great
Lakes.
- Standing anywhere in the state a person is within 85 miles of one of
the Great Lakes.
- Michigan includes 56,954 square miles of land area; 1,194 square
miles of inland waters; and 38,575 square miles of Great Lakes water
area.
- Sault Ste. Marie was established in 1668 making it the oldest town
between the Alleghenies and the Rockies.
- Michigan was the first state to provide in its Constitution for the
establishment of public libraries.
- Michigan was the first state to guarantee every child the right to
tax-paid high school education.
- Four flags have flown over Michigan - French, English, Spanish and
United States.
- Isle Royal Park shelters one of the largest moose herds remaining in
the United States.
- Some of the longest bulk freight carriers in the world operate on
the Great Lakes. Ore carriers 1,000 feet long sail Michigan's inland
seas.
- The Upper Michigan Copper Country is the largest commercial deposit
of native copper in the world.
- The 19 chandeliers in the Capitol in Lansing are one of a kind and
designed especially for the building by Tiffany's of New York. Weighing
between 800-900 pounds apiece they are composed of copper, iron and
pewter.
- The first auto traffic tunnel built between two nations was the
mile-long Detroit-Windsor tunnel under the Detroit River.
- The world's first international submarine railway tunnel was opened
between Port Huron, Michigan and Sarnia, Ontario, Canada in 1891.
- The nation's first regularly scheduled air passage service began
operation between Grand Rapids and Detroit in 1926.
- In 1879 Detroit telephone customers were first in the nation to be
assigned phone numbers to facilitate handling calls.
- In 1929, the Michigan State Police established the first state
police radio system in the world.
- Grand Rapids is home to the 24-foot Leonardo da Vinci horse, called
Il Gavallo, it is the largest equestrian bronze sculpture in the Western
Hemisphere.
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