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Wikipedia

Michigan

Michigan (/ˈmɪʃɪɡən/ (listen)) is a state in the Great Lakes region of the upper Midwestern United States. With a population of nearly 10.12 million and an area of nearly 97,000 sq mi (250,000 km2), Michigan is the 10th-largest state by population, the 11th-largest by area, and the largest by area east of the Mississippi River.[b] Its capital is Lansing, and its largest city is Detroit. Metro Detroit is among the nation's most populous and largest metropolitan economies. Its name derives from a gallicized variant of the original Ojibwe word ᒥᓯᑲᒥ (mishigami),[c] meaning "large water" or "large lake".[2][7]

Michigan
State of Michigan
Nickname(s)
"The Great Lake State",[1] "The Wolverine State", "The Mitten State", "Water (Winter) Wonderland"
Motto(s)
Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam circumspice
(English: "If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look about you")
Anthem: "My Michigan"
Map of the United States with Michigan highlighted
CountryUnited States
Before statehoodMichigan Territory
Admitted to the UnionJanuary 26, 1837 (26th)
CapitalLansing
Largest cityDetroit
Largest metro and urban areasDetroit
Government
 • GovernorGretchen Whitmer (D)
 • Lieutenant GovernorGarlin Gilchrist (D)
LegislatureMichigan Legislature (R)
 • Upper houseSenate (R)
 • Lower houseHouse of Representatives (R)
JudiciaryMichigan Supreme Court
U.S. senatorsDebbie Stabenow (D)
Gary Peters (D)
U.S. House delegation7 Democrats
7 Republicans (list)
Area
 • Total99,729 sq mi (250,493 km2)
 • Rank11th
Dimensions
 • Length456[2] mi (734 km)
 • Width386[2] mi (621 km)
Elevation
900 ft (270 m)
Highest elevation1,979 ft (603 m)
Lowest elevation571 ft (174 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total10,077,331[4]
 • Rank10th
 • Density174/sq mi (67.1/km2)
  • Rank17th
 • Median household income
$54,900[5]
 • Income rank
32nd
Demonym(s)Michigander, Michiganian, Yooper (Upper Peninsula)[6]
Language
 • Official languageNone (English, de facto)
 • Spoken languageEnglish 91.11%
Spanish 2.93%
Arabic 1.05%
Other 4.92%
Time zones
Most of stateUTC−05:00 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−04:00 (EDT)
4 U.P. counties (Gogebic, Iron, Dickinson, and Menominee)UTC−06:00 (Central)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−05:00 (CDT)
USPS abbreviation
MI
ISO 3166 codeUS-MI
Traditional abbreviationMich.
Latitude41°41′ N to 48°18′ N
Longitude82°7′ W to 90°25′ W
Websitemichigan.gov
Michigan state symbols
Living insignia
BirdAmerican robin (Turdus migratorius)
FishBrook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis)
FlowerApple blossom (Malus domestica)
Wildflower: Dwarf lake iris (Iris lacustris)
MammalUnofficial: Wolverine (Gulo gulo luscus)
Game animal: White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)
ReptilePainted turtle (Chrysemys picta)
TreeEastern white pine (Pinus strobus)
Inanimate insignia
FossilMastodon (Mammut americanum)
GemstoneIsle Royale greenstone
RockPetoskey stone
SoilKalkaska sand
State route marker
State quarter
Released in 2004
Lists of United States state symbols

Michigan consists of two peninsulas. The Lower Peninsula resembles the shape of a mitten, and comprises a majority of the state's land area. The Upper Peninsula (often called "the U.P.") is separated from the Lower Peninsula by the Straits of Mackinac, a five-mile (8 km) channel that joins Lake Huron to Lake Michigan. The Mackinac Bridge connects the peninsulas. Michigan has the longest freshwater coastline of any political subdivision in the United States, being bordered by four of the five Great Lakes and Lake St. Clair.[8] It also has 64,980 inland lakes and ponds.[9] Michigan has the second-most water of any state, behind only Alaska.[10]

The area was first occupied by a succession of Native American tribes over thousands of years. In the 17th century, French explorers claimed it as part of the New France colony, when it was largely inhabited by indigenous peoples. French and Canadian traders and settlers, Métis, and others migrated to the area, settling largely along the waterways. After France's defeat in the French and Indian War in 1762, the region came under British rule. Britain ceded the territory to the newly independent United States after Britain's defeat in the American Revolutionary War.

The area was part of the larger Northwest Territory until 1800, when western Michigan became part of the Indiana Territory. Michigan Territory was formed in 1805, but some of the northern border with Canada was not agreed upon until after the War of 1812. Michigan was admitted into the Union in 1837 as the 26th state, a free one. It soon became an important center of industry and trade in the Great Lakes region, attracting immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries from many European countries. Immigrants from Finland, Macedonia, and the Netherlands were especially numerous.[11] Migration from Appalachia[12] and of Black Southerners as part of the Great Migration[13] increased in the 1930s, with many settling in Metro Detroit.

Although Michigan has developed a diverse economy, in the early 20th century it became widely known as the center of the U.S. automotive industry, which developed as a major national economic force. It is home to the country's three major automobile companies (whose headquarters are all in Metro Detroit). Once exploited for logging and mining, today the sparsely populated Upper Peninsula is important for tourism due to the abundance of natural resources.[14][15] The Lower Peninsula is a center of manufacturing, forestry, agriculture, services, and high-tech industry.

History

When the first European explorers arrived, the most populous tribes were Algonquian peoples, who include the Anishinaabe groups of Ojibwe, Odaawaa/Odawa (Ottawa), and the Boodewaadamii/Bodéwadmi (Potawatomi). The three nations co-existed peacefully as part of a loose confederation called the Council of Three Fires. The Ojibwe, whose numbers are estimated to have been between 25,000 and 35,000, were the largest.

The Ojibwe Indians (also known as Chippewa in the U.S.), an Anishinaabe tribe, were established in Michigan's Upper Peninsula and northern and central Michigan. Bands also inhabited Ontario and southern Manitoba, Canada; and northern Wisconsin, and northern and north-central Minnesota. The Ottawa Indians lived primarily south of the Straits of Mackinac in northern, western, and southern Michigan, but also in southern Ontario, northern Ohio, and eastern Wisconsin. The Potawatomi were in southern and western Michigan, in addition to northern and central Indiana, northern Illinois, southern Wisconsin, and southern Ontario. Other Algonquian tribes in Michigan, in the south and east, were the Mascouten, the Menominee, the Miami, the Sac (or Sauk), and the Meskwaki (Fox). The Wyandot were an Iroquoian-speaking people in this area; they were historically known as the Huron by the French, and were the historical adversaries of the Iroquois Confederation.

17th century

 
Père Marquette and the Indians (1869) by Wilhelm Lamprecht

French voyageurs and coureurs des bois explored and settled in Michigan in the 17th century. The first Europeans to reach what became Michigan were those of Étienne Brûlé's expedition in 1622. The first permanent European settlement was founded in 1668 on the site where Père Jacques Marquette established Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, as a base for Catholic missions.[16][17] Missionaries in 1671–75 founded outlying stations at Saint Ignace and Marquette. Jesuit missionaries were well received by the area's Indian populations, with few difficulties or hostilities. In 1679, Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle built Fort Miami at present-day St. Joseph. In 1691, the French established a trading post and Fort St. Joseph along the St. Joseph River at the present-day city of Niles.

18th century

In 1701, French explorer and army officer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac founded Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit or "Fort Pontchartrain on-the-Strait" on the strait, known as the Detroit River, between lakes Saint Clair and Erie. Cadillac had convinced King Louis XIV's chief minister, Louis Phélypeaux, Comte de Pontchartrain, that a permanent community there would strengthen French control over the upper Great Lakes and discourage British aspirations.

The hundred soldiers and workers who accompanied Cadillac built a fort enclosing one arpent[18][19] (about 0.85 acres (3,400 m2), the equivalent of just under 200 feet (61 m) per side) and named it Fort Pontchartrain. Cadillac's wife, Marie Thérèse Guyon, soon moved to Detroit, becoming one of the first European women to settle in what was considered the wilderness of Michigan. The town quickly became a major fur-trading and shipping post. The Église de Saint-Anne (Catholic Church of Saint Anne) was founded the same year. While the original building does not survive, the congregation remains active. Cadillac later departed to serve as the French governor of Louisiana from 1710 to 1716. French attempts to consolidate the fur trade led to the Fox Wars, in which the Meskwaki (Fox) and their allies fought the French and their Native allies.

At the same time, the French strengthened Fort Michilimackinac at the Straits of Mackinac to better control their lucrative fur-trading empire. By the mid-18th century, the French also occupied forts at present-day Niles and Sault Ste. Marie, though most of the rest of the region remained unsettled by Europeans. France offered free land to attract families to Detroit, which grew to 800 people in 1765. It was the largest city between Montreal and New Orleans.[20] French settlers also established small farms south of the Detroit River opposite the fort, near a Jesuit mission and Huron village.

 
Map of British America showing the original boundaries of the Province of Quebec and its Quebec Act of 1774 post-annexation boundaries
 
Treaty of Paris, by Benjamin West (1783), an unfinished painting of the American diplomatic negotiators of the Treaty of Paris which brought official conclusion to the Revolutionary War and gave possession of Michigan and other territory to the new United States

From 1660 until the end of French rule, Michigan was part of the Royal Province of New France.[d] In 1760, Montreal fell to the British forces, ending the French and Indian War (1754–1763), the North American front of the Seven Years' War in Europe. Under the 1763 Treaty of Paris, Michigan and the rest of New France east of the Mississippi River were ceded by defeated France to Great Britain.[21] After the Quebec Act was passed in 1774, Michigan became part of the British Province of Quebec. By 1778, Detroit's population reached 2,144 and it was the third-largest city in Quebec province.[22]

During the American Revolutionary War, Detroit was an important British supply center. Most of the inhabitants were French-Canadians or American Indians, many of whom had been allied with the French because of long trading ties. Because of imprecise cartography and unclear language defining the boundaries in the 1783 Treaty of Paris, the British retained control of Detroit and Michigan after the American Revolution. When Quebec split into Lower and Upper Canada in 1791, Michigan was part of Kent County, Upper Canada. It held its first democratic elections in August 1792 to send delegates to the new provincial parliament at Newark (now Niagara-on-the-Lake).[23]

Under terms negotiated in the 1794 Jay Treaty, Britain withdrew from Detroit and Michilimackinac in 1796. It retained control of territory east and south of the Detroit River, which are now included in Ontario, Canada. Questions remained over the boundary for many years, and the United States did not have uncontested control of the Upper Peninsula and Drummond Island until 1818 and 1847, respectively.

19th century

 
 
 
Territorial changes of the Michigan Territory from 1818 to 1836

During the War of 1812, the United States forces at Fort Detroit surrendered Michigan Territory (effectively consisting of Detroit and the surrounding area) after a nearly bloodless siege in 1812. A US attempt to retake Detroit resulted in a severe American defeat in the River Raisin Massacre. This battle, still ranked as the bloodiest ever fought in the state, had the highest number of American casualties of any battle of the war.

Michigan was recaptured by the Americans in 1813 after the Battle of Lake Erie. They used Michigan as a base to launch an invasion of Canada, which culminated in the Battle of the Thames. But the more northern areas of Michigan were held by the British until the peace treaty restored the old boundaries. A number of forts, including Fort Wayne, were built by the United States in Michigan during the 19th century out of fears of renewed fighting with Britain.

Michigan Territory governor and judges established the University of Michigan in 1817, as the Catholepistemiad, or the University of Michigania.

The population grew slowly until the opening in 1825 of the Erie Canal through the Mohawk Valley in New York, connecting the Great Lakes to the Hudson River and New York City. The new route attracted a large influx of settlers to the Michigan territory. They worked as farmers, lumbermen, shipbuilders, and merchants, and shipped out grain, lumber, and iron ore. By the 1830s, Michigan had 80,000 residents, more than enough to apply and qualify for statehood.

A Constitutional Convention of Assent was held to lead the territory to statehood.[24] In October 1835 the people approved the Constitution of 1835, thereby forming a state government. Congressional recognition was delayed pending resolution of a boundary dispute with Ohio known as the Toledo War. Congress awarded the "Toledo Strip" to Ohio. Michigan received the western part of the Upper Peninsula as a concession and formally entered the Union as a free state on January 26, 1837. The Upper Peninsula proved to be a rich source of lumber, iron, and copper. Michigan led the nation in lumber production from the 1850s to the 1880s. Railroads became a major engine of growth from the 1850s onward, with Detroit the chief hub.

A second wave of French-Canadian immigrants settled in Michigan during the late 19th to early 20th century, working in lumbering areas in counties on the Lake Huron side of the Lower Peninsula, such as the Saginaw Valley, Alpena, and Cheboygan counties, as well as throughout the Upper Peninsula, with large concentrations in Escanaba and the Keweenaw Peninsula.[25] This was also a period of development of the gypsum industry in Alabaster, Michigan, which became nationally prominent.

The first statewide meeting of the Republican Party took place July 6, 1854, in Jackson, Michigan, where the party adopted its platform. The state was predominantly Republican until the 1930s, reflecting the political continuity of migrants from across the Northern Tier of New England and New York. Michigan made a significant contribution to the Union in the American Civil War and sent more than forty regiments of volunteers to the federal armies.

Michigan modernized and expanded its system of education in this period. The Michigan State Normal School, now Eastern Michigan University, was founded in 1849, for the training of teachers. It was the fourth oldest normal school in the United States and the first U.S. normal school outside New England. In 1899, the Michigan State Normal School became the first normal school in the nation to offer a four-year curriculum. Michigan Agricultural College (1855), now Michigan State University in East Lansing, was founded as the first agricultural college in the nation. Many private colleges were founded as well, and the smaller cities established high schools late in the century.[26]

20th and 21st centuries

Michigan's economy underwent a transformation at the turn of the 20th century. Many individuals, including Ransom E. Olds, John and Horace Dodge, Henry Leland, David Dunbar Buick, Henry Joy, Charles King, and Henry Ford, provided the concentration of engineering know-how and technological enthusiasm to develop the automotive industry.[27] Ford's development of the moving assembly line in Highland Park marked a new era in transportation. Like the steamship and railroad, mass production of automobiles was a far-reaching development. More than the forms of public transportation, the affordable automobile transformed private life. Automobile production became the major industry of Detroit and Michigan, and permanently altered the socioeconomic life of the United States and much of the world.

With the growth, the auto industry created jobs in Detroit that attracted immigrants from Europe and migrants from across the United States, including both blacks and whites from the rural South. By 1920, Detroit was the fourth-largest city in the US. Residential housing was in short supply, and it took years for the market to catch up with the population boom. By the 1930s, so many immigrants had arrived that more than 30 languages were spoken in the public schools, and ethnic communities celebrated in annual heritage festivals. Over the years immigrants and migrants contributed greatly to Detroit's diverse urban culture, including popular music trends. The influential Motown Sound of the 1960s was led by a variety of individual singers and groups.

Grand Rapids, the second-largest city in Michigan, is also an important center of manufacturing. Since 1838, the city has been noted for its furniture industry. In the 21st century, it is home to five of the world's leading office furniture companies. Grand Rapids is home to a number of major companies including Steelcase, Amway, and Meijer. Grand Rapids is also an important center for GE Aviation Systems.

Michigan held its first United States presidential primary election in 1910. With its rapid growth in industry, it was an important center of industry-wide union organizing, such as the rise of the United Auto Workers.

In 1920 WWJ (AM) in Detroit became the first radio station in the United States to regularly broadcast commercial programs. Throughout that decade, some of the country's largest and most ornate skyscrapers were built in the city. Particularly noteworthy are the Fisher Building, Cadillac Place, and the Guardian Building, each of which has been designated as a National Historic Landmark (NHL).

In 1927 a school bombing took place in Clinton County. The Bath School disaster, perpetrated by an adult man, resulted in the deaths of 38 schoolchildren and constitutes the deadliest mass murder in a school in U.S. history.

 
Detroit in the mid-twentieth century. At the time, the city was the fourth-largest U.S. metropolis by population, and held about one-third of the state's population.

Michigan converted much of its manufacturing to satisfy defense needs during World War II; it manufactured 10.9 percent of the United States military armaments produced during the war, ranking second (behind New York) among the 48 states.[28]

Detroit continued to expand through the 1950s, at one point doubling its population in a decade. After World War II, housing was developed in suburban areas outside city cores to meet demand for residences. The federal government subsidized the construction of interstate highways, which were intended to strengthen military access, but also allowed commuters and business traffic to travel the region more easily. Since 1960, modern advances in the auto industry have led to increased automation, high-tech industry, and increased suburban growth.

Michigan is the leading auto-producing state in the US, with the industry primarily located throughout the Midwestern United States; Ontario, Canada; and the Southern United States.[29] With almost ten million residents, Michigan is a large and influential state, ranking tenth in population among the fifty states. Detroit is the centrally located metropolitan area of the Great Lakes Megalopolis and the second-largest metropolitan area in the U.S. (after Chicago) linking the Great Lakes system.

The Metro Detroit area in Southeast Michigan is the state's largest metropolitan area (roughly 50% of the population resides there) and the eleventh largest in the United States. The Grand Rapids metropolitan area in Western Michigan is the state's fastest-growing metro area, with more than 1.3 million residents as of 2006. Metro Detroit receives more than 15 million visitors each year. Michigan has many popular tourist destinations, including areas such as Frankenmuth in The Thumb, and Traverse City on the Grand Traverse Bay in Northern Michigan. Tourists spend about $17 billion annually in Michigan supporting 193,000 jobs.[30]

Michigan typically ranks third or fourth in overall Research & development (R&D) expenditures in the US.[31][32] The state's leading research institutions include the University of Michigan, Michigan State University, and Wayne State University, which are important partners in the state's economy and the state's University Research Corridor.[33] Michigan's public universities attract more than $1.5 B in research and development grants each year.[34] Agriculture also serves a significant role, making the state a leading grower of fruit in the US, including blueberries, cherries, apples, grapes, and peaches.[35]

Government

State government

 
The Michigan State Capitol in Lansing houses the legislative branch of the government of the U.S. state of Michigan.

Michigan is governed as a republic, with three branches of government: the executive branch consisting of the Governor of Michigan and the other independently elected constitutional officers; the legislative branch consisting of the House of Representatives and Senate; and the judicial branch. The Michigan Constitution allows for the direct participation of the electorate by statutory initiative and referendum, recall, and constitutional initiative and referral (Article II, § 9,[36] defined as "the power to propose laws and to enact and reject laws, called the initiative, and the power to approve or reject laws enacted by the legislature, called the referendum. The power of initiative extends only to laws which the legislature may enact under this constitution"). Lansing is the state capital and is home to all three branches of state government.

The governor and the other state constitutional officers serve four-year terms and may be re-elected only once. The current governor is Gretchen Whitmer. Michigan has two official Governor's Residences; one is in Lansing, and the other is at Mackinac Island. The other constitutionally elected executive officers are the lieutenant governor, who is elected on a joint ticket with the governor, the secretary of state, and the attorney general. The lieutenant governor presides over the Senate (voting only in case of a tie) and is also a member of the cabinet. The secretary of state is the chief elections officer and is charged with running many licensure programs including motor vehicles, all of which are done through the branch offices of the secretary of state.

The Michigan Legislature consists of a 38-member Senate and 110-member House of Representatives. Members of both houses of the legislature are elected through first past the post elections by single-member electoral districts of near-equal population that often have boundaries which coincide with county and municipal lines. Senators serve four-year terms concurrent to those of the governor, while representatives serve two-year terms. The Michigan State Capitol was dedicated in 1879 and has hosted the executive and legislative branches of the state ever since.

 
Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D) speaking at a National Guard ceremony in 2019

The Michigan judiciary consists of two courts with primary jurisdiction (the Circuit Courts and the District Courts), one intermediate level appellate court (the Michigan Court of Appeals), and the Michigan Supreme Court. There are several administrative courts and specialized courts. District courts are trial courts of limited jurisdiction, handling most traffic violations, small claims, misdemeanors, and civil suits where the amount contended is below $25,000. District courts are often responsible for handling the preliminary examination and for setting bail in felony cases. District court judges are elected to terms of six years. In a few locations, municipal courts have been retained to the exclusion of the establishment of district courts. There are 57 circuit courts in the State of Michigan, which have original jurisdiction over all civil suits where the amount contended in the case exceeds $25,000 and all criminal cases involving felonies. Circuit courts are also the only trial courts in the State of Michigan which possess the power to issue equitable remedies. Circuit courts have appellate jurisdiction from district and municipal courts, as well as from decisions and decrees of state agencies. Most counties have their own circuit court, but sparsely populated counties often share them. Circuit court judges are elected to terms of six years. State appellate court judges are elected to terms of six years, but vacancies are filled by an appointment by the governor. There are four divisions of the Court of Appeals in Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing, and Marquette. Cases are heard by the Court of Appeals by panels of three judges, who examine the application of the law and not the facts of the case unless there has been grievous error pertaining to questions of fact. The Michigan Supreme Court consists of seven members who are elected on non-partisan ballots for staggered eight-year terms. The Supreme Court has original jurisdiction only in narrow circumstances but holds appellate jurisdiction over the entire state judicial system.

Law

 
Michigan Supreme Court at the Hall of Justice

Michigan has had four constitutions, the first of which was ratified on October 5 and 6, 1835.[37] There were also constitutions from 1850 and 1908, in addition to the current constitution from 1963. The current document has a preamble, 11 articles, and one section consisting of a schedule and temporary provisions. Michigan, like every U.S. state except Louisiana, has a common law legal system.

Politics

Having been a Democratic-leaning state at the presidential level since the 1990s, Michigan has evolved into a swing state after Donald Trump won the state in 2016. Governors since the 1970s have alternated between the Democrats and Republicans, and statewide offices including attorney general, secretary of state, and senator have been held by members of both parties in varying proportion. Additionally, from 1994 until 2022, the governor-elect had always come from the party opposite the presidency. The Republican Party holds a majority in both the House and Senate of the Michigan Legislature. The state's congressional delegation is commonly split, with one party or the other typically holding a narrow majority.

Michigan was the home of Gerald Ford, the 38th president of the United States. Born in Nebraska, he moved as an infant to Grand Rapids.[38][39] The Gerald R. Ford Museum is in Grand Rapids, and the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library is on the campus of his alma mater, the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

In a 2020 study, Michigan was ranked as the 13th easiest state for citizens to vote in.[40]

Administrative divisions

State government is decentralized among three tiers—statewide, county and township. Counties are administrative divisions of the state, and townships are administrative divisions of a county. Both of them exercise state government authority, localized to meet the particular needs of their jurisdictions, as provided by state law. There are 83 counties in Michigan.

Cities, state universities, and villages are vested with home rule powers of varying degrees. Home rule cities can generally do anything not prohibited by law. The fifteen state universities have broad power and can do anything within the parameters of their status as educational institutions that is not prohibited by the state constitution. Villages, by contrast, have limited home rule and are not completely autonomous from the county and township in which they are located.

There are two types of township in Michigan: general law township and charter. Charter township status was created by the Legislature in 1947 and grants additional powers and stream-lined administration in order to provide greater protection against annexation by a city. As of April 2001, there were 127 charter townships in Michigan. In general, charter townships have many of the same powers as a city but without the same level of obligations. For example, a charter township can have its own fire department, water and sewer department, police department, and so on—just like a city—but it is not required to have those things, whereas cities must provide those services. Charter townships can opt to use county-wide services instead, such as deputies from the county sheriff's office instead of a home-based force of ordinance officers.

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Michigan
Rank Name County Pop.
 
Detroit
 
Grand Rapids
1 Detroit Wayne 639,111  
Warren
 
Sterling Heights
2 Grand Rapids Kent 198,917
3 Warren Macomb 139,387
4 Sterling Heights Macomb 134,346
5 Ann Arbor Washtenaw 123,851
6 Lansing Ingham 112,644
7 Dearborn Wayne 109,976
8 Clinton Charter Township Macomb 100,513
9 Canton Charter Township Wayne 98,659
10 Livonia Wayne 95,535

Geography

 
Map of the Saint Lawrence River/Great Lakes Watershed in North America. Its drainage area includes the Great Lakes, the world's largest system of freshwater lakes. The basin covers nearly all of Michigan.
 
The Huron National Wildlife Refuge, one of the fifteen federal wildernesses in Michigan

Michigan consists of two peninsulas separated by the Straits of Mackinac. The 45th parallel north runs through the state, marked by highway signs and the Polar-Equator Trail—[42][self-published source]along a line including Mission Point Light near Traverse City, the towns of Gaylord and Alpena in the Lower Peninsula and Menominee in the Upper Peninsula. With the exception of two tiny areas drained by the Mississippi River by way of the Wisconsin River in the Upper Peninsula and by way of the Kankakee-Illinois River in the Lower Peninsula, Michigan is drained by the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence watershed and is the only state with the majority of its land thus drained. No point in the state is more than six miles (9.7 km) from a natural water source or more than 85 miles (137 km) from a Great Lakes shoreline.[43][better source needed]

The Great Lakes that border Michigan from east to west are Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Michigan and Lake Superior. The state is bounded on the south by the states of Ohio and Indiana, sharing land and water boundaries with both. Michigan's western boundaries are almost entirely water boundaries, from south to north, with Illinois and Wisconsin in Lake Michigan; then a land boundary with Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula, that is principally demarcated by the Menominee and Montreal Rivers; then water boundaries again, in Lake Superior, with Wisconsin and Minnesota to the west, capped around by the Canadian province of Ontario to the north and east.

The heavily forested Upper Peninsula is relatively mountainous in the west. The Porcupine Mountains, which are part of one of the oldest mountain chains in the world,[44] rise to an altitude of almost 2,000 feet (610 m) above sea level and form the watershed between the streams flowing into Lake Superior and Lake Michigan. The surface on either side of this range is rugged. The state's highest point, in the Huron Mountains northwest of Marquette, is Mount Arvon at 1,979 feet (603 m). The peninsula is as large as Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island combined but has fewer than 330,000 inhabitants. They are sometimes called "Yoopers" (from "U.P.'ers"), and their speech (the "Yooper dialect") has been heavily influenced by the numerous Scandinavian and Canadian immigrants who settled the area during the lumbering and mining boom of the late 19th century.

 
Mackinac Island, an island and resort area at the eastern end of the Straits of Mackinac. More than 80% of the island is preserved as Mackinac Island State Park.
 
Sleeping Bear Dunes, along the northwest coast of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan
 
The Pointe Mouillee State Game Area, one of the 221 state game and wildlife areas in Michigan. It encompasses 7,483 acres of hunting, recreational, and protected wildlife and wetland areas at the mouth of the Huron River at Lake Erie, as well as smaller outlying areas within the Detroit River.

The Lower Peninsula is shaped like a mitten and many residents hold up a hand to depict where they are from.[45] It is 277 miles (446 km) long from north to south and 195 miles (314 km) from east to west and occupies nearly two-thirds of the state's land area. The surface of the peninsula is generally level, broken by conical hills and glacial moraines usually not more than a few hundred feet tall. It is divided by a low water divide running north and south. The larger portion of the state is on the west of this and gradually slopes toward Lake Michigan. The highest point in the Lower Peninsula is either Briar Hill at 1,705 feet (520 m), or one of several points nearby in the vicinity of Cadillac. The lowest point is the surface of Lake Erie at 571 feet (174 m).

The geographic orientation of Michigan's peninsulas makes for a long distance between the ends of the state. Ironwood, in the far western Upper Peninsula, lies 630 miles (1,010 kilometers) by highway from Lambertville in the Lower Peninsula's southeastern corner. The geographic isolation of the Upper Peninsula from Michigan's political and population centers makes the region culturally and economically distinct. Frequent attempts to establish the Upper Peninsula as its own state called "Superior" have failed to gain traction.

A feature of Michigan that gives it the distinct shape of a mitten is the Thumb. This peninsula projects out into Lake Huron and the Saginaw Bay. The geography of the Thumb is mainly flat with a few rolling hills. Other peninsulas of Michigan include the Keweenaw Peninsula, making up the Copper Country region of the state. The Leelanau Peninsula lies in the Northern Lower Michigan region. See Also Michigan Regions

Numerous lakes and marshes mark both peninsulas, and the coast is much indented. Keweenaw Bay, Whitefish Bay, and the Big and Little Bays De Noc are the principal indentations on the Upper Peninsula. The Grand and Little Traverse, Thunder, and Saginaw bays indent the Lower Peninsula. Michigan has the second longest shoreline of any state—3,288 miles (5,292 km),[46] including 1,056 miles (1,699 km) of island shoreline.[47]

The state has numerous large islands, the principal ones being the North Manitou and South Manitou, Beaver, and Fox groups in Lake Michigan; Isle Royale and Grande Isle in Lake Superior; Marquette, Bois Blanc, and Mackinac islands in Lake Huron; and Neebish, Sugar, and Drummond islands in St. Mary's River. Michigan has about 150 lighthouses, the most of any U.S. state. The first lighthouses in Michigan were built between 1818 and 1822. They were built to project light at night and to serve as a landmark during the day to safely guide the passenger ships and freighters traveling the Great Lakes. See Lighthouses in the United States.

The state's rivers are generally small, short and shallow, and few are navigable. The principal ones include the Detroit River, St. Marys River, and St. Clair River which connect the Great Lakes; the Au Sable, Cheboygan, and Saginaw, which flow into Lake Huron; the Ontonagon, and Tahquamenon, which flow into Lake Superior; and the St. Joseph, Kalamazoo, Grand, Muskegon, Manistee, and Escanaba, which flow into Lake Michigan. The state has 11,037 inland lakes—totaling 1,305 square miles (3,380 km2) of inland water—in addition to 38,575 square miles (99,910 km2) of Great Lakes waters. No point in Michigan is more than six miles (9.7 km) from an inland lake or more than 85 miles (137 km) from one of the Great Lakes.[48]

The state is home to several areas maintained by the National Park Service including: Isle Royale National Park, in Lake Superior, about 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Thunder Bay, Ontario. Other national protected areas in the state include: Keweenaw National Historical Park, Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Huron National Forest, Manistee National Forest, Hiawatha National Forest, Ottawa National Forest and Father Marquette National Memorial. The largest section of the North Country National Scenic Trail passes through Michigan.

With 78 state parks, 19 state recreation areas, and six state forests, Michigan has the largest state park and state forest system of any state.

Climate

 
Köppen climate types of Michigan, using 1991-2020 climate normals.

Michigan has a continental climate, although there are two distinct regions. The southern and central parts of the Lower Peninsula (south of Saginaw Bay and from the Grand Rapids area southward) have a warmer climate (Köppen climate classification Dfa) with hot summers and cold winters. The northern part of Lower Peninsula and the entire Upper Peninsula has a more severe climate (Köppen Dfb), with warm, but shorter summers and longer, cold to very cold winters. Some parts of the state average high temperatures below freezing from December through February, and into early March in the far northern parts. During the winter through the middle of February, the state is frequently subjected to heavy lake-effect snow. The state averages from 30 to 40 inches (76 to 102 cm) of precipitation annually; however, some areas in the northern lower peninsula and the upper peninsula average almost 160 inches (4,100 mm) of snowfall per year.[49] Michigan's highest recorded temperature is 112 °F (44 °C) at Mio on July 13, 1936, and the coldest recorded temperature is −51 °F (−46 °C) at Vanderbilt on February 9, 1934.[50]

The state averages 30 days of thunderstorm activity per year. These can be severe, especially in the southern part of the state. The state averages 17 tornadoes per year, which are more common in the state's extreme southern section. Portions of the southern border have been almost as vulnerable historically as states further west and in Tornado Alley. For this reason, many communities in the very southern portions of the state have tornado sirens to warn residents of approaching tornadoes. Farther north, in Central Michigan, Northern Michigan, and the Upper Peninsula, tornadoes are rare.[51][52]

Geology

The geological formation of the state is greatly varied, with the Michigan Basin being the most major formation. Primary boulders are found over the entire surface of the Upper Peninsula (being principally of primitive origin), while Secondary deposits cover the entire Lower Peninsula. The Upper Peninsula exhibits Lower Silurian sandstones, limestones, copper and iron bearing rocks, corresponding to the Huronian system of Canada. The central portion of the Lower Peninsula contains coal measures and rocks of the Pennsylvanian period. Devonian and sub-Carboniferous deposits are scattered over the entire state.

Michigan rarely experiences earthquakes, and those that it does experience are generally smaller ones that do not cause significant damage. A 4.6-magnitude earthquake struck in August 1947. More recently, a 4.2-magnitude earthquake occurred on Saturday, May 2, 2015, shortly after noon, about five miles south of Galesburg, Michigan (9 miles southeast of Kalamazoo) in central Michigan, about 140 miles west of Detroit, according to the Colorado-based U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center. No major damage or injuries were reported, according to Governor Rick Snyder's office.[53]

Demographics

 
Michigan 2020 population distribution
Racial Composition of Michigan (as of 2010)
Self-identified race Percent of population
Non-Hispanic white
76.6%
Hispanic and Latino (of any race)
4.4%
Black or African American
14.2%
Asian
2.4%
Two or more races
2.3%
Native Americans and Alaska Natives
0.6%
Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders
0.1%
Historical population
Census Pop.
18003,757
18104,76226.8%
18207,45256.5%
183028,004275.8%
1840212,267658.0%
1850397,65487.3%
1860749,11388.4%
18701,184,05958.1%
18801,636,93738.2%
18902,093,89027.9%
19002,420,98215.6%
19102,810,17316.1%
19203,668,41230.5%
19304,842,32532.0%
19405,256,1068.5%
19506,371,76621.2%
19607,823,19422.8%
19708,875,08313.4%
19809,262,0784.4%
19909,295,2970.4%
20009,938,4446.9%
20109,883,640−0.6%
202010,077,3312.0%
Sources: 1910–2020[54]

Population

The United States Census Bureau recorded the population of Michigan at 10,084,442 at the 2020 United States census, an increase of 2.03% from 9,883,635 recorded at the 2010 United States census.

The center of population of Michigan is in Shiawassee County, in the southeastern corner of the civil township of Bennington, which is northwest of the village of Morrice.[55]

As of the 2010 American Community Survey for the U.S. census, the state had a foreign-born population of 592,212, or 6.0% of the total. Michigan has the largest Dutch, Finnish, and Macedonian populations in the United States.

The large majority of Michigan's population is white. Americans of European descent live throughout Michigan and most of Metro Detroit. Large European American groups include those of German, British, Irish, Polish and Belgian ancestry. People of Scandinavian descent, and those of Finnish ancestry, have a notable presence in the Upper Peninsula. Western Michigan is known for the Dutch heritage of many residents (the highest concentration of any state), especially in Holland and metropolitan Grand Rapids.

African-Americans, who came to Detroit and other northern cities in the Great Migration of the early 20th century, form a majority of the population of the city of Detroit and of other cities, including Flint and Benton Harbor.

As of 2007 about 300,000 people in Southeastern Michigan trace their descent from the Middle East.[61] Dearborn has a sizeable Arab community, with many Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac, and Lebanese who immigrated for jobs in the auto industry in the 1920s along with more recent Yemenis and Iraqis.[62]

As of 2007, almost 8,000 Hmong people lived in the State of Michigan, about double their 1999 presence in the state.[63] As of 2007 most lived in northeastern Detroit, but they had been increasingly moving to Pontiac and Warren.[64] By 2015 the number of Hmong in the Detroit city limits had significantly declined.[65] Lansing hosts a statewide Hmong New Year Festival.[64] The Hmong community also had a prominent portrayal in the 2008 film Gran Torino, which was set in Detroit.

As of 2015, 80% of Michigan's Japanese population lived in the counties of Macomb, Oakland, Washtenaw, and Wayne in the Detroit and Ann Arbor areas.[66] As of April 2013, the largest Japanese national population is in Novi, with 2,666 Japanese residents, and the next largest populations are respectively in Ann Arbor, West Bloomfield Township, Farmington Hills, and Battle Creek. The state has 481 Japanese employment facilities providing 35,554 local jobs. 391 of them are in Southeast Michigan, providing 20,816 jobs, and the 90 in other regions in the state provide 14,738 jobs. The Japanese Direct Investment Survey of the Consulate-General of Japan, Detroit stated more than 2,208 additional Japanese residents were employed in the State of Michigan as of 1 October 2012, than in 2011.[67] During the 1990s the Japanese population of Michigan experienced an increase, and many Japanese people with children moved to particular areas for their proximity to Japanese grocery stores and high-performing schools.[66]

A person from Michigan is called a Michigander or Michiganian;[68] also at times, but rarely, a "Michiganite".[69] Residents of the Upper Peninsula are sometimes referred to as "Yoopers" (a phonetic pronunciation of "U.P.ers"), and they sometimes refer to those from the Lower Peninsula as "trolls" because they live below the bridge (see Three Billy Goats Gruff).[70][71][72]

Birth data

As of 2011, 34.3% of Michigan's children under the age of one belonged to racial or ethnic minority groups, meaning they had at least one parent who was not non-Hispanic white.[73]

Note: Percentages in the table can exceed 100% as Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race.

  • Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.
 
Map of counties in Michigan by racial plurality, per the 2020 U.S. census
Non-Hispanic White

Languages

As of 2010, 91.11% (8,507,947) of Michigan residents age five and older spoke only English at home, while 2.93% (273,981) spoke Spanish, 1.04% (97,559) Arabic, 0.44% (41,189) German, 0.36% (33,648) Chinese (which includes Mandarin), 0.31% (28,891) French, 0.29% (27,019) Polish, and Syriac languages (such as Modern Aramaic and Northeastern Neo-Aramaic) was spoken as a main language by 0.25% (23,420) of the population over the age of five. In total, 8.89% (830,281) of Michigan's population age five and older spoke a mother language other than English.[82]

Religion

 
The Basilica of Sainte Anne de Détroit is the second-oldest continuously operating Roman Catholic parish in the country.

The Roman Catholic Church has six dioceses and one archdiocese in Michigan; Gaylord, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Marquette, Saginaw and Detroit.[83] The Roman Catholic Church is the largest denomination by number of adherents, according to the Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA) 2010 survey, with 1,717,296 adherents.[84] The Roman Catholic Church was the only organized religion in Michigan until the 19th century, reflecting the territory's French colonial roots. Detroit's Saint Anne's parish, established in 1701 by Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, is the second-oldest Roman Catholic parish in the United States.[85] On March 8, 1833, the Holy See formally established a diocese in the Michigan territory, which included all of Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and the Dakotas east of the Mississippi River. When Michigan became a state in 1837, the boundary of the Diocese of Detroit was redrawn to coincide with that of the State; the other dioceses were later carved out from the Diocese of Detroit but remain part of the Ecclesiastical Province of Detroit.[86]

In 2010, the largest Protestant denominations were the United Methodist Church with 228,521 adherents; followed by the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod with 219,618, and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with 120,598 adherents. The Christian Reformed Church in North America had almost 100,000 members and more than 230 congregations in Michigan.[87] The Reformed Church in America had 76,000 members and 154 congregations in the state.[88] In the same survey, Jewish adherents in the state of Michigan were estimated at 44,382, and Muslims at 120,351.[89] The Lutheran Church was introduced by German and Scandinavian immigrants; Lutheranism is the second largest religious denomination in the state. The first Jewish synagogue in the state was Temple Beth El, founded by twelve German Jewish families in Detroit in 1850.[90]

In West Michigan, Dutch immigrants fled from the specter of religious persecution and famine in the Netherlands around 1850 and settled in and around what is now Holland, Michigan, establishing a "colony" on American soil that fervently held onto Calvinist doctrine that established a significant presence of Reformed churches.[91] Islam was introduced by immigrants from the Near East during the 20th century.[92] Michigan is home to the largest mosque in North America, the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn. Battle Creek, Michigan, is also the birthplace of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which was founded on May 21, 1863.[93][94]

Economy

Top publicly traded
companies in Michigan

according to revenues
with State and U.S. rankings
State Corporation US
1 General Motors 21
2 Ford 22
3 Dow 82
4 Penske Automotive 143
5 Whirlpool 154
6 Lear 179
7 Rocket Companies 194
8 Stryker 212
9 Kellogg's 222
10 DTE Energy 250
11 Ally 287
12 BorgWarner 295
13 SpartanNash 329
14 Auto-Owners 341
15 Autoliv 392
16 Masco 398
17 CMS Energy 430
Further information:
List of Michigan companies

Source: Fortune[96]

 
The Ambassador Bridge, a suspension bridge that connects Detroit with Windsor, Ontario, in Canada. It is the busiest international border crossing in North America in terms of trade volume.
 
Michigan is the center of the American automotive industry. The Renaissance Center in Downtown Detroit is the world headquarter of General Motors.
 
Ford Dearborn Proving Ground (DPG) completed major reconstruction and renovations in 2006.

In 2017, 3,859,949 people in Michigan were employed at 222,553 establishments, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.[97]

The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis estimated Michigan's Q3 2018 gross state product to be $538 billion, ranking 14th out of the 50 states.[98] According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of June 2021, the state's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was estimated at 6.3%.[99]

Products and services include automobiles, food products, information technology, aerospace, military equipment, furniture, and mining of copper and iron ore.[quantify] Michigan is the third leading grower of Christmas trees with 60,520 acres (245 km2) of land dedicated to Christmas tree farming.[100][101] The beverage Vernors Ginger Ale was invented in Michigan in 1866, sharing the title of oldest soft drink with Hires Root Beer. Faygo was founded in Detroit on November 4, 1907. Two of the top four pizza chains were founded in Michigan and are headquartered there: Domino's Pizza by Tom Monaghan and Little Caesars Pizza by Mike Ilitch. Michigan became the 24th right-to-work state in U.S. in 2012.

Since 2009, GM, Ford and Chrysler have managed a significant reorganization of their benefit funds structure after a volatile stock market which followed the September 11 attacks and early 2000s recession impacted their respective U.S. pension and benefit funds (OPEB).[102] General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler reached agreements with the United Auto Workers Union to transfer the liabilities for their respective health care and benefit funds to a 501(c)(9) Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association (VEBA). Manufacturing in the state grew 6.6% from 2001 to 2006,[103] but the high speculative price of oil became a factor for the U.S. auto industry during the economic crisis of 2008 impacting industry revenues. In 2009, GM and Chrysler emerged from Chapter 11 restructurings with financing provided in part by the U.S. and Canadian governments.[104][105] GM began its initial public offering (IPO) of stock in 2010.[106] For 2010, the Big Three domestic automakers have reported significant profits indicating the beginning of rebound.[107][108][109][110]

As of 2002, Michigan ranked fourth in the U.S. in high tech employment with 568,000 high tech workers, which includes 70,000 in the automotive industry.[111] Michigan typically ranks third or fourth in overall research and development (R&D) expenditures in the United States.[31][32] Its research and development, which includes automotive, comprises a higher percentage of the state's overall gross domestic product than for any other U.S. state.[112] The state is an important source of engineering job opportunities. The domestic auto industry accounts directly and indirectly for one of every ten jobs in the U.S.[113]

Michigan was second in the U.S. in 2004 for new corporate facilities and expansions. From 1997 to 2004, Michigan was the only state to top the 10,000 mark for the number of major new developments;[29][114] however, the effects of the late 2000s recession have slowed the state's economy. In 2008, Michigan placed third in a site selection survey among the states for luring new business which measured capital investment and new job creation per one million population.[115] In August 2009, Michigan and Detroit's auto industry received $1.36 B in grants from the U.S. Department of Energy for the manufacture of electric vehicle technologies which is expected to generate 6,800 immediate jobs and employ 40,000 in the state by 2020.[116] From 2007 to 2009, Michigan ranked 3rd in the U.S. for new corporate facilities and expansions.[117][118]

As leading research institutions, the University of Michigan, Michigan State University, and Wayne State University are important partners in the state's economy and its University Research Corridor.[33] Michigan's public universities attract more than $1.5 B in research and development grants each year.[34] The National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory is at Michigan State University. Michigan's workforce is well-educated and highly skilled, making it attractive to companies. It has the third highest number of engineering graduates nationally.[119]

Detroit Metropolitan Airport is one of the nation's most recently expanded and modernized airports with six major runways, and large aircraft maintenance facilities capable of servicing and repairing a Boeing 747 and is a major hub for Delta Air Lines. Michigan's schools and colleges rank among the nation's best. The state has maintained its early commitment to public education. The state's infrastructure gives it a competitive edge; Michigan has 38 deep water ports.[120] In 2007, Bank of America announced that it would commit $25 billion to community development in Michigan following its acquisition of LaSalle Bank in Troy.[121]

Michigan led the nation in job creation improvement in 2010.[122]

 
Distribution of Michigan's jobs as percentages of entire workforce

Taxation

Michigan's personal income tax is a flat rate of 4.25%. In addition, 22 cities impose income taxes; rates are set at 1% for residents and 0.5% for non-residents in all but four cities.[123] Michigan's state sales tax is 6%, though items such as food and medication are exempted. Property taxes are assessed on the local level, but every property owner's local assessment contributes six mills (a rate of $6 per $1000 of property value) to the statutory State Education Tax. Property taxes are appealable to local boards of review and need the approval of the local electorate to exceed millage rates prescribed by state law and local charters. In 2011, the state repealed its business tax and replaced it with a 6% corporate income tax which substantially reduced taxes on business.[124][125] Article IX of the Constitution of the State of Michigan also provides limitations on how much the state can tax.

A 6% use tax is levied on goods purchased outside the state (that are brought in and used in state), at parity with the sales tax.[126] The use tax applies to internet sales/purchases from outside Michigan and is equivalent to the sales tax.[127]

Agriculture

 
Michigan is the leading U.S. producer of tart cherries, blueberries, pickling cucumbers, navy beans and petunias.
 
The world headquarters of the Kellogg's Company in Battle Creek

A wide variety of commodity crops, fruits, and vegetables are grown in Michigan, making it second only to California among U.S. states in the diversity of its agriculture.[128] The state has 54,800 farms utilizing 10,000,000 acres (40,000 km2) of land which sold $6.49 billion worth of products in 2010.[129] The most valuable agricultural product is milk. Leading crops include corn, soybeans, flowers, wheat, sugar beets, and potatoes. Livestock in the state included 78,000 sheep, a million cattle, a million hogs, and more than three million chickens. Livestock products accounted for 38% of the value of agricultural products while crops accounted for the majority.

Michigan is a leading grower of fruit in the U.S., including blueberries, tart cherries, apples, grapes, and peaches.[35][130] Plums, pears, and strawberries are also grown in Michigan. These fruits are mainly grown in West Michigan due to the moderating effect of Lake Michigan on the climate. There is also significant fruit production, especially cherries, but also grapes, apples, and other fruits, in Northwest Michigan along Lake Michigan. Michigan produces wines, beers and a multitude of processed food products. Kellogg's cereal is based in Battle Creek, Michigan and processes many locally grown foods. Thornapple Valley, Ball Park Franks, Koegel Meat Company, and Hebrew National sausage companies are all based in Michigan.

Michigan is home to very fertile land in the Saginaw Valley and Thumb areas. Products grown there include corn, sugar beets, navy beans, and soybeans. Sugar beet harvesting usually begins the first of October. It takes the sugar factories about five months to process the 3.7 million tons of sugarbeets into 485,000 tons of pure, white sugar.[131] Michigan's largest sugar refiner, Michigan Sugar Company[132] is the largest east of the Mississippi River and the fourth largest in the nation. Michigan sugar brand names are Pioneer Sugar and the newly incorporated Big Chief Sugar. Potatoes are grown in Northern Michigan, and corn is dominant in Central Michigan. Alfalfa, cucumbers, and asparagus are also grown.

Tourism

 
Mackinac Island is well-known for cultural events and a wide variety of architectural styles, including the Victorian Grand Hotel
 
Holland, Michigan, is the home of the Tulip Time Festival, the largest tulip festival in the U.S.

Michigan's tourists spend $17.2 billion per year in the state, supporting 193,000 tourism jobs.[133] Michigan's tourism website ranks among the busiest in the nation.[134] Destinations draw vacationers, hunters, and nature enthusiasts from across the United States and Canada. Michigan is 50% forest land, much of it quite remote. The forests, lakes and thousands of miles of beaches are top attractions. Event tourism draws large numbers to occasions like the Tulip Time Festival and the National Cherry Festival. In 2006, the Michigan State Board of Education mandated all public schools in the state hold their first day of school after Labor Day, in accordance with the new Post Labor Day School law. A survey found 70% of all tourism business comes directly from Michigan residents, and the Michigan Hotel, Motel, & Resort Association claimed the shorter summer between school years cut into the annual tourism season.[135]

Tourism in metropolitan Detroit draws visitors to leading attractions, especially The Henry Ford, the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Detroit Zoo, and to sports in Detroit. Other museums include the Detroit Historical Museum, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, museums in the Cranbrook Educational Community, and the Arab American National Museum. The metro area offers four major casinos, MGM Grand Detroit, Hollywood Casino, Motor City, and Caesars Windsor in Windsor, Ontario, Canada; moreover, Detroit is the largest American city and metropolitan region to offer casino resorts.[136]

Hunting and fishing are significant industries in the state. Charter boats are based in many Great Lakes cities to fish for salmon, trout, walleye, and perch. Michigan ranks first in the nation in licensed hunters (over one million) who contribute $2 billion annually to its economy. More than three-quarters of a million hunters participate in white-tailed deer season alone. Many school districts in rural areas of Michigan cancel school on the opening day of firearm deer season, because of attendance concerns.[citation needed]

 
Marquette, Michigan, is home to a vast snowmobile trail system.

Michigan's Department of Natural Resources manages the largest dedicated state forest system in the nation. The forest products industry and recreational users contribute $12 billion and 200,000 associated jobs annually to the state's economy. Public hiking and hunting access has also been secured in extensive commercial forests. The state has the highest number of golf courses and registered snowmobiles in the nation.[137]

The state has numerous historical markers, which can themselves become the center of a tour.[138] The Great Lakes Circle Tour is a designated scenic road system connecting all of the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River.[139]

With its position in relation to the Great Lakes and the countless ships that have foundered over the many years they have been used as a transport route for people and bulk cargo, Michigan is a world-class scuba diving destination. The Michigan Underwater Preserves are 11 underwater areas where wrecks are protected for the benefit of sport divers.

Infrastructure

Energy

In 2020, Michigan consumed 113,740-gigawatt-hours (GWh) of electrical energy and produced 116,700-gigawatt-hours (GWh) of electrical energy.[140]

Coal power is Michigan's leading source of electricity, producing roughly half its supply or 53,100-gigawatt-hours (GWh) of electrical energy (12.6 GW total capacity) in 2020.[140] Although Michigan has no active coal mines, coal is easily moved from other states by train and across the Great Lakes by lake freighters. The lower price of natural gas is leading to the closure of most coal plants, with Consumer Energy planning to close all of its remaining coal plants by 2025;[141] DTE plans to retire 2100MW of coal power by 2023.[142] The coal-fired Monroe Power Plant in Monroe, on the western shore of Lake Erie, is the nation's 11th-largest electric plant, with a net capacity of 3,400 MW.

Nuclear power is also a significant source of electrical power in Michigan, producing roughly one-quarter of the state's supply or 28,000-gigawatt-hours (GWh) of electrical energy (4.3 GW total capacity) in 2020.[140] The three active nuclear power plants supply Michigan with about 26% of its electricity. Donald C. Cook Nuclear Plant, just north of Bridgman, is the state's largest nuclear power plant, with a net capacity of 2,213 MW. The Enrico Fermi Nuclear Generating Station is the second-largest, with a net capacity of 1,150 MW. It is also one of the two nuclear power plants in the Detroit metropolitan area (within a 50-mile radius of Detroit's city center), about halfway between Detroit and Toledo, Ohio, the other being the Davis–Besse Nuclear Power Station, in Ottawa County, Ohio. The Palisades Nuclear Power Plant, south of South Haven, closed in May 2022.[143] The Big Rock Point Nuclear Power Plant, Michigan's first nuclear power plant and the nation's fifth, was decommissioned in 1997.

Transportation

International crossings

 
The Bluewater Bridge, a twin-span bridge across the St. Clair River that links Port Huron and Sarnia, Ontario

Michigan has nine international road crossings with Ontario, Canada:

The Gordie Howe International Bridge, a second international bridge between Detroit and Windsor, is under construction. It is expected to be completed in 2024.[144][145][146]

Railroads

Michigan is served by four Class I railroads: the Canadian National Railway, the Canadian Pacific Railway, CSX Transportation, and the Norfolk Southern Railway. These are augmented by several dozen short line railroads. The vast majority of rail service in Michigan is devoted to freight, with Amtrak and various scenic railroads the exceptions.[147]

Amtrak passenger rail services the state, connecting many southern and western Michigan cities to Chicago, Illinois. There are plans for commuter rail for Detroit and its suburbs (see SEMCOG Commuter Rail).[148][149][150]

Roadways

 
US Highway 2 (US 2) runs along Lake Michigan from Naubinway to its eastern terminus at St. Ignace.
 
The Mackinac Bridge, a suspension bridge spanning the Straits of Mackinac to connect the Upper and Lower peninsulas of Michigan
  • Interstate 75 (I-75) is the main thoroughfare between Detroit, Flint, and Saginaw extending north to Sault Ste. Marie and providing access to Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. The freeway crosses the Mackinac Bridge between the Lower and Upper Peninsulas. Auxiliary highways include I-275 and I-375 in Detroit; I-475 in Flint; and I-675 in Saginaw.
  • I-69 enters the state near the Michigan–Ohio–Indiana border, and it extends to Port Huron and provides access to the Blue Water Bridge crossing into Sarnia, Ontario.
  • I-94 enters the western end of the state at the Indiana border, and it travels east to Detroit and then northeast to Port Huron and ties in with I-69. I-194 branches off from this freeway in Battle Creek. I-94 is the main artery between Chicago and Detroit.
  • I-96 runs east–west between Detroit and Muskegon. I-496 loops through Lansing. I-196 branches off from this freeway at Grand Rapids and connects to I-94 near Benton Harbor. I-696 branches off from this freeway at Novi and connects to I-94 near St. Clair Shores.
  • US Highway 2 (US 2) enters Michigan at the city of Ironwood and travels east to the town of Crystal Falls, where it turns south and briefly re-enters Wisconsin northwest of Florence. It re-enters Michigan north of Iron Mountain and continues through the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to the cities of Escanaba, Manistique, and St. Ignace. Along the way, it cuts through the Ottawa and Hiawatha national forests and follows the northern shore of Lake Michigan. Its eastern terminus lies at exit 344 on I-75, just north of the Mackinac Bridge.
  • US Highway 23 enters Michigan at the Ohio state line in the suburban spillover of Toledo, Ohio, as a freeway and leads northward to Ann Arbor before merging with I-75 just south of Flint. Concurrent with I-75 through Flint, Saginaw, and Bay City, it splits from I-75 at Standish as an intermittently four lane/two-lane surface road closely following the western shore of Lake Huron generally northward through Alpena before turning west to northwest toward Mackinaw City and Interstate 75 again, where it terminates.
  • US Highway 31 enters Michigan as Interstate-quality freeway at the Indiana State Line just northwest of South Bend, Indiana, heads north to Interstate 196 near Benton Harbor, and follows the eastern shore of Lake Michigan to Mackinaw City, where it has its northern terminus.
  • US Highway 127 enters Michigan from Ohio south of Hudson as a two-lane, undivided highway and closely follows the Michigan meridian, the principal north-south line used to survey Michigan in the early 19th century. It passes north through Jackson and Lansing before terminating south of Grayling at I-75, and is a four-lane freeway for the majority of its course.
  • US Highway 131 has its southern terminus at the Indiana Toll Road roughly one mile south of the Indiana state line as a two-lane surface road. It passes through Kalamazoo and Grand Rapids as a freeway of Interstate standard and continues as such to Manton, where it reverts to two-lane surface road to its northern terminus at US 31 in Petoskey.

Airports

 
Aerial view of Detroit Metro Airport (DTW)

The Detroit Metropolitan Airport in the western suburb of Romulus, was in 2010 the 16th busiest airfield in North America measured by passenger traffic.[151] The Gerald R. Ford International Airport in Grand Rapids is the next busiest airport in the state, served by eight airlines to 23 destinations. Flint Bishop International Airport is the third largest airport in the state, served by four airlines to several primary hubs. Other frequently trafficked airports include Cherry Capital Airport, in Traverse City, Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport, serving the Kalamazoo and Battle Creek region, Capital Region International Airport, located outside of Lansing, and MBS International Airport serving the Midland, Bay City and Saginaw tri-city region. Additionally, smaller regional and local airports are located throughout the state including on several islands.

Metropolitan areas

Largest combined statistical areas in Michigan[152]
MI Rank U.S. Rank Combined statistical area Image 2019 estimate 2010 Census Change Constituent core-based statistical areas
1 12 Detroit–Warren–Ann Arbor, MI   5,341,994 5,318,744 +0.44% Detroit–Warren–Dearborn, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Flint, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Ann Arbor, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Monroe, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Adrian, MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
2 42 Grand Rapids–Kentwood–Muskegon, MI   1,412,470 1,320,064 +7.00% Grand Rapids–Kentwood, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Muskegon, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Holland, MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
Big Rapids, MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
68 South Bend–Elkhart–Mishawaka, IN–MI 809,069 798,005 +1.39% South Bend-Mishawaka, IN-MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Elkhart-Goshen, IN Metropolitan Statistical Area
Niles, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Warsaw, IN Micropolitan Statistical Area
Plymouth, IN Micropolitan Statistical Area
Lansing–East Lansing–Owosso, MI   550,085 534,684 +2.88% Lansing–East Lansing, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Owosso, MI Micropolitan statistical area
3 88 Kalamazoo–Battle Creek–Portage, MI 503,706 493,020 +2.17% Kalamazoo–Portage Metropolitan Area
Battle Creek, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Sturgis, MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
Coldwater, MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
4 101 Saginaw–Midland–Bay City, MI 376,821 391,569 −3.77% Saginaw, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Bay City, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
Midland, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area
5 159 Mount Pleasant–Alma, MI 110,583 112,787 −1.95% Mount Pleasant, MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
Alma, MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
161 Marinette–Iron Mountain, WI-MI 92,664 96,369 −3.84% Marinette, WI–MI Micropolitan Statistical Area
Iron Mountain, MI–WI Micropolitan Statistical Area

Other economically significant cities include:

Half the wealthiest communities in the state are in Oakland County, just north of Detroit. Another wealthy community is just east of the city, in Grosse Pointe. Only three of these cities are outside of Metro Detroit. The city of Detroit, with a per capita income of $14,717, ranks 517th on the list of Michigan locations by per capita income. Benton Harbor is the poorest city in Michigan, with a per capita income of $8,965, while Barton Hills is the richest with a per capita income of $110,683.

Education

 
Cranbrook Kingswood School, one of the leading college preparatory boarding schools in the country

Michigan's education system serves 1.6 million K-12 students in public schools. More than 124,000 students attend private schools and an uncounted number are homeschooled under certain legal requirements.[153][154] The public school system had a $14.5 billion budget in 2008–09.[155] From 2009 to 2019, over 200 private schools in Michigan closed, partly due to competition from charter schools.[156] In 2022, U.S. News & World Report rated three Michigan high schools among the nation's 100 best: City High Middle School (18th), the International Academy of Macomb (21st), and the International Academy (52nd). Washtenaw International High School ranked 107th.[157]

The University of Michigan is Michigan's oldest higher educational institution and among the oldest research universities in the nation. It was founded in 1817, 20 years before Michigan Territory achieved statehood.[158][159] Kalamazoo College is the state's oldest private liberal arts college, founded in 1833 by a group of Baptist ministers as the Michigan and Huron Institute. From 1840 to 1850, the college operated as the Kalamazoo Branch of the University of Michigan. Methodist settlers in Spring Arbor Township founded Albion College in 1835. It is the state's second-oldest private liberal arts college.

Michigan Technological University is the first post-secondary institution in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, founded in 1885 as the Michigan Mining School. Eastern Michigan University was founded in 1849 as the Michigan State Normal School for the training of teachers. It was the nation's fourth-oldest normal school and the first U.S. normal school outside New England. In 1899, the Michigan State Normal School became the nation's first normal school to offer a four-year curriculum. Michigan State University was founded in 1855 as the nation's first agricultural college.

The Carnegie Foundation classifies eight of the state's institutions (University of Michigan, Michigan Technological University, Eastern Michigan University, Wayne State University, Central Michigan University, Michigan State University, Western Michigan University, Oakland University) as research universities.[160]

Culture

Arts

Music

Michigan music is known for three music trends: early punk rock, Motown/soul music and techno music. Michigan musicians include Tally Hall, Bill Haley & His Comets, The Supremes, The Marvelettes, The Temptations, The Four Tops, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye "The Prince of Soul", Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Aretha Franklin, Mary Wells, Tommy James and the Shondells, ? and the Mysterians, Al Green, The Spinners, Grand Funk Railroad, The Stooges, the MC5, The Knack, Madonna "The Queen of Pop", Bob Seger, Jack Scott, Ray Parker Jr., Jackie Wilson, Aaliyah, Eminem, Kid Rock, Jack White and Meg White (The White Stripes), Big Sean, Alice Cooper, and Del Shannon.[161]

Performance arts

Major theaters in Michigan include the Fox Theatre, Music Hall, Gem Theatre, Masonic Temple Theatre, the Detroit Opera House, Fisher Theatre, The Fillmore Detroit, Saint Andrew's Hall, Majestic Theater, and Orchestra Hall.

The Nederlander Organization, the largest controller of Broadway productions in New York City, originated in Detroit.[162]

Sports

 
Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor is the largest stadium in the Western Hemisphere, and the third-largest stadium in the world.

Michigan's major-league sports teams include: Detroit Tigers baseball team, Detroit Lions football team, Detroit Red Wings ice hockey team, and the Detroit Pistons men's basketball team. All of Michigan's major league teams play in the Metro Detroit area. The state also has a professional second-tier (USL Championship) soccer team in Detroit City FC, which plays its home games at Keyworth Stadium in Hamtramack, Michigan.

The Pistons played at Detroit's Cobo Arena until 1978 and at the Pontiac Silverdome until 1988 when they moved into The Palace of Auburn Hills. In 2017, the team moved to the newly built Little Caesars Arena in downtown Detroit. The Detroit Lions played at Tiger Stadium in Detroit until 1974, then moved to the Pontiac Silverdome where they played for 27 years between 1975 and 2002 before moving to Ford Field in Detroit in 2002. The Detroit Tigers played at Tiger Stadium (formerly known as Navin Field and Briggs Stadium) from 1912 to 1999. In 2000 they moved to Comerica Park. The Red Wings played at Olympia Stadium before moving to Joe Louis Arena in 1979. They later moved to Little Caesars Arena to join the Pistons as tenants in 2017. Professional hockey got its start in 1903 in Houghton,[163] when the Portage Lakers were formed.[164]

The Michigan International Speedway is the site of NASCAR races and Detroit was formerly the site of a Formula One World Championship Grand Prix race. From 1959 to 1961, Detroit Dragway hosted the NHRA's U.S. Nationals.[165] Michigan is home to one of the major canoeing marathons: the 120-mile (190 km) Au Sable River Canoe Marathon. The Port Huron to Mackinac Boat Race is also a favorite.

Twenty-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams was born in Saginaw. The 2011 World Champion for Women's Artistic Gymnastics, Jordyn Wieber is from DeWitt. Wieber was also a member of the gold medal team at the London Olympics in 2012.

Collegiate sports in Michigan are popular in addition to professional sports. The state's two largest athletic programs are the Michigan Wolverines and Michigan State Spartans, which play in the NCAA Big Ten Conference. Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, home to the Michigan Wolverines football team, is the largest stadium in the Western Hemisphere and the third-largest stadium worldwide.

The Michigan High School Athletic Association features around 300,000 participants.

State symbols and nicknames

Michigan is traditionally known as "The Wolverine State", and the University of Michigan takes the wolverine as its mascot. The association is well and long established: for example, many Detroiters volunteered to fight during the American Civil War and George Armstrong Custer, who led the Michigan Brigade, called them the "Wolverines". The origins of this association are obscure; it may derive from a busy trade in wolverine furs in Sault Ste. Marie in the 18th century or may recall a disparagement intended to compare early settlers in Michigan with the vicious mammal. Wolverines are, however, extremely rare in Michigan. A sighting in February 2004 near Ubly was the first confirmed sighting in Michigan in 200 years.[166] The animal was found dead in 2010.[167]

Sister regions

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988.
  2. ^ i.e., including water that is part of state territory. Georgia is the largest state by land area alone east of the Mississippi and Michigan the second-largest.
  3. ^ The first form is the way it is spelled in Ojibwe native syllabics.
  4. ^ The Province included the modern states of Wisconsin, eastern Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, two-thirds of Georgia, and small parts of West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, and Maine.

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Bibliography

  • Bald, F. Clever (1961). Michigan in Four Centuries. New York: Harper. ISBN 978-0-06-000240-4. OCLC 478659.
  • Browne, William P. & VerBurg, Kenneth (1995). Michigan Politics & Government: Facing Change in a Complex State. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-1209-1.
  • Bureau of Business Research (1987). Michigan Statistical Abstract. Wayne State University.
  • Dunbar, Willis F. & May, George S. (1995). Michigan: A History of the Wolverine State. ISBN 978-0-8028-7055-1.
  • Groop, Richard E.; et al. (1984). Michigan Political Atlas (Map). Scale not given. East Lansing, MI: Center for Cartographic Research and Spatial Analysis. OCLC 11918446.
  • Rich, Wilbur (1989). Coleman Young and Detroit Politics: From Social Activist to Power Broker. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-2093-8.
  • Rubenstein, Bruce A. & Ziewacz, Lawrence E. (2008). Michigan: A History of the Great Lakes State (4th ed.). Wheeling, IL: Harlan Davidson. ISBN 978-0-88295-257-4.
  • Sisson, Richard; Zacher, Christian K. & Cayton, Andrew R.L., eds. (2006). The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34886-9.
  • Weeks, George; Kirk, Robert D.; Blanchard, Paula L. & Weeks, Don (1987). Stewards of the State: The Governors of Michigan. Ann Arbor, MI: Historical Society of Michigan. ISBN 978-0-9614344-2-7.

External links

  •   Geographic data related to Michigan at OpenStreetMap
  • State of Michigan government website
  • Info Michigan, detailed information on 630 cities
  • Michigan Historic Markers
  • Historical Society of Michigan
  • Clarke Historical Library, Central Michigan University, Bibliographies for Michigan by region, counties, etc..
  • Michigan State Guide from the Library of Congress
  • Michigan Official Travel Site
  • Michigan Official Business Site
  • Michigan Official Talent Site
  • Michigan State Fact Sheet from the U.S. Department of Agriculture
  • The Michigan Municipal League
  • Michigan at Curlie
Preceded by List of U.S. states by date of statehood
Admitted on January 26, 1837 (26th)
Succeeded by

Coordinates: 44°N 85°W / 44°N 85°W / 44; -85 (State of Michigan)

michigan, this, article, about, state, other, uses, disambiguation, great, lakes, state, redirects, here, states, around, great, lakes, region, great, lakes, region, listen, state, great, lakes, region, upper, midwestern, united, states, with, population, near. This article is about the U S state For other uses see Michigan disambiguation The Great Lakes State redirects here For states around the Great Lakes region see Great Lakes region Michigan ˈ m ɪ ʃ ɪ ɡ en listen is a state in the Great Lakes region of the upper Midwestern United States With a population of nearly 10 12 million and an area of nearly 97 000 sq mi 250 000 km2 Michigan is the 10th largest state by population the 11th largest by area and the largest by area east of the Mississippi River b Its capital is Lansing and its largest city is Detroit Metro Detroit is among the nation s most populous and largest metropolitan economies Its name derives from a gallicized variant of the original Ojibwe word ᒥᓯᑲᒥ mishigami c meaning large water or large lake 2 7 MichiganStateState of MichiganFlagSealNickname s The Great Lake State 1 The Wolverine State The Mitten State Water Winter Wonderland Motto s Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam circumspice English If you seek a pleasant peninsula look about you Anthem My Michigan Map of the United States with Michigan highlightedCountryUnited StatesBefore statehoodMichigan TerritoryAdmitted to the UnionJanuary 26 1837 26th CapitalLansingLargest cityDetroitLargest metro and urban areasDetroitGovernment GovernorGretchen Whitmer D Lieutenant GovernorGarlin Gilchrist D LegislatureMichigan Legislature R Upper houseSenate R Lower houseHouse of Representatives R JudiciaryMichigan Supreme CourtU S senatorsDebbie Stabenow D Gary Peters D U S House delegation7 Democrats 7 Republicans list Area Total99 729 sq mi 250 493 km2 Rank11thDimensions Length456 2 mi 734 km Width386 2 mi 621 km Elevation900 ft 270 m Highest elevation Mount Arvon 3 a 1 979 ft 603 m Lowest elevation Lake Erie 3 a 571 ft 174 m Population 2020 Total10 077 331 4 Rank10th Density174 sq mi 67 1 km2 Rank17th Median household income 54 900 5 Income rank32ndDemonym s Michigander Michiganian Yooper Upper Peninsula 6 Language Official languageNone English de facto Spoken languageEnglish 91 11 Spanish 2 93 Arabic 1 05 Other 4 92 Time zonesMost of stateUTC 05 00 Eastern Summer DST UTC 04 00 EDT 4 U P counties Gogebic Iron Dickinson and Menominee UTC 06 00 Central Summer DST UTC 05 00 CDT USPS abbreviationMIISO 3166 codeUS MITraditional abbreviationMich Latitude41 41 N to 48 18 NLongitude82 7 W to 90 25 WWebsitemichigan wbr govMichigan state symbolsLiving insigniaBirdAmerican robin Turdus migratorius FishBrook trout Salvelinus fontinalis FlowerApple blossom Malus domestica Wildflower Dwarf lake iris Iris lacustris MammalUnofficial Wolverine Gulo gulo luscus Game animal White tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus ReptilePainted turtle Chrysemys picta TreeEastern white pine Pinus strobus Inanimate insigniaFossilMastodon Mammut americanum GemstoneIsle Royale greenstoneRockPetoskey stoneSoilKalkaska sandState route markerState quarterReleased in 2004Lists of United States state symbolsMichigan consists of two peninsulas The Lower Peninsula resembles the shape of a mitten and comprises a majority of the state s land area The Upper Peninsula often called the U P is separated from the Lower Peninsula by the Straits of Mackinac a five mile 8 km channel that joins Lake Huron to Lake Michigan The Mackinac Bridge connects the peninsulas Michigan has the longest freshwater coastline of any political subdivision in the United States being bordered by four of the five Great Lakes and Lake St Clair 8 It also has 64 980 inland lakes and ponds 9 Michigan has the second most water of any state behind only Alaska 10 The area was first occupied by a succession of Native American tribes over thousands of years In the 17th century French explorers claimed it as part of the New France colony when it was largely inhabited by indigenous peoples French and Canadian traders and settlers Metis and others migrated to the area settling largely along the waterways After France s defeat in the French and Indian War in 1762 the region came under British rule Britain ceded the territory to the newly independent United States after Britain s defeat in the American Revolutionary War The area was part of the larger Northwest Territory until 1800 when western Michigan became part of the Indiana Territory Michigan Territory was formed in 1805 but some of the northern border with Canada was not agreed upon until after the War of 1812 Michigan was admitted into the Union in 1837 as the 26th state a free one It soon became an important center of industry and trade in the Great Lakes region attracting immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries from many European countries Immigrants from Finland Macedonia and the Netherlands were especially numerous 11 Migration from Appalachia 12 and of Black Southerners as part of the Great Migration 13 increased in the 1930s with many settling in Metro Detroit Although Michigan has developed a diverse economy in the early 20th century it became widely known as the center of the U S automotive industry which developed as a major national economic force It is home to the country s three major automobile companies whose headquarters are all in Metro Detroit Once exploited for logging and mining today the sparsely populated Upper Peninsula is important for tourism due to the abundance of natural resources 14 15 The Lower Peninsula is a center of manufacturing forestry agriculture services and high tech industry Contents 1 History 1 1 17th century 1 2 18th century 1 3 19th century 1 4 20th and 21st centuries 2 Government 2 1 State government 2 2 Law 2 3 Politics 2 4 Administrative divisions 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Geology 4 Demographics 4 1 Population 4 2 Birth data 4 3 Languages 4 4 Religion 5 Economy 5 1 Taxation 5 2 Agriculture 5 3 Tourism 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Energy 6 2 Transportation 6 2 1 International crossings 6 2 2 Railroads 6 2 3 Roadways 6 2 4 Airports 7 Metropolitan areas 8 Education 9 Culture 9 1 Arts 9 1 1 Music 9 1 2 Performance arts 9 2 Sports 10 State symbols and nicknames 11 Sister regions 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Michigan For a chronological guide see Timeline of Michigan history When the first European explorers arrived the most populous tribes were Algonquian peoples who include the Anishinaabe groups of Ojibwe Odaawaa Odawa Ottawa and the Boodewaadamii Bodewadmi Potawatomi The three nations co existed peacefully as part of a loose confederation called the Council of Three Fires The Ojibwe whose numbers are estimated to have been between 25 000 and 35 000 were the largest The Ojibwe Indians also known as Chippewa in the U S an Anishinaabe tribe were established in Michigan s Upper Peninsula and northern and central Michigan Bands also inhabited Ontario and southern Manitoba Canada and northern Wisconsin and northern and north central Minnesota The Ottawa Indians lived primarily south of the Straits of Mackinac in northern western and southern Michigan but also in southern Ontario northern Ohio and eastern Wisconsin The Potawatomi were in southern and western Michigan in addition to northern and central Indiana northern Illinois southern Wisconsin and southern Ontario Other Algonquian tribes in Michigan in the south and east were the Mascouten the Menominee the Miami the Sac or Sauk and the Meskwaki Fox The Wyandot were an Iroquoian speaking people in this area they were historically known as the Huron by the French and were the historical adversaries of the Iroquois Confederation 17th century Edit Main articles New France and Canada New France Pere Marquette and the Indians 1869 by Wilhelm Lamprecht French voyageurs and coureurs des bois explored and settled in Michigan in the 17th century The first Europeans to reach what became Michigan were those of Etienne Brule s expedition in 1622 The first permanent European settlement was founded in 1668 on the site where Pere Jacques Marquette established Sault Ste Marie Michigan as a base for Catholic missions 16 17 Missionaries in 1671 75 founded outlying stations at Saint Ignace and Marquette Jesuit missionaries were well received by the area s Indian populations with few difficulties or hostilities In 1679 Robert Cavelier Sieur de la Salle built Fort Miami at present day St Joseph In 1691 the French established a trading post and Fort St Joseph along the St Joseph River at the present day city of Niles 18th century Edit Main articles French and Indian War Treaty of Paris 1763 Province of Quebec 1763 1791 Indian Reserve 1763 American Revolutionary War Treaty of Paris 1783 Northwest Ordinance and Northwest Territory In 1701 French explorer and army officer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac founded Fort Pontchartrain du Detroit or Fort Pontchartrain on the Strait on the strait known as the Detroit River between lakes Saint Clair and Erie Cadillac had convinced King Louis XIV s chief minister Louis Phelypeaux Comte de Pontchartrain that a permanent community there would strengthen French control over the upper Great Lakes and discourage British aspirations The hundred soldiers and workers who accompanied Cadillac built a fort enclosing one arpent 18 19 about 0 85 acres 3 400 m2 the equivalent of just under 200 feet 61 m per side and named it Fort Pontchartrain Cadillac s wife Marie Therese Guyon soon moved to Detroit becoming one of the first European women to settle in what was considered the wilderness of Michigan The town quickly became a major fur trading and shipping post The Eglise de Saint Anne Catholic Church of Saint Anne was founded the same year While the original building does not survive the congregation remains active Cadillac later departed to serve as the French governor of Louisiana from 1710 to 1716 French attempts to consolidate the fur trade led to the Fox Wars in which the Meskwaki Fox and their allies fought the French and their Native allies At the same time the French strengthened Fort Michilimackinac at the Straits of Mackinac to better control their lucrative fur trading empire By the mid 18th century the French also occupied forts at present day Niles and Sault Ste Marie though most of the rest of the region remained unsettled by Europeans France offered free land to attract families to Detroit which grew to 800 people in 1765 It was the largest city between Montreal and New Orleans 20 French settlers also established small farms south of the Detroit River opposite the fort near a Jesuit mission and Huron village Map of British America showing the original boundaries of the Province of Quebec and its Quebec Act of 1774 post annexation boundaries Treaty of Paris by Benjamin West 1783 an unfinished painting of the American diplomatic negotiators of the Treaty of Paris which brought official conclusion to the Revolutionary War and gave possession of Michigan and other territory to the new United States From 1660 until the end of French rule Michigan was part of the Royal Province of New France d In 1760 Montreal fell to the British forces ending the French and Indian War 1754 1763 the North American front of the Seven Years War in Europe Under the 1763 Treaty of Paris Michigan and the rest of New France east of the Mississippi River were ceded by defeated France to Great Britain 21 After the Quebec Act was passed in 1774 Michigan became part of the British Province of Quebec By 1778 Detroit s population reached 2 144 and it was the third largest city in Quebec province 22 During the American Revolutionary War Detroit was an important British supply center Most of the inhabitants were French Canadians or American Indians many of whom had been allied with the French because of long trading ties Because of imprecise cartography and unclear language defining the boundaries in the 1783 Treaty of Paris the British retained control of Detroit and Michigan after the American Revolution When Quebec split into Lower and Upper Canada in 1791 Michigan was part of Kent County Upper Canada It held its first democratic elections in August 1792 to send delegates to the new provincial parliament at Newark now Niagara on the Lake 23 Under terms negotiated in the 1794 Jay Treaty Britain withdrew from Detroit and Michilimackinac in 1796 It retained control of territory east and south of the Detroit River which are now included in Ontario Canada Questions remained over the boundary for many years and the United States did not have uncontested control of the Upper Peninsula and Drummond Island until 1818 and 1847 respectively 19th century Edit Main articles Indiana Territory Organic act List of organic acts Michigan Territory Admission to the Union List of U S states by date of admission to the Union and Michigan in the American Civil War Territorial changes of the Michigan Territory from 1818 to 1836 During the War of 1812 the United States forces at Fort Detroit surrendered Michigan Territory effectively consisting of Detroit and the surrounding area after a nearly bloodless siege in 1812 A US attempt to retake Detroit resulted in a severe American defeat in the River Raisin Massacre This battle still ranked as the bloodiest ever fought in the state had the highest number of American casualties of any battle of the war Michigan was recaptured by the Americans in 1813 after the Battle of Lake Erie They used Michigan as a base to launch an invasion of Canada which culminated in the Battle of the Thames But the more northern areas of Michigan were held by the British until the peace treaty restored the old boundaries A number of forts including Fort Wayne were built by the United States in Michigan during the 19th century out of fears of renewed fighting with Britain Michigan Territory governor and judges established the University of Michigan in 1817 as the Catholepistemiad or the University of Michigania The population grew slowly until the opening in 1825 of the Erie Canal through the Mohawk Valley in New York connecting the Great Lakes to the Hudson River and New York City The new route attracted a large influx of settlers to the Michigan territory They worked as farmers lumbermen shipbuilders and merchants and shipped out grain lumber and iron ore By the 1830s Michigan had 80 000 residents more than enough to apply and qualify for statehood A Constitutional Convention of Assent was held to lead the territory to statehood 24 In October 1835 the people approved the Constitution of 1835 thereby forming a state government Congressional recognition was delayed pending resolution of a boundary dispute with Ohio known as the Toledo War Congress awarded the Toledo Strip to Ohio Michigan received the western part of the Upper Peninsula as a concession and formally entered the Union as a free state on January 26 1837 The Upper Peninsula proved to be a rich source of lumber iron and copper Michigan led the nation in lumber production from the 1850s to the 1880s Railroads became a major engine of growth from the 1850s onward with Detroit the chief hub A second wave of French Canadian immigrants settled in Michigan during the late 19th to early 20th century working in lumbering areas in counties on the Lake Huron side of the Lower Peninsula such as the Saginaw Valley Alpena and Cheboygan counties as well as throughout the Upper Peninsula with large concentrations in Escanaba and the Keweenaw Peninsula 25 This was also a period of development of the gypsum industry in Alabaster Michigan which became nationally prominent The first statewide meeting of the Republican Party took place July 6 1854 in Jackson Michigan where the party adopted its platform The state was predominantly Republican until the 1930s reflecting the political continuity of migrants from across the Northern Tier of New England and New York Michigan made a significant contribution to the Union in the American Civil War and sent more than forty regiments of volunteers to the federal armies Michigan modernized and expanded its system of education in this period The Michigan State Normal School now Eastern Michigan University was founded in 1849 for the training of teachers It was the fourth oldest normal school in the United States and the first U S normal school outside New England In 1899 the Michigan State Normal School became the first normal school in the nation to offer a four year curriculum Michigan Agricultural College 1855 now Michigan State University in East Lansing was founded as the first agricultural college in the nation Many private colleges were founded as well and the smaller cities established high schools late in the century 26 20th and 21st centuries Edit Michigan s economy underwent a transformation at the turn of the 20th century Many individuals including Ransom E Olds John and Horace Dodge Henry Leland David Dunbar Buick Henry Joy Charles King and Henry Ford provided the concentration of engineering know how and technological enthusiasm to develop the automotive industry 27 Ford s development of the moving assembly line in Highland Park marked a new era in transportation Like the steamship and railroad mass production of automobiles was a far reaching development More than the forms of public transportation the affordable automobile transformed private life Automobile production became the major industry of Detroit and Michigan and permanently altered the socioeconomic life of the United States and much of the world With the growth the auto industry created jobs in Detroit that attracted immigrants from Europe and migrants from across the United States including both blacks and whites from the rural South By 1920 Detroit was the fourth largest city in the US Residential housing was in short supply and it took years for the market to catch up with the population boom By the 1930s so many immigrants had arrived that more than 30 languages were spoken in the public schools and ethnic communities celebrated in annual heritage festivals Over the years immigrants and migrants contributed greatly to Detroit s diverse urban culture including popular music trends The influential Motown Sound of the 1960s was led by a variety of individual singers and groups Grand Rapids the second largest city in Michigan is also an important center of manufacturing Since 1838 the city has been noted for its furniture industry In the 21st century it is home to five of the world s leading office furniture companies Grand Rapids is home to a number of major companies including Steelcase Amway and Meijer Grand Rapids is also an important center for GE Aviation Systems Michigan held its first United States presidential primary election in 1910 With its rapid growth in industry it was an important center of industry wide union organizing such as the rise of the United Auto Workers In 1920 WWJ AM in Detroit became the first radio station in the United States to regularly broadcast commercial programs Throughout that decade some of the country s largest and most ornate skyscrapers were built in the city Particularly noteworthy are the Fisher Building Cadillac Place and the Guardian Building each of which has been designated as a National Historic Landmark NHL In 1927 a school bombing took place in Clinton County The Bath School disaster perpetrated by an adult man resulted in the deaths of 38 schoolchildren and constitutes the deadliest mass murder in a school in U S history Detroit in the mid twentieth century At the time the city was the fourth largest U S metropolis by population and held about one third of the state s population Michigan converted much of its manufacturing to satisfy defense needs during World War II it manufactured 10 9 percent of the United States military armaments produced during the war ranking second behind New York among the 48 states 28 Detroit continued to expand through the 1950s at one point doubling its population in a decade After World War II housing was developed in suburban areas outside city cores to meet demand for residences The federal government subsidized the construction of interstate highways which were intended to strengthen military access but also allowed commuters and business traffic to travel the region more easily Since 1960 modern advances in the auto industry have led to increased automation high tech industry and increased suburban growth Michigan is the leading auto producing state in the US with the industry primarily located throughout the Midwestern United States Ontario Canada and the Southern United States 29 With almost ten million residents Michigan is a large and influential state ranking tenth in population among the fifty states Detroit is the centrally located metropolitan area of the Great Lakes Megalopolis and the second largest metropolitan area in the U S after Chicago linking the Great Lakes system The Metro Detroit area in Southeast Michigan is the state s largest metropolitan area roughly 50 of the population resides there and the eleventh largest in the United States The Grand Rapids metropolitan area in Western Michigan is the state s fastest growing metro area with more than 1 3 million residents as of 2006 update Metro Detroit receives more than 15 million visitors each year Michigan has many popular tourist destinations including areas such as Frankenmuth in The Thumb and Traverse City on the Grand Traverse Bay in Northern Michigan Tourists spend about 17 billion annually in Michigan supporting 193 000 jobs 30 Michigan typically ranks third or fourth in overall Research amp development R amp D expenditures in the US 31 32 The state s leading research institutions include the University of Michigan Michigan State University and Wayne State University which are important partners in the state s economy and the state s University Research Corridor 33 Michigan s public universities attract more than 1 5 B in research and development grants each year 34 Agriculture also serves a significant role making the state a leading grower of fruit in the US including blueberries cherries apples grapes and peaches 35 Government EditSee also List of Governors of Michigan and United States congressional delegations from Michigan State government Edit Main article Government of Michigan The Michigan State Capitol in Lansing houses the legislative branch of the government of the U S state of Michigan Michigan is governed as a republic with three branches of government the executive branch consisting of the Governor of Michigan and the other independently elected constitutional officers the legislative branch consisting of the House of Representatives and Senate and the judicial branch The Michigan Constitution allows for the direct participation of the electorate by statutory initiative and referendum recall and constitutional initiative and referral Article II 9 36 defined as the power to propose laws and to enact and reject laws called the initiative and the power to approve or reject laws enacted by the legislature called the referendum The power of initiative extends only to laws which the legislature may enact under this constitution Lansing is the state capital and is home to all three branches of state government The floor of the Michigan House of Representatives The governor and the other state constitutional officers serve four year terms and may be re elected only once The current governor is Gretchen Whitmer Michigan has two official Governor s Residences one is in Lansing and the other is at Mackinac Island The other constitutionally elected executive officers are the lieutenant governor who is elected on a joint ticket with the governor the secretary of state and the attorney general The lieutenant governor presides over the Senate voting only in case of a tie and is also a member of the cabinet The secretary of state is the chief elections officer and is charged with running many licensure programs including motor vehicles all of which are done through the branch offices of the secretary of state The Michigan Legislature consists of a 38 member Senate and 110 member House of Representatives Members of both houses of the legislature are elected through first past the post elections by single member electoral districts of near equal population that often have boundaries which coincide with county and municipal lines Senators serve four year terms concurrent to those of the governor while representatives serve two year terms The Michigan State Capitol was dedicated in 1879 and has hosted the executive and legislative branches of the state ever since Governor Gretchen Whitmer D speaking at a National Guard ceremony in 2019 The Michigan judiciary consists of two courts with primary jurisdiction the Circuit Courts and the District Courts one intermediate level appellate court the Michigan Court of Appeals and the Michigan Supreme Court There are several administrative courts and specialized courts District courts are trial courts of limited jurisdiction handling most traffic violations small claims misdemeanors and civil suits where the amount contended is below 25 000 District courts are often responsible for handling the preliminary examination and for setting bail in felony cases District court judges are elected to terms of six years In a few locations municipal courts have been retained to the exclusion of the establishment of district courts There are 57 circuit courts in the State of Michigan which have original jurisdiction over all civil suits where the amount contended in the case exceeds 25 000 and all criminal cases involving felonies Circuit courts are also the only trial courts in the State of Michigan which possess the power to issue equitable remedies Circuit courts have appellate jurisdiction from district and municipal courts as well as from decisions and decrees of state agencies Most counties have their own circuit court but sparsely populated counties often share them Circuit court judges are elected to terms of six years State appellate court judges are elected to terms of six years but vacancies are filled by an appointment by the governor There are four divisions of the Court of Appeals in Detroit Grand Rapids Lansing and Marquette Cases are heard by the Court of Appeals by panels of three judges who examine the application of the law and not the facts of the case unless there has been grievous error pertaining to questions of fact The Michigan Supreme Court consists of seven members who are elected on non partisan ballots for staggered eight year terms The Supreme Court has original jurisdiction only in narrow circumstances but holds appellate jurisdiction over the entire state judicial system Law Edit Main article Law of Michigan Michigan Supreme Court at the Hall of Justice Michigan has had four constitutions the first of which was ratified on October 5 and 6 1835 37 There were also constitutions from 1850 and 1908 in addition to the current constitution from 1963 The current document has a preamble 11 articles and one section consisting of a schedule and temporary provisions Michigan like every U S state except Louisiana has a common law legal system Politics Edit Main article Politics of Michigan Having been a Democratic leaning state at the presidential level since the 1990s Michigan has evolved into a swing state after Donald Trump won the state in 2016 Governors since the 1970s have alternated between the Democrats and Republicans and statewide offices including attorney general secretary of state and senator have been held by members of both parties in varying proportion Additionally from 1994 until 2022 the governor elect had always come from the party opposite the presidency The Republican Party holds a majority in both the House and Senate of the Michigan Legislature The state s congressional delegation is commonly split with one party or the other typically holding a narrow majority Michigan was the home of Gerald Ford the 38th president of the United States Born in Nebraska he moved as an infant to Grand Rapids 38 39 The Gerald R Ford Museum is in Grand Rapids and the Gerald R Ford Presidential Library is on the campus of his alma mater the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor In a 2020 study Michigan was ranked as the 13th easiest state for citizens to vote in 40 Administrative divisions Edit Main article Administrative divisions of Michigan See also List of counties in Michigan and List of municipalities in Michigan State government is decentralized among three tiers statewide county and township Counties are administrative divisions of the state and townships are administrative divisions of a county Both of them exercise state government authority localized to meet the particular needs of their jurisdictions as provided by state law There are 83 counties in Michigan Cities state universities and villages are vested with home rule powers of varying degrees Home rule cities can generally do anything not prohibited by law The fifteen state universities have broad power and can do anything within the parameters of their status as educational institutions that is not prohibited by the state constitution Villages by contrast have limited home rule and are not completely autonomous from the county and township in which they are located There are two types of township in Michigan general law township and charter Charter township status was created by the Legislature in 1947 and grants additional powers and stream lined administration in order to provide greater protection against annexation by a city As of April 2001 update there were 127 charter townships in Michigan In general charter townships have many of the same powers as a city but without the same level of obligations For example a charter township can have its own fire department water and sewer department police department and so on just like a city but it is not required to have those things whereas cities must provide those services Charter townships can opt to use county wide services instead such as deputies from the county sheriff s office instead of a home based force of ordinance officers Largest cities or towns in Michigan 2020 Census 41 Rank Name County Pop Detroit Grand Rapids 1 Detroit Wayne 639 111 Warren Sterling Heights2 Grand Rapids Kent 198 9173 Warren Macomb 139 3874 Sterling Heights Macomb 134 3465 Ann Arbor Washtenaw 123 8516 Lansing Ingham 112 6447 Dearborn Wayne 109 9768 Clinton Charter Township Macomb 100 5139 Canton Charter Township Wayne 98 65910 Livonia Wayne 95 535Geography EditFurther information Geography of Michigan Protected areas of Michigan and List of Michigan state parks Map of the Saint Lawrence River Great Lakes Watershed in North America Its drainage area includes the Great Lakes the world s largest system of freshwater lakes The basin covers nearly all of Michigan The Huron National Wildlife Refuge one of the fifteen federal wildernesses in Michigan Michigan consists of two peninsulas separated by the Straits of Mackinac The 45th parallel north runs through the state marked by highway signs and the Polar Equator Trail 42 self published source along a line including Mission Point Light near Traverse City the towns of Gaylord and Alpena in the Lower Peninsula and Menominee in the Upper Peninsula With the exception of two tiny areas drained by the Mississippi River by way of the Wisconsin River in the Upper Peninsula and by way of the Kankakee Illinois River in the Lower Peninsula Michigan is drained by the Great Lakes St Lawrence watershed and is the only state with the majority of its land thus drained No point in the state is more than six miles 9 7 km from a natural water source or more than 85 miles 137 km from a Great Lakes shoreline 43 better source needed The Great Lakes that border Michigan from east to west are Lake Erie Lake Huron Lake Michigan and Lake Superior The state is bounded on the south by the states of Ohio and Indiana sharing land and water boundaries with both Michigan s western boundaries are almost entirely water boundaries from south to north with Illinois and Wisconsin in Lake Michigan then a land boundary with Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula that is principally demarcated by the Menominee and Montreal Rivers then water boundaries again in Lake Superior with Wisconsin and Minnesota to the west capped around by the Canadian province of Ontario to the north and east The heavily forested Upper Peninsula is relatively mountainous in the west The Porcupine Mountains which are part of one of the oldest mountain chains in the world 44 rise to an altitude of almost 2 000 feet 610 m above sea level and form the watershed between the streams flowing into Lake Superior and Lake Michigan The surface on either side of this range is rugged The state s highest point in the Huron Mountains northwest of Marquette is Mount Arvon at 1 979 feet 603 m The peninsula is as large as Connecticut Delaware Massachusetts and Rhode Island combined but has fewer than 330 000 inhabitants They are sometimes called Yoopers from U P ers and their speech the Yooper dialect has been heavily influenced by the numerous Scandinavian and Canadian immigrants who settled the area during the lumbering and mining boom of the late 19th century Mackinac Island an island and resort area at the eastern end of the Straits of Mackinac More than 80 of the island is preserved as Mackinac Island State Park Sleeping Bear Dunes along the northwest coast of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan The Tahquamenon Falls in the Upper Peninsula The Pointe Mouillee State Game Area one of the 221 state game and wildlife areas in Michigan It encompasses 7 483 acres of hunting recreational and protected wildlife and wetland areas at the mouth of the Huron River at Lake Erie as well as smaller outlying areas within the Detroit River The Lower Peninsula is shaped like a mitten and many residents hold up a hand to depict where they are from 45 It is 277 miles 446 km long from north to south and 195 miles 314 km from east to west and occupies nearly two thirds of the state s land area The surface of the peninsula is generally level broken by conical hills and glacial moraines usually not more than a few hundred feet tall It is divided by a low water divide running north and south The larger portion of the state is on the west of this and gradually slopes toward Lake Michigan The highest point in the Lower Peninsula is either Briar Hill at 1 705 feet 520 m or one of several points nearby in the vicinity of Cadillac The lowest point is the surface of Lake Erie at 571 feet 174 m The geographic orientation of Michigan s peninsulas makes for a long distance between the ends of the state Ironwood in the far western Upper Peninsula lies 630 miles 1 010 kilometers by highway from Lambertville in the Lower Peninsula s southeastern corner The geographic isolation of the Upper Peninsula from Michigan s political and population centers makes the region culturally and economically distinct Frequent attempts to establish the Upper Peninsula as its own state called Superior have failed to gain traction A feature of Michigan that gives it the distinct shape of a mitten is the Thumb This peninsula projects out into Lake Huron and the Saginaw Bay The geography of the Thumb is mainly flat with a few rolling hills Other peninsulas of Michigan include the Keweenaw Peninsula making up the Copper Country region of the state The Leelanau Peninsula lies in the Northern Lower Michigan region See Also Michigan RegionsNumerous lakes and marshes mark both peninsulas and the coast is much indented Keweenaw Bay Whitefish Bay and the Big and Little Bays De Noc are the principal indentations on the Upper Peninsula The Grand and Little Traverse Thunder and Saginaw bays indent the Lower Peninsula Michigan has the second longest shoreline of any state 3 288 miles 5 292 km 46 including 1 056 miles 1 699 km of island shoreline 47 The state has numerous large islands the principal ones being the North Manitou and South Manitou Beaver and Fox groups in Lake Michigan Isle Royale and Grande Isle in Lake Superior Marquette Bois Blanc and Mackinac islands in Lake Huron and Neebish Sugar and Drummond islands in St Mary s River Michigan has about 150 lighthouses the most of any U S state The first lighthouses in Michigan were built between 1818 and 1822 They were built to project light at night and to serve as a landmark during the day to safely guide the passenger ships and freighters traveling the Great Lakes See Lighthouses in the United States The state s rivers are generally small short and shallow and few are navigable The principal ones include the Detroit River St Marys River and St Clair River which connect the Great Lakes the Au Sable Cheboygan and Saginaw which flow into Lake Huron the Ontonagon and Tahquamenon which flow into Lake Superior and the St Joseph Kalamazoo Grand Muskegon Manistee and Escanaba which flow into Lake Michigan The state has 11 037 inland lakes totaling 1 305 square miles 3 380 km2 of inland water in addition to 38 575 square miles 99 910 km2 of Great Lakes waters No point in Michigan is more than six miles 9 7 km from an inland lake or more than 85 miles 137 km from one of the Great Lakes 48 The state is home to several areas maintained by the National Park Service including Isle Royale National Park in Lake Superior about 30 miles 48 km southeast of Thunder Bay Ontario Other national protected areas in the state include Keweenaw National Historical Park Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore Huron National Forest Manistee National Forest Hiawatha National Forest Ottawa National Forest and Father Marquette National Memorial The largest section of the North Country National Scenic Trail passes through Michigan With 78 state parks 19 state recreation areas and six state forests Michigan has the largest state park and state forest system of any state Climate Edit See also Climate change in Michigan Koppen climate types of Michigan using 1991 2020 climate normals Michigan has a continental climate although there are two distinct regions The southern and central parts of the Lower Peninsula south of Saginaw Bay and from the Grand Rapids area southward have a warmer climate Koppen climate classification Dfa with hot summers and cold winters The northern part of Lower Peninsula and the entire Upper Peninsula has a more severe climate Koppen Dfb with warm but shorter summers and longer cold to very cold winters Some parts of the state average high temperatures below freezing from December through February and into early March in the far northern parts During the winter through the middle of February the state is frequently subjected to heavy lake effect snow The state averages from 30 to 40 inches 76 to 102 cm of precipitation annually however some areas in the northern lower peninsula and the upper peninsula average almost 160 inches 4 100 mm of snowfall per year 49 Michigan s highest recorded temperature is 112 F 44 C at Mio on July 13 1936 and the coldest recorded temperature is 51 F 46 C at Vanderbilt on February 9 1934 50 The state averages 30 days of thunderstorm activity per year These can be severe especially in the southern part of the state The state averages 17 tornadoes per year which are more common in the state s extreme southern section Portions of the southern border have been almost as vulnerable historically as states further west and in Tornado Alley For this reason many communities in the very southern portions of the state have tornado sirens to warn residents of approaching tornadoes Farther north in Central Michigan Northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula tornadoes are rare 51 52 Geology Edit The geological formation of the state is greatly varied with the Michigan Basin being the most major formation Primary boulders are found over the entire surface of the Upper Peninsula being principally of primitive origin while Secondary deposits cover the entire Lower Peninsula The Upper Peninsula exhibits Lower Silurian sandstones limestones copper and iron bearing rocks corresponding to the Huronian system of Canada The central portion of the Lower Peninsula contains coal measures and rocks of the Pennsylvanian period Devonian and sub Carboniferous deposits are scattered over the entire state Michigan rarely experiences earthquakes and those that it does experience are generally smaller ones that do not cause significant damage A 4 6 magnitude earthquake struck in August 1947 More recently a 4 2 magnitude earthquake occurred on Saturday May 2 2015 shortly after noon about five miles south of Galesburg Michigan 9 miles southeast of Kalamazoo in central Michigan about 140 miles west of Detroit according to the Colorado based U S Geological Survey s National Earthquake Information Center No major damage or injuries were reported according to Governor Rick Snyder s office 53 Demographics EditSee also Michigan statistical areas Michigan 2020 population distribution Racial Composition of Michigan as of 2010 Self identified race Percent of populationNon Hispanic white 76 6 Hispanic and Latino of any race 4 4 Black or African American 14 2 Asian 2 4 Two or more races 2 3 Native Americans and Alaska Natives 0 6 Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders 0 1 Historical populationCensus Pop 18003 757 18104 76226 8 18207 45256 5 183028 004275 8 1840212 267658 0 1850397 65487 3 1860749 11388 4 18701 184 05958 1 18801 636 93738 2 18902 093 89027 9 19002 420 98215 6 19102 810 17316 1 19203 668 41230 5 19304 842 32532 0 19405 256 1068 5 19506 371 76621 2 19607 823 19422 8 19708 875 08313 4 19809 262 0784 4 19909 295 2970 4 20009 938 4446 9 20109 883 640 0 6 202010 077 3312 0 Sources 1910 2020 54 Population Edit The United States Census Bureau recorded the population of Michigan at 10 084 442 at the 2020 United States census an increase of 2 03 from 9 883 635 recorded at the 2010 United States census The center of population of Michigan is in Shiawassee County in the southeastern corner of the civil township of Bennington which is northwest of the village of Morrice 55 As of the 2010 American Community Survey for the U S census the state had a foreign born population of 592 212 or 6 0 of the total Michigan has the largest Dutch Finnish and Macedonian populations in the United States Michigan racial breakdown of population Self identified race 1970 56 1990 56 2000 57 2010 58 2020 59 White American 88 3 83 4 80 1 78 9 73 9 Black or African American 11 2 13 9 14 2 14 2 13 7 Asian American 0 2 1 1 1 8 2 4 3 3 American Indian 0 2 0 6 0 6 0 6 0 6 Native Hawaiian andother Pacific Islander Other race 0 2 0 9 1 3 1 5 2 2 Two or more races 1 9 2 3 6 3 Thirteen largest ancestries in Michigan 2016 60 Ancestry PercentGerman 19 5 Irish 10 6 English 8 5 Polish 8 2 American 5 6 Italian 4 7 Dutch 4 5 French 4 0 Scottish 2 2 Arab 1 9 French Canadian 1 6 Swedish 1 4 Hungarian 1 0 The large majority of Michigan s population is white Americans of European descent live throughout Michigan and most of Metro Detroit Large European American groups include those of German British Irish Polish and Belgian ancestry People of Scandinavian descent and those of Finnish ancestry have a notable presence in the Upper Peninsula Western Michigan is known for the Dutch heritage of many residents the highest concentration of any state especially in Holland and metropolitan Grand Rapids African Americans who came to Detroit and other northern cities in the Great Migration of the early 20th century form a majority of the population of the city of Detroit and of other cities including Flint and Benton Harbor As of 2007 update about 300 000 people in Southeastern Michigan trace their descent from the Middle East 61 Dearborn has a sizeable Arab community with many Assyrian Chaldean Syriac and Lebanese who immigrated for jobs in the auto industry in the 1920s along with more recent Yemenis and Iraqis 62 As of 2007 update almost 8 000 Hmong people lived in the State of Michigan about double their 1999 presence in the state 63 As of 2007 update most lived in northeastern Detroit but they had been increasingly moving to Pontiac and Warren 64 By 2015 the number of Hmong in the Detroit city limits had significantly declined 65 Lansing hosts a statewide Hmong New Year Festival 64 The Hmong community also had a prominent portrayal in the 2008 film Gran Torino which was set in Detroit As of 2015 update 80 of Michigan s Japanese population lived in the counties of Macomb Oakland Washtenaw and Wayne in the Detroit and Ann Arbor areas 66 As of April 2013 update the largest Japanese national population is in Novi with 2 666 Japanese residents and the next largest populations are respectively in Ann Arbor West Bloomfield Township Farmington Hills and Battle Creek The state has 481 Japanese employment facilities providing 35 554 local jobs 391 of them are in Southeast Michigan providing 20 816 jobs and the 90 in other regions in the state provide 14 738 jobs The Japanese Direct Investment Survey of the Consulate General of Japan Detroit stated more than 2 208 additional Japanese residents were employed in the State of Michigan as of 1 October 2012 update than in 2011 67 During the 1990s the Japanese population of Michigan experienced an increase and many Japanese people with children moved to particular areas for their proximity to Japanese grocery stores and high performing schools 66 A person from Michigan is called a Michigander or Michiganian 68 also at times but rarely a Michiganite 69 Residents of the Upper Peninsula are sometimes referred to as Yoopers a phonetic pronunciation of U P ers and they sometimes refer to those from the Lower Peninsula as trolls because they live below the bridge see Three Billy Goats Gruff 70 71 72 Birth data Edit As of 2011 update 34 3 of Michigan s children under the age of one belonged to racial or ethnic minority groups meaning they had at least one parent who was not non Hispanic white 73 Note Percentages in the table can exceed 100 as Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race Live births by single race ethnicity of mother Race of mother 2013 74 2014 75 2015 76 2016 77 2017 78 2018 79 2019 80 2020 81 White American 85 994 75 7 87 070 76 1 85 838 75 7 non Hispanic White 79 107 69 7 80 304 70 2 78 960 69 7 77 696 68 6 75 578 67 8 74 777 68 0 73 025 67 7 70 426 67 7 Black or African American 22 645 20 0 22 237 19 4 22 394 19 8 20 565 18 1 20 849 18 7 20 558 18 7 20 370 18 9 19 341 18 6 Asian American 4 136 3 6 4 284 3 7 4 294 3 8 4 316 3 8 4 468 4 0 4 395 4 0 4 304 4 0 4 260 4 1 American Indian 714 0 6 784 0 7 786 0 7 418 0 4 426 0 4 446 0 4 433 0 4 410 0 4 Hispanic and Latino American of any race 7 318 6 4 7 352 6 4 7 431 6 5 7 485 6 6 7 339 6 6 7 139 6 5 7 117 6 6 6 985 6 7 Total 113 489 100 114 375 100 113 312 100 113 315 100 111 426 100 110 032 100 107 886 100 104 074 100 Since 2016 data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected but included in one Hispanic group persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race Map of counties in Michigan by racial plurality per the 2020 U S censusNon Hispanic White 40 50 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 Languages Edit As of 2010 update 91 11 8 507 947 of Michigan residents age five and older spoke only English at home while 2 93 273 981 spoke Spanish 1 04 97 559 Arabic 0 44 41 189 German 0 36 33 648 Chinese which includes Mandarin 0 31 28 891 French 0 29 27 019 Polish and Syriac languages such as Modern Aramaic and Northeastern Neo Aramaic was spoken as a main language by 0 25 23 420 of the population over the age of five In total 8 89 830 281 of Michigan s population age five and older spoke a mother language other than English 82 Most common non English languages spoken in Michigan Language Percentage of population as of 2010 update 82 Spanish 2 93 Arabic 1 04 German 0 44 Chinese 0 36 French 0 31 Polish 0 29 Syriac languages 0 25 Italian 0 21 Albanian 0 19 Hindi 0 16 Tagalog 0 16 Vietnamese 0 16 Japanese 0 16 Korean 0 16 Religion Edit The Basilica of Sainte Anne de Detroit is the second oldest continuously operating Roman Catholic parish in the country The Roman Catholic Church has six dioceses and one archdiocese in Michigan Gaylord Grand Rapids Kalamazoo Lansing Marquette Saginaw and Detroit 83 The Roman Catholic Church is the largest denomination by number of adherents according to the Association of Religion Data Archives ARDA 2010 survey with 1 717 296 adherents 84 The Roman Catholic Church was the only organized religion in Michigan until the 19th century reflecting the territory s French colonial roots Detroit s Saint Anne s parish established in 1701 by Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac is the second oldest Roman Catholic parish in the United States 85 On March 8 1833 the Holy See formally established a diocese in the Michigan territory which included all of Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota and the Dakotas east of the Mississippi River When Michigan became a state in 1837 the boundary of the Diocese of Detroit was redrawn to coincide with that of the State the other dioceses were later carved out from the Diocese of Detroit but remain part of the Ecclesiastical Province of Detroit 86 In 2010 the largest Protestant denominations were the United Methodist Church with 228 521 adherents followed by the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod with 219 618 and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with 120 598 adherents The Christian Reformed Church in North America had almost 100 000 members and more than 230 congregations in Michigan 87 The Reformed Church in America had 76 000 members and 154 congregations in the state 88 In the same survey Jewish adherents in the state of Michigan were estimated at 44 382 and Muslims at 120 351 89 The Lutheran Church was introduced by German and Scandinavian immigrants Lutheranism is the second largest religious denomination in the state The first Jewish synagogue in the state was Temple Beth El founded by twelve German Jewish families in Detroit in 1850 90 In West Michigan Dutch immigrants fled from the specter of religious persecution and famine in the Netherlands around 1850 and settled in and around what is now Holland Michigan establishing a colony on American soil that fervently held onto Calvinist doctrine that established a significant presence of Reformed churches 91 Islam was introduced by immigrants from the Near East during the 20th century 92 Michigan is home to the largest mosque in North America the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn Battle Creek Michigan is also the birthplace of the Seventh day Adventist Church which was founded on May 21 1863 93 94 Religious affiliation in Michigan 2014 95 Affiliation of Michigan populationChristianity 70 70 Protestant 51 51 Evangelical Protestant 25 25 Mainline Protestant 18 18 Black Protestant 8 8 Roman Catholic 18 18 Mormon 0 5 0 5 Jehovah s Witnesses 1 1 Orthodox 0 5 0 5 Other Christianity 1 1 Judaism 1 1 Buddhism 1 1 Islam 1 1 Hinduism 0 5 0 5 Other faiths 1 1 Unaffiliated 24 24 Don t know No answer 1 1 Economy EditSee also List of companies based in Michigan Economy of metropolitan Detroit and Michigan locations by per capita income Top publicly tradedcompanies in Michiganaccording to revenueswith State and U S rankingsState Corporation US1 General Motors 212 Ford 223 Dow 824 Penske Automotive 1435 Whirlpool 1546 Lear 1797 Rocket Companies 1948 Stryker 2129 Kellogg s 22210 DTE Energy 25011 Ally 28712 BorgWarner 29513 SpartanNash 32914 Auto Owners 34115 Autoliv 39216 Masco 39817 CMS Energy 430Further information List of Michigan companiesSource Fortune 96 The Ambassador Bridge a suspension bridge that connects Detroit with Windsor Ontario in Canada It is the busiest international border crossing in North America in terms of trade volume Michigan is the center of the American automotive industry The Renaissance Center in Downtown Detroit is the world headquarter of General Motors Ford Dearborn Proving Ground DPG completed major reconstruction and renovations in 2006 In 2017 3 859 949 people in Michigan were employed at 222 553 establishments according to the U S Census Bureau 97 The U S Bureau of Economic Analysis estimated Michigan s Q3 2018 gross state product to be 538 billion ranking 14th out of the 50 states 98 According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics as of June 2021 update the state s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was estimated at 6 3 99 Products and services include automobiles food products information technology aerospace military equipment furniture and mining of copper and iron ore quantify Michigan is the third leading grower of Christmas trees with 60 520 acres 245 km2 of land dedicated to Christmas tree farming 100 101 The beverage Vernors Ginger Ale was invented in Michigan in 1866 sharing the title of oldest soft drink with Hires Root Beer Faygo was founded in Detroit on November 4 1907 Two of the top four pizza chains were founded in Michigan and are headquartered there Domino s Pizza by Tom Monaghan and Little Caesars Pizza by Mike Ilitch Michigan became the 24th right to work state in U S in 2012 Since 2009 GM Ford and Chrysler have managed a significant reorganization of their benefit funds structure after a volatile stock market which followed the September 11 attacks and early 2000s recession impacted their respective U S pension and benefit funds OPEB 102 General Motors Ford and Chrysler reached agreements with the United Auto Workers Union to transfer the liabilities for their respective health care and benefit funds to a 501 c 9 Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association VEBA Manufacturing in the state grew 6 6 from 2001 to 2006 103 but the high speculative price of oil became a factor for the U S auto industry during the economic crisis of 2008 impacting industry revenues In 2009 GM and Chrysler emerged from Chapter 11 restructurings with financing provided in part by the U S and Canadian governments 104 105 GM began its initial public offering IPO of stock in 2010 106 For 2010 the Big Three domestic automakers have reported significant profits indicating the beginning of rebound 107 108 109 110 As of 2002 update Michigan ranked fourth in the U S in high tech employment with 568 000 high tech workers which includes 70 000 in the automotive industry 111 Michigan typically ranks third or fourth in overall research and development R amp D expenditures in the United States 31 32 Its research and development which includes automotive comprises a higher percentage of the state s overall gross domestic product than for any other U S state 112 The state is an important source of engineering job opportunities The domestic auto industry accounts directly and indirectly for one of every ten jobs in the U S 113 Michigan was second in the U S in 2004 for new corporate facilities and expansions From 1997 to 2004 Michigan was the only state to top the 10 000 mark for the number of major new developments 29 114 however the effects of the late 2000s recession have slowed the state s economy In 2008 Michigan placed third in a site selection survey among the states for luring new business which measured capital investment and new job creation per one million population 115 In August 2009 Michigan and Detroit s auto industry received 1 36 B in grants from the U S Department of Energy for the manufacture of electric vehicle technologies which is expected to generate 6 800 immediate jobs and employ 40 000 in the state by 2020 116 From 2007 to 2009 Michigan ranked 3rd in the U S for new corporate facilities and expansions 117 118 As leading research institutions the University of Michigan Michigan State University and Wayne State University are important partners in the state s economy and its University Research Corridor 33 Michigan s public universities attract more than 1 5 B in research and development grants each year 34 The National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory is at Michigan State University Michigan s workforce is well educated and highly skilled making it attractive to companies It has the third highest number of engineering graduates nationally 119 Detroit Metropolitan Airport is one of the nation s most recently expanded and modernized airports with six major runways and large aircraft maintenance facilities capable of servicing and repairing a Boeing 747 and is a major hub for Delta Air Lines Michigan s schools and colleges rank among the nation s best The state has maintained its early commitment to public education The state s infrastructure gives it a competitive edge Michigan has 38 deep water ports 120 In 2007 Bank of America announced that it would commit 25 billion to community development in Michigan following its acquisition of LaSalle Bank in Troy 121 Michigan led the nation in job creation improvement in 2010 122 Distribution of Michigan s jobs as percentages of entire workforce Taxation Edit Michigan s personal income tax is a flat rate of 4 25 In addition 22 cities impose income taxes rates are set at 1 for residents and 0 5 for non residents in all but four cities 123 Michigan s state sales tax is 6 though items such as food and medication are exempted Property taxes are assessed on the local level but every property owner s local assessment contributes six mills a rate of 6 per 1000 of property value to the statutory State Education Tax Property taxes are appealable to local boards of review and need the approval of the local electorate to exceed millage rates prescribed by state law and local charters In 2011 the state repealed its business tax and replaced it with a 6 corporate income tax which substantially reduced taxes on business 124 125 Article IX of the Constitution of the State of Michigan also provides limitations on how much the state can tax A 6 use tax is levied on goods purchased outside the state that are brought in and used in state at parity with the sales tax 126 The use tax applies to internet sales purchases from outside Michigan and is equivalent to the sales tax 127 Agriculture Edit See also Cherry production in Michigan Michigan is the leading U S producer of tart cherries blueberries pickling cucumbers navy beans and petunias The world headquarters of the Kellogg s Company in Battle Creek A wide variety of commodity crops fruits and vegetables are grown in Michigan making it second only to California among U S states in the diversity of its agriculture 128 The state has 54 800 farms utilizing 10 000 000 acres 40 000 km2 of land which sold 6 49 billion worth of products in 2010 129 The most valuable agricultural product is milk Leading crops include corn soybeans flowers wheat sugar beets and potatoes Livestock in the state included 78 000 sheep a million cattle a million hogs and more than three million chickens Livestock products accounted for 38 of the value of agricultural products while crops accounted for the majority Michigan is a leading grower of fruit in the U S including blueberries tart cherries apples grapes and peaches 35 130 Plums pears and strawberries are also grown in Michigan These fruits are mainly grown in West Michigan due to the moderating effect of Lake Michigan on the climate There is also significant fruit production especially cherries but also grapes apples and other fruits in Northwest Michigan along Lake Michigan Michigan produces wines beers and a multitude of processed food products Kellogg s cereal is based in Battle Creek Michigan and processes many locally grown foods Thornapple Valley Ball Park Franks Koegel Meat Company and Hebrew National sausage companies are all based in Michigan Michigan is home to very fertile land in the Saginaw Valley and Thumb areas Products grown there include corn sugar beets navy beans and soybeans Sugar beet harvesting usually begins the first of October It takes the sugar factories about five months to process the 3 7 million tons of sugarbeets into 485 000 tons of pure white sugar 131 Michigan s largest sugar refiner Michigan Sugar Company 132 is the largest east of the Mississippi River and the fourth largest in the nation Michigan sugar brand names are Pioneer Sugar and the newly incorporated Big Chief Sugar Potatoes are grown in Northern Michigan and corn is dominant in Central Michigan Alfalfa cucumbers and asparagus are also grown Tourism Edit See also List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan List of Registered Historic Places in Michigan and List of museums in Michigan Mackinac Island is well known for cultural events and a wide variety of architectural styles including the Victorian Grand Hotel Holland Michigan is the home of the Tulip Time Festival the largest tulip festival in the U S Michigan s tourists spend 17 2 billion per year in the state supporting 193 000 tourism jobs 133 Michigan s tourism website ranks among the busiest in the nation 134 Destinations draw vacationers hunters and nature enthusiasts from across the United States and Canada Michigan is 50 forest land much of it quite remote The forests lakes and thousands of miles of beaches are top attractions Event tourism draws large numbers to occasions like the Tulip Time Festival and the National Cherry Festival In 2006 the Michigan State Board of Education mandated all public schools in the state hold their first day of school after Labor Day in accordance with the new Post Labor Day School law A survey found 70 of all tourism business comes directly from Michigan residents and the Michigan Hotel Motel amp Resort Association claimed the shorter summer between school years cut into the annual tourism season 135 Tourism in metropolitan Detroit draws visitors to leading attractions especially The Henry Ford the Detroit Institute of Arts the Detroit Zoo and to sports in Detroit Other museums include the Detroit Historical Museum the Charles H Wright Museum of African American History museums in the Cranbrook Educational Community and the Arab American National Museum The metro area offers four major casinos MGM Grand Detroit Hollywood Casino Motor City and Caesars Windsor in Windsor Ontario Canada moreover Detroit is the largest American city and metropolitan region to offer casino resorts 136 Hunting and fishing are significant industries in the state Charter boats are based in many Great Lakes cities to fish for salmon trout walleye and perch Michigan ranks first in the nation in licensed hunters over one million who contribute 2 billion annually to its economy More than three quarters of a million hunters participate in white tailed deer season alone Many school districts in rural areas of Michigan cancel school on the opening day of firearm deer season because of attendance concerns citation needed Marquette Michigan is home to a vast snowmobile trail system Michigan s Department of Natural Resources manages the largest dedicated state forest system in the nation The forest products industry and recreational users contribute 12 billion and 200 000 associated jobs annually to the state s economy Public hiking and hunting access has also been secured in extensive commercial forests The state has the highest number of golf courses and registered snowmobiles in the nation 137 The state has numerous historical markers which can themselves become the center of a tour 138 The Great Lakes Circle Tour is a designated scenic road system connecting all of the Great Lakes and the St Lawrence River 139 With its position in relation to the Great Lakes and the countless ships that have foundered over the many years they have been used as a transport route for people and bulk cargo Michigan is a world class scuba diving destination The Michigan Underwater Preserves are 11 underwater areas where wrecks are protected for the benefit of sport divers Infrastructure EditEnergy Edit See also List of power stations in Michigan Enrico Fermi Nuclear Generating Station on the shore of Lake Erie near Monroe In 2020 Michigan consumed 113 740 gigawatt hours GWh of electrical energy and produced 116 700 gigawatt hours GWh of electrical energy 140 Coal power is Michigan s leading source of electricity producing roughly half its supply or 53 100 gigawatt hours GWh of electrical energy 12 6 GW total capacity in 2020 140 Although Michigan has no active coal mines coal is easily moved from other states by train and across the Great Lakes by lake freighters The lower price of natural gas is leading to the closure of most coal plants with Consumer Energy planning to close all of its remaining coal plants by 2025 141 DTE plans to retire 2100MW of coal power by 2023 142 The coal fired Monroe Power Plant in Monroe on the western shore of Lake Erie is the nation s 11th largest electric plant with a net capacity of 3 400 MW Nuclear power is also a significant source of electrical power in Michigan producing roughly one quarter of the state s supply or 28 000 gigawatt hours GWh of electrical energy 4 3 GW total capacity in 2020 140 The three active nuclear power plants supply Michigan with about 26 of its electricity Donald C Cook Nuclear Plant just north of Bridgman is the state s largest nuclear power plant with a net capacity of 2 213 MW The Enrico Fermi Nuclear Generating Station is the second largest with a net capacity of 1 150 MW It is also one of the two nuclear power plants in the Detroit metropolitan area within a 50 mile radius of Detroit s city center about halfway between Detroit and Toledo Ohio the other being the Davis Besse Nuclear Power Station in Ottawa County Ohio The Palisades Nuclear Power Plant south of South Haven closed in May 2022 143 The Big Rock Point Nuclear Power Plant Michigan s first nuclear power plant and the nation s fifth was decommissioned in 1997 Transportation Edit International crossings Edit The Bluewater Bridge a twin span bridge across the St Clair River that links Port Huron and Sarnia Ontario Michigan has nine international road crossings with Ontario Canada Ambassador Bridge North America s busiest international border crossing the Detroit River Blue Water Bridge a twin span bridge Port Huron Michigan and Point Edward Ontario but the larger city of Sarnia is usually referred to on the Canadian side Blue Water Ferry Marine City Michigan and Sombra Ontario Canadian Pacific Railway tunnel Detroit Windsor Truck Ferry Detroit and Windsor Detroit Windsor Tunnel International Bridge Sault Ste Marie Michigan and Sault Ste Marie Ontario St Clair River Railway Tunnel Port Huron and Sarnia Walpole Island Ferry Algonac Michigan and Walpole Island First Nation Ontario The Gordie Howe International Bridge a second international bridge between Detroit and Windsor is under construction It is expected to be completed in 2024 144 145 146 Railroads Edit See also List of Michigan railroads and History of railroads in Michigan Michigan is served by four Class I railroads the Canadian National Railway the Canadian Pacific Railway CSX Transportation and the Norfolk Southern Railway These are augmented by several dozen short line railroads The vast majority of rail service in Michigan is devoted to freight with Amtrak and various scenic railroads the exceptions 147 Main article Michigan Services Amtrak passenger rail services the state connecting many southern and western Michigan cities to Chicago Illinois There are plans for commuter rail for Detroit and its suburbs see SEMCOG Commuter Rail 148 149 150 Roadways Edit See also Michigan State Trunkline Highway System and County Designated Highways in Michigan US Highway 2 US 2 runs along Lake Michigan from Naubinway to its eastern terminus at St Ignace The Mackinac Bridge a suspension bridge spanning the Straits of Mackinac to connect the Upper and Lower peninsulas of Michigan Interstate 75 I 75 is the main thoroughfare between Detroit Flint and Saginaw extending north to Sault Ste Marie and providing access to Sault Ste Marie Ontario The freeway crosses the Mackinac Bridge between the Lower and Upper Peninsulas Auxiliary highways include I 275 and I 375 in Detroit I 475 in Flint and I 675 in Saginaw I 69 enters the state near the Michigan Ohio Indiana border and it extends to Port Huron and provides access to the Blue Water Bridge crossing into Sarnia Ontario I 94 enters the western end of the state at the Indiana border and it travels east to Detroit and then northeast to Port Huron and ties in with I 69 I 194 branches off from this freeway in Battle Creek I 94 is the main artery between Chicago and Detroit I 96 runs east west between Detroit and Muskegon I 496 loops through Lansing I 196 branches off from this freeway at Grand Rapids and connects to I 94 near Benton Harbor I 696 branches off from this freeway at Novi and connects to I 94 near St Clair Shores US Highway 2 US 2 enters Michigan at the city of Ironwood and travels east to the town of Crystal Falls where it turns south and briefly re enters Wisconsin northwest of Florence It re enters Michigan north of Iron Mountain and continues through the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to the cities of Escanaba Manistique and St Ignace Along the way it cuts through the Ottawa and Hiawatha national forests and follows the northern shore of Lake Michigan Its eastern terminus lies at exit 344 on I 75 just north of the Mackinac Bridge US Highway 23 enters Michigan at the Ohio state line in the suburban spillover of Toledo Ohio as a freeway and leads northward to Ann Arbor before merging with I 75 just south of Flint Concurrent with I 75 through Flint Saginaw and Bay City it splits from I 75 at Standish as an intermittently four lane two lane surface road closely following the western shore of Lake Huron generally northward through Alpena before turning west to northwest toward Mackinaw City and Interstate 75 again where it terminates US Highway 31 enters Michigan as Interstate quality freeway at the Indiana State Line just northwest of South Bend Indiana heads north to Interstate 196 near Benton Harbor and follows the eastern shore of Lake Michigan to Mackinaw City where it has its northern terminus US Highway 127 enters Michigan from Ohio south of Hudson as a two lane undivided highway and closely follows the Michigan meridian the principal north south line used to survey Michigan in the early 19th century It passes north through Jackson and Lansing before terminating south of Grayling at I 75 and is a four lane freeway for the majority of its course US Highway 131 has its southern terminus at the Indiana Toll Road roughly one mile south of the Indiana state line as a two lane surface road It passes through Kalamazoo and Grand Rapids as a freeway of Interstate standard and continues as such to Manton where it reverts to two lane surface road to its northern terminus at US 31 in Petoskey Airports Edit See also List of airports in Michigan Aerial view of Detroit Metro Airport DTW The Detroit Metropolitan Airport in the western suburb of Romulus was in 2010 the 16th busiest airfield in North America measured by passenger traffic 151 The Gerald R Ford International Airport in Grand Rapids is the next busiest airport in the state served by eight airlines to 23 destinations Flint Bishop International Airport is the third largest airport in the state served by four airlines to several primary hubs Other frequently trafficked airports include Cherry Capital Airport in Traverse City Kalamazoo Battle Creek International Airport serving the Kalamazoo and Battle Creek region Capital Region International Airport located outside of Lansing and MBS International Airport serving the Midland Bay City and Saginaw tri city region Additionally smaller regional and local airports are located throughout the state including on several islands Metropolitan areas EditFurther information List of cities villages and townships in Michigan Largest combined statistical areas in Michigan 152 MI Rank U S Rank Combined statistical area Image 2019 estimate 2010 Census Change Constituent core based statistical areas1 12 Detroit Warren Ann Arbor MI 5 341 994 5 318 744 0 44 Detroit Warren Dearborn MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaFlint MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaAnn Arbor MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaMonroe MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaAdrian MI Micropolitan Statistical Area2 42 Grand Rapids Kentwood Muskegon MI 1 412 470 1 320 064 7 00 Grand Rapids Kentwood MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaMuskegon MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaHolland MI Micropolitan Statistical AreaBig Rapids MI Micropolitan Statistical Area 68 South Bend Elkhart Mishawaka IN MI 809 069 798 005 1 39 South Bend Mishawaka IN MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaElkhart Goshen IN Metropolitan Statistical AreaNiles MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaWarsaw IN Micropolitan Statistical AreaPlymouth IN Micropolitan Statistical Area Lansing East Lansing Owosso MI 550 085 534 684 2 88 Lansing East Lansing MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaOwosso MI Micropolitan statistical area3 88 Kalamazoo Battle Creek Portage MI 503 706 493 020 2 17 Kalamazoo Portage Metropolitan AreaBattle Creek MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaSturgis MI Micropolitan Statistical AreaColdwater MI Micropolitan Statistical Area4 101 Saginaw Midland Bay City MI 376 821 391 569 3 77 Saginaw MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaBay City MI Metropolitan Statistical AreaMidland MI Metropolitan Statistical Area5 159 Mount Pleasant Alma MI 110 583 112 787 1 95 Mount Pleasant MI Micropolitan Statistical AreaAlma MI Micropolitan Statistical Area 161 Marinette Iron Mountain WI MI 92 664 96 369 3 84 Marinette WI MI Micropolitan Statistical AreaIron Mountain MI WI Micropolitan Statistical AreaOther economically significant cities include Battle Creek known as Cereal City is the headquarters of Kellogg s Benton Harbor St Joseph is the headquarters of Whirlpool Corporation East Lansing is the home of Michigan State University Holland is the home of the Tulip Time Festival the largest tulip festival in the U S Jackson is the headquarters of CMS Energy Manistee is home to the world s largest salt plant owned by Morton Salt Marquette is the largest city in the Upper Peninsula with 19 661 people and home of Northern Michigan University Midland is the headquarters of the Dow Chemical Company and the Dow Corning Corporation Sault Ste Marie is the home of the Soo Locks and Sault Ste Marie International Bridge Traverse City is the Cherry Capital of the World making Michigan the nation s largest producer of cherries and is also the largest city in Northern Michigan Half the wealthiest communities in the state are in Oakland County just north of Detroit Another wealthy community is just east of the city in Grosse Pointe Only three of these cities are outside of Metro Detroit The city of Detroit with a per capita income of 14 717 ranks 517th on the list of Michigan locations by per capita income Benton Harbor is the poorest city in Michigan with a per capita income of 8 965 while Barton Hills is the richest with a per capita income of 110 683 Education EditSee also List of colleges and universities in Michigan and List of high schools in Michigan University of Michigan Cranbrook Kingswood School one of the leading college preparatory boarding schools in the country Michigan s education system serves 1 6 million K 12 students in public schools More than 124 000 students attend private schools and an uncounted number are homeschooled under certain legal requirements 153 154 The public school system had a 14 5 billion budget in 2008 09 155 From 2009 to 2019 over 200 private schools in Michigan closed partly due to competition from charter schools 156 In 2022 U S News amp World Report rated three Michigan high schools among the nation s 100 best City High Middle School 18th the International Academy of Macomb 21st and the International Academy 52nd Washtenaw International High School ranked 107th 157 The University of Michigan is Michigan s oldest higher educational institution and among the oldest research universities in the nation It was founded in 1817 20 years before Michigan Territory achieved statehood 158 159 Kalamazoo College is the state s oldest private liberal arts college founded in 1833 by a group of Baptist ministers as the Michigan and Huron Institute From 1840 to 1850 the college operated as the Kalamazoo Branch of the University of Michigan Methodist settlers in Spring Arbor Township founded Albion College in 1835 It is the state s second oldest private liberal arts college Michigan Technological University is the first post secondary institution in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan founded in 1885 as the Michigan Mining School Eastern Michigan University was founded in 1849 as the Michigan State Normal School for the training of teachers It was the nation s fourth oldest normal school and the first U S normal school outside New England In 1899 the Michigan State Normal School became the nation s first normal school to offer a four year curriculum Michigan State University was founded in 1855 as the nation s first agricultural college The Carnegie Foundation classifies eight of the state s institutions University of Michigan Michigan Technological University Eastern Michigan University Wayne State University Central Michigan University Michigan State University Western Michigan University Oakland University as research universities 160 Kalamazoo College Olivet College Hope College Finlandia UniversityCulture EditArts Edit Music Edit Main article Music of Michigan Michigan music is known for three music trends early punk rock Motown soul music and techno music Michigan musicians include Tally Hall Bill Haley amp His Comets The Supremes The Marvelettes The Temptations The Four Tops Stevie Wonder Marvin Gaye The Prince of Soul Smokey Robinson and the Miracles Aretha Franklin Mary Wells Tommy James and the Shondells and the Mysterians Al Green The Spinners Grand Funk Railroad The Stooges the MC5 The Knack Madonna The Queen of Pop Bob Seger Jack Scott Ray Parker Jr Jackie Wilson Aaliyah Eminem Kid Rock Jack White and Meg White The White Stripes Big Sean Alice Cooper and Del Shannon 161 Performance arts Edit Major theaters in Michigan include the Fox Theatre Music Hall Gem Theatre Masonic Temple Theatre the Detroit Opera House Fisher Theatre The Fillmore Detroit Saint Andrew s Hall Majestic Theater and Orchestra Hall The Nederlander Organization the largest controller of Broadway productions in New York City originated in Detroit 162 Sports Edit Main article List of Michigan professional sports teamsSee also List of Michigan sport championships Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor is the largest stadium in the Western Hemisphere and the third largest stadium in the world Michigan s major league sports teams include Detroit Tigers baseball team Detroit Lions football team Detroit Red Wings ice hockey team and the Detroit Pistons men s basketball team All of Michigan s major league teams play in the Metro Detroit area The state also has a professional second tier USL Championship soccer team in Detroit City FC which plays its home games at Keyworth Stadium in Hamtramack Michigan The Pistons played at Detroit s Cobo Arena until 1978 and at the Pontiac Silverdome until 1988 when they moved into The Palace of Auburn Hills In 2017 the team moved to the newly built Little Caesars Arena in downtown Detroit The Detroit Lions played at Tiger Stadium in Detroit until 1974 then moved to the Pontiac Silverdome where they played for 27 years between 1975 and 2002 before moving to Ford Field in Detroit in 2002 The Detroit Tigers played at Tiger Stadium formerly known as Navin Field and Briggs Stadium from 1912 to 1999 In 2000 they moved to Comerica Park The Red Wings played at Olympia Stadium before moving to Joe Louis Arena in 1979 They later moved to Little Caesars Arena to join the Pistons as tenants in 2017 Professional hockey got its start in 1903 in Houghton 163 when the Portage Lakers were formed 164 Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn Michigan The Michigan International Speedway is the site of NASCAR races and Detroit was formerly the site of a Formula One World Championship Grand Prix race From 1959 to 1961 Detroit Dragway hosted the NHRA s U S Nationals 165 Michigan is home to one of the major canoeing marathons the 120 mile 190 km Au Sable River Canoe Marathon The Port Huron to Mackinac Boat Race is also a favorite Twenty time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams was born in Saginaw The 2011 World Champion for Women s Artistic Gymnastics Jordyn Wieber is from DeWitt Wieber was also a member of the gold medal team at the London Olympics in 2012 Collegiate sports in Michigan are popular in addition to professional sports The state s two largest athletic programs are the Michigan Wolverines and Michigan State Spartans which play in the NCAA Big Ten Conference Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor home to the Michigan Wolverines football team is the largest stadium in the Western Hemisphere and the third largest stadium worldwide The Michigan High School Athletic Association features around 300 000 participants State symbols and nicknames Edit Dwarf lake iris Michigan is traditionally known as The Wolverine State and the University of Michigan takes the wolverine as its mascot The association is well and long established for example many Detroiters volunteered to fight during the American Civil War and George Armstrong Custer who led the Michigan Brigade called them the Wolverines The origins of this association are obscure it may derive from a busy trade in wolverine furs in Sault Ste Marie in the 18th century or may recall a disparagement intended to compare early settlers in Michigan with the vicious mammal Wolverines are however extremely rare in Michigan A sighting in February 2004 near Ubly was the first confirmed sighting in Michigan in 200 years 166 The animal was found dead in 2010 167 State nicknames Wolverine State Great Lake State Mitten State Water Winter Wonderland State motto Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam circumspice Latin If you seek a pleasant peninsula look about you adopted in 1835 on the coat of arms but never as an official motto This is a paraphrase of the epitaph of British architect Sir Christopher Wren about his masterpiece St Paul s Cathedral 168 169 State song My Michigan official since 1937 but disputed amongst residents 170 Michigan My Michigan Unofficial state song since the civil war State bird American robin since 1931 State animal wolverine traditional State game animal white tailed deer since 1997 State fish brook trout since 1965 State reptile painted turtle since 1995 State fossil mastodon since 2000 State flower apple blossom adopted in 1897 official in 1997 State wildflower dwarf lake iris since 1998 a federally listed threatened species State tree white pine since 1955 State stone Petoskey stone since 1965 It is composed of fossilized coral Hexagonaria pericarnata from long ago when the middle of the continent was covered with a shallow sea State gem Isle Royale greenstone since 1973 Also called chlorastrolite literally green star stone the mineral is found on Isle Royale and the Keweenaw peninsula State quarter U S coin issued in 2004 with the Michigan motto Great Lakes State State soil Kalkaska sand since 1990 ranges in color from black to yellowish brown covers nearly 1 000 000 acre 4 000 km2 in 29 counties Sister regions Edit Shiga Prefecture Japan 171 Sichuan Province People s Republic of China 172 See also Edit Michigan portal Michigan highways portal Index of Michigan related articles Outline of Michigan organized list of topics about MichiganNotes Edit a b Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988 i e including water that is part of state territory Georgia is the largest state by land area alone east of the Mississippi and Michigan the second largest The first form is the way it is spelled in Ojibwe native syllabics The Province included the modern states of Wisconsin eastern Minnesota Illinois Indiana Ohio Kentucky Tennessee Mississippi Alabama two thirds of Georgia and small parts of West Virginia Pennsylvania New York Vermont and Maine References Edit License plate facts PDF Archived PDF from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved May 1 2017 a b c Michigan in Brief Information About the State of Michigan PDF Department of History Arts and Libraries Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2006 Retrieved November 28 2006 a b Elevations and Distances in the United States United States Geological Survey 2001 Archived from the original on October 15 2011 Retrieved October 24 2011 Resident Population for the 50 States the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico 2020 Census PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved April 26 2021 Median Annual Household Income The Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 9 2016 Hansen Liane September 27 2009 What Is a Yooper Weekend Edition Sunday NPR Archived from the original on August 21 2013 Retrieved June 13 2013 Freelang Ojibwe Dictionary Freelang net Archived from the original on March 15 2008 Retrieved March 24 2008 My State Michigan NOAA Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management Archived from the original on February 15 2013 Retrieved July 25 2010 Compilation of Databases on Michigan Lakes PDF Michigan Department of Natural Resources p 5 Archived PDF from the original on March 14 2009 Retrieved April 18 2009 Another unique code Unique ID was previously assigned to all 70 542 polygons including 5 527 islands 35 streams and 64 980 lakes and ponds down to 0 008 acres 31 4 m2 338 ft2 United States Summary 2010 Population and Housing Unit Counts 2010 Census of Population and Housing PDF United States Census Bureau September 2012 pp V 2 1 amp 41 Tables 1 amp 18 Retrieved February 7 2014 Ueda Reed 2017 America s Changing Neighborhoods An Exploration of Diversity through Places Greenwood ISBN 978 1 4408 2864 5 Balestier Courtney In search of the Hillbilly Highway metromode Retrieved 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River International Crossing Study Website Archived from the original on May 4 2010 Retrieved December 2 2019 3 8B to build Gordie Howe bridge complete by end of 2024 CBC September 28 2018 Retrieved June 16 2020 Michigan Department of Transportation Railroads Operating in Michigan PDF Map Michigan Department of Transportation Archived PDF from the original on February 16 2008 Retrieved February 15 2008 Gray Kathleen January 22 2007 Commuter rail plan to Detroit gets a push Amtrak from Ann Arbor Detroit Free Press Archived from the original on February 10 2007 Commuter rail service facts Archived from the original on February 25 2008 Mulcahy John March 10 2009 Commuter rail line will have stop in Ypsilanti The Ann Arbor News Archived from the original on March 13 2009 Retrieved March 17 2009 Airports Council International 2010 Final Airport Traffic Report Archived from the original on March 16 2012 Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas Population Totals and Components of Change 2010 2019 United States Census Bureau Population Division March 26 2020 Retrieved April 26 2020 Number of Non Public Schools in Michigan Archived July 25 2010 at the Wayback Machine Michigan Department of Education 2010 Number of Public Schools in Michigan PDF Michigan Department of Education 2010 Archived PDF from the original on July 28 2010 Retrieved August 5 2010 2008 2009 BULLETIN 1011 Analysis of Michigan Public School Districts Revenues and Expenditures PDF Michigan Department of Education 2009 Archived PDF from the original on December 3 2010 Retrieved August 5 2010 Wisely John May 28 2019 200 private schools have closed in Michigan in the last decade Detroit Free Press Retrieved May 2 2020 Rankings Best High Schools U S News amp World Report Retrieved May 1 2020 University of Michigan Timelines General University Timeline Bentley Historical Library July 5 2007 Archived from the original on April 21 2009 Retrieved March 9 2013 Morris Robertson Kay 2012 A to Zee Across America AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4685 0328 9 The Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education RU VH Research Universities very high research activity The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching 2010 Retrieved March 9 2011 Perini Mike April 26 2011 Del Shannon s Runaway tops charts 50 years ago this week www michiganradio org Retrieved June 21 2020 Gavrilovich Peter McGraw Bill 2006 The Detroit Almanac 2nd edition Detroit Free Press ISBN 978 0 937247 48 8 Hoey Mike March 25 2014 Marquette Regional History Center Will Host Houghton Hockey History Talk Ishpeming MI WBUP TV Archived from the original on May 13 2014 Retrieved May 8 2014 ice hockey History Rules Equipment Players amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved June 23 2022 50th Anniversary Mac Tools U S Nationals History 50th usnationals com Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved November 5 2011 Runk David February 25 2004 First Michigan wolverine spotted in 200 years NBC News Associated Press Archived from the original on February 18 2013 Retrieved December 23 2008 Bell Dawson March 15 2010 Only known wolverine in the Michigan wild dies Detroit Free Press Archived from the original on July 6 2015 Michigan state motto at least on its coat of arms Archived from the original on January 25 2008 Retrieved December 29 2007 Law enacting State Court of Arms Archived from the original on September 19 2008 Retrieved December 29 2007 Michigan s State Songs Archived from the original on August 2 2009 Birmingham Sister City Program Archived from the original on November 5 2015 Briefing on Sichuan International Sister Cities Cooperation and Development Week 2005 Archived from the original on June 7 2008 Bibliography EditBald F Clever 1961 Michigan in Four Centuries New York Harper ISBN 978 0 06 000240 4 OCLC 478659 Browne William P amp VerBurg Kenneth 1995 Michigan Politics amp Government Facing Change in a Complex State Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 1209 1 Bureau of Business Research 1987 Michigan Statistical Abstract Wayne State University Dunbar Willis F amp May George S 1995 Michigan A History of the Wolverine State ISBN 978 0 8028 7055 1 Groop Richard E et al 1984 Michigan Political Atlas Map Scale not given East Lansing MI Center for Cartographic Research and Spatial Analysis OCLC 11918446 Rich Wilbur 1989 Coleman Young and Detroit Politics From Social Activist to Power Broker Detroit Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 2093 8 Rubenstein Bruce A amp Ziewacz Lawrence E 2008 Michigan A History of the Great Lakes State 4th ed Wheeling IL Harlan Davidson ISBN 978 0 88295 257 4 Sisson Richard Zacher Christian K amp Cayton Andrew R L eds 2006 The American Midwest An Interpretive Encyclopedia Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34886 9 Weeks George Kirk Robert D Blanchard Paula L amp Weeks Don 1987 Stewards of the State The Governors of Michigan Ann Arbor MI Historical Society of Michigan ISBN 978 0 9614344 2 7 External links EditMichigan at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Geographic data related to Michigan at OpenStreetMap State of Michigan government website Energy Data amp Statistics for Michigan Info Michigan detailed information on 630 cities Michigan Historic Markers Historical Society of Michigan Clarke Historical Library Central Michigan University Bibliographies for Michigan by region counties etc Michigan State Guide from the Library of Congress Michigan Official Travel Site Michigan Official Business Site Michigan Official Talent Site Michigan State Fact Sheet from the U S Department of Agriculture The Michigan Municipal League USGS real time geographic and other scientific resources of Michigan Michigan at Curlie Preceded byArkansas List of U S states by date of statehoodAdmitted on January 26 1837 26th Succeeded byFlorida Coordinates 44 N 85 W 44 N 85 W 44 85 State of Michigan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michigan amp oldid 1128551014, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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