Delhi Metropark
History
In 1835, there was a sawmill located on the Huron River at this site. That year, Norman Gooddale purchased the mill for $50 and added a flour mill to the site. Jacob Doremus platted a village adjacent to the mill in 1836 named Michigan Village, although the name was changed to Delhi shortly afterward. In 1842, Gooddale acquired all of the unsold lots. His son Frank expanded the mill, shipping flour to New England and employing 20 people; in 1880, Delhi Mills shipped 41,000 barrels of flour on the Michigan Central Railroad. In 1883, Delhi had 2 flour mills, a woolen mill and a saw mill, taking power from a dam 150 feet long with a 7-foot head and producing 140 horsepower when all mills run at once.
Today's Delhi Rapids is the remains of the collapsed mill dam that once powered Delhi Mills.
References
- ^ "Welcome to Pure Michigan". 10 October 2016. Archived from the original on 7 February 2011. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
- ^ "Delhi Metropark - Ann Arbor - LocalWiki".
- ^ "Delhi Metropark: Reviews & Upcoming Events - WLAJ ABC 53". Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2010-08-18.
- ^ "Ann Arbor Area Convention and Visitors Bureau - Visitor's Guide - Delhi Metropark". www.visitannarbor.org. Archived from the original on 2011-07-28.
- ^ Domm, Robert W. (2006). Backroads of Michigan. ISBN 9781610603478.
- ^ Scio Township, History of Washtenaw County, Michigan, Vol 2, Charles C, Chapman, 1881; pages 828, 844, 849-853.
- ^ James L. Greenleaf, Report on the Water-Powers of the Drainage Basins of Lakes Huron and Erie, Eastern Drainage Area of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, Huron River, Description of Developed Power, in Water Power of the United States, Part I Department of the Interior, Census Office, GPO, Washington, 1885; page 494.
External links
- Huron-Clinton Metroparks
- U.S. Geological Survey Map at the U.S. Geological Survey Map Website. Retrieved November 16th, 2022.