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About
Midland |
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Midland, Michigan is located mid-section of the Michigan mitt,
near the crook of the thumb.
Together, Saginaw, Midland and Bay City make up the area commonly
referred to as the “Tri-Cities,” although Midland is considered a
micropolitan, according to U.S. Census data. As far as population
numbers, Midland is the second largest of the three
cities. Saginaw is the largest; Bay City is the smallest.
Midland has evolved from an Indian village to the “City of Science
and Culture.” If you visited Midland 150 years ago, you would have
discovered that the riverbanks were lined with many Chippewa
Indian Wikkiups, round huts made of bent saplings covered with
skins and bark. Perhaps you would have come across an Indian
hunting or fishing while others worked crops of corn, squash,
gourds and pumpkins. The thousand acres now known as the Chippewa
Nature Center originally were within the 6,000 acres retained by
the Chippewa under the Treaty of Saginaw in the year 1819.
Following the era of Indian hunters, fishermen and white
fur-traders were farmers and loggers. The second largest sawmill
in the Saginaw Valley was located in Midland. What is now Main
Street began as a series of businesses along a dirt road
constructed of timber cut from the surrounding forests.
Midland County was organized in 1850 and the City of Midland in
1856. By 1874, the Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad extended
through the heart of Midland to Averill, three miles west. The
City of Midland was incorporated in 1897.
In 1890, a young man by the name of Herbert Henry Dow arrived in
Midland and subsequently founded The Dow Chemical Company. His
success enabled Midland to survive the end of the logging era and
to grow to its present size. Now the heart of Michigan’s
technology basin, Midland is the global headquarters of two
Fortune 500 companies, The Dow Chemical Company and Dow Corning
Corporation and home to the Midland Cogeneration Venture, the
largest gas-fueled, steam recovery cogeneration facility in North
America. Midland has become a center for industrial innovation.
In addition to the strong economic base, Midland is also proud of
its quality education programs. The Midland Public Schools were
rated as one of the top 44 school districts in the country by
Expansion Management magazine. Offering many opportunities for
higher education, Midland is the home of Northwood University and
is located within 20 minutes of Davenport University, Saginaw
Valley State University, Central Michigan University and Delta
College.
Residents and tourists alike enjoy Midland’s abundance of cultural
and recreational facilities. The Midland Center for the Arts,
Herbert H. Dow Historical Museum, Dow Gardens, the Herbert D. Doan
Midland County History Center, and the architecture of Alden B.
Dow are several attractions which reflect the culture and heritage
of Midland.
Midland’s 14-foot-wide, 30-mile-long, paved Pere Marquette
Rail-Trail, the Midland Community Tennis Center, Community Soccer
Complex, a brand-new 107,000-square-foot Civic Arena with three
skating rinks, a Community Center, 72 different parks and the
Emerson Park and St. Charles area softball complexes provide
residents with many recreational opportunities.
The
City of Midland maintains 72 City parks. Small neighborhood parks
nestled within residential areas are found throughout the city so
that each neighborhood has a place of quiet recreation.
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