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Grand Rapids tourist information

Grand Rapids

Grand Rapids is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 197,800. It is the county seat of Kent County, Michigan6. It is the second largest city in the state (following Detroit) and is the principal ... more »

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Grand Rapids is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 197,800. It is the county seat of Kent County, Michigan6. It is the second largest city in the state (following Detroit) and is the principal city in the region of West Michigan.

Grand Rapids sits on the banks of the Grand River, where there was once a set of rapids, at an altitude of 610 feet above sea level. It is approximately 30 miles (50 km) east of Lake Michigan. The state capital of Lansing lies about 60 miles (100 km) to the east-by-southeast, and Kalamazoo is about 50 miles (80 km) to the south.

Things to do
Grand Rapids is the home of John Ball Park, Belknap Hill, and the Gerald R. Ford Museum. The Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park is a major botanical garden and outdoor sculpture park. The DeVos Place Convention Center and Van Andel Arena are also located in the city. The Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts is located in the center of the city, and houses art exhibits, a movie theater, and the urban clay studio. Simulated ancient burial mounds used by the Hopewell tribe are a short distance down-river from downtown.

Grand Rapids is also home to the Public Museum of Grand Rapids. Founded in 1854 it is among the oldest history museums in the United States and is still regarded as one of the best local history museums. The museum's sites currently include the main site at the Van Andel Museum Center which is also home to the Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium (constructed in 1994), as well as the Veen Observatory in Lowell, Michigan, Voight House Victorian Museum and the City Archives and Records Center--which is the pre-1994 site of the museum and Chaffee plantarium (the original planetarium wing has been demolished). The Van Andel Museum Center is located at a scenic location downtown on the banks of the Grand River, just south of the Ford Museum, Norton Indian Mounds and Fish Ladder and across the river from the Amway Grand Hotel and DeVos Place Convention Center. The museum has, in the past few years, played host to a handful of notable exhibitions, including the Dead Sea Scrolls, and The Quest for Immortality: the Treasures of Ancient Egypt. Like the Detroit Zoological Society, the museum is currently in the process of transferring ownership from a public, city-owned institution to a non-profit institution owned and managed by the Public Museum of Grand Rapids Foundation.

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History *

Over 2,000 years ago, the Hopewell Indians occupied the Grand River Valley. Around 1700 A.D., the Ottawa Indians moved into the area and founded several villages along the Grand River.

The Grand Rapids area was first settled by Europeans near the start of the 19th century by missionaries and fur traders, who generally lived in reasonable peace alongside the Ottawa tribespeople, trading their European metal and textile goods for the fur pelts. Joseph and Madeline La Framboise established the first Indian/European trading post in West Michigan, on the banks of the Grand River near what is now Ada. After the death of her husband in 1806, Medaline La Franboise carried on, expanding fur trading posts to the west and north. La Framboise, a mix of French and Indian descent, later merged her successful operations with the American Fur Company and retired, at age 41, to Mackinac Island. The first permanent white settler in the Grand Rapids area was a Baptist minister named Isaac McCoy who arrived in 1825.

In 1826 Detroit-born Louis Campau, the official founder of Grand Rapids, built his cabin, trading post, and blackmith shop on the east bank of the Grand River near the rapids. Campau returned to Detroit and came back a year later with his wife and $5,000 of trade goods to trade with the native tribes. In 1831 the federal survey of the Northwest Territory reached the Grand River and set the boundaries for Kent County, named after prominent New York jurist James Kent. Campau became perhaps the most important settler when, in 1831, he bought 72 acres (291,000 m²) of what is now the entire downtown business district of Grand Rapids from the federal government for $90 and named his tract Grand Rapids. Rival Lucius Lyon, who purchased the rest of the prime land, called his the Village of Kent. Yankee immigrants and others began immigrating from New York and New England in the 1830s.

In 1836 John Ball, representing a group of New York land speculators, bypassed Detroit for a better deal in Grand Rapids. Ball declared the Grand River valley "the promised land, or at least the most promising one for my operations."

By 1838 the settlement had incorporated as a village encompassing an area of approximately three-quarters of a mile (1 km). The first formal census occurred in 1845 which announced a population of 1,510 and recorded an area of four square miles. The city of Grand Rapids was officially created on May 1, 1850, when the village of Grand Rapids voted to accept the proposed city charter. The population at the time was 2,686. By 1857, the city of Grand Rapids' boundary totaled 10.5 square miles (27 km²).

During the second half of the 19th century the city became a major lumbering center and the premier furniture manufacturing city of the United States. For this reason it was nicknamed "Furniture City". After an international exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876, Grand Rapids became recognized worldwide as a leader in the production of fine furniture. Today, Grand Rapids is considered a world leader in the production of office furniture. The city also became a center of Dutch immigration in the 19th century.

The Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad began passenger and freight service to Cedar Springs, Michigan on December 25, 1867. This railroad expanded service from Grand Rapids to Muskegon, northern Michigan and into Indiana and Ohio over the next few decades.

In 1881, the country's first hydro-electric plant was put to use on the city's west side. With the new century, the people of Grand Rapids numbered 82,565. In 1916 the citizens of Grand Rapids voted to adopt a home rule charter that abolished the old aldermanic systems and replaced it with a commission-manager form of government, one of the first in the country. That 1916 Charter, although amended several times, is still in effect.

Grand Rapids was a home to the first regularly scheduled passenger airline in the United States when Stout Air Services began flights from Grand Rapids to "Detroit" (actually Ford Airport in Dearborn, Michigan) on July 31, 1926.

In 1945, Grand Rapids became the first city in the United States to add fluoride to its drinking water.

Transportation *

Public bus transportation is provided by the Interurban Transit Partnership, which brands itself as The Rapid. Commercial air service to Grand Rapids is provided by Gerald R. Ford International Airport (GRR). Amtrak provides direct train service to Chicago.

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Transportation is also provided by the DASH buses. These buses are the Downtown Area SHuttle. These provide transportation to and from the parking lots in the city of Grand Rapids to various designated loading and unloading spots around the city. The parking lots in mention also have their own Security. These officers known as PSO's (Protective Services Officers). These men and women patrol the lots to not only ensure the safety and security of the citizens of Grand Rapids, but also to provide roadside assistance. This includes jumping cars, changing tires, unlocking car doors, etc. The officers are all students from local area colleges and universities pursuing a career in a public service field. The majority are trying to become police officers but, there are paramedics and other service fields represented. This is one if not the only program of its kind known to exist in the United States.

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Culture *

Beginning with the installation of La Grande Vitesse, the city has been host to an annual festival of the arts downtown, known to locals simply as Festival. During the first weekend in June, several blocks of downtown surrounding the Calder stabile next to City Hall are closed to traffic. Festival features several stages with free live performances, food booths selling a variety of ethnic cuisine, art demonstrations and sales, and other arts-related activities. Organizers bill it as the largest all-volunteer arts festival in the United States. Also in Vandenberg Plaza are various country-specific ethnic festivals that occur throughout the summer season.

In Grand Rapids in 1973, Main Street America celebrated mainstream art, as the city hosted Sculpture off the Pedestal, an exemplar of public sculpture exhibitions, which assembled 13 world-renowned artists, including Mark di Suvero, John Henry, Kenneth Snelson, Robert Morris, John Mason and Stephen Antonakos, in a single, citywide celebration. Sculpture off the Pedestal was a public/private partnership, which included financial support by the National Endowment for the Arts, educational support from the Michigan Council for the Arts and in-kind contributions from individuals, business and industry. Fund-raising events, volunteers and locals housing artists contributed to the public [character of the event.

In mid-2004, Grand Rapids began construction on a new, larger building for its art museum collection. The new building site is several blocks from the present museum, facing downtown's Ecliptic by Maya Lin at Rosa Parks Circle.


Terrain

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Languages

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Weather

Temperature - Yearly Average




* This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
   It uses material from the Source wikipedia.

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