Birmingham is an upscale
city in Oakland
County
of the U.S. state of
Michigan
. As
of the
2000 census, the
total population was 19,291.
An affluent suburb of
Detroit
, the city
hosts a downtown that attracts shoppers
from throughout the Metro Detroit
area.
Geography
According to the
United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 4.8 mi²
(12.4 km², of which 4.8 mi² (12.4 km²) is land and
0.21% is water. Reed Fenton is the mayor.
Demographics
As of the
census of 2000, there were 19,291
people, 9,131 households, and 5,076 families residing in the city.
The
population density was
4,038.4 per square mile (1,558.2/km²). There were 9,700 housing
units at an average density of 2,030.6/sq mi (783.5/km²). The
racial makeup of the city was 96.13%
White, 0.91%
African American, 0.15%
Native American, 1.50%
Asian, 0.04%
Pacific Islander, 0.19% from
other races, and 1.09%
from two or more races.
Hispanic or
Latino of any race were 1.19% of the
population.
There were 9,131 households out of which 24.7% had children under
the age of 18 living with them, 47.6% were
married couples living together, 6.1% had a female
householder with no husband present, and 44.4% were non-families.
38.0% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.1% had
someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average
household size was 2.11 and the average family size was 2.85.
In the city the population was spread out with 21.2% under the age
of 18, 3.9% from 18 to 24, 34.9% from 25 to 44, 26.0% from 45 to
64, and 14.0% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was
39 years. For every 100 females there were 91.5 males. For every
100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.2 males.
The median income for a household in the city was $80,861, and the
median income for a family was $110,627. Males had a median income
of $78,865 versus $51,834 for females. The
per capita income for the city was
$59,314. About 1.6% of families and 2.9% of the population were
below the
poverty line, including 2.5%
of those under age 18 and 3.3% of those age 65 or over.
History
The area comprising what is now the city of Birmingham was part of
land ceded by
Native American tribes
to the United States government by the 1807
Treaty of Detroit. However, settlement was
delayed first by the
War of 1812 and
subsequently by an unfavorable report by the Surveyor-General of
the United States,
Edward Tiffin
regarding the placement of
Military Bounty Lands for veterans of
the War of 1812. Tiffin's report claimed that "There would not be
an acre out of a hundred, if there would be one out of a thousand
that would, in any case, admit cultivation." In 1818, Territorial
Governor
Lewis Cass lead a group of men
along the Indian Trail. The Governor's party discovered the swamp
was not as extensive as Tiffin had supposed. Not long after Cass
issued a more encouraging report about the land, interest quickened
in its suitability for settlement.
The earliest land entry was made on January 28, 1819, by Colonel
Benjamin H. Pierce (brother of future U.S. President
Franklin Pierce) for the northwest
quarter of
section 36. Colonel Pierce
visited his land several times, but never settled on it. In March
1818, John W.
Hunter and his brother Daniel left Auburn
, New York
by sleigh
and traveled to Michigan by way of Upper
Canada. They waited in Detroit
for their
father and other family members who arrived by schooner over Lake Erie
in July. The family remained in Detroit
until spring 1819 when John W. made an entry for the northeast
quarter of section 36 now in the southeast section of current-day
Birmingham. Lacking a proper land survey, John W. mistakenly built
his log house on a tract later purchased by Elijah Willets. That
house was later occupied by William Hall, a son-in-law of Elisha
Hunter, while John W. Hunter built another log house a short
distance to the southeast. On September 25, 1821, Elijah Willets
made a land entry for the southwest quarter of section 25. Two days
later, Major John Hamilton made an entry for the southeast quarter
of section 25. Each of these initial land entries met at what is
now the intersection of Maple Rd. and Pierce St.
For a time, all three men, John W. Hunter, Major Hamilton, and
Elijah Willets operated hotels and taverns from their houses within
a short distance from each other.
While Hunter did not continue for very
long, Hamilton and Willets continued a rivalry for many years,
competing with each other for business from travelers on Woodward Avenue between Detroit and Pontiac
. The
growing settlement was known variously as "Hamilton's", "Hunter's",
or "Willets'"; it was later known as "Piety Hill". The settlement's
original
plat was surveyed and recorded on
August 25, 1836, in the northwest quarter of section 36 then owned
by Rosewell T. Merrill who also ran the town foundry and the
thrashing machine factory.
Merrill named his plat "Birmingham" after
Birmingham
, England
in the hope
that the new settlement would similarly become a great industrial
center. Elijah Willets recorded a plat on his property on
December 20, 1837. John W. Hunter followed suit with two plats on
his property on January 31, 1840, and June 21, 1842, while Major
Hamilton laid out a plat on October 7, 1846. Several other
properties were subsequently platted as additions. The plats made
in 1836 and 1837 were in anticipation of completion of the
Detroit and Pontiac
Railroad.
Now known as "Birmingham", the village first received mail through
the "Bloomfield" post office. Birmingham established its own post
office on April 5, 1838. The settlement incorporated as a village
in 1864, comprising the northern half of section 36 and the
southern half of section 25 with a total land area of one square
mile. The first village elections were held March 1, 1864 and was
soon governed by a seven-man board of trustees who appointed a
marshal and a treasurer. Birmingham re-incorporated as a city in
1933.
The names of the city's founders are seen throughout Birmingham in
places such as Pierce Elementary School, Hunter House Hamburgers
(which was located on the road formerly known as Hunter Boulevard,
which bypassed downtown to the east and was renamed Woodward, with
the original Woodward Avenue section renamed Old Woodward), The
Hamilton Hotel, The Willets Building and Merrill St. Hall &
Hunter Realtors named themselves in tribute to the builder and
occupier of Birmingham's first home.
The Eccentric
George H. Mitchell and Almeron Whitehead, who were two of a small
group of bachelors who had formed a club called The Eccentrics,
published the first edition of their newspaper which they named
after their club on May 2, 1878. At a price of 2 cents, The
Eccentric provided a "live home paper, replete with all the news of
the day" with considerable emphasis on the "local items of
importance occurring in Birmingham and immediate vicinity". By the
turn of the 20th Century, The Eccentric ran advertisements for
Detroit stores and theaters as well as offers of property and
houses suitable for the "commuter." In the 1920s, the slogan of The
Eccentric was "For A Bigger and Better Birmingham". Today, the
Birmingham Eccentric Newspaper continues its role as keeper of the
community's local heritage.
Economy
Google operates its Detroit-area offices in
Birmingham.
Education
Birmingham City School
District administers several nationally accredited schools
including Seaholm High
School
and Groves High School
. Roeper School
has a campus on Adams Road. The Holy Name School is a
parochial school founded by the
Roman Catholic Holy Name Church. It educates
in grades pre-K to 8. The school was established in 1928, along
with a now non-existent convent for IHM nuns. The church and school
continue to operate in conjunction today.
Public library
The
Baldwin Public Library serves the city of Birmingham and nearby
communities of Beverly Hills
and Bingham
Farms
. The original building first opened to the
public on December 19, 1927. In October 1959, an extension for the
Youth Department was added to the east side of the building. In
1983, another addition opened changing the entrance to Merrill St.
There are over 120,000 books in the library along with CDs, DVDs,
periodicals, educational toys, databases and free
wifi.
The library is named after Martha Baldwin, a civic leader and
lifelong resident of Birmingham who was instrumental in
establishing the first library. She also helped get sidewalks for
the business section, street lights, seats placed at interurban
transit stops, flowers and trees planted and wastebaskets placed at
the street corners.
Downtown
The city's downtown district has many coffee houses, ice cream
parlors, upscale apparel and home furnishing shops, restaurants and
theatres. The Townsend Hotel is one of the state's premiere
locations for lodging and is the choice for many celebrities
visiting or working in Southeastern Michigan.
Some popular restaurants include: Leo's Coney Island; Greek Isles
Coney Island; Forte, a high class restaurant located near the
Uptown Birmingham Theater; Max and Erma's; 220 Merrill; Tokyo Sushi
and Grill; The Rugby Grille, located inside the Townsend Hotel;
Cameron's Steakhouse and Mitchell's Fish Market (located next door
to each other); and Old Woodward Deli.
The downtown offers a wide variety of shopping choices. Children's
stores include Adventures in Toys. Caruso Caruso satisfies trendy
teenagers with top designer names.
Parks
The city has over twenty parks with many amenities including tennis
courts, baseball diamonds, playgrounds, golf courses, sledding
hills, nature trails, picnic areas and deep woods. Shain Park, the
city's main
commons, is the site of the
Village Fair, art shows, summer music concerts and numerous
community events all beneath "The Freedom of the Human Spirit"
sculpted by
Marshall
Fredericks.
Transportation
Birmingham was a
stagecoach stop in the
19th Century between Detroit and Pontiac. On June 18, 1896, the
Oakland Railway, the electric
interurban, came to Birmingham and
provided service to Detroit in 40 minutes; the service ended in
1931.
Suburban
Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation (SMART)
currently operates local and regional bus transit.
Amtrak provides passenger rail service on the
Pontiac
-Detroit
-Chicago
Wolverine with a stop in Birmingham three
times per day in each direction (see also Birmingham,
Michigan
).
In 1839, the railroad tracks were extended to Birmingham with two
steam trains a day running to Detroit. By 1931, the
Grand Trunk Western Railroad
(GTW) moved the tracks to their present location and provided
commuter rail service from Pontiac to downtown Detroit with a stop
in Birmingham. The
Southeastern
Michigan Transportation Authority (SEMTA) took control of this
service in 1968 but was ended on October 17, 1983 after subsidies
were discontinued. Efforts continue to this day to restore such
service.
Class one freight rail service is provided by
Canadian National Railway
(CN).
Religion
The First United Methodist Church was established in 1821 with its
first services conducted in Elijah Willits' tavern. Its current
location was built in 1839; it is now the oldest church building in
the city. Currently, there are other houses of worship spanning
many different religions.
Notable residents

"The Freedom of the Human Spirit" by
Marshall Fredericks
- Tim Allen, actor (born in Colorado but
raised in Birmingham)
- Shane Battier, basketball player
with the Houston Rockets
- Randal Bryant, dean, Carnegie
Mellon School of Computer Science
- Miguel Cabrera, Detroit Tiger
- Clarence Dayton Hillman,
prominent Seattle businessman and land developer
- Virgil Exner, automobile
designer
- Marshall Fredericks,
sculptor
- Christine Lahti, actress
- Alexi Lalas, Former pro soccer
player and GM and President of the Los Angeles Galaxy
- Gerald S. McGowan, US Ambassador to Portugal
- Meg Oliver, anchor of CBS's
Up to the Minute
- Kenny Olson, lead guitarist for Kid
Rock (attended Midvale Elementary School)
- Sam Raimi, director (attended Groves
High School)
- David Spade, actor and comedian
- Sheila Young,
speed skater and first American Olympian to place first, second and
third (receiving a gold, a silver and a bronze medal) while
competing at the Innsbruck
1976 Winter
Olympics
External links
References
- Seeley pp. 188-189
- Seeley, pp. 27-28
- Description of the military land in Michigan,
report by surveyor-general Edward Tiffin, November 30, 1815, in
Michigan As a Province, Territory and State, the Twenty-Sixth
Member of the Federal Union Vol. 2, by Henry M. Utley and
Clarence M. Cutcheon. pg. 254-255.
- Seeley p.372
- Woodward Ave. History
- City of Birmingham, MI: The Birmingham Eccentric
- " Google Offices." Google. Retrieved on July 12, 2009.
- First United Methodist Church History
- Tutag, Nola Huse, and Lucy Hamilton. Discovering Stained
Glass in Detroit [1]