West Bloomfield michigan
Latest Publication:
Our History & Remembrance of Pleasant lake
West Bloomfield, MI |
View pictures of the 2007
Apple Island Tours |
Greg Robertson describes Island plants |

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Check out the latest additions to our reference papers!
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In the 1870’s George Hammond made a fortune by developing refrigerated railway cars to transport meat from his packing plant in Hammond, Indiana. After his death in 1883, his family bought land around then “Lord’s Lake” and renamed the lake after themselves. Read more…
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The history of education in West Bloomfield began in 1834 in one room school houses. Today, the district now includes the cities of Orchard Lake, Keego Harbor, and parts of Sylvan Lake. Read more...
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The Keego Theater opened for business in 1940 to serve the resort town of Keego Harbor in West Bloomfield, MI. The first movie shown was “The Grapes of Wrath” Read more…
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David Ward - In the late 1800’s, former medical doctor turned lumber baron David Ward was the richest man in Michigan. In 1894, he built a palatial summer home on the strip of land between Orchard Lake and Cass Lake. Read his complete autobiography on-line…
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Pontiac, Chief of the Ottawa’s once roamed the grounds of West Bloomfield. Pontiac Trail is named in his honor. Legend has it that he is buried on Apple Island on Orchard Lake. Read more in the “Rearview Mirror” section link to the Detroit News.
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In the early 1900’s, Albert Kahn was a renowned industrial architect from Detroit. His early works included the Packard Motor Car Company and the Ford Model T Plant in Highland Park. He had a summer home on the shores of Walnut Lake. Read more ...
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In 1763, Chief Pontiac engaged the British on the grounds of what is now the Elmwood Cemetery near downtown Detroit. George Hammond, who made a fortune in the meat packing industry died in 1883 at the age of 45 and was buried there. Read their stories ...
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Orchard Lake Museum - What was once the Orchard Lake City hall is now the Orchard Lake Museum. The building is made from the same materials salvaged from the Orchard Lake Hotel… which stood on the same site! Let’s go on a virtual tour to see displays and artifacts from Orchard Lake, Keego Harbor Sylvan Lake and West Bloomfield. View pictures…
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The Michigan Military Academy at Orchard Lake
by James C. Starbuck
Reprinted from Michigan History Magazine, September 1966
with additional notes by Brian J. Bohnett Read more ...
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Orchard Lake Hotel was at the corner of Orchard Lake and Long Lake roads. Built in 1867 on the east shore of Orchard Lake, the hotel served as the place to be in this resort area of Oakland County. Read more ...
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Special Feature!
Greater West Bloomfield Historical Society to publish Them Was the Daysby Brian Bohnett: ABOUT THE BOOK: In 1877, an idea - formed in the mind of 33-year-old Army Major, J. Sumner Rogers - became a reality. The Michigan Military Academy. From the early beginnings as the retirement residence of former Michigan Supreme Court Justice, Joseph Tarr Copeland, to its final days and bankruptcy, this book covers the brief 30-year life of a school once deemed "the West Point of the West."
More than just a history of the school, this volume - illustrated with over 100 photos and illustrations - contains anecdotes and hands-on accounts from the cadets, faculty and others who played a part in the school's history, giving the reader a flavor of what it was like to be at a 19th century military school... located on the picturesque shores of Orchard Lake.
West Bloomfield Map - 1896
Click on a section to see a larger view with related photographs
 
Explanation of the map sections
By an act of the legislative council, approved April 22, 1833, township 2 north of range 9 east was set off from Bloomfield to create a separate township. It was given the name West Bloomfield. The boundaries of the township established then are the same as at present. Over time Oakland County was divided mostly into 36-square-mile townships.
One of Oakland County's 25 townships, West Bloomfield is further divided into 36 sections, numbered from NE corner to SE corner, in a serpentine fashion. Each section (1 sq. mi.) is 640 acres; a quarter section, when divided, makes two 80-acre parcels (most of which were oriented twice as "tall" as they were "wide"). These 80-acre "farms" were the most commonly purchased piece of Oakland County land when it was first offered by the U.S. Government. The first recorded sale of land in what is now West Bloomfield Township occurred on May 15, 1823, 14 years before Michigan achieved statehood.
Description of West Bloomfield
"This township is joined on the north by Waterford, and on the east by Bloomfield; its southern and western boundaries being respectively the townships of Farmington and Commerce.
"A strongly-marked feature in the topography of West Bloomfield is the number, extent, and beauty of the lakes which thickly stud its surface, particularly in the northern part. It is the lake township of Oakland County; about one-fifth of its area being covered by these bodies of clear fresh water. There are Pine, Black Walnut, Long, Cranberry, and Lord's lakes in the eastern part; Cass and Pickerel lakes in the north; Orchard, Upper Straits, Woodpecker, and Morris in the central portion; and Union, Scotch, Green, Pleasant, and Lower Straits in the western part of the town, besides numerous smaller lakes, many of which are nameless, though beautiful and romantic.
"The largest of these, Cass lake, discharges its waters through Pickerel and Timber lakes and the Clinton river into lake St. Clair; Lord's, Long, Black Walnut, Cranberry, Woodpecker, and Morris lakes discharge through small branches into the river Rouge; while Upper and Lower Straits, Green, Scotch, and Union lakes send their tribute westward through the township of Commerce to the Huron river. The Pine lake has the greatest altitude, being very nearly four hundred feet above the level of the river at Detroit.
The only stream of even moderate size in the township (with the exception of the short channel which connects Cass and Pickerel lakes) is a creek, of which the western branch takes its rise in Woodpecker and Morris lakes, and the eastern one flows out from Black Walnut lake, the two uniting on section 26, there forming the main stream, which leaves the township at its southeastern corner. This stream turns several mill-wheels in its course through the townships of Farmington, Bloomfield, and Southfield, and in former years furnished propelling power for a saw- and a grist-mill in West Bloomfield, but they have long since disappeared, and now the little creek flows unobstructed from its sources to the line of Farmington. The surface of the township is uneven, particularly in the lake region, where it is frequently broken into abrupt hills, though these do not rise to any great height. In the southern part it is simply rolling, and this portion was originally much more heavily timbered than was the case among the lakes in the northern part."
from the History of Oakland County, Michigan, published in 1877:
Greater West Bloomfield Historical Society
3951 Orchard Lake Road
P.O. Box 240514
Orchard Lake, MI 48324
Long Lake and Orchard Lake Roads
on the East shore of Orchard Lake
Museum: 248-682-2279 |

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Genoa township home page link
Lake orion web site link
Oakland township web site link
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