United States / Ann Arbor

all or unphotographed
2 plaques 0% have been curated
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Native American Land Gift 1817 This plaque commemorates the grant of lands from the Ojibwa (Chippewa), Odawa (Ottawa), and Bodewadimi (Potawatomi), through the Treaty of Fort Meigs, which states that "believing they may wish some of their children hereafter educated, [they] do grant to the rector of the Catholic church of St. Anne of Detroit..., and to the corporation of the college at Detroit, for the use of the said college, to be retained or sold, as the said rector and corporation may judge expedient..." The rector was Gabriel Richard, a founder and first vice president of the corporation of the college, chartered by the territorial legislature as the University of Michigania in 1817. These lands were eventually sold to the benefit of the University of Michigan, which was relocated to Ann Arbor in 1837. 2001 History and Traditions Committee Site #8

, Ann Arbor, United States

This is one of several boulders unearthed during construction of the South Fifth Avenue Parking Garage in 2010. Though most were limestone boulders originating in northern Michigan, this gneissic boulder originated in Canada. All were glacially transported to this site in Ann Arbor during the last ice age 14,000 to 18,000 years ago. Glaciers are the only geological transport mode capable of collecting materials from different origins, mixing them together and depositing them elsewhere.

343 South Fifth Avenue, Ann Arbor, United States