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Dearborn (Michigan)

Dearborn (Michigan)

Dearborn, Michigan
—  City  —
City of Dearborn
The Ford Motor world head office, nickname glass house
A motto: "Home Town of Henry Ford"[1]
Position of Michigan
Position (the United States of America) of Dearborn, Michigan
Dearborn, Michigan
Dearborn, Michigan
Location in the United States
A coordinate: 42°18'52" N 83°12'48" W / 42.31444 degrees N 83.21333 degrees W / 42.31444, -83.21333
Country The United States of America
State Michigan
County Wayne county
The establishment 1786
The village system enforcement year 1893
The municipal organization enforcement year 1927
Administration
 - Classification Mayor = municipal assembly
 - The mayor John B. O'Reilly, Jr.
Area
 - 計 24.5mi2 (63.3km2)
 - Land 24.4mi2 (63.1km2)
 - The surface of the water 0.1mi2 (0.2km2)
Altitude 591ft (180m)
Population (2010) [2]
 - 計 98,153 people
 - Approximate (2013)[3] 95,884 people
 - Population density 4,050.9 /mi² (1,564.1 /km²)
Equal time obi EST (UTC-5)
 - Daylight saving time EDT (UTC-4)
Area code 313
FIPS code 26-21,000
GNIS feature ID 0624432[4]
Website City of Dearborn

The city where Dearborn (Dearborn) is located in the southeastern part of United States of America Michigan, the Wayne county. It is next to the west of Detroit. The population 98,153 people (2010 national census).

Dearborn is the place that produced Henry Ford and is the ground where Ford Motor establishes the head office again. The river rouge factory of Ford in Dearborn produced Ford Mustangs again early in Ford model T in the 1960s. For the heyday, this factory had 120,000 employees.

Table of contents

History

It was about 1786 that the first European settlement was established on this ground [5]. The village of Dearborn was established in 1836. The name of the village was acquired for Henry Dearborn that acted as the fifth secretary of the army with the third President Thomas Jefferson in the generals in the independence war. In 1929, a merger with the Ford loss that avoided merger to Detroit was established, and current city limits were established. A lot of undeveloped areas remain between two towns at the time without development advancing partially now.

It was old, and Henry Ford who purchased land of this whole area that was farmland of the one side built own residence called the fair lane and the head office of Ford Motor in this ground. In 1925, the Ford Airport who was one of the United States's first modern airports was installed, and a flight between Chicago went into service. This Ford Airport was used until Detroit metropolitan Wayne county airport opened in 1947. This airport was converted into the examination room of Ford afterwards.

Geography

The left: Position of Dearborn in the Wayne county
The right: Position of the Wayne county in Michigan
Rouge river and Michigan way Route 39

Dearborn is located at 42°18'41" N 83°12'49" W. It is next to the west of Detroit and is located to approximately 10km from downtown to the west. According to United States of America Statistics Bureau, Dearborn City is total area 63.3km² (24.5mi²). 63.1km² (24.4mi²) of those is land, and 0.2km² (0.1mi²) is area of the sea. 0.37% of total areas become the area of the sea.

A rouge river flows through the city. In the site of the mansion of Henry Ford, an artificial waterfall was established in the rouge river, and hydraulic power generation was accomplished. Three branches of the rouge river join in Dearborn. The width of a river is widened for the navigation of the ship artificially near the river rouge factory, and the rouge river is maintained as a canal.

Traffic

An airport becoming the doorway of the Detroit urban area including Dearborn is Detroit metropolitan Wayne county airport (IATA: DTW). It is a large airport eminent United States having six runways, and the international airline including not only the United States but also Pacific route and the Atlantic route arrives and departs a lot again at the airport which is a hub of Northwest Orient Airlines.

The network of expressways to cover Detroit urban area goes along Dearborn. Expressway I-94 between states goes to the southeast of the city. In addition, Michigan way Route 39 becoming the expressway standard in the west of the city lies in the north and south.

Middle-range train which links Pontiac of Detroit northern suburbs to Chicago, Wolverine stop at Dearborn Station of Amtrak. I pass downtown of Detroit in the Pontiac area in Ann Arbor and Kalamazoo in the Chicago area. Wolverine is one of three middle range trains called the Michigan line (Michigan Services) with Pele market, blue water toward Grand Rapids from Chicago toward Port Huron in total.

Education

University of Michigan Dearborn school establishes a campus in Dearborn. The proofreading is one of principal school and flint school in Ann Arbor and three State University forming University of Michigan system in total. The school has approximately 8,000 students.

The K-12 course of Dearborn is supported including a part of Dearborn Heights City which is next to the west by a public school building under the administration of the Dearborn public school district. The school district holds 34 public schools including three main high schools.

Population dynamics

The Isla Mick center of United States

In Dearborn, an Irishman is German historically and a lot of Polish inhabitants live. They are descendants of the emigrants whom they put into this ground from the mid-19th century through the early 20th century. In addition, there are many Armenian inhabitants in Dearborn. Most of them are refugees and the descendants who went to the United States when Ottoman Empire collapsed. On the other hand, unlike Detroit of the east side where a population rate of black reaches approximately 80% of the total population, there are few African inhabitants [6].

And there is the huge community of Arabic inhabitants in modern Dearborn. There is more Arabic population in Dearborn of American people than Los Angeles that has population more than 30 times of Dearborn with size next to New York in the United States [7]. The Arabic inhabitants in Dearborn count approximately 30,000 and reach 33.4% of total population. In addition, the inhabitants who assume Arabic a first language occupy 29.3% of total population. The first Arabic inhabitants were the Lebanese Christians whom they put as the worker who worked in a car factory of Dearborn at the mid-1900s. It was Yemenite, and, an Iraqi system, the Muslims such as Palestinian systems put it before long. North America's biggest mosque, the Isla Mick center of United States are located in Dearborn [8]. In January, 2005, a national Arab American museum was opened in the ground of this Dearborn. The hall cooperates with the Smithsonian Institution with the world's first thing for a museum to introduce the Arabic American history and culture to [9]; [10]. The Arabic inhabitants live in the east side of the city mainly, but in late years the residence district spreads out in the west.

Statistics data

Dearborn City
Population change every generation
1900 844 people
1910 911 people
1920 2,470 people
1930 50,358 people
1940 63,589 people
1950 94,994 people
1960 112,007 people
1970 104,199 people
1980 90,660 people
1990 89,286 people
2000 97,775 people

It is the population statistics data by the national census of 2000 as follows.

Basic data

  • Population: 97,775 people
  • The number of the households: 36,770 households
  • The number of the families: 23,863 families
  • Population density: 1,549.7 /km² (4,013.2 /mi²)
  • The number of the houses: 38,981 houses
  • House density: 617.8 /km² (1,600.0 /mi²)

Population composition according to the race

  • A white: 86.86%
  • An African is American: 1.28%
  • A native is American: 0.26%
  • An Asian: 1.47%
  • Pacific Islands system: 0.01%
  • Other races: 0.73%
  • Mixed blood: 9.38%
  • Hispanic Latin system: 3.00%

Age-specific population composition

  • Under 18 years old: 27.8%
  • 18-24 years old: 8.3%
  • 25-44 years old: 29.2%
  • 45-64 years old: 19.1%
  • 65 years old or older: 15.6%
  • Median age: 34 years old
  • Sex ratio (population of the man per 100 women)
    • Total population: 99.0
    • 18 years old or older: 96.5

A household and family (the number of the households)

  • There is a child younger than 18 years: 31.3%
  • Marriage, the couple who lives together: 51.0%
  • A single divorce, bereavement woman is family nurturer: 9.4%
  • A nonfamily household: 35.1%
  • It is a household alone: 30.9%
  • An old man alone living 65 years or older: 14.7%
  • The mean constitution number of people
    • A household: 2.65 people
    • A family: 3.42 people

An income and the family budget

  • Median income
    • A household: 44,560The U.S. dollar
    • A family: 53,060 U.S. dollars
    • Sex
      • A man: 45,114 U.S. dollars
      • A woman: 33,872 U.S. dollars
  • An income per a population of one: 21,488 U.S. dollars
  • Lower than poverty line
    • Anti-population: 16.1%
    • The number of the anti-families: 12.2%
    • Under 18 years old: 24.4%
    • 65 years old or older: 7.6%

Sister city

Dearborn links the sister city tie-up to the Lebanese kana.

Note

  1. ^ "City of Dearborn, Michigan". City of Dearborn, Michigan. August 25, 2012 reading.
  2. ^ "American FactFinder." United States Census Bureau. January 2, 2013 reading.
  3. ^ "Population Estimates." United States Census Bureau. August 14, 2014 reading.
  4. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Dearborn (Michigan)
  5. ^ History of the Area. Heritage Newspapers.
  6. ^ Rev. Horace L. Sheffield, III, Denounces 'Residents Only' Policy at New Dearborn Civic Center as Racist Attempt to Limit Access by African-Americans. PR Newswire. June 15, 2001.
  7. ^ The Arab Population: 2000. pp.7-8. U.S.Census Bureau. December, 2003.
  8. ^ Home. Islamic Center of America.
  9. ^ Affiliate Directory. Smithsonian affiliations.
  10. ^ About the Museum. Arab American National Museum.

References

  • Cantor, George. Detroit: An Insiders Guide to Michigan. University of Michigan Press. 2005. ISBN 0472030922.
  • Fisher, Dale. Building Michigan: A Tribute to Michigan's Construction Industry. Eyry of the Eagle Publishing. Grass Lake, MI. 2003. ISBN 1891143247.
  • Fisher, Dale. Southeast Michigan: Horizons of Growth. Eyry of the Eagle Publishing. Grass Lake, MI. 2005. ISBN 1891143255.
  • Hill, Eric J. and John Gallagher. AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture. Wayne State University Press. 2002. ISBN 0-8143-3120-3.

Outside link

This article is taken from the Japanese Wikipedia Dearborn (Michigan)

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