|
|
| |
 |
| |
Legend
has it that the towering sand dunes of Lake Michigan’s
eastern shore reminded him of the ocean dunes in the Netherlands
and he decided to make his settlement here in new Holland.
The
area was settled by the first Dutch immigrants
on the banks of what was called Black Lake (later renamed
Lake Macatawa) was a far cry from the picturesque community
Holland has become. The area was vast forests that had to
be cut and huge swamplands that had to be drained. The Dutch
settlers cut the trees for homes and business and created
a thriving lumber industry with the rest. |
|
| |
| |
Local
legend holds that sparks from the Great Chicago
Fire which started October 8, 1871 drifted 30 miles
across Lake Michigan to set the city of Holland Michigan
on fire the same day. Like Chicago, the Holland fire
destroyed most of the wooden stores downtown and several
surrounding neighborhoods. Holland’s downtown
was rebuilt out of stone and brick instead of wood
and many of the buildings and fine architecture can
still be seen today. |
|
|
| |
Unlike neighboring Saugatuck and Grand Haven
which had natural lakeland harbors for boats, Holland’s
outlet to Lake Michigan was blocked by sandbars at the
mouth of Black Lake. After repeated requests to state
and the federal agencies for help in building a channel
from Lake Michigan to Black Lake where ignored, Van Raalte
in 1860 organized a citizens brigade to hand dig a channel
to Lake Michigan and open up Holland to lake shipping.
The little Dutch settlement prospered
from lakeside port and by the late 1890s had become a
thriving summer resort area
for summer visitors sporting mammoth hotel resorts near
Lake Michigan. A city trolley was built to take residents
from Holland to the lake during the summer. The Great
Depression and loss of tourism in the 1920s, though, brought
an end to the era. All of the great hotels are gone now,
lost to fire or the wrecking ball. But, the beautiful
vistas once occupied by those grand hotels are now part
of the Holland State Park on the north shore of Lake Macatawa.
|
|
| |
| |
City
Founder helps start Republican Party: The
Rev. Albertus Van Raalte brought his flock of Dutch
colonist to the wilderness of West Michigan in 1847
to establish the town of Holland. Van Raalte, a few
years later, was also the area’s delegate to
the first official meeting of the Republican Party
on July 6, 1854 in Jackson, Michigan. Since the Civil
War, Holland has voted Republican in every presidential
election. |
|
|
| |
| Since
the late 1950s, the Holland area has become a major
manufacturing and commercial area, home to a more than a
dozen Fortune 500 companies plus hundreds of other small
to medium size companies. It is the base to some of the
largest office furniture and automotive parts companies
in the nation. It is also one of the largest regional shopping
destinations in Western Michigan, second only to Grand Rapids.
The city is the home to more than 35,000
residents with more than 130,000 people living in surrounding
areas. Today it is also the home to Hope College and has
branch campuses of Davenport University and Grand Valley
State University. |
|
| |
 |
| |
| The
Holland area is one of the largest business, retail
and industrial centers along the Lakeshore. The area is
home to such major industries as office furniture manufacturers,
auto components, agriculture machinery, fine woodworking,
food processors, power boats and yachts, home products,
medical supplies, and much more. The area even has a place
that makes Dutch wooden shoes. |
|
| |
| |
Michigan Governors
Scrub the Streets: It has become a tradition
for Michigan Governors to come each year to Holland
and participate in the annual Street Scrubbers Parade
which kicks off the city’s annual Tulip Time
Festival. The Governors join hundreds of “street
scrubbers” dressed in traditional Dutch clothes,
caps, and wooden shoes to get the streets clean for
the festival using straw brooms and pails of water. |
|
|
| |
It
is often said that if you want anything concepted,
designed, fabricated and manufactured it can be down in
the Holland, Michigan, metropolitan region.
In
the business arena, the city covers all bases and
brands for new and previously-owned cars and trucks and
sport and recreation vehicles including boats. Whether you
looking for a new SUV, a snowmobile for winter, or a luxury
car for the grand opening of the latest production of Hope
Summer Repertoire company, you can find it in the Holland,
Michigan, area. |
|
| |
|