Online Encyclopedia

SAGINAW

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 1003 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SAGINAW  , a

city and the county-seat of Saginaw county, Michigan, U.S.A., situated on both banks of the Saginaw
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river, about 16 m. from its entrance into Saginaw
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Bay and about 96 m . N.W. of
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Detroit . Pop . (189o) 46,322, (1900) 42,345, of whom 11,435 were
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foreign-born, (1910) 50,510 . Saginaw is served by the
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Grand Trunk, seven divisions of the Pere Marquette (which has repair shops here) and four divisions of the Michigan Central
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railways, by interurban electric railways to Detroit and Bay City, and by steamboat lines to several of the lake ports . The city is built on level ground covering an
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area of about 13 sq. m. and somewhat more elevated than the surrounding country . In the city are St Vincent's
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Orphan Home (1875) and St Mary's Hospital (1874) under the Sisters of Charity, a Woman's Hospital (1888) and the Saginaw General Hospital 1 Mr Sage's secretary was also killed, and one of his clerks, W . R . Laidlaw, jr., was badly injured . Laidlaw afterward repeatedly sued Sage for damages, claiming that Sage had used him as a shield at the moment of the
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explosion, but his suits were unsuccessful . (1887); the Hoyt Library and the Public Library; a large auditorium, belonging to the city; an armoury; the Germania Institute, with a
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kindergarten, a gymnastic school and a German library; and a
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free bathhouse and
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manual training school (1903), a
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part of the public school
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system . There is an
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annual
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music festival in May .

The city has parks, including Hoyt

Park (27 acres), used for athletic sports, Rust Park (150 acres), occupying an island in the river, and
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Riverside Park, a pleasure resort . Saginaw is situated in a good farming region with a fertile
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soil, especially adapted to the culture of
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sugar beets; other important crops are beans, cabbages, tomatoes, cucumbers, hay, apples and grains . In the vicinity of the city there are salt wells, and Saginaw county is the most productive coalfield in the state—in 1907 its output was 1,047,927 tons, more than
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half the
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total for the state . The city is an important distributing centre, has a large wholesale trade (especially in groceries, hardware, boots and shoes, and dry goods), and in 1904 in the value of its factory products ($10,403,508, 20.2% more than in 1900) it ranked fifth among the cities of the state . The
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municipality owns and operates the
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water-
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works . The first settlement was made on the west
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bank of the river in 1815 and was called Saginaw City; the settlement on the east side of the river made in 1849 was called East Saginaw and was financed by Eastern capitalists . East Saginaw in 1855 was incorporated as a
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village . East Saginaw and Saginaw City each received a city charter in 1859, but in 1890 the two were consolidated as the city of Saginaw, and in 1897 the charter was revised .

End of Article: SAGINAW
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