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  1. #1

    Default 10 Detroit Facts You Should [[And Maybe Already) Know

    1. First City to Pave a Concrete Road


    In 1909, Wayne County built the first mile of concrete highway in the world on Woodward Avenue between Six and Seven Mile roads. Until then, a surfaced road was gravel, and often a horse was employed to pull a car out of the muddy muck. Road builders from near and afar came to see how concrete stood up under the heavy traffic of that period. It cost $13,537, including $1,000 in state aid.
    The success of this experiment led to other transportation-firsts. In 1919 the nation’s first 4-way three color traffic light was installed on the corner of Woodward and Michigan Avenues in Detroit 1. In 1930 the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel was completed making it the first traffic tunnel between two nations. By 1942, the world’s first urban freeway opened to the public, the Davison Freeway.


    2. Home to the Ice Cream Soda


    Long before A&W introduced their root-beer float the ice-cream soda was being served to thirsty Detroiters along Boston Boulevard. Many historians claim Detroit’s own Fred Sanders, a confectioner and owner of The Pavilion of Sweets first served the drink to two customers in 1876. A popular drink at the time was the sweet cream soda. One day when the ice delivery truck failed to show Sander’s day-old cream went sour. Improvising, he instead mixed ice cream with the carbonated beverage and hence the drink was born.

    By the 1880s the most popular combination for this drink was Ginger Ale with ice cream aka the Boston Cooler; specifically Vernor’s Ginger Ale & Sander’s ice cream. The beverage was named after the Boulevard and not the Massachusetts city. James Vernor’s drugstore located a short distance away made the unique combination seem very natural. Vernor’s produced an intense golden ginger ale, unlike most modern dry ginger ales. Until the 1920s ginger ale was the nation’s most popular choice of carbonated beverage, and Vernor’s happens to be our nation’s oldest soda. Soda connoisseurs still advocate to this day that if you want to taste ginger ale the way it was meant to taste locate a Vernor’s.


    3. Supplied 75% of liquor during Prohibition

    In January 1920, the era of Prohibition began in the U.S. The Detroit River, barely one mile across in some places, was a smuggler’s dream. Enterprising smugglers carried cargo beneath boats, rigged mechanical cables across the river and utilized old underground tunnels to transport their illegal bounty. During cold winter months, the river became a highway, as daring smugglers in automobiles made their way across the ice from Canada to the United States.
    A number of government agencies, including the U.S. Customs Department, the U.S. Coast Guard, the Michigan State Police and the Detroit Police Department combined forces to patrol the waterways in an effort to stop the smuggling. Despite their efforts, it’s estimated that more than 75% of illegal liquor supplied to the U.S. during prohibition entered the country by way of the Detroit River, Lake St. Clair and the St. Clair River.


    4. First Ever News Radio Broadcast


    Going on air in August 20, 1920, 8MK, later renamed WWJ, is believed to be the first station to broadcast regular news reports. Financed by The Detroit News, 8MK was initially licensed to Michael DeLisle Lyons. He assembled the station in the Detroit News Building. As was common practice in the early days of radio, the Scripps family asked Lyons to register the station in his name in case this rather new technology was only a fad.
    Newspaper owners at the time were worried radio might replace newspapers and put them out of business. Almost 100 years later and we’re happy to report both The Detroit News and WWJ Radio still operate today.

    Continued at: http://www.ampyourstrat.com/2011/03/...-know/#source3

  2. #2

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    Ummm, that's only 4 "facts". Where was this stuff copied from?

    That Sander's/Vernor's information is a bit off. For one thing, nothing was served by Sander's "along Boston Blvd." since the street was [[and remains) entirely residential. And neither Sander's nor Vernor's were "nearby" Boston Blvd. either, since both were located downtown. Oh, and a Boston Cooler is not an ice cream soda [[which requires soda water or seltzer), it is properly termed a float.

  3. #3

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    Follow the link at the end.

  4. #4

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    What's soda?

    Oh. Pop!

  5. #5

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    We can't even get the facts of Detroit straight...

  6. #6

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    They need to check their facts about looking south to Canada also!

    Attachment 14252

  7. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jimaz View Post
    What's soda?

    Oh. Pop!
    That's part of where the confusion comes in.

    If you walked into a soda fountain [[back in the days when there were such things) in Detroit and asked for a "soda" you would have gotten an ice cream soda [[i.e. soda water, ice cream, and flavored syrup, mixed together).

    But if you asked for "soda" on the east coast you would have gotten what we call "pop". In order to get what we called a "soda" there, you would have had to ask for an "ice cream soda" [[which would have been made with some mysterious substance called "seltzer water").

    Of course, soda fountains, and their nomenclature, have now pretty much entirely disappeared from the American landscape and consciousness. So all that's really left of any of these distinctions today is the "pop" vs. "soda" geographic lexical divide.

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