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HISTORY
OF THE
CHARTER
TOWNSHIP
OF FLUSHING
The Charter
Township of Flushing was organized in 1838 and was
nine (9) by twelve (12) miles, or 108 square miles.
The original Township area included the present area
of Flushing and Clayton Townships, as well as the
portion one-half of both Mt. Morris and Flint
Townships. This area was later subdivided until the
Township was reduced to its present size of
thirty-six (36) square miles which includes the four
(4) square miles of the City of Flushing. The
name of Dover was originally adopted by the Township
organizers but, owing to the fact that another
township of the same name existed in the State, the
legislature substituted Flushing.
The earlier
inhabitants of the Flushing River Valley were the
Sauk Indians who lived off the land.
Land was first purchased in the Township by John
Paton who bought 83.20 acres in Section 22 and 47.85
acres in Section 27 in June 1834. However, due to
the fact no one was living in Flushing Township at
the time, he did not settle his family there until
1837.
The first
non-native settler known to have taken up residence
within the limits of what is now the Township of
Flushing was Rufus Harrison who settled in the fall
of 1835 on a farm in the southeast part of the
Township.
In the
history of Flushing, Joseph Gage was an
African-American settler who became a well known
businessman. Mr. Gage was not only in business, he
was an athlete, a barber, a boxer, a singer, a
dancer, an early Boy Scout leader, a fireman and
fire chief, and he and his wife also practiced faith
healing. Mr. Gage died in 1956; he and Mrs. Gage
are buried at Flushing Cemetery.
Thomas L.
Brent, a Virginian, who had acquired a national
reputation and a large fortune, built a dam across
the Flint River in Section 3 and erected a sawmill
the same year. The dam was washed away in 1837.
The operation was replaced by another dam and a
second mill somewhat removed from the river. The
large acreage of pine in that area of the Township
was cleared.
In 1840,
a number of families from England settled in the
north-western area of the Township in what was known
as the “English Settlement”. The first settlers in
that area were John Reid, James Bailey, and Samuel
and James Wood.
The first
road cut in the Township was the “River Road” from
the east, which was surveyed in 1835, through to the
farm of Paton in Sections 22 and 27.
Early
extractive industries included coal, salt, and
sandstone removal. A vein of bituminous coal on
Paton’s farm was worked where it outcropped at the
river. A well at one time was dug and brine was
struck at a depth of seven hundred (700) feet.
Flushing sandstone “pronounced by experts to be of
excellent quality for building purposes and the best
in the lower peninsula of Michigan” was quarried at
beds south and east of Flushing Village. The stone
was used in construction of St. Paul’s Episcopal
Church and numerous other buildings in Flint and
elsewhere.
When
Flushing Village became a city in 1964, the units of
government had their separate headquarters with the
township converting the former James Graham School
on Seymour Road into its township office. In terms
of length of service to the township, Claude R.
Hallack was township clerk for over forty (40)
years.
One of
the first jobs for the new township officers was to
lay out road districts. By 1840 there were ten (10)
districts. Each owner of land was “charged a
certain number of days work on the road” with the
time depending on the size of his property.
There
is one site in Flushing Township currently on the
National Register of Historic Places and one on the
State Register of Historic Sites. The residence,
located at 10410 Stanley Road, is on the National
Register, and believed to have been built in 1870.
According to the Register entry “it is considered
the most unusual of all nineteenth century
architectural resources examined in Genesee County.
The Brent Creek Methodist Church located at 10412 W.
Mt. Morris Road is on the State Register. It was
built in 1891 as the first permanent church for the
Flint River Circuit pastors.
There
are three (3) Centennial Farms in the Township.
Centennial Farms are those that have been actively
worked and been in the same family for over one
hundred (100) years. The oldest Centennial Farm,
located at 12412 Carpenter Road was first worked by
its current family in 1842.
The
Township of Flushing has grown considerably since it
was first formed in 1838. In 1840 Flushing Township
had a population of 473; by 1860 it was up to 1,237;
1900 showed 2,132; in 1930 there were 3,298
residents and the 1960 population was 8,535. The
1990 census showed a population of 9,223; in 1997
there were over 7,000 registered voters. The 2000
census showed a population of 10,230; in 2006, there
were 7,801 registered voters.
Flushing
Township has kept its small town appeal even though
there are no major roads that connect Flushing to
the major highways.
Flushing Township has many treasures to
offer to families: 1) fishing and canoeing on the
Flint River that flows through the Township; 2) the
Flushing Township Nature Park which consists of
approximately one hundred twenty-three (123) acres
on the scenic Flint River with three (3) fishing
piers, an observation tower, native plants, walking
trails, pavilion; and many more features; 4) a great
Flushing Community School system; 5) shops,
restaurants, and local businesses located in the
City of Flushing, 6) Flushing Area Senior Center, 7)
Flushing Historical Society, and many more treasures
too numerous to mention.
Charter Township of Flushing
6524 North Seymour Road Flushing Michigan 48433
(810) 659-0800 Fax (810) 659-4212
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