Picnic Shelters
Table and Trees
Ducks on the Grand
Ducks on the Grand
Colors!
Harvest
Trees and Grass at the Beach
Along the Trail
Roots
Excellent Color
John Deere
Tractor
Harvester
Dust to Dust
Gillette Visitor Center
Trees by the River
Trees by the River
Uprooted
Still a Few Leaves
Red, with green and yellow accents.
For Sale
A Bit o' Color
Lines of Trees
In a Fog
Still Standing
The Other Missing Barn
The Other Missing Barn
No Barn, but Still Cattle
Where the McCargar Barn Was
McCargar's Barn
Still Some Color Out There...
First Reformed
Walk the Dogs
Bronson Park Color
Past Prime
Mornin'
The Tree Next Door
Bales, with Color
Dew on the Mornin' Glory
The Usual Place
Sidewalk
Location
Lat, Lng:
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Where the Dimondale Dam Was


Michigan's Grand River was dammed at this location in 1850 by Isaac Dimond, who laid out a village around the dam, called Dimondale, in 1856 (I'm leaving out a lot of complications). Dimond build a sawmill in what's now Lions Community Park, and a grist mill in the present (and brand new) Danford Island Park. This photo was taken from Island; Lions is on the far shore of the river.
After some rebuilds of the dam and both mills the village thrived as a mill town, supporting settlers and farmers in Windsor Township, southwest of Lansing.
The 1880 incarnation of the dam was removed in September of 2006 and replaced with what the village and the state call a "W" weir. Who am I to argue with that description?
I had a Dimondale address for about a dozen years, though I've never lived in the village. It's now pretty much a Lansing suburb, though the town seems to resist the description.
After some rebuilds of the dam and both mills the village thrived as a mill town, supporting settlers and farmers in Windsor Township, southwest of Lansing.
The 1880 incarnation of the dam was removed in September of 2006 and replaced with what the village and the state call a "W" weir. Who am I to argue with that description?
I had a Dimondale address for about a dozen years, though I've never lived in the village. It's now pretty much a Lansing suburb, though the town seems to resist the description.
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