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Huron River: Early History
Native American tribes regularly travelled through Washtenaw County and the Ann Arbor area for centuries prior to the founding of the
city of Ann Arbor in 1824. The land that lies just to the north of the river, where
present-day Plymouth runs, marks the meeting of several old Native
American trails. The Huron River also served as a major canoeing route.
Click here to view an early map of Native American Trails that run
through Washtenaw County. Native Americans called the Huron River cos-scut-e-nong sebee,
meaning "Burnt District River", due to the periodic openings or clearings
in the dry oak on the highland above the river (according to Charles C.
Chapman's 1881 History of Washtenaw County, Michigan).
The nature of the land situated along the banks of the Huron and its
tributaries was a primary reason that John Allen chose this site for the
founding of his frontier town, originally called "Annarbour". In 1824,
Allen had travelled from Detroit with Elisha Rumsey to found a town in the
west. When they reached a beautiful wooded area with large openings of
cleared land where Allen's Creek fed the greater Huron River, they deemed
it the perfect location. Allen decried, "Our river is the most
beautiful I have beheld." The Huron would be
more than simply beautiful, providing the water the town and nearby
farmers would need to become successful.
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