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| Detroit Free Press, July 3, 1893 |
As was the case with most small towns looking for a leg-up in the
booming industrial age, plans were afoot in Romulus in the 1890s to make
it a manufacturing hub. Being conveniently located at the crossing of
the Wabash Railroad and the Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad it made
perfect sense for the time.
As such, the Romulus Land Syndicate
of Detroit, which had already lured such manufacturers as the J. M.
Hommel Mfg. Co., The Romulus Knitting Mills, The Seestedt Furniture Co.
and the Columbian Wire Works. Seestadt, having formerly been located in
Wayne, needed an upgrade in their growing business and chose Romulus.
On July 4, 1893 the Romulus Land Syndicate renting a train an offered a
free expedition from the New Union Depot in Detroit to the burgeoning
town 13 miles to the west. The only exclusions were children because
they meant business, I suppose.
Not a solitary event the land syndicate seemingly did this annually for a few years.

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