1955 in Michigan

Events from the year 1955 in Michigan

Top stories

Newspaper headlines announcing Salk vaccine approval

The Associated Press (AP) and United Press (UP) each selected Michigan's top news stories of 1955 as follows:[1][2]

  • The modified guaranteed annual wage (GAW) agreements between the United Auto Workers (UAW) and the major American automobile manufacturers. The historic agreements provided a modified GAW obligation on the part of the auto makers to pay workers supplementary payments on top of unemployment benefits for 26 weeks in the event of a layoff. (AP-1, UP-1)
  • The unsolved sex slayings of Barbara Gaca (age 7, body discovered near Pontiac, March 31), Jeannie Singleton (age 8, body found north of Kalamazoo, June 1), and Peter Gorham (age 12, body found north of Muskegon, August 14). (AP-3, UP-2)
  • The announcement at a press conference in Ann Arbor on April 12 that the Salk polio vaccine had been approved as safe and effective. (AP-2, UP-4)
  • Record production totals in the automobile industry. The industry produced a record 7,942,893 passengers cars in 1955, an increase of more than a million cars over 1954 production levels. Truck production was 1,247,799. The breakdown among manufacturers was 4,649,279 for General Motors (1,830,037 for Chevrolet), 2,614,599 for Ford Motor, and 1,457,453 million for Chrysler.[3] In addition, the payroll of the Big Three auto makers (General Motors, Ford Motor, and Chrysler) exceeded five billion dollars paid to 982,183 salaried and hourly workers.[4] (AP-6 [tie], UP-5)
  • The April 4 election in which Democrats dominated state offices. (AP-4, UP-10)
  • A 46-day newspaper strike that ran from December 1, 1955, until January 17, 1956, that halted publication of The Detroit News, Detroit Free Press, and Detroit Times. (AP-11 [tie], UP-7 [tie])
  • The Michigan Legislature's adoption in November 1955 of a 65-mile per hour daytime speed limit. (UP-3)
  • The legislative deadlock over funding for hospital beds for child mental patients. The deadlock was broken on December 14 when the Michigan Legislature passed legislation providing for 1,450 additional beds to be available within four months and 2,500 more beds in a new hospital to be built in southeastern Michigan. (AP-5)
  • Competition between Cadillac and Kalkaska over the site for a jet base in northern Michigan. (UP-6)
  • The 1955 Michigan State Spartans football team winning a bid to the Rose Bowl. (AP-6 [tie])
  • The Michigan Legislature's adoption of a highway program. (UP-7)
  • Record heat and water shortages in many Michigan communities during the summer. (AP-8)
  • Ford Motor Co.'s decision to list its stock for public sale. (AP-9)
  • Construction of the Mackinac Bridge. By October 1955, 600 skilled men were working on the bridge, which was half completed with the gigantic main towers and concrete cable anchorages in place.[5] (UP-9)

The United Press[6] and The Detroit Reporter (strike newspaper)[7] each selected the year's top sports stories as follows:

Office holders

State office holders

Mayors of major cities

Federal office holders

Population

In the 1950 United States Census, Michigan was recorded as having a population of 6,421,000 persons, ranking as the seventh most populous state in the country. By 1960, the state's population had grown 22.8% to 7,823,194 persons.

Cities

The following is a list of cities in Michigan with a population of at least 40,000 based on 1950 U.S. Census data. Historic census data from 1940 and 1960 is included to reflect trends in population increases or decreases. Cities that are part of the Detroit metropolitan area are shaded in tan.

1950
Rank
City County 1940 Pop. 1950 Pop. 1960 Pop. Change 1950-60
1DetroitWayne1,623,4521,849,5681,670,144−9.7%
2Grand RapidsKent164,292176,515177,3130.5%
3FlintGenesee151,543163,143196,94020.7%
4DearbornWayne63,58994,994112,00717.9%
5SaginawSaginaw82,79492,91898,2655.8%
6LansingIngham78,75392,129107,80717.0%
7PontiacOakland66,62673,68182,23311.6%
8KalamazooKalamazoo54,09757,70482,08942.4%
9Bay CityBay47,95652,52353,6042.1%
10JacksonJackson49,65651,08850,720−0.7%
11Battle CreekCalhoun43,45348,66644,169−9.2%
12MuskegonMuskegon47,69748,42946,485−4.0%
13Ann ArborWashtenaw29,81548,25167,34039.6%
14Royal OakOakland25,08746,89880,61271.9%
15WarrenMacomb23,65842,65389,246109.2%

Counties

The following is a list of counties in Michigan with populations of at least 100,000 based on 1950 U.S. Census data. Historic census data from 1940 and 1960 are included to reflect trends in population increases or decreases. Counties that are part of the Detroit metropolitan area are shaded in tan.

1980
Rank
County Largest city 1940 Pop. 1950 Pop. 1960 Pop. Change 1950-60
1WayneDetroit2,015,6232,435,2352,666,2979.5%
2OaklandPontiac254,068396,001690,25974.3%
3KentGrand Rapids246,338288,292363,18726.0%
4GeneseeFlint227,944270,963374,31338.1%
5MacombWarren107,638184,961405,804119.4%
6InghamLansing130,616172,941211,29622.2%
7SaginawSaginaw130,468153,515190,75224.3%
8WashtenawAnn Arbor80,810134,606172,44028.1%
9KalamazooKalamazoo100,085126,707169,71233.9%
10MuskegonMuskegon94,501121,545129,9436.9%
11CalhounBattle Creek94,206120,813138,85814.9%
12BerrienBenton Harbor89,117115,702149,86529.5%
13JacksonJackson93,108108,168131,99422.0%

Companies

The following is a list of major companies based in, or having a substantial manufacturing presence in, Michigan in 1955.

Fortune 500 Rank (1956)[8] Company 1955 sales (millions)[8] 1955 net earnings (millions)[8] Headquarters Nature of business
1General Motors12,443.3[9]1,189.5DetroitOne of the "Big Three" automobile manufacturers and the largest corporation in the world
3Ford Motor Company5,594.0[10]437.0DearbornOne of the "Big Three" automobile manufacturers
5Chrysler3,466.2[11]100.1DetroitOne of the "Big Three" automobile manufacturers
58Bendix Aviation567.225.9DetroitParts supplier to auto industry
75Studebaker-Packard480.0-29.7Detroit and South Bend, IN[12]One of the "Little Three" automobile makers[13]
77Dow Chemical Co.470.737.4MidlandAs of 1955, the fourth largest chemical firm in United States[14]
81American Motors441.1-7.0DetroitOne of the "Little Three" automobile makers[13]
naS. S. Kresge Corp.354.7[15]13.9DetroitNational chain of over 600 dime stores
117Electric Auto-Lite296.0[16]10.1Toledo, OHSparkplugs and auto parts company with Michigan manufacturing[17]
122Thompson Products286.2[18]11.3ClevelandAutomobile parts with manufacturing in Michigan[19][20] (later became TRW)
127Whirlpool-Seeger280.4[21]14.1Benton Harbor[22]Washers, dryers, and ironers[23]
165Fruehauf Trailer Co.234.6[24]8.7DetroitTruck trailers
naDetroit Edison219.726.3DetroitElectric utility
169Eaton Manufacturing218.1[25]13.3Cleveland, OHAutomobile parts
170Burroughs218.6[25]12.1Detroit[26]Adding machines, computers, and other business equipment[26][27] (later became Unisys)
182Timken Roller Bearing196.122.1Canton, OHRoller bearings with several Detroit plants[28]
naConsumers Power189.4[29]JacksonElectric and natural gas utility
190Kellogg's182.1[30]13.8Battle CreekCereal foods
206Kaiser Industries164.05.1ToledoOne of the "Little Three" automobile makers;[13] Kaiser Motors was renamed Kaiser Industries in 1955, which also included Willys Motors and non-automobile enterprises[31]
263Clark Equipment Co.150.7[32]9.5BuchananIndustrial and construction machinery
241McLouth Steel145.0[33]8.1DetroitSteel[34]
272Parke-Davis123.1[35]14.3DetroitPharmaceutical
302Detroit Steel101.8[24]6.3DetroitSteel
324Ex-Cell-O92.5[36]9.5DetroitMachine work
343Gerber Products86.75.5FremontBaby food
350Federal-Mogul85.07.8DetroitBearings and replacement parts for autos, trucks, and aircraft[37]
372Midland Steel Products80.6[38]4.4ClevelandAutomobile frames with manufacturing in Michigan[39]
426Mueller Brass Co.67.7[40]2.5Port Huron[41]Brass tubing and fitting[42]
434Calumet & Hecla64.43.6ChicagoCopper mining and smelting in northern Michigan
441American Metal Products63.54.3Detroit[43][44]Automotive and aircraft parts manufacturing
naWrigley Supermarkets----Detroit$332-million supermarket chain owned by John and Nathan Lurie[45]
naUpjohn----KalamazooPharmaceutical
naMasco Screw Products----DearbornScrew machine parts and Delta faucets owned by Alex Manoogian[46]
naMichigan Bell--29.5[47]DetroitTelephone utility

Sports

Baseball

American football

Ron Kramer starred for Michigan in both football and basketball.

Basketball

Ice hockey

Gordie Howe led the Red Wings with 29 goals.

Boat racing

Golfing

Chronology of events

January

  • January 1 - G. Mennen Williams was sworn in for his fourth term as Governor of Michigan. Some 5,000 persons attended the inaugural ceremony that included the firing of artillery guns, bands playing, and jets flying overhead. The ceremony also included the administration of oaths of office to Democrats Philip Hart as Lieutenant Governor, James M. Hare as Secretary of State, Thomas M. Kavanagh as Attorney General, Sanford A. Brown as State Treasurer, and Victor Targonski as Auditor General.[74]
  • January 5 - Democrat Patrick V. McNamara was sworn in as Michigan's junior U.S. Senator, having defeated Republican Homer S. Ferguson in the November election. Vice President Richard Nixon administered the oath of office.[75] Four new members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Michigan also took office. The new members were: Republican August E. Johansen of Battle Creek; Democrat Donald Hayworth of East Lansing; Democrat Charles Diggs of Detroit (the first African-American to represent Michigan in Congress); and Democrat Martha Griffiths.[76]
  • January - Detroit native John H. Noble was freed after spending nearly 10 years in the Vorkuta gulag located nearly 100 miles above the Arctic Circle.[77] He later wrote two books relating to his experiences.
  • January 18 - The first multilevel freeway exchange in Michigan, connecting the Lodge and I-94 freeways, opened in downtown Detroit. The Detroit Free Press called it a scene of "utter confusion" at the morning rush hour as motorists tried to figure out the puzzle of driving through the interchange.[78][79]
  • January 20 - Mariners' Church was lifted from the original site in Detroit where it had been for 108 years and began its move to a new location on Jefferson Avenue.[80]
  • January 21 - The University of Michigan Board of Regents announced its plan to open a Flint campus on the site of Flint Junior College.[81] The University of Michigan–Flint opened in 1956.

February

  • February 10 - Ford Motor announced plans to build a 1.3 million square foot chassis parts plant at 17 Mile Road and Mound Road in Sterling Township.[82]
Detroit streetcars circa 1920
  • February 12 - During the week ending Saturday, February 12, production of passenger cars reached a record of 167,095.[83]
  • February 17 - Floyd Diamond, a 16-year-old boy, was arrested after confessing to killing Kathleen McLaughlin, a 9-year-old girl. The girl's body was discovered in a pond in Farmington Township. She had been stabbed repeatedly in the torso and had a fractured skull.[84][85]
  • February 19 - After an attempted overthrow was quelled, John Feikens was reelected as chairman of the Michigan Republican Party.[86] Feikens was later appointed to a federal judgeship by Presidents Eisenhower (1960), Kennedy (1961), and Nixon (1970); he remained a federal judge in Detroit until his death in 2011.
  • February 23 - Leo Nowicki, general manager of the Department of Street Railways (DSR), proposed closing the city's last three streetcar lines—the Woodward, Gratiot, and Michigan lines. The proposal was the subject of heated debate at a meeting of the DSR Commission. Mayor Cobo noted that conversion of the streetcar lines to bus service would save $1.2 million in projected cost to repair the track and trolley line. The proposal would terminate trolley service which began in Detroit in 1863 with horse-drawn trolleys.[87]
  • February 26 - A proposal to urge Gov. G. Mennen Williams to run for President in 1956 gained support at Michigan's Democratic Party state convention in Grand Rapids.[88]

March

Former NBD building
  • March 2 - General Motors Chairman Alfred P. Sloan and CEO Harlow Curtice released the company's 1954 financial results. The company reported earnings of $806 million on sales of $9.8 billion. The earnings were the second highest in company history and were achieved despite a 29% reduction in company sales to the military.[89]
  • March 3 - National Bank of Detroit (NBD) acquired a city block in downtown Detroit bounded by Woodward, Griswold, Fort, and Congress.[90] One week later, NBD announced plans to build a 12-story banking building on the site.[91] The building, originally known as the National Bank of Detroit Building, was opened in October 1959.[92] In 2011, the building was acquired by Quicken Loans and renamed The Qube.
1954 Chevrolet Corvette
1954 Ford Victoria
  • March 4 - According to final figures released by R.L. Polk & Co., Chevrolet was the top selling automobile brand in 1954 with 1,417,453 new cares registered. Ford was second with 1,400,440 cars registered. Ford disputed the totals, contending out that Chevrolet's totals were artificially inflated with 56,802 cars registered in dealer names but not yet sold.[93]
  • March 10 - Pravda criticized the inefficiency of the Soviet machine building industry and opined that it "could learn a lot from Detroit and Pittsburgh."[94]
  • March 14 - Negotiations began between the United Auto Workers (UAW) and General Motors over a new collective bargaining agreement, and preliminary discussions with Ford began two days later.[95] The big issue in the negotiations was the UAW's demand for a guaranteed annual wage (GAW), assuring union members a year-around wage regardless of seasonal or other layoffs.[96][97][98][99] Reuther banked on the competition between Ford and General Motors to persuade one of them to concede on the GAR.[97] On April 29, the UAW extended GM's contract, making Ford the chief target in the GAW negotiations.[100] The union asked that Ford set aside 4% of the company's base payroll until a $500 million reserve fund was in place to guarantee 52 weeks of payments to the company's 455,000 employees.[101]
  • March 17 - During a game at the Montreal Forum between the Montreal Canadiens and Detroit Red Wings, rioting broke out in response to the decision of NHL President Clarence Campbell to suspend Montreal star Maurice Richard. One fan set off a tear gas canister inside the arena, and Campbell was punched and struck by an avalanche of debris. The game was stopped with Detroit ahead, 4-1, resulting in a forfeit. The rioting then spread into the streets with 74 arrests in a night of looting and window smashing. Detroit general manager Jack Adams called the riot the most disgraceful thing he had seen in 39 years of hockey.[102][103]
  • March 18 - General Motors (GM) CEO Harlow Curtice testified before the U.S. Senate Banking Committee that the automobile industry was as competitive as he had ever seen it and that GM had no chance of becoming a monopoly.[104]
  • March 18 - After Michigan State College submitted a bill to the state legislature seeking to change its name to Michigan State University, the University of Michigan Board of Regents opposed the name change on grounds that it would create confusion and "dilute the prestige of the University of Michigan."[105] Informal meetings between the two university governing boards failed to reach a resolution.[105] Despite the objections from Ann Arbor, the Michigan Senate approved the name change on April 13, and Gov. Williams later signed the bill.[106]
  • March 20 - The Detroit Red Wings defeated the Montreal Canadiens, 7-0, in the final game of the regular season. The Wings won their seventh consecutive regular season NHL title.[65]
  • March 21 - Dearborn Mayor Orville Hubbard fired all six attorneys on the city's legal staff when they refused to sign off on a legal opinion dictated by Hubbard supporting his effort to raise his salary from $6,500 to $24,500. The Detroit Free Press called the firing the "latest Hubbard dictatorial move."[107]
  • March 21 - Jean Claude Simard, a French-Canadian, was arrested after tightrope walking from Windsor to Detroit on a girder along the Ambassador Bridge. Simard wore a jacket with a Detroit Red Wings emblem as he walked the one-mile span of the bridge.[108]
  • March 31 - The mutilated body of seven-year-old Barbara Gaca, missing since March 24 and the subject of a massive search effort,[109] was discovered in a wooded area southwest of Pontiac. An autopsy showed that she had been raped, strangled, stabbed 15 times, and struck with a heavy blow on the back of her head.[110]

April

  • April 3 - In Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Finals, Detroit's Marty Pavelich scored a short-handed goal to break a 2-2 ties with three minutes left in the game. Detroit won the game.[111]
  • April 4 - Democrats dominated in state elections.
  • April 5 - The Detroit Red Wings defeated the Montreal Canadiens, 7-1, in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Finals at Olympia Stadium. Ted Lindsay scored four goals. The win was the 15th straight for the Red Wings, setting a new NHL record and eclipsing the prior record of 14 games set by Boston in 1930.[112]
  • April 7 - Bernie Geoffrion scored a hat trick to pace the Canadiens to victory in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Finals.[113]
  • April 10 - Gordie Howe scored a hat trick, all three goals in an 18-minute span, to lead the Red Wings to a victory in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Finals.[114]
  • April 12 - At a meeting in Ann Arbor sponsored by the University of Michigan and the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, Dr. Thomas Francis Jr. announced that the United States Secretary of Welfare had approved the Salk vaccine for general use after determining it to be safe, effective, and potent in providing long-lasting immunity to polio.[115] The Detroit Free Press wrote: "No other event in medical annals has been surrounded by the glamor and glare," as "academic halls were taken over by klieg lights and an army of newsmen."[116]
  • April 14 - The Red Wings defeated the Canadiens in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals before a crowd of 15,541 at Olympia Stadium. Alex Delvecchio scored two goals. The two teams combined for a record 47 goals in the seven-game series.[117]
  • April 17 - Al Kaline hit three home runs in a 16-0 victory over Kansas City, had six RBIs, and boosted his batting average to .561.[118]
  • April 21 - General Motors reported first quarter sales of $2.4 billion and record earnings of $309 million.[119]
  • April 26 - A dynamite bomb thrown from a car exploded outside the Detroit home of Recorders Court Judge W. McKay Skillman. Neither the judge nor his home were injured.[120]
  • April 28 - Henry Ford II announced that Ford Motor would invest $625 million over the next three years in new plants and equipment.[121]

May

  • May 2 - Royce Howes of the Detroit Free Press won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished editorial writing in 1954. The prize was awarded for an editorial written by Howes about the July 1954 Chrysler strike that idled 45,000 Chrysler workers. It appeared in the newspaper on July 26, 1954.[122][123]
  • May 2 - Former Detroit Tiger star Hank Greenberg was sued for divorce by his wife Caral Gimbel Greenberg, of the Gimbels department store family. She alleged "extreme cruelty and gross neglect" and sought sole custody of their three children.[124]
  • May 3 - A heat wave covered Michigan with a record high temperature of 88 degrees recorded in Detroit.[125] With temperatures reaching 87 degrees the following day, schools in Roseville, Michigan, closed due to a water shortage.[126]
  • May 2 - A strike by the United Steel Workers shut down operations at Calumet & Hecla's copper smelter in Houghton from May 2 to August 22. The strike idled 2,200 workers at the smelter and at the company's copper mines. The settlement came with a two-year contract providing a 15 cent per hour raise in the first year and a four percent increase in the second year.[127]
  • May 6 - President Eisenhower met with Detroit trucker Floyd Pemberton at the White House. Pemberton was named "Trucker of the Year" for rescuing two women from a burning automobile in December 1954.[128]
  • May 12 - A court hearing was held in the battle for control of the Vernors ginger ale company. James Vernor Sr. died in 1954, leaving the company stock in trust for his son James Vernor Jr. and his minor children. His second wife, whom he married in 1952, was left the family home in Bloomfield Hills, but sued to invalidate the trust and obtain control of the company.[129]
  • May 15 - The Detroit Free Press celebrated Michigan Week with a compilation of facts about Michigan's ranking in various fields, including the following: first in the country with 2,200 miles of shoreline (in addition to 11,000 lakes and 36,000 miles of streams); per capita earnings of $1,949 ($404 above the national average); family spending for retail goods at $4,417 ($840 above the national average); 12,000 factories employing more than a million workers; Detroit ranking first in production of adding machines (Burroughs), foundry products, ranges and heating devices, and heavy chemicals; top producer of canned baby food (Gerber); Muskegon with the largest factory for billiard tables and bowling alleys; world's largest pharmaceutical plant (Upjohn in Kalamazoo); first in production of red tart cherries, cantaloupes, strawberries, and blueberries; second in production of plums, mint, and navy beans; third in production of grapes; and fourth in the production of apples.[130]
  • May 26 - In lieu of a GAW provision, Ford proposed a "Partnership in Prosperity Plan" (PIPP) which provided for selling shares of Ford common stock to UAW members at half price when it was offered to the public in 1956. The UAW quickly rejected the proposal.[131][132] Some referred to Ford's stock offer plan as "worker capitalism".[133] On May 28, the UAW set a strike date of June 2.[134] Convinced that workers would support the company's PIPP proposal Ford asked that it be presented to UAW members.[134] UAW President Walter Reuther responded that by offering to submit both plans (GAW and PIPP) to workers in a binding poll, if the company would agree to be bound by the result.[135] On May 31, after Ford agreed to consider a modified GAW plan, the UAW extended the strike deadline until June 6.[136][137] After details of Ford's public offering were announced, the Detroit Free Press in November reported that the UAW's decision to choose the modified GAW over the PIPP proposal cost UAW workers $152 per year.[138]

June

Detroit-Leland Hotel where Ford and the UAW negotiated the modified GAW
Wilber M. Brucker, the "man who laughed at Senator McCarthy"
  • June 1 - The mutilated body of eight-year-old Jeannie Singleton, missing since May 23,[139] was found in a wooded area north of Kalamazoo. An autopsy showed that she had been raped, beaten, and strangled.[140]
  • June 6 - After a final, 30-hour marathon negotiating session at the Detroit-Leland Hotel, Ford Motor reached a three-year agreement with the UAW that included a modified version of the guaranteed annual wage (GAW) provision sought by the UAW. The agreement, described as "revolutionary", guaranteed a laid-off worker "a reasonable living" for six months. The Detroit Free Press reported at the time that the accord touched off a debate as to whether it would "drive the country to socialism or provide a new built-in security that will stabilize employment and assure prosperity."[141][142]
  • June 7 - Residents of Southfield and Troy, previously organized as townships, voted to incorporate as cities.[143] Both cities experienced rapid growth after incorporating. Southfield grew by 119.8% from 31,531 in 1960 to 69,298 in 1970. Troy grew by nearly 400% from 19,402 in 1960 to 80,959 in 2010.
  • June 10 - With the Ford contract behind, the UAW set a June 12 strike deadline with General Motors.[144] On June 12, after 37 hours of continuous negotiations, the UAW and General Motors agreed to a three-year pact giving a modified guaranteed wage to 350,000 GM workers. Walter Reuther said the concessions were worth $600 million over three years and represented more than 20 cents an hour in benefits. The GM pact followed the Ford model in requiring the company to supplement unemployment benefits, allowing workers to draw 60 to 65% of take-home pay for 26 weeks in the event of a layoff.[145] With approval of a modified GAW by both Ford and GM, it was suggested that "big labor" had emerged in the United States as a force that "could grow more powerful . . . than big business ever was."[146] Labor expert Edwin A. Lahey opined that big labor strikes were dead and noted that the largest corporation in the world had made concessions "that were and will remain highly repugnant to the industrial traditionalists."[147] GM reportedly "abhorred and feared" the GAW and would have preferred a long strike to the GAW if it had been the first to negotiate, suggesting Reuther's wisdom in choosing Ford as the UAW's first target on the GAW.[148]
  • June 15 - A civil defense exercise simulated an atomic bomb being dropped at Livernois and Fort Streets in Detroit at 2:39. Due to mass evacuation ordered at 11:03 a.m., the projected death toll dropped from 94,800 to 57,600.[149]
  • June 22 - General Motors announced a $500 million expansion and modernization plan that the company hoped would create an additional 28,000 jobs annually.[150]
  • June 22 - President Eisenhower appointed former Michigan Gov. Wilber M. Brucker as Secretary of the Army. Brucker had become known as the "man who laughed at Senator McCarthy" after he became amused at questions posed by the Senator during the Army–McCarthy hearings. Brucker's his laugh "boomed through the hearing room" and was credited with dissipating an atmosphere of fear and hatred surrounding the hearings.[151]
  • June 26 - Eaton Manufacturing reached agreement with the UAW which included supplemental unemployment benefits consistent with the Ford and GM modified GAW, covering 4,100 workers at plants in Detroit, Cleveland, Battle Creek, and Marshall, Michigan.[152] By late June, the modified GAW was reported to be "mushrooming throughout the subsidiary automobile industry," including smaller parts and tool companies.[153] As Lincoln ended its 1955 model production at the end of June, the company announced that it did not anticipate model-changeover layoffs, a shift in past patterns which was attributed to the GAW provision.[153] On August 13, the GAW model was adopted and expanded by the United Steel Workers who negotiated a contract providing a full year of supplementary unemployment benefits for 20,000 steelworkers employed by American Can Co. and 15,000 more employed by Continental Can Co.[154]

July

Reports of an alligator in Lower Long Lake
1955 Chevrolet Bel Air
  • July–September - A major heat wave struck Michigan during the summer months, and by September 20, Detroit had recorded a record 32 days temperatures exceeding 90 degrees.[155][156] In early July, the heat shut down Chrysler's automobile production.[157] Also in July, a water shortage developed in metropolitan Detroit, and Mayor Cobo urged residents to limit water usage to that which was essential.[158] A ban on lawn sprinkling remained in effect for most of the summer in Detroit and 40 suburban communities.[159] The heat wave led to record water usage of in Detroit of 695 million gallons on July 6, and that record was broken two weeks later with 725 million gallons consumed on July 21.[160] Laurence Lenhardt, general manager of the Detroit Water Department, noted that the water shortage resulted from the city's lack of facilities to purify, pump, and distribute enough water to keep up with increased demand.[161] Lenhardt announced his resignation on August 5 after being publicly criticized by Mayor Cobo.[162]
  • July/August - Reports of an alligator in Lower Long Lake in Bloomfield Township, Michigan, attracted an alligator wrestler with a female alligator as a lure to the lake.[163][164][165][166]
  • July 1 - Automobile production in the first six months of 1955 totaled 4,899,000, a record figure that surpassed full year production for every year prior to World War II as well as several postwar years. The production breakdown was 2,458,646 by General Motors, 1,344,568 by Ford, and 849,129 for Chrysler.[167]
  • July 11 - The water was shut off in Utica, Michigan, after high levels of chromium waste was discovered in the water supply.[168][169] On July 13, Detroit offered to supply water to Utica as water there remained highly contaminated.[170] Utica's water system was shut off again on September 15 when unsafe levels of chromium were again detected. The city's schools were closed, and chromium waste from Pontiac was blamed.[171] On September 20, the Pontiac Division of General Motors agreed to reimburse the city's expenses in connection with the water crisis. The company also agreed to take steps to avoid further discharges of chromium into the Clinton River.[172]
  • July 20 - A federal grand jury issued a four-count indictment against the UAW for allegedly using union dues to support Democratic candidates for office. UAW officials charged that the indictment was the result of Republican political gamesmanship.[173] UAW secretary-treasurer Emil Mazey said on August 6 that the Justice Department offered to dismiss the indictment if the UAW would disavow having used general-fund money for political purposes, but that the UAW refused to do so and intended to vindicate its First Amendment right to pay for political programs and have union-supported candidates on those programs.[174]

August

1955 Chrysler New Yorker
1956 Lincoln Continental
  • August 3 - A two-year traffic study resulted in a report recommending construction of 14 new expressways in Detroit totaling 212 miles and costing a billion dollars.[175]
  • August 4 - Chrysler president L. L. Colbert and chairman K. T. Keller issued the company's financial report for the first six months of 1955. The company reported all-time records for six months with sales of $1,884,638,006, earnings of $70,010,642, and unit sales of 900,546 cars and trucks (surpassing the prior six-month record of 804,884 cars and trucks).[176]
  • August 12 - A delegation of three Russians toured the Ford Rouge plant. After spending the morning touring the assembly line and eating roast beef and potato salad at the plant cafeteria, the Russians were allowed to have a test drive in the soon-to-be-released Lincoln Continental. After the test drive, one of the Russians said, "The engineers who produce Cadillacs are going to have some sleepless nights."[177] A Soviet newspaper reported on the delegation's visit to Detroit: "Residents of Detroit, as in the past, were most hospitable and we were most impressed with what we saw in this dynamic United States city."[178]
  • August 14 - The mutilated body of 12-year-old Peter Gorham was found in a swampy area 10 miles north of the Muskegon Boy Scout camp (Camp Wabaningo) where he was last seen on July 5. The boy had been sexually assaulted and shot in the back of his head.[179]
  • August 16 - Faced with a waiting list of 1,188 "mentally defective and retarded" children who had been committed to state institutions but for whom hospital beds were unavailable, Gov. Williams asked the Mental Health Department to prepare an emergency program to house them.[180] On October 10, the Department issued the Wagg Report recommending an emergency plan for housing the children and also recommended an additional 3,140 permanent beds.[181] Gov. Williams called the Michigan Legislature into a joint session on November 1, but the Legislature was unable to agree on a bill until December 14, when it adopted a program to establish 1,450 additional beds (approximately 800 at Fort Custer) to be available within four months and 2,500 more beds in a new hospital to be built in southeastern Michigan. The total cost of the plan was placed at $1.2 million.[182]
  • August 19 - Ford announced plans to build a new assembly plant on a 325-acre site in Novi Township, for its Lincoln Division. The plant was expected to open in 1957 and to employ between 4,000 and 5,000 workers.[183]
  • August 19 - Edgar Guest, known as the People's Poet, celebrated his 60th anniversary with the Detroit Free Press. He began as an office boy, and his first poem appeared in the paper in 1898.[184]
  • August 20 - Detroit's first annual Riverama festival began with a tugboat race, a parade of 800 vessels, and a reenactment of Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac's landing at what would become Detroit in 1701.[185]
  • August 24 - A political battle over locating a $17-million jet interceptor base came to an end as Secretary of the Air Force Donald Quarles awarded the base to Kalkaska, Michigan. Sites in Benzie County and Cadillac were also considered. The battle pitted Ruth Thompson, whose Ninth Congressional District included Cadillac and Benzie County, and Victor A. Knox, whose Eleventh District included Kalkaska.[186]
  • August 25 - Due to the dissolution of Briggs Commercial and Development Company, a company that held the residue from the estate of Walter Briggs Sr., made necessary in order to pay estate taxes, the Detroit Tigers baseball club and Briggs Stadium were announced as being for sale.[187] An offer of $2.5 million by Walter Briggs Jr. for the team and stadium was rejected on September 15 by his four sisters.[188] (The club was ultimately sold in July 1956 to an ownership group that included Fred Knorr and John Fetzer.)
  • August 28 - A crowd of 5,000 gathered in what was described as a "carnival" atmosphere to watch a gun battle at 11046 W. Outer Drive between 200 Detroit police officers and Charles Luther Rollins. After a four-hour standoff, the house caught fire, and Rollins ran from the back of the house firing a shotgun. He was killed by multiple shotgun wounds to the head, chest, neck and legs.[189][190]

September

City-County Building dedicated September 23
MLB batting champion Al Kaline
  • September 1 - Six hours after the UAW's strike deadline had passed, Chrysler and the UAW reached an agreement following the Ford/GM model with 26 weeks of modified GAW payments in the event of a layoff. The Big Three contracts also included union shop provisions requiring all employees within the union's jurisdiction to join the union as a condition of employment. With the Chrysler deal completed, the Detroit Free Press wrote: "It was a bloodless revolution which saw some of the greatest improvements in labor history achieved without a major strike."[191]
  • September 2 - The UAW reached a modified GAW agreement with American Motors, although the commencement of the GAW provision would not apply to American Motors for 15 months.[192]
  • September 3 - General Motors reversed a prior policy in announcing that, subject to approval of the federal government, it would begin selling automobiles to the Soviet Union and its satellite countries.[193]
  • September 12 - Chrysler hosted more than 500 newspaper, radio and television reporters at its proving ground in Chelsea, Michigan. In an elaborate stage presentation titled "Flight '56", company president L. L. "Tex" Colbert a new push-button automatic gear shift, a Highway HiFi record player, and a number of features, including the first seat belts in the industry to comply with aviation safety standards and new safety latches for car doors. Chrysler also previewed its new models featuring descending hood lines and elevated tail fins simulating the lines of a jet aircraft.[194]
  • September 13 - During a preview of Ford's new models, Robert McNamara, general manager of the Ford Division, announced that the Ford Division had expanded its production capacity by 250,000 per year. McNamara predicted that employment would remain strong in the auto industry through 1956.[195]
  • September 23 - The new City-County Building in downtown Detroit, built at a cost of $26 million, was dedicated in a ceremony attended by Governor G. Mennen Williams, Mayor Albert Cobo, and Council President Louis Miriani. Mayor Cobo said the building would stand as "a beacon for the next hundred years."[196]
  • September 25 - After President Eisenhower suffered a heart attack, Detroiters gathered to pray for him in churches and synagogues.[197] Eisenhower's illness also led to optimism as to the Democratic Party's chances of prevailing in the 1956 Presidential election, and the Detroit Free Press reported that Governor Williams' star was brighter as a possible candidate.[198]
  • September 30 - Al Kaline was declared the American League batting champion with a .340 batting average. At age 20, he was the youngest batting champion in league history.[199]
  • September 30 - At the University of Michigan, 3,000 male students left a pep rally at Ferry Field and conducted a "panty raid" at three girls' dormitories. At Mosher-Jordan, Stockwell, and Alice Lloyd Halls, the raiders "ransacked bureau drawers and clothes closets for panties, slips and bras."[200] The raid led to vandalism as theater marquees were torn down on State Street and "cars pushed through store fronts."[200] The university's dean of men said he did not envision any disciplinary action being taken, because the raids were a "spontaneous thing" with no leader.[200]

October

  • October 8 - Michigan (ranked No. 2 in the AP Poll) defeated Army (ranked No. 6) by a 26–2 score at Michigan Stadium. After the victory, Michigan was ranked No. 1.
  • October 26 - General Motors reported record earnings ($913 million) and sales ($9.5 billion) for the first nine months of 1955. It sold more cars and trucks in the first three quarters (3.6 million) than in all of 1954. In the company's quarterly report, Harlow Curtice and Alfred P. Sloan said: "The automobile industry is experiencing the best year in its history. Confidence in progress of the national economy is widespread and the public has the desire and ability to buy."[201]
  • October 31 - Voters in Warren Township voted to incorporate as a city by a vote count of 4,142 to 1,537.[202] At the time, Warren Township was growing rapidly from 22,000 in 1940 to 42,000 in 1950 and 58,000 in 1955. The population was principally in the southern part of the township from Eight Mile to Ten Mile Roads and along Van Dyke.[203] The area along Mound Road had become a center for automobile manufacturing with General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler factories and the 823-acre General Motors Technical Center. The existing Village of Warren became a part of the new city.[202] The city covered most of a six-mile square (with a carve-out for the Center Line), making it the third largest city in the state by area, behind only Detroit and Livonia.[203]

November

UAW President Walter Reuther
1955 Packard 400
General Motors locomotive
  • November 1 - Ford Motor chairman Ernest R. Breech reported that the company's earnings for the first nine months of 1955 exceeded the company's combined earnings for the 21 years before World War II.[204]
  • November 5 - Undefeated Michigan, ranked No. 1 in the Coaches' Poll, lost to unranked Illinois, 25–6, in a road game at Champaign, Illinois.[205]
  • November 6 - Ford Motor announced that the Ford Foundation would, after a 15-for-1 stock split, sell approximately seven million shares of the company's common stock to the public. The sale was set for early 1956 and was expected to generate $400 million. The sale was the first public offering of Ford stock.[206]
  • November 8 - Orville L. Hubbard was elected to his eighth term as Mayor of Dearborn by a vote count of 21,063 to 8,961.[207]
  • November 8 - The UAW's GAW campaign suffered a setback when voters in Ohio rejected a ballot proposal to change Ohio law to permit workers to receive supplemental benefits from employers without impacting their right to receive state unemployment benefits.[208][209] The campaign against the ballot proposal was led by the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and Ohio Manufacturers Association and featured an "anti-Reuther" theme, describing UAW president Walter Reuther as a "wild and unstable salesman" trying to gain power for himself at the expense of the state's economic development.[210]
  • November 9 - The UAW signed a new three-year contract with Studebaker-Packard covering 9,000 employees in the Detroit area. The contract followed the modified GAW pattern established with Ford and GM.[211]
  • November 9 - Representatives of the nation's locomotive manufacturers appeared before the U.S. Senate Antitrust Subcommittee concerning General Motors' increased dominance in that industry. They complained that the U.S. government had favored GM during World War II and that GM had made 60% of the diesel locomotives purchased by railroads since the war.[212]
  • November 10 - Chrysler President L. L. Colbert announced a five-year, $1 billion expansion program, including an East Coast assembly plant and research and development on gas turbine engines, electronics, and nuclear and solar energy.[213]
  • November 11 - Gov. G. Mennen Williams signed a bill passed at a special joint session of the Michigan Legislature enacting a maximum speed limit of 65 miles per hour in the daytime and 55 miles per hour at nighttime. Michigan had not had a speed limit law in effect since 1927. The law was set to be effective February 3, 1956.[214][215]
  • November 14 - Detroit Police Commissioner Edward S. Piggins said his officers would begin using unmarked cars to patrol Detroit's freeways to control speeding and reckless driving.[216] In the first day of such patrols, three unmarked cars issued 85 tickets in 15 hours.[217]
  • November 17 - Ten persons, mostly hunters, died in a winter storm.[218] Two of the men died while duck hunting on a Lake Erie marsh. Fred LaPointe, a 51-year-old Dearborn, man became stuck in quicksand, and Edward Kocher, an 18-year-old Detroit man, went to his rescue. Both were "engulfed in quicksand up to their necks and froze to death in the howling gale."[219] Maurice Kocher, father of the 18-year-old, escaped injury by waiting six hours for the mud to freeze and crawling to the shore on his stomach.[219] By the end of the first week of hunting season, 32 hunters had died.[220]
  • November 19 - Michigan lost to Ohio State, 17-0, and Michigan State received the Big Ten Conference bid to play in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day.[221][222] The final two minutes of the Michigan-Ohio State game became a free-for-all, as Michigan player were penalized eight time and Michigan players Ron Kramer and Al Sigman were ejected. After what was called "the most shameful incident in Michigan's football history," head coach Bennie Oosterbaan and athletic director Fritz Crisler publicly apologized to Ohio State.[223]
  • November 24 - The Detroit Lions defeated the Green Bay Packers, 24-10, on Thanksgiving Day before 51,685 spectators at Briggs Stadium in Detroit. Detroit's Lew Carpenter ran 49 yards for a touchdown, and Sonny Gandee returned an interception 46 yards for another touchdown.[224]
  • November 27 - Jimmy Hoffa, head of the Teamster's Central Council representing the Midwest, negotiated a "mutual assistance" pact with the longshoremen's union. Hoffa at age 42 was described at the time as the "heir apparent" of the Teamsters union, an "iron-fisted", "colorful", and "violent" leader who "lets nothing stand in his way."[225]

December

John Dingell was first elected in December 1955
1956 Plymouth
  • December 1 - The Stereotypers Union No. 9 went on strike against Detroit's three major newspapers, The Detroit News, Detroit Free Press, and Detroit Times.[226] All three papers were shut down. On December 3, workers from the three papers began publishing a temporary newspaper called The Detroit Reporter.[227] The strike lasted 46 days, and the city's newspapers resumed publication on January 17, 1956.[228]
  • December 2 - Mayor Cobo ordered the DSR to convert its Woodward and Gratiot lines from streetcars to buses as soon as possible.[229] On December 14, the DSR Commission executed a contract to sell the city's 183 streetcars to Mexico City for approximately $700,000 -- $4,000 each for 133 newer streetcars and $3,000 each for 33 older models. DSR planned to then buy 130 new buses for $2.6 million to operate on Gratiot and Woodward by the spring of 1956. It projected that service would be increased by 25% with buses replacing streetcars on the Gratiot and Woodward lines.[230] While lack of profitability had been a justification for terminating streetcar service, the DSR reported on December 21 that it had recorded a profit for the five months ending in November and that ridership was up for the first time in 10 years. The DSR during this time carried a daily load of 608,995 with 175,000 miles logged each day.[231]
  • December 13 - Following the death of his father on September 19, John Dingell Jr. was elected to his father's seat in Michigan's 15th Congressional District.[232] Dingell and his father, John D. Dingell Sr., represented Michigan in Congress for a combined run of 82 years—the father from 1933 to 1955 and the son from 1955 to 2015.
  • December 14 - A commission appointed by the Governor unanimously recommended that the State of Michigan take over Wayne University. Up to that time, Wayne had been operated by the Detroit Board of Education. Governor Williams said the recommendation seemed "wise and realistic."[233]
  • December 16 - Chrysler laid off 1,400 workers, mostly at the Mack plant that made Plymouth vehicles. A UAW local leader protested the company's "cruel and inhuman attitude", blamed the company's production "bungling" for the layoffs, asserted that "Chrysler management has a cash register for a heart", and called on the company to cancel the layoffs to save Christmas for the 1,400 impacted families.[234] The company responded that the 1,400 workers were temporary workers hired to meet heightened demand for 1956 models and were no longer needed since dealer stocks were approaching acceptable levels.[234]
Time Man of the Year Harlow Curtice
  • December 21 - Ford Motor announced that its 11 top executives would receive $3.3 million ($2.4 million in salaries and approximately $900,000 in stock dividends) for their services in 1955, plus $8 million in "accumulated credits" (a supplemental compensation system paid after termination of employment) to be paid at a later time. Henry Ford II and Ernest Breech were the highest paid executives with salaries of $321,000 and $925,000 each in accumulated credits.[235] Ford also disclosed the same day, as part of a filing for its first public stock offering scheduled for January, that its net income for the first nine months of 1955 was $312 million.[236]
  • December 26 - A fire at Edgewater Park, a 20-acre amusement park at Grand River and Seven Mile Road in Detroit, destroyed the large arcade building and part of the roller coaster structure. The flames rose 100 feet into the air, and smoke was visible from 10 miles. Arson was suspected as the cause.[237]
  • December 27 - General Motors CEO Harlow Curtice was selected as Time Man of the Year. Time wrote that it chose Curtice "because of his leadership in the free, competitive, expanding American economy that is the keystone of the defense of the West against the Communist world."[238]

Births

Deaths

See also

References

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  123. "An Instance of Costly Cause and Effect Which Detroiters Should Weigh Soberly". Detroit Free Press. July 26, 1954. p. 8 via Newspapers.com.
  124. "Hank Greenberg Sued For Divorce in Ohio". Detroit Free Press. May 3, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  125. "Today's Heat Wave Will Push 90 Mark". Detroit Free Press. May 4, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  126. "Heat Due to Break And Water to Flow". Detroit Free Press. May 5, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  127. "Calumet Copper Strike Ends". Detroit Free Press. August 22, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  128. "Hero Trucker Pays Visit to President". Detroit Free Press. May 7, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  129. "Vernor Heirs Fight To Control Firm". Detroit Free Press. May 13, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  130. "Vast, Rich -- That's Our Michigan". Detroit Free Press. May 15, 1955. pp. 1, 6 via Newspapers.com.
  131. "Union Quickly Spurns Half-Billion Ford Plan". Detroit Free Press. May 27, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  132. "UAW, Ford Slate Talks On Sunday". Detroit Free Press. May 28, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  133. "Ford Plan Would Bring a 'Revolution'". Detroit Free Press. May 29, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  134. "UAW OK's Thursday Strike; Ford Urges Vote on Offer". Detroit Free Press. May 29, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  135. "UAW To Ford: Let Vote Settle The Pact". Detroit Free Press. May 31, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  136. "Ford Changes Stand; Strike Threat Eased". Detroit Free Press. June 1, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  137. "UAW Ultimatum To Ford: Pact Monday -- Or Strike". Detroit Free Press. June 2, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  138. "Union's Choice Cost Worker $152 a Year". Detroit Free Press. November 11, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  139. "Hope Dims For Missing Girl". Detroit Free Press. May 25, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  140. "Find Jeannie Murdered: Mutilated Body 15 Miles from Home". Detroit Free Press. June 2, 1955. p. 1.
  141. "Ford Contract: 20 Cts., 3 Yrs.; Workers Get Jobless Pay, Hikes in Wages, Pensions". Detroit Free Press. June 7, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  142. "What's Behind Ford Jobless Pay Plan?". Detroit Free Press. June 7, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  143. "Southfield, Troy OK City Status". Detroit Free Press. June 8, 1955. p. 17 via Newspapers.com.
  144. "UAW To Spill Talk Details". Detroit Free Press. June 11, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  145. "GM-UAW Agreement! $600,000,000 3-Year Pact Approved; $150,000,000 Jobless Fund! Reuther: 'Best Ever'". Detroit Free Press. June 13, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  146. "The Magnitued of What's Just Happened". Detroit Free Press. June 14, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  147. Edwin A. Lahey (June 14, 1955). "Big Auto Strikes Are Dead". Detroit Free Press. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  148. "Now It Can Be Told: Full Inside Story on GAW!". Detroit Free Press. June 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  149. "Bomb 'Kills' 57,600 in Detroit". Detroit Free Press. June 16, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  150. "How GM Will Add Thousands of Jobs Annually". Detroit Free Press. June 23, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  151. "Ike Names Brucker Army Boss". Detroit Free Press. June 23, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  152. "Parts Firm Matches Ford, GM on 'GAW'". Detroit Free Press. June 26, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  153. "Guaranteed-Wage Pattern Sweeping Subsidiary Shops". Detroit Free Press. June 27, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  154. "Steel Union Wins First Full GAW". Detroit Free Press. August 14, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  155. "Cooler Air Due to Hold Heat to 80". Detroit Free Press. September 20, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  156. "Let's Have Another Steam Bath". Detroit Free Press. August 21, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  157. "39,400 Idle As Heat Closes Up Chrysler". Detroit Free Press. July 9, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  158. "Cut In Water Use Ordered". Detroit Free Press. July 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  159. "Cobo, Aide Clash on Water Ban". Detroit Free Press. August 5, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  160. "Don't Look for Cool Weather". Detroit Free Press. July 22, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  161. "Water Everywhere Except in Faucets". Detroit Free Press. August 3, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  162. "Is Lenhardt Retiring By Request?". Detroit Free Press. August 6, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  163. "'Gator vs. 'Davy': Bloomfield Scans Lake for Reptile". Detroit Free Press. July 6, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  164. "Are There 2 'Gators or One in 2 Lakes". Detroit Free Press. July 10, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  165. "Agnes Alligator Tries Charm To Tempt Creature From Lake". Detroit Free Press. July 11, 1955. p. 4 via Newspapers.com.
  166. "That Darned 'Gator Still Splashes About". Detroit Free Press. July 11, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  167. "4,899,000 Cars top 6-Mo. Peak". Detroit Free Press. July 2, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  168. "All Water Cut Off in Utica". Detroit Free Press. July 12, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  169. "Pollution Ebbs in Utica Water". Detroit Free Press. July 13, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  170. "City Offers Water To End Utica Peril". Detroit Free Press. July 14, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  171. "Poison Fouls Utica Water". Detroit Free Press. September 16, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  172. "GM to Pay Utica's Bill in Crisis". Detroit Free Press. September 21, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  173. "U.S. Indicts the UAW; Vote Activity Hit". Detroit Free Press. July 21, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  174. "UAW Charges U.S. Sought Deal to Drop Indictments". Detroit Free Press. August 7, 1955. p. 1.
  175. "14 More X-Ways Proposed for City". Detroit Free Press. August 4, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  176. "Chrysler Sales, Earnings Hit Peak". Detroit Free Press. August 5, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  177. "3 Reds at Rouge See Fords Go By". Detroit Free Press. August 12, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  178. "Soviet Paper Says Detroit Is Wonderful". Detroit Free Press. August 14, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  179. "Sex Pervert Is Sought In Boy Scout's Death: Body Found Near Camp Swamp Area". Lansing State Journal. August 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  180. "Williams Demands Child Mental Care". Detroit Free Press. August 17, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  181. "Plan to Aid Retarded Child Ready". Detroit Free Press. October 11, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  182. "Retarded Program Adopted". The Detroit Reporter. December 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  183. "Ford To Build Huge Lincoln Plant: Buildings Near Novi Due by '57". Detroit Free Press. August 20, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  184. "60 Years on the Job: Eddie Guest Loves It". Detroit Free Press. August 20, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  185. "Cadillac Lands Again in Detroit". Detroit Free Press. August 21, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  186. "Kalkaska Jet Site Affirmed". Detroit Free Press. August 25, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  187. "Do You Want To Buy Tigers?". Detroit Free Press. August 26, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  188. "Briggs' Offer to Buy Tigers Is Rejected". Detroit Free Press. September 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  189. "Gunman Killed In Battle With 200 Police; 2 Shot". Detroit Free Press. August 29, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  190. "Thousands Periled in Gunfight". Detroit Free Press. August 30, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  191. "Auto Pacts Worth Billion". Detroit Free Press. September 2, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  192. "AMC Pact Gives GAW To 24,000". Detroit Free Press. September 3, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  193. "Magazine Says GM OK's Sales to Reds". Detroit Free Press. September 4, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  194. "Chrysler Chief Predicts: Auto Sales to Stay High; Corporation Previews New Models". Detroit Free Press. September 13, 1955. pp. 1–2 via Newspapers.com.
  195. "Ford Output, Jobs Boosted". Detroit Free Press. September 14, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  196. "Detroit Dedicates Its C-C Building". Detroit Free Press. September 26, 1955. p. 3 via Newspapers.com.
  197. "Detroiters Pray for President". Detroit Free Press. September 26, 1955 via Newspapers.com.
  198. "Labor Gains Political Edge: Williams Star Grows Brighter". Detroit Free Press. September 26, 1955. p. 1.
  199. "Kaline's .340 Best in Majors". Detroit Free Press. September 26, 1955. p. 29 via Newspapers.com.
  200. "3,000 Panty Raiders Run Wild at U. of M." Detroit Free Press. October 1, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  201. "GM Sales Billion a Month". Detroit Free Press. October 27, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  202. "Warren To Be a City: Voters OK Move by Big Margin". Detroit Free Press. November 1, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  203. "City of Warren -- Industrial Giant". Detroit Free Press. p. B1 via Newspapers.com.
  204. "Ford Profits Top 21 Years Combined". Detroit Free Press. November 2, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  205. Lyall Smith (November 6, 1955). "U-M Upset Once Too Often: Illinois 25, Michigan 6". Detroit Free Press. p. D1 via Newspapers.com.
  206. "Ford To Sell Stock After 15-for-1 Split". Detroit Free Press. November 7, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  207. "Dearborn Elects Hubbard Again". Detroit Free Press. November 9, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  208. "Ohio Turns Down Idle Pay Plus GAW". Detroit Free Press. November 9, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  209. "GAW Not Licked By Ohio Defeat, UAW Aides Say". Detroit Free Press. November 10, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  210. "Anti-GAW Bid Made Reuther Target in Ohio". Detroit Free Press. November 13, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  211. "Packard and UAW Sign 3-Year Pact". Detroit Free Press. November 10, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  212. "U.S. Favored GM In War, Rivals Say". Detroit Free Press. November 10, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  213. "Chrysler To Spend A Billion". Detroit Free Press. November 11, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  214. "Governor Signs Speed Law Bill". Ironwood Daily Globe. November 11, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  215. "New Speed Limit Signs To Cost State $40,000". Lansing State Journal. November 16, 1955. p. 33 via Newspapers.com.
  216. "Police to Use Plain Cars On X-Ways". Detroit Free Press. November 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  217. "X-Way Police Have Big Day". Detroit Free Press. November 17, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  218. "Storm Toll Hits Ten". Detroit Free Press. November 18, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  219. "Death Traps 2 in Quicksand's Freezing Hell". Detroit Free Press. November 18, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  220. "32 Dead In a Week of Hunting". Detroit Free Press. November 22, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  221. "OSU Smashes Michigan, 17-0: MSU Going to Rose Bowl". Detroit Free Press. November 20, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  222. "It's Official: Big 10 Sends MSU West". Detroit Free Press. November 21, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  223. "U-M To Ohio: We're Sorry". Detroit Free Press. November 22, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  224. "Lions Wreck Green Bay, 24-10". Detroit Free Press. November 25, 1955. p. 53 via Newspapers.com.
  225. "Hoffa's Power Extended: Teamsters, ILA Sign Pact". Detroit Free Press. November 28, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  226. "Vote to Strike 3 Newspapers In Detroit". Detroit Free Press. December 1, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  227. "Why This Paper Is In Your Hands". The Detroit Reporter. December 3, 1955. p. 1.
  228. "Presses Rolling at 3 Papers". Detroit Free Press. January 17, 1956. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  229. "Buses Planned in '56 on Gratiot and Woodward". The Detroit Reporter. December 3, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  230. "OK Sale of DSR Trolleys". The Detroit Reporter. December 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  231. "November Profitable for DSR". The Detroit Reporter. December 22, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  232. "15th Voters Send Another Dingell To Washington". Polish Daily News. December 14, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  233. "State Urged to Run Wayne U." The Detroit Reporter. December 15, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  234. "Plymouth Line Cut: Union Hits Layoffs". Detroit Free Press. December 17, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  235. "11 Split 3 Millions As '55 Ford Chiefs". The Detroit Reporter. December 22, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  236. "Worth 2.5 Billions -- Ford: 9-Month Net 312 Millions". The Detroit Reporter. December 22, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  237. "Edgewater Park Ravaged By Fire". The Detroit Reporter. December 27, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  238. "GM Boss Is Named 'Man of the Year'". Detroit Free Press. December 28, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  239. "Death Takes Father Lord, Author of Detroit Pageant". Detroit Free Press. January 16, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  240. "Archie Hahn, Former Ironwood, Olympic Sprint Champion, Dies". Ironwood Daily Globe. January 24, 1955. p. 5 via Newspapers.com.
  241. "W.W. Bishop, 'U' Librarian Emeritus, Dies". The Michigan Daily. February 20, 1955. p. 1.
  242. "Gaskell Romney Dies In Salt Lake". The Daily Herald (Provo, Utah). March 9, 1955. p. 4.
  243. "Pneumonia Fatal to Wolgast at 67". Detroit Free Press. April 15, 1955. p. 27 via Newspapers.com.
  244. "Ex-Member of Congress Dies at 71". Detroit Free Press. June 14, 1955. p. 23 via Newspapers.com.
  245. "Jane Murfin Crisp, Film Writer, Taken By Death". Los Angeles Times. August 11, 1955. p. 4 via Newspapers.com.
  246. "AFL's Martel Is Dead". Detroit Free Press. August 30, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  247. "Harry Toy Dies of Heart Ailment". Detroit Free Press. September 10, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  248. "Rep. John Dingell Dies at 61". Detroit Free Press. September 20, 1955. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
  249. "Carl W. Milles, Noted Sculptor, Dies". Detroit Free Press. September 20, 1955. p. 12 via Newspapers.com.
  250. "Prof. Myers Dies at Game". The Michigan Daily. October 9, 1955. p. 1.
  251. "Sculptor Dies". Chicago Tribune. November 30, 1955. pp. 4–6 via Newspapers.com.
  252. "Death Notices". Detroit Free Press. December 14, 1955. p. 6.
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