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Why people love Hell, a town in Michigan

 
 
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2006 08:10 am
Hell, Michigan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hell,_Michigan

Hell, Michigan is an unincorporated community in Livingston County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The community is in Putnam Township near the border with Washtenaw County about 20 miles northwest of Ann Arbor at 42°26′05″N, 83°59′06″W. Hell has a population of 266 and the ZIP Code is 48169.

History
For several hundred years, the low, swampy area was occupied mostly by the Potawatomi tribe. Later, in the early 19th century, it was the most unpleasant part of a trail between Lansing and Dexter (which at the time contained a major farmers market) and a point on the route taken by traders portaging between the Huron River and the Grand River.

In the late 1830s, George Reeves, a New York farmer, started several businesses in the area ?- a general store, and a mill, and a distillery ?- which became the core of a minor population center; by the 1840s, enough people had immigrated to make a 70-person school viable (assuming 19th century birth rates, this pegs the population somewhere close to its current level).

According to the town's semiofficial Web site, there are two leading theories about how Hell got its name.

The first holds that a pair of German travelers stepped out of a stagecoach one sunny afternoon in the 1830s, and one said to the other, "So schön und hell!" - roughly translated as, "So bright and beautiful." Their comments were overheard by some locals and the name stuck.

The second holds that George Reeves was asked after Michigan gained statehood what he thought the town he helped settle should be called, and reportedly replied, "I don't care, you can name it Hell if you want to." The name became official on October 13, 1841.

Miscellaneous

Hell's main export is, appropriately, kitsch. It has a "fully non-accredited" college that sells singed diplomas, a motorcycle dealership, and an ice cream parlor.

In the early 1930s, Pinckney, MI postmaster W. C. Miller began to receive requests from stamp and postmark collectors for cancellations: Hell had no post office, and Pinckney was barely three miles away. On July 15, 1961, a postal substation was established at Hell. (It remains today, at the back of the general store.)

Hell Creek runs through town, and through a small dam; a bar next to the creek is known as "The Dam Site Inn".

Hell also sponsors a running event called "Run Thru Hell 10 mile and 4.8 mile race." [1] Each participant is given a T-shirt that says "I Ran Thru Hell".

Kiwanis International chartered the Kiwanis Club of Hell, Michigan on December 15, 2001 as the Michigan District's first Internet club. The club meets in private AOL chatroom, "Kiwanis Online." [2]

Hell also had a party on June 06, 2006. Among other things, they had live entertainment and a costume contest. There were also souvenirs, most selling for $6.66. [3]

See also:

Paradise, Michigan, in the Upper Peninsula, is 294 miles north of Hell, despite being often cited as 666 miles away.
Climax, Michigan, another small Michigan town known for its name, is just a couple hours west of Hell.
Hell for Certain, Kentucky
Hell, Norway
Hell, Grand Cayman
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2006 08:14 am
Hell shines in its apocalyptic moment in the sun
Hell shines in its apocalyptic moment in the sun
ABC News Online

[This is the print version of story http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200606/s1656917.htm]

Wednesday, June 7, 2006

Hell shines in its apocalyptic moment in the sun. The road to Hell was crowded with the curious onlookers on Tuesday - as well as devils-in-disguise, hearse enthusiasts, Christian protesters and merchants trying to cash in on the apocalypse.

Hell, Michigan, a tiny town about 97 kilometres west of Detroit, threw itself open for a once-in-a-millennium party to mark the passage of June 6, 2006 - or 666, a number long associated with the Antichrist.

Home to only about 70 souls on an average day, Hell's population swelled to the hundreds by Tuesday afternoon, with dozens waiting in line to buy t-shirts emblazoned with "666."

"We can't even keep those in stock," said Chad Wines, an employee at Screams Ice Cream, working to keep up with demand for souvenirs and ice cream on what proved to be a hot day in Hell.

"It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and I couldn't pass it up," said Paul Groenendal, one of dozens of leather-clad bikers who rode to Hell for the street party.

Mr Groenendal, who wore devil horns glued to his bald head as well as a skull and crossbones rings and matching necklace, joked he was in Hell to "make deals and collect."

Auto salvage worker Ken McKeny, 43, pulled his customised, casket on wheels into town with the "4MLDHYD" license plates, part of a Michigan-based hearse enthusiasts group that call themselves "Hearsin' Around."

"I went to work this morning but my boss told me to get out and go to Hell," he said.

A crowd gathered as Gabrielle Olney, 20, visiting Hell with her mother and grandmother, crawled into McKeny's green metallic casket.

"It was just something to do," said Ms Olney, a college student. "I figure you've got to try everything once."

Nearby a handful of Christian protesters were righteously indignant to the revelry.

"I'm here to tell people that they don't have to go to hell," said one woman, who gave her name only as Donna. "Hell is not a joke."

Paradise, after all, is only a day's drive away - less than 500 kilometres north in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

-Reuters
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blacksmithn
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2006 08:17 am
If I knew anything about the construction trade, I'd move there and open up a concrete business featuring my newest product-- Good Intentions Asphalt. Then, as everyone knows, the road to Hell would be paved with Good Intentions!
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2006 08:23 am
Blacksmithn
blacksmithn wrote:
If I knew anything about the construction trade, I'd move there and open up a concrete business featuring my newest product-- Good Intentions Asphalt. Then, as everyone knows, the road to Hell would be paved with Good Intentions!


Laughing Laughing

Would all direction signs on your road have arrows pointing up and down instead of left or right?

BBB
0 Replies
 
Eva
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2006 03:12 pm
I went to Hell a couple of years ago. (Grand Cayman)

http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y3/crue00/-smallhell.jpg
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blacksmithn
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2006 03:56 pm
Maybe I could move there and open a foundry specializing in the production of fine bells. Soon, everyone would be clamoring for Hell's Bells!
0 Replies
 
 

 
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