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Flint, Michigan

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City of Flint
File:Flint skyline2.JPG
Nickname(s): 
The Vehicle City, Buick City, Flint Town, Bedrock, The 810
Location of Flint within Genesee County, Michigan.
Location of Flint within Genesee County, Michigan.
CountryUnited States of America
StateMichigan
CountyGenesee
Settled1818
Incorporation1855
Government
 • TypeStrong Mayor-Council
 • MayorDonald Williamson
 • City AdministratorPeggy Cook
Population
 (2000)
 • City124,943
 • Urban
365,096
 • Metro
443,883
Time zoneUTC-5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDT)
ZIP code
48501-48507, 48532
Area code810
Websitehttp://www.cityofflint.com
Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18602,950
18705,38682.6%
18808,40956.1%
18909,80316.6%
190013,10333.7%
191038,550194.2%
192091,599137.6%
1930156,49270.8%
1940151,543−3.2%
1950163,4137.8%
1960196,94020.5%
1970193,317−1.8%
1980159,611−17.4%
1990140,761−11.8%
2000124,943−11.2%
2006 (est.)117,068

Flint is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan and is located along the Flint River, 66 miles (106 km) northwest of Detroit. As of the 2000 census, the city had a population of 124,943, making it the fifth largest city in Michigan. It is the county seat of Genesee County6.

Flint Charter Township is adjacent to the city on the west but is politically independent.

History

Some scholars consider the Saginaw Valley, particularly the vicinity of Flint, to be the oldest continually inhabited part of Michigan. Regardless of the validity of this claim, the region was home to several Ojibwa tribes at the top of the 19th century, with a particularly significant community established near present-day Montrose. The Flint River had several convenient fords which became points of contention among rival tribes, as attested by the presence of arrowheads and burial mounds near Flushing.

Jacob Smith, a fur trader on cordial terms with both the local Ojibwas and the territorial government founded a trading post in Flint itself in 1819. On several occasions, Smith negotiated land exchanged with the Ojibwas on behalf of the U.S. government, and he was highly regarded on both sides. Smith apportioned many of his holdings to his children. As the ideal stopover on the overland route between Detroit and Saginaw, Flint grew into a small but prosperous village. The city was incorporated in 1855. The 1860 U.S. census indicated that Genesee County had a population of 22,498 of Michigan's 750,000.

In the latter half of the 1800s, Flint became a lumber center, and at the turn of the 20th century the revenue and infrastructure from lumbering funded the establishment of the local carriage making industry. As horse-drawn carriages gave way to the automobiles, Flint became a major player in the nascent auto industry. Buick, after a rudimentary start in Detroit, soon moved to Flint. AC Spark Plug (now part of Delphi) originated in Flint, as did several defunct automobile marques such as the Dort, Little, Flint and Mason brands. Chevrolet's first (and for many years, main) manufacturing facility was also in Flint, although its headquarters were in Detroit. For a brief period, all Chevrolets and Buicks were built in Flint.

In 1904, local entrepreneur William C. Durant was brought in to manage the Buick Motor Company, which became the largest manufacturer of automobiles by 1908. In 1908, Durant founded General Motors, filing incorporation papers in New Jersey, with headquarters in Flint. GM moved its headquarters to Detroit in the mid 1920's.[1]

Durant lost control of GM twice during his lifetime. On the first occasion, he befriended Louis Chevrolet and founded Chevrolet, which was a runaway success. He used the capital from this success to buy back share control. He later lost decisive control again, permanently. Durant experienced financial ruin in the stock market crash of 1929 and subsequently ran a bowling alley in Flint until the time of his death in 1947.

For the last century, Flint's history has been dominated by both the auto industry and car culture. During the sit down strike of 1936-1937, the fledgling United Automobile Workers triumphed over General Motors, inaugurating the era of labor unions.

The city was a major contributor of tanks and other war material during World War II due to its extensive manufacturing facilities.

The eighth deadliest tornado on record in the United States struck Beecher, just north of Flint, on June 8, 1953, killing 115 people, injuring 844. Known as the "Beecher Tornado," after the North Side community, the tornado devastated the area. On the next day the same weather system spawned the worst tornado in New England in Worcester, Massachusetts, killing another 94 people.

For decades, Flint remained politically important as a major population center as well as for its importance to the automotive industry. The city's population peaked in 1960 at almost 200,000 (196,940). These decades are seen as the height of Flint's prosperity and influence, and culminated with the establishment of many local institutions, most notably including the Flint Cultural Center, which remains one of the city's chief commercial and artistic draws to this day.

Since the late 1960s, Flint has suffered from disinvestment, deindustrialization, and depopulation. Initially, this took the form of the "white flight" that afflicted many American towns and cities, but the decline was exacerbated by the 1973 oil crisis and subsequent collapse of the U.S. auto industry. In the 1980s, the rate of deindustrialization accelerated with local GM employment falling from a 1978 high of 80,000 to under 23,000 by the late 1990s. Many factors have been blamed, including Reaganomics, outsourcing and exporting jobs abroad and to non-union facilities, unionization, exorbitant overhead, globalization, and most recently, a dramatic decline in General Motors sales. These rationales are often strictly applied along lines of political orientation, and labor remains the most divisive and polarizing local issue.

The recent decline was highlighted in the film Roger and Me by Michael Moore (the title refers to Roger B. Smith, the CEO of General Motors during the 1980s). Also highlighted in Moore's documentary was the failure of city officials to reverse the trends with entertainment options (e.g. Six Flags' AutoWorld) during the 1980s. Moore, a native of the area, revisited Flint in his later movies, including Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11.

Today, the auto industry continues its exodus from Flint as does the population and sources of revenue. Details on specific plant openings and closings are found in the article Flint, Michigan Auto Industry.

Of the nearly 80,000 people that worked for General Motors in Flint during its peak years in the late 1970s, only about 8,000 are left after the 2006 buyouts.

Unable to pay its debts, the city was placed into receivership by the state of Michigan in 2002, with a financial manager effectively replacing the mayor. In 2004, local control was resumed.

Recently, many skilled workers have been leaving Flint for jobs in Wyoming in the booming energy industry of coal, oil, and gas. The state of Wyoming has conducted three job fairs in Flint in 2006. At least 200 families have moved so far, many citing the October, 2006 Michigan unemployment rate of 7.1% as reason to leave.Despite Flint's current economic condition, it remains a very important part of Michigan and the automobile industry. [1]

The city has seen a major decline while its suburbs have flourished. Outlying towns such as Grand Blanc and Swartz Creek have seen significant growth and development as bedroom communities. Many professionals who work in the Metro Detroit area have moved outward due to lower taxes, lower housing costs and larger lot sizes. Numerous residential subdivisions have been built in recent years to meet this demand.

In 2004, General Motors made multi-million dollar upgrades to three Flint factories: Flint Truck and Bus Assembly, Flint Metal Center, and Flint Engine South. Delphi's Flint East facility (formerly AC Sparkplug) had been on Delphi's long list of plants it was going to shut down to emerge from bankrupcy, but a 2007 agreement with the UAW saved the plant and secured 1,100 jobs for at least several more years.

File:First-national-bank-flint-mi.jpg
Renovated First National Bank building in downtown Flint.

Since 2002, Flint's downtown has experienced a small revival. Abandoned buildings have been refurbished and occupied, The Capitol Theatre has began renovations after years of abandonment, Rowe Inc. is moving their headquarters from numerous SW Michigan locations to one centrally located building in downtown. The Rowe Building has taken the place of many abandoned buildings and its abandoned neighbors have been renovated and now house buisnesses. Also, UM-Flint has recently passed a proposal to build a 310-person dormatory in Downtown Flint. This student housing will be a major factor, along with the newly built First Street Lofts, in Flint's revitalization. The University of Michigan-Flint has considered turning the long-abandoned Durant Hotel into a student housing building. There has also been a sprucing up of Saginaw Street with new lighting, new benches, and the return of the "Vehicle City" arches. On May 2, 2007, Wade Trim, a civil engineering firm, said that they were moving their Flint office to downtown. There will be 3 abandoned buildings demolished to make way for the new building. The new structure will also house new buisnesses. The plans call for the redevelopment of not just this building's area, but the entire Mott Block. In 2004 the first planned residential community in Flint in over 30 years, University Park, was built. In 2007 construction will begin on turning third street, the road that links Kettering University to U of M-Flint, into a "University Corridor". This construction will add trees, landscaping, and hopefully spur new buisnesses along this stretch of road. Along with the Third Street landscaping, there will be a group that is landscaping 16 different locations from in Flint as a part of a $415,600 beautification project.

Geography and climate

The Flint River in the late 1970s during a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers flood control project, taken from approximately halfway between the Grand Traverse Street bridge and Beach-Garland Street bridge, looking east.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 88.2 km² (34.1 mi²). 87.1 km² (33.6 mi²) of it is land and 1.1 km² (0.4 mi²) of it (1.26%) is water. Flint lies just to the northeast of the Flint hills. The terrain is low and rolling along the south and east sides, and flatter to the northwest.

For a city of its size, Flint has many neighborhoods, grouped around the center of the city on the four cardinal "sides." The downtown business district is centered on Saginaw Street south of the Flint River. Just west, on opposite sides of the river, are Carriage Town (north) and the Grand Traverse Street District (south). These neighborhoods were the center of manufacturing for and profits from the nation's carriage industry until the 1920s, and to this day are the site of many well-preserved Victorian homes and the setting of Atwood Stadium. Just north of downtown is River Village, a successful example of mixed-income public housing. To the east of I-475 is Central Park, a small neighborhood defined by cul-de-sacs.

Hall's Flats on the West Side is one of Flint's many neighborhoods.

The North Side and 5th Ward are predominantly African American, with such historic districts as Buick City and Civic Park on the north, and Sugar Hill, Floral Park, and Kent and Elm Parks on the south. Many of these neighborhoods were the original centers of early Michigan blues. The South Side in particular was also a center for multi-racial migration from Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, and the Deep South since World War II. These neighborhoods are most often lower income, but have maintained some level of economic stratification. The East Side is the site of the Applewood Mott Estate, and Mott Community College, the Cultural Center, and East Village, one of Flint's more prosperous areas. Just north is Eastside Proper, also known as the "State Streets," a low-income rental area that has rapidly diversified and is the center of Flint's Hispanic community. Eastside has had trouble with prostitution, particularly in districts centered on Dort Highway and Olive Avenue. The West Side includes the main site of the 1937 sitdown strike, the Mott Park neighborhood, Kettering University, and the historic Woodcroft Estates, owned in the past by legendary automotive executives and current home to prominent and historic Flint families such as the Motts, the Manleys, and the Smiths.

Facilities associated with General Motors in the past and present are scattered throughout the city, including GM Truck and Bus, Flint Metal Center and Powertrain South (clustered together on the city's southwestern corner); Powertrain North, Flint Tool and Die and Delphi East. The largest plant, Buick City and adjacent facilities, have been demolished.

The Genesee Towers (left).

Half of Flint's fourteen tallest buildings were built during the 1920s. The city's tallest building, the 19-story Genesee Towers, was completed in 1968.[2] The building has become unused in recent years and has fallen into severe disrepair; a cautionary sign warning of falling debris was put on the sidewalk in front of it. City officials have considered having the building demolished.

Monthly Normal and Record High and Low Temperatures
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Rec High °F 61 68 80 87 93 101 101 98 94 89 76 70
Norm High °F 29.2 32.3 43.1 56.2 69 77.7 82 79.5 71.9 59.7 46.3 34.2
Norm Low °F 13.3 15.3 24.3 34.6 45.2 54.6 59.1 57.4 49.4 38.6 29.8 19.1
Rec Low °F -25 -22 -12 6 22 33 40 37 26 19 6 -13
Precip (in) 1.57 1.35 2.22 3.13 2.74 3.07 3.17 3.43 3.76 2.34 2.65 2.18
Source: USTravelWeather.com [2]

Demographics

As of the census² of 2000, there were 124,943 people, 48,744 households, and 30,270 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,434.5/km² (3,714.9/mi²). There were 55,464 housing units at an average density of 636.8/km² (1,649.1/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 41.39% White, 53.27% Black or African American, 0.64% Native American, 0.44% Asian, 0.02% Pacific Islander, 1.11% from other races, and 3.14% from two or more races. 2.99% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There were 48,744 households out of which 33.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 29.0% were married couples living together, 27.5% had a female householder with no husband present, and 37.9% were non-families. 31.9% of all households were made up of individuals and 9.9% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.51 and the average family size was 3.16.

In the city the population was spread out with 30.6% under the age of 18, 10.3% from 18 to 24, 29.4% from 25 to 44, 19.2% from 45 to 64, and 10.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 31 years. For every 100 females there were 88.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 83.1 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $28,015, and the median income for a family was $31,424. Males had a median income of $34,009 versus $24,237 for females. The per capita income for the city was $15,733. About 22.9% of families and 26.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 37.4% of those under age 18 and 13.4% of those age 65 or over.

Crime

According to the FBI, Flint has one of the highest crime rates in Michigan (5538 incidents/100,000 residents). In 2004 it had the second highest violent crime rate in the United States. In the first three months of 2007, all areas of crime besides burglary are down. [3]

Education

Universities in Flint

Primary and Secondary Schools

Public K-12 education is provided under the umbrella of the Flint Community Schools. Students attend 25 elementary schools, one 7-9 facility (Whittier), a gender based 7-8 academy (Holmes), and six high schools. McKinley and Longfellow middle schools were recently shut down due to budget cuts, however McKinley was reopened in December of 2006 as the Flint Southwestern Academy Annex in order to reduce the student population of Flint Southwestern Academy. One of the city's oldest schools, Flint Northern High School, has relocated from its original location, but has remained a local institution since 1929 respectively. Both Flint Central High School and Flint Northern High School, will become 7-12 institutions in the fall of 2006. Flint Central's current building is in East Village near Mott Community College and the Cultural Center, and was finished in 1923. The building was designed by Malcolmson, Higginbotham, and Palmer. There is also Mott Middle College, Flint Southwestern Academy, Flint Northwestern Preparatory Academy, and Schools of Choice, all of which are 7-12 institutions.

Declining enrollment and costly maintenance, however, have threatened the future of many of Flint's schools. The district has come under fire for high truancy and dropout rates as well as low test scores. The district has also been lauded for its ground-breaking magnet program, particularly programs in math, science, and fine arts. Moreover, the district was the testing ground for Frank Manley's community schools ideas. A local elementary school has been named in his honor.

The state-run Michigan School for the Deaf and Blind is also located in Flint.

Flint also hosts a number of private schools such as The Valley School. Powers Catholic High School is located just outside the city limits in neighboring Mount Morris Township.

Westwood Heights, Carman-Ainsworth, Beecher, Atherton, Bendle, Bentley, Davison, and Kearsley are adjacent districts based in the City of Burton, Flint Township, Mount Morris Township, and Genesee Township, and do not belong to the Flint Community Schools.

Culture

Flint hosts a large cultural center that was built with revenue from the auto industry in the 1950s. Set on a 30 acre (120,000 m²) site near downtown, it boasts:

The Flint Institute of Arts was founded in 1928 and is a member of the Flint Cultural Center. It was recently renovated and reopened with an expanded collection in September 2006.
  • Flint Public Library.
  • Buick Gallery & Research Center.
  • Bower and Elgood Theatres, home of Flint Youth Theatre.
  • Flint Institute of Arts, an art museum with an extensive collection and learning facility.
  • Flint Institute of Music, home of the Flint Symphony Orchestra and Flint Youth Symphony Orchestra, among other organizations.
  • Longway Planetarium, the largest and best-equipped planetarium in Michigan.
  • Sloan Museum, with a large portion dedicated to rare automobiles.
  • Whiting Auditorium, a 2100-seat auditorium which hosts fine arts performances, including symphonic concerts and touring theatrical performances.

Flint is also home to:

  • Flint Central Academy Theatre, which puts on and promotes educational theatre within the community.
  • Flint Local 432, one of the country's longest-running alcohol-free youth concert venues.
  • Flint Children's Museum, a "hands-on" museum for children located on the campus of Kettering University.
  • Vertigo Productions, the only semi-professional theater company in Genesee County. Vertigo presents critically-acclaimed theater and dinner shows in the Historic Masonic Temple in downtown Flint, as well as sponsoring the annual Summer favorite, Shakespeare in the Park and Gilkeyshire Renaissance Faire.
  • Buckham Gallery, an artist-run gallery in downtown Flint serving the arts community for over 20 years.
  • Pages Independent Bookstore, a cultural crossroads in downtown Flint that provides a wide selection of books and can be used as a meeting space for the community.
  • Flint Concert Band
  • Flint Symphonic Wind Ensemble

Noteworthy annual events include the Flint Jazz Festival, the Michigan Storytellers Festival, the Buick Open PGA Tour golf tournament (in nearby suburb Grand Blanc), and the Crim Festival of Races.

Media

Print

The local paper is the Flint Journal, which dates back to 1876 . It won the Michigan Press Association's Newspaper of the Year award (Daily Class B) in 2006. [3]

The East Village Magazine is a non-profit news magazine providing information about neighborhood issues since 1976. The monthly magazine centers on the East Village neighborhood, outside downtown Flint, but is distributed throughout the city. The Uncommon Sense is a recent publication featuring critical journalism, satirical cartoons, and articles on music and nightlife.

The University of Michigan-Flint student newspaper is The Michigan Times.

The Flint Enquirer is a small-circulation newspaper serving the African American community of Genesee County. It is distributed at local colleges and other locations.

Television

Two area stations operate from Flint; WJRT (ABC), one of ten ABC owned-and-operated stations, and WFUM (PBS), a service of the University of Michigan-Flint. Other stations serving the area include WNEM (CBS), WEYI (NBC), WSMH (Fox), and WBSF (The CW).

Radio

The Flint radio market has a rich history. WAMM-AM 1420 (started in 1955, now gospel station WFLT) on the city's eastside was one of the first stations in the country to program to the black community and was also where legendary DJ Casey Kasem had his first radio job. [4]

WTAC-AM 600 (now religious station WSNL) was a highly-rated and influential Top 40 station in the 1960s and 1970s, showcasing Michigan artists and being the first in the U.S. to play acts like The Who and AC/DC. WTAC changed its format to country music in 1980 and then became a pioneering contemporary Christian music station a few years later; the calls are now on 89.7 FM, a member of the "Smile FM" network. WTRX-AM 1330 also played Top 40 music for a time in the 1960s and '70s.

The city's very first radio station, AM 910 WFDF, first went on the air in 1922 . It has since relocated south into the Detroit market, changing its city of license to Farmington Hills and increasing its power to 50,000 watts.

In 1985, WWCK-FM 105.5 became the highest-rated rock station in America. [5] The station (whose calls were derived from those of Windsor, Ontario's legendary CKLW) continued as a market leader after changing its format to CHR, which it has remained since, in 1989 .

Today, the following stations serve Flint with an array of programming choices:

AM

FM

  • 88.9 WAKL - Flint (Contemporary Christian, Educational Media Foundation; K-Love network affiliate)
  • 89.7 WTAC - Burton-Flint (Contemporary Christian, Superior Communications; "Smile FM" network affiliate)
  • 90.1- delta college public radio, on saturday, mexican music from 1:30-5:00
  • 91.1 WFUM - Flint (Public Radio, Michigan Radio, University of Michigan; simulcast of WUOM Ann Arbor)
  • 92.7 WDZZ - Flint (Urban Adult Contemporary, Z92.7, Cumulus Media)
  • 93.7 WRCL - Frankenmuth (Rhythmic CHR, Club 93-7, Regent Broadcasting)
  • 94.3 WKUF - Flint (Kettering University student station)
  • 95.1 WFBE - Flint (Country, B95, Citadel Broadcasting)
  • 98.9 WOWE - Vassar (Urban Adult Contemporary, Praestantia Broadcasting)
  • 101.5 WWBN - Tuscola-Flint (Active Rock, Banana 101.5, Regent Broadcasting)
  • 102.5 WIOG - Flint- (top hits, and old school)
  • 103.9 WRSR - Owosso-Flint (Classic Rock, 103.9 The Fox, Cumulus Media)
  • 105.5 WWCK - Flint (Mainstream CHR, CK105.5, Cumulus Media)
  • 107.9 WCRZ - Flint (Adult Contemporary, Cars 108, Regent Broadcasting)

Regent Broadcasting's WCRZ is consistently the top-rated station in Flint and has been near the top of the ratings consistently since changing format from beautiful music WGMZ in 1984 . Sister stations WRCL and WWBN also regularly chalk up top 10 ratings in Flint. Cumulus Media's top stations are WDZZ (usually the #2 rated station 12+ in Flint, second only to WCRZ) and WWCK. Citadel Broadcasting owns popular country station WFBE (which for many years was a classical-music public radio station owned by the Flint school system), as well as sports-talker WTRX and Saginaw/Bay City's WHNN (96.1 FM, Oldies) and WIOG (102.5 FM, Top 40), which both have good signals and significant listenership in Flint.

Radio stations from Detroit, Lansing and Lapeer may also be heard in the Flint area; Detroit's WJR (760 AM) is regularly rated among the top 10 stations in Flint and often higher-rated than any local Flint-based AM station.

See Flint's Fall 2006 Arbitron 12+ ratings here.

Politics

In 2006, Flint was the 10th most liberal city in the United States, according to a nationwide study by the non-partisan Bay Area Center for Voting Research which examined the voting patterns of 237 cities with a population over 100,000. Flint placed just after San Francisco (9) and before Seattle (16) and New York (21). A full listing can be found here

Sports

Club Sport League Venue Logo
Flint Generals Hockey International Hockey League Perani Arena and Event Center
Flint Fury Football Mid Continental Football League Atwood Stadium
Genesee County Patriots Football North American Football League Atwood Stadium
Michigan Admirals Football North American Football League Russ Reynolds Field
Flint Rogues Rugby Independent Longway Park
Michigan Phoenix Soccer Women's Premier Soccer League Guy V. Houston Stadium

The Flint Generals professional hockey team plays at the Perani Arena and Event Center (formerly known as the IMA Sports Arena), a 4,021+ seat arena which is mostly home to hockey, but has also hosted basketball, indoor football, wrestling, boxing, and many other events. The Flint Generals are in their 13th year in the recently renamed International Hockey League, formerly the United Hockey League, since the original IHL Flint Generals left Flint for 8 years. The Generals won the IHL's Turner Cup in 1984, and won the UHL's Colonial Cup in 1996 and 2000.

There is also semi-pro football at Atwood Stadium with the Flint Fury. Atwood is an 11,000+ seat stadium in downtown Flint which has hosted many events, including baseball. When artificial turf was installed, it was no longer able to host baseball games. The Flint Fury are heading into their fourth season and second in the Mid Continental Football League. The team was founded by two of its players: Charles Lawler and Prince Goodson, who both played for the defunct Flint Falcons semi-pro team.

A second semi-pro football team in Flint is the Michigan Admirals. They play at Russ Reynolds Field, a 1,500 seat stadium with a grass surface. The stadium is also home to the Flint Beecher Buccaneers High School Football team. In 2005, the Admirals won the NAFL2 Northern Conference Championship, and were one win away from going to the Championship in Orlando. The Admirals are heading into their fifth season in the North American Football League.

The Genesee County Patriots semi-pro football team also play their home games in Flint. The Patriots were founded in 2003 and originally played at Atwood Stadium in Flint with the Flint Fury. At the time, both teams were in the Ohio Valley Football League and shared the stadium. After the 2003 season, the Patriots jumped to the North American Football League and moved to Clio's Pride Stadium. After a disagreement with the Clio athletic director, the Patriots returned to Atwood Stadium for 2006.

The Flint Rogues rugby team plays at Longway Park behind Potter Elementary. The Michigan Phoenix women's soccer team plays at Guy V. Houston Stadium behind Flint Northwestern Prepatory Academy.

Flint is twinned with Hamilton, Ontario, and its amateur athletes compete in the Canusa Games, held alternatively there and here since 1957.

The upcoming 2008 comedy, Semi-Pro, stars Will Ferrell as the owner/coach/player of a fictional American Basketball Association team called the Flint Tropics.

Although Flint does not have its own NBA team, it does boast that many of its local players have gone to the NBA or on to play Division 1 or European professional basketball. A local teacher, turned independent film maker, Marcus Davenport chronicals Flint's unique ties to Basketball and the basketball culture that thrives in Flint. His documentary film is Flint Star: The Motion Picture. The film and Flint are discussed in an indepth interview Marcus Davenport describes Flint's love of basketball, the players and the inner city culture.

Former sports teams

Club Sport League Venue Logo
Flint Flyers Baseball Michigan State League
Flint Halligans Baseball Michigan-Ontario League
Flint Vehicles Baseball Michigan-Ontario League
Flint Gems Baseball Michigan State League Atwood Stadium
Flint Indians Baseball Michigan State League Atwood Stadium
Flint Arrows Baseball Central League Atwood Stadium
Flint Fuze Basketball Continental Basketball Association IMA Sports Arena
Michigan Stones Basketball International Basketball League
Flint Generals/Spirits Hockey United Hockey League/International Hockey League IMA Sports Arena
Flint Bulldogs Hockey Colonial Hockey League IMA Sports Arena
Flint Blue Devils Football Atwood Stadium
Flint Pros Football Super Football League Atwood Stadium
Flint Wildcats Football Super Football League Atwood Stadium
Flint Sabres Football Super Football League Atwood Stadium
Flint Falcons Football Michigan Football League, Ohio Valley Football League Atwood Stadium
Flint Flames Football Indoor Football League IMA Sports Arena

Transportation

The city of Flint is served by Bishop International Airport and various bus lines. Amtrak provides intercity passenger rail service on the Blue Water line from Chicago to Port Huron at the border to Canada. For travel within and around the city, the Flint Mass Transportation Authority (MTA) provides local bus services. Greyhound Lines also runs inter-city bus services north to Bay City and south to Detroit. Indian Trails runs inter-city bus services west to Chicago.

Famous people and groups

Movie, radio, and television figures

Musicians and bands

Sports figures

Courtney Hawkins, football player

Writers, novelists, poets

Jan Worth-Nelson, Author and Flint Resident teaches at UMflint

Others

Sister cities

Flint has three sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International, Inc. (SCI):

Partnership Cities

Trivia

Movies and TV

The following Movies and TV shows have taken place or were filmed in Flint.

Television

  • TV Nation (1994-1995) was the debut TV series by Michael Moore. Numerous segments were filmed in and around Flint, including one where Moore uses declassified information to find the exact impact point from the nuclear ICBM that targeted the city (ground zero was Chevrolet Assembly, one of the General Motors plants at Bluff & Cadillac Streets. The plant is now destroyed anyway, by GM). Moore then went to Russia (actually Kazakhstan) to try and redirect the ICBM away from Flint, such as "the stars' homes" (Beverly Hills). Watch at FlintHistory.com

Movies

  • Roger & Me (1989) Documentary about the downturn in Flint because of GM closing various plants. The premise of the movie was Moore's attempt to find GM Chairman Roger Smith for an interview.
  • Semi-Pro (2008) Will Ferrell movie which centers around a fictious ABA basketball team, The Flint Tropics, in the 1970s from Flint.

References

  1. ^ The Detroit News: Wyoming woos Michigan workers
  2. ^ SkyscraperPage.com: Flint, Michigan
  3. ^ "Flint shows first-quarter drop in violent crimes". The Flint Journal. Retrieved July 2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)

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