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Flint, Michigan

Flint is the largest city and seat of Genesee County, Michigan, United States. Located along the Flint River, 66 miles (106 km) northwest of Detroit, it is a principal city within the region known as Mid Michigan.[9][10] At the 2020 census, Flint had a population of 81,252,[5] making it the twelfth largest city in Michigan. The Flint metropolitan area is located entirely within Genesee County. It is the fourth largest metropolitan area in Michigan with a population of 406,892 in 2020.[11] The city was incorporated in 1855.

Flint

1819

1855

Flint City Council

Council Members
  • Leon El-Alamin (NP), 1st Ward
  • Ladel Lewis (D), 2nd Ward
  • Quincy Murphy (D), 3rd Ward
  • Judy Priestley (R), 4th Ward
  • Jerri Winfrey-Carter (D), 5th Ward
  • Tonya Burns (D), 6th Ward
  • Candice Mushatt (D), 7th Ward
  • Dennis Pfeiffer (NP), 8th Ward
  • Eva Worthing (D), 9th Ward

34.10 sq mi (88.33 km2)

33.44 sq mi (86.61 km2)

0.67 sq mi (1.72 km2)

751 ft (229 m)

81,252

80,628

US: 438th
MI: 12th

2,429.78/sq mi (938.13/km2)

298,964 (US: 134th)[4]

1,455.1/sq mi (561.8/km2)

404,208 (US: 135th)

Flintstone[7]

UTC-4 (EDT)

48501–48507, 48531, 48532, 48550–48557, 48559

26-29000

0626170[8]

Flint was founded as a village by fur trader Jacob Smith in 1819 and became a major lumbering area on the historic Saginaw Trail during the 19th century. From the late 19th century to the mid 20th century, the city was a leading manufacturer of carriages and later automobiles, earning it the nickname "Vehicle City". General Motors (GM) was founded in Flint in 1908, and the city grew into an automobile manufacturing powerhouse for GM's Buick and Chevrolet divisions, especially after World War II up until the early 1980s recession. Flint was also the home of a sit-down strike in 1936–37 that played a vital role in the formation of the United Auto Workers.


Since the late 1960s, Flint has faced several crises. The city experienced an economic downturn after GM significantly downsized its workforce in the area from a high of 80,000 in 1978 to under 8,000 by 2010. From 1960 to 2010, the population of the city nearly halved, from 196,940 to 102,434. In the mid-2000s, Flint became known for its comparatively high crime rates and has repeatedly been ranked among the most dangerous cities in the United States according to crime statistics.[12] The city was under a state of financial emergency from 2002 to 2004 and again from 2011 to 2015.[13][14]


From 2014 to 2019, Flint faced a public health emergency due to lead contamination in parts of the local water supply as well as an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease.[15][16] The acute lead crisis has been addressed as the city has secured a new source of clean water, installed modern copper pipes to nearly every home, and distributed filters to all residents who want them. However, a legacy of distrust in public authorities remains.[17]

Landmarks such as the First National Bank building have been extensively renovated, often to create lofts or office space, and filming for the movie Semi-Pro resulted in renovations to the Capitol Theatre.

Will Ferrell

at Saginaw and Third street has been owned by the Collison Family, Thomas W. Collison & Co., Inc., for the last 30 years. The building is rich in Art Deco throughout the interior and exterior. The building also houses its own garage in the lower level, providing heated valet parking to The Paterson Building Tenants.

The Paterson Building

In 2004, University Park, the first planned residential community in Flint in over 30 years, was built north of Fifth Avenue off Saginaw Street, Flint's main thoroughfare.

Local foundations have funded the renovation and redecoration of Saginaw Street and have begun work turning University Avenue (formerly known as Third Avenue) into a mile-long "University Corridor" connecting with Kettering University.

University of Michigan–Flint

located on University Avenue, received extensive renovations, and the Cultivating Our Community project landscaped 16 different locations as a part of a $415,600 beautification project.

Atwood Stadium

Wade Trim and Rowe Incorporated made major renovations to transform empty downtown Flint blocks into business, entertainment, and housing centers. WNEM-TV, a television station based in Saginaw, uses space in the Wade Trim building facing Saginaw Street as a secondary studio and newsroom.[33]

[32]

The long-vacant , formerly owned by the United Hotels Company,[34] was turned into a mixture of commercial space and apartments intended to attract young professionals or college students, with 93 units.[35]

Durant Hotel

In March 2008, the Crim Race Foundation put up an offer to buy the vacant Character Inn and turn it into a fitness center and do a multimillion-dollar renovation.

[36]

University of Michigan–Flint

Kettering University

Mott Community College

Michigan State University College of Human Medicine

runs east and west through Flint.

I-69

 / US 23 runs north and south through the southwestern part of the city near the General Motors Flint Assembly complex and Bishop International Airport.

I-75

runs north and south through Flint.

I-475

(also known as Corunna Road and Court Street) runs nearly due east and west through Flint, west of I-475

M-21

, also known as Dort Highway after Flint automotive pioneer Josiah Dallas Dort, runs north and south through the eastern part of the city.

M-54

China

Changchun, Jilin

Canada[123]

Hamilton, Ontario

Poland

Kielce, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship

Russia

Tolyatti, Samara Oblast

Flint has four sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International:

by Christopher Paul Curtis

The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963

by Christopher Paul Curtis

Bud, Not Buddy

by Christopher Paul Curtis

Elijah of Buxton

by Christopher Paul Curtis

The Mighty Miss Malone

by Donald Goines

Daddy Cool

The Ghosts of Flint by Anna Lardinois

The following notable books are set in Flint or relate to the city.


Fiction


Non-Fiction

Flint is the subject of the song "Flint (For the Unemployed and Underpaid)" featured on his album Michigan.

Sufjan Stevens

Flint is the main focus for music group crediting it as “Murder Town” and their life growing up during the increase of crime rates during the 2000s. Also creating the songs “Crow's Feet” and “We Gotta Help Ourselves” to raise money toward the current water crisis happening in the city

King 810

Flint was home to , the first commercially successful rapper to come from the Midwest.

MC Breed

Flint was where , an American rock band formed in 1969.

Grand Funk Railroad

Kansas City rapper Tech N9ne mentioned its water problems in his song "Poisoning the well"

Flint is likely the subject of "Near DT, MI" by the English rock band .

Black Midi

Flint is the hometown of the award-winning Pop/RnB group .

Ready For The World

Flint is the hometown of band Greet Death.

shoegaze

Flint is currently home to an emerging rap scene, pioneered by artists like Rio Da Yung OG, Bfb Da Packman, and YN Jay. Flint rap, greatly influenced by Detroit drill, is characterized by bouncy drums, menacing melodic elements, and commonly a tresillo rhythm in the 808.[124] Many artists use a laidback, almost non-chalant, vocal delivery. Flint rappers have grown notoriety for their outlandish, vulgar, and often comical lyrics.[125]

(1996-2001 In one of the last episodes of the show the character Michelle jokes to a man soon to be sent to live in Flint through the witness protection program that the city is similar to Paris. The man, from a foreign country, does not realize she is joking and is looking forward to his arrival in Flint.

Nash Bridges

(1977–78) was a short-lived CBS TV drama about an Irish Catholic working-class family living in Flint. The show was filmed in Hollywood, but set in Flint. Also, the families were portrayed as steelworkers, not autoworkers.

The Fitzpatricks

(2018) a Netflix documentary about the struggling urban areas of the city.[126]

Flint Town

(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). Moore then went to Kazakhstan to try to redirect the ICBM away from Flint.

TV Nation

(1999–2000) was Michael Moore's second TV show. It featured segments from Flint.

The Awful Truth

The has appeared in the 31st season of the reality show Cops, airing in the summer of 2018 and winter of 2019.[127]

Flint Police Department

Flint Police also appeared in a 2015 episode on 's Cold Justice: Sex Crimes, which paid to test old rape kits that resulted in convictions of three people for criminal sexual conduct.[128]

TNT

Back to the Bricks

Citizens Republic Bancorp

History of General Motors

3 ships

USS Flint

Gilman, Theodore J. No Miracles Here: Fighting Urban Decline in Japan and the United States. Albany, NY: , 2001.

State University of New York Press

Highsmith, Andrew R. Demolition Means Progress: Flint, Michigan, and the Fate of the American Metropolis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015.

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

at Curlie

Flint, Michigan

 – Segment from C-SPAN's Alexis de Tocqueville Tour

Tocqueville in Flint

Flint Underground Music Archive

. The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.

"Flint, Mich."