Greenmead Historical Park (Livonia, Michigan)
USA /
Michigan /
Farmington /
Livonia, Michigan /
8 Mile Road, 38125
World
/ USA
/ Michigan
/ Farmington
World / United States / Ohio
park, NRHP - National Register of Historic Places
The historic farmsite known as Greenmead was purchased by the City of Livonia in 1976. It serves as a legacy of Michigan's agricultural heritage as well as a multi-faceted recreational and cultural facility hosting a number of major special events each year. This 95-acre parksite was the 1820's homestead of Michigan pioneer, Joshua Simmons. It includes the original farm complex, Historical Village, picnic facilities and recreational areas. The Historical Village at Greenmead was established to protect and preserve several locally significant structures that would have been lost to development at their original locations.
The farm complex features an 1841 Greek Revival farmhouse and its outbuildings and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The farm maintains its unique architectural character and is significant in that nine of its eleven original outbuildings are still intact. Built in 1829, the North Barn was the first barn built in Livonia Township. The Simmons family lived in a modest frame house, while the barn, a building of primary importance, was the first major structure completed. Together, the buildings tell the story of farm life in rural Michigan. In 1920, Sherwin Hill, a prominent Detroit attorney purchased the farm and raised dairy cattle until his death in 1961. Upon purchasing the land in 1976, the City of Livonia moved several contemporaneous buildings from nearby to create a small "village". Greenmead Farms was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1971 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.
livonia.gov/211/Greenmead-Historical-Park
The farm complex features an 1841 Greek Revival farmhouse and its outbuildings and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The farm maintains its unique architectural character and is significant in that nine of its eleven original outbuildings are still intact. Built in 1829, the North Barn was the first barn built in Livonia Township. The Simmons family lived in a modest frame house, while the barn, a building of primary importance, was the first major structure completed. Together, the buildings tell the story of farm life in rural Michigan. In 1920, Sherwin Hill, a prominent Detroit attorney purchased the farm and raised dairy cattle until his death in 1961. Upon purchasing the land in 1976, the City of Livonia moved several contemporaneous buildings from nearby to create a small "village". Greenmead Farms was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1971 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.
livonia.gov/211/Greenmead-Historical-Park
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenmead_Farms
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 42°26'9"N 83°25'4"W
- Rotary Park 4.3 km
- Heritage Park 5.4 km
- Holliday Park 9 km
- Hix Park 10 km
- Maybury State Park 11 km
- Middle Rouge Parkway 11 km
- Maybury State Park AKA the Maybury Sanitorium 11 km
- Erwin Orchards 22 km
- Matthaei Botanical Gardens 25 km
- Kensington Metropark 28 km
- Whispering Willows Golf Course 0.7 km
- Meadowbrook Hills 1 km
- Green Valley Estates 1.7 km
- Schoolcraft College 1.9 km
- Gold Manor 2.1 km
- Farmington Square Subdivision 2.4 km
- Meadowbrook Country Club 2.4 km
- Whispering Meadows 2.6 km
- Village Oaks 3.4 km
- Northville Township, Michigan 6.5 km