Inscription
In 1818 Territorial Governor Lewis Cass proclaimed the third Michigan county to be called Macomb. At that time the young general was commander of the Fifth Military Department in Detroit. Born in that city in 1782, son of prominent local entrepreneurs, Macomb had entered the U.S. Army in 1799. He had gained national renown and honor during the War of 1812 for his victory at Plattsburg in September 1814 over a far superior force of British invaders.
Later as chief army engineer he promoted the building of military roads in the Great Lakes area. From May 1828 to his death in June 1841, Macomb served as commander in chief of the army. He is buried in the Congressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C. His birthday, April 3, is honored as Macomb County Heritage Day.
Location
Sources
More markers in Macomb
Ray Township District No. 1 School
Ray Township, MI
In 1863, Ray area farmers built what became known popularly as Mill School.
Packard Motor Car Company
Shelby Township, MI
In 1899 brothers James Ward and William Doud Packard founded the Ohio Automobile Company in Warren, Ohio.
St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church
Eastpointe, MI
Erin Township’s German immigrants first worshipped together in a log church amid an oak forest in 1846.
St. Lawrence Parish of Utica
Utica, MI
In May 1866 the Reverend Amandus VanDenDriessche of Detroit recited Utica’s first Catholic mass.
Crawford Settlement Burying Ground
Macomb Township, MI
Revolutionary War veteran John Crawford and his wife, Ann, founded this cemetery in 1837.
