Inscription
Originally known as Indian Village, Romeo was platted in 1830 on the former winter campgrounds of a band of Chippewa Indians. Nathaniel Taylor, Ashael Bailey and a Major Larned laid out the village, which was incorporated in 1838. Named Romeo by Taylor’s wife, Laura, the village became an agricultural and mercantile center.
Many of its early settlers were from New England and upstate New York. In 1835 the Romeo Academy was established, and in the 1840s the Romeo Branch of the University of Michigan opened in the village. The many examples of nineteenth-century architecture that remain in the village led Michigan and the federal government to list Romeo as a historic district in 1970.
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.
