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==History== {{Unreferenced section|date=October 2009}} The first record of land purchased in the area that became Armada Township was made by John Proctor in 1825.<ref>[http://dunhamwilcox.net/mi/macomb_bio.htm John Proctor]. HISTORY OF MACOMB COUNTY, MICHIGAN; M. A. Lesson & Co., Chicago, 1882. Armada Biographies, pp. 687-716. Accessed April 10, 2024.</ref> Twenty-three more families had bought land in the rural area by 1832. Until that year the area was part of [[Ray Township, Michigan|Ray Township]]. At that time a meeting was called to organize a separate township. The vote won by two and Armada Township was founded. When the discussion began to choose the name for the new township, legend says that "Hosea Northrup jumped up and shouted the name 'Armada'". The name was accepted. Several communities were founded within the township, which was originally developed for agriculture. What became the village of Armada was founded in 1833 by Elijah Burke; it was originally called "Burke's Corners" after him. The village began to prosper when residents improved the old Indian trail for use as a roadway in the early 1830s. The road soon became part of the immigrant and migrant road network between [[Romeo, Michigan|Romeo]] and [[Port Huron, Michigan]].<!-- Why? --> Today this is known as Armada Ridge Road. Burke's Corners was briefly renamed "Honeoye", for the [[Honeoye, New York|New York hometown]] of several newly arrived migrants. When the village was finally incorporated in the late 1860s, it was officially named "Armada", the same as the township. By then the village had about 800 inhabitants. During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the village had a stagecoach stop, an opera house, a theater, seven grocery stores, three hotels, three hardware stores, a lumberyard, a grain mill, two implement dealers, a bakery, five doctors, several blacksmiths shops, and a drug store. The first school in Armada was a one-room schoolhouse located at Selleck's Corners. Soon schools were built all around the township. These one-room schools were consolidated during the 1940s. At that time, children were bused into town to attend the schools of the consolidated district. Armada's interest in education was demonstrated in the early 20th century by their applying to the Carnegie Foundation for matching funds in order to build and operate a public library. [[Andrew Carnegie]]'s program was based on providing grants to villages and towns that would both provide matching funds for construction and commit to supporting all operations and maintenance of libraries. The residents committee of the township asked for $8,000 toward building a permanent township library. The Armada Free Public Library was built in 1915 and is still being used to provide library service in the early 21st century. A number of fraternal organizations, a literary club, a science club, and the Armada Cornet Band were among the social outlets for villagers and township residents. The [[Michigan Air Line Railway]] connected Armada to other cities in Michigan and elsewhere. Passengers and freight were processed through the two-door depot at the foot of Church Street. A cartage company delivered the freight to uptown businesses by horse and wagon. In 2014, the village was shut down due to an investigation by [[Michigan State Police]] and the [[FBI]] of the murder of 14-year-old April Millsap, who was walking her dog on the Macomb Orchard Trail. Her body was found just outside the village limits. In 2016 a jury found the 34-year-old defendant, James VanCallis, a man from St. Clair County, to be guilty of four counts associated with the murder. He was sentenced to life in prison.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/macomb/2016/02/08/macomb-jury-verdict-millsap-vancallis/80013216/ |title=VanCallis guilty of murder in Armada teen's death |newspaper=Detroit Free Press |first=Christina |last=Hall |date=February 8, 2016 |access-date=July 30, 2019}}</ref> Following this, residents came together to support their community. In a July 2019 ''[[Reader's Digest]]'' vote, Armada was selected as the "Nicest Place in Michigan". It was a finalist for the magazine's "50 Nicest Places in America" story.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/lifestyle-buzz/armada-michigan-hopes-to-be-designated-nation-s-nicest-place/ar-AAE4EwX |title=Armada, Michigan hopes to be designated nation's nicest place |publisher=msn.com |first=Christina |last=Hall |date=July 9, 2019 |access-date=July 30, 2019}}</ref>
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