Detroit, Michigan might not be the
city it once was, but it does have a prestigious history and a few
firsts attributed to it.
The very first news broadcast came out of Detroit on WWJ.
Detroit was the first city to assign individual phone numbers,
in 1879.
It is potato chip capital of the world… per consumption. (Love
those Better Made chips)
Ice cream soda was invented in Detroit.
Pizza deliveryman Richard Davis invented the bulletproof vest,
after being attacked by three armed robbers during a delivery.
(DuPont chemist Stephanie Kwolek, who passed away last month,
discovered Kevlar in 1965).
Detroit has more registered bowlers than any other city.
The salt mines beneath Detroit could keep food flavored for over
seventy thousand years.
Elijay J. McCoy invented the best lubrication system for
locomotives and other machinery in 1872. Manufacturers wanted the
best, “the real McCoy.” (That’s where the saying came from).
The first four-way traffic light was in Detroit, at the
intersection of Woodward and Fort St.
A one-mile stretch of Detroit road was paved with concrete in
1908, making it the world's first concrete-paved road.
Vernor's Ginger Ale was invented there.
The first air-conditioned car was manufactured in 1939 by
Detroit's Packard Motor Car Company.
The J.W. Westcott II, Detroit, is the world's only floating post
office, as it delivers mail to ships as they pass under the
Ambassador Bridge (I once rode on it).
The first tunnel connecting two countries in the world is the
Detroit Windsor Tunnel, connecting Detroit and Windsor, Ontario,
Canada.
Belle Isle, in Detroit is the largest island park in the US.