Belknap Lookout

Belknap Lookout is a neighborhood on the Northeast side of Grand Rapids.

Contents

Boundaries

The neighborhood is bound by Leonard Street on the north, College Avenue on the east, Crescent Street on the south, and the Grand River on the west.

(Items on this map are dynamically generated with semantic data. Viget articles coded as located in Belknap Lookout and having geographic coordinates will be automatically shown.)

Organizations

Food & Fun

In our neighborhood, instead of calling it a "Pub Crawl" we call it a "Stair Stumble"

External links

Unique facts and features

History

The name "Belknap Lookout" has two separate derivations. The word Belknap comes from the surname of Charles E. Belknap. Belknap was a Grand Rapids resident who came home from the Civil War in 1871 to serve Grand Rapids as the first commissioner of the Boy Scouts of America, as mayor in 1884 and as a U.S. congressman in 1888. The word Lookout comes from what is perhaps the neighborhood's most prominent feature, Belknap Hill: a 160ft high bluff overlooking the downtown of the City of Grand Rapids.

The area which forms the Belknap Lookout Neighborhood was purchased from the government in 1831 by Charles Dexter. In 1850 the area was included in the original organization of the city of Grand Rapids.

In its early days the area was significant for several reasons. First, the neighborhood contained the city's first cemetery. More importantly, the neighborhood contained a spring known as an excellent supply of drinking water. Shortly after the spring's discovery, water pipelines where built connecting the water supply to downtown Grand Rapids through Michigan, Lyon and Monroe. After a disastrous fire in 1873, the citizens of Grand Rapids realized they needed a larger supply of water. A water reservoir, which today holds 6 million gallons of water, was constructed within the neighborhood. This reservoir was intended to be a backup water supply for the City of Grand Rapids. In 1880, the reservoir leaked and flooded Ottawa Avenue. In 1900, the reservoir failed again and flooded Coldbrook, Newberg, Coit, Clancy, and Bradford Streets. The latter flood caused more than a million dollars in damages.

Construction of homes, in significant numbers, did not occur within the neighborhood until 1874. Heavy construction lasted until approximately 1888. Early residents of the Belknap Lookout neighborhood included the mayor, city attorney, school principal, superintendent, bankers, newspaper editors, physicians, musicians, furniture carvers, and factory foreman. The homes on the West side of the neighborhood tend to be larger and more expensive than those on the East side. [2]

Demographics

[3]

References

1. ^ Heart & Soul: The Story of Grand Rapids Neighborhoods by Linda Samuelson (Author), Andrew Schrier (Editor) 2. ^ Historical Profile, Community Research Institute, Grand Valley State University http://www.cridata.org 3. ^ US Census 2000