Excerpt from Detroit, the City of the Straits: Illustrative of Its Beauty, Its Architecture, Its Streets, Parks, Commerce, Manufactures, Etc
America is too often derided for its mushroom growth, and, like Philip Doddridge, accused of its youth, - a fault which that distinguished divine replied time would remedy. Detroit, the metropolis of Michigan, has, however, a respectable age and a history full of adventure and picturesqueness, fascinating to the imagination. The drama of its life is a succession of striking pictures, accompanied by the martial music of diverse nations.
In the first scene we see three birch-bark canoes breasting the steady current of the broad stream, and landing here under the broad trees that overhang the bank, and ten white men, two of whom are robed in black. These break in pieces and throw into the waters a great stone idol. It is the first incursion of the Christian iconoclasts, for these are the Sulpitian fathers Galinee and Dollier, and the date is 1670.
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