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 Michigan Minute
Michigan Minute
New episodes released daily at 6AM

WKAR’s Jamie Paisley presents intriguing stories for each day in Michigan history.

From name changes and iconic cities to arcane laws, Michigan Minute covers a wide variety of fascinatingly true tales from the Great Lake State.

Subscribe at all major podcast platforms. Listen live at 90.5 FM during Morning Edition and Weekend Edition.

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Latest Episodes
  • 1887: Political corruption leads to the first expelling of a member of the Michigan House of Representatives, Milo Dakin. 1896: Detroit Tigers have their first official game with the team name of the Tigers.
  • 1764: Detroit branch of Masonic lodge chartered. 1833: Steamboat Michigan launches from Detroit and sails to ports along the Great Lakes during its 13-day maiden voyage.
  • 1901: Free lunches in Kalamazoo saloons revoked as the practice had spiraled out of financial control. 1865: Two Lansing cousins found Lincoln Assassin, John Wilkes Booth and co-conspirator David Herold in a barn.
  • 1838: Mary T. Lathrap, temperance evangelist and co-founder of MI's Women's Suffrage was born. She was also a poet, whose work inspired the aphorism "Before you judge someone, walk a mile in their shoes."
  • 1941: Detroit produces first tank for World War II, and it is tested for military brass in Warren, MI. Ultimately, 22,000 tanks would be made for the war effort.
  • 1918: First Fordson Tractor given to friend of Henry Ford. 1954: Controversial Oscar-winning documentarian Michael Moore born in Davison, MI.
  • 1933: The Michigan and Huron Institute, later Kalamazoo College chartered in the Michigan Territory. 2017: Lois E. Holt, civil rights activist and Michigan's first Black school teacher passes away.
  • 1948: Amid the start of the Cold War, MSU Student James Zarichny takes a stand and defies the Michigan Senate's Committee on Un-American Activities.
  • 1912: Detroit Tigers inaugurate playing in the 23,000-seat Navin Field, which would later be rechristened as Tiger Stadium, in a game against Cleveland.
  • 1912: Glenn T. Seaborg, born in Ishpeming, Michigan, discovered Seaborgium, one of only 13 atomic elements named after people. 1927: WWJ aired the first radio broadcast of a regular season Detroit Tigers baseball game, with the Tigers securing an 8-5 win against Cleveland.