Dearbornball

Dearbornball is a cityball in the state of Michigancube, inside of  Detroitball metropolitan area. He is know for having the highest Muslim population in  USAball per capita.

Pre-European encounter
Before European encounter, the area around him had been inhabited for thousands of years by successive indigenous peoples. Historical tribes living in that area belonged to the Algonquian-language family, especially the Council of Three Fires, the Potawatomi and related peoples. In contrast, the Huron (Wyandot) were Iroquoian-speaking.

European encounter
French colonists had a trading post at Fort Detroit and a settlement developed there in the colonial period. Another developed on the south side of Detroit River in what is now southwestern Ontariobal l, near a Huron mission village. French and French-Canadian colonists also established farms at Dearbornball in this period. Franceball ceded all of his territory east of the Mississippi River to UKball in 1763 after he lost to the British in the Seven Years' War.

Arrival of USAball
Beginning in 1786, after USAball gained independence in the Revolutionary War, more European Americans entered this region, settling in the Detroitball and Dearbornball area. With population growth, Dearbornball Township was established in 1833 and the village of Dearbornvilleball in 1836, each named after American patriot Henry Dearborn, a general in the American Revolution who later served as Secretary of War under President Thomas Jefferson.

Incorporated
The Town of Dearbornball was incorporated in 1893, but he was still a village until 1927. Through much of the 19th century, the area around him was largely rural and dependent on agriculture.

Now a City (1927-present)
Stimulated by industrial development in Detroitball and within his own limits, in 1927 he became a city. His current borders result from a 1928 consolidation vote that merged Dearbornball and neighboring Fordsonball (previously known as Springwellsball), which feared being absorbed into expanding Detroitball.

More historical information soon.