1974 in Michigan


Events from the year 1974 in Michigan.
The Associated Press selected the top news stories of 1974 in Michigan as follows:
  1. Gerald Ford's elevation to President of the United States after the resignation of Richard Nixon;
  2. The decline of the automobile industry tied to the 1973 oil crisis with layoffs of more than 200,000 automobile workers;
  3. The re-election of William Milliken as Governor of Michigan despite a general tide in favor of Democrats;
  4. The United States Supreme Court ruling in Milliken v. Bradley reversing a lower court order requiring cross-district busing of public school students among 53 school districts in metropolitan Detroit and instead directing the creation of a desegregation plan limited to the Detroit schools;
  5. Voters' repeal of the state sales tax on food and drugs;
  6. Gasoline shortage;
  7. Contaminated feed forces the slaughter of thousands of farm animals;
  8. Democrats take the Fifth and Eighth Congressional Districts and then hold them in post-Watergate elections resulting in Democrats taking control of the Michigan Legislature and the state's Congressional delegation;
  9. The worst snowstorm of the century hit southern Michigan; and
  10. Utilities suffered lower profit margins and were granted large rate increases.
The AP also selected the state's top sports stories of 1974 as follows:
  1. Al Kaline's retiring after 21 years with 3,007 hits and 399 home runs;
  2. The 1974 Michigan Wolverines football team compiling a 10–0 record before losing to Ohio State on November 23;
  3. The death of Detroit Lions head coach Don McCafferty on July 28;
  4. The 1974 Michigan State Spartans football team compiling a 7–3–1 record and upsetting No. 1 ranked Ohio State on November 9;
  5. The 1974 Central Michigan Chippewas football team winning the NCAA Division II Football Championship;
  6. The 1973–74 Detroit Pistons compiling a 52–30, the best record in franchise history to that point;
  7. The rise and fall of the Detroit Wheels of the World Football League;
  8. The 1974 Detroit Lions compiling a 7–7 record under new head coach Rick Forzano;
  9. Hudson High School won the Class C state football championship and kept its winning streak alive; and
  10. John Hiller of the Detroit Tigers set an American League record with 17 wins as a relief pitcher and was named to the All-Star team.
The year's highlights in Michigan music included the releases of Stevie Wonder's Fulfillingness' First Finale which reached #1 and won the Grammy for Album of the Year, Grand Funk Railroad's Shinin' On album with the #1 hit The Loco-Motion, and Aretha Franklin's Let Me in Your Life album that reached #1 on Billboard's R&B albums chart.

Office holders

State office holders

Sports

Baseball

The following is a list of major companies based in Michigan in 1974.
Company1974
Rank
1975
Rank
HeadquartersCore business
General Motors12DetroitAutomobiles
Ford Motor Company33DearbornAutomobiles
Chrysler411Highland ParkAutomobiles
Dow Chemical Company3827MidlandChemicals
Bendix Corporation6176SouthfieldAutomotive brakes, vacuum tubes, aeronautical hydraulics and electric power systems, avionics, fuel control systems, radios, televisions and computers
American Motors8893DetroitAutomobiles
Whirlpool Corporation97122Benton HarborHome appliances
Clark Equipment Company149148BuchananIndustrial and construction machinery and equipment
Kellogg Co.197200Battle CreekCereal products
Gerber Products Company461--FremontBaby food
Burroughs CorporationDetroitBusiness equipment
National Bank of DetroitDetroitBanking
Detroit EdisonDetroitElectric utility
Ex-Cell-OTroyEngine components, auto parts, machine tools
MascoTaylorHome improvement and construction products
S. S. Kresge CorporationTroyKmart and Kresge retail stores
Monroe Auto Equipment Co.MonroeAuto parts
UpjohnKalamazooPharmaceutical
SteelcaseGrand RapidsOffice, educational, and health care furniture
Consumers PowerJacksonNatural gas utility
Michigan National Corp.Bloomfield HillsBanking
AmwayAdaConsumer products, direct selling

Chronology of events

January

Births

Deaths