Leapin' Lilacs.  A bouquet of springtime floral fragrance.
You'll swear you have a lilac bush in the house

Yet another Detroit name with a pronunciation that confounds outsiders, Livernois Avenue runs from the Detroit River all the way north to the city's border with Ferndale. Halted near Nine Mile it reemerges as Main St. in Royal Oak and Clawson, and finally gives up the fight altogether when it meets up with Rochester's Paint Creek.

Hallmarks along Livernois's Detroit route make it one of the most fascinating capsules of Motor City history. It takes its name from one of earliest settlers to Fort Detroit du Ponchartrain, Francois Benoit, called Livernois, who arrived at the New France settlement on April 2, 1707. A century later, land-claim documents show a large swath of land near the foot of Livernois listed to his descendant. Some of that was requisitioned by the federal government in the early 1840s when the Patriot Rebellion broke out in Canada. Fearing a British-backed invasion, the U.S. government planned a series of border defense fortifications that would stretch from New England all the way to Minnesota. One of the few built was Fort Wayne, which has garrisoned thousands of U.S. soldiers from the Civil War until World War II eras, but whose cannons have never fired a shot.

Livernois Avenue also hosts another historic Detroit treasure: Baker's Keyboard Lounge, the world's longest running jazz club. Opened in 1934 as a neighborhood bar near 8 Mile when the area was largely farmland, Baker's has hosted luminaries from the world of jazz from Art Tatum to John Coltrane. Baker's famous keyboard-shaped bar even inspired a visiting Liberace to install a piano-shaped pool at his Beverly Hills palace. Baker's is still thumping after seven decades in business and remains the last of the city's once-legendary jazz joints along with the vaunted Bluebird Inn on Tireman Avenue.

Livernois Avenue was also known for decades as Detroit's "Avenue of Fashion" for its blocks of posh clothing retailers like B. Siegel. Though many of the original stores are gone and largely forgotten, a stretch near 7 Mile retains some of the old retail flavor.


Purchase this candle which includes this Detroit Scents of History


Read more:

Save Historic Fort Wayne

Baker's Keyboard Lounge
Motor City Candleworks, based in the historic Russell Industrial Center in Detroit, Michigan, makes candles and incense with local flavor.

Our Detroit Scents of History™ candles are all named for a piece of Detroit History. It could be a person, a place, or a thing. Included with each of these candles is a short story about it's namesake.

We also make candles named for places around our great, Great Lake State. We call these candles, Great Lakes Scents.

In addition to candles, we also make some killer incense. We call it Motor City Incense and it, too, is named for places around Michigan.

You can always find great deals on our home page, or click any of the links above to browse through all our products.

Do you want to know more about Motor City Candleworks, and our cool home in an old auto factory? Then click here.

In addition to all this, we can also create a fundraising program for your non-profit, or create custom candles for your business or event.

To reach us, you can alway send us an email, or call (313) 254-4799.  

 

Candle & Incense Burning Tips    -    Retail Locations   -  Privacy Statement   -    Contact Us

Scents of History™, Detroit Scenic Scents™, D-Lights™, Motor City D-Lights™ and Great Lakes Scents™
are trademarks of Motor City Candleworks.
All rights reserved.

© 2009 Motor City Candleworks