I hope you dont have dial up!!

fun for the average person!


im not kidding hell is in Michigen!

thre are about 3-5 citys/towns with the name hell. did you know hell has a ski resort? and it snows in hell. figures?

pictures of hell

http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images/view?back=http%3A%2F%2Fimages.search.yahoo.com%2Fsearch%2Fimages%3Fei%3DUTF-8%26p%3Dhell%252C%2520MI%26fr2%3Dtab-web%26fr%3Dyfp-t-501&w=500&h=375&imgurl=static.flickr.com%2F33%2F39710720_24383e0cb0_m.jpg&rurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.flickr.com%2Fphotos%2Fascites29%2F39710720%2F&size=86.1kB&name=39710720_24383e0cb0.jpg&p=hell%2C+MI&type=jpeg&no=2&tt=6,790&oid=fea03f32fe065962&fusr=Ascites29&tit=Hell+MI&hurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.flickr.com%2Fphotos%2Fascites29%2F&ei=UTF-8&src=p               

A view of Hell 

A view of Hell
 
The country store in Hell as seen in July, 2005.  
              
 
 

 

Hell's main export is kitsch. It has a "fully non-accredited" college that sells "signed, sealed and singed" diplomas, a motorcycle dealership, an ice cream parlor (called Screams Ice Cream) and a small general store. In the early 1930s, Pinckney, Michigan postmaster W. C. Miller began to receive requests from stamp and postmark collectors for cancellations: Hell had no post office, and Pinckney was barely three miles away. On July 15, 1961, a postal substation was established at Hell, operating from May 1 through September 30. It remains today, at the back of the general store, although the United States Postal Service does not recognize Hell as a town, but instead uses the nearby Pinckney name as the actual mailing address.

Hell Creek runs through town, and through a small dam; a bar next to the creek is known as "The Dam Site Inn". This has produced the tongue-in-cheek phrase "dammed to Hell". The dam burst due to heavy rains in the 1970s, causing Detroit-area newsreaders (including Bill Bonds) to exclaim, "There's a dam break in Hell tonight!"

Hell also sponsors a running event called "Run Thru Hell 10 mile and 4.8 mile race."[3] Each participant is given a T-shirt that says "I Ran Thru Hell". The Ann Arbor Bicycle Touring Society hosts an annual recreational event called "One Helluva Ride."

In 1995, when the nearby Detroit Red Wings played the New Jersey Devils in the Stanley Cup Finals, WXYZ-TV, the Detroit affiliate of ABC (Channel 7), did a report on whether the residents of Hell would root for the Devils. Most interviewees decided to stick with the home-state Red Wings. (The Devils won in four straight games anyway.)

Kiwanis International chartered the Kiwanis Club of Hell, Michigan on December 15, 2001 as the Michigan District's first Internet club. The club meets in private AOL chatroom, "Kiwanis Online".[4]

Hell also had a party on June 6, 2006 (6/6/6). Among other things, they had live entertainment and a costume contest. There were souvenirs, most selling for $6.66.[5]

Numerous other events take place in Hell, such as the Blessing of the Rides, where clergy bless attendees' motorcycles. The Vista Cruise to Hell and Back is held at Hell Creek Ranch every Father's Day weekend by the GM Skywagon Club.[6]

Because of Michigan's climate, people watch for Hell to "freeze over" every winter, a fact which provides amusement and yearly grist in various media. Hell residents, referred to as "Hellions", determine if Hell has frozen over by whether the water over the spillway of the dam between Screams Ice Cream and the Dam Site Inn had stopped flowing. This has happened only once in recorded history, on January 24, 2004[citation needed].

Total Nonstop Action Wrestling wrestler Chris Sabin is billed as coming from Hell, Michigan, though he is actually from nearby Pinckney.                 

 

How hell got its name

For several hundred years, the low, swampy area was occupied mostly by the Potawatomi tribe. Later, in the early 19th century, it was the most unpleasant part of a trail between Lansing and Dexter (which at the time contained a major farmers market) and a point on the route taken by traders portaging between the Huron River and the Grand River.

In the late 1830s, George Reeves, a New York farmer, started several businesses in the area — a general store, and a watermill, and a distillery — which became the core of a minor population center; by the 1840s, enough people had immigrated to make a 70-person school viable (assuming 19th century birth rates, this pegs the population somewhere close to its current level).

There are two leading theories cited by residents for the origin of Hell's name:

The first holds that a pair of German travelers stepped out of a stagecoach one sunny afternoon in the 1830s, and one said to the other, "So schön und hell!" - roughly translated as, "So beautiful and bright!" Their comments were overheard by some locals and the name stuck.[1]

The second holds that after Michigan gained statehood, George Reeves was asked what he thought the town he helped settle should be called, and replied, "I don't care, you can name it Hell for all I care." The name became official on October 13, 1841

Create a free website at Webs.com