2022 in Michigan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2022
in
Michigan

Decades:
See also:

Events from the year 2022 in Michigan.

State office holders

Gretchen Whitmer

Mayors of major cities

Mike Duggan

Federal office holders

Debbie Stabenow
Gary Peters

Population of largest cities

The state's 15 largest cities, based on U.S. Census estimates for 2021,[1] were as follows:

2021
rank
City County 2000 pop. 2010 pop. 2020 pop. 2021 pop. (est)[1] Change 2000-21
1DetroitWayne951,270713,777639,111632,464−33.5% Decrease
2Grand RapidsKent197,800188,036198,917198,1730.2% Increase
3Sterling HeightsMacomb124,471129,699134,346133,2697.1% Increase
4WarrenMacomb138,247134,056139,387138,1300.1% Decrease
5Ann ArborWashtenaw114,024113,934123,851121,5366.6% Increase
6LansingIngham119,128114,297112,644112,6845.4% Decrease
7DearbornWayne97,77598,153109,976108,4208.9% Increase
8LivoniaWayne100,54596,94295,53494,4226.1% Decrease
9TroyOakland80,95980,98087,29486,8367.3% Increase
10WestlandWayne86,60284,09485,42084,515
11Farmington HillsOakland82,11179,74083,98683,292
12FlintGenesee124,943102,43481,25280,62835.5% Decrease
13WyomingKent69,36872,12576,50176,749
14SouthfieldOakland78,32271,75876,61875,898
15KalamazooKalamazoo76,14574,26273,59873,257

Sports

Baseball

Miguel Cabrera became the newest member of the 3,000-hit club on April 23, 2022.

American football

Basketball

Ice hockey

Other

Chronology of events

Deaths

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI