city, Berrien county, southwestern Michigan, U.S. It lies on Lake Michigan near the mouth of the St. Joseph River, opposite its twin city of St. Joseph. Originally called Brunson Harbor and a part of St. Joseph, it was renamed for Thomas Hart Benton (a Missouri senator who had supported statehood for Michigan) and was separately incorporated as a village in 1869, following a disagreement over bridging the river. The House of David, a religious sect, established a colony there in 1903. The city is also the site of Lake Michigan (junior) College (1946). Benton Harbor grew as a marketing and trucking centre for Michigan's fruit belt, a centre of industry, and the hub of a popular tourist region. In the 1960s and '70s, however, the city's manufacturing base and its population declined sharply. By the mid-1980s most businesses in the downtown area had closed. Inc. city, 1891. Pop. (1960) city, 19,136; (1990) city, 12,818; Benton Harbor MSA, 161,361; (1994 est.) city, 13,186; Benton Harbor MSA, 161,845.
BENTON HARBOR
Meaning of BENTON HARBOR in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012