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Gazetteer
Hersey, MI -- U.S. village in Michigan
Population (2000): 374
Housing Units (2000): 169
Land area (2000): 1.089259 sq. miles (2.821169 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.089259 sq. miles (2.821169 sq. km)
FIPS code: 37820
Located within: Michigan (MI), FIPS 26
Location: 43.849732 N, 85.442176 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 49639
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Hersey, MI
Hersey
Wikipedia
Hersey

Hersey may refer to:

Hersey (MBTA station)

Hersey is a passenger rail station on the MBTA Commuter Rail Needham Line, located in the Bird's Hill section of Needham, Massachusetts. The station serves as a park-and-ride, with easy access from Route 128. Hersey station has been open since 1917, except for an 8-year closure during Southwest Corridor construction. It is fully handicapped accessible.

Hersey (name)

Hersey is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include:

Surname:

  • David Hersey (born 1939), American lighting designer
  • Ira G. Hersey (1858–1943), politician from the U.S. state of Maine
  • John Hersey (1914–1993), American writer
  • Kathleen Hersey (born 1990), American swimmer
  • Samuel F. Hersey (1812–1875), politician from the U.S. state of Maine
  • Thayer David, born David Thayer Hersey (1927–1978), American actor
  • Mark L. Hersey (1863–1934), United States Army officer

Given name:

  • Hersey Hawkins (born 1966), former American professional basketball player
  • Hersey Kyota, Palau politician

Usage examples of "hersey".

When I read the article, I got a funny feeling in the pit of my stomach, because Hersey had once plagiarized from my mother.

And, even though Hersey is dead and this story has long been forgotten by everyone outside our family, you can't take that away from her.

He told me that several other people, including an emeritus professor at the University of Chicago, had already called to report that, over the years, Hersey had lifted their words as well.

Jackson Hersey picked up a Saturday Evening Post, began to flip through it, and did a double-take.

Some of the older women in town - Mabel Werts, Glynis Mayberry, Audrey Hersey - remember that Larry McLeod found some charred papers in the upstairs fireplace, but none of them know that the papers were the accumulation of twelve years' correspondence between Hubert Marsten and an amusingly antique Austrian nobleman named Breichen, or that the correspondence of these two had commenced through the offices of a rather peculiar Boston book merchant who died an extremely nasty death in 1933, or that Hubie had burned each and every letter before hanging himself, feeding them to the fire one at a time, watching the flames blacken and char the thick, cream-colored paper and obliterate the elegant, spider-thin calligraphy.

Mrs Hersey told police officers that her aunt was a shut-in and is in poor health.