About Us

Location

Spring Hill is formally comprised of five platted subdivisions in two disjoint groupings. The original Spring Hill, Spring Hill 1, and Spring Hill 2 are located to the east of Adams Rd (Hillendale and Rhineberry entrances) and south of Walton Blvd (East Maryknoll entrance). Spring Hill 3 and Spring Hill 4 are located north of Avon (Castlebar Dr entrance). Meadow Brook Elementary is located in this section of the neighborhood.

History

The Spring Hill subdivision began in 1955 when the land was purchased by Edward M. Stout, a Pontiac real estate investor. As the years went on, more land was added to the subdivision.

There is a great write up on the blog, Remembering Rochester, that speaks to the history of the subdivision:

The Spring Hill subdivisions near the southeast corner of Walton and Adams roads stand on land that was owned by the Ross family for most of the nineteenth century. The property was originally purchased from the federal government in 1825 by Needham Hemingway, a settler who came to Oakland County from Monroe County, New York and built a grist mill in Oakland Township around which the settlement of Goodison would eventually form. By 1857, John Ross, a local builder who had migrated to Michigan from Northampton County, Pennsylvania, owned the land. It later passed to John Ross’s sons, George S. Ross and David H. Ross.

We have some information about the inhabitants of the area before Needham Hemingway bought the land, however. This item published in the Rochester Era on November 3, 1899, tells us:

D.H. Ross of Southwest Avon brought to The Era office last Friday a rare collection of Indian arrowheads which he picked up on his farm. In early days an Indian trail ran through the farm and the redmen were in the habit of camping near by on Renshaw’s lake [the lake referred to here was on the Jacob Miller farm just to the south of the Ross property and is also known as Miller’s Lake on most maps]. Mr. Ross says that he has gathered more than a bushel of arrowheads and other Indian relics, but had given the most of them away. The arrowheads are made of a flinty stone, which looks very much like that which abounds in the Lake Superior region.

The Ross land was eventually purchased by Pontiac real estate investor Edward M. Stout, and in the spring of 1955, his widow, Grace, platted the first Spring Hill subdivision on it. Subsequent Spring Hill subdivisions were platted later in 1955, in 1957 and 1959, and were developed by the Howard T. Keating real estate firm, which offered new houses in the $25-30,000 range. Today there are 323 [sic] lots in the combined Spring Hill subdivisions. The original Spring Hill subdivision celebrates its 55th birthday in 2010.

The neighborhood now consists of 320 lots containing 318 homes. This has created a vibrant, multi-generational place to live!

After a few years of inactivity, the homeowners association was rebooted in 2015. You can read about this process on Brahm Windeler’s Exposure report.

Board Members

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Ben Galliway

President

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[Vacant]

Vice President

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Brahm Windeler

Treasurer

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Leah Roberts

Secretary

Committees

We have a number of committees to focus on improving community experience within the neighborhood. If you are interested in volunteering on any of these committees, please drop us a line!

  • Architectural Control Committee
  • Social Event Committee: Kelly Kamman, Melanie Sinka, Laura Schlitt
  • Welcome Committee: Cindy Schurman, Barb Pacella
  • Entrance Sign Committee: John Pacella, Brahm Windeler, Ben Galliway