JUNE 26 ISSUE ANSWERS: EDITOR’S NOTE: This is a continuation of the column from last week detailing Cynthia Bailey’s trek to the Michigan wilderness we now call Romeo. Pictured is Cynthia Bailey’s family’s last house, which was moved from South Main Street to Sission Street. Cynthia Bailey and her family continued to be most hospitable to newly arriving settlers, asking for no compensation because of their desire to promote growth in Town 5, Indian Village, later called Romeo. They also became “fast and trusted friends of the Indians.” The first log house first occupied and purchased by the Bailey’s from Jeremiah Allen, recorded by the Bureau of Land Management. It was at the east half of the southwest quarter of Section 35 of Bruce Township, historically in Town 5. It consisted of approximately 80 acres. Today locals would know it as located approximately from East St. Clair Street to Gates Street; from Chandler Street to Jeffrey Court, (McVicker Road). Could you imagine not knowing, in this wilderness when an exhausted family may arrive at your doorstep needing to be fed, horses or oxen