JAN. 15 ISSUE ANSWERS: Sellecks or Armada Corners was a community at the corner of 32 Mile and Romeo Plank Roads. In the early 1800s it was a thriving place being a stage stop between Romeo and Richmond and between Romeo and Mount Clemens. At one time it boasted two hotels, one with saloon and one “temperance” house. After the coming of the railroad through Romeo, the corners declined for want of traffic. The photo above shows Chamberlain’s store at Sellecks. There was a dance hall upstairs with a spring floor. Folks came from miles around to dances and oyster suppers served in the hall. Mr. and Mrs. Southerlands, in last week’s photo, and the Selleck family had homes here. The Romeo Historical Society archives have many photos and paintings of these two families. The settlement had numerous mills that used the nearby North Branch of the Clinton River. Noah Webster had a saw mill in 1827 and a flour mill in 1836 nearby. The Selleck one room school was in the settlement. Grades were first through eighth. R. Beringer, Romeo Historical Society staff