Frontier, Michigan Statistic: Population, Charts, Map, Steets and More

The first question that many people ask after playing the game is, "What are the Population and Steets in Frontier City?" The answer to this question is not as simple as it seems, but it's a good indicator of how the city's future might look. Here are some interesting facts about this small city located in the foothills. Among other things, it was named after a popular Buffalo, New York, city.

Chicago was a frontier town for nearly two centuries. Until the opening of its first railroad, it was an isolated settlement. But as railroading spread across the nation, Chicago quickly began to trade its frontier status for that of a major transportation hub. The Michigan Southern and the Michigan Central railroads provided direct rail lines to the Atlantic, which gave Chicago the title of "capital of everything west of it."

In "Population & Steets in Frontier City," Graham Denyer Willis and Diane Davis extend Castell's insight to the Global South. In conflict-ridden nations, cities become sites of flows and are connected to alternative regimes of authority. Urban flows are shaped by illicit cross-national economies and the role of the state oscillates between militarized presence and selective absence. They are places where the state is a marginal presence.