Let Us Restore Your Peace-of-Mind…FAST
For you to be visiting our website you’re either experiencing the horrible feeling of being exposed to and invaded by the outside elements because of a roof leak, OR, you’re doing your advance homework because you know your “ugly” roof means it’ll soon be a “leaky” roof (kudos to you either way). If you’re located in Plymouth, MI, you can RELAX, because you’ve found a site with just you in mind.
READ MOREBecome an Expert at Buying Contractor Services In Plymouth, MI
One of the first things you’ll notice about Rapid Roofing is that rather than us blithering on and on about how great we are at solving every type of roofing problem (which of course we are), we’d rather convey to you what’s necessary for you to obtain your best deal for price & value. To accomplish this, you need to become an expert at buying what we sell, solutions to your roofing problems. Your peace-of-mind is also restored, you can’t have “buyer’s remorse”, and here’s our payback, you’ll enjoy a job done well and happily refer us to your family and friends. Now there’s a WIN-WIN…
Plymouth, MI History Tidbit
The first settlers to come to what is now known as Plymouth, Michigan, were Keziah (Benjamin) and William Starkweather. Farmers from Preston, Connecticut, they purchased 240 acres (240 acres (0.97 km2)) of land from the United States Government on March 11, 1825, for $1.25 an acre. The Starkweather clan had lived in Preston at least as early as 1694, according to records of a land gift in which Captain John Masons gave land to Robert Starkweather, William's grandfather. William, ninth born of 11 siblings, and his wife Keziah brought their first born son Albert to the area, and built the first home in Plymouth, at the southwest Corner of Main Street and Ann Arbor Trail. The first home was a rustic lean-to, and was later replaced by a log cabin which has since been lost to time. William's eldest son Albert died at age 20 while attending the newly formed University of Michigan as a sophomore. George Anson Starkweather, William's second-born, was the first non-native American born within the boundaries of what is now known as the City of Plymouth. His father William died at 44 years of age, from typhoid, and his mother Keziah two years later, leaving their eldest son George at 20 years of age.






