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19½ years on Wikipedia! 💩
19½ years on Wikipedia! 💩




Notorious4life is the name I use on Wikipedia, where I have been active since March 20, 2005. I am just a freelance editor and try to avoid any involuntary responsibility or lengthy discussions. If it’s doesn't interest me or feel it's worth my time, I’m not going to do it. If it’s something that interests me, there’s no limit to the amount of time and effort I’ll put toward accomplishing my goal (if I know it's a goal I can accomplish). I was most prolific on Wikipedia from 2008–2012 and most recently since mid-2017. I have a pretty good understanding of article creation, photo uploading, and Wikipedia policies. I have created or significantly contributed the majority of content to over 190 articles. I have uploaded 1,635 pictures and created uncounted hundreds of image maps within the state of Michigan.

Biography

I was born in Monroe, Michigan in 1983 and grew up in Detroit Beach. I attended Jefferson Schools and graduated from Jefferson High School in 2001, Monroe County Community College with an associate degree in 2004, and Eastern Michigan University with a bachelor of science in 2008. I graduated with a teaching degree, emphasizing in social studies, history, and geography.

I have lived in Frenchtown Charter Township, Woodhaven, Brownstown Charter Township, Taylor, Canton Charter Township, and currently Sumpter Township. I am not religious but do hold strong conservative political ideologies. I am a strong supporter of Donald Trump. I detest liberals, modern hipsters, freeloading government moochers, and have a general disdain toward stereotypical Millennials and a dumber, technology-addicted society. I am a fan of the Detroit Tigers, The Simpsons, The Three Stooges, Nintendo, fishing and nature, camping, and drinking a lot of Budweiser (Bud Ice).

Wikipedia history

I joined Wikipedia in early-2005 and soon made my first article, Sandy Creek (original version), which is a small waterway near where I lived at the time. I'm surprised the poorly constructed article survived its infancy at a time when Wikipedia had only 750,000 articles. In my early years, I bounced around various interests, such as sparring in the AfD, CSD, and the now defunct RfD. I combated vandalism and argued adamantly in the debate of notability versus verifiability in article creations, especially after finding several flaws and conflicts in the AfD criteria that seemed to water down the Wikipedia inclusion process when terrible articles squeezed through the cracks. I am no longer involved in any of those discussions, although I make rare appearances in AfD to nominate local articles that should be deleted.

It took awhile to learn the processes of Wikipedia, and I began mass-creating articles of my own personal interest around 2009—particularly articles in my area of Monroe County, which seemed to lack many suitable articles of local importance, such as the George Armstrong Custer Equestrian Monument, River Raisin National Battlefield Park, and the Battle of Frenchtown. Using my interest in history and photography, I created or expanded the sub-articles for the National Register of Historic Places listings in Monroe County. I soon traveled to other counties for the same purpose: Lapeer, Lenawee, and St. Clair. I promoted the Michigan State Historic Preservation Office in order to recognize Michigan State Historic Sites—paving the way for the creation of numerous articles of local importance that otherwise may not have had the notability to have their own article unless labeled with a historic designation.

In 2010, I joined WikiProject Michigan and categorized thousands of articles, focusing much of my attention on Michigan's geography. I created the physical geography department in an attempt to standardize guidelines across the spectrum, but there seemed to be no other user involvement in the WikiProject and soon left to carry on work on my own. I expanded numerous articles and infoboxes relating to islands, rivers, lakes, and protected areas. I notably created or significantly expanded the articles for the Detroit River, List of islands in the Detroit River, Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge, and the exhaustive List of islands of Michigan and many sub-articles within. I also worked on island projects for other states, such as Arizona, Hawaii, and Wyoming. I bounced around through other interests, such as Major League Baseball, in which I created the articles for Shutouts in baseball and List of Major League Baseball annual shutout leaders—a highly underrated baseball statistic. I also spent a lot of time driving around Detroit and photographing various schools and blight (mostly from photo requests), but not so much anymore since it seems to be overplayed by other self-professed urban explorers with more time and better cameras.

From around 2013–2016, I was a rarer contributor to Wikipedia and made only sporadic and brief edits—sometimes going months without making an edit—but I have recently returned with newfound focus on improving articles within the state of Michigan.

Current activity

In the past few years, my focus has been to improve municipality and geography-related articles within the state of Michigan. Many articles contain outdated information, are poorly written and not sourced, and contain a lot of unprofessional tone (e.g. articles that read like they were written by a sixth grader who edited Wikipedia for the first time). I have traveled to most places within the state of Michigan (except western Upper Peninsula).


Created or significantly expanded articles
The colored bubbles represent the size of an article. For an explanation, see Template:Alr.
Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page This icon denotes articles that were featured in the Did You Know section on the Main Page. (9 total)


  1. Adrian Engine House No. 1
  2. Adrian Public Library
  3. Airport Community Schools
  4. Arch McCarthy
  5. Argo Dam
  6. Ayuba Suleiman Diallo
  7. Backus Creek State Game Area
  8. Barton Dam
  9. Battle of Frenchtown Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  10. Bedford Public Schools (Michigan)
  11. Belleville Lake
  12. Bois Blanc Pines School District
  13. Boynton–Oakwood Heights
  14. Brevort, Michigan
  15. Bridge School (Michigan) Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  16. Brookside Cemetery (Tecumseh, Michigan)
  17. Calf Island (Michigan)
  18. Civil War Memorial (Adrian, Michigan) Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  19. Comins, Michigan
  20. Cone, Michigan
  21. Curran, Michigan
  22. Currier House (Almont, Michigan)
  23. Curtis, Michigan
  24. Custer Airport
  25. Cut River
  26. Davenport House
  27. David Carpenter House
  28. Delray, Detroit
  29. Dennis–State Streets Historic District
  30. Detroit–Bay City Railroad Company Columbiaville Depot
  31. Dead Stream Flooding
  32. Detroit River
  33. Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge
  34. Dr. Leonard Hall House
  35. Dr. Samuel Catlin House
  36. Downtown Adrian Commercial Historic District
  37. Dundee Community Schools
  38. Dundee Historic District
  39. East Elm–North Macomb Street Historic District
  40. Edward Loranger House
  41. Eggleston School
  42. Elizabeth Park (Michigan)
  43. Elm Hall, Michigan
  44. Elmira, Michigan
  45. Emerson, Michigan
  46. Engadine, Michigan
  47. Epoufette, Michigan
  48. Eureka, Michigan
  49. First Presbyterian Church of Blissfield
  50. Flat Rock Dam
  51. Ford Lake Dam
  52. Ford Lake
  53. French Landing Dam and Powerhouse
  54. Frontier, Michigan
  55. Gamaliel Thompson House
  56. Garnet, Michigan
  57. Geddes Dam
  58. General Squier Historic Park Complex
  59. George Armstrong Custer Equestrian Monument Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  60. George B. Horton and Amanda Bradish Farmstead
  61. Gould City, Michigan
  62. Governor Charles Croswell House
  63. Governor Robert McClelland House
  64. G. P. Sparks House
  65. Grassy Island Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  66. Green Lake
  67. Gregory, Michigan
  68. Grosse Ile (Michigan)
  69. Hadley Flour and Feed Mill
  70. Helmer, Michigan
  71. Heman R. Goodrich House
  72. Henry Armstrong Reed
  73. Houghton Lake Flats
  74. Houghton Lake State Airport
  75. Hudson Downtown Historic District
  76. Ida, Michigan
  77. Ida Public Schools
  78. Indian Lake (Michigan)
  79. Jackson Branch Bridge No. 15
  80. Jefferson Avenue–Harbin Drive Bridges
  81. Jefferson Schools (Michigan)
  82. Jerome, Michigan
  83. John and Rosetta Lee House
  84. John Pennington–Henry Ford House
  85. John W. Day House
  86. John W. and Erena Alexander Rogers Keeney Farm
  87. John O'Connell (catcher)
  88. John O'Connell (second baseman)
  89. Joseph Armstrong House
  90. Joseph E. Hall House
  91. Lake Hudson Recreation Area
  92. Lake, Michigan
  93. Lake Missaukee
  94. Lapeer County Courthouse
  95. Lenawee County Courthouse
  96. List of CDPs in Michigan
  97. List of islands in Isle Royale National Park
  98. List of islands in the Detroit River
  99. List of islands of Arizona
  100. List of islands of Hawaii
  101. List of islands of Michigan
  102. List of islands of Wyoming
  103. List of Major League Baseball annual shutout leaders
  104. List of Michigan islands in Lake Huron
  105. List of Michigan state game and wildlife areas
  106. Little Long Lake (Clare County, Michigan)
  107. Long Lake (Kalkaska County, Michigan)
  108. Lorenzo Palmer and Ruth Wells House
  109. Luzerne, Michigan
  110. Mamajuda Island Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  111. Maple River State Game Area Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  112. Mason Consolidated Schools
  113. Marl Lake
  114. Marty O'Toole
  115. Maybee, Michigan
  116. McKinley, Michigan
  117. McMillan, Michigan
  118. Merritt, Michigan
  119. Metamora Crossroads Historic District
  120. Michigan State Historic Preservation Office
  121. Milan, Michigan
  122. Monroe County Community College
  123. Monroe County Intermediate School District
  124. Monroe County, Michigan
  125. Monroe, Michigan
  126. Monroe Public Schools (Michigan)
  127. Mooreville, Michigan
  128. Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks
  129. Mosherville, Michigan
  130. Nathaniel S. Wheeler House
  131. Navarre–Anderson Trading Post
  132. North Maumee Bay Archeological District
  133. NRHP listings in Lapeer County
  134. NRHP listings in Lenawee County
  135. NRHP listings in Monroe County
  136. Naubinway, Michigan
  137. Newport, Michigan
  138. Old Mill Museum (Dundee, Michigan)
  139. Old Village Historic District (Monroe, Michigan)
  140. Osseo, Michigan
  141. Ottawa Lake, Michigan
  142. Pac-In-Time
  143. Paint Creek
  144. Peninsular Paper Dam
  145. Piety Hill Historic District
  146. Pioneer State Bank No. 36
  147. Pointe Mouillee State Game Area
  148. Potter Cemetery
  149. Raisin Valley Friends Meetinghouse
  150. Randy Richardville
  151. Reedsburg Dam
  152. Rich Rowland
  153. River Raisin National Battlefield Park Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  154. Riverdale, Michigan
  155. Roscommon Zoo
  156. Roundhead (Wyandot) Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  157. Rudolph Nims House
  158. Saint Elizabeth's Church (Tecumseh, Michigan)
  159. Saint John's Lutheran Church (Adrian, Michigan)
  160. Saint Joseph Church and Shrine
  161. Saint Mary of Good Counsel Catholic Church
  162. St. Mary's Church Complex Historic District
  163. Saint Michael Church and Cambridge Cemetery
  164. Samaria, Michigan
  165. Sam Gray
  166. Samuel W. Temple House
  167. Sandy Creek (Michigan)
  168. Sawyer House (Monroe, Michigan)
  169. Scofield, Michigan
  170. Seal River
  171. Sherman, Michigan
  172. Shutouts in baseball Appeared on Did You Know (DYK) on the Main Page
  173. Somerset Center, Michigan
  174. Sterling State Park
  175. Super Baseball 2020
  176. Superior Dam
  177. Summerfield Schools
  178. Tecumseh Downtown Historic District
  179. The Island House
  180. Topinabee, Michigan
  181. Tower, Michigan
  182. Trenton Channel Power Plant
  183. Turtle Island (Lake Erie)
  184. Walker Tavern
  185. Waters, Michigan
  186. Weis Manufacturing Company
  187. West Saint Clair Street Historic District
  188. Whiteford Agricultural Schools
  189. Whittaker, Michigan
  190. William Hayden House (Tecumseh, Michigan)
  191. Willis, Michigan
  192. Willow, Michigan
  193. Winn, Michigan
  194. Woodland Cemetery (Monroe, Michigan)
  195. Younge Site