The voters' adoption of a new Michigan Constitution (AP-1, DFP-1);
Gov. George W. Romney's fiscal reform campaign, including a proposed state income tax that was defeated by the Legislature (AP-2, DFP-4);
A boom year for the automobile industry (AP-6, DFP-2);
Racial demonstrations, including the June 23 Detroit Walk to Freedom that drew an estimated crowd of 125,000 and was known as "the largest civil rights demonstration in the nation's history" up to that date (AP-7, DFP-3);
A botulism outbreak that (i) killed two Grosse Ile women in March tied to canned tuna, (ii) resulted in two additional deaths in October tied to smoked whitefish, and (iii) caused five deaths in the south traced to Michigan-packaged smoked chubs; some of the botulism was traced to smoked fish canned in Grand Haven (AP-4, DFP-7);
The ouster of Joe Collins led by former Gov. John Swainson and selection of Zolton Ferency as chairman of the state Democratic Party at the February convention in Grand Rapids (AP-9, DFP-6);
Detroit's bid to host the 1968 Summer Olympics, ending with the International Olympic Committee's selection of Mexico City on October 18 (AP-8, DFP-8);
The April escape of four prisoners from the Michigan State Prison in Jackson leading to an intensive manhunt (AP-11 [tie], DFP-9);
The disappearance and murder of Joan Watkins, a 28-year-old housewife and mother from Brooklyn, Michigan (AP-11 [tie], DFP-10);
The impact on Michigan of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy (AP-3);
The July 27 collapse of a bridge into the Clinton River, causing injury to 48 persons, during a golf tournament at Hillcrest Country Club in Macomb County; and
In the 1960 United States census, Michigan was recorded as having a population of 7,823,194 persons, ranking as the seventh most populous state in the country. By 1970, the state's population had grown 13.4% to 8,875,083 persons.
Cities
The following is a list of cities in Michigan with a population of at least 60,000 based on 1960 U.S. Census data. Historic census data from 1950 and 1970 is included to reflect trends in population increases or decreases. Cities that are part of the Detroit metropolitan area are shaded in tan.
The following is a list of counties in Michigan with populations of at least 100,000 based on 1960 U.S. Census data. Historic census data from 1950 and 1970 are included to reflect trends in population increases or decreases. Counties that are part of the Detroit metropolitan area are shaded in tan.
1963 Detroit Lions season – The Lions, under head coach George Wilson, compiled a 5–8–1 record and finished in fourth place in the NFL's West Division. The team's statistical leaders included Earl Morrall with 2,621 passing yards, Dan Lewis with 528 rushing yards, and Terry Barr with 1,086 receiving yards and 78 points scored.[7]
January 7 - Henry Ford II announced a $400 million expansion plan for Ford Motor Company, including $50-60 million in the Detroit area
January 8 - Detroit Police Commissioner George Edwards charged that several Detroit Lions players, including Alex Karras and Wayne Walker, were associating with "notorious gamblers"[22]
January 12 - Three persons were killed when a plane crashed into the back yard of a home in Warren, Michigan
January 23-24 - Cold weather covers much of the country with over 100 deaths; Detroit records a record 12 degrees below zero
January 28 - General Motors announced a 1962 profit of $1.459 billion, the largest corporate profit in history
February
February 5 - Following a month of sniper shootings in Oakland County, a 15-year-old genius (140 IQ) from Bloomfield Township, Douglas Cooper Godfrey, was arrested. He confessed to shooting and killing his mother.[23] A 22-year-old Novi man confessed on February 7 to another shooting which was intended to copy the Bloomfield shooter.
February 6 - Ford Motor Company announced record 1962 profits of $480.7 million.
February 15 - Studebaker announced it would install seatbelts on all new cars, becoming the first auto maker to make the commitment.
February 18 - General Motors announced a $1.25 billion expansion plan, including $500 million in investments in Michigan
February 24 - The executive offices of Hygrade Food Products in Detroit were destroyed by a fire.
March
March 4 - Detroit Tigers holdout Rocky Colavito signed a $54,000 contract with the club.
March 18 - Detroit announces as the winner of the USOC bid to host the 1968 Summer Olympics.[24]
April
April 7 - Three Central Michigan University students were killed and 12 injured as a wall collapsed in a burning building in Mount Pleasant.
April 9 - Arjay Miller was announced as the new president of Ford Motor Company.
April 12 - Two white men were arrested in Mississippi for throwing a firebomb into a house where Detroit Congressman Charles Diggs was staying.
April 16 - Chrysler announced a $36.2 million profit in first quarter with a 50% increase in sales.
April 17 - NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle suspended Lions' star Alex Karras for one year for betting on football games. Five other Lions were fined $2,000 each for betting on the 1962 NFL Championship Game.
April 18 - The Detroit Red Wings lost the final game of the 1963 Stanley Cup Finals to the Toronto Maple Leafs.
April 23 - Four prisoners escaped from Jackson Prison. The last three prisoners were captured on May 25 in Wisconsin.
April 24 - General Motors announced record profits of $414 million in first quarter on sales of $4.1 billion.
May
May 9 - Jimmy Hoffa was indicted on charges of tampering with a federal grand jury in Nashville.
June
June - Charles S. Mott gifted General Motors stock valued at $129 million to the Flint schools and other local programs.
June 4 - Jimmy Hoffa was indicted in Chicago on federal charges of fraudulently obtaining loans from Teamsters pension funds.
June 9 - A tornado injured 12 persons in Belmont, Michigan (north of Grand Rapids), with storms and flooding extending to Detroit
June 18 - Bob Scheffing was fired as manager of the Detroit Tigers
June 20 - Anthony Giacalone was arrested for bribing a police officer to lay off his gambling operation.
June 27 - The first public hearing is held on the new I-696 freeway which is expected to require demolition of 1,500 homes and businesses.
July
July 24 - The body of Detroit confidence man Sol C. Brodsky was discovered riddled with bullets in Macomb Township.
July 27 - A bridge collapsed into the Clinton River, causing injury to 48 persons, during a golf tournament at Hillcrest Country Club in Macomb County.[25]
July 29 - General Motors announced second quarter earnings that broke 10 records. Earnings for the first six months totaled $878 million on $8.668 billion in sales. Worldwide employment reached 641,449.
August
August 21 - General Motors and Chrysler announce that seat belts will be standard equipment starting in 1964.
September
September 19 - 40 persons arrested in Detroit drug raid; heroin and marijuana seized.
September 26 - An elephant escaped from a carnival, broke through the windows of a Lansing department store, and rampaged through the store.
September 29 - The Detroit Free Press publishes an investigative report on the runway at Selfridge Air Force Base built with defective concrete that has developed thousands of small holes, forcing the Air Force to declare it hazardous.
October
October 3-8 - Four die in botulism outbreak tied to smoked whitefish packaged in Michigan
October 5 - Unemployment rate in Michigan and Detroit area drops to 3.9%, the lowest level since 1955.
October 10 - Detroit Police Commissioner testified before Congress about the operations of the Mafia in Detroit.
October 11 - Michigan State Police raided the Star Social Club in Madison Heights, alleged to be a gambling operation tied to the Mafia.
October 25 - A five-year-old girl was kidnapped from a car in Lansing. She was found alive one day later.
October 28 - General Motors announced record profits of $1.086 billion for first three quarters on sales of $11.681 billion.
November
November 6 - Detroit's Archbishop John Dearden was appointed to the Vatican Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity.
November 9 - After a 10-year decline in Detroit's population from 1.905 million in 1953 to 1.620 million in 1963, Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission projected an increase in population moving forward.
November 10 - Gordie Howe scored his 545th regular season goal against the Montreal Canadiens, breaking the NHL record set by Maurice Richard.
November 18 - The Detroit Tigers traded Rocky Colavito to the Kansas City Athletics.
November 20 - A federal judge in Nashville charged that Jimmy Hoffa's attorney conspired to bribe a juror in Hoffa's trial for tampering with a grand jury.