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Ready to Sell Your Wyandotte Michigan Home?

CONSIDER IT SOLD!

Avoid the hassle of realtors and repairs. Get A Fair “AS IS” Cash Offer. And you choose the closing date.

Sell your home the easy way by dealing directly with a LOCAL cash buyer.

  • No lowball offers
  • No sales pitch
  • No hard sell

Stop wasting time. Fill out the form and let’s get started!

Need To Sell An Inherited, Probate, or Estate Home?

We buy houses as-is, in ANY CONDITION, for cash - and we've been working with estates since 2004. Enter your information below to get an offer in 24 hours.....
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We Buy Inherited, Estate and Probate Houses In Any Condition or Price Range In Wyandotte Michigan
Call Us First to Sell Your Inherited Property

Need to sell your inherited, probate, or estate house… we’d like to make you a fair all-cash offer.  And we’ll even GUARANTEE that offer and can have a check in your hand in as little as 7 days. Just give us a call at (248) 460-1606 to get a quick offer over the phone today… or fill out the simple form on this site. At Sell Inherited House Wyandotte Michigan we’re experts on the probate process.

We buy inherited houses in any condition… as-is… let us take over the burden of that unwanted property.

There are lots of situations in addition to inherited and estate homes where we can help, including… avoiding foreclosure, divorce, relocating, own a vacant house, upside down in your mortgage, behind on payments, owe liens, downsized and can’t sell your house, needs repairs you can’t pay for, fire damaged, bad rental tenants, and more.

Basically, if you have a property and need to sell it… we’d like to make you a fair cash offer and close on it when you’re ready.

Do You Need To Sell An Inherited House in Wyandotte Michigan?

Sell Inherited House Wyandotte Michigan
We Can Buy Your Wyandotte Michigan home.

You’ve tried to sell your house but are running into roadblocks.  You probably even tried calling a real estate agent. Sometimes selling a house the traditional way with a real estate agent is simply not the best for everyone.  As you know, there can be lots of pitfalls when selling a house the agent route, including: having to clean up and repair the property so it shows well, finding an agent who you trust and who can deliver on their promise (selling your house quickly), signing a contract that binds you to an agent for a certain term, the piles of paperwork you have to sign, shuffling paperwork back and forth from buyer –> to agent –> to you… and back.

The biggest issue with trying to sell with a real estate agent or selling it yourself is often times retail buyers will tie up a home for weeks and pull out on the deal at the last second… or have their bank loan fall through.

It can all add stress, months to the process, and in the end after paying the agent fees, you may or may not be ahead of the game.

At Sell Inherited House Wyandotte Michigan we’re different – and that’s a good thing.  We will provide you a fair all-cash offer on your house within 24 hours of submitting the short property info form below and can close when you want to closeIf the house is in terrible shape and you don’t want to (or can’t) fix it up… NO problem, we’ll deal with it for you.  If you need to get something done quickly, we can close in as little as 7 days because we buy houses with cash and don’t have to rely on traditional bank financing. (Go here to learn about our process <<)

In short…

 No matter the condition of your house – your situation – or timeframe… 

Our goal is to help make your life easier and to get out from under a property that’s stressing you out… while still paying a fast, fair, and honest price for your house.

Sell Your House Now - Please Submit Your Property Info Below

... to receive a fair all cash offer and to download our free guide.
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Or Call or Text Us At (248) 460-1606

About Wyandotte Michigan

Wyandotte is a city in Wayne County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 25,883 at the 2010 census, a decrease of 7.6% from 2000. Wyandotte is located in southeastern Michigan, approximately 11 miles south of Detroit on the Detroit River, and is part of the collection of communities known as Downriver. Wyandotte is bounded by Southgate (west), Lincoln Park (northwest), Riverview (south), Ecorse (north) and Lasalle (east).

Wyandotte is a sister city to Komaki, Japan, and each year delegates from Komaki come to Wyandotte to tour the city.

Originally founded as a village in 1854 (deeded by John Biddle to Eber Ward, et al. on December 12, 1854), Wyandotte was incorporated as a city, and granted a charter by the State of Michigan, on December 12, 1866, with the first city election held in April 1867, thus making it the oldest incorporated city in Wayne County other than Detroit. The site where Wyandotte sits today in the 18th century was a small village called by the native Indians “Maquaqua” and by the local French “Monguagon”. This Native American tribe was known as the Wyandot or Wendat, and were part of the Huron nation originally from the Georgian Bay area of Canada. It was from near here, along the banks of Ecorse Creek, now a northern boundary of the present-day city, that Chief Pontiac plotted his failed attack against the British garrisoned Fort of Detroit, in 1763.

The center of the village was nearly parallel to Biddle Avenue between Oak Street and Eureka Road near the river and its sandy beach, which was a welcome feature to the local tribesmen, as their main mode of transportation to the fort in Detroit was by birch bark canoe. The tribe was considered peaceable and friendly with the British, the remaining French in the area, and the newly arrived Americans. They were a farming tribe and were therefore fairly stable in their settlement, relying heavily on hunting in the local surrounding hardwood forest, fishing from the river, and trading with the nearby fort and associated settlers to supplement their existence.

Between Maquaqua/Wyandotte and Detroit (a distance of roughly 10 to 12 miles) there were numerous settlers living along the river who inhabited their ancient “Ribbon Farms”, some dating back to the time of Antoine Cadillac’s founding of “Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit”, in July 1701. In 1818, the Wyandot signed a treaty with the U.S. government relinquishing this land, moving to an area near Flat Rock, Michigan, then to Ohio, Kansas and finally Oklahoma. The name somewhat lives on as Wyandotte County, Kansas

One of the first white settlers to come to Wyandotte in the years after the Native Americans left was John Biddle, a Pennsylvania-born former Army major who fought in the War of 1812 and later went on to a prolific political career, serving as mayor of Detroit, delegate from the Territory of Michigan in the U.S. Congress, president of the Michigan Central Railroad, member and later speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives and one-time candidate for Michigan Governor. West Jefferson Avenue, which begins in downtown Detroit and runs south to Berlin Township, becomes Biddle Avenue within Wyandotte city limits.

Biddle purchased a 2,200-acre plot near modern Biddle Avenue and Vinewood Avenue in 1835 and created a farm he called “The Wyandotte.” He sold the plot in 1854 to Eber Ward of the Eureka Iron Co. for $44,000. In 1864, Captain Eber Brock Ward used a high-quality grade of iron ore (known as “Superior”) from the recently opened Marquette Range in the Upper Peninsula, and smelted it into the first Bessemer Steel commercially cast in America, using the patented Bessemer process. In 1865, the process created steel rails and allowed an explosion of iron-related businesses to open in the region. As a result, Detroit soon became a major center of iron production, especially for use in stoves. Wyandotte was home to several companies as well, including the Regeant Stove Co. It would be this technology that would give Henry Ford from nearby Dearborn the capabilities to create large amounts of steel for his automobile assembly lines.

John S. Van Alstyne, General Manager for Eber Ward of both the Eureka Iron & Steel Works and the associated Wyandotte Rolling Mills, laid out the master plan for the city. This plan was frequently called the “Philadelphia Plan”, with streets laid out on a north/south and east/west grid. Streets going along one axis were named after native plants and trees; the streets running away from the river, into the interior, were simply numbered. Van Alstyne was elected as the city’s first mayor in 1867. (A street along Wyandotte’s Detroit River is named after him – ironically on the site of the former iron works he managed, after it failed and was razed around 1904.) He would also go on to found the Wyandotte Savings Bank in 1871, which was housed in the Main Office building of the Eureka Iron Works which still stands at the southwest corner of Biddle and Elm; though greatly remodeled it remains the oldest building in the city today for decades until it relocated into a new building at the northwest corner of Biddle and Eureka Road in 1981, where it remained until it was acquired in January 1989 by NBD Bancorp. Today, Chase Bank, the successor to NBD, continues to operate in the same building, sharing it with the Wyandotte City Hall, which relocated into that building from a former department store a block north in late 2012.

Eureka Iron Works prospered through the late 19th century but suffered a shortage of raw materials. It closed in 1892, but not before Wyandotte became a major hub in the chemical production industry, possible because of the many salt mines deep below the city.

A community named New Jerusalem consisting of immigrants from multiple nations was founded in the 1890s in what is now Wyandotte. It was incorporated as a vilalge with the name of Glenwood in 1900. In 1901 a post office was established here with the name of Bacon since there was already a Glenwood post office in Wayne Township, Cass County, Michigan. Wyandotte annexed the community in 1905.

The community of Ford City was founded as a village in 1902. It was named for John B. Ford who ran the Michigan Alkali Company there. In 1922 it merged with Wyandotte.

Learn more about Wyandotte here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wyandotte,_Michigan

Sell Inherited House Wyandotte Michigan

We help property owners just like you, in all kinds of situations.  From divorce, foreclosure, death of a family member, burdensome rental property, and all kinds of other situations.  Need to Sell Inherited House Wyandotte Michigan? We buy inherited, probate, and estate houses in Wyandotte Michigan.  Sometimes, those who own property simply have lives that are too busy to take the time to do all of things that typically need to be done to prepare a house to sell on the market… if that describes you, just let us know about the property you’d like to be rid of and sell your house fast for cash. Visit NOLO Press for more information on the probate process in Michigan.

If you prefer to talk to someone in our office before submitting your property information just give us a call today at (248) 460-1606.

Need to Sell Inherited House Wyandotte Michigan? We buy inherited, probate, and estate houses in Wyandotte Michigan. If you need to Sell Inherited House Wyandotte Michigan, then connect with us… we’d love to make you a fair no-obligation no-hassle offer. Take it or leave it. You’ve got nothing to lose 🙂

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