Historic Photos of Lake Michigan
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The vast lingering remnant of an ice age that came to a close more than 10,000 years ago, Lake Michigan has shaped the history of the settlements along its surrounding shores for centuries. Its storied waters have seen schooners, luxury steamships, and modern freighters, its lakeshores the rise of the railroads that helped to carve a way of life into the surrounding wooded wilderness for the Americans who called the region home. Through high times and lean, the lake’s 1,640 miles of coastline have clung to their untamed beauty even as bustling harbor hamlets and booming cities like Chicago and Milwaukee rose in their midst.
Historic Photos of Lake Michigan chronicles portions of two centuries on and around Lake Michigan—the only great lake entirely within United States borders, the third-largest of the five Great Lakes, and the fifth-largest freshwater lake in the world—showcasing the ever-changing life and landscape along its quartz crystal coast.
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Historic Photos of Lake Michigan - Lynda Twardowski
HISTORIC PHOTOS OF
LAKE MICHIGAN
TEXT AND CAPTIONS BY LYNDA TWARDOWSKI
Sheboygan County’s Crystal Lake, pictured here in 1912, is one reservoir of the 75-mile Sheboygan River, which empties into Lake Michigan at Milwaukee.
HISTORIC PHOTOS OF
LAKE MICHIGAN
Turner Publishing Company
200 4th Avenue North • Suite 950
Nashville, Tennessee 37219
(615) 255-2665
www.turnerpublishing.com
Historic Photos of Lake Michigan
Copyright © 2009 Turner Publishing Company
All rights reserved.
This book or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2009921193
ISBN: 978-1-59652-532-0
Printed in China
09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16—0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
SETTLEMENT OF THE GREAT WATER (1861–1880)
THROUGH TIMBER BOOM AND BUST (1881–1900)
CRESTS AND TROUGHS (1901–1929)
HARD TIMES AND POSTWAR PROSPERITY (1930–1965)
NOTES ON THE PHOTOGRAPHS
A floating boardinghouse and tug in the harbor of Elk Rapids, Michigan—likely those of the firm Dexter & Noble, who owned an immense timber operation in the village. Floating boardinghouses typically served two purposes: transporting logs tied together in rafts—a safer method than driving separated logs—and housing the men who rafted
the logs.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This volume, Historic Photos of Lake Michigan, is the result of the cooperation and efforts of many individuals and organizations. It is with great thanks that we acknowledge the valuable contribution of the following for their generous support:
Bentley Historic Library
Library of Congress
Wisconsin Historical Society
———————
With the exception of touching up imperfections that have accrued with the passage of time and cropping where necessary, no changes have been made. The focus and clarity of many images are limited to the technology and the ability of the photographer at the time they were recorded.
PREFACE
Imagine, if you can, a time when Lake Michigan didn’t exist. Nearly 20,000 years ago, it didn’t—not a drop. Where now there is a freshwater vastness of cerulean blue, there was then nothing but a gigantic white sheet of ice, nearly two miles thick. The ice would ultimately vanish without a trace, but an indelible map of the glacier’s existence on the earth was etched into the terrain beneath. As the world around it warmed, the glacier retreated, carving deep gouges—the deepest of which would become enormous basins into which the glacial melt would pour, filling them and falling, then rising and falling again as the land and water worked to find balance over the next 10,000 years.
The Lake Michigan we know today, more than 100 miles wide, 300 miles long, and filled with nearly 1,180 cubic miles of water, took more than 6,000 years to ease into its current shape and volume. But glacially slow though its first 200 centuries moved, this third-largest of the Great Lakes, in recent centuries, seems to have evolved as quickly as a sudden Lake Michigan storm can chase away the sun.
Ancient peoples and Woodland Indians settled early on the dried landscape beside the new waters, and European explorers followed in the early seventeenth century. French explorer Jean Nicolet is considered the first European to discover Lake Michigan, but he would not be the last to traverse its waters and coast. Louis Jolliet, Jacques Marquette, and Robert de La Salle and a host of traders and missionaries came to the region, one after another, establishing scores of small ports and settlements along the coast through the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Some say the first permanent settlement on Lake Michigan was at the site of present-day Chicago by Jean Baptiste Point du Sable in 1779; others assert Green Bay has a rightful claim to that distinction, noting the mission established by Father Allouez in present-day Green Bay, Wisconsin, in 1669. Much like its bitterly contested claims to firsts,
the Lake Michigan region, as part of the resource-rich Northwest Territory, inspired countless battles for control between the French, English, and Native Americans, but by 1796 it was in the hands of the newly formed United States—and the American way of growth, expansion, and innovation would kick-start the nineteenth century’s progress along the Lake Michigan shoreline like none before.
With Lake Michigan as the anchor to trade throughout the otherwise remote and largely isolated region, ships plied its waters, giving birth to city after city along its coast. The year 1837 brought the founding of Chicago, Illinois. The city of Manistee, Michigan, was founded four years later. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, settled since 1818, officially became a city in 1846. Green Bay followed in 1854. The growth in commerce spurred the cities on, fueling their expansion and attracting waves of immigrants seeking a livelihood and making their way from the Atlantic Coast to the burgeoning cities, farms, and orchards around Lake Michigan. As time advanced, so too did technology, bringing steam power to Lake Michigan’s ships, then to the railroad lines stretching out along its shores. Timber from Michigan’s