The Wonderful Wilderness of Michigan's Upper Peninsula
Immortalized by Longfellow, the Midwest's preferred vacation spot offers unspoiled forests, waterfalls and coastal villages
- By Jonathan Kandell
- Photographs by Scott S. Warren
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2011, Subscribe
From the summit of 1,327-foot Marquette Mountain in northern Michigan, the view offers a pleasing mix of industrial brawn and natural beauty. Dense pine forests descend to the red sandstone churches and office buildings of Marquette, the largest town (pop. 20,714) in the Upper Peninsula, or UP. In Marquette’s harbor on Lake Superior, the world’s largest body of fresh water, a massive elevated ore dock disgorges thousands of tons of iron pellets into the hold of a 1,000-foot-long ship. Closer to my lofty perch, a bald eagle plunges toward unseen prey in the lake’s blue waters.
For more than a century, the UP has been the summer playground of Midwesterners. From the early 1900s on, captains of industry and commerce—including Henry Ford and Louis G. Kaufman—converged here. The industrialists erected lavish lakeside “cabins” that rivaled the Adirondack “camps” of the Eastern Seaboard elite. By the American automobile’s mid-20th-century heyday, Detroit assembly-line workers were flocking here as well.
With Lake Superior to the north, Lake Michigan to the south and Lake Huron to the east, the UP covers 16,542 square miles, or about 28 percent of Michigan’s landmass. (Since 1957, the two peninsulas, Upper and Lower, have been connected by the five-mile-long Mackinac suspension bridge.) Yet only about 3 percent of the state’s population—some 317,000 residents—live amid the UP’s woodlands, waterfalls and icy trout streams. Ernest Hemingway, who fished in the UP as a boy and young man, paid homage to the region in a 1925 Nick Adams short story, “Big Two-Hearted River,” set there. “He stepped into the stream,” the novelist wrote. “His trousers clung tight to his legs. His shoes felt the gravel. The water was a rising cold shock.”
“Yoopers,” as local residents call themselves, scoff at warm-weather visitors; as much as 160 inches of snow falls annually in parts of the UP. Even in July and August, when daylight stretches past 10 p.m., Lake Superior breezes keep average temperatures below 80 degrees. By nightfall, lakeside restaurants are packed with patrons tucking into grilled whitefish and pasties (pronounced PASS-tees)—turnovers stuffed with beef, potato and onion, a regional specialty introduced more than 150 years ago by British miners from Cornwall.
I confined my nine-day journey to a scenic stretch along Lake Superior, between the heavily transited ship locks in Sault Ste. Marie (pronounced SOO Saint Ma-REE, pop. 16,542) on the east and the lonely crescent beaches of the Keweenaw Peninsula, 263 miles to the west. Looming on the horizon at nearly every turn was Lake Superior, considered an inland sea despite its fresh water—so big it holds more water than the other four Great Lakes combined. The Ojibwa tribe called it “Gichigami,” meaning “big water,” and it was memorialized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s epic poem, “The Song of Hiawatha”: “By the shores of Gitche Gumee / By the shining Big-Sea-Water...”
French Explorers came to the Upper Peninsula in the 1600s for pelts, particularly beaver; they used Huron and Odawa Indians as go-betweens with trappers from other tribes. “The fur trade led Native Americans to give up their traditional way of life and plug into the global economy,” says historian Russ Magnaghi of Northern Michigan University in Marquette. The tribes also revealed locations of copper and iron deposits. By the 1840s, metal ore revenues surpassed those from fur, attracting miners from Germany, Ireland, Britain, Poland, Italy, Sweden, Norway and Finland.
At first, ore moved by boat on Lake Superior to Sault Ste. Marie, then was unloaded and carried overland by horse-drawn wagons past the St. Mary’s River rapids, a distance of some 1.5 miles. Then the ore was once again loaded onto waiting ships—a “staggeringly slow and inefficient” process, says Northern Michigan University historian Frederick Stonehouse.
But in 1853, construction began on locks to allow the ships direct passage between Superior and Huron. Sault Ste. Marie’s Soo Locks opened on schedule in 1855. “The lakes themselves became a vital highway for the Union Army in the Civil War,” says Stonehouse. In the year before the locks opened, fewer than 1,500 tons of ore were shipped; a decade later, the annual total had increased to 236,000 tons. After the war, the ore was shipped to the iron mills of Ohio and Pennsylvania. “The economic impact of Soo Locks was felt throughout the Middle West and across the nation,” says Pat Labadie, a historian at Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary on the shores of Lake Huron at Alpena, Michigan. Today, nearly 80 million tons of cargo pass through the Soo Locks each year, making it the third busiest man-made waterway after the Panama and Suez canals.
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Comments (78)
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About 50 years ago my wife and I spent 10 day touring the UP.Everything from the Soo to Copper Harbor..the southern coasr...Lake Michigan. ..also one of the bestnights wsa spent in soo junction...from there we took a narrow gauge railroad that took us to the Taquanam river and then by boat to the other side of the falls the back the same way.I will never forget that summer.
Posted by john dotson on March 6,2013 | 12:31 PM
I must say, he did portray an accurate cross-section of the "Yooper" population. Having lived in the U.P. all of my life and having gone to school in several "Yooper" schools (Finlandia (AKA Suomi College), Gogebic, and the satellite branch of Bay De Noc Community College) I have to agree this particular news article was quite accurate in the representation of "Yooper" life.
Posted by Jack M. on February 2,2013 | 03:03 AM
@Ryan Michaud - You are so right. Ironically, Cajun comes from the shortened Acacian ( French Canadian province of Acacia )where Cajuns originated. I used to wonder why they seemed to have an accent just as strong as we/us Yoopers. Similar mispronounced words, etc. Makes sense now - alot of Yoopers hold on to their French variations. My favorite Cajun/Yooper speak is multiple contractions i.e. wouldn't've...Shouldn't've'oughto've...
Posted by J.P. John Perron on December 27,2011 | 06:18 PM
Good article and interesting comments from all the UP expatriates.
I pre-date the invention of "Yooper". In many ways we were legally part of Michigan, but got our radio from Chicago and newspapers from Milwaukee. There was even a secession movement originating in Escanaba in the late 50s. Regional pride nurtured by a feeling of being cutoff from (and neglected by) the Lesser Peninsula was a shaping force in our lives.
But, after living in the LP, Chicago, New York, Alasks, North Carolina and Florida, it is absolutely true that you can get the kid out of the UP, but never the UP out of the kid.
Thanks for the article.
Posted by Dick Gilbert on September 10,2011 | 11:13 AM
How sweet it is! Let Michiganders recognize this rarity an fight to keep it free to be enjoyed by all of posterity, not sold off for water rights.
Posted by slynnj@comcast.net on August 7,2011 | 06:18 PM
Having made several visits to friends that reside in the Calumet area I always have to remark that the UP is not part of America. It is a country unto itself. It is so unique and different in dialect, rituals, vistas and geography that it is stunning in its diversity as opposed to the homogenized cookie cutter experience of the rest of America.
Posted by will hicks on June 27,2011 | 08:27 PM
YEAH GO SOO!!
Posted by Berenika on June 12,2011 | 06:09 PM
There is a palpable piece of the U.P. that those of us who move away will always carry. This is often borne out by keeping hunting camps alive for generations. 100 years is not uncommon!
Posted by J.P. John Perron on May 24,2011 | 10:25 PM
Great article. but the entire western end of the U.P. was left out. I was born in Wakefield, MI, close to Ironwood and the Wisconsin border. I tell everyone I grew up in the woods and fields of the U.P. and I watched the night sky and Auroa Borealis lying on the huge rocks outside our hilltop home.
You also missed Finlandia University, previously Suomi College, a wonderful institution and home to the many Finns of the U.P. I was a member of the Suomi Choir which toured nationally and even internationally to Finland. It is located across the river from Michigan Tech in Hancock. The two towns are separated by a draw bridge! My husband, brother, cousins, and myself all graduated from Michigan Tech and my sister from Northern Michigan University/
Wakefield was home to iron mines, Sunday Lake and Wico (I think). The mines closed in the late 1950's when iron ore in Minnesota was determined to be more profitable to mine. My dad Uno Hill was a logger and he and his friends had many logging camp stories to tell, as well as stories of WPA. We lived on his Finnish family farm. Wakefield is on Sunday Lake, home of annual moor boat races.
Nancy Hill Mtchell, Salt Lake City, UT
Posted by Nancy Mitchell on May 18,2011 | 01:29 AM
I lived in the UP for several years and I still think of it as a second home. Beyond the raw beauty that abounds are the incredible people. Because of the low population density and its relative isolation, Yuppers have retained a distinct and wonderful culture all their own. It's the closest you can get to an international experience without leaving the states.
Posted by Mark Cornillie on May 17,2011 | 10:05 AM
Technically speaking, Isle Royale is not the northernmost point of Michigan. Rather, it is a tiny piece of land jutting out from the intersection of Minnesota and Michigan on the mainland just west of Canada. The little piece is about 200' wide and several piece deep and is the only part of Michigan abutting Minnesota. It is approximately at 43 00'12.07" N 89 28'43.71" W.
Posted by Captain Don Kilpela Dr. on May 14,2011 | 03:05 PM
Lois Cady,
Page 2 mentions pictured rocks and Munising.
Posted by Alvin on May 11,2011 | 04:31 PM
Thank you writing the article about the UP. I attended Michigan Technological University in Houghton, MI, which is one of the best engineering schools in the country.
You missed one of the engineering wonders of the world - the Cornish Pump in Iron Mountain, MI! It was built in 1890/91 by E.P. Allis Co. of Milwaukee, heralded as the nation's largest steam-driven pumping engine. This massive engine lifted 200 tons of water per minute at "D" shaft of the Chapin Iron Mine. The pump was listed in the National Register of Historic places in 1981. We go to the UP for my wife's family reunion every other year in Republic (don't miss the Pine Grove!), and we stop at the Cornish Pump whenever we have the time.
Posted by James Doman on May 9,2011 | 08:45 PM
I was raised in Houghton, MI in the 40's and 50's. Went to St. Ignatius Grade School and the old Houghton High School. I married a Tech student and lived the last 30+ years in CT. But, if you ask me where I'm from, without blinking an eye, I'd respond, "I'm a Yooper"
Posted by Nancy Graves Carlson on May 9,2011 | 06:34 PM
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