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
(Page 3 of 4)
After a few minutes, the Pictured Rocks come into view, looking like giant, freshly painted abstract works of art. “There are a few cliff formations elsewhere along Superior, but nothing this size or with these colors,” says Gregg Bruff, who conducts education programs at Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. Hundreds of large and small waterfalls and springs splash down the cliffs, reacting with minerals in the sandstone to create a palette of colors, including browns and reds from iron, blues and greens from copper, and black from manganese. The fragility of this natural wonder is apparent: large fragments from recently collapsed cliffs lie at the base of rock faces. In some places, the cliffs may retreat several feet in a single year. Eaten away by pounding waves, the lower portions are the first to go. “On top, there will be overhangs protruding above the water,” says Bruff. “Right now, there is one spot with an overhanging boulder the size of a four-bedroom house.” As we head back to the harbor, flocks of hungry gulls emerge from nesting holes in the cliffs, flying parallel to our boat.
Some 150 miles west, on the northwest shore of the scenic Keweenaw (KEE-wuh-naw) Peninsula, 1,328-foot Brockway Mountain offers a breathtaking prospect of Lake Superior. This is copper mining country. At Keweenaw’s tip, the tiny hamlet of Copper Harbor is Michigan’s northernmost point. During the Civil War, the port was a major loading dock for copper ore. In the century that followed, the peninsula drew vacationing families to holiday houses, many along the southeastern coast of Keweenaw Bay. Some of the beaches were created from massive amounts of gravel and sand excavated during removal of copper ore from underground mines.
Established in 1848 midway up the Keweenaw Peninsula, the Quincy mine grew into one of the largest and most profitable underground copper mines in the country, earning the nickname Old Reliable—until its lodes declined in purity in the early 1940s. By then, Quincy’s main shaft had reached a depth of 6,400 feet—well over a mile. Today, guided tours transport visitors on a cart pulled by tractor to a depth of only 370 feet. Below, the mine has filled with water.
Tour guide Jordan Huffman describes the work routine in the mine’s heyday. “You had a three-man team, with one man holding a steel rod and two men pounding away at it with sledgehammers,” says Huffman. After each blow, the miner grasping the rod rotated it 90 degrees. At the end of a ten-hour workday, four holes would have been driven into the rock. Sixteen holes filled with dynamite formed a blast pattern that loosened a chunk of copper ore to be transported to the surface. The backbreaking work was done by the light of a single candle.
With a twinge of guilt, I return to my comfortable lodgings, the Laurium Manor Inn, a restored Victorian mansion that once belonged to mine owner Thomas H. Hoatson Jr. From my balcony I can see small-town Americana. Girls play hopscotch on the sidewalk. Young men hunch over the open hood of a Chevy Camaro, scrub the tires and wax the exterior. A songbird chorus rises from the stately oaks, hemlocks and maples shading large houses, many dating back more than a century. David and Julie Sprenger graduated from the UP’s Michigan Tech, in the town of Houghton. They abandoned careers in Silicon Valley in 1991 to transform this once-derelict mansion into an upscale bed-and-breakfast in tiny Laurium (pop. 2,126), about ten miles northeast of the Quincy mine. “We gave ourselves two years to get it up and running—and then we just couldn’t stop,” says Julie. Work on the stained glass, reupholstered furniture, carpentry, original plumbing and lighting fixtures has stretched out for 20 years. “And we still aren’t through,” she says.
Some 100 miles to the east, the town of Marquette offers a remarkable inventory of historical architecture, linked to another 19th-century mining boom—in iron ore. The single most striking structure is the now abandoned Lower Harbor Ore Dock, jutting 969 feet into Lake Superior from downtown Marquette. The Presque Isle Harbor Dock, at the town’s northern end, remains in operation. Here, loads of iron pellets are transferred from ore trains to cargo vessels.
From about 1870, iron-mining wealth funded many handsome buildings built of locally quarried red sandstone. Landmarks include the neo-Gothic First United Methodist Church (1873), with square buttressed towers and two asymmetrical spires; the Beaux-Arts-style Peter White Public Library (1904), constructed of white Bedford (Indiana) limestone; and the former First National Bank and Trust Company headquarters (1927), built by Louis G. Kaufman.
The Marquette County Courthouse, built in 1904, is where many of the scenes in the 1959 courthouse cliffhanger, Anatomy of a Murder, were filmed. The movie, starring James Stewart, Lee Remick and Ben Gazzara, was adapted from the 1958 novel of the same title by Robert Traver, the pseudonym of John Voelker, who was the defense attorney in the rape and vengeance murder case on which the book was based. “After watching an endless succession of courtroom melodramas that have more or less transgressed the bounds of human reason and the rules of advocacy,” wrote New York Times movie critic Bosley Crowther, “it is cheering and fascinating to see one that hews magnificently to a line of dramatic but reasonable behavior and proper procedure in a court.”
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Comments (77)
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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
I grew up in Munising right on the shores of Lake Superior. I know one short article can't possibly iclude every thing about the U.P. but surely mention could have been made about Pictured Rocks and Lake Superior National Lake Shore.
Posted by Lois Cady on May 8,2011 | 11:55 AM
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