Photo Copyright by Anderson Aerial Photography
A Publication of
Friends of Sleeping Bear Dunes
Copyright 2007, Friends of Sleeping Bear Dunes,
P.O. Box 6344, Traverse City, MI 49696
www.friendsofsleepingbear.org
This booklet was compiled by Kerry Kelly,
Friends of Sleeping Bear Dunes.
Cover photo copyright by Anderson Aerial Photography,
Traverse City, MI. 231-947-4598. Photo was taken by
Jim Anderson.
The content for this booklet was taken from the following
sources:
•
Tending a Comfortable Wilderness, Eric
MacDonald with Arnold R. Alanen, U.S.
Department of the Interior, National Park
Service, Midwest Field Office, Omaha, NE,
published in 2000
•
Coming Through with Rye, U.S. Department
of the Interior, National Park Service, Midwest
Field Office, Omaha, NE, published in 1996
These books are available at the Cottage Book Shop in
Glen Arbor.
2
The Manitou Islands are the hidden gems of Sleeping Bear Dunes National
Lakeshore. Because of the time commitment required to visit the islands, most
visitors to the Park only see the islands from a distance – the mysterious emerald
lines on the horizon. This book will introduce you to the islands and hopefully
entice you to plan a trip to one or both islands to experience the beauty and
seclusion inherent in island life.
Ferry service from Leland is available
to both islands during the summer.
Day trips are available to South
Manitou Island, but you need to plan
to spend the whole day, so bring a
lunch. Trips to North Manitou Island
require an overnight camping stay in
the backcountry. Information about the
ferry service to the islands and
backcountry camping is available on
the last page of this book. Ferry approaching South Manitou Island
North and South Manitou Islands are part of a 14 island archipelago aligned
primarily north to south in northeastern Lake Michigan. The islands, like the rest
of Northern Michigan were formed by a series of glaciers, the most recent being
the Wisconsonian glacier which melted about 10,000 years ago. The glaciers
carved out Lake Michigan and deposited sand, gravel, and boulders which were
moved to their present locations by the melting water, wave action, and years of
wind.
North Manitou Island is approximately five miles wide at its greatest breadth
and seven miles long, encompassing just under 15,000 acres and having 20
miles of shoreline. South Manitou Island is smaller: 5,260 acres, about 3 miles
wide and 3 miles long with about 10 miles of shoreline. The majority of both
islands are managed as wilderness, which provides some of the best hiking and
backpacking in the Mid-west. The landscape of both islands is made up of
rolling hills, steep bluffs, and sand dunes. There are two inland lakes on North
Manitou Island and one on South Manitou Island. Deciduous forests of maple,
beech, white birch, and black cherry cover most of the islands.
History of the Islands
The earliest archaeological evidence of prehistoric human habitation in the
Sleeping Bear Dunes region is believed to date to about 3,000 BC, but it is likely
that people hunted in the region much earlier. There is no evidence that
prehistoric peoples lived on the island, but they were used for hunting and
fishing. An account from Albert Ellis in 1823 remarked that North Manitou
Island appeared to be a “resort” for the Indians. They observed a line of mounds
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stretching for a half mile along the beach. Each was topped by wooden frames
which were “evidently for a game of athletes at jumping… their tracks were
abundant proof of the game, at which it appeared they had been exercising only
a day or two before our visit.”
Over-trapping of fur-bearing species, combined with a collapse in the European
market for felt, caused the decline of the fur trade during the late 1820s. This
seriously eroded the economic stability of the regions American Indian
inhabitants. By the mid-1830s, the Great Lakes fur economy was defunct. In its
place, a new economy based on agriculture and maritime commerce was
developing, spurred by the opening of the Erie Canal in 1825. Under extreme
political and economic pressure to sell their lands to the U.S. Government, the
Ottawa relinquished claim to the northwestern third of Michigan’s Lower
Peninsula and the entire Upper Peninsula in 1836, formally opening this area to
Euro-American settlement.
The Manitou Islands and the coastal areas of Lake Michigan were among the
first to be settled by Euro-Americans. The first non-Indian inhabitant of North
Manitou Island may have been Joseph Oliver who moved to the island during
the 1820s to hunt and fish. The sheltered channel between the Manitou Islands
and the mainland became an important shipping lane known as the Manitou
Passage. Within a few years of opening the Erie Canal, many wood-burning
steamers were moving cargo and passengers around the Great Lakes. A few
entrepreneurs established docks on the islands and began cutting timber to
supply the steamers with fuel.
The first wooding station in the Manitou Passage was established on South
Manitou Island in the mid-1830s by William Burton. On North Manitou Island,
Nicholas Pickard started a large-scale wooding operation between 1842 and
1846. By 1847 one family was living on the island and 40 men were employed
in cutting and hauling wood. The pier was 150 feet long by 60 feet wide. By
1847 a substantial area of forest near the dock was already cleared. Their
method was to clear-cut large swaths of forest inland from the coastal areas
leaving little more than brushwood.
Timber extraction on the islands became more extensive during the 1850s and
also evolved to producing lumber. A sawmill was established on the east side of
North Manitou Island, and another sawmill was built on the west side of NMI
near the dock. By the mid-1860s, most of the wood had been harvested and the
cord wood and lumber business declined. By 1870, a substantial part of the land
had been planted in crops such as rye, barley, oats, wheat, corn, and potatoes.
4
The development of shipping on the
Great Lakes also required safety
precautions to assist crew and
passengers on ships in distress and to
provide navigational aids for ships
passing through the Manitou Passage.
The first lighthouse was established
on South Manitou Island in 1839 and
a succession of improved lighthouses
were built until the current lighthouse
was completed in 1872. The North
Manitou Island lighthouse began operation in 1898 on the southern part of the
island near Dimmick’s Point. That lighthouse is no longer there. Lifesaving
Service Stations were established at Sleeping Bear Point, South Manitou Island,
and North Manitou Island in the 1870s.
SMI Lighthouse complex
Although ships no longer docked at the island as frequently as during the middle
of the century, connections with major ports like Chicago, Milwaukee, and
Detroit remained strong. The most important mainland port for the islands was
Leland, where many islanders chose to reside at least part of the year.
Once the forest was cleared, the land was turned to agriculture. Several poor
immigrant farmers struggled to develop homesteads in the 1880s. Silas
Boardman, a retired banker from Chicago, bought large tracts of land on North
Manitou Island for free-range cattle grazing. He also established a post office on
North Manitou Island and became the postmaster in 1888. In 1894, Boardman
also backed a large commercial orchard. During the late 1890s and early 1900s,
Franklin Newhall and his son Benjamin bought large tracts of land on North
Manitou Island for fruit orchards. They grew cherries, apples, pears, plums, and
apricots.
South Manitou Island History
William Burton and his family, originally from Vermont, were the first recorded
Euro-Americans to live on South Manitou Island. They arrived around 1835 and
by 1838 there was a house and steamboat landing belonging to Burton where he
provided cord wood to fuel the steamers. The dock and early village was located
in the middle of the bay on the east side of the island. A few pilings are still
visible near the shore. In 1847, the village had a blacksmith shop, grocery store,
and a barn. There was a wooden tamarack railroad track extending inland with
branches for hauling cord wood to the dock. About 3-4 miles of track existed.
The first purchase of island property was made by Burton in 1849. The cut-over
condition of large portions of the island noted in a survey done in 1847 indicate
5
that Burton was cutting timber on land that he didn’t own for several years
before the survey was done.
Putnam and Melissa Burdick were also early island settlers. They eventually
owned a large area of the island. Apparently Putnam bought land rights from
soldiers and widows of soldiers that had been granted through the Military Land
Bounty Act for military service done before 1855. James Burdick served as the
South Manitou Island Lighthouse Keeper from July, 1908 until February, 1928.
John LaRue came to South Manitou Island from Chicago in 1847 and began
trading with the Indians. He moved to the mainland in 1848 and became one of
the founders of what is now Glen Arbor. When Congress passed the Homestead
Act in 1862, public lands in the West became available to settlers to homestead
as farms.
George Johann Hutzler, who came to South Manitou Island in 1856 became the
first islander to file a claim as a homesteader. Hutzler and his wife, Margaretha
and five children boarded the Sir Isaac Newton in Hamburg, Germany to sail for
New York on October 21, 1853. The winter voyage was long and hard, and
before they arrived in New York City harbor on January 23, 1854, one of the
children (Johann) had died. The family went on to Buffalo, NY via railroad. The
following summer, most of the Hutzlers came down with cholera, and George,
Jr. died from the disease. In January, 1855, another son, also named George, was
born. In the spring of that year, determined to find a better place for his family to
settle, George Johann took a job on the Steamer Iowa, which made regular runs
between Buffalo and Chicago.
The Iowa stopped on South Manitou
George Johann Hutzler House
Island on one of those trips, and
Hutzler took a job with Mr. Burton as
a woodcutter. It took him a little over a
year to earn enough for to pay for his
family’s passage to the island. Once
they arrived in 1856, they began
farming. He filed a homestead claim
January 9, 1863 for property in the
north-central part of the island.
By 1868, they were cultivating about 15 acres of land, had built two barns,
planted 60 fruit trees, and dug a well.
6
Of the island’s 5,260 acres, about over
65% is beach, sand dunes, or steep
slopes unsuitable for agriculture. The
central part of the island is more
suitable for agriculture, and that is
where the first five homestead claims
were made (1,943 acres). Thomas
Kitchen, George Haas, Christopher
Beck, and Alfred Evans also made
claims in 1863. In 1868, three more
Beck House
claims were made: James Sheridan,
Conrad Hutzler, and Thomas Armstrong.
Farming, fishing, and timber harvesting, along with tending the lighthouse, were
the main occupations on the island. Year-round population was 74 in seventeen
households in the 1860 census and 98 (20 households) in the 1880 census.
The Chicago fire of 1871 affected the island. Much of the sand and gravel used
in building more permanent structures was supplied by the Garden City Sand
Company of Chicago, which bought land on South Manitou Island and brought
barges here for excavation.
Conrad Hutzler Farm
Most farming activities occurred on
South Manitou Island from the post-
Civil War years to the pre-World War
II period. Due to isolation from goods
and supplies, the island’s residents
were always “subsistence” farmers. In
addition to gathering wild berries,
mushrooms, maple sap, and ginseng,
they harvested ice and cut timber.
They grew a variety of crops,
vegetables, and fruits.
Most of the island’s farmers grew grains that required threshing to separate the
grain from the stalk and husk. Threshing activities required cooperation. A
threshing machine was expensive, but necessary. According to oral history
accounts, between 1910 and 1940, one large threshing machine was shared by
all the farmers. They pooled their money to buy the machine, which was hauled
by horses from one farm to the next. All of the farmers would come to the farm
and help get the job done. The machine was then moved to the next farm until
all the threshing was done. Threshing time was also a social occasion where the
farmers’ wives would prepare the meals while the men would be working in the
7
fields. Then during dinner, the men would come in and wash up and sit down for
a big meal of bread, meat, potatoes, pies and other deserts before heading back
to the fields to work until evening.
While the first lighthouse was established in 1839, a subsequent lighthouse was
built in 1858 and the current one was built in 1872. A Lifesaving Station was
established on South Manitou Island in 1902. The lighthouse and Lifesaving
Station can be seen today when you make the trip to South Manitou Island.
When wooding operations served as the primary activity, the old dock location
provided a safe site for refueling steamers and was accessible to the island’s
northern hardwood forest. The dock area became the heart of the island
community. When the first post office was opened in 1879, it was located near
the old dock at Burton’s Harbor.
The site selected for the lighthouse
was at the southeastern shore to mark
the dangerous straits in the Manitou
Passage. Like most lighthouses, it
was developed as an independent
entity. The Lifesaving Station
complex required a location that
would allow easy launching of
rescue boats as well as proximity to
the most dangerous parts of the South Manitou Island Lifesaving Station
passage. That is why it is located in the southern tip of the harbor relatively near
the lighthouse. The location near these installations became an important
community center, and when logging operations ended and the dock fell into
disrepair, the original island village dwindled in size and importance. Burdick’s
moved their general store from its original location near the old dock to a site
near the Lifesaving station in 1923, and that marked the shift of the island
community to the current village site.
Island residents made up a close-knit community. Over time, members of
several farming families served in the Lifesaving Service or as lighthouse
keepers. As island families grew, these career opportunities allowed islanders to
make a living without having to leave the island. The houses provided a place
for families to live together, since the Lifesaving Station provided housing for
single servicemen and the keeper’s family only. The village houses provided a
place for crew members to live year-round on the island. Most of the houses in
the village were built between 1908 and 1920.
Island agriculture moved into a new phase in 1918 when South Manitou Island
was chosen by Michigan State College (now Michigan State University) as a site
for growing Rosen rye seed. Compared to wheat and barley, rye has been
8
cultivated for a relatively short time. Its principal use is for making bread.
Compared to wheat, rye depends on light, sandy soils typical of Michigan. It is
easily fertilized and cross-pollinates like corn. Developing and maintaining a
pure strain of rye is one of the most difficult problems in growing rye seed.
Louis Hutzler standing in a field of
prize rye ca. 1925.
In 1909, a student from Russia named Rosen,
who was attending Michigan Agricultural
College, brought Russian rye seed to plant
breeder F. A. Spragg. After some improvement,
the variety showed excellent yields, but when
planted in fields adjacent to common rye, the
resulting cross-pollination reduced the yields
significantly.
The isolated location of South Manitou Island
and a record of community cooperation made it
an ideal place for this Rosen rye. The Rosen rye
strains were distributed and grown throughout
the nation. George and Louis Hutzler won
numerous awards for their Rosen rye. Spragg
continued his experiments on Rosen rye until
his death in 1924. Production of Rosen rye continued into the early 1940s.
The introduction of coal to fuel the steamships meant that fewer ships would
stop at the island, making it more difficult to transport agricultural products and
equipment to and from the mainland. The development of better roads on the
mainland made farms there more competitive than on the islands, so in the
1940s, several farm families began to leave the island.
Several attempts were made to create an island resort on South Manitou Island.
The most successful was when Fred Burdick returned to the island where he had
been born to begin a small tourist operation. Eventually the Burdicks built
several cottages along the edge of Florence Lake and operated the island store.
They provided jeep transportation around the island and burro rides. The
Burdicks owned a sizable amount of island property, and in the 1960s began to
partition it off for sale.
In 1970 Congress authorized the creation of Sleeping Bear Dunes National
Lakeshore with all of South Manitou Island included within its boundaries. In
1974 the last year-around residents, Ed and Esther Riker, left the island. They
had worked for 20 years as caretaker – tenant farmers.
North Manitou Island History
In 1894, Chicago residents Frederick Trude and George Blossom in cooperation
with Blossom’s father-in-law, Silas Boardman created a resort development
called Cottage Row where 10 lots were marked off for building sites for summer
homes. Cottage Row was set on a ridge overlooking the beach to the east. The
land between the cottages and the beach was to be reserved for a private park for
the recreation and pleasure of the cottage owners. As the Newhall’s increased
their ownership on North Manitou Island, they took over management of
Cottage Row, the hotel and dining hall. In the early 1900s, North Manitou Island
became a summer resort for wealthy Chicago families.
The farm built by Colonel Alvar and
Mary Bournique was the most
elaborate private resort developed on
North Manitou Island. They ran a
dance school in Chicago founded by
Alvar’s parents in 1867. They owned
additional dance studios in Waukegon
and Lake Forest, IL and Milwaukee,
WI. Alvar filed a homestead claim for
about 150 acres of land. He settled on
the land October 25, 1903 and built a The Bournique House
32’ X 42’ log house in 1904. They built a second dwelling, ice house, barn,
chicken coop, tool shed, laundry, fences, and wells. His wife and two children
lived on the farm. By 1908, they cultivated about 30 acres. The Bourniques
continued their dance school business and ran the island farm by “remote
control”, coming to the island for summer vacations. They increased their
holdings to 400 acres and continued farm operations until 1925.
They employed island residents to tend to various household and farm chores. In
1938 the Bourniques sold their dance school and moved to Leland. Following
Alvar’s death that same year, Mary continued to reside in Leland. Their house
on North Manitou Island was last occupied in 1941, but Mary would visit the
island each summer until 1946. The Angell foundation bought the property for
$20,000 in 1959. The house can still be seen by taking a hike to the southeastern
part of the island.
By 1906 the lumber business was back on North Manitou Island. Smith & Hull
Lumber Company of Traverse City purchased over 4,000 acres of timbered land
on the western side of the island. Because it was relatively far from the former
west-side dock, much of the land may have been spared the intensive timber
harvesting in the 1800s. Smith & Hull completed construction of a 600-foot
dock in 1908 and built the village of Crescent there to support their lumber
9 10
Logs piled near NMI Village Dock ca. 1910
operations. The logging lasted only
until 1915 when it was shut down and
the village was abandoned. During
the same time, the Newhall’s began
selective timber cutting on their
property on the east side of the island
with Peter Stormer, who built a dock
and sawmill on the south eastern
shore near where the first wooding
station was located.
During the early 1920s, Benjamin Newhall lost his family’s island holdings to a
group of Chicago businessmen who held his mortgage. The men created a
nominal partnership known as the Manitou Island Syndicate. Eventually the
Syndicate became the Manitou Island Association (MIA). During the 1920s and
1930s the most of the island was purchased by the Association. The
Association’s operations were administered by a paid manager who resided on
the island. They continued the traditional island activities such as fruit farming,
logging, commercial fishing, and supplying ice, wood, dairy products, and fresh
vegetables to the local Coast Guard families and summer cottage owners.
During the 1920s the MIA maintained a large free-range beef cattle herd and
substantially increased the size of the orchard acreage devoted to cherry
production. They also began to transform the island landscape into a more
marketable recreational resource. In 1926, the association released a small herd
of white tailed deer with the intent of eventually establishing a population large
enough to sustain hunting for sport and for the national venison market.
During the 1930s management of
the deer herd became an
increasingly important part of the
MIA operation. Other wildlife
species including raccoon,
pheasant, ruffed grouse, and wild
turkeys were introduced to the
island to make it more attractive as
a sportsman’s retreat. They planted
alfalfa near Cottage Row to
encourage the deer to feed near the Apple packing crew -Newhall Orchard (ca. 1910)
village. They stopped harvesting apples from the Beuham orchards leaving the
annual crops as fodder for the growing deer herd. Dogs were banned for fear
that they would chase or kill the young deer. By 1937, the deer had dispersed
throughout the island and trails and a noticeable browse-line was visible in the
forest. Deer hunters, who were invited guests of the MIA members, stayed at the
11
MIA lodge (former Cottage Row dining hall), which could house 20-25 guests
at a time. During the winter of 1938-1939, the MIA began feeding the deer in
order to maintain the population at artificially high levels. Hunters were
guaranteed at least one deer. In the 1960s, MIA began promoting fishing as well
as hunting.
While MIA continued to emphasize the sportsman vacation activities, they also
continued the timber harvesting business they started in 1956. In 1972 the MIA
entered into a 5-year agreement with the Lake Michigan Hardwood Company
for selective cutting of timber on the island. The minimum annual harvest was
supposed to be between 1 – 1.5 million board-feet. To protect the aesthetic
appearance of the island, the timber harvest was confined to areas not
immediately adjacent to roads and trails. Income from the timber harvest
subsidized the deer hunting operation.
Legislation enacted by Congress in 1970 to authorize the creation of Sleeping
Bear Dunes National Lakeshore included North and South Manitou Islands. In
1977 the National Park Service made an offer to purchase North Manitou Island
from MIA, but it took several years of negotiations and court battles to settle on
a price for the island. In 1984, the National Park Service took possession of the
island for $11 million.
The MIA began preparing for the National Park Service takeover during the late
1970s. They held the final deer hunt during the 1977-78 season in an attempt to
reduce the island herd to roughly 150 animals. This hunt yielded just over 500
deer. The MIA also discontinued the supplemental feeding program. During the
fall of 1979, they moved the caretaker and his wife from the island and sold
most of the equipment and furnishings on the island.
Discontinuing both the hunting and feeding programs had a devastating effect
on the natural resources of the island. The deer population soared severely
stressing the island’s native plant communities. The ground layer and understory
vegetation of the island’s forests were eliminated almost completely by the deer
herd, which suffered mass starvation during the winter and spring seasons. To
correct this problem, studies indicated that the Park Service should conduct
annual deer hunts to manage the deer herd to 200-300 animals, so the natural
vegetation could be restored. The first NPS-sponsored deer hunt occurred during
the autumn of 1984.
NPS management policies have emphasized protecting the island’s natural
resources. The island provides habitat for several rare plant species including the
Pitcher’s Thistle, a federally listed endangered species and two State of
Michigan threatened species (Pumpelly’s brome grass and American chestnut).
In addition, two bird species on the federal list of endangered species (piping
plover and bald eagle) nest on the island.
12
Virtual Tour – South Manitou Island
You can ride the ferry from Leland to South Manitou Island for a day trip, or
you can plan to camp at one of the three backcountry campgrounds. The maps at
the back of this book can be used as a reference. When you arrive at the island,
you will walk off the dock into the
village. The first building you come to
at the end of the dock is the Lifesaving
Service Boathouse. This is where you
will get your island orientation from
the NPS ranger. On your left is the
Ranger Station, formerly the residence
for the Lifesaving Station. This is a
great place for a leisurely picnic before
you start your exploration of the
island. SMI Dock and Lifesaving Station
As you walk through the little village, imagine living here and working on the
crew of the Lifesaving station. The people of South Manitou Island created a
close-knit community. They enjoyed the quiet lifestyle of island life and helping
each other and celebrating their successes together.
The last building in the village before you enter the wilderness area is now the
island Visitor Center and small museum of island history. While most of the
houses in the village were built around 1900 – 1920, this was built in 1879 and
altered in 1904-1924 when it was used as the post office and general store.
Follow the path to the lighthouse complex. Along the way, you will learn about
the Three Brothers ship that was sunk here in 1911. The first lighthouse on the
island was built in 1839 with subsequent lighthouses built in 1858 and 1872.
The present lighthouse served Lake Michigan shipping through the Manitou
Passage for over 100 years. The tower is one of the identifying landmarks of the
Keeper’s quarters as seen from the lighthouse
tower. Note the covered passageway that
connects it to the lighthouse.
island. Towers in this class, designed
by Army-trained engineer Orlando
Poe, are considered among the most
graceful and beautiful ever built. The
white structure is visible from the
mainland on a clear day and stands as
a symbol of the island’s rich heritage.
The keeper’s quarters, connected to
the tower by a covered passageway,
was built in 1858 to replace the
original 1839 lighthouse. The building
once served as both lighthouse and
13
keeper’s residence with the tower built on the roof nearest the shore. In 1875 a
fog signal was added to the site. For many years, the light was equipped with a
three-wick kerosene lantern within a third-order Fresnel lens system. On a clear
night it was visible at Point Betsie 15 miles south. The small circular steel
building provided safe storage for the kerosene.
The lighthouse is described in detail in the Lighthouses booklet. Take a tour of
the tower for a spectacular view of the beach, Lake Michigan, and Sleeping Bear
Point in the distance.
Florence Lake was named after Florence Haas (1863-1943). She served as the
postmaster for the island beginning in 1912. She was also a mid-wife who
delivered many of the island children and spent her later years as a crewmember
on the Pere Marquette railroad car ferries sailing between Michigan and
Wisconsin.
To hike to Florence Lake, follow the road behind the boathouse to the right past
a few houses to Burdick Road. Follow Burdick Road about 1.0 mile to Ohio
Road. Follow the trail straight ahead for about 0.25 miles to the sandy beach on
the east side of the lake. If you want to see the north side of the lake, walk north
along Ohio Road for about 10 minutes and you'll come to a trail to the left that
leads to the lake.
The Schoolhouse -walk another 10
minutes north on Ohio Road and
you'll be at the one-room school
built in 1899 which accommodated
students from grades 1-8. Those who
wished to go on to high school had
to go to the mainland. The teachers
also served as Principal, nurse, and
custodian. The day typically began
by cleaning the school and starting
the fire to heat the building before
the students arrived.
South Manitou Island Schoolhouse
The school also served as a meeting place and location for social activities on
the island. Spelling bees, recitals, skits and plays were held here. The school is
being restored to its original condition by the Manitou Island Memorial Society
in cooperation with the National Park Service.
The Cemetery -Hike north of the schoolhouse on Ohio Road about a mile to
the Cemetery. The cemetery is about 2 miles from the village. The island's
main cemetery is preserved as the final resting place of several descendants of
the island's earliest settlers. The list includes Burdick, Beck, Haas, Hutzler, and
14
Peth. There are several other places on the island where islanders were buried.
Many of them on their homesteads. Workers and transients were likely to be
buried in unmarked and now forgotten graves.
The Farms -At one time, there were seven successful farms on the island. You
can hike the farm loop in the center of the island to see the two farmsteads that
survive today. This loop is almost 2 miles around, so the total hiking distance
from the village and around the loop and back is about 6 miles.
About 1/4 mile after leaving Ohio Rd, you will come to a fork in the road. If you
stay to the right, the August Beck farm is the first that you will find. August was
a German immigrant who came to the island as a teenager in 1860. At age 19, he
married the 16 year old daughter of another German immigrant-farmer, and this
became their home. He was one of the most progressive farmers on the island.
Continuing down the road, you will come to the George Conrad Hutzler
homestead.
Hutzler was another German immigrant and half-brother to one of the island's
first settlers. This farm is the place where Conrad's son and grandson, in
cooperation with Michigan State, developed special highly productive varieties
of rye and beans which became the standard for the industry. Conrad's grave is
on the hill overlooking his homestead.
The Shipwreck of the Morazan Hike
from the village to the wreck
of the Francisco Morazan on the
south shore of the island to see the
remains of the ship, which is only
partially submerged. The
shipwreck is about 2.5 miles from
the dock. You can either take
Brudick Rd to Ohio Rd near
Florence Lake and turn left to the
trail, then turn right on the trail Wreck of the Francisco Morazan
that leads to the shipwreck and the cedars. Or you can take the trail through the
village and past the Weather Station campground which will continue on to the
shipwreck and the cedars.
When you get to the shipwreck, you will be standing on the bluff overlooking
the ship. You can hear (and smell) the double-crested cormorants which now
live on the ship.
The Francisco Morazan left Chicago bound for Rotterdam on November 27,
1960 when it was battered by strong northwest winds the following day. Waves
were washing over the decks and the crew was blinded by heavy snow squalls.
Their position was off by more than 70 miles from what they thought and they
15
ran the 246 foot freighter aground on the southern shore of South Manitou
Island. The crew, Captain, his wife, and unborn child were rescued, but the ship
and all of the 940 ton of cargo was lost.
The Valley of the Giants -The Southwestern corner of South Manitou Island is
home to some of the largest White Cedars in Michigan. These trees are over
twice as large as the average size White Cedar. The trail loops through this area,
so you can get a good appreciation for the size and number of these trees. It is a
mystical walk. Some say that these trees were spared because their bark is
infused with wind-blown sand, and the lumbermen didn't want to have to
continually sharpen their saws, which they had to do by hand. This hike is about
0.3 miles beyond the turn-off to the Shipwreck of the Morazan.
The Bluffs & Perched Dunes -This
difficult hike provides the most
spectacular views of the island and is
well worth the effort. You can make it
to one of the highest points on the
island where you can see Lake
Michigan in every direction! On a
clear day you can see Crescent Bay,
the lighthouse, North Manitou Island
and the Sleeping Bear Dunes on the
mainland. Beware of the poison ivy,
which tends to grow into the trail on
the dunes.
View of North Manitou Island from the Perched
Dunes on South Manitou Island. A 360
panoramic view of the island is available here.
Virtual Tour – North Manitou Island
Most of this 15,000 acre island is managed as wilderness, and is a backpacker’s
paradise. The forests have come back to create a high canopy, but you can still
find evidence of the agricultural heritage when you come into a clearing or see
an old orchard.
North Manitou Island Lifesaving Station as seen from Cottage Row
Now used as NPS ranger station and staff housing on the island.
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When you walk off the dock, you
will see the Lifesaving Station on
your left. These buildings are now
used by NPS rangers as residences
and offices. To your right is the old
MIA generator building where you
will have your island orientation
with an NPS ranger. If you continue
past the generator building, you will
see an array of photovoltaic cells.
An interpretive exhibit will describe Photovoltaic array supplies power to the island.
how the sun is used to provide power to the island.
Walking past the PV array, you will find one of the old sawmills that used to
supply cedar shingles and lumber for the island. This is the latest sawmill on the
island. The other ones were all dismantled when they were no longer needed as
described in the History section above. Even though the sawmill was built at a
late date, maybe as late as 1927, it was built using traditional technology. The
engine and equipment date from 1875, and the method of construction and
layout are typical of sawmills of the late 1800s. Steam powered sawmills of this
type, which were once common in this area, are now rare.
Manitou Island Association Sawmill Manitou Island Association Office
The Manitou Island Association office is located on the road from the dock. It is
a simple rectangular building with fieldstone walls. It reflects MIA’s concept of
the farm as a business and the association’s hierarchical managerial structure.
Behind the MIA office is a small, one-story dwelling known as the Campbell
House. It was used to house MIA workers and reflects the importance of hired
labor to corporate farming organizations.
Walking down the site of the old board walk on Cottage Row, the first building
you come to is the Monte Carlo Cottage. Constructed in 1893 by George and
Carrie Blossom, it is situated on a three acre plot directly north of the Cottage
Row plat. The cottage shared this plot with the former home of the U.S.
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Lifesaving Service keeper Daniel Buss, which was moved from its original
location near the Lifesaving Station. The house was remodeled to serve as a
communal dining facility for Cottage Row property owners. The original
cottages on Cottage Row did not have kitchens or dining rooms since they
would eat at the dining hall. The dining hall was eventually converted into a
lodge for guests of the MIA, but it was destroyed by fire in 1953.
The Monte Carlo cottage is known
as a dog-trot bungalow. It predates
the other Cottage Row houses. Its
architectural design as well as the
possibility that the house was built
by George and Carrie Blossom
suggest that it may be the cottage
designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
The dog-trot design had rooms
arranged along each side of a
covered breezeway with doors Monte Carlo cottage built in 1893
opening into the central passage. The origins of the dog-trot plan are traced to
the gulf coast area of Mississippi, where it later evolved into a bungalow house
type with a breezeway that was enclosed to form a central room and a verandah
that extended across the front of the house to catch the on-shore breezes to cool
the house naturally. Wright was likely familiar with this design through his
work in the office of Louis Sullivan.
The Foote family, close friends of the Blossoms, stayed at the Monte Carlo
while they completed their cottage in 1894. The design of the Foote and Trude
cottages may be based on that of the Monte Carlo. These cottages represent a
distinctive house type that is rare in the northern Great Lakes region.
Cottage Row Lot 10 – This lot was never built on. During the 1930s and 1940s
Mr. Angell used the lot as a small alfalfa field intended to entice deer to the area.
Cottage Row Lot 9 – Howard Foote built his
second cottage here in 1901. The house was
destroyed by fire in 1935 and in its place,
Foote’s daughter, Shirley Foote Alford erected
a small house purchased as a kit from Sears &
Roebuck. The Alford cottage is a small one-
story side-gabled structure with a full-width
front verandah. One of the cabins built by the
MIA during the 1930s to house migrant
orchard workers is located behind the Alford cottage.
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Cottage Row Lot 8 – The Margaret Riggs
Cottage was built in 1924 by Nicholas Feilen,
who had built several of the other cottages on
the island. While there is no front verandah,
the floor plan is similar to the Monte Carlo
cottage. Note the arch-roofed hood that
projects over the front stoop.
Cottage Row Lot 7 – No structure was ever built on this lot.
Cottage Row Lot 6 – The lot was purchased by John Keating in 1894. During
the following summer Nicholas Feilen built a cottage for Keating, his wife Ellen
and their daughter Ethel. During the early 1940s the Keating cottage was
relocated to a site north of the Campbell house. Lacking a stable foundation at
the new site, the structure collapsed and has been removed.
Cottage Row Lot 5 – The Howard Foote Cottage was built in 1894 by two
Chicago carpenters, one of which was Nicholas Feilen. In 1900 Foote sold the
cottage to S.W. McMunn, the father of Mary Bournique.
Cottage Row Lot 4 – The Frederick and
Mary Trude Cottage was also built by
Nicholas Feilen in 1894. The Trudes were
one of the developers of the Cottage Row
resort colony, and this cottage is one of the
three houses based on the dog-trot
architectural plan similar to the Monte Carlo
cottage. This cottage and the Foote cottage
were constructed of materials reused from dismantled exhibition booths of the
Manufacturers’ Building at the 1893 Chicago World’s Columbian Exposition.
Cottage Row Lot 3 – The George and Carrie Blossom Cottage was originally
located in the farmhouse yard of Silas Boardman’s farm near the site of the
dining hall. It was moved to the Cottage Row lot in 1894.
Blossom Cottage ruin today Blossom Cottage ca. 1900
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The 1 ½ story structure had a light wood frame and gabled dormers with a full
verandah across the front. The Blossoms later sold the cottage to the Burdick
family, who called it Tanglewood. After decades of neglect, the cottage is now a
ruin.
Cottage Row Lot 2 – The Hewitt cottage
was built in 1895 or 1896. It was a shingle-
style cottage furnished in “burlap and
calico” and was described as “the prettiest
cottage of all.” A few years later the Hewitts
sold the cottage to Dr. John Edwin and
Louise Rhoades. In a wooded area adjacent
to the cottage, the Rhoades’ built a little
play house for their daughter, Margaret. Shortly after Margaret married
Roderick Peattie, a lower floor was added to the play house, transforming it into
a small, two-story, private cottage they called the Treehouse. During the 19371950s
the Treehouse was occupied by an American Indian named Raphael. The
cottage eventually fell into disrepair and was removed, but the Treehouse
remains.
Cottage Row Lot 1 – The Katie Shepard
Hotel, “The Beeches” is a 1 ½ story shingle-
style house was built in 1895 or 1896 for
Mrs. William Shepard for their daughter
Katherine, who was popularly known on the
island as “Miss Katie.” She opened the
house as a hotel known as The Beeches
around the time the Newhalls began logging
around 1908 when they discontinued meal service at the dining hall at the
northern end of Cottage Row. Miss Katie operated the hotel and dining room
until poor health forced her to discontinue the business in the early 1930s. After
her death, her niece, Edna Shepard Dean rented the house until she sold it
around 1950. The Angell foundation acquired the lot in 1969.
Walk across the island and see if you can find the remains of the logging village
of Crescent. If you walk along the beach, you should find the old pilings from
the dock. There is an old barn not far from the site of the village.
Lake Manitou is a favorite destination for fishermen. In the early 1900s, there
were cottages and at least two boathouses on the lake. Today, you will find some
very nice camping areas near the lake.
The Manitou Islands, the “Gems” of Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore
await. Plan your leisurely trip to the islands and experience the beauty, sense of
history, and solitude for yourself.
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Getting to the Islands
Access to North and South Manitou Islands is by private boat or by passenger
ferry service operated by Manitou Island Transit (231-256-9061)
http://www.leelanau.com/manitou. The ferry service operates from the Fishtown
Dock located in Leland, MI. The ferry operators have been servicing the islands
for many generations and the company is still run as a family business. More
information is available on the Park web site
http://www.nps.gov/slbe/planyourvisit/plantriptoislands.
Between June and August, the ferries for each island leave daily from the
Fishtown Dock in Leland at 10:00 AM. Reservations are recommended. Plan to
arrive at the Fishtown Dock 45 minutes prior to departure. Leland is located 27
miles north of Empire on M-22. The following suggestions are offered to help
you have a safe and enjoyable visit. The boat trip can be cool even in summer,
so plan ahead and bring a jacket.
On your way to the islands you will see the North Manitou Island Lighthouse
Crib. It has become a favorite resting spot for the Double-crested Cormorant.
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