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STANDARD GUIDEIg
MACKINAC ISIAND
ANS NORTHERN lAKE RESORTS
MACKINAC ISLAND
ST. IGNACE
SAULT STE. MARIE
PETOSKEY
CHARLEVOIX
MACATAWA
OTTAWA BEACH
LAKE HARBOR
OMENA
TRAVERSE CITY
PT. AUX BARQUES
BATTLE CREEK
CHICAGO BEACH
ILLUSTRATED
COPYRIGHT, 1099, 1!V
FOSTER & RE\ NOI.DS
I Chicago & West Michigan |
i\' .... AND .... g
I Detroit^ Gd. Rapids & Western* i
FAVORITE
LINES
TO
Michigan
Summer
Resorts
WITH
THROUGH
SLEEPING CARS
P'ROM
Chicago,
5t. Louis,
Detroit,
TO
CHARLEVOIX,
PETOSKEY,
BAY VIEW,
TRAVERSE CITY,
VIA
GRAND RAPIDS.
h\
hx
C'' For full particulars write to GEO. 1)H HAVEN, Gen. Pass. Agent, hi
I; GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. |
U ^ ir.
^^f
j THE CHICAGO BEACH
C A HIGH-CLASS RESIDENTIAL-TOURIST
i and TRANSIENT HOTEL. Cost, Furnished, $1>000,00 0. |
A SEASIDE RESORT, with all advantages of a great city. Ten minutes
from financial and business center of CHICAGO. Conducted in a manner to attract
the best patronage. Illinois Central, "Big Four" and Hichigan Central,
53d St. Depot, adjacent to Hotel. 1,000 feet broad veranda, swept by cooling
breezes. Write for handsome Booklet.
GEORGE B. ROSS, Manager.
'' THE IMPERIAL HOTEL.
PETOSKEY, MICHIGAN.
CbC Imperial i^ peculiar in its construction, being built around a handsonn.-
residence, but so arranged that all the rooms of the residence are brought into
practical use, making the interior at once cosy, attractive and home-like to a
degree seldom experienced in hotel construction. The home atmosphere of the
original building remains, and gives the dominating character of the entire build-
ing. In the handsome double parlors of the former residence, with the open
grate fire to cheer one on frosty September mornings, is tclt the genuine "at home"
feeling.
It was a happy thought, that of rounding the north end of the east wing, and
a happier one that led to the location of a pleasant sitting room here on the second
floor which has been claimed by both ladies and invalids. It is a particularly
cheerful spot, getting the early morning and late evening sun, abundance of lake
breeze, and beautiful views of lake and land.
THE IMPERIAL HOTEL.
PETOSKEY, MICHIGAN.
TOWER END OF THE IMPERIAL OFFICE.
the
K Imperial BOtCl is pertectly equipped and is one of the most up-to-date liotels
in this country. It has one hundred and sixty-five bed chambers, eighty-four of
which are equipped with steam heat. It is lighted with electric light throughout.
The Imperial is five stories high, and a modern, quickly-running elevator carries
guests to their respective floors. The furnishings are of the best grade and of a
quality rarely found in resort hotels; in fact, many pronounce it the most handsomely
furnished hotel in northern Michigan. There are twenty-one rooms with bath and
toilet connected. New sanitary plumbing is a notable feature.
An especially attractive feature of the Imperial Hotel is its commanding position on
an eminence, but a block away from the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railway station,
and its north and west fronts afford a beautiful view of the waters or Lake Michigan.
The exterior at once impresses one as very inviting, and the interior even more so.
All bedrooms are light and airy, and perfect cleanliness is maintained.
The superior excellence of our table is directly attributable to "good home cooking"
style in the preparation of foods. We serve the finest fresh lake fish and our method of
planking whitefish is unequalled. The ciieerful dining room overlooks the bay.
Write us for our rooms and rates circulai. Transient rates, $3.00 to $5.00 per day.
Special by tiie week or month, also for July or September.
CHRISTIANCY & HOWARD, Proprietors, Petoskey, Mich.
For a SUM/WER
COAST LINE
M
CRUISE take the
MACKINAC
TO
new Steel
Passenger
Steamers
^ %JP Detroit
Clevelamd^
iMAViqjOiTiQiy, CQ.
riir COAST 'U,V£ to MACKItlAC,
SKND 2 CENTS FOR
, ILLCSTRATED
i..>«
f/*)C. >^. „„„^„„ PAMPHLET.
"maSt^y^ Address
A. A SCHANTZ, G. p. A..
DETROIT, MICH.
Comfcrt;
Speed
and Safety
The Greatest Perfection yet attained In Boat Construction— Luxurious
Equipment, Artistic Furnishing, Decoration and Efficient Service
To Detroit, Mackinac, Georgian
Bay, Petoskey, Chicago.
No other Line offers a panorama of 4()() miles of equal variety and interest.
Foi'K Trips pfi; Week Ret\vei:n'
Coledo, Detroit ^ macKinac
Petoskey, "Che Soo," lHarquette,
and Dulutb.
LOW RATES ^^^.c^i'nrc'■"^nd^
return, including Meals and Berths. Ap-
proximate Cost from Cleveland, $l'.t; from
Toledo, $l(i; from Detroit, $I:J.50.
Day ami Xiiiii t Sekvkk Between
Detroit ana Cleveland
Fare ^-j cq Each Direction.
Berths, 75c., $1. btateroom, $1.75.
Connections are made at Cleveland w ith
Earliest Trains for all points East, South
and Southwest, and at Detroit for all
points North and Northwest.
Sunday Trips June. July, August.
September, October Only.
Evekv Day and Night Between
Cleveland, Put=in=Bay and Toledo.
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND NAVIGATION CO.
|l«l«^^^^^^^l|^^'^:i|^fi«1«l|°4^«M'4^^°«^l|llll^il^l«l«^^^°4l«<«ll1«lll«<«l«°4°4°4^°4°4 'III' iii> ¥ iii> v> V v> V ¥ V V «> V '!> lift #
THE STANDARD GUIDE SERIES,
The Most Beautiful Handbooks for Tourists Published*
STANDARD GUIDE TO WASHINGTON.
Paper, 25 cents. Also in cloth, full gilt, gold stamps (advertising pages omitted),
a superb book on the National Capital. Price, $1.00.
STANDARD GUIDE TO THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.
Being the text of the Library chapter of the .Standard Guide to Washington, with
16 views. Paper, 10 cents. Also in cloth, 32 views, 50 cents.
STANDARD GUIDE TO ST. AUGUSTINE.
The Florida East Coast and Nassau. With pictures of Cuba. Superbly illus-
trated. Price, 25 cents.
STANDARD GUIDE TO MACKINAC ISLAND,
and Northern Lake Resorts. A handbook for tourists and pleasure voyagers on
the (]reat Lakes. Illustrated. Paper, 25 cents.
*(,♦ The above sent postpaid on receipt of price by Foster & Reynolds, 1333 Pennsylvania Avenue,
Washington, D. C, or the Standard Guide Information Bureau, St. Augustine, Florida.
THE STANDARD GUIDE
W
MACKINAC ISLAND
AND
NORTHERN LAKE RESORTS
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS
^
FOSTER & REYNOLDS
1899
38413
Copyright, 1899, by
Foster & Revnolds.
TWO 0OFIE8 Receiveo.
^^SU^lo
^
In Explanation.
This book contains just those things which the writer of it would have
been glad to know when visiting Mackinac Island in the summer of 1898.
It is believed that the information given will be equally acceptable to
others.
The Standard Gi'ide is first of all a visitor's handbook. Its chapters
describe the natural objects to be seen here, and give the legends which
cling about them. Something too is told of the romantic history of the
Island and the Fort, and of the several personages who have had part m
that history— the savage, the Jesuit, the explorer, the fur-trader, the
soldier— Indian, French, British, American. The Island, which was at
first the home of a simple primitive people, has been consecrated as the
seat of missionary endeavor, has trembled to the shock of artillery, and
has been a center of vast commercial interests. We shall appreciate
INIackinac more if we know something of its past.
There are chapters relating to other Northern Lake Resorts not less
well known and equally popular. Some pages are devoted to the lake com-
merce, the prodigious volume of which cannot help but pique curiosity in
those who for the first time look upon its fleets. Finally, the route of
the North Land and North West is followed in detail from Buffalo to
Duluth.
Contents.
I'AGE
Mackinac Inland, - - - - - - 3
Sr. Linage, - - - - - - 33
Sault Stk. Marie, - - - - - - 39
Charlevoix, .-.-.- 46
Petoskev, - - - - - - - 49
Macatawa and Ottawa Beach, - - - 53
Lake Hariuir, - - - - - - 5^
PoiNTE aux Barques, . . ... ^8
Traverse Citv and OiMENA, - - - - - 60
Chicago, ------- 65
Battle Creek, - - - - - - 66
Alexander Henrv, ... . . 53
In Skull Cave, - - - - - - 73
Channels, ---.--. 7^
Freighters, - - - - - - - 77
79
Lights and Sirens, ......
The CiReat Lakes, - - - - - - 80
On Inland Seas, - - - - - - 81
From place to place in my previous travel-
ings I had been told of the charms of the
lakes^ and especially of the Island of Mack-
inaw, This island is chiefly known as a
principal station of the great Northwestern
Fur Company. Others know it as the seat
of an Indian Mission. Others, again, as a
frontier garrison. It is known to me as the
wildest and tenderest piece of beauty that I
have yet seen on God^s earth.
Harriet Mariineau.
Standard Guide Map
OF
NACKimc Island, Michigan.
mackinac Island.
Mackinac Island is situated in the Straits of Mackinac, which divide
the Upper and Lower Peninsulas of Michigan, and connect Lake Michigan
and Lake Huron. The island is at the Lake Huron end of the Straits. It
is eight miles in circumference, with an area of three and one-half miles.
The surface is elevated, the main plateau being 150 feet above the surface
of the lake, the upper plateau 294 feet, and the highest point near the
southern end 318 feet. For the most part the shore rises abruptly from a
narrow beach in high hills and precipitous bluffs. The surface is densely
wooded with maple, oak, birch and beech, and other trees common to the
latitude, and a profusion of evergreens, juniper, arbor vitse. tamarack,
spruce and pine. The hazel abounds, and there are lilacs in the village of
prodigious growth.
The climate was once facetiously described by an officer stationed at Fort
Mackinac as nine months of winter and three months of cool weather; and
Marquette wrote that about this central point the three great lakes sur-
rounding it "seem incessantly tossing ball at each other. For, no sooner
has the wind ceased blowing from Lake Michigan than Lake Huron hurls
back the gale it has received, and Lake Superior in its turn sends forth
its blasts from another quarter, and thus the game is played from one to
another." The summer coolness, the breezes and the marvelously pure air
with its invigorating tonic, have long attracted visitors, and the most
convincing testimony to the health-giving qualities of the climate as well
as to the scenic attractions of the island is afforded by the host of annual
visitors who return to Mackinac year after year.
The island is justly famed for its scenery. The heights command
views of sea and shore, ever changing with the varying lights and shades
of the hours and the movements of passing ships. Well kept roads —
thirty miles of them — lead in various directions from the village, through
the woods, amid curious rock formations, now along the edge of the
bluff with vistas of the lake, and again to some open outlook, whence the
panorama is bounded only by the limitations of vision. There are glens
and ravines innumerable ; open spaces which were the ancient gardens of
the Indians; and delectable parks, whose clumps of shrubs and trees are
so effectively arranged that one at first thought credits the artistic effect
to the skill of landscape artist rather than to the caprice of nature.
The place names here are memorials of an historic past. "Mackinac"
takes us back to Indian days ; "St. Ignace" perpetuates the record of mis-
sionary endeavor under the regime of New France ; "British Landing" and
"Fort Holmes" recall the stirring events of the War of 1812.
The old form of Mackinac was Michilimackinac, meaning "Great Turtle."
I\Iichi (or Missi as the French wrote it), meaning great, enters into the
composition of other names: Michigan, great water; Mississippi, great
river. iNIarquette spelled it Michilimakinong. which is close to the Indian
THE STAXJJARD Gil HE.
ARCH ROCK AND GITCHIE MANITOU.
Photo by Rossiter.
pronunciation, Mishinimakinang. The old legend is that once upon a time
when the people were gathered on the shore, where now stands St. Ignace,
to watch the rising sun, in the Manitou or Fehruary moon, they saw the
island rise out of the lake before their astonished vision. Seen from that
point the contour of the island is that of a turtle, and this was the name
they gave it.
Another interpretation is that tlie Indian name was Mishi-min-auk-m-ong,
meaning the place of dancing spirits— ethereal and shadowy beings of In-
dian mythology who were believed to make the island a chosen haunt.
Formerly the French form Mackinac was written in English Mackinaw;
but this spelling appears now oiily in the name of Mackinaw City across
the Straits. Mackinac is pronounced as if in the final syllable it were
spelled Mackinaw.
Approach. — From whatever direction one may come in tlie journey
to Mackinac, the one approach to the island is the harbor cm the
southern end. with the old town stretching along the crescent shore, and
the heights rising abruptly in the background, crowned on the bluff with the
white walls and green slopes of old Fort ?\lackiiiac. The island was aptly
described by a British officer early in the century as a "fortress built l)y na-
ture for herself" : others have called it a miniature Gibraltar : and we
accept the fortified heights as of right belonging to the scene. Handsome
summer homes line the crest of the plateau east and w^est of'the village ; and
hotels give town and island the dominating air of a pleasure resort.
MACKINAC ISLAND.
FAIRY ARCH.
Photo by Rossiter.
The Chief Points of Interest for their historical associations, are :
Fort Mackinac and Fort Holmes, Farley's Farm, the scene of battle in
the War of 1812, and the British Landing; and Skull Cave, the hiding place
of Alexander Henry. The natural objects are: Arch Rock and Sugar
Loaf: Robinson's Folly, Giant's Stairway and Fairy Arch; Pontiac's Look-
out. Lover's Leap, Chimney Rock, the Devil's Kitchen. All these are re-
ferred to on pages noted in the index. They may be seen most ex-
peditiously by employment of the carriage service, which is a feature of
the island.
Carriages. — The conventional drive from the village is over a route
which includes the chief points of interest, at a charge for the trip of one
dollar for each person in the party.
The East End and the West End are extensions of the town in these
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
ROUINSON S FOI.LV.
Photo hy Rossitei".
directions, each of ihcm a summer cottage district, witli liandsome arclii-
tecture and beautiful grounds.
The Post Office is on the main street near tlio steamboat wharf. There
are daily mails throughout the year, and in tlie season five a day.
The Churches are: The Old Mission Church, undenominational: St.
Anne's, Roman Catholic; Trinity, Protestant Episcopal.
Arch Rock, on the eastern side of the island, is the most famous of the
natural curiosities of Mackinac. It is a part of the high cliff which here
forms a conspicuous feature from the water, and affords from its heights
magnificent views of stretching sea and distant shore. A large section of
the lower part of the rock has fallen away, and the remaining portion has
been sculptured by the agency of the elements int() an arch of singularly
perfect and pleasing lines. The work of erosion is constantly progressing;
and more than seventy years ago visitors predicted the early downfall of
the rock. The summit of the arch is 149 feet above the lake surface; the
height from the base of buttress to the top of the rock is 49 feet. Be-
neath, part way down the steep descent, are other similar formations, rudi-
mentary arch rocks. One of these distinguished by the beauty of its
.«;ylvan setting is the Fairy Arch, which is under the first step of the
Giant's Stairway, and is reached by the shore walk from the village. The
Giant's Stairway consists of a succession of jutting cliffs, which, by large
fancy may be likened to the steps of a staircase. At the water's edge below
Arch Rock, and originally forming a part of it, are two masses of rock
which still retain the Indian designation of Gitchie ^fANiTOU. the landing
MA CKINA C I SLA ND.
SUGAR LOAF.
Photo by Rossiter.
place of the great Manitou of the Lakes. Here, on the occasion of his
visits to the island, the Manitou stepped ashore, ascended the cliff by the
Giant's Stairway, and entering through Arch Rock, passed on to Sugar
Loaf, which was his wigwam.
Sugar Loaf, as the Indian fancied it, the abode of his deity, is a much
more poetic and romantic conception than the Brobdingnagian loaf of sugar
which the white man's dull imagination found in it. The rock is a huge
cone rising 90 feet amid the forest growth. In the west side at a height of
ARC
Pbcto
K.
ssiter.
lo THE STANDARD GLIDE.
30 feet it is pierced b}- a grotto, from which radiate fissures throughout
the mass. The exterior is broken with crevices and cracks and indenta-
tions, and so gives lodgment for the scanty vegetation springing from seeds
brought by the winds and the birds. In the early days of white settlement,
the records say, large trees grew from near the summit. An admirable
and imposing landscape with Sugar Loaf as a central feature is had from
Prospect Point.
The agency of water in the sculpture of the rock is clearly manifest ;
and as if to confirm the old Indian legend of the island's rising from the
Ir.ke, the scientists tell us that at some period of geologic time Sugar Loaf
must have been submerged beneath the sea. Here the former presence of
water is demonstrated at what is now an altitude of 250 feet above the
present level of the lake ; and at various other points on the island may be
discerned clearly marked terraces showing at least four different coast
Imes, the series rising to the height of the fort. Professor Winchell thinks
that the emergence of the island probably was due to two causes, first, the
subsidence of the waters of the sea which originally covered it ; and, second,
the elevation of the land by some tremendous convulsion of nature. Here
and there, scattered over the island, are boulders of foreign origin, which
nuist have been brought here by the ice of the glacial period from the
far north.
Robinson's Folly is a bold and precipitous bluff some half-mile east of
the village, rising 127 feet above the water. It is popularly believed to have
been named after Capt. Daniel Robinson, or Robertson, a British officer
who was in command of the post from 1782 to 1787. The name appears in
the early records. Robinson's Folly is mentioned as a strategic point in
some of the official documents of the War of 1812, and in the proceedings
of the first Mackinac County Court, held on the island in 1818, the
"debtor's limits" were marked by a line "commencing at the Streights
at such a point below Robinson's Folly as that a straight line drawn
directly through or directly over the point of said Folly shall strike the
northeastern angle of Fort Michilimackinac."
Of what the folly was there are various legends. One is that the Cap-
tain had built for himself a summer house or eyrie on the edge of the
bluff, and that it was so insecurely perched that in a storm it was blown
down to the rocks below. A second version is that the Folly was the
favorite trysting place of white man and Indian girl, and that when the
faithless soldier brought to the island a white wife, the discarded flame, hav-
ing enticed him one day to their old meeting place, hurled him and her-
s.elf with him over the brink to destruction. Again the story runs that
:-:s the soldier was one day strolling here he beheld the form of a seductive
Indian girl. Eluding his advances, the vision of loveliness retreated toward
the edge of the cliff, and walking backward appeared as if about to fall
over it. The infatuated man sprang forward to save her, when with a
mocking laugh the apparition vanished into thin air and her victim plunged
to destruction.
There remains the tale of Peczhiki and Wintemoyeh. Peezhiki was a
chief dwelling on the Isle des Iroquois. Wintemoyeh was his daughter.
MACK IX AC ISLAND. ii
Feezhiki had promised Wintemoyeh in marriage to Assibun, a warrior
of the Chegoimegons. Assibun was old and ugly. Wintemoyeh, young and
blooming, hated him and demurred to playing May to his January. She
loved the white man Robinson ; and for the purposes of this story, at least,
Robinson loved her. When he heard about Assibun and Wintemoyeh's
peril he promptly invited her to come to Mackinac and be his; and she
came and was his. They spread the wedding feast on the top of this
rock; the wedding guests were gathered, and all went merry as a mar-
riage bell. The festivities were at their height, when Peezhiki appeared
on the scene with a gun. The bullet he intended for Robinson missed its
mark and killed another. The red man and white grappled in a death
struggle ; and the white man prevailed. Robinson forced his antagonist to
the edge of the cliff and threw him over. But in his fall Peezhiki caught
an overhanging limb, and hung suspended in mid-air. Wintemoyeh, a
daughter still, sprang to the rescue of her father, was seized by the chief,
j.nd both fell — thus making the total of five fatalities involved in the
several legends of Robinson and his folly.
Lover's Leap is a solitary pinnacle of rock rising 145 feet from the lake
shore a mile west of the village. The legend which gives it its name is
that in the long ago an Indian maiden of the Ojibway tribe, betrothed to
Ge-niw-e-gon, watched from this height the departure of her lover with a
war expedition across the water ; and to the rock she came day after day to
await his coming. At last the party, returning without him, brought word
of his death, and the distracted maiden, seeing in fancy the spirit of her
warrior lover beckoning her to him, repaired to this spot where her fond
eyes had bidden him farewell, and leaping over the brink joined ''the
innumerable caravan'' of Indian girls who have jumped from the Lover's
Leaps of so many American summer resorts.
Chimney Rock, 175 feet high, on the southwest shore, is best seen from
the water. Further north, near the British Landing, on the west shore, is
Pulpit Rock, or Friendship's Altar.
The Devil's Kitchen, a mass of calcareous rock hollowed out by the
action of water and fashioned into semblance of a Dutch oven, is on the
shore west of the village, and is reached by the beach boulevard.
Skull Cave, a cavern formed by an overhanging rock, is on Garrison
Avenue, southwest of Fort Holmes. Devoid of interest as a natural
curiosity, it is popularly believed to have been the refuge of Alexander
Henry, whose adventure here is related on another page. A larger cavern
is Scott's Cave, named from the discoverer, on the north side of the island
a mile from British Landing.
British Landing is that point of the northwestern shore where in the War
of 1812 the British troops debarked for the attack upon Fort Mackinaw:
and Farley's Farm was the scene, later in the same war, of the repulse of
the American forces by British and Indians. The farmhouse occupied at
that date by Michael Dousman still remains. This is the only farm on
the island.
The Old Cannon on the beach road below the fort is said to have been
one of the guns captured by Perry in the battle of Lake Erie. There were
12 THE STAXDARD GUIDE.
formerly in Fort ]\rackinac two cannon which bore the legends, "Taken at
Saratoga," and "Taken from Lord Cornwallis." Alexander Henry tells us
that when he came to old Fort Michilimackinac there were mounted on its
bastions brass cannon, which had been captured by a party of French-
Canadians on a plundering expedition against the posts of Hudson's Bay.
The House of Anne, the old Government Indian agency, which stood
just east of the present schoolhouse, was burned in the seventies. It has
been made famous by Constance Fenimore Woolsen in her novel of "Anne."
Miss Woolsen was at one time a resident of the island.
The Cemeteries, separated by the carriage road, Roman Catholic and
Protestant, contain no graves of special note. Many of the graves are
marked by the conventional military headstone with its simple inscription,
U. S. Soldier, No. . The epitaph of Capt. John Clitz, who died in
1836, while in command of the post, commemorates him as "Distinguished
alike for ardent zeal and intelligence in the duties of his profession and
manly frankness and sincerity in intercourse with his associates."
St. Anne's Catholic Church, built in 1874, succeeded the church which
h.ad been built at Old Mackinac in the last century, and in 1780, when the
military post was transferred to the island, had been taken down, brought
across on the ice and set up again on this site.
Point Lookout, which is included in the carriage route, overlooks a
stretch of woodland having for its central feature the conical mass of
Sugar Loaf.
The Golf Links of the Wawashkemo (or Crooked Trail) Club are on
the picturesque heights beyond the West End.
Ste.\mboat excursions are made in the season to St. Ignace and other
isearby points. Those whose course is around the island afford an oppor-
tunity to view Arch Rock and other objects from the water.
The Bluff Walk along the summit of the south shore, affords many
charming views. The walk begins at the upper end of the line of cottages,
av the end of the board walk, just before the road turns to the right and
climbs the hill.
Of the In'dians who were formerly the populous dwellers in all this
region, only a remnant — of the Chippeway tribe — remains. In the early
days of French settlement, the two races intermingled, and a portion of
the island population is of mixed blood.
Mackinac Island St.\te Park.— In 1875 Congress set aside 911 acres
of the public domain on the island to be the Mackinac National Park;
and in 1895, the military post having been abandoned, the park, fort and
reservation, 1,114 acres in all, were ceded to Michigan "for use as a State
Park." The park is under the contrfil of a l)oard of five commissioners.
The area comprise very nearly one-half of the island. Provision is made
for leasing building plots for a term of years, and many of the hand-
some summer homes ea.st and west of the village are upon such leased
plots. The dwellings of the fort also are lea.sed.
Les Cheneaux Islands, or Pine Islands, the name corrupted into "The
Snows," are a group of one hundred islands in Lake Huron, fourteen miles
northeast of Mackinac, famous for their fishing.
MACKINAC ISLAND. 13
The story of the Old AIission Church is closely connected with that of
tlie Mission House. Early in the century the Connecticut Missionary So-
ciety, which was a body formed for the conversion of the heathen of North
America, sent here Rev. Wm. AI. Ferry, a Presbyterian minister, who in
\S2S established a mission school for Indian children. The Mission House
was built in 1825 ; and the church building was completed in 1830, the
lumber for it having been hauled across on the ice. Mackinac was then a
busy center of the fur trade and a popular meeting place for the tribes.
The school attracted scholars from all the surrounding country, some of
them coming hundreds of miles. Church and school grew with the pros-
perity and importance of Mackinac, flourished for a few years and then
declined with the shrinking of the island's population, until in 1837, after
having enrolled some 500 scholars, the mission was abandoned, and
the church was closed. From that time until 1895 it was practically dis-
used, or was used for other than church purposes. In 1895, the property
having been acquired by certain visitors and residents, the church was re-
opened as the Union Chapel of Mackinac Island. It is altogether indepen-
dent of sectarian or denominational control, and summer visitors are cor-
dially welcomed to the Sabbath services. In preparing the edifice for oc-
cupancy once more, care was taken to permit no alterations from the
original style and arrangement. The straight-backed pews, old-time pulpit,
high choir gallery and small-paned windows, all were jealously preserved.
Said Rev. Dr. Meade C. Williams in the discourse at the reopening :
"So the church was built, and truly a pioneer church for this part of
the world it was. It is interesting to reflect that we are sitting to-day in
what is probably the oldest Protestant church building in our country be-
tween the State of Ohio and the farthest point of the Northwest. And
perhaps, too, the claim might be hazarded that in respect to original and
unchanged appearance there are very few church edifices — of any name
or in any part of the earlier West — that can boast of greater age. For
while other old church structures show enlargement and change, a new
end or a new front or a tower or spire built in subsequent years, or other
marks of alteration, this one in its entire structural form from foundation
wall to its tin-topped belfry and from end to end, and in the plaster of its
walls and ceiling, in its floors and its weather-worn exterior, stands with-
out any change, the same to-day as when first built."
PoNTiAc's Lookout, a cliff on the south shore, beyond the Grand Hotel
and the West End, commands one of the finest views on the island. The
name is a fitting recognition of Pontiac's place in the history of the region ;
although it is possible that he himself never looked out from the rock.
The view takes in a wide sweep. On the right we may look through
the Straits to Lake Michigan ; opposite is Mackinaw City ; then the South
Channel, with the smoke rising above Cheboygan in the far distance ;
Rois Blanc and Round Islands ; and on the left, seen through the Straits,
stretches Huron. Beneath us decline the wooded island slopes to the curv-
ing shore ; and beyond are the Grand Hotel and the town.
It is a noble prospect, and one to stir the imagination, to repeople
Mackinac with its ancient denizens, to restore the wigwams to the shore, the
M
THE STASDARD GUlDll.
■1
^mwPic
THE SAINTE MARIE IN THE ICE.
upturned canoes, the smoke rising from the camp-fires, and the dusky
groups of men and women with the children at play. We may see in
fancy the bark canoes of Marquette and Joliet setting out on their ever-
memorable expedition to the Mississippi, and we may watch the long
procession of Chippewas and Hurons convoying the reclaimed relics of
their beloved priest to his resting place at St. Ignace. Again, we may
follow the peltry laden canoe of the couriers des bois, its crew with steady
stroke keeping time to the Canadian boat-song, breaking now into shouts
and cheers, as they leap out on the shore, glad to see white men once
again, and after the long months of isolation among savages eager to meet
the newcomers from Montreal and hear tidings from La Belle France and
home. Or from the lookout we may see, rounding Bois Blanc, La Salle's
Griffin, first vessel on the Great Lakes, and prototype of the mighty fleet
of to-day; or the sails may be those of the Niagara and the Lawrence flying
the Stars and Stripes, and fresh from their victory on Lake Erie, now
come to meet humiliation and defeat in futile essay against this island
stronghold. There is abundant material in the past of I\Lickinac to dream
over; and the island and its surroundings are doulily attractive because
thus invested with human interest.
Familiar features of the Straits as seen froin M.ickinac arc tiie great Car
Ferries which ply between the terminals of the Grand Rapids &
Indiana Railway and the Michigan Central Railroad at Mackinaw City, and
the Duluth. South Shore & Atlantic Railway at St. Ignace, thus crossing
the Straits and connecting the L^pper and Lower Peninsulas. The dis-
tance is nine miles, and in winter this means nine miles of solid ice from
MACKINAC ISLAND.
15
THE NORTH WEST IN PORT.
Photo by Rossiter.
two to four feet thick. This might appear to offer an insuperable obstacle
to navigation, but the problem of overcoming it has been met by Amer-
ican genius and solved so successfully as to challenge the admira-
tion of the world. The boats devised for the service are of prodigious
strength and irresistible power as ice-crushers. The pioneer boat — Algoma
--built in 1881, was superseded in 1885 by the larger, St. Ignace ; and in
1895 came the Sainte Marie, the largest and most powerful ice-crusher in
the world. She is 305 feet over all, and has a capacity of eighteen loaded
freight or passenger cars. She is built rounding on the bottom and is
deeper aft than forward. Her engines are of 4.500 horse-power, being the
largest on the lakes, excepting those of the North Land and the North
West. She has a propeller with diameter of 12 feet, and an auxiliary
screw of 10 feet diameter under the prow. These are operated at a speed of
from sixty-five to eighty revolutions a minute; and when driven by this
tremendous power the boat is forced ahead, the bow climbs up on to the
ice, the suction of the forward propeller draws the supporting water from
imder the ice, the boat crushes it down, the current from the forward screw
tosses it one side, and the Sainte Marie moves steadily on her way with a
maintained speed of eight miles an hour through ice two feet thick. In
massiveness the construction rivals that of a warship: the boat is practi-
16
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
THE GRAND.
Photo by Bell.
cally solid timber below the water line; and the hull is complete)}' sheathed
with a casing of riveted steel.
The fame of the Straits of Mackinac ice-crushers has gone abroad. Rear-
Admiral Makaroff of the Russian Navy was commissioned to study the
Sainte Marie in service ; and the Czar has had built two boats after her
plans, one for Vladivostock and the other for St. Petersburg on the Neva.
Light-houses seen from Mackinac village are : To the southeast — Bois
Blanc Island fixed white light. East — Round Island white light with red
flashes every 20 .seconds. Southwest — Old Point Mackinaw (Mackinaw
City) red flash every 10 seconds; and west of this — McGulpin's Point fixed
white light.
Geography. — The general direction of the Straits of Mackinac is east
and west. Mackinac village faces southeast. Opposite in the southeast
lies Round Island; beyond that is Bois Blanc Island. Southwest is
Mackinaw City, on the northern shore of the Lower Peninsula. West is
St. Ignacc, at the southern point of the Upper Peninsula.
rO.XTIAC S LOOKOUT.
MACKINAC ISLAND.
17
MACKINAC.
Photo by Rossiter.
Fort Mackinac, on the heights above the village, is one of the dominat-
ing features of the island landscapes. It is situated on an elevation 133
feet above the water, and commands the town and harbor and Straits. The
parapets and old-time blockhouses have an air delightfully antiquated and
pictvirescjue. The fort piques curiosity and invites investigation. Thou-
sands of visitors ascend the steep slope every year to make exploration of its
quaint construction and arrangement. The cedar stockade with its loop-
holes for musketry fell to decay long ago ; parapet and blockhouse have
been dismantled of their guns, and no sentrj' challenges approach. With
open gate and unbarred port, interposing not even a no-trespass warning.
Fort Mackinac welcomes all comers to ramble through its bounds and
ascend the parapets, whence the view is an inspiration.
The ofificers' quarters, the barracks, commissary's stores and other build-
ings, no longer used for military purposes, have lost their martial air; and
some of the dwellings ar^ occupied as summer homes. But the masonry
of the fort is little changed. The stone-works have been cemented and
solidified with the lapse of time ; and the fort seems to have become a part
of the hill on which it stands. In all material respects as an island
stronghold, the fortification endures to-day as it was in those earlier
years when it had part in the troubled conflicts of international strife.
The first Fort Michilimackinac, built by the French in 1673, was a pali-
saded defense on the north side of the Straits, at Pere Marquette's
mission of St. Ignace du Michilimackinac, now St. Ignace. This was
i8
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
yUKT HOLMES.
Photo by Kossiter.
succeeded by another fort of the same name, a wooden fortification with
log bastions, on the south shore, where now is Mackinaw City. When
France yielded her Canadian possessions to England in 1760, the fort was
occupied by British troops; and there in 1763 occurred the massacre of the
garrison of Fort Michilimackinac, an incident of the Conspiracy of Pontiac.
Pontiac's War was an uprising of the Indians against the whites. The
tribes inhabiting the territory ceded by France to England resented being
given over to the British rule ; and instigated by Pontiac, an Ottawa chief
dwelling near Detroit, a plot was formed to massacre all the garrisons
simultaneously and thus restore his land to the red man. June 4, 1763, was
the date set for the attack ; and on that day every post west of Fort Niagara,
with the exception of Detroit and Fort Pitt, was taken and the garrison
slaughtered or made prisoners.
At Fort Michilimackinac, manned by a force of ninety odd, the Indians
had gathered in large numbers on the day set ; and a crafty stratagem was
devised to gain ingress to the fort. On the grounds outside the stockade
they organized for a ball game, baggatiway, or lacrosse, in which the players,
divided into two sides, seek to carry the ball beyond the opponent's goal.
When the sport was at its height, officers and men watching the game, the
ball was thrown, as if by accident, within the stockade; and the players,
as if still in play, rushed in after it. Once inside they raised the war
whoop, and quickly overpowered the garrison. Of the ninety-nine soldiers,
seventy were killed. Among the survivors was Alexander Henry, the fur
trader, whose narrative of the event is given on another page. Pontiac's
MACKINAC ISLAND.
19
^^
THE PERRY .CANNON.
Photo by Rossiter.
conspiracy, although so successful in execution here, failed in its large
purpose ; and the following year Fort Michilimackinac was again occupied
by British troops.
In 1780 the military post was transferred to the island as affording a more
defensible position, and the present fortification was begun. The timbers
were brought from the mainland ; the stone was quarried on the island ;
and there may still be seen near Fort Holmes the limekiln used for making
the lime. Of the fort at this period as an outpost of civilization, a British
officer stationed here wrote : "The Island and Fort of Mackinac is of
the first importance, as tending to promote our Indian connections and
secure them in our interests; its geographical position is admirable; its in-
fluence extends and is felt among the Indian Tribes to New Orleans and
the Pacific Ocean ; vast tracts of country look to it for protection and
.supplies; and it gives security to the great trading establishments of the
North West and Hudson's Bay Companies by supporting the Indians on the
Missisippi, the only barrier which interposes between them and the enemy."
While the conflict between England and the Colonies had in a measure in-
fluenced the removal to the island, the fort had no share in the events of
the Revolutionary War. At the close of the war it came by cession into
the control of the United States. Years of tranquility ensued, with little
to break the serenity of garrison life at Mackinac. Then came 1812; and
here, far removed from the theater of eflfective operations, were enacted
incidents of war, which if they were barren of result yet had in them
the elements which go to the conduct and winning of decisive campaigns.
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
THE OI.O MISSION CHURCH.
Photo by Rossiter.
That it should fare hard with. the garrison of Fort ^[ackinac was under
the circumstances a foregone conchision.
Lieut Porter Hanks was in command. His entire command comprised a
force of 57 effective men. 5 men in hospital, and a drummer boj-.
Against him was arrayed a British force of 306 regulars and Canadians,
and 718 Indians, 1.021 all told. They were under command of Capt. Charles
Roberts, stationed at St. Joseph's Island. Capt. Roberts received intelli-
gence of the declaration of war on July 15, and was directed to attack Fort
Mackinac immediately. He sailed on the next day. the i6th. in the North-
west Fur Company's ship Caledonia, with an armament of two six-
pounders, ten batteries and sixty canoes. Among the force of a thousand
find odd must have been many who knew Mackinac well ; indeed, as a
former British post, fort and island must have been familiar in everv de-
MACKINAC ISLAND.
THE MISSION HOUSE.
Photo by Rossiter.
tail to the officers in command, and on this knowledge, no doubt, was
based the plan of attack.
Coming to anchor ofif the northwest shore, at the point ever since known
c-s the British Landing, the troops debarked in the early mornffig hours;
before daybreak the artillery had been hauled into position, one of the guns
on the heights in the rear of the fort commanding its weakest points ; and
the force of whites and Indians was disposed for the attack. Then under
flag of truce the British commander sent an officer to demand of the
Americans immediate surrender. This call to give up his fort was the first
that Lieut. Hanks knew of the declaration of war. There was nothing else
to be done ; the garrison bowed to the inevitable, surrendered the fort,
marched out with the honors of war, gave up their arms, and were sent
away under parole to Detroit and other American posts.
This is the story of the affair as Lieut. Hanks reported it to Gen.
Hull :
"I take the earliest opportunity to acquaint Your Excellency of the sur-
render of the garrison of Michilimackinac, under my command, to his Britan-
nic Majesty's forces under the command of Capt. Charles Roberts, on the 17th
ultimo, the particulars of which are as follows: On the i6th, I was in-
formed by the Indian interpreter that he had discovered from an Indian
that the several nations of Indians then at St. Joseph (a British garrison,
distant about forty miles) intended to make an immediate attack on
^Michilimackinac.
"I was inclined, from the coolness I had discovered in some of the prin-
cipal chiefs of the Ottawa and Chippewa nations, who had but a few days
before professed the greatest friendship for the United States, to place
confidence in this report.
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
THE WEST END.
Photo by Rossiter.
"I immediately called a meeting of the American gentlemen at that time
en the island, in which it was thought proper to dispatch a confidential
person to St. Joseph to watch the motions of the Indians.
"Captain Michael Dousman, of the militia, was thought the most suitable
for this service. He embarked about sunset, and met the British forces
within ten or fifteen miles of the island, by whom he was made prisoner
and put on his parole of honor. He was landed on the island at day-
break, with positive directions to give me no intelligence whatever. He
was also instructed to take the inhabitants of the village, indiscriminately,
to a place on the west side of the island, where their persons and property
should be protected by a British guards but should they go to the fort, they
would be subject to a general massacre by the savages, which would be in-
evitable if the garrison fired a gun. This information I received from Dr.
Day, who was passing through the village when every person was flying
for refuge to the enemy. T immediately, on being informed of the approach
of the enemy, placed ammunition, etc., in the block houses ; ordered every
gun charged, and made every preparation for action. About 9 o'clock I
could discover that the enemy were in possession of the heights that com-
manded the fort, and one piece of their artillery directed to the most de-
fenseless part of the garrison. The Indians at this time were to be seen in
great numbers in the edge of the woods.
"At half past 11 o'clock the enemy sent in a flag of truce, demanding a
surrender of the fort and island to his Britannic Majesty's forces. This,
sir, was the first information I had of the declaration of war ; I. however,
had anticipated it, and was as well prepared to meet such an event as I
possibly could have been with tlie force under my command, amounting to
MAC KIN A C ISLA ND.
23
THE LAKE VIEW.
Photo by Rossiter.
fifty-seven effective men, including officers. Three American gentlemen,
who were prisoners, were permitted to accompany the flag; from them I
ascertained the strength of the enemy to be from nine hundred to one
thousand strong, consisting of regular troops, Canadians and savages ; that
they had two pieces of artillery, and were provided with ladders and ropes
for the purpose of scaling the works, if necessary. After I had obtained
this information, I consulted my officers, and also the American gentlemen
present, who were very intelligent men ; the result of which was, that it was
impossible for the garrison to hold out against such a superior force. In
this opinion I fully concurred, from the conviction that it was the only
measure that could prevent a general massacre. The fort and garrison
were accordingly surrendered."
The capture of Fort Mackinac had a depressing effect upon the United
States troops in the Northwest, and was bitterly resented. In 1814, after
Perry's victory on Lake Erie, the Americans planned an expedition to re-
take their own. A fleet of seven war vessels and a land force of 750 men
set sail from Detroit, to destroy British ships on the upper lakes and to
capture Fort Mackinac. Among the ships were the Lawrence, Niagara,
Scorpion and Tigress, forever famous for their participation in the Battle of
Lake Erie. There was this time not to be any stealthy night landing nor
morning surprise. The island was well advised of the coming of the hostile
fleet, and was prepared to repel the attack. Fort Mackinac was strongly
garrisoned; on the heights above it had been constructed the new fortifica-
tion of Fort George; earthworks and batteries lined the bluffs; and Can-
adian militiamen and Indian allies held all the strategic points. Mackinac
was an American Malta.
The fleet came; a week was spent in fruitless maneuvering for position;
24
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
KORT MACKINAC
Photo
Round Island was attempted as a base, and straightway, vnider tire of Fort
Mackinac, abandoned ; and then the land force debarked at British Land-
ing, bent on what was recognized to be a hopeless enterprise. So wrote
Capt. Arthur Sinclair, the naval officer in command, in his report to the
Secretary of the Navy ; and of what followed he told the story :
"I arrived off Michilimackinac on the 26th of July; but owing to a
tedious spell of bad weather, which prevented our reconnoitering or being
able to procure a prisoner who could give us information of the enemy's
Indian force, which, from several little skirmishes we had on an adjacent
island, appeared to be very great, we did not attempt a landing until the
4th inst., and it was then made more with a view to ascertain positively
the enemy's strength than with any possible hope of success; knowing, at
the same time, that I could effectually cover their landing and retreat to
the ships, from the position I had taken within 300 yards of the beach.
Col. Croghan would never have landed, even with his protection, being
positive, as he was, that the Indian force alone on the island, with the ad-
MACKINAC ISLAND.
:he harbor.
iter.
vantages they had, were superior to, him, could he have justified himself
to his government, without having stronger proof than appearances, that
he could not effect the object in view. Mackinac is, by nature, a perfect
Gibraltar, being a high inaccessible rock on every side, except the west,
from which to the heights, you have near two miles to pass through a
wood, so thick that our men were shot in every direction, and within a
few yards of them, without being able to see the Indians who did it; and
a height was scarcely gained before there was another within 50 or 100
yards commanding it, where breastworks were erected and cannon opened
on them. Several of those were charged, and the enemy driven from
them ; but it was soon found the further our troops advanced the stronger
the enemy became, and the weaker and more bewildered our forces were;
several of the commanding officers were picked out and killed or wounded
by the savages, without seeing any of them. The men were getting lost
and falling into confusion, natural under such circumstances, which de-
manded an immediate retreat, or a total defeat and general massacre must
26
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
LOOKING TOWARD BRITISH LANUINC.
Photo by Rossiter.
have ensued. This was conducted in a masterly manner by Col. Crog-
han, who had lost the aid of that valuable and ever to be lamented officer,
Major Holmes, who, with Captain Van Horn, was killed by the Indians.
"The enemy were driven from many of their strongholds ; but such was
the impenetrable thickness of the woods, that no advantage gained could
be profited by. Our attack would have been made immediately under the
lower fort, that the enemy might not have been able to use his Indian force
to such advantage as in the woods, having discovered by drawing a fire
from him in several instances, that I had greatly the superiority of metal
of him ; but its site being about 120 feet above the water, I could not, when
near enough to do him an injury, elevate sufficiently to batter it. Above
this, nearly as high again, he has another strong fort, commanding every
point on the island, and almost perpendicular on all sides."
The fiercest part of the engagement was fought on the fields of the Dous-
man (now Earley) farm. Here the Americans in the open were exposed to
a masked battery of four pieces, and subjected to the fire of Indians and
troops concealed in the woods. They retreated to their ships, with a loss
of 13 killed, 48 wounded and 2 missing. Among the dead was Major
Andrew Hunter Holmes, in whose honor Fort George afterward received
the name of Fort Holmes.
Balked of their purpose to capture Mackinac by assault, the .Americans
determined to reduce it by siege. The plan was to blockade the approaches
?.nd intercept supplies. "Those being the only two channels of communi-
cation by which Mackinac can possibly be supplied, and their provisions
at this time being extremely short," wrote Capt. Sinclair, "I think they
will be starved into a surrender."
At the outlet of Lake Simcoe the Americans came upon the British
schooner Nancy, laden with six months' rations for the garrison. They
opened fire ; and with a shell blew up schooner and cargo. The crew, under
conunand of Lieut. Worsley, of the British Navy, escaped from the wreck,
and, eluding capture, made their way in an open boat to Mackinac. The
MACKINAC ISLAND.
27
THE ISLAND HOUSE.
Photo by Rossiter.
Tigress and the Scorpion were left to maintain the blockade, and the other
vessels of the fleet repaired to Detroit.
Then followed the most daring exploit in the annals of Fort J^Iackinac.
With starvation before the garrison if the blockade should remain un-
broken, the leading spirits resolved upon an enterprise no less desperate
than to attempt the capture of the enemy's ships. Under the leadership of
Lieut. Worsley the company of volunteers — soldiers, sailors and Indians — •
left Mackinac in open boats, and made for Detour, where the Tigress and
the Scorpion were reported to be cruising. So timing their progress as
to reach their destination in the night, they discovered the Tigress alone
and at anchor, rowed silently up to her in the darkness, clambered over
the side, and in hand to hand struggle overpowered the crew.
Two days afterwards the Scorpion returned to the bay; and at night,
wholly ignorant of the events which had converted the Tigress from a
companion ship into an enemy, dropped anchor within two miles of her.
At daybreak, still in guise of sister ship, the Tigress bore down upon
the Scorpion and opened fire. Before the dumfounded Americans could
realize the situation and rally for resistance, the ship had been taken ; and
the Mackinac blockade was raised.
It was the final incident of the war in these waters; and it is the last
martial activity we have to chronicle in the history of Fort Mackinac.
With the coming of peace the island was restored to the United States ;
and thenceforward, for a period of eighty years, the fort was occupied
as a garrison post ; until it was finally abandoned by the Government in
1895.
If the events in which the fort had part were not in themselves mo-
mentous, it is interesting to recall that they were typical of the historical
28
THE STAXDARD GUIDE.
THE OLD FL'K CXIMI'ANV HEADOUAKTERS.
J'hoto hv Kossiter.
transitions of the period. When the French standard was floated here
at old Fort ]\Iichihmackinac. it was significant of tlie coming of a new
people to supplant the old race which had occupied the continent so long.
When the Lilies of France gave way to the hanner of Great Britain, the
change signified that America was to be in custom and speech English
and not French. And not less momentous was the change of flags wiiicli
took place when in turn the Cross of St. George was supplanted by the
Stars and Stripes, an emblem which had had its birth since the old fort
was young.
The selection of Mackinac as a location for a fortification was de-
termined by the French in 1673 because of its strategic importance, here
at the converging of the great inland seas, where it controlled the avenues
of the fur. trade and the routes to the Northwest. It is to-day as it was
then, the Key of the Lakes. Should hostile forces ever confront one an-
other here in the lake regions of the continent, the name of Fort Mackinac,
one may surmise, would be written large on the war maps ; and the lake
ports, east or west and north or sdutli of tlie Straits of Alackinac would
sleep more securely of nights for their confidence in this Michigan
Gibraltar. With search-lights and disappearing dynamite guns, and with
mines for the Straits' channels. Fort Mackinac would hold at bay even an
American fleet commanded by American captains and manned by Amer-
ican Jackies.
MACKINAC ISLAND.
ClIlMXIiV KULK.
Photo by Rossiter.
One of the sights of New York City is the Waldorf-Astoria, largest and
most costly hotel in the world. One of the sights of Mackinac Island is the
old Headquarters of the American Fur Company. It was the fortune
made in the Mackinac warehouse which built the colossal structure on Fifth
Avenue.
When John Jacob Astor decided to go into the fur trade in 1807, his
most formidable opposition was found here in Mackinac. Always an im-
portant fur trading post under the French regime, the island was destined
to assume new importance with the British. When the success of the North
West Company, whose headquarters was on Lake Superior, prompted
rivalry, a new organization called the Mackinaw Company, was established
with chief offices here. It sent its agents out through all the northwestern
country to the Missisippi, and far to the south through the territory
acquired by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase ; until the growing
influence of the alien company with the Indians of the western country
attracted the unfavorable attention of the Government. Astor had long
dealt in furs, buying in Montreal and exporting to Europe, and had amassed
large capital. When he embarked in the fur trade proper — that is, the busi-
3°
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
THE DEVIL S KITCHEN.
Photo by Rossiter.
ness of collecting first-hand from the Indians and trappers — he found him-
self shut out from almost the whole field within the American borders by
this Mackinaw Company. Thereupon he organized the American Fur
Company, with a million dollars capital ; purchased a controlling interest
in the Mackinaw Company ; secured from Congress a law prohibiting
British fur traders from doing business within American limits; and had
the field to himself.
Such in outline is the story of the old fur trading headquarters of
Mackinac Island. Here is Irving's description of the post, as one of
Astor's agents saw it, when he came here to enlist recruits for the ex-
pedition to Astoria in the year 1810:
"This famous old French trading post continued to be a rallying point
for a multifarious and motley population. The inhabitants were amphi-
bious in their habits, most of them being, or having been, voyageurs or
canoe men. It was the great place of arrival and departure of the south-
west fur trade. Here the ^Mackinaw Company had established its principal
post, from whence it communicated with the interior and with Montreal.
Hence its various traders and trappers set out for their respective destina-
tions about Lake Superior and its tributary waters, or for the IMississippi.
the Arkansas, the Missouri, and the other regions of the west. Here, after
the absence of a year or more, they returned with their peltries, and settled
their accounts: the furs rendered in by them being transmitted, in canoes.
MACKINAC ISLAND.
31
LOVER S LEAP.
Photo by Rossiter.
from hence to Montreal. Mackinaw was, therefore, for a great part of the
year, very scantily peopled ; but at certain seasons the traders arrived from
all points, with their crews of voyageurs, and the place swarmed like
a hive.
"Mackinaw, at that time, was a mere village, stretching along a small
bay, with a fine broad beach in front of its principal row of houses, and
dominated by the old fort, which crowned an impending height. The beach
was a kind of public promenade, where were displayed all the vagaries of
a seaport on the arrival of a fleet from a long cruise. Here voyageurs
32
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
ilji
IILE ,sAi.\ ri-: AlAKlh.
I'hoto by Kossiter.
frolicked away their wages, fiddling and dancing in the booths and cabins,
buying all kinds of knick-knacks, dressing themselves out finely, and parad-
ing up and down, like arrant braggarts and coxcombs. Sometimes they
met with rival coxcombs in the young Indians from the opposite shore,
who would appear on the beach painted and decorated in fantastic style,
and would saunter up and down, to be gazed at and admired, perfectly
satisfied that they eclipsed their pale-faced competitors.
"Now and then a chance party of 'Northwesters' appeared at Mackinaw
from the rendezvous at Fort William. These held themselves up as
the chivalry of the fur trade. They were men of iron; proof against cold
weather, hard fare, and perils of all kinds. Some would wear the north-
west button, and a formidable dirk, and assume something of a military
air. They generally wore feathers in their hats, and affected the 'brave.'
'Je siiis tin liomme du nord!' — 'I am a man of the north,' one of the.se
swelling fellows would exclaim, sticking his arms akimbo and ruffling by
the Southwesters, whom he regarded with great contempt, as men softened
by mild climates and the luxurious fare of bread and bacon, and whom he
stigmatized with the inglorious name of pork-eaters. The superiority as-
sumed by these vainglorious swaggerers was, in general, tacitly admitted.
Indeed, some of them had acquired great notoriety for deeds of hardihood
and courage; for the fur trade had its heroes, whose names resounded
throughout the wilderness.
"Such was IMackinaw at the time of wliich we are treating. It now,
doubtless, presents a totally different aspect. The fur companies no longer
assemble there; the navigation of the lakes is carried on by steamboats
?nd various shipping, and the race of traders, and trappers, and voyageurs,
and Indian dandies, have vapored out their brief hour and disappeared."
St. Tgnace.
St. Ignace, on the north shore of the Straits, at the extremity of the
Upper Peninsula, is the termintts of the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic
Railroad, which here connects by car-ferry with Mackinaw City, on the
Lower Peninsula. The spot has historical interest for its association with
the labors of the missionary and explorer, Pere Marquette. Here in 1671 he
founded the mission of St. Ignatius du Michilimackinac, from here he set
forth on his exploration to discover the Mississippi, here his body was
brought for burial by his devoted followers, and here is the monument
which marks his grave.
Jacques Marquette, a native of France and member of the Society of
Jesus, came as a missionary to Canada in 1666; and two years later, arrived
at Sault Ste. Marie, he re-established there the mission which had been
founded in 1641 and afterwards abandoned. In 1671, coming here, he
founded the mission of St. Ignace du Michilimackinac, named after St.
Ignatius Loyola, and built a chapel ; then followed the stockaded village,
the St. Ignace of to-day.
In 1673 he realized his long cherished project of making search for the
great river in the west, of which the Indians had brought reports. "It
runs north and south," he wrote, "and so far that the Illinois, who do not
know what canoes are, have never yet heard of the mouth ; they only
know that there are very great nations below them, some of whom raise
two crops of maize a year. This great river can hardly empty into Vir-
ginia, and we rather believe its mouth is in California." With Sieur Joliet
and five Indians, in two birch bark canoes, they started in May. "I was the
more enraptured," his journal reads, "as I saw my designs on the point of
being accomplished, and myself in the happy necessity of exposing my life
for the salvation of all these nations, and particularly for the Illinois, who
had, when I was at Lapointe du St. Esprit, very earnestly entreated me to
carry the word of God to their country. We set out fully resolved to do
and suffer all for so glorious an enterprise. The joy of being chosen for
this expedition," he exclaims, "roused our courage and sweetened the labor
of paddling from morning till night."
From the Straits of Mackinac they coasted along the shore of Lake
Michigan to Green Bay, and then by the Fox River and across Lake
Winnebago, by portage, to the Wisconsin and down that stream until
the canoes floated out upon a mightier flood, and "safely entered the
Mississippi on the 17th day of June, with a joy I cannot express."
They proceeded down the river, being everywhere kindly received by
the natives. "I thank thee, Black-Gown," said the sachem of the Illinois,
with that fine figurative speech so characteristic of the Indian, "for taking
so much pains to come and visit us. Never has the earth been so beautiful
nor the sun so bright as to-day. Never has our river been so calm, nor so
34
THR STAXDARl) GLIDE.
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^^^^^•^^^^^1
iOtt^abfl^l
i
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9
PERE MARijL'ETTE 0.\ THE .MI.SS1>>I ITI.
From the painting in Montreal.
free from rocks, which your canoes have remoxed a> they passed. Never
has our tol)acco had so fine a flavor, nor our corn ai)peared so beautiful as
we behold it to-day." In reading IMarquette's narrative, one is constantly
impressed by this recognition the Indians api)ear everywhere to have made
of the dc\'otc(l mis>i( nary as an apostle of the Prince of Peace. So, meet-
ing welcome e\ery\\hcre. ruul erecting the symbols of religion, and im-
parting, as they could, the simple story of the Cross, they followed down the
river to the mouth of the Arkansas, and until Marquette had satisfied him-
self that the Mississippi must How into the Gulf of Mexico. Then re-
tracing their course, they reached Green Bay in September, after having
traveled more than J. 700 miles, and after the missionary (.'xplorer had won
for himself a i)lace ain.ong the disco\'erers of the continent.
In 1674 Manpiette fotmded tlie mission of the Illinois, in the follow-
uig winter, worn oiU by hrirdshi]) and exposure antl falling ill. he foresaw
the end; and there came r])nn him a great longing to retm-n to .St. Ignace
that he might die among his peoj/le. Hut it was not tn be. .Setting oiU in
the spring of 167.^, by way of the St. Joseph's River, and the eastern shore
of Lake Michigan, he had come so far as to the ijromontnry of the .Sleep-
:ing Bear, where he died, and was buried on the bank< of the Michigan
river ever since known a^ the l^ere Marquette. 'i"he Indian^ were too
deeply attached to their faithful missionary to leave his liody in so un-
honored a grave, writes Shea: "They resolved, in 1677, to transport his
remains to Mackinaw: and, landing at the si)ot, oi)ened the grave. The
body was entire, though dried up: clearing llu' He^b from the bones, they
inclo-ed them in a box of bark, and. depositing it in a canoe. ])roceedcd to-
ST. IGXACE.
35
PERE MARQUETTE.
Statue by Trentanove in the Capitol at Washington.
36
THE STAXDARD GUIDE.
LOYOLA RENOLINCING THE WORLD.
Altar-piece in St. Ignatius' Church.
wards tlifir \illage in a long and silent convoy. Some Iro(|nois canoes
which met them, learning the nature of the ceremony, joined the line.
On appearing before Mackinaw, the two villages, headed by their mission-
aries, Pierson and Nouvel. came down to the shore, and verifying the
identity of the body, landed it amid the chant of the 'De Profundis.' Borne
then with the usual ceremonies to the church, it lay exposed till the next
day, the Qth of June, when, after a mass of requiem, it was interred in a
little vault in the middle of the church, 'where,' .says Father Dal)l(>n, 'he
reposes as the guardian angel of our Ottawa missions.' "
In 1706 the mission was abandoned, the church was burned, and the site
of church and grave was lost for 170 years, until in 1877 the church founda-
tions were revealed, and the grave was identified. All that remained within
it was removed for preservation to Marquette College in Milwaukee. In
ST. IGNACE.
27
1882 the marble shaft was erected which marks the site of the grave. The
inscription reads :
In Memoriam Rcvdi Ptris J. Marquette S. J. Qui obiit die 18 Mail
MDCLXXV, X X xviii ainios iiat., et sepultus est in isto sepulchro A. D.
MDCLXXVII. R. I. P. Lapis iste ereetus est ab incolis opidi A. D.
MDCCCLXXXII.
"In memory of Reverend Father J. Marquette, S. J., who died May 18,
1675, aged 38 years, and was buried in this grave A. D. 1677. Requiescat
in pace. This stone was erected by the inhabitants of this town A. D. 1882."
In St. Ign.^tius' Catholic Church are preserved som.e extremely inter-
esting relics of Marquette and of the mission and the old Indian life. These
are exhibited to visitors by the rector. Rev. Jos. P. Kunes.
The altar piece is a painting of St. Ignatius Loyola, founder of the
Jesuits, renouncing the world at Montserrat. This picture is reputed to
be 300 years old ; to have been brought here by Marquette himself, and
when the chapel was burned in 1706 to have been preserved by the pious
care of the Indians.
The picture of Marquette on the Mississippi is in Montreal. It was used
as the device of the one-cent postage stamp in the Trans-Mississippi Ex-
position series.
CHIPPEWAS OF TO-DAY.
Photo by Bell.
- o
Sault $tc. marie.
The most interesting object here is the St. Mary's Falls Canal with its
immense locks, the largest ship canal in the world. To appreciate the work
we must note the natural conditions presented at the Sault Ste. Marie.
The level of Lake Huron is 22 feet below that of Lake Superior, there is
therefore this amount of descent in the St. Mary's River connecting the two
lakes; and of this fall 19 feet occurs here at the Sault, in the half-mile
stretch of rapids known as the St. Mary's Falls. This was of course* an in-
superable barrier to navigation of the stream itself. The engineering prob-
lem presented was to receive a ship on the lower level at the foot of the falls,
:.nd lift it ig feet to the level of the river above the falls.
When Michigan was admitted to the Union, one of the first public en-
terprises undertaken by the new State was to provide a ship canal for the
Sault. In 1852 Congress granted 750,000 acres of lands, the proceeds of
which were to go to building the canal. In 1855 the State canal was
opened; it was 4,500 feet in length and had two locks. The demands of
an increasing lake commerce outgrew the capacity of the State lock, and
the construction of a new one was undertaken by the Government, at a
cost of nearly one million dollars. This was opened in 1881, and was named
after Gen. Godfrey Weitzel, of the United States Army, the engineer in
charge. The Weitzel Lock is 515 feet in the basin, 80 feet wide, and 39^^
feet deep, and has a draft of 17 feet on the miter-sills. A second Govern-
ment lock, taking the place of the old State lock, was opened in 1896. It
is named the Poe Lock, after Gen. Orlando M. Poe, U. S. A., the con-
structing engineer. The length of basin between gates is 800 feet, width
/ ^ ■ ■ u
WEITZEL LUCK AND .\Ii.M I NISTRATION BUILDING.
Photo by Bell.
40
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
VVHALEBACKS IN THE LOCK.
Photo by Bell.
100 feet, depth over miter-sills (the allowable draft of vessels) 21 feet;
cUid the lift is from 18 to 20 feet, according to the fluctuations of the upper
end lower levels of the river. The Poe Lock can receive at one lockage
four vessels each ,150 feet long and 46 feet beam. The cost exceeded
$4,700,000.
To fill the lock water is admitted to it through two culverts (8 feet
square) extending from the canal above the upper gates to a point just
above the lower gate. The top of the culverts is the iloor of the lock, and
this has, in the Weitzel Lock, 58 apertures, through which the water flows
in. The lock is emptied by means of culverts, which extend beneath
tlic lower gates and discharge into the stream below. To fill the Weitzel
Lock requires 11 minutes; 8 minutes to empty it, and 2 minutes to open or
close the gates. The locks are worked by hydraulic power.
The operation of lockage, or "locking through," is Very simple. When
a vessel is to be taken up. the upper gates being closed, the lock is emptied
until the water in it is on a level with the water of the canal outside where
the vessel is waiting. Then the lower gates are opened; the vessel enters
and the gates are closed behind her. The water is admitted from above
through tlie culverts, and lifting the ship with it rises in the lock to the level
of the water in the canal above the upper gates, which then are opened, and
/V\
A STUDY OF STEAM AND SMOKE.
Photo by Fanjoy.
42
run STAXDARD GLIDE.
STEAMSHIP NORTH LAND ENTERING THE CANAL.
Photo by BelL
the vessel glides out into the canal. A vessel bound down enters the lock at
the high level, the gates are closed behind her, the water sinks to the level
of the canal below, the gates are opened and she passes out. Though all
so simple in principle and operation, it is an impressive exhibition of
tremendous and majestic power: and there is singular fascination in watch-
ing the huge ships, one after another in endless procession, deliberately
and steadily lifted and lowered, as by a mysterious agency.
In the busy season there is always, above and below, a line of vessels
awaiting their turn to pass the locks. In the fiscal year endii:g June .30.
1898. 13,411 vessels were passed through in 6,258 lockages, an average of
more than two at a time. The canal in that year was open 2t,~ days, the
closed season being from Dec. 10 to Ai)ril 18. The 13.41 1 vessels carried
14,968,377 tens of freight — coal, flour, wheat, grain, iron, copper, silver,
salt, lumber, stone — and 28,767 passengers. Of the lockages 1.660 were
through the Weitzel Lock, and 4.598 through the Poe Lock. The average
time spent by vessels in passing the locks was 36 minutes 31 seconds. There
?re no tolls, the locks are free. The marine post-oftice of the canal handled
82,179 pieces of mail.
The Canadian Lock, on the other bank of the river, is 900 feet long. 60
feet wide, and of 21-feet draft. Thtre was a canal here as early as 1790.
when the Northwest Fur Company built a lock 38 feet long, with a lift of
9 feet, for their canoes. The Canadian lock passed 4.750 vessels last year,
and 11,883 passengers. The combined traffic of the Sault for that year.
American and Canadian, was 18,161 vessels, 20,288,639 tons of freight, and
40.650 passengers. The tonnage of the St. Mary's Falls Canal is double
that of the Suez Canal.
On the river banks above the locks is the stone building of the State Fish
SAULT STE. MARIE.
43
ciiirrKWA 1 i.^ni.KAiEx netting w hiiei i,-,ii.
I'hoto by Bell.
Hatchery, where some handsome specimens of trout may be seen in the
ponds; and in season the process of hatching whitefish may be inspected.
The Sault has always been famous for its whitefish ; a familiar figure is the
Chippewa netting fish in the swift waters of the rapids. Their right to the
fishing is guaranteed to the tribe in perpetuity. The Sault Indians and
half-breeds spend their lives on the water, and are exceedingly skillful
in the management of their craft. Shooting the rapids with the native
boatman is a conventional diversion with visitors. The boats put out
from the bank near the fish hatchery, and the course extends over some-
thing less than a half-mile to a point below the locks. The experience is
exhilarating, if not thrilling, and the records prove that it is a perfectly
safe adventure.
At Fort Brady, v/hich occupies a commanding situation on an elevation
west of the locks, one may have an insight into garrison life. A ^■isit to
the fort should be timed for witnessing dress-parade, or the guard-mount
nt sunset. The fort has been occupied by United States troops since the
year 1821. The Sault was a military post in very early times. The
French had a fort here in 1750 to intercept the Lake Superior Indians on
their way to the New York shores of Lake Ontario to receive presents
from the English.
Sault Ste. Marie has historical interest as the oldest settlement in
Michigan, and one of the oldest in the Northwest. Jesuit missionaries
visited the tribes here in 164 1, naming the rapids Saut du Gaston, the Falls
of Gaston, in honor of the brother of the French King. In 1668 Dablon
and Marquette established the mission of Ste. Marie du Sault. Three years
later the Sault was the scene of one of the continent-claiming proclama-
44
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
THE IROQUOIS.
Photo by Bell.
tions to which the representatives of European monarchs were much
given in those days. Sieur Daumont de Saint Lusson, a sub-delegate of
the Intendant of New France, called a council here of the Indian tribes in-
habiting the Northwest, and took formal possession of the entire territory
from Montreal westward to the Pacific. "Having convoked the tribes,"
he writes, "we have caused our commission to be read to them, and have
had it interpreted, that they may not be ignorant of it. We have then
caused a cross to be erected to produce here the fruits of Christianity, and
near it a cedar pole, to which we have attached the arms of France, saying
three times with a loud voice and public proclamation, that in the name
of the most high, most powerful and most redoubtable monarch, Louis
XIV. of name, most Christian King of France and Navarre, we take pos-
session of said place, Sainte Marie du Sault, as also of the Lakes Huron
i.nd Superior, the Island of Caientation. and of all other lands, rivers, lakes
and streams contiguous to and adjacent here, as well discovered as to be
discovered, which are bounded on the one side by the seas of the North
and West, and on the other side by the sea of the South, in its whole
length or depth. At each of the said three proclamations we have taken
up a sod of earth, crying (Vive le Roi !' and caused the same to be cried by
the whole assembly, as well French as Indians, declaring to the said
nations aforesaid and hereafter that from henceforth they were to be subjects
of His Majesty's, subject to obey his laws and follow his customs, promising
them all protection and succor on his part against the incursion and in-
vasion of their enemies, declaring to all other potentates, sovereign princes,
SAULT STE. MARIE.
45
as well States as Republics, to them or their subjects, that they neither can
nor shall seize upon or dwell in any place of this country, unless with the
good pleasure of his said most Christian Majesty, and of him who shall
govern the land in his name, under penalty of incurring his hatred and the
efforts of his arms."
It was a high sounding and impressive declaration of a claim to
sovereignty which endured less than a hundred years ; and Sieur de St.
Lusson's document is interesting to-day chiefly as recalling a forgotten
page of history. Of all who visit Sault Ste. Marie probably not one in ten,
unless fresh from school, remembers that the King of France ever had
dominion here in the Northwest. (Hotel: The Iroquois.)
.^
CHARLEVOIX.
Cbarkwoix.
Charlevoix, ciglitcLii mik-s fruni Petoskey, en tlic sliorc of [.ake Michi-
gan, is one of the ancient towns of the northern lake region. It was called
after Pierre Francois Xavier Charlevoix, the French Jesuit historian and
explorer, who in 1720 made an expedition thmugh Lakes Huron and Michi-
gan, and descended the Mississippi to its mouth; and so with Marquette,
loliet. La Salle, Hcnne] in and others of hi> race, wrote his name on the
map of New France.
Plain Charlevoix is the official desigr,ati( n : hut tho-e who know the s])ot
a> a -iMumer rest haven are wont to speak of it as Charlevoix-t he-Beauti-
ful. It is indeed lovely for situation, and the surroundings are a delight.
Just back of the Lake Michigan beach is Round Lake, a natural basin half
a mile in diameter and of great depth; and connected with the larger lake
by Pine River, which has been converted by the Government at great ex-
pense into a deep-water channel, capable of admitting the largest ships on
the lake^. Still back of Round Lake, and connected by a deep channel is Pine
Lake, fifteen miles in Itng;h and three miles wide. These waters, together
with connecting bays and -treams, afford unlimited opportunities for fly
and deep-water fishing, as well as sailing and rowing — ranging from the
safe s''rface of the inland lake and the quiet waters of the placid streams
to the more hazardous expaurc of Lake Michiiian. Nowhere on Lake
■'S^i.yi^fnv^'
Till-; (IIHACO AMI WKST MUIIKIA.X STATION' AT CH AKI.KV. it X,
CHARLEVOIX.
47
*-■
FROM STATION TO INN.
Michigan is there a more inviting rendezvous for private yaclits. steam,
sail and naphtha.
The town has shared the growing popularity of all this region as a sum-
mer resort. It has developed from its ancient bounds and character into a
town of 2,500 inhabitants, w'ith schools, churches, water-works, electric
lights and a decidedly modern and up-to-date air. It has a Charlevoix
Summer Home Association, whose "Resort" occupies a tract south of the
river on the terraces overlooking Round and Pine Lakes.
The Chicago Resort, which is what its name indicates, the summer home
of Chicago people, has numerous handsome cottages, and owns a con-
siderable tract on the north side of the river, and similarly on the terraces
overlooking the two lakes.
(The hotel at Charlevoix is The Inn. whose attractions are hinted in the
illustrations.)
Between Charlevoix and Traverse City (a distance of sixty-five miles
via the Chicago & West Michigan Railway) there are more good fishing
waters convenient to railroad facilities than anywhere else perhaps in the
world. Starting at Charlevoix and ending at Elk Rapids, there are a
hundred miles of continuous lakes, big and little, all connected one with
another by streams, excepting one portage of five miles between Ellsworth
and East Jordan. All have game fish of some kind, the list including
speckled trout, grayling, black bass, pickerel, etc. The railroad penetrates
the center of this region, and for forty miles runs along the shores of the
48
THE STANDARD GUIDE.
rivers, lakes and streams; its several stations bring the most remote
places in this fishing wilderness within a few miles of one or another of
the stopping places of the trains. This means that whether you make your
headquarters at Traverse City, Charlevoix or Petoskey, it will be entirely
practicable to go into the wildest regions and fish between breakfast and
supper at any one of the above named places. First is Pine Lake, fifteen
miles long and two to three miles wide. South Arm, a narrower lake
which empties into the former, is eight miles long. These have good
steamboats which ply regularly their entire length between Charlevoix and
Boyne City on Pine Lake, and East Jordan on South Arm. Jordan River,
said to be the most famous trout stream in the world, empties into South
Arm at East Jordan, and this river is navigable for small boats for a
distance of twelve miles. Proceeding southward from Charlevoix, along
the Chicago & West Michigan Railway, are Newman's Creek (trout). Twin
Lakes (bass and pickerel), Orr Creek (trout). Then comes the Inter-
mediate chain of lakes, in order as follows : Shoals, St. Claire, Hardy,
White, Benway and Central. Flowing into or adjacent are Shoals' Creek.
Eaton Lake, White and Mill Creeks. It is only a mile west of the rail-
way from Twenty- Six Lake to another succession of small lakes and con-
necting or contiguous streams, in order going southwardly: Herkimer,
Matchett's, Lime, Mud, etc.; and following on beyond is Mill Creek, which
empties into White Lake, one of the Intermediate chain referred to above.
THE INN CHARLEVU1.\-THE-BE.\UT1FUL.
Petoskey.
Petoskev is the center of the Little Traverse Bay district. It occupies
an elevated position on the southeastern shore, with a waterfront of one and
one-half miles, from which it looks across to the sister resorts of Harbor
Point, Harbor Springs, Wequetonsing and Roaring Brook. On the north
it is adjoined by Bay View, the two towns lie in an amphitheater of
natural terraces, which rise in regular gradations to the wooded crest
forming the sky line.
Petoskey takes its name from Ignatius Bedosega ( or Petoskey ) . the
former Indian proprietor of the town site. It was established in 1874, when
the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad had been extended to this point. It
is to-day a progressive modern city, well equipped with all the conven-
iences that go to make up city life. The park plots, shaded streets and
handsome homes, and the general air of prosperity and comfort which are
characteristic of Petoskey, unite to attract the visitor and entice him to
make test of the reality of what is so fair in the seeming. Petoskey invites
the health and pleasure tourist ; very early in its history the town acquired
fame for its pure and invigorating air, and the healing balm which insure
immediate relief from the distressing malady of hay-fever. The cure of
diis disease is certain and speedy; Petoskey is the headquarters of the
Western Hay Fever Association, and the harbor of refuge to which come
hay fever sufiferers from all over the country. One finds in Petoskey a
happy combination of a thriving town, alert and active in its business
interests, and the characteristics of a summer resort where every provi-
sion is made for the comfort and entertainment of the visitor.
Little Traverse Bay is celebrated for its beauty ; and the terraced grades
of the town give to all its homes views of the water with its animated pic-
tures of wave and cloud, pleasure craft and shipping. The fishing is
excellent ; there is a fleet of sailboats ; and carriage roads and bicycle paths
thread the pine woods and skirt the shore.
Bay View takes its name from its situation on a succession of terraces
rising one back of another from the shore, and giving the hundreds of
cottages which make up the town an outlook over the bay, and the benefit of
the cool breezes which temper the summer's heat. The resort is the prop-
erty of the Michigan Camp Ground Association of the Methodist Episcopal
Church. The annual camp meeting of the Association is held here in
July and August. Prompted and guided by a purpose to make the weeks
spent at a summer refort something more than a period of idleness, or
profitless activity in playing games. Bay View has developed a series of
institutions which make for higher culture. The Bay View Summer LTni-
versity has an academical department and a school of methods designed
to provide teachers with all the advantages of a normal school. The Bay
View Assembly has its lecturers and entertainments for which it calls upon
the best talent of the country. The Bay View Reading Circle follows sys-
tematic courses of reading and study ; it has State and local branches, and
j^JH^^S
PETOSKEY
51
the membership runs into the thousands. Bay View is in effect a Michigan
Chautauqua.
Harbor Point is a narrow tongue of land which puts out from the north
shore of Little Traverse Bay, and separating it from Lake Michigan, en-
closes an admirably protected harbor. It is owned by the Harbor Point
Association, whose cottages adorn the curving shores. Nearby on the main
shore is
Harbor Sprjngs. the site of the early Jesuit mission of L'Abre Croche
(the crooked tree), whose records run back two hundred years. It
takes its present nam.e from the beautiful springs which are among the
native attractions which have made it a favorite resort. Back from the
bay the land rises in high bluffs, from which a noble prospect greets the
eye, the view extending over harbor and bay and lake and the rising hills
beyond Petoskey. A mile east of Harbor Springs is the Presbyterian Re-
sort of
We-que-ton-sing, its name the Indian designation which was given to
Little Traverse Bay. Adjoining We-que-tcn-sing on the east is
Roaring Brook, with its stream dashing down from the heights and
winding its way to the lake through a dense tangle of wilderness vegeta-
tion, which the wise forethought of the resort managers has preserved in its
original condition. One may spend delightful hours exploring the
maze of the primitive woods with their fallen cedars of prodigious size ;
or ascending the footway whose easy grades climb the hill, may enjoy from
the summit a view not excelled in this whole Little Traverse Bay district,
famous as it is for its landscape effects.
THE IMPERIAL HOTEL, PETOSKEV.
KOARl.NG liKUUK.
macatawa and Ottawa Beacb.
These popular resorts are situated on the east shore of Lake Michigan,
95 miles from Chicago and 30 miles from Grand Rapids, Michigan. Their
location, at the widest part of the great lake, gives them the benefit of the
prevailing western breezes over the broad expanse of its waters, and secures
a delightful summer climate. They are reached by the Chicago and West
Michigan Railway ; also by steamboat, from Chicago. The Holland and
Chicago line operates a daily line of steamers, which land at the Macatawa,
Ottawa and Holland docks.
Macatawa Park and Ottawa Beach are separated only by the narrow
harbor channel which connects Lake Michigan and Macatawa Bay. A
ferry steamer makes frequent trips between the two landings. Macatawa
Bay, a body of water from one-half to two miles in width, extends inland
from Lake Michigan for a distance of six miles, and gives ample oppor-
tunity for rowing and sailing. The city of Holland, an enterprising town
containing 10,000 inhabitants, is located at the eastern end of the bay. The
shores of the bay are lined with summer homes, fruit orchards and forests.
Excursion steamers make regular trips between the resorts and Holland.
An electric railway also furnishes hourly service between the points.
The bathing in Lake Michigan is one of the features. The pure water
of the lake, the white sands, free from all rocks, and the gradual increase in
the depth of the water and its warmth, make the bathing beaches at Ottawa
and Macatawa very popular.
Macatawa Park comprises 300 acres of land, the greater part of which
is covered by native forest, through which miles of pleasant walks have
been made. The park is a succession of hills and valleys, which present
picturesque and romantic scenery. Ottawa and Macatawa contain 300 cot-
tages, which are made the summer homes of families from all parts of the
country. The social features of the resorts is especially attractive.. The
resorts are in the midst of a fine farming and fruit growing country.
Holland City at the head of the bay, provides twenty miles of graded and
graveled streets for bicyclists, and excellent carriage roads lead out from
the town in all directions. Grand Rapids, a city of 100,000 inhabitants, is
but twenty-five miles from Holland, with good roads to it for wheelmen,
and direct railway service from Ottawa Beach and Holland.
(The hotels at the two resorts are Hotel Ottawa and Hotel Macatawa.)
The pretty story connected with the name of Macatawa runs thus : "The
good chief Macatawa, of the Ottawas, selected for his tepee the
base of an isolated mountain near the bay, and to the north of which the
mysterious wind, which builds and unbuilds at its pleasure, had left a wide
expanse of level sand. The chief fished in the waters and hunted in the
forest, and dwelt in peace with his people. His fair daughter,
Mattalena, had grown from child to woman, and now was eagerly
sought by all the young braves of the tribe. To Wakazoo sh?
51
THE ST.IXP.IRP CA'IDE.
AT MACATAWA.
slniwtd favur, but knowing tliat the young man did not please
lier father, dare not show her preference. As she would have
none of her father's choosing, he at last decided that the swiftest and most
powerful canoe man among the young braves should have her. On the
appointed day all the young braves assembled and were taken by the chief
to the top of the hill, near his wigwam. The maiden was seated
in her canoe en the bay at the foot nf the liill, and at a given signal she
raised her paddle and flew up the small inland lake. At the same signal
the young warriors dashed down the hillside, each for his own canoe, and
sped after her. On flew the pursuers and on sped the prize; fir--t one and
then another dropped from the race exhausted, till imly two were lett in
the struggle, Wakazoo whom she loved, and Alaksauba whom she hated
with all an Indian's hatred. Slowly and .steadily Maksauba gained on
the maiden till with only a few yards left in which to complete the race he
was a good canoe length ahead. She glanced over her shoulder and saw
that the race was lost to her lo\'er, but with firm determination decided that
death was preferable to the impending fate. On came her lover, never
giving up the struggle. When Mattalena saw Maksauba with one hand
extended to grasp her canoe, and knew that the race was over, with
maddened dexterity she wheeled the bow of her boat, the stern striking
that of AFaksauba, and he was thrown into the water. He disapi:)eared, al-
though a powerful swimmer, and for some unknown cause never came to
the surface. His body was never recovered, and there were for many moons
vague whisperings that connected his evil life with his death. In the mean-
MAC AT AW A AND OTTAWA BEACH.
55
time Wakazoo had taken the now ahnost fainting maiden into his canoe,
and in silent triumph returned to the waiting tribe. They were married
and their descendants lived in the beautiful place many years."
Not less pleasing, and much Ijetter authenticated, is the story of the cir-
cumstances which led to the preservation of the spot in its natural condi-
tions for our enjoyment. It is told in one of the resort booklets: "Then
came the white man, and the primeval forest rang with the sharp swish of
the axe, tree after tree fell, clearing after clearing was formed, town and
village appeared and the last of the Indians disappeared to return no more.
One day a party of white people came from the tov/n to camp on
the shore of the great lake. The woodsman's axe still sounded on the
border of the hills, but the gigantic forests upon the hills themselves were
unharmed. The river which had been an outlet for the inland lake
had been filled by the action of the waves, until now but a small shallow
stream found its way sluggishly over the beach into the lake. The campers
saw the wonderful beauty of the hills and forests, and were thankful that
one spot had been spared in a state of nature for wearied man to rest.
They went and came again, and the woodman's axe was in the forest on
the hills, and they felt that the beauty of the place was to be gone forever.
They formed themselves into a little company, and decided to try by all
means to keep this spot of nature sacred. They succeeded, and bought the
land, and to-day where the wind and waves formed the giant hills, and the
wind carried the seeds for the trees and vegetation is our summer home,
beautiful Macatawa."
LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN.
Cake Rarbor.
Lake Harbor is on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan nearly midway
between Muskegon and Grand Haven, and about opposite Milwaukee. It is
reached by the Chicago & West Michigan Railroad direct to Lake Harbor
Station. The tourist landing at Muskegon, whether by boat or rail, will
find excellent facilities for reaching the hotel by a special Lake Harbor train
service furnished by the Chicago & West Michigan Railroad to Lake
Harbor Station. Thence by steamboat the full length of beautiful and
picturesque Lake Harbor, where passengers who have crossed Lake
Michigan arrive by 8:30 — ample time for breakfast.
A LAKE HARUOU DRIVE.
LAKE HARBOR.
LAKE HARBOR HOTEL.
The Lake Harbor Hotel faces the picturesque channel connecting Lake
Harbor with Lake Michigan. A stone can be thrown from the veranda
into Lake Harbor, while Lake Michigan is only about forty rods distant
in the opposite direction. The views are fine. The broad lawn rises gradu-
ally from the channel to the hotel, which is thirty feet above the water
level. Bathing is one of the chief attractions of the place. There is a
sandy beach and often an excellent surf. The water is very warm, and
there is no undertow. There is a large and commodious bath house. The
hotel has a large boat livery and a steam launch that may be chartered.
Lake Harbor and the channel afford excellent opportunities for this pastime
in which even small children may indulge with perfect safety There is
fine black bass fishing in Lake Harbor and also in Muskegon, Little Black,
Blue and Wolf lakes in the vicinity.
Lake Harbor being on the east side of Lake Michigan, is on the side to
insure summer comfort. The prevailing winds are from the southwest, and
pass for one hundred miles over the water. The result is a temperature
from ten to fifteen degrees cooler than in Chicago and Milwaukee, or at the
Wisconsin resorts, where the winds blow across the heated plains of the
interior. People who formerly went to the sea shore or mountains are
finding out that here in Michigan they can be more comfortable nearer
home, and enjoy most of the attractions obtainable at those resorts and
manv more.
Pointe Hux Barques.
Front the Resort Association Booklet.
The extreme northernmost point of the "Tlnnnl)" of ]\liehigan. which
jutting out into Lake Huron, marks the northern limits of Saginaw Bay, is
of a character so unusual and remarkalile that the earliest explorers of these
great western seas made mention of it. It is supposed that Father Claude
Allouez, the Jesuit priest, who with a canoe party traversed the waters
of Lake Huron in 1665, named it. It was the Pointe aux Bar(|ues to the
venturesome voyagcurs who noted it as they passed on their dangerous
and laborious journeys; and it is still the Pointe aux Barques, now that
civilization has driven out the red man. and has peopled the "Thumb"
with a thrifty and progressive community. The rocky cape still stands
a grim sentry, as it were, looking out upon the vast blue expanse of restless
waters, which, in sunshine and in storm, dash upon its rock-bound base.
Dame Nature has provided no more delightful retreat along the chain of
great inland seas, to which the footsteps of the busy people of the great
cities may tend during the warm months, when rest and recreation from
t-^..
^^.^'
rOlNTE AUX BARQUES.
POINT E AUX BARQUES.
59
'':j^1sA
THE SUOKE AT POINTE AUX BAKUUES.
the routine cares of life become a necessity. The Pointe aux Barques de-
scribed by Colonel Anderson of the Government Survey of 1833, as a
'rough, rocky, small caverned cape," still furnishes numberless nooks and
grottoes where, in the cool environment, one may muse with luxurious
contentment upon the uniquely picturesque surroundings. Here the cool
and inviting breezes always blow, and beyond stretches the beach of white
sand, dotted with merry children, and in the background are the pleasant
groves which give certain promise of romantic paths and pleasant glades.
For more than a score of years the lighthouse on the reef has flashed
nightly the beacon light of warning at regular intervals, and in thick
weather the bass voice of the fog-horn has been heard for miles. Until
1896 the residence of the lighthouse keeper was alone and solitar}-. But
early in that year the Pointe aux Barques Resort Association, having for
its purpose the upbuilding of a family resort, was formed. It was be-
lieved that this spot was ideal for the location of sunmier hon'ies. No
place is more healthful, the air and temperature are delightful, and the
water not so cold as at other resorts farther north. To the south lies one
of the most fertile and highly cultivated farming sections of the State,
which assures the cottagers of the wholesome products of the farm in their
freshness. A delightful drive or walk to the beautiful little village of Port
Austin puts the stores of the merchants at the command of the resorters.
Within a few hours' ride of the centers of population of the State, it is
easy of access; so good is the service that the afternoon papers of Detroit
6o THE STANDARD GLIDE.
are delivered the same evening. The acreage and water front, controlled iiy
the association, is of an extent which prevents the possibility of intrusion,
?nd the association has secured the promise of the railroad that no rough
day-excursionists will be landed at the Pointe. It is secure from the
undesirable element which too frequently inflicts its presence at such
{•laces.
Unexpected success has followed the efforts of the association. It
has many members and has made substantial improvements. The Pointe
aux Barques Club, as the new clubhouse is designed, is of the old colonial style
(^f architecture. It is located on solid rock, thirty feet above the level of the
lake, overlooking the waters of Lake Huron, and only a short distance
from the beach.
The Club is connected with Western Union Telegraph lines, which en-
ables its guests to comnnmicate with the world at large, and the govern-
ment has made this its post-office, and twice a day the mails bring letters
to the guests.
The season opens June i, and the class of patronage is high, making it
a most desirable retreat for the cultivated people of our large cities.
Those who take pleasure in rowing or sailing, will f.nd the Pointe aux
Barques a most delightful resort, with the waters of Saginaw Bay on the
one side and that of Lake Huron on the other, always available for either
the row or sail boat. Pointe aux Barques bathing is an enjoyment. The
water is clear as crystal, and of a pleasant temperature, and one can hardly
be persuaded to come out. The shore of Alaska Bay, which bends into the
land from Lake Huron in a graceful curve, about two miles long and
the same distance in breadth, has one of the finest strips of pure sand
beach on the chain of Great Lakes.
Huron County, in which the Pointe aux Barques is located, boasts of
having good country highways, and well it may, because nowhere can
better highways be found by the enthusiastic wheelmen, who delight in a
spin out into the country. During the summer months the gravel roads
which stretch out for miles in either direction, with magnificent farms on
either side, form a perfect panorama, in which the bicyclist revels.
Michigan, with a thousand miles of lake coast, holds pre-eminence over
all her sister States in the importance of her commercial fisheries. These
lakes have an area of 97,000 square miles, and a total length of about 1,500
miles, with a varying depth.
It is in traversing a territory so bountifully remembered by nature in
her many gifts of delightful, crystal fishing grounds, that the Pointe aux
Barques appeals to the angler. Saginaw Bay, the waters of which teem
with the finest and largest of the finny tribe, lies just to the west. Fisher-
men generally acknowledge this bay to be one of the finest fishing waters in
America. From the Pointe aux Barques all the famous fishing points are
most accessible. Here the exciting and delightful sport, trolling for lake
trout, during the season can be enjoyed to the utmost. Bass and perch
fishing is unexcelled.
There are several attractive summer places at a convenient di-^tance from
Pointe aux Barques, which afford the opportunity for pleasant excursions.
POINTE AUX BARQUES. 6i
Among them Port Austin, with its picturesque shore; Bay Port with its
fine hotel and excellent fishing, nestled m the shelter of rieisterman and
North Islands, is a desirable place for a day's outing, and of convenient
distance from the Pointe ; and Sand Beach with its mineral springs, the
waters of which have developed marvelous curative properties, government
breakwater and finest harbor of refuge on the chain of Great Lakes, upon
which the government has spent millions of dollars, is only a short distance
from the Pointe.
Each applicant desiring membership, who has been properly vouclied
for, upon payment of $50, receives two shares of non-assessable stock. The
owner of the two shares of stock then has the privilege of selecting and
purchasing any lot then owned by the association, the price of which may
vary according to location, receiving full title to same, and protected by the
laws of Michigan, subject only to the regulations of the association; all
money received from the sale of stock and lots to be tised for improve-
ments and dividend, in which all members participate. These shares en-
title the holder to a vote on each share in the selection of the Board of
Directors, which, like a village board, makes the regulations which govern
this community. They also secure for the member and his inunediate
family and guests, the substantial concessions in the rates at the Club
House, as has been before show-n by the schedule ; and a half fare rate on
all railroads in Michigan when going to and from Pointe aux Barques.
The annual dues of ten dollars on each share to which land has been
attached, which are payable in the spring of eacli year, aggregate a sum
which enables the Board of Directors to provide for the members many
services which in many places are found to be expensive and annoying to
the individual. Upon application, Mr. H. F. Moeller, General Passenger
Agent, Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad. Saginaw, Mich., will gladly
furnish detailed information on this subject.
-' "'-^'v ^^s^vc si^^rirs
iGS Fi^ TTi PIS |^SIII!l|iKj
POINTE AU.X BARQUES CLUB HOUSE.
Craversc City and Oitiena.
Omena Resort is on the west arm of Grand Traverse Bay, twenty milej.
north of Traverse City, from which it is reached by steamer, and where it
has connection with the Grand Rapids & Indiana and the Chicago & West
Michigan railways. Excursion boats also ply to Charlevoix, Bay View.
Petoskey and other neighboring resorts.
Omena is an Ottawa word, signifying Beautiful Gift. The Indians were
often endowed with an eye to see the poetry of nature, and with a felicity of
expression which embodied this poetical recognition in their place-names ;
and it may not be altogether fanciful to believe that in this spot they recog-
nized a Beautiful Gift from their Great Spirit to his children. Those whi)
came after the red man and succeeded to his inheritance had ii; Omena a
goodly legacy ; and most appropriately was the name retained.
The situation is on a narrow tongue of land which extends a mile out into
Grand Traverse Bay, and in the curve forms its own sheltered nook of
Omena Bay. From a broad, hard beach the land rises in natural terraces
to an elevation of 150 feet. The terraces afford ideal sites for summer
homes; and from their ample grounds embowered amid trees, many
cottages look out over the water. The elevated situation, with the
broad expanse of the bay, insures cool airs all through the heated term.
In addition to its natural attractions, Omena has a decided advantage in
well-.stocked markets, supplied from neighboring fruit farms and vegetable
gardens; the cost of household living is as a rule cheaper than in the city.
The woods are intersected by winding carriage roads and bicycle paths :
and the beach drives stretch away for miles with an ever animated water
view. Pleasure craft are here in many forms, and to suit every taste. Fish-
ing in the bay is rewarded by generous strings of the Mackinaw trout and
other varieties: there are numerous black bass waters, and neighboring
streams afford good brook trout tishing. Omena was planned to be and
essentially is a family resort. Of it Mr. F. H. Graves, the ])roiector, savs :
"Every man is king antl every woman is ciueen of her own castle here.
It she chooses to dream the lovely days away in the seclusion of her
rustic palace, en deshabille, it is her undisputed privilege. If she cares
to mingle with the throng of gay society people from Chicago and the
great cities of the South; if she loves the diversion of Terpsichore or the
excitement of dashing through the shady drives or down the wave-washed
beach on her wheel; if she wishes to feel the thrill of a big lake trout upon
her hook: or listen to the nnisical laughter of sweet childhood; take a
plrngt iiUo the limpid waters of the liay ; or send the blood coursing
through her vein-^ behind the oars, it i^ her supreme right."
'Hotels: Eeelanaw Hotel; Onuna Inn.)
TRAVERSE CITY.
63
Traverse City, at the foot of the west arm ot Grand Traver:-e Bay, is
the central point of a region which is in growing popularity with visitors
to the Michigan pine country. It is on the Boardman River, which here
enters the bay as the outlet for a vast and richly stocked lumber
district. Traverse City was settled to the song of the sawmill ; its founda-
tions were laid in sawdust ; and it is to-day a humming, buzzing center of
V, ood-working industries. Where "all the pins go to" we shall never know :
Init they come by the million — clothes-pin.s — from Traverse City. iNIichigan.
as one may see for himself; and it is well worth while to inspect the in-
genious mechanical devices which turn out the immense product of the
factories here. Traverse City clothes-pins make secure the fluttering linen
of a million back-yards; and a million pantries know the Traverse City
wooden butter dish.
Apart from its commercial features, the town has many attractions for
the tourist. When men began to see something in trees besides saw-logs,
and something in rivers besides highways for rafts, the natural attractions
of the spot appealed to them, and they recognized the beauty in its con-
tours and terraces, and bay and river shores. Ample provision has been
made for the summer health seeker and the pleasure tourist. The neigh-
boring forests are threaded by good roads and bicycle paths; the bay gives
never-failing scope for aquatic diversions : there are some fishiiig grounds
where luck is reputed to give way to certainty ; and all these, with the
equable summer temperature and the ever-pure air attract numerous
visitors. (Hotel: The Park Place.)
IN WASHINGTON P.ARK, CHICAGO.
-;r^'
., ..
\ \
\^
•\
■'4
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1 1 1
Chicago.
We associate Chicago with sky-scraping buildings, congested street traf-
fic, the bustle and push of business, the din and clangor and steam and
smoke of the greatest railroad center on earth. And yet there are Chicago
people, who when they visit other cities are restless because they miss the
stretch of prairie within city limits and the outlook over Lake Michigan's
boundless expanse. There is only one Chicago ; but Chicago itself is many
sided. It combines with the characteristics of a vast commercial and in-
dustrial center, many of the qualities of a Northern Lake- Resort. For
there are residence districts on the Lake Michigan front, which in their
advantage of situation and charm of surrounding hold out decided attrac-
tions to the pleasure tourist. This is in particular true of the park section
made famous as the site of the World's Fair. The Jackson Park is to-day,
with its lawn and knoll, and lake and umbrageous drive and ramble, more
lovely still than in the years of the "White City." And this is only one of
the pleasure grounds which make up the magnificent Chicago park system.
Boulevards and avenues — among them the famous Midway — lead out from
Jackson to other parks hardly less beautiful in landscape gardening and in-
viting shades.
The Jackson Park section is distinguished too for its residences, its
hotels, its educational and art institutions, among them the Field Colum-
bian Museum, with rapidly growing collections, which have already given it
place among the great museums of the world. But with all these varied
attractions, aided by the forethought of the municipal government and by
individual munificence, the Jackson Park district owes its peculiar character
to the situation here on the shore of Lake Michigan; the water front is
the dominating element; in the lake air and the marine view is the perpatual
charm. Many travelers have discovered these attractions of Chicago as a
halting place, for interrupting the summer trip to Northern resorts; and a
growing number of tourists now count the city as one of the regular
points on the annual itinerary.
To those who are fond of wheeling (experts or beginners), the sec-
tion offers additional attractions. The long-distance rider can start
from here and make a run of eighty miles through Chicago's famous
parks and drives without leaving the boulevard, while beginners by seeking
a quiet part of Jackson or Washington Park can practice to their heart's
content, without fear of collision or publicity. Coaching parties are quite
a feature with the young folks. A drive on a tallyho, with a gay party,
through Chicago's beautiful parks, stopping at some outlying summer
garden for supper, and then home along the beach by moonlight, con-
stitutes a trip long to be remembered. Moonlight excursions on the lake
from the Chicago Beach pier are popular with those who are fond of
the water. A beautiful summer evening with the soft fresh breeze float-
ing from the lake, and the moon casting its rays across the water's surface,
combined with the strains of the orchestra and laughter and song of the
66 THE STANDARD GUIDE.
oarsman, constitute an hour once enjoyed, never forgotten. There are
many summer gardens within easy reach, and the theater roof gardens
furnish amusement for those who are inchned to such form of enter-
tainments.
The Chicago Beach Hotel is located in the finest residence district of
the city, on a small peninsula running out into Lake Michigan, and is almost
entirely surrounded by water. It has an unique situation, being entirely
surrounded by lake and parks, and still within ten minutes of the business
center and activities of a city of one million five hundred thousand people.
It stands on a beautiful peninsula with the blue-green waves of Lake
Michigan rolling around two sides of it, and the lawns, groves and flower
beds of Chicago's system of parks stretching for miles away on the other
two sides. It is as delightfully rural and restful as if it were a thousand
miles from any town, and yet it is within ten minutes' ride of all the
rush, roar and excitement of a busy city.
The hotel grounds proper front for fifteen hundred feet on the lake,
and the broad beach of snowy sand, strewn with shells and pebbles, is a
perpetual delight to the troops of gayly dressed children, who are busy
from morning till night with their tiny shovels and buckets, digging, wad-
ing, paddling, shell gathering and having a gay time generally in
their own juvenile fashion. It only needs a little salt in the water to make
a real ocean scene. The waves come rolling up within fifty steps of the
verandas. Flocks of white-winged sea gulls float airily in the sunlight.
Great steamers glide past with their stately motion, and countless diminu-
tive yachts, with bright-hued pennons flying, skim and dart hither and
thither, while the rippling of the waters mingles harmoniously with the
laughter of the merry throng.
The district, while having thus all the benefits and pleasures of a
seaside resort, is yet only ten minutes' distant from the theaters, roof
gardens, large retail stores, museums and galleries of a great city, and, on
the other hand, is also in close proximity to Jackson and \Vashington
parks, of "World's Fair" fame.
td^ «.?* «4?* tT* e.?*
Battle Creek.
Nothing is more important for a medical institution than a salubrious
location. Pure air, pure water and a porous, well-drained soil are among
the most essential features of a first-class location for a sanitarium. A
happy combination of these essential elements, found at Battle Creek,
Michigan, and at the particular point selected for this institution, was what
led the founders of the establishment to plant it here at the inception of
the enterprise, nearly thirty years ago, after a considerable time spent in
looking about for the most eligible and advantageous site.
The aim of the managers of this institution has been to gather together
in one place and under favorable conditions, all the means, methods and
BATTLE CREEK. 6^
appliances for the treatment of the sick which are recognized in rational
medicine, and to utilize these means and methods in a conscientious and
intelligent manner.
The Battle Creek Sanitarium differs from most sanitariums in that its
central and fundamental idea is the thought that health-getting is not a
matter of magic nor of pill-swallowing, nor, in most cases, one of climate,
hut rather a matter of training and education. The chronic invalid is sick,
usually because he has neglected to supply the conditions necessary for
health, or because, by long-continued violation of the laws of health in
various unhygienic practices, he has developed evil tendencies and morbid
activities in his various bodily organs. The cure of such a patient must
largely consist in a course of systematic training by which he will be edu-
cated out of his evil ways into better ones — by which his abnormal
vital functions will be trained to normal and healthful activity. This course
of training necessarily includes such discipline and regimen as will influence
every disordered function. It involves absolute control of the, entire life
of the invalid. All his habits of life must be systematically conformed to
such rules and principles as will efficiently and curatively modify his dis-
ordered vital processes.
An effort is made to inspire every one of the two hundred nurses and
medical attendants employed in the institution, with the thought that the
place must be kept full of sturdy ideas about health and wholesome living,
and that every room must be kept aglow with mental and moral sunshine
through the agency of cheerful surroundings, kindly sympathy, and efficient
and amiable service.
One of the latest additions to the therapeutic resources of the institution
is the electric light or radiant heat bath, which was originated here, and
which proves to be a wonderfully effective agent in certain classes of
diseases.
The Battle Creek menu is not that of a fashionable hotel, but such
as is prompted by good sense and a thorough knowledge of the needs of
invalids, and the dietetic value of the various wholesome foods and food
productions produced and obtainable in this part of the world. Great atten-
tion is given to the subject of medical dietetics. The experimental kitchen
v.'hich has been in operation for the last ten years, constantly supplies new
features for the bill of fare ; and the diet kitchen, supplied with every facility
to meet the wants of the most capricious appetite and the most obstinate
stomach, serves the same purpose in relation to the diet prescriptions that
the pharmacy or a drug store serves in relation to medicinal prescriptions.
The institution was organized in 1866 by a few persons interested in the
advancement of sanitary reform and rational medicine. Two years later
when the stockholders found the enterprise a pronounced success they were
easily persuaded to relinquish all claims upon the earnings, and make the
original stock an endowment, the earnings to be perpetually used for neces-
sary improvements, the treatment of the sick poor, and the furtherance of
the purposes for which the institution was organized. All the earnings of
the institution have accordingly been thus used from its foundation to the
present time, and will continue to be thus employed.
JHexander Renrv.
Alexander Henry, a fur trader, was the first Englishman to adventure
into this country after its cession by France to Great Britain; and he found
the Indians so incensed at having been surrendered to the domination of
England, so bitterly hostile to the English, that he himself was in daily
and hourly peril of his life. He came to Fort Michilimackinac in 1671,
after the French garrison had abandoned the post, and before the British
sent to occupy it had arrived. Following a series of hairbreadth escapes, he
was about to be put to death, when he was rescued by the opportune
arrival of the troops. Two years later he was in the fort at the time of
the massacre. The story of that event, omitting some of the blood-curdling
details, we will let him relate in his own way :*
"When I reached Michilimackinac, I found several other traders who
had arrived before me, from different parts of the country, and who, in
general, declared the disposition of the Indians to be hostile to the English,
and even apprehended some attack. M. Laurent Ducharme distinctly in-
formed Major Ethrington that a plan was absolutely conceived for destroy-
ing him, his garrison, and all the English in the upper country; but the
commandant, believing this and other reports to be without foundation,
proceeding only from idle or ill-disposed persons, and of a tendency to do
mischief, expressed much displeasure against M. Ducharme, and threatened
to send the next person who should bring a story of the same kind a
prisoner to Detroit.
"The garrison at this time consisted of ninety privates, two subalterns,
and the commandant, and the English merchants at the fort were four in
number. Thus strong, few entertained anxiety concerning the Indians, who
had no weapons but small arms.
"Meanwhile the Indians from every quarter were daily asFcmbling in
unusual numbers, but with every appearance of friendship, frequenting the
forts and disposing of their peltries in such a manner as to dissipate almost
any one's fears. For myself, ori one occasion, I took the liberty of observ-
ing to Major Ethrington that, in my judgment, no confidence ought to
1)0 placed in them, and that I was informed no less than four hundred
lay around the fort. In return, the Major only rallied me on my timidity;
and it is to be confessed, that, if this officer neglected admonition on his
part, so did I on mine. Shortly after my first arrival at Michilimackinac,
in the preceding year, a Chippewa named Wawatam began to come often
lo my house, betraying in his demeanor strong marks of personal regard.
After this had continued for some time, he came on a certain day, bringing
with him his whole family; and, at the same time, a large present, con-
sisting of skins, sugar, and dried meat. He informed me that he had
dreamed of adopting an Englishman as his son, brother and friend ; that.
177?-'''^'^'^ and Adventures in Canada and the Indian Territories, between 1760 and
ALEXANDER HENRY. 69
from the moment in which he first beheld me, he had recognized me as
the person whom the Great Spirit had been pleased to point out to him
for a brother; th'at he hoped that I would not refuse his present, and that
he should forever regard me as one of his family. I could do no other-
wise than accept the present, and declare my willingness to have so good
a man as this appeared to be for my friend and brother.
"Twelve months had now elapsed since the occurrence of this incident,
and I had almost forgotten the person of my brother, when, on the
second day of June, Wawatam came again to my house, in a temper of mind
visibly melancholy and thoughtful. He told me that he was very sorry
to find me returned from the Sault ; that he had intended to go to that
place himself, immediately after his arrival at. Michilimackinac; and that
he wished me to go there along with him and his family the next morning.
I answered that I could not think of going to the Sault so soon as the
next morning, but would follow him there after the arrival of my clerks.
Finding himself unable to prevail with me, he withdrew for that day ; but
early the next morning he came again, bringing with him his wife and a
present of dried meat. At this interview he expressed a second time his
apprehensions from the numerous Indians who were around the fort, and
earnestly pressed me to consent to an immediate departure for the Sault.
As a reason for this particular request, he assured me that all the Indians
proposed to come in a body that day to the fort, to demand liquor of
the commandant, and that he wished me to be gone before they should
grow intoxicated. The Indian manner of speech is so extravagantly figura-
tive, that it is only for a very perfect master to follow and comprehend it
entirely. Had I been further advanced in this respect, I think that I
should have gathered so much information from this, my friendly moni-
tor, as would have put me into possession of the designs of the enemy,
and enabled me to save others as well as myself ; as it was, it unfortunately
happened that I turned a deaf ear to everything, leaving Wawatam and
his wife, after long and patient, but ineffectual efforts, to depart alone,
with dejected countenances, and not before they had each let fall some
tears.
"In the course of the same day, I observed that the Indians came in
great numbers into the fort, purchasing tomahawks. At night I turned
in my mind the visits of Wawatam; but, though they were calculated to
excite uneasiness, nothing induced me to believe that serious mischief
was at hand.
'The next day, being the 4th of June, was the King's birthday. A
Chippewa came to tell me that his nation was going to play at bag'gat'iway,
v/ith the Sacs or Saakies, another Indian nation, for a high wager. He
invited me to witness the sport, adding that the commandant was to be
there, and would be on the side of the Chippewas. In consequence of this
information, I went to the commandant, and expostulated with him a
little, representing that the Indians might possibly have some sinister
end in view ; but the commandant only smiled at my suspicions.
"I did not go myself to see the match which was now to be played
without the fort, because, there being a canoe prepared to depart on the
yo TUB STAXDARI) GUIDE.
following day for Montreal, I employed myself in writing letters to my
friends; and even when a fellow-trader, Mr. Tracy, happened to call upon
me, saying that another canoe had just arrived from Detroit, and pro-
posing that I should go with him to the beach, to inquire the news, it so
happened that I still remained, to finish my letters, promising to follow
Mr. Tracy in the course of a few minutes. Mr. Tracy had not gone more
than twenty paces from my door, when I heard an Indian war-cry, and a
noise of general confusion. Going instantly to my window, I saw a crowd
of Indians within the fort, furiously cutting down and scalping every
Englishinan they found. In particular, I witnessed the fate of Lieutenant
Jemette.
"I had, in the room in which I was, a fowling-piece, loaded with swan
phot. This I immediately seized, and held it for a few minutes, waiting
to hear the drum beat to arms. In this dreadful interval I saw several of
my countrymen fall, and more than one struggling between the* knees of
an Indian, who, holding him in this manner, scalped him while yet living.
"At length, disappointed in the hope of seeing resistance made to the
enemy, and sensible, of course, that no effort of my own unassisted arm
could avail against four hundred Indians, I thought only of seeking
shelter. Amid the slaughter which was raging, I observed many of the
Canadian inhabitants of the fort calmly looking on, neither opposing the
Indians nor suffering injury; and, from this circumstance, I-conceived a
hope of finding security in their houses.
"Between the yard door of my own house and of M. Langlade, my next
neighbor, there was only a low fence, over which I easily climbed. At
my entrance I found the whole family at the windows, gazing at the scene
of blood before them. I addressed myself immediately to M. Langlade;
begging that he would put me into some place of safety until the heat of
the affair should be over, an act of charity by which he might perhaps
preserve me from the general massacre ; but, while I uttered my petition,
M. Langlade, who had looked for a moment at me, turned again to the
window, shrugging his shoulders, and intimating that he could do nothing
for me: 'Que voiidricz — voiis que j' en fcraisf
"This was a moment for despair; but the next, a Pani woman, a slave of
M. Langlade, beckoned me to follow her. She brought me to a door,
which she opened, desiring me to enter, and telling me that it led to the
garret, where I must go and conceal mys^f. I joyfully obeyed her direc-
tions ; and she, having followed me up to the garret door, locked it after
me, and with great presence of mind took away the key.
"This shelter obtained, if shelter I could hope to find it, I was naturally
anxious to know what might still be passing without. Through an aper-
ture, which afforded me a view of the area of the fort, I beheld, in shapes
the foulest and most terrible, the ferocious triumphs of barbarian con-
querors. I was shaken, not only with horror, but with fear. The suffer-
ings which I witnessed, I seemed on the point of experiencing. No long
time elapsed before, everyone being destroyed who could be found, there
was a general cry of 'All is finished !' At the same instant I heard some
of the Indians enter the house in which I was. The garret was separated
ALEXANDER HENRY. 71
from the room below only bj^ a layer of single boards, at once the flooring of
the one and the ceiling of the other. I could therefore hear everything
that passed ; and the Indians no sooner came in than they inquired whether
or not any Englishmen were in the house. M. Langlade replied that 'he
could not say' ; he 'did not know of any' — answers in which he did not
exceed the truth, for the Pani woman had not only hidden me by stealthy
but kept my secret, and her own. M. Langlade was therefore, as I pre-
sume, as far from a wish to destroy me as he was careless about saving
me, when he added to these answers, that 'they might examine for them-
selves, and would soon be satisfied as to the object of their question.'
Saying this, he brought them to the garret door.
"The state of my mind will be imagined. Arrived at the door, some
delay was occasioned by th^ absence of the key, and a few moments were
thus allowed me in which to look around me for a hiding place. In one
corner of the garret was a heap of those vessels of birch bark used in
maple sugar making, as I have recently described.
"The door was unlocked, and opening, and the Indians ascending the
stairs, before I had completely crept into a small opening, which pre-
sented itself at one end of the heap. An instant later four Indians en-
tered the room, all armed with tomahawks, and all besmeared with blood
upon every part of their bodies.
"The die appeared to be- cast. I could scarcely breathe, but I thought
that the throbbing of my heart occasioned a noise loud enough to be-
tray me. The Indians walked in every direction about the garret, and one
of them approached me so closely that at a particular moment, had he
put forth his hand he must have touched me. Still I remained undis-
covered, a circumstance to which the dark color of my clothes, and the
want of light in a room which had no window, and in the corner in which
I was, must have contributed. In a word, after taking several turns in
the room, during which they told M. Langlade how many they had
killed, and how many scalps they had taken, they returned downstairs, and
I, with sensations not to be expressed, heard the door, which was the
barrier between me and my fate, locked for the second time.
"There was a feather bed on the floor, and on this, exhausted as I was
by the agitation of my mind, I threw myself down and fell asleep. In this
state I remained till the dark of the evening, when I was awakened by a
second opening of the door. The person that now entered was M. Lang-
lade's wife, who was much surprised at finding me, but advised me not
to be imeasy, observing that the Indians had killed most of the English,
but that she hoped I might myself escape. A shower of rain having begun to
fall, she had come to stop a hole in the roof. On her going away, I begged
her to send me a little water to drink, which she did.
"As night was now advancing, I continued to lie on the bed, ruminating
on my condition, but unable to discover a source from which I could
hope for life. A flight to Detroit had no probable chance of success. The
distance, from Michilimackinac was four hundred miles; I was without
provisions; and the whole length of the road lay through Indian countries,
countries of an enemv in arms, where the first man whom I should meet
72 THE STANDARD GUIDE.
would kill me. To stay where I was, threatened nearly the same issue.
As before, fatigue of mind, and not tranquility, suspended my cares, and
procured me further sleep.
"The respite which sleep afforded me, during the night, was put to an
end by the return of morning. I was again on the rack of apprehension.
At sunrise I heard the family stirring, and, presently after, Indian voices,
informing M. Langlade that they had not found my hapless self among
the dead, and that they supposed me to be somewhere concealed. ]\I.
Langlade appeared, from what followed, to be, by this time, acquainted
with the place of my retreat, of which no doubt he had been informed by
his wife. The poor woman, as soon as the Indians mentioned me, declared
to her husband in the French tongue, that he should no longer keep me in
his house, but deliver me up to my pursuers; giving as a reason for this
measure, that should the Indians discover his instrumentality in my con-
cealment, they might avenge it on her children, and that it was better
that I should die than they. M. Langlade resisted, at first, this sentence
of his wife's, but soon suffered her to prevail, informing the Indians that
he had been told I was in the house, that I had come there without his
knowledge, and that he would put me into their hands. This was no
sooner expressed than he began to ascend the stairs, the Indians follow-
ing upon his heels.
"I now resigned myself to the fate with which I was menaced ; and, re-
orrding every attempt at concealment as vain, I arose from the bed and
presented myself full in view to the Indians who were entering the room.
They were all in a state of intoxication, and entirely naked, except about
the middle. One of them, named, Wenniway, whom I had previously
known, and who was upward of six feet in height, had his entire face and
l)ody covered with charcoal and grease, only that a white spot of two
inches in diameter encircled either eye. This man, walking up to me, seized
me with one hand by the collar of the coat, while in the other he held a
large carving knife, as if to plunge it into my breast ; his eyes, meanwhile,
were fixed steadfastly on mine. At length, after some seconds of the most
anxiotis suspense, he dropped his arm, saying, 'I won't kill you !' To
this he added, that he had been frequently engaged in wars against the
English, and had brought away many scalps ; that, on a certain occasion, he
had lost a brother whose name was Musinigon. and that I should be
called after him."
Thus preserved, Henry was held prisoner, his fate still uncertain, until
on the fourth day Wawatam appeared before the council, and claiming the
white man as an adopted brother, took him out of the hands of his
enemies and brought him over to his own lodge on the island. Here other
adventures were in store for him, among them that of the refuge m the
cavern, now known as Skull Cave. This is his own account :
"Several days had now passed, when, one morning, a continued alarm
prevailed, and I saw Indians running in a confused manner toward the
beach. In a short time I learned that two large canoes from Montreal were
ill sight.
■"All the Indian canoes were immediately manned, and those from
]\Iontreal were surrounded and seized as they turned a point, behind which
the flotilla had been concealed. The goods were consigned to a Mr. Levy,
and would have been saved if the canoe men had called them French
T;roperty ; but they were terrified and disguised nothing.
"In the canoes was a large proportion of liquor — a dangerous acquisition,
ond one which threatened disturbance among the Indians, even to the loss
of their dearest friends. Wawatam, always watchful of my safety, no
sooner heard the noise of drunkenness which, in the evening, did not
fail to begin, than he represented to me the danger of remaining in the
\ illage, and owned that he could not himself resist the temptation of
joining his comrades in the debauch. That I might escape all mischief, he
therefore requested that I would accompany him to the mountain, where I
Avas to remain hidden till the liquor should be drank. We ascended the
mountain accordingly. After walking more than half a mile, we came to
■a large rock, at the base of which was an opening, dark within, and ap-
pearing to be the entrance of a cave. Here Wawatam recommended that
I should take up my lodging, and by all means remain till he returned.
"On going into the cave, of which the entrance was nearly ten feet
wide, I found the further end to be rounded in its shape, like that of an
oven, but with a further aperture, too small, however, to be explored. After
thus looking around me, I broke small branches from the trees and spread
them for a bed, then wrapped myself in my blanket and slept till day-
break. On awaking, I felt myself incommoded by some object upon which
I lay, and, removing it, found it to be a bone. This I supposed to be that
of a deer, or some other animal, and what might very naturally be looked
for in the place in which I was; but when daylight visited my chamber
T discovered, with some feelings of horror, that I was lying on nothing
less than a heap of human bones and skulls, which covered the floor !
"The day passed without the return of Wawatam, and without food, x^s
right approached, I found myself unable to meet its darkness in the charnel-
74 THE STANDARD GUIDE.
house, which, nevertheless, I had viewed free from uneasiness during the
day. I chose, therefore, an adjacent bush for this night's lodging, and
slept under it as before; but in the morning I awoke hungry and dispirited
end almost envying the dry bones, to the view of which I returned. A'^
length the sound of a foot reached me, and my Indian friend appeared,
making many apologies for his long absence, the cause of which was an
unfortunate excess in the enjoyment of his liquor.
"This point being explained, I mentioned the extraordinary sight that
had presented itself in the cave to which he had recommended my slumbers.
He had never heard of its existence before, and, upon examining the cave
together, we saw reason to believe that it had been anciently filled with
human bodies.
"Wawatam related to the other Indians the adventure of the bones. All
of them expressed surprise at hearing it, and declared that they had never
been aware of the contents of this cave before. After visiting it, which
they immediately did, almost every one offered a different opinion as to its
history. Some advanced, that at a period when the waters overflowed the
land (an event which makes a distinguished figure in the history of their
world), the inhabitants of this island had fled into the cave, and been
there drowned; others, that those inhabitants, when the Hurons made war
upon them (as tradition says they did), hid themselves in the cave, and,
being discovered, were there massacred. For myself, I am disposed to
believe that this cave was an ancient receptacle of the bones of prisoners
.sacrificed and devoured at war feasts. I have always observed that the In-
dians pay particular attention to the bones of sacrifices, preserving thenr
unbroken, and depositing them in some place kept exclusively for that
purpose."
From his quasi captivity on Mackinac, Henry at length escaped, and
after a long series of adventures, which he says, in the relation of them,
were more like fiction than truth, he found his way eventually to Sault
Ste. Marie. There he prospered as a fur trader, and took to himself an
Indian wife. A nephew, Alexander Henry the second, shared his adven-
turous disposition, and following the uncle's example became trader, ex-
plorer, adventurer and author.
fc3* tj^r* f^*
Books about Mackinac are many. The older ones are not readily ac-
cessible. Of those usually found in the shops may be mentioned: "Early
Mackinac," by Rev. Dr. Meade C. Williams, a concise and sympathetic
review of the island's history. "Mackinac, formerly Michilimacldnac," by
John R. Bailey, M. D., a valuable compendium, with materials drawn from
the original sources. Miss Woolson's "Anne" has much to do with the
island; and Irving's "Astoria" pictures the American fur trade, of which
IMackinac was once a center.
Channels.
The development of the commerce of the Great Lakes to its present
vast proportions has been made possible by the deepening of the channels
of the connecting rivers. The improvements were begun at an early-
date, as has already been told of the St. Mary's Falls Canal. In 1892
Congress authorized the execution of the plans of Gen. O. M. Poe, Corps
of Engineers, United States Army, for a ''ship cha.nnel 20 and 21 feet in
depth, and a minimum width of 300 feet, in the shallows of the con-
necting waters of the Great Lakes between Chicago, Duluth and Buffalo."
The estimated cost was $3,340,000. Operations were begun in 1893, and
the work is now practically completed. The total expenditure of the
Government to date for improvement of navigation on the Great Lakes
Approximates $50,000,000. The most extensive work has been on the De-
troit and St. Clair Rivers connecting Lakes Erie and Huron, and the St.
Mary's River connecting Lakes Huron and Superior. These improve-
ments are on the route of the Northern Steamship line from Buffalo to
Duluth ; indeed it is due to them that vessels of the North West and North
Land type are possible. The most important improvements in the three
rivers are at the Lime Kiln Crossing, the St. Clair Flats Canal, the Hay
Lake Channel and the St. Mary's Falls Canal.
The Lime Kiln Crossing, in the lower Detroit River, between Bois
Blanc Island and Amherstburg, was formerly the most dangerous point
in the navigation of the lakes. There was here a jagged bottom of bed-
rock and bowlders only 13 feet below the surface. The work of im-
provement was begun in 1874, and by June, 1897, the engineers had se-
cured a channel 20 feet deep and 440 feet wide. It was for the most
part blasted out of solid rock. Tens of thousands of tons of rock have
been brought to the surface and carried away on scows. The expendi-
ture at the Crossing has been $1,500,000. The channel is lighted by gas
buoys, which make it navigable by night. A 20-foot channel has also
been secured throughout the river; and this it is proposed to increase to
600 feet.
The St. Clair Flats Canal is at the outlet of the St. Clair River
into Lake St. Clair. The river had seven mouths or passes, through the
Flats. All of these were shallow, the deepest, that of the South Pass,
having only 9 feet of water over the bar. The draft of vessels on the Great
Lakes has always been governed by the depth of water on the St. Clair
Flats; and very early in the development of lake commerce attention was
given to deepening the South Pass. By a project begun in 1866 and com-
pleted in 1871 the channel was dredged and diked, and converted into the
St. Clair Flats Canal. The canal is a mile long and 20 feet deep.
The St. Mary's River has been improved at various points, the most
important work being the St. Mary's Falls Canal, described in our chapter
on Sault Ste. Marie. Only second to this is the opening of the Hay Lake
76 THE STAXDARD GUIDE.
Channel, through Hay Lake, an extension of the river. Tlie lake formerly
was impassable for commercial purposes by reason of its ehoals and
rapids. The project of improvement called for .a channel 20 and 21 feet
deep and 300 feet wide, at a cost of more than two and one-half millions.
The new Hay Lake Channel was opened in 1894, and the work is now
practically completed. The new route saves eleven miles between the two
lakes, and practically all «f the immense traffic of the river passes through
it. A system of lighting by gas buoys makes the channel navigable by
night.
Commerce has kept pace with each improvement of the waterways ; in-
deed has anticipated it. "Immediately after the Weitzel Lock was opened
to traffic," says Lieut.-Col. G. J. Lydecker, the Government engineer in
charge of the Great Lakes works, "an astonishing increase in commerce
took placej a like increase in the size of the vessels engaged in it followed,
and a corresponding increase in navigable depth and locking capacity be-
came imperative." This has been the rule following all the improvements,
imtil to-day the Secretary of the Treasury can tell Congress : "Com-
pared with the shipping tonnage employed in the foreign commerce of
the United States, the activity of the lake shipping is far greater. The
bulk of transactions in the lake-carrying interests is so large as to rank it
among the great conveyers of the world."
^^ t^^ ^^
The S.-\nd Beach Harbor of Refuge is an artificial harbor at Sand
Beach, on the west shore of Lake Huron, 60 miles north of the mouth of St.
Clair River. The harbor was begun in 1872, and completed in 1885, at a
cost of nearly $1,000,000. It is formed by a breakwater of cribwork 8,132
feet in length, which shelters a water area of 650 acres; and is the only
safe refuge on the coast between the Detroit River and Tawas Bay. 115
miles north. In the years 1877 to 1897 it gave refuge to 25,007 vessels.
t^^ ^^ ^*
The Straits of Mackinac are 48 miles long; 26^ miles wide at the
eastern or Lake Huron entrance, and 12^ miles wide at Lake Michigan.
The narrowest part is between Pointe St. Ignace and Old Point Mackinac
where they contract to 4>^ miles.
freighters.
The chief factors contributing to the development of lake commerce
have been (i) the deepening of the channels already alluded to as making
possible the employment of larger vessels, (2) the lighting of the channels
permitting passage at night, (3) the supplanting of sailing vessels by steam-
ships and of small craft by others of enormous size, and (4) improved
facilities for loading and unloading cargoes. These are discussed in a
report on "Statistics of Lake Commerce" made to the Bureau of Statistics
of the Treasury Department by Prof. George C. Tunell, of Chicago, in
1898. From that report most of the facts here given, sometimes in the
original language of the report, have been drawn.
Local traffic on the Great Lakes is comparatively insignificant. Nearly
the whole of the commerce is carried from one end of the lake system to
the other. Most of the grain and flour moved on Lake Superior is shipped
from Duluth, West Superior and Ashland, at the extreme western end of
the lake to Buffalo, at the extreme eastern end of Lake Erie, or a distance
of approximately 1,000 miles. The average distance that the 16,239,061
tons of freight which passed through the St. Mary's Falls Canal in 1896
were carried was 836.4 miles.
Sail has given way to steam. Sailing vessels have practically disap-
peared from Lake Superior ; only six passed through the locks in 1897.
There are but few on the lower lakes. Wooden vessels have beeen super-
seded by those of steel. Steel is cheaper than wood; the steel ships are
stronger and more buoyant and durable.
A marked feature of the vessels on the Great Lakes is their uniformly
great size ; this has increased with the improved channels. Between 1870
and 1897 the average size of the lake steamer doubled. One of the
Bessemer Steamship Company's new propellers measures over all 475 feet,
with 50-foot beam and 29-foot depth. (Of ocean steamships the Kaiser
Wilhelm der Grosse is 648 feet over all ; and the Oceanic, now building, will
be 704 feet.) The lake craft have enormous carrying capacity. The
record single cargo last year was one of 6,171 tons, carried by the Empire
City, of Duluth ; the greatest total of freight for the season was of 130,956
tons carried by the ore freighter Andrew Carnegie, of Cleveland.
The bulk of the traffic (more than 90 per cent.) consists of iron ore,
grain and lumber carried east, and coal carried west. Of nearly 19,000,000
tons of freight which passed east through the St. Mary's Falls Canal in
1897, over 10,000,000 were of iron ore. Two-thirds of the ore consumed
by the blast-furnaces of the United States comes from the Lake Superior
region, and is carried during some portion of the journey from mine to
furnace over the waters of the Great Lakes. It is the specialized mining
and transportation facilities employed which enable the Lake Superior
ore to compete at distant points. Steam shovels of prodigious power and
7 8 THE STANDARD GUIDE.
capacity dig and load the ore on the cars which convey it to the ships. At
one of the Mesabi mines three of these shovels in one day, working 14
hours each, have dug and raised from the natural bed of the mine, 10,700
tons, or 428 cars of ore; 25-ton ore cars have been loaded at a rate of 2]^
minutes per car; and one shovel has loaded 5,825 tons, or 233 cars, in 10
hours. At the shipping ports, the ore trains are run out upon docks 57 feet
high, whence the ore is spouted through iron chutes into the hold. Every-
thing here is done on a gigantic scale, and almost entirely by ma-
chinery; and with a rapidity which is marvelous. At Two Harbors 3,028
tons of ore have been loaded in 70 minutes ; vessels frequently load and
depart with a cargo of 3,500 to 4,000 tons within two hours of the time
they reach port.
Like provision has been made for coal transportation. To the vast extent
of territory about the Great Lakes, especially to the country north and
west of Lakes Michigan and Superior, lake transportation means cheap
coal. Duluth gets its coal from Bufifalo, a distance of 997 miles, at a
freight charge of 20 cents per ton. To the lake carrier coal means a west-
bound cargo ; without it nearly all the vessels carrying ore, grain, flour
or lumber to the lower lake ports would be obliged to return "light."
During 1896 coal constituted 86 per cent, of the freight west-bound
through the St. Mary's Falls Canal. Loading methods are expeditious.
Hard coal is taken aboard from elevated pocket trestles ; the propeller
Zenith City recently took in at Buffalo a cargo of 5,127 tons in 4 hours.
For soft coal there have been devised powerful car dumping machines,
which lift up the car from the track and tip it over, and dump the coal
through chutes into the hold. One machine on a Cleveland dock has a
lecord of 5,176 tons of coal transhipped from car to boat in 10 hours and
3c minutes, at a cost of one-fourth of a cent per ton.
The elevator systems of lading wheat and grain are so familiar that we
need not do more than allude to them as equally saving of time. With
these developed facilities for handling in bulk the several products car-
ried by the lake freighters, it has come to be true that instead of spend-
ing days in loading and unloading, as was once the case, but a few hours
i're now consumed in port. Vessels lose almost no time at all at the docks;
it is almost literally true that they are constantly coming and going. For
the iron-ore carriers 22 round trips in a season are considered a fair aver-
age. The mileage record for last year was made by the propeller Harlem,
cf Buffalo, which ran 49,853 miles. There were in the lakes in 1897, 2.869
\essels.
An engineering project now under consideration is for a deep water-
way from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic. One proposition is that the
Government shall acquire the Erie Canal (which extends from Lake Erie
to the Hudson River), and enlarge it to admit the passage of Lake ship-
ping. The scheme is by no means a visionary one. If in the year 1825 the
State of New York could open the Erie Canal, before the year 1925 we
may look for the opening by the United States of a ship canal to connect
these inland seas with the seaboard : and when this shall have been accom-
plished one may take ship at Duluth and go ashore at Liverpool.
eights and Sirens.
There is something peculiarly and gratefully personal about a light-
house at night; for as its light is flashed across the water to us and we
lay our course by it, we feel that the warning or the welcome is directly
to us, for the benefit of our own individual ship. By day, too, the beacons
are as pleasing as they are conspicuous, for they give variety and pic-
turesqueness to the marine view, and often reiieve the monotony of a low
shore line.
Of the 3,072 lights maintained by the United States at the close of the
last fiscal year, 441 were on the Great Lakes ; there were also 700 day
beacons, buoys, fog signals and other aids to navigation; and to these
must be added the several hundred lights belonging to Canada.
Lights are distinguished by their power, as of the first order, second
order, etc. ; by color, white or red ; and by their character as fixed or
steady lights, or revolving or flash lights. The flash is produced by the
revolution of the lantern about the light, alternately eclipsing and re-
vealing it. There are various combinations of white and red lights, and
fixed and flashing. These several variations serve to identify them. The
stations are further distinguished in the daytime by peculiarities of con-
struction and painting ; and in fogs by the fog bells or sirens. Thus, tak-
ing the lights of the Straits of Mackinac :
Spectacle Reef Light, which guides to the Straits of Mackinac from
the eastward, flashes alternately red and white with a 30-seconds interval
between flashes. The light is 86 feet above lake level, and is visible
ijyi miles. The station is a conical, gray, limestone tower; dome and
railings black, with white houses. The fog siren gives blasts of 3 seconds
with alternate silent intervals of 17 and 42 seconds.
Poe Reef Light VesseLj at the easterly entrance to the South Channel
of the Straits of Mackinac, shows a fixed white light, 40 feet above the
water and visible 13^ miles. The hull is red, with "Poe Reef" in white
en each side, and "No. 62" in white on each bow. The fog siren, a 6-inch
steam whistle, gives blasts of 5 seconds, with silent intervals of 10
seconds.
Bois Blanc Light, on the north end of Bois Blanc Island, is a fixed white
light, 53 feet high, visible 13 miles. The station is a square tower on a
3'ellow brick dwelling. It has no fog signal.
Round Island Light, opposite Mackinac Island, is a fixed white light
varied by a red flash every 20 seconds, 53 feet high, visible 1434 miles.
The station is a square red-brick tower attached to a red-brick dwelling.
The fog siren sounds blasts of 5 seconds with silent intervals of 55 seconds.
Old Mackinac Point Light, in Mackinaw City, flashes red every 10
seconds. The light is 62 feet high, and is visible 15% miles. The station
is a cylindrical tower, with keeper's dwelling, of yellow brick, and black
lantern. The fog whistle gives blasts of 5 seconds with alternate silent in-
tervals of 17 and 32 seconds.
8o THE STAXDARD GUIDE.
McGuLPiN Point Light, on the south side of the Straits at the en-
trance to Lake Michigan, is a fixed wliite Hght, 102 feet high, visible 181/2
miles. The station is an octagonal tower attached to the keeper's
dwelling, both of yellow brick, with red roofs. There is no fog signal.
The mechanism of the revolving lights and of some of the fog signals
is operated by clockwork. The lanterns are lighted from stmset to sunrise
throughout the season. Some of the channels are lighted by gas-buoys,
which burn continuously day and night for 80 days; on the sea coast some
of these gas buoys burn for a year.
There are on the lakes six steam lighthouse tenders — ^larigold. Ama-
ranth, Lotus, Dahlia, Haze and Warrington — busy craft which carry oil
and supplies to the stations, make repairs, and put out and remove the
stakes and buoys at the 'opening and close of the season.
The navigation season usually runs from about April 15 to Dec. 15. In
1899 the opening on Lake Superior was on April 29.
tj5* t^^ t?^ tP^ t?*
De Great Cakes.
To know the Great Lakes one must have beheld Niagara. To com-
prehend Niagara one must have seen the Great Lakes. We look in awe
upon the stupendous volume of water pouring over the Falls, to-day as
yesterday, now as a hundred years ago, for a hundred years as for the
centuries before, and for ages untold, unknown, beyond the grasp of
human comprehension ; and we marvel from what exhaustless source flows
the eternal flood. When we have crossed Lake Erie and Lake Huron,
glimpsed Lake Michigan, and entered upon the majestic expanse of Lake
Superior, there is wonder at Niagara's source no longer.
The Great Lakes are the largest bodies of fresh water on the globe. In
area there is- a progression from the 7,240 square miles of Ontario to the
10,000 miles of Erie, the 21,000 of Huron, the 22,400 of Michigan and the
31,200 of Superior, the largest lake in the world. Crowfoot, a Blackfoot In-
dian chief, called Lake Superior "Brother to the Sea." In the story of its
early shipping is record of a storm-driven schooner, which was out of sight
of land for fourteen days. The lake receives the w^aters of 200 rivers, and
drains a territory of 53,000 square miles. It fills a basin 1,008 feet dee])
and 1,500 miles around the rim; the bottom is 406 feet below the sea level.
the surface 602 feet above.
Lake Michigan is almost as deep, 1,000 feet. Lake Huron is 802 feet
deep; Lake Erie 210 feet; Lake Ontario 506 feet. The lake levels
are subject to fluctuations from one season to another; Lake Michigan,
for example, in a period of recorded observation, has lowered 5 feet. The
lunar tide of Lake Michigan ranges from 0.153 feet in the period of ka^t
variation to 0.245 feet in the spring tides. Lake Michigan is believed to be
moving slowly westward, uncovering the eastern shore and encroaching
upon the western shore.
i
On Inland Seas.
The route of the Northern steamships is from Buffalo to Duluth. a
thousand miles on inland seas. The twin ships North West and
North Land leave Buffalo each week during the season, on Tuesdays and
Fridays, touch at Cleveland and Detroit Wednesdays and Saturdays,
AJackinac Island and Sault Ste. Marie Thursdays and Sundays, and arrive
at Duluth Fridays and Mondays. Returning they sail from Duluth
Saturdays and Tuesdays, Sault Ste. Marie and Mackinac Island Sundays
and Wednesdays, Detroit and Cleveland Mondays and Thursdays, and
reach Buffalo Tuesdays and Fridays. Thus the round trip of 2,000 miles is
made in a week. The ships are among the most modern and best ap-
pointed passenger steamers in the world. Each is 386 feet over all, 40 feet
beam, and has accommodation for over 600 passengers. Thej' carry no
freight. The size and roominess are grateful ; there is not the slightest
suggestion of the cramped quarters of shipboard; nor are we subjected to
that motion in a seaway which is so trying in small vessels. To build and
equip such ships for the Great Lakes was a bold business enterprise which
comma-nds our admiration. That the sagacity of those who projected it has
been abundantly vindicated is attested by the fact that the tourist finds it
advisable to book his passage far ahead.
The ship sails from Buffalo (foot of Main Street) at 9:15 P. M. If op-
portunity affords, a visit to Niagara may well be made, for, as the outlet
of the Great Lakes, the Falls properly come within the tour. One lasting
impression of the lake trip will be of the immensity of the water system ;
and as has been remarked, this impression will be deepened by the over-
whelming majesty of the Falls. With the railroads and the electric lines
connection between Buffalo and Niagara Falls is constant, and the excur-
sion may be made in a few hours.
Buffalo itself has interest not only as a beautiful and prosperous city, but
as the chief lake port, to whose grain elevators are bound hundreds of the
vessels we shall see on our trip ; there are more than 10,000 arrivals and
departures of vessels in a season. The elevators dominate the water front ;
shadowy and mysterious, they loom up about and above us like phantoms
in the gloom as our ship leaves her pier, and passing out into Lake Erie
lays her course for Cleveland. The lights seen as we put out from
Buffalo are the Buffalo Light, fixed white, on the south pier of the harbor
crib ; Buffalo Breakwater light, fixed red. on the breakwater which pro-
tects the harbor ; and Horseshoe Reef Light, fixed white with white flash
every 90 .seconds, to the north, near the entrance to Niagara River.
The early morning finds us approaching Cleveland. The solitary struc-
ture far out on the lake in front of the harbor is the intake of the Cleveland
waterworks, whence the water is conveyed to the city through a tunnel
6,600 feet in length. The entrance to the harbor is between two im-
mense breakwaters, with a light on each one ; and then between the cribs
built at the entrance of the Cuyahoga River. Cleveland occupies a
82 THE STAXDARI) Ci'IDE.
siglitly position on an elevated plateau and is embowered in a pro-
fusion of shade trees which have given it the name of the
"Forest City." A prominent object in the picture as we approach is
the Garfield Monument, in Lake View Cemetery, 250 feet above the lake.
The water front is lined with manufacturing plants ; and there are ex-
tensive shipyards; Cleveland is the largest shipbuilding port on the Lakes;
the North West and the North Land were built here.
Our ship fuels from elevated pockets, to which the coal cars arc taken up
on immense inclines to a height of 63 feet, and from which the coal descends
in chutes through the hatches to the bunkers below. On an opposite
railroad pier may be seen in operation one of the coal conveying ma-
chines alluded to in earlier pages as having simplified and expedited lake
transportation. This is one of the McMyler coal dumping machines. A
coal car detached from the train runs down by gravity to the foot of the
machine. The machine lifts the car from the track, elevates it, turns it
over and dumps it into a chute, through which the coal flows into the hold
of the vessel lying alongside. Then the machine lowers the empty car and
replaces it upon the rails, whence, by gravity, it passes on to an automatic
switch and is shunted to another track, and the next car follows. The ma-
chine handles 416 tons of coal in an hour ; it has a record of over 5,000
tons transhipped from cars to vessel in 10 hours 30 minutes.
Cleveland harbor we shall find crowded with shipping, and from here to
Duluth we shall meet such a procession of freighters as we >hould find
nowhere else though we circled the globe. The Great Lakes tour reveals
not only the vastness of these inland seas but also the magnitude of their
commerce which bears east and west the products of the forests, the mines
and the grain fields.
One impressive characteristic of lake shipping is the uniformly large
size of the vessels. We note, too, the absence of sailing craft, and miss
the picturesqueness they would give. Another novel feature is the number
of barges in tow. There is something peculiarly mechanical about these
marine types, suggestive of freight trains ; and they are almost as certain
on their schedules. Says Gen. O. M. Poe : "Of large capacity and great
power, regardless of wind or weather, steamers of the prevailing type bear
their cargoes from ports a thousand miles apart with the precision of rail-
road trains, each of them transporting at once more than ten ordinary
freight trains."
Wh.vlebacks. — One peculiar type of vessel native to the Great Lakes, and
still almo.st confined to these waters, is the whaleback. which is so called
from the shape of the model. It is a huge steel tank entirely decked over,
and when loaded is so far submerged that the water swashes entirely over
the deck. The pilot-house and other upper works are carried on pillars.
The whaleback is an invention of Capt. Alexander :\IcDougall, of West
Superior, Wis., and is patented. Among the merits claimed for it is that
its submergence secures increased buoyancy with mim"mum of wind and
wave resistance, A tow of wlialebacks is one of the most grotesque of
marine spectacles. One Lake Superior wlialeback having passed through
ON INLAND SEAS. 83
the Welland Canal to the Atlantic has made a voyage to Europe and
thence around the Horn to California. It is said that the whaleback pas-
senger steamer Christopher Columbus, familiar to World's Fair visitors,
\vill go to Europe in the Paris Exposition year.
When Ship Meets Ship. — The right side of a ship (looking toward
the bow) is the "'starboard" ; the left side is "port." The side on which
one ship will pass another is signaled by blasts of the whistle.
One signal means that she will go to starboard (i.e., to the r'ight), and
the ships will pass each other on the port (left) sides.
Two signals mean that she will go to port, and the ships will pass each
other on the starboard (or right) side.
To see a passing ship, go to the port (left) side of the vessel if the whistle
blows once; to the starboard (right) side if it blows twice.
When the deck watch forward observes a vessel approaching on the
starboard, he touches a button which rings an electric bell in the pilot-
house; when he sees a vessel approaching on the port he touches the
button twice. His signals are acknowledged by the pilot, being repeated
on the electric bell, which we hear in the bow.
Side-lights at night are green on the starboard and red on the port. One
way to remember this is to associate red, port, and red port wine.
Ship's time is divided into three watches, and one bell is rung for every
half-hour of each watch. Thus 12:30 is i bell, i o'clock is 2 bells. 1:30
is 3 bells; and so on until 4 o'clock, which is 8 bells. Then from 4:30, i
bell, to 8 o'clock, 8 bells; and to 12 o'clock 8 bells again.
The ship's log records the distance run. The taffrail log, so called be-
cause attached to the taffrail, or rail across the stern, consists of the log, the
log-line and the register. The log is a metal cylinder fitted with curved
blades, like those of a propeller, which, as it is dragged through the water,
cause it to revolve. This in turn causes the line to revolve, and the revolu-
tions, so many to the mile, are recorded by a registering apparatus, some-
thing like a bicycle cyclometer, on the taffrail.
Through Historic Waters. — Between Cleveland and the Detroit River
we pass through the waters where was fought the Battle of Lake Erie, ten
miles north of Put-in-Bay. In the Detroit River we shall see other points
of historic interest in connection with the War of 1812; and a brief
resume may be given of the events of that conflict occuring on the line of
our route. When the war began. General Hull, who was in command at De-
troit, crossed to Sandwich, on the Canadian shore, hoisted the American
flag and reported to Washington that he had taken Upper Canada.
Shortly afterward he received news of the capture of Fort Mackinac by
the British, and thereupon he withdrew from Canada, was followed to
Detroit by the British and there incontinently surrendered. This gave
Detroit and the control of the upper lakes to the British and their savage
allies, who, enlisted under the command of the Shawnee chief. Tecumseh,
waged a campaign marked by the atrocities of Indian warfare, including
the massacres of prisoners and the scalping of United States soldiers.
To regain the conquered American territory was the purpose of the can^
84 THE STAXDARD GL'IDE.
paign of 1813. undertaken by General William Henry Harrison l)y land,
?nd Captain Oliver Hazard Perry on the water. Perry waited at Put-in-
Bay for the British fleet, under Captain Barclay. They met on the morn-
ing of Sept. 10, at a point 10 miles north of the bay. The Americans had
10 vessels, the British 6. The Englishman had the advantage of more
guns, and larger and of longer range than the American. These were
used with terrible effect, and before the Americans could draw close
enough to deliver effective fire the flagship Lawrence was reduced to a
wreck, and drew helplessly out of the fight. From the Lawrence, taking
his broad banner and pennant. Perry was rowed, through fifteen minutes'
rain of lead, to the Niagara, upon which he raised his colors. Then at last
coming into close quarters, the Americans broke through the enemy's line,
raked his ships with their broadsides, and in eight minutes finished the
fight. Barclay's flagship, the Detroit, was the first to strike her colors ;
three of the others followed; two ran away and were overhauled. Then
Perry wrote on the back of an old letter in lead pencil the famous message
to General Harrison: "We have met the enemy and they are ours; two
ships, two brigs, one schooner and one sloop."
The forces under Harrison proceeded to the Detroit River, where Fort
Maiden was abandoned at their approach. Harrison pursued the retreating
British to the Thames River, and routed them there, Teciunseh falling in
battle. The purpose of the campaign was accomplished — Alichigan was
restored to American control.
There are now no war vessels on the Great Lakes. The only Govern-
ment vessels we encounter are lighthouse tenders, revenue cutters and the
engineering craft. The Put-in-Bay Lslands are summer resorts. They are
famous for their bass fishing and their vineyards and wines.
The Detroit River entrance is marked by the Detroit River or Bar
Point Light (conical brown tower with black lantern). Leaving this
astern and passing the Bar Point Light Vessel, which marks a shoal, we
are fairly in the river. The stream has much of the character of a strait;
the name, indeed, which was given by the French, Detroit, means strait.
The river here widens out into a broad expanse studded with islands. In
his "New Discovery" Father Hennepin, who in 1679 was here with La
Salle in the Griffin, the first sailing vessel on the lakes, wrote witli that en-
thusiasm which is so refreshing and so charming in the old chronicles :
"The islands are the finest in the w-orld ; the strait is finer than Niagara ; the
banks are vast meadows ; and the prospect is terminated with some hills
crowned with vineyards, trees bearing good fruit, groves and forests so
well disposed that one would think that Nature alone could not have made,
without the help of art. so charming a prospect."
Following the Canadian Channel, we are soon abreast Bois Blanc Lsland,
on the left, a summer outing resort to which ferries ply from Detroit. On
the right is the French-Canadian town of Amherstburg. Between the u])per
end of the island and the town the Lime-Kiln Crossing (page 75) is marked
by two flat-bottomed scow light-vessels, lettered on the hulls "Lime-Kiln
Crossing South" and "Lime-Kiln Crossing North." Here we may see
the dredges at w'ork (one of them is named "Old Glory"), the steam drills
ON INLAND SEAS. 85
and scoops and shovels, cranes, derricks, scows with immense masses of
rock, and perhaps the divers in their diving dress. The ship slacks speed
liere to avoid making waves which would interfere with the dredges, and
also as a measure of precaution for safe navigation of the channel. It
may be that we shall be obliged to lay-to to await the passage of an-
other vessel, for at this point the river is likely to be crowded.
Measured by its tonnage, the Detroit River is the most important water
highway in the world. The tonnage is four times that of the Suez Canal,
and more than the entrances and clearances of London and Liverpool
combined. In the active part of the season there is one continuous pro-
cession of vessels — an average of one every four minutes. In May, 1899,
166 vessels passed Amherstburg in two days ; 99 went by in 24 hours.
Just beyond Amherstburg on the right is Fort Maiden ; and on the left
Grosse Island, a Detroiters' summering point. The Ballard Reef Light-
Vessel marks another of the points in the Detroit where an immense sum
has been expended by the Government to blast out a channel from the
solid reef and boulders. Wyandotte, with shipyards and rolling mills, is
seen on the left bank; Fighting Island is passed on the right; then come
Grassy and Mud Islands on the left. Beyond ]Mud Island is Ecorse, and
the manufacturing town of Delray. Fort Wayne, on the left bank, com-
mands the river, and is the strongest fortification on the Great Lakes ;
the officers' quarters are in a grove of trees. On the opposite shore is the
French-Canadian town of Sandwich, the oldest settlement in western
Ontario. Here begin Detroit's nine miles of river front, lined through-
out a large portion of its extent with shipyards, foundries, car shops and
other manufacturing establishments, which, with the geographical posi-
tion, have made Detroit the chief city of IMichigan. The river presents a
scene of much animation ; there is a bewildering multitude of com-
mercial and pleasure craft, freighters and passenger steamboats, coming
and going, and throngs on the docks. The "City of the Straits" stretches
back from the river on a level plain ; the sky-line is broken with the high
business buildings ; we may catch a glimpse of the City Hall ; the skeleton
frame-works lifting high in air are electric light towers. The hand-
some pavilion overlooking the water near our wharf is that of the Wayne
Hotel. Opposite on the Canadian shore are Windsor and Walkerville.
The Marine Mail Service of Detroit is one of the most interesting
institutions of the river. Mail is delivered to passing steamships while
the vessels maintain their regular speed. When a vessel is sighted for
which mail is held, the little postal steamboat goes out into the channel
with the carrier aboard and his rowboat in tow. ^Maneuvering his boat
with the skill of long experience, the carrier comes under the vessel's hull
and puts a line aboard, by which he is held in position, while a bucket is
lowered from the deck in which he deposits the mail. Then the rope is
cast off and he drops astern, to be picked up by the steam tender. The
service is arduous and full of hazard, and calls for skill and intrepidity of
a very high order. Quick work is necessary when, as often happens, sev-
eral vessels are to be served at once. On one day in April, i8g8. 57 boats
86 THE sr.lXn.lRP Gl'lDE.
passed in a single hour, to wliicli 336 pieces of mail were delivered, and y6
pieces collected from them. On Oct. 30 of the same year 1,428 pieces were
delivered in the 24 hours. The total delivery for the season of 1898 aggre-
gated 217,782 pieces.
Belle Island Park appears on our left as the high buildings of Detroit
recede. It is an island of 700 acres, which was laid out after plans by the
well-known landscape artist, Frederick Law Olmsted ; and with its
lagoons, meadows, bridges and roads and casinos, is counted (>nc of the
most beautiful parks in the world. It is connected with the city by a hand-
some bridge. Detroiters are addicted to repeating the historical fact that
the island pleasure park which has cost tlje city more than a million and a
half was bought from the Indians by its first purchase for 8 barrels of
rum, 3 rolls of tobacco. 6 pounds of vermilion and a belt of wampum.
Beyond the park on the left is seen the high tower of the city water
works. Then come on the left Windmill Point, and on the right the Isle
aux Peches, which tradition says was the home of Pontiac, the hero of
Pontiac's Conspiracy (page 18). The large residence upon it was that of
the late Hiram Walker, the founder of Walkerville. The shore on the left
is very attractive, with fine residences all the way to Grosse Point, a
fashionable summer home resort of wealthy Detroit people.
Passing the Grosse Point Light- Vessel, which marks the end of a
dredged channel, the ship lays a course directly across Lake St. Clair. It is
a veritable lake in miniature when its diminutive proportions are con-
trasted with Huron's. After the custom of the French and Spanish ex-
plorers who named their discoveries after the saints. La Salle gave the
lake its name because he happened to enter it in the Griffin on the day in
the calendar devoted to St. Clara, or, in the French form, Ste. Claire.
From the lake we pass to the river through the St. Clair Flats Canal
(page 75); and here we are subject to strict navigation rules. Vessels
are forbidden to enter the canal two abreast, to i)ass others going in the
same direction, or to proceed in more than one line; or at greater sjieed
than 8 miles an hour, while lieav}- draft vessels are re(|uired to slow down
to 4 miles an hour. From the light on the lake end of the canal to that on
the river end the length is one mile.
When we leave the canal and enter the St. Clair River ui' are among
the famous St. Clair Flats, the Venice of America, wdiere the houses are
built on made land, the streets are canals, locomotion is by boat, and the
daily life has an amphibious character. The route is through a long suc-
cession of sumnier cottages, camps, club houses, hotels, nondescript dwell-
ings ; and a church, to which the worshipers come in boats of a Sunday.
This Flats country is a famous summer resort region; the waters abound
in muscalonge, bass, pike-perch and pickerel and other fish ; and extensive
marshes of wild rice attract wild ducks. .A number of fishing and shoot-
ing clubs have their headquarters here. Some of the most prominent
points on the left hand as we ascend the river are: The Lake St. Clair
Fishing and Shooting Club House, with the bell-shaped tower. Mervue
Club House, three stories, two verandas. Ru^hmore Club House, the
ON INLAND SEAS.
87
largest on the Flats. Star Island Hotel. Stansel's Point. Boj^dell's Is-
land. Bedor's. Canadian Club House (on the left). Maple Leaf, on
Herson Island. Then are passed in rapid succession the towns of Algonac,
Baby's Point, Lambton, Cottrellville, Marine City, with its extensive ship-
yards and its salt wells ; Sombra, opposite ; China, St. Clair Springs, with
its great hotel; Stag Island, with its pretty summer homes; and we ap-
proach Port Huron on the American side, with Sarnia on the Canadian
THE ST. CLAIR TUNNEL.
shore. The two are connected by a submarine railroad tunnel which is
a triumph of engineering skill.
The tunnel proper is a continuous iron tube, 19 feet 10 inches in diam-
eter, and 6,025 feet or more than a mile long. The length of the ap-
proaches, in addition to the tunnel proper, is 5,603 feet, making all told a
little over two miles. It is reputed to be the greatest submarine tunnel in
the world. It connects the Grand Trunk Railway System of Canada with
the Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway; its cost was $2,700,000.
Beyond Port Huron we pass Fort Gratiot, with its light (fixed white
with white flash every minute), which marks the mouth of the St. Clair
River; and the ship enters Lake Huron.
On the trip west we cross the lake by night ; but on the return voyage we
may see in the early morning on the distant Michigan shore the houses and
shipping of Sand Beach Harbor of Refuge (page 76). After the night on
Huron we welcome the solitary light-house on Spectacle Reef (page 79)
which tells us that we are at the eastern approach to the Straits of
Mackinac. This Spectacle Reef fog siren was in eruption, as they say
of the geysers in the Yellowstone Park, 327 hours last season; and the
statistician of the Standard has computed that in that time it must have
sounded its warning whistle 39,240 times. Beyond Spectacle Reef we lay
88 THE STAXIKIKI) GilDE.
Eois Blanc Island on our left, and then roiniding Round Island sec be-
fore us the bold white bluffs and green slopes of Mackinac.
The route from Mackinac Island to Sault Ste. Marie is by the Detour
Passage, marked by the Detour Light (whose station is a white skeleton
iron tower, with a white dwelling), into the St. Mary's River (page 75).
The navigation of the river is most cautious; there is one succession of
islands and crooks and turns of the channel, and the sailing regulations are
very strictly enforced by a special marine police, who, from the banks,
watch passing vessels and note their speed. In certain parts of the river
vessels are forbidden to proceed at a greater speed than 9 miles per
hour; to pass other vessels moving in the same direction or to approach
them nearer than a quarter-mile; or to go faster than at half-speed when
meeting and passing other vessels. The steamer's route is through the Hay
Lake Channel, already described. In the 62 miles of the river from Huron
to Superior there are more than 100 lights and signals; long reaches of the
channel are marked by perpetually burning gas buoys. At some points
where the channel narrows and the rest of the river is shoal, the passage
of the steamship, displacing the water from the channel, deepens the flow
on either side, and submerges the channel buoys. At certain turns in the
course, as at the Black Hole, below Sailor's Encampment, a white ball
signal is elevated on the shore, to give warning that a vessel is in the
Hole; or if she have a tow, a red ball is shown; so that we have here a
block-signal system of navigation. The scenery of the St. ]\lary's is justly
famed; and the approach to Sault Ste. Marie is a picture that will long live
in memory.
Locking through the St. Alary's Falls Canal, the vessel is shortly there-
after ploughing the waters of Lake Superior. The next morning brings
us to Duluth, "Zenith City of the LTnsalted Seas.''
Duluth and West Superior are twin cities. Duluth is on a hill. West
Superior on a flat. As the chief outlet of the vast volume of Lake Su-
perior the vohmie of their output is something prodigious — of grain 50
million bushels a j-ear, of ore 5 million tons, of coal received 2 million
tons. There are enormous elevators and ore and coal docks. Nearly 5.000
vessels clear from the port in a season. Everything is on a tremendous
scale. Duluth was laid out on a plan to comport with its coming greatness.
The City Hall, High School. Board of Trade, churches and theater — these
rre all large, handsome and substantial stone structiu-es, not elsewhere sur-
passed. The day we have here may be well spent in sight seeing. The in-
cline railway takes one to the summit of a hill 500 feet high, whence there
i: a commanding view of the two cities and the lake. One remarkable
feature of the .scene is Minnesota Point, a curving spit of sand 7 miles in
length and 500 feet wide, extending across the end of the lake toward the
Wisconsin side, and forming a safe harbor for shi])ping. The opportunity
should be improved of seeing the operations of loading and unloading
vessels; and a visit may be made to the West Superior shipyards. This is
the home of the whaleback, and we shall be sure to find some of them on
the stocks or in the drvdock.
HOTEL IROQUOIS,
SAULT STE. MARIE,
MICHIGAN.
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Transient Rates, $2.50 per Day and Upwards. X
Special Rates by Week, Month or Season. X
X
The Iroquois is a new hotel, standing on the site of tlie old house, which was
destroyed by fire April 24, iSqy. This new house is modern in every respect and is
the finest constructed and appointed hotel in Northern Michigan. Electric light,
steam heat, elevator, private baths. v-?
Overlooks the Government Park, the famous Ship Locks and beautiful Rapids, it
affords exceptional attractions for sunnier Tourists. The swift current of the St.
Marys Rapids and adjacent mountain stieams furnish the finest of brook trout fishing.
FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS, RATES, ETC., WRITE
GUY D. WELTON,
Proprietor.
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Resorts
are
reached by
the
I'OIH'LAR
Flint & Pere Marquette R. R.
AND
Steamship Lines,
With terminals at
TOLEDO, DETROIT, PORT
HURON, MILWAUKEE
AND
with
MANITOWOC, ,, , . j,_ .^. .:^&|f^>M"l-- ^
^.
Through Car
Service.
For full infoniiatioii
apply to
H. F. MOELLER,
Gen'l I'asscnger
Agent,
SAGINAW, = MICH.
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POINTE AUX BARQUES,
Under the Auspices of the Pointe
aux Barques Resort Association.
This delightful and charming family resort is situated on the
extreme tip of what is known as the "Thumb of Michigan,"
with the waters of Saginaw Bay on one side and those of
Lake Huron on the other.
3>2 Miles of Shore Frontage, covering 1,000 Acres.
T 'fW^^ ./-»* — -:
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a B 3 ■
jG^'i^T^f^iBriBimi^i
Desirable
Membership
welcome.
Cotta§:es to
Rent.
Desirable
Building
Lots for sale
Moderate
Rates.
Cl.UB HOUSE.
DELIGHTFUL BATHING.
HAGNIFICENT FORESTS.
BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY,
WITH GOOD ROADS FOR BICYCLE OR DRIVING.
Golf Links and Tennis Courts.
For any information apply to
B. W. YATES, President,
Detroit, nich.
H. F, MOELLER, Secretary,
Saginaw, flich.
♦
«
*
*
I MACATAWA PARK I
I THE GEM OF MICHIGAN I
4» RESORTS 'M -^ -^^ 4
«^ 4
j^ FINE HOTELS, FISHING, BATHING, BOAT= |
$ ING, SCENERY and all the DELIGHTS of |
i A First-class Lake Resort |
A 100 Miles from Chicago, on the 4
East Shore of Lake Michigan.
4*
^ ^ 4
«l* 4
4 PATRONIZED BY ST. LOUIS, LOUISVILLE, 4
$ INDIANAPOLIS AND CHICAGO FAMILIES, $
4* 4
i - ^ ^ f
5 FOR ILLUSTRATED BOOK ADDRESS «|
4* 4
t J. C» POST, Secretary. 4
I HOLLAND, ^ ^ ^ MICHIGAN. |
4» ^ . . . . 4
OMEN A RESORT. — Richest in native grandeur, most perfect in climate, and most popu-
lar of Michigan's many resorts, is located twenty miles down the west arm of picturesque
Grand Traverse Bay. Accessible by three railway lines to Traverse City, also by the bay
and lake line steamers. Omena embraces 150 acres of virgin forest, extending one mile into
the bay, rising terrace upon terrace to a point one hundred and fifty feet above the water.
Hundreds of pretty cottages, fine hotels, shady walks, woodland drives, miles of beach road
boulevard, sublime scenery. Building lots with water front, $^0 and up. Material close at hand.
For resort book and full information address FRANK H. GRAVES, Grand RapidS, Mich.
Wheeling & Lake Erie
MAKES DIRECT CONNECTION AT
TOLEDO-" THE LADY OF THE LAKES,"
WITH ALL RAIL AND WATER ROUTES TO MACKINAC
And other Michigan Summer Resorts.
Agents of the W. & L. E. are prepared to sell tickets and check
baggage through to any destination.
ALL THROUGH TRAINS OF THIS ROAD NOW RUN
TO AND FROM THE UNION DEPOT AT TOLEDO.
H. J. BOOTH, Cxen. Traffic Mgr.
J. F. TOWNSEND, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt.
m #
tLake Harbor Hotel,!
i MUSKEGON, MICHIGAN. p
®
'EDWARD R. SWETT,
Proprietor.
m
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Unquestionably the Best Located, Best Equipped and Best Patronized
Resort Hotel on Lake Michigan.
Easy of access by rail or boat. Cool lake breezes, abundant shade, flowers, excellent
walks and drives, picturesque scenery witli fine views of lakes and surrounding
country, hills, fine woods. A good hotel with long verandas, commodious office,
and parlors, and children's play room. The largest dining room in Michigan with first-
class tables and service. Large rooms; good beds and a liberal management. 5^ ^
Golf, Tennis, Croquet, Billiards, Pool, Bowling, Shooting Gallery,
Boat Livery, Bathing equal to the Ocean, Steam Launches,
Bicycle Livery, Large Dancing Casino and Music Hall.
A strictly first-class hotel at popular rates. For furtlier infoiiiiation .nddress
E. R. SWETT, Prop., Muskegon, Michigan.
I LAKE VIEW HOUSE,!
^ CLAUDE C. CABLE, Proprietor. *
i MACKINAC ISLAND, = = MICHIGAN, f
*
*
-^ Terms, $2.50 to $3.00 per Day. ^
?^ Special Terms by the Week. ^
^ . ^
^ BEAUTIFUL SCENERY, ROMANTIC DRIVES AND PURE W
W
*
*
*
AIR. UNEXCELLED IN ALL MICHIGAN.
EXCELLENT FISHING GROUNDS.
*
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*
*
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"Mi^t
THE ISLAND HOUSE,
Mackinac island, Mich.
Mrs. R. Vaa A. Webster, Prop. Jt
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^ This Hold is tirsi-class m every respect, standing in large grounds facing the lake, the best and "2
JC most convenient location on the island. Electric Bells, Baths, Casino and Orchestra, Billiard -2
JC Hall, Tennis Court and Bicycle Room. Terms, $2 to $i per day; special by week. "^
THE MISSION HOUSE,
Mackinac Island, = = = Michigan.
As the Mission building linked with the history of the past — as the Mission
hotel popular with the tourist of to-day. Tekms : $2 to $', per day,
$14 to $1 7. so per week. Special rates by season. Correspondence solicited.
FRANKS BROS., Proprietors.
in
MRS. JOS. FORD, |
. . . THE ISLAND CATERER. . . l
DINING PARLOR. |
MACKINAC ISLAND, MICHIGAN, 5? V^l ^^S^l |
Lunches prepared in Boxes for Outgoing Visitors. jt ^ jt ^0
Jt ^ ,^ Private Dining Rooms for Exclusive Parties. ^
I THE GEM OF MACKINAC ISLAND, MICH. |
m jf
I Davis' New Brick Store, I
j^ Replete with Modern Conveniences and Fixtures. Ten thousand feet «
^ floor space filled with ^
I ALL KINDS of MERCHANDISE, I
j^ ... IN'CLUDING CHOICE LINES OF . . . »§
IC Fancy and Staple Groceries, Hardware, Tinware, Croclcery, Glassware, ^
% Dry Goods, Fine Footwear, Etc. %
f^ We endeavor to anticipate the wants of our " Home People" the "Summer Cottagers," {E
fc" " Yachtsmen," " Sportsmen," and all "Pilgrims," who visit our "Fairy Isle." ^
i ^
g^ We aim to give Satisfaction in Prices, Quality and Service. GOODS DELIVERED 3
fc" TO ANY PART OF THE ISLAND. j{
*: Jk Jt ^ Ji J. W. DAVIS & SONS, S
J ^
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CHICAGO MARKET. T^'T^S '"^^5 ^
p. MULCRONE,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
BEEF, MUTTON, PORK, HAM, LARD, BACON, ETC.
I BOGAN'S PHARMACY, I
jf BOG AN BROS., Proprietors. Mackitiac Island, Michigati. J
1^ ^
If Perfumery, Cigars, Confectionery and Books. Physicians' Prescriptions ^
1^ Accurately Prepared, Day or Night. Headquarters for fine Ice Cream Soda. Agents ^
*f for Eastman Kodak Supplies. We keep the Best in all lines of DRUGS and 5
S FANCY TOILET ARTICLES. X
■■ ■ ■ ■
i: V* H. J. ROSSITER, -M j:
j: THE ISLAND PHOTOGRAPHER :■
■■
% FROM 1884 TO THE PRESENT TIME. "I
■■
■« Photos and Water (.dlors ot tlie beautitul and historic things ot Mackinac Island. "■
■■ ^
,■ Groups a Specialty. Summer Season Only. "■
■■ -■
■ ■■■■■■■■■iiissB9BaBaaBBiaaaaaaBaiaBiBaBBBaBHaaaaBBBB~
BaaaBBBBaBBtBBBaBBBaaBBiaBBBBBBBBBBBBnBBBBaBaaBBBaaaaa
i PARK PLACE HOTEL, I
i TRAVERSE CITY, ----- MICHIGAN. %
g Open the year around. Steam heat, electiiL ligiits and all convenience.-. ;■;
55 Rates, $2.00 and $2. ^o per day. Special bv the week, ;!t
^ ;5
i ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ;^ W. O. HOLDEN, Manager. %
^.. ,,,--,, ,. .. . , - , ,.-^, ,.,.. ^ ,.,, , ,,, , , , ^
$ CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. O
' ROUNDS' CARRIAGE LINE, |
FRANK ROUNDS. Manager, O
!, 4, 6 and 8 Passenger Carriages. MACKINAC ISLAND, MICH, g
>O0O0OO0 00C>OOOO0OC-O'XCmXh>OOOO0 0O0OOO0OCh>OOC»OO >oo.o
I ISLAND STEAM LAUNDRY, |
I kM.w7™EK,s^pt. WITMER BROS., Props., Mackinaclsland, Mich. J
J SHORT NOTICE WORK A SPECIALTY. S€
i^• * * ^
55 Are you going to the Northern resorts for the summer ? If so, %
H would you not like a selection of views of Petoskey and vicinity ^
^ before deciding your routes. A tine selection is kept at the ^
^ Studio of H. M. Wilco.x. who is prepared to meet all calls for ^
I! general viewing. Also the grouping of Picnicking, Boating ^
5»
and Fishing parties a specialty. H. M. WILCOX, Scenic Photo- $5
|| grapher, S12 and S14 State Street, Petoskey, Michigan. ^
FINE SOUVENIRS
OF THIS REGION.
In STERLING SILVER, AGATE and OTHER MATERIALS,
AS WELL AS FINE
Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry,
IN LARGE DISPLAY, at the POPULAR JEWELRY STORE of
OTTO SUPE, 304 Ashmun St., ^^'''^^il^a^^':'''^'
Fine Repairing and Engraving in Connection.
PHOTOGRAPHS
of SAULT STE. MARIE ; the Locks, Rapids, Ships, Scenery and all
Points of Interest in Northern Michigan.
EXCELLENT PICTURES AT VERY LOW PRICES.
W. J. BELL, = = = ELITE ART STUDIO,
SAULT STE. MARIE, MICHIGAN-
THE STANDARD GUIDE SERIES.
The Most Beautiful Handbooks for Tourists Published,
STANDARD GUIDE TO WASHINGTON.
Paper, 25 cents. Also in cloth, full gilt, gold stamps (advertising pages omitted),
a superb book on the National Capital. Price, $1.00.
STANDARD GUIDE TO THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.
Being the text of the Library chapter of the Standard Guide to Washington, with
16 views. Paper, 10 cents. Also in cloth, 32 views, 50 cents.
STANDARD GUIDE TO ST. AUGUSTINE.
The Florida East Coast and Nassau. With pictures of Cuba. Superbly illus-
trated. Price, 25 cents.
STANDARD GUIDE TO MACKINAC ISLAND,
and Northern Lake Resorts. A handbook for tourists and pleasure voyagers on
the Great Lakes. Illustrated. Paper, 25 cents.
*^:* The above sent postpaid on receipt of price by Foster & Reynolds, 1333 Pennsylvania Avenue,
Washington, D. C, or the Standard Guide Information Bureau, St. Augustine, Florida.
THE FLORIDA EAST COAST HOTELS.
REACHED ONLY VIA THE EEORIDA EAST
COAST RAILWAY AND STEAMSHIP COS.
Jacksonville to Miami. Miami to Key West, Miami to Havana.
Miami to Nassau (Bahama Islands) Santiago de Cuba.
KEY WEST :
Hotel Key West.
G. BUTLER SMITH, Manager.
Open the year round. $t.Oi> and upward. Steam-
ship from Miami.
NASSAU^Bahama Islands :
Hotel Royal Victoria.
H. E. BEMIS, Manager.
Hotel Colonial.
H. E. BEMIS, Manager.
Steamship from Miami. GOLF.
MIAMI :
Hotel Royal Palm.
H. W. MERRILL, Manager.
GOLF.
Casino.
EDWARD A. WATSON, Superintendent.
Hot and Cold Salt-Water Baths. Salt-Water
Swimming Pool.
ORMOND :
Hotel Ormond.
ANDERSON & PRICE, Managers.
GOLF.
PALM BEACH:
Palm Beach Inn.
BytheSea.
FRED. STERRY, Manager.
GOLF.
Hotel Royal Poinciana.
FRED. STERRY, Manager. GOLF.
Casino.
ERNEST ALLEN, Superintendent.
Hot and Hold Salt-Water Baths. Salt-Water
Swimming Pool. Surf Bathing.
ST. AUGUSTINE:
Hotel Alcazar.
JOSEPH P. GREAVES, Manager.
GOLF.
Hotel Ponce de Leon.
ROBERT MURRAY, Manager. GOLF.
Hotel Cordova.
Open during February and March. Rooms, Suites,
or Apartments.
Casino.
A. M. TAYLOR, Superintendent.
Swimming Pool. Bicycle Riding Academy.
Send to the General Offices, St. Augustine, p l> l/'lVnTT General Superintendent Florida
for Souvenir Folders of the East Coast, o . V>. I>. IVnUl ly
East Coast Hotel System.
Northern Offices: The Travelers' Information Company.
NEW YORK : 3 Tcrk I'lace.
BOSTON: 175 Devonshire Street.
PHILADELPHIA: 171 1 Chestnut St.
BUFFALO : 377 Main Street.
CLEVELAND : 146 Euclid Avenue,
CINCINNATI : In Grand Hotel.
CHICAGO: 221 Michigan Avenue.
PITTSBURG : 239 Fourth Avenue.
ST. LOUIS : In New Planters Hotel.
ST. PAUL, MINN.: 131 E. Sixth St.
Where Tickets may be had, Steamship, Sleeping Car and Hotel Reservations made, and
Transfer of Baggage orderej.
Florida East Coast
k Golf Club.
LOCATED IN
FLORIDA and NASSAU.
Largest in the Country. Members have the Privileges of Five Links.
Makes the Season Championship under both the
EngHsh and American Flao^s.
Sr. AUaUSTINB: - - St. Augustini
Country Club Golf Links, 9 Holes.
Opea November to May.
ORMOND: Ormond Golf Links, 9 Holes.
Open December to April.
PALM BEACH: Palm Beach Golf
Links, - - - 9 Holes.
Open December to April.
MIAMI: Miami Golf Links, - 9 Holes.
Opea December to April.
NASSAU (New Providence), Bahamas,
Nassau Golf Links, - 9 Holes.
Opea December to April.
No. 4 Tee, Top oi Coquina Tower, St. Aus
LOCAL VICE-PRESIDENTS:
St. Augustine : Robert Murray, Jos. P. Greaves, A. M. Taylor.
Ormond: John Anderson, J. D. Price. Palm Beach: Fre'd Steiwy.
niami : H. W. Merrill, R. W. Parsons. Nassau; H E Bemis.
President: C. B. KNOTT.
t^ t^ f^ ir^ t^
Golf Goods and Supplies on sale at all Links, and at all Florida East ('oast Hotel News Stands.
Tournaments will take place on each course weekly from their opening, and
handsome trophies will be put up as prizes.
mm-j-j:*;
OUUNLESS «*«»
R SALE BY ALL
OPTICIANS.
f¥¥¥¥^¥'¥¥¥¥¥¥^¥^¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥^^^¥lf^¥¥^^^^'¥¥¥f^
THE STANDARD GUIDE INFORMATION BUREAU
In the Round Tower of Hotel Cordova,
ST. AUGUSTINE, FLA.
Is maintained by the "Standard Guide to the
Florida East Coast." It is conducted solely for
the benefit of travelers, who are cordially invited
to avail themselves of its services, which are ren-
dered without any charge whatever. No fees are
asked or in any instance accepted.
You arc invited to write freely to the Bureau for
information about Florida and other Southern re-
sorts. We can help you to plan your tour. Address
STANDARD GUIDE INFORMATION BUREAU,
St. Augustine, Florida.
(i#d|4«|4«l#««l«l44«l#«l«l4«l4«44«l<er.
ACCOMMODATION for 800 GUESTS.
THOROUGHLY MODERN AND
COMFORTABLE.
POPULAK KATES.
For further information, circulars etc., address
J. R. HAYES,
"Wayne Hotel, Detroit, Mich.
1 Summer Tour
reat Lakes.
In All the World No Trip Like This ! ^nf'2"orKsSrouirH'l" a
Northern Steamship Co
THE rwo
Exclusively Passen8:er Steamships
slORTH WEST
AND
NORTH LAND,
Models fif Klej^ance. (.'onvenience and
Luxurious Comforls.
Semi-Weekly Sailings Hetwei
BUFFALO
\ DULUTIi
A Reijular Landings at
CLEVELAND, DETROIT,
MACKINAC ISLAND and
SAULT STE. MARI
2036
Jnsurpassed Accommodations for 500 First Class Passengers. 5peed, 25 Miies per Hour. No Freig
Carried on tiiesc Steamships. For Information address
V. G. FARRINGTON, Vice-Pres. STEWART ML'RRAY, Gen. Fgt. and Pass. Agt., BUFFALO, N.
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