The
Upper Peninsula of Michigan is the northern of the
two major land masses that comprise the U.S.
state of Michigan
. It
is commonly referred to as the
Upper Peninsula,
the U.P., or
Upper Michigan.
More
casually it is known as the land "above the Bridge
" (above the Mackinac Bridge
linking the two peninsulas). It is bounded on the
north by Lake
Superior
, on the east
by the St. Mary's River
, on the south by Lake Michigan
and Lake
Huron
, and on the west by Wisconsin
.
The Upper Peninsula contains almost one-third of the land area of
Michigan but just three percent of its total population. Residents
are frequently called
Yoopers (derived from
"U.P.-ers") and have a strong regional identity.
It includes the only
counties in the United
States
where a plurality of residents claim Finnish ancestry. Large
numbers of
Finnish,
Swedish,
Danish
and
Norwegian emigrants came to the Upper Peninsula, especially
the
Keweenaw Peninsula, to work
in the mines, and they stayed on and prospered even after the
copper mines closed.
The
peninsula's largest cities are Marquette
, Escanaba
, Sault Ste Marie
, Menominee
, Houghton
, and Iron Mountain
. The land and climate are not very suitable
for agriculture. The economy has been based on
logging,
mining and
tourism. Most mines have closed since the "golden
age" from 1890 to 1920, and the land is heavily forested. Logging
remains a major industry.
History
The first known inhabitants of the Upper Peninsula were tribes
speaking
Algonquian languages.
They arrived roughly around AD 800 and subsisted chiefly from
fishing. Early tribes included the
Menominee, Nocquet, and the Mishinimaki.
Étienne Brûlé of France
was probably
the first European to visit the peninsula,
crossing the St. Marys River around 1620 in search of a route to
the Far East.
French colonists
laid claim to the land in the 17th century, establishing missions
and
fur trading posts such as Sault Ste.
Marie and
St.
Ignace
. Following the end of the French and Indian War (part of the
Seven Years' War) in 1763, the
territory was ceded to Great Britain
.
American Indian
tribes formerly allied with the French were dissatisfied with the
British occupation, which brought new territorial policies. Whereas
the French cultivated alliances among the Indians, the British
postwar approach was to treat the tribes as conquered peoples. In
1763 tribes united in
Pontiac's
Rebellion to try to drive the British from the area.
American
Indians captured Fort Michilimackinac
, near present-day Mackinaw City,
Michigan
, then the principal fort of the British in the
Michilimackinac region, as well as
others and killed hundreds of British. In 1764 they began
negotiations with the British which resulted in temporary peace and
changes in objectionable British policies.
Although the Upper Peninsula nominally became United States
territory with the 1783
Treaty of
Paris, the British did not give up control until 1797 under
terms of the
Jay Treaty. As an American
territory, the Upper Peninsula was still dominated by the
fur trade.
John Jacob
Astor founded the American Fur
Company on Mackinac
Island
in 1808; however, the industry began to decline in
the 1830s as beaver and other game were overhunted.
When the
Michigan Territory was
first established in 1805, it included only the
Lower Peninsula and the eastern
portion of the Upper Peninsula.
In 1819 the territory was expanded to
include the remainder of the Upper Peninsula, all of Wisconsin
, and part of Minnesota
(previously included in the Indiana and Illinois Territories). When
Michigan was preparing for statehood in the 1830s, the boundaries
proposed corresponded to the original territorial boundaries, with
some proposals even leaving the Upper Peninsula out entirely.
Meanwhile, the territory was involved in a
border dispute with the state of Ohio
in a
conflict known as the Toledo
War.
The people of Michigan approved a constitution in May 1835 and
elected state officials in late autumn 1835. Although the state
government was not yet recognized by the
United States Congress, the
territorial government effectively ceased to exist. A
constitutional convention of the state legislature refused a
compromise to accept the full Upper Peninsula in exchange for
ceding the
Toledo Strip to Ohio. A
second convention, hastily convened by Governor
Stevens Thomson Mason, consisting primarily
of Mason supporters, agreed in December 1836 to accept the U.P. in
exchange for the Toledo Strip.
In January 1837, the
U.S.
Congress admitted Michigan as
a state of the Union. At the time, Michigan was considered the
losing party in the compromise. The land in the Upper Peninsula was
described in a federal report as a "sterile region on the shores of
Lake Superior destined by soil and climate to remain forever a
wilderness."
This belief changed when rich mineral deposits (primarily
copper and
iron) were discovered
in the 1840s.
The Upper Peninsula's mines produced more
mineral wealth than the California
Gold Rush, especially after shipping was improved by the
opening of the Soo
Locks
in 1855 and docks in Marquette in 1859. The
Upper Peninsula supplied 90% of America's copper by the 1860s. It
was the largest supplier of iron ore by the 1890s, and production
continued to a peak in the 1920s, but sharply declined shortly
afterward. The last copper mine closed in 1995, although the
majority of mines had closed decades before. Some iron mining
continues near Marquette.
Thousands
of Americans and immigrants moved to the area during the mining
boom, prompting the federal government to create Fort
Wilkins
near Copper Harbor
to maintain order. The first wave were the
Cornish from England, with centuries
of mining experience; followed by
Irish,
Germans, and
French Canadians. During the 1890s,
Finnish immigrants began settling there in large numbers. In the
early 20th century, 75% of the population was foreign-born.
Geography
The Upper Peninsula contains 16,452 square miles (42,610 km²),
almost one-third of the land area of the state. The maximum
east-west distance in the Upper Peninsula is about 320 miles
(515 km), and the maximum north-south distance is about
125 miles (200 km).
It is bounded on the north by Lake Superior
, on the east by St. Mary's
River
, on the south by Lake Michigan
and Lake
Huron
, and on the west by Wisconsin
and (counting the water border on Lake Superior) by
Minnesota. It has about 1,700 miles
(2,700 km) of continuous shoreline with the Great Lakes
. There are about 4,300 inland lakes, the
largest of which is Lake
Gogebic
, and 12,000 miles (19,000 km) of
streams.
The peninsula is divided between the flat, swampy areas in the
east, part of the
Great Lakes Plain, and the steeper, more rugged western half,
called the
Superior Upland, part of
the
Canadian Shield. The rock in the
western portion is the result of volcanic eruptions and is
estimated to be at least 3.5 billion years old (much older than the
eastern portion) and contains the region's ore resources. A
considerable amount of
bedrock is visible.
Mount Arvon
, the highest point in Michigan, is found in the
region, as well as the Porcupine
and Huron Mountains. All of
the higher areas are the remnants of ancient peaks, worn down over
millions of years by erosion and
glaciers.
The
Keweenaw Peninsula is the
northernmost part of the peninsula. It projects into Lake Superior
and was the site of the first copper boom in the United States,
part of a larger region of the peninsula called the
Copper Country.
Copper Island is its northernmost
section.
About one third of the peninsula is government owned recreational
forest land today, including the
Ottawa National Forest and
Hiawatha National Forest. Although
heavily logged in the 19th century, the majority of the land was
forested with mature trees by the 1970s.
Wildlife
The Upper Peninsula contains a large variety of wildlife. Some of
the
mammals found in the U.P. include
shrews, moles, mice, white tailed deer, moose, black bears, gray
& red foxes, wolves, river otters, martens, fishers, bobcats,
coyotes, snowshoe hares, cotton-tail rabbits, chipmunks, squirrels,
opossums, raccoons and bats. There is a large variety of
birds, including hawks, osprey, gulls, hummingbirds,
chickadees, robins, woodpeckers, warblers, and bald eagles. In
terms of
reptiles and
amphibians, the UP has common
garter snakes, red bellied snakes, pine snakes,
northern water snakes, brown snakes, eastern garter snakes, eastern
fox snakes, smooth green snakes, northern ringneck snakes, Eastern
Milk snakes (Mackinac and Marquette counties) and Eastern Hognose
snakes (Menominee County only), plus
snapping turtles, wood turtles, and
painted turtles (the state reptile), green
frogs,
bull frogs, northern leopard frogs,
and
salamanders. Lakes and rivers contain
many
fish like
walleye,
Northern Pike,
Trout,
Salmon, and bass. The UP
also contains many shellfish, such as
clams,
aquatic snails, and
crayfish.
The
American Bird Conservancy
and the National
Audubon Society
have designated several locations as
internationally Important Bird
Areas.
Climate
The Upper Peninsula has a
humid continental climate
(
Dfb in the
Köppen climate
classification system). The Great Lakes have a great effect on
most of the peninsula. Winters tend to be long, cold, and snowy for
most of the peninsula, and because of its northern latitude, the
daylight hours are short— around 8 hours between sunrise and sunset
in the winter. Lake Superior has the greatest effect on the area,
especially the northern and western parts.
Many areas get in
excess of of snow per year—especially in the Keweenaw Peninsula and
Baraga, Marquette and Alger counties, where Lake Superior
contributes to lake-effect snow,
making them a prominent part of the midwestern snow belt
.
Records of of snow or more have been set in many communities in
this area. The Keweenaw Peninsula averages more snowfall than
almost anywhere in the United States—more than anywhere east of the
Mississippi River and the most of
all non-mountainous regions of the
continental United States. Because
of the howling storms across Lake Superior, which cause dramatic
amounts of precipitation, it has been said that the lake-effect
snow makes the Keweenaw Peninsula the snowiest place east of the
Rockies.
Herman, Michigan, averages of snow every
year. Lake-effect snow can cause blinding
whiteouts in just minutes, and some
storms can last days.
The area along the Wisconsin border has a more continental climate
since most of its weather does not arrive from the lakes. Summers
tend to be warmer and winter nights much colder. Coastal
communities have temperatures tempered by the Great Lakes. In
summer, it might be 10 °F (5 °C) cooler at lakeside than
it is inland, and the opposite effect is seen in winter. The area
of the Upper Peninsula north of Green Bay though Menominee and
Escanaba (and extending west to Iron River) does not have the
extreme weather and precipitation found to the north. Locally it is
known as "the
banana belt."
Time zones

Michigan counties observing Central
Time
Like the entire
Lower
Peninsula of Michigan, most of the Upper Peninsula observes
Eastern Time.
However, the four counties bordering Wisconsin are in the
Central Time zone.
In 1967, when the
Uniform Time Act
came into effect, the Upper Peninsula went under year-round CST,
with no
daylight saving time.
In 1973, the majority of the peninsula switched to Eastern Time.
Only the
four counties of Gogebic
, Iron
, Dickinson
, and Menominee
stayed in Central Time.
Government
State
prisons are located in Baraga
, Marquette
, Munising
, Newberry
, Marenisco
and Kincheloe
.
Politics
The U.P. tends to vote Democratic.
The current
Congressman from the
district
containing the Upper Peninsula is
Bart
Stupak. He, the Upper Peninsula
State Senator, and all four
State
Representatives whose districts contain parts of the Upper
Peninsula are Democrats. In
2006 a majority of
the Upper Peninsula voted to re-elect
Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat, for
governor. In
2008 a majority of the Upper
Peninsula voted for President
Barack
Obama.
Superior (proposed state)
Superior is the name of a longstanding
51st state proposal for the
secession of the Upper Peninsula from the rest of
Michigan. Named for Lake Superior, the idea has gained serious
attention at times.
Because stronger connections to the rest of
the state exist since completion of the Mackinac Bridge
, the proposal is unlikely to gain passage.
Several prominent legislators, including local politician
Dominic Jacobetti, attempted to gain
passage of the bill in the 1970s, with little traction.
Demographics
The Upper Peninsula remains a predominantly rural region. As of the
2000 census, the region
had a population of 317,258, and was predicted to have fallen to
308,319 according to the
Census Bureau's July 1, 2008
estimate.
According to the
2000
census, only 91,624 people live in the twelve towns of at least
4,000 people, covering 96.5 square miles (155.365 km²). Only
114,544 people live in the twenty-one cities and villages of at
least 2,000 or more people, which cover 123.7 square miles
(320.4 km²)—less than 1% of the peninsula's land area.
Cities and Villages of the Upper
Peninsula
| City |
Population |
Area (sq mi) |
Marquette |
19,661 |
11.4 |
Sault Ste. Marie |
16,542 |
14.8 |
Escanaba |
13,140 |
12.7 |
Menominee |
9,131 |
5.2 |
Iron Mountain |
8,154 |
7.2 |
Houghton |
7,134 |
4.3 |
Ishpeming |
6,535 |
8.7 |
Ironwood |
6,293 |
6.6 |
Kingsford |
5,549 |
4.3 |
Gladstone |
5,266 |
5.0 |
Negaunee |
4,576 |
13.8 |
Hancock |
4,323 |
2.5 |
Manistique |
3,583 |
3.2 |
Iron River |
3,122 |
3.5 |
Norway |
2,959 |
8.8 |
Newberry |
2,686 |
1.0 |
St. Ignace |
2,678 |
2.7 |
Munising |
2,539 |
5.4 |
Bessemer |
2,148 |
5.5 |
Laurium |
2,126 |
0.7 |
L'Anse |
2,107 |
2.6 |
Wakefield |
2,085 |
8.0 |
| TOTAL |
114,544 |
123.7 |
Counties of the Upper Peninsula
| County |
Population |
Land Area (sq mi) |
Population Density (per sq mi) |
| Alger |
9,862 |
918 |
10.7 |
| Baraga |
8,735 |
904 |
9.7 |
Chippewa |
38,413 |
1561 |
24.7 |
Delta |
38,520 |
1170 |
32.9 |
Dickinson |
27,427 |
766 |
35.8 |
Gogebic |
17,370 |
1102 |
15.8 |
| Houghton |
36,016 |
1012 |
35.6 |
Iron |
13,138 |
1166 |
11.3 |
| Keweenaw |
2,301 |
541 |
4.3 |
| Luce |
7,024 |
903 |
7.8 |
Mackinac |
11,943 |
1022 |
11.7 |
Marquette |
64,634 |
1821 |
35.5 |
Menominee |
25,109 |
1043 |
24.3 |
Ontonagon |
7,818 |
1312 |
6.0 |
| Schoolcraft |
8,903 |
1178 |
7.6 |
| TOTAL |
317,258 |
16,420 |
19.3 |
Economy
Industries
The Upper Peninsula is rich in
mineral
deposits including iron, copper,
nickel and
silver. Small amounts of
gold have also been discovered and mined. In the 19th
century,
mining dominated the economy, and
the U.P. became home to many isolated
company towns. For many years, mines in the
Keweenaw Peninsula were the world's largest producers of copper.
The mines began declining as early as 1913, with most closing
temporarily during the
Great
Depression. Mines reopened during
World
War II, but almost all quickly closed after the war ended. The
last copper mine in the
Copper
Country was the White Pine Mine, which closed in 1995.
Ever since logging of
white pine
began in the 1880s, timber has been an important industry. However,
the stands of
hemlock and
hardwood went under-exploited until the
mid-twentieth century as selection cutting was practiced in the
western reaches of the forest. Because of the highly seasonal
climate and the short growing season, agriculture is limited in the
Upper Peninsula, though
potatoes,
strawberries and a few other small fruits
are grown.
Tourism has become the main industry in
recent decades. In 2005, ShermanTravel, LLC listed the Upper
Peninsula as No. 10 in its assessment of all travel destinations
worldwide. The article was republished in April 2006 by MSN.com.
The peninsula has extensive coastline on the Great Lakes, large
tracts of state and national forests,
cedar swamps, more than 150 waterfalls,
and low population densities. Because of the camping, boating,
fishing, snowmobiling, hunting, and hiking opportunities, many
Lower Peninsula and Wisconsin families spend their vacations in the
U.P. Tourists also go there from Chicago and other metropolitan
areas.
Notable attractions
Casinos
American Indian
casinos contribute to the tourist attractions and are popular
in the U.P. Originally the casinos were simple, one-room affairs.
Some of the casinos are now quite elaborate and are being developed
as part of resort and conference facilities, including features
such as golf courses, pool and spa, dining, and rooms to
accommodate guests.
Transportation
Straits of Mackinac and bridge in winter
The Upper
Peninsula is separated from the Lower by the Straits of
Mackinac
, five miles (8 km) across at the narrowest,
and is connected to it by the Mackinac Bridge
at St. Ignace
, one of the longest suspension bridges in the world.
Until the bridge was completed in 1957, travel between the two
peninsulas was difficult and slow (and sometimes even impossible
during winter months). In 1881, the
Mackinac Transportation
Company was established by three railroads, the
Michigan Central Railroad, the
Grand Rapids and
Indiana Railroad, and the
Detroit, Mackinac and
Marquette Railroad, to operate a railroad car
ferry across the Straits. Beginning in 1923, the State
of Michigan operated automobile ferries between the two peninsulas.
At the busiest times of year the wait was several hours long. In
winter, travel was possible over the ice only after the straits had
solidly frozen.
Despite its rural character, the Upper Peninsula offers many
transportation options.
Automobiles
The
primary means of transportation in the Upper Peninsula
is by automobile.It is served by one
interstate and several U.S. highways and Michigan state
trunklines.
Interstate Highways
Interstate Highway Business Loops
US highways
Great Lakes Circle Tour
The
Great Lakes Circle Tour
is a designated scenic road system connecting all of the Great
Lakes and the St. Lawrence River.
Airports
There are 43 airports in the Upper Peninsula.
There
are six airports with commercial passenger service: Gogebic-Iron County Airport
north of Ironwood
, Houghton County Memorial
Airport
southwest of Calumet
, Ford Airport
west of Iron Mountain
, Sawyer International Airport
south of Marquette
, Delta County Airport
in Escanaba
, and Chippewa
County International Airport
south of Sault Ste.
Marie
.
There are 19 other public use airports with a hard surface runway.
These are used for
general aviation
and charter.
Notably, Mackinac Island
, Beaver Island, and
Drummond
Island
are all accessible by airports.
There are 5 public access airports with turf runways.
There are 13 airports for the private use of their owners.
There is
only one control tower in the whole
Upper Peninsula, at Sawyer
.
Ferries and bridges
The Eastern Upper Peninsula Transportation Authority operates car
ferries in its area.
These include ferries for Sugar Island, Neebish Island
, and Drummond Island
. Three ferry companies run passenger
ferries from St. Ignace to Mackinac Island.
The three major bridges in the Upper Peninsula are:
- Mackinac Bridge
, connecting Northern
Michigan to the Upper Peninsula;
- Sault Ste.
Marie
International Bridge, which connects the city of Sault Ste.
Marie to
its twin city of Sault Ste.
Marie
in Canada
; and
- Portage Lift Bridge,
which crosses Portage Lake. The Portage
Lift Bridge is the world's heaviest and widest double-decked
vertical lift bridge. Its center span "lifts" to provide of
clearance for ships. Since rail traffic was discontinued in the
Keweenaw, the lower deck is used to accommodate snowmobile traffic in the winter. As the only
land-based link between the north and south sections of the
Keweenaw Peninsula, the bridge is crucial to transportation.
Railways
- Grand Trunk Corporation:
Provides rail service for the Menominee area and south into
Wisconsin.
- Lake Superior
and Ishpeming Railroad: Transports iron ore over a 16 mile
(26 km) line from the Empire-Tilden Mine (operated by Cleveland-Cliffs), south of Ishpeming, to
Marquette's port on Lake Superior.
- Soo Line Railroad Sault Ste.
Marie is the namesake of the Minneapolis,
St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie
Railway, now the Soo Line
Railroad, the U.S. arm of the Canadian Pacific Railway. This
railroad has a bridge parallel to the International Bridge,
crossing the St. Mary's River. The remaining Soo Line trackage in
the Upper Peninsula is now part of the Canadian National
Railway.
- Escanaba & Lake Superior Railroad:
[5770] Chartered
in 1898, the E&LS is an industrial beltline railroad with
347 miles of trackage connecting Escanaba, Ontonagon,
Republic, and Green Bay, Wisconsin
, with a common junction at Channing
, and a spur to Nestoria
from Sidnaw.
Education
The
Upper Peninsula of Michigan has three state universities: Northern
Michigan University
in Marquette; Lake Superior State
University in Sault Ste. Marie; and Michigan
Technological University
in Houghton. Finlandia University is a private
university located in Hancock
, Michigan
, on the Keweenaw
Peninsula. There are also two community colleges, Bay de
Noc Community College in Escanaba and Gogebic Community College in
Ironwood.
Culture

"Da Yoopers Tourist Trap", near
Ishpeming, features a host of gaudy items in its museum and store
that play up Yooper stereotypes.
[[Image:UPAncbymunicipality.png|thumb|250px|right|Map showing
primary Upper Peninsula ancestry by municipality. Key:
Finnish German Native
American Swedish African
American Italian French Polish Colonial
American French Canadian English Irish ]]
Early settlers included multiple waves of people from
Nordic countries. There are still
Swedish- and
Finnish-speaking communities in many areas
of the Upper Peninsula today.
People of Finnish
ancestry make up 16% of the peninsula's
population. The U.P. is home to the highest concentration of
Finns outside Europe and the only counties of the United States
where a plurality of residents claim Finnish ancestry. The Finnish
sauna and the concept of
sisu have been adopted widely by residents of the Upper
Peninsula.
The television program Finland
Calling, filmed at Marquette station WLUC-TV
, is the only Finnish-language television broadcast
in the United States; it has aired since March 25, 1962.
Finlandia University, America's only college with Finnish roots, is
located in Hancock. Street signs in Hancock appear in English and
Finnish to celebrate this heritage.
Other sizeable ethnic communities in the Upper Peninsula include
French-Canadian,
German,
Cornish,
Italian, and
American Indian
ancestry.
Upper Peninsula natives
speak a
dialect influenced by Scandinavian and French-Canadian speech.
A popular bumper sticker, a parody of the "Say YES to Michigan"
slogan promoted by state tourism officials, shows an outline of the
Upper Peninsula and the slogan, "Say yah to da U.P., eh!"
The
dialect and culture are captured in many songs by Da Yoopers, a comedy music and skit troupe from
Ishpeming,
Michigan
.
The Mining Journal,
based in Marquette, is the only daily
newspaper with distribution across the entire U.P.
It has
been the region's primary newspaper for more than 150 years, but
other towns also have local newspapers, such as The Daily
News of Iron Mountain
or The Reporter of Iron
County
.
The Keweenaw peninsula is home to several ski areas.
Mont Ripley
, just outside of Houghton, is popular among
students of Michigan Technological
University
(the school actually owns the mountain).
Further up the peninsula in the small town of
Lac La Belle is
Mt.
Bohemia. A skiing purist's resort,
Bohemia is a self proclaimed "experts only" mountain, and it does
not
groom its heavily
gladed slopes.
Regional identity
Today, the Upper Peninsula is home to 328,000 people—only about 3%
of the state's population— living in almost one-third of the
state's land area. Residents are known as Yoopers, (from "U.P.ers")
and many consider themselves Yoopers before they consider
themselves Michiganders. (People living in the Lower Peninsula are
commonly called "
trolls" by Upper Peninsula
residents, as they live "
Under
da Bridge.") This
regionalism is not only a result of
the physical separation of the two peninsulas, but also the history
of the state.
Residents of the western Upper Peninsula take on some of the
cultural identities of both Wisconsin and Michigan. In terms of
sports fandom, residents often gravitate toward the nearby
Wisconsin teams, particularly the
Green Bay Packers. This is a result of
both proximity and the broadcast and print media of the area. The
four counties that border Wisconsin are also in the Central Time
Zone, unlike the rest of Michigan, which is on Eastern time.
A trip
downstate is often rather difficult: a trip from Ironwood
to Detroit
is roughly 600 miles (960 km) long, more
than twice the distance to Minneapolis
and almost as long as a trip to St.
Louis
. Such a trip is made more difficult by the
lack of freeways: a short section of
I-75 is
the only interstate in the U.P. Commonly, people of the western
U.P. will go to Minneapolis or Wisconsin for trips, but they have
managed to retain identity with Michigan. Residents of the
northeastern part of the U.P. may cross the Sault Ste. Marie
International Bridge to Canada more often than they cross the
Mackinac Bridge to the Lower Peninsula, and they often associate
more closely with
Northern
Ontario.
Cuisine

A Yooper pasty (beef)
The Upper Peninsula has a distinctive local cuisine.
The pasty (pronounced pass tee), a kind of meat turnover
originally brought to the region by Cornish
miners, is popular among locals and tourists
alike. Pasty varieties include chicken, venison, pork,
hamburger, and pizza.Many restaurants serve potato sausage and
cudighi, a spicy
Italian meat.
Finnish immigrants contributed
nisu, a
cardamon-flavored
sweet bread;
pannukakku, a variant on the pancake with a
custard flavor;
viili (sometimes
spelled "fellia"), a stretchy, fermented Finnish milk; and
korppu, hard slices of toasted
cinnamon bread, traditionally dipped in
coffee.
Maple syrup is a
highly prized local delicacy. Fresh Great Lakes fish, such as the
lake trout,
whitefish, and (in the spring)
smelt are widely eaten, despite concerns about
PCB contamination and
elevated
mercury concentrations.
Smoked fish is also popular.
Thimbleberry and
Chokecherry jam is a treat.
Notable residents
- Former University of Michigan
football coach Lloyd Carr
is an alumnus of Northern Michigan University
; he was quarterback for the school's football
team during an undefeated season in 1967. He graduated from
NMU in 1968 with his B.S. in education and went on to earn his M.A.
in education administration at NMU in 1970.
- Robert J. Flaherty, a filmmaker who directed and
produced the first commercially successful feature length
documentary film Nanook of the
North in 1922 is from Iron Mountain
.
- George Gipp, the
"Gipper"—immortalized in the film Knute Rockne, All American
by Ronald Reagan—was born in Laurium
. He was the first All-American at the Notre Dame football
program.
- Clarence L. "Kelly" Johnson, aircraft engineer and
aeronautical innovator, was born in Ishpeming
.
- Tucker Kujala, auteur film
director. Notable works include "URBAN LEGEND", "Static Affair",
and several other shorts. Resident of Iron Mountain.
- John Lautner, a
native of Marquette and alumnus of Northern Michigan University,
was one of Frank Lloyd Wright's
most successful Taliesin
fellows. His Modernist
residence, Chemosphere
, is a Los
Angeles
landmark.
- Former Detroit
Lions head coach Steve Mariucci
and Michigan
State
basketball coach Tom Izzo
are both natives of Iron Mountain
. Both went to Northern Michigan University,
where Mariucci was quarterback of the Wildcats' 1975 NCAA Division II
national championship team.
- Terry O'Quinn, actor, was born in
Newberry in 1952. O'Quinn most recently appeared with a recurring
role as John Locke in the popular
TV show, Lost.
- Chase Osborn was the only Governor of Michigan from the
Upper Peninsula (1911-1913).
- Pam Reed is an
ultrarunner who currently resides in Tucson, Arizona
. She grew up in Palmer, Michigan, and
graduated from Michigan Technological University.
- Mike Shaw, professional wrestler, was
born in Skandia. He wrestled in the WWF as Bastion Booger and the
WCW as Norman the Lunatic.
- Howard Schultz, chairman of
Starbucks Coffee Co., is a Northern
Michigan University alumnus.
- Glenn T. Seaborg, a chemist
and major contributor in the discovery of several of the transuranium elements, was born in
Ishpeming. Before his death in 1999, he was the only living person
to have a chemical element named after him (seaborgium, abbreviated as Sg and with atomic number 106). This name caused
controversy because Seaborg was still alive, but eventually it was
accepted by international chemists. Though he lived most of his life in
California
, the Seaborg Center at Northern Michigan University
is named in his honor.
- Matthew Songer, founder and CEO
of Pioneer Surgical
Technology, lives in Marquette.
- Mary
Chase Perry Stratton founder of Pewabic Pottery
, was born in Hancock, Michigan
.
- Art Van Damme,
jazz accordionist, was born in Norway
.
- Hon. John D. Voelker, Justice of the Michigan
Supreme Court
, wrote the best selling book Anatomy of a Murder under the pen
name Robert Traver. The movie —
filmed in Big Bay and Ishpeming (with some courtroom scenes in
Marquette) — was directed by Otto
Preminger.
- Steven Wiig,
actor in the film Into the
Wild and musician, was born and raised in Negaunee,
Michigan
, attended Northern Michigan University and works
with the band Metallica.
See also
References
Further reading
External links
- Beacons in the Night, Michigan Lighthouse
Chronology, Clarke Historical Library, Central Michigan
University.
- Clarke
Historical Library, Central Michigan University, Bibliography on
Michigan (arranged by counties and regions)
- Michigan Geology -- Clarke Historical Library, Central
Michigan University.
- Great
Lakes Coast Watch
- Michigan
Department of Natural Resources website, harbors, hunting,
resources and more.
- Michigan Historic Markers
- Michigan's
Official Economic Development and Travel Site, including
interactive map, information on attractions, museums, etc.
- Map of Upper Peninsula Counties and Minor Civil
Divisions
- USCG's complete list of Michigan
lighthouses.
- Map of Michigan Lighthouses in PDF Format.
- Michigan's
Official Economic Development and Travel Site.
- Your
source for Yooper news on Twitter.