Upper Peninsula of Michigan
| Upper Peninsula of Michigan
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| Region
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| The Porcupine Mountains within the Upper Peninsula of Michigan
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| Nickname: The UP
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| Country
| United States
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| State
| Michigan
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| Length
| 515 km (320 mi), east to west
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| Width
| 200 km (124 mi), north to south
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| Area
| 42,610 km² (16,452 sq mi)
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The Upper Peninsula, in red, is bordered by Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Ontario.
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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 simply as the Upper Peninsula, the U.P., or Upper Michigan, and more casually as the land "above the Bridge". 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 the 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 state their ancestry as Finnish. The peninsula's largest cities are Marquette, Escanaba, Sault Ste Marie, Menominee, and Iron Mountain. The land and climate are not very suitable for agriculture, although the economy has occasionally thrived from logging and mining. Most mines have closed since the "golden age" from 1890 to 1920, and the land is now heavily forested. Logging remains a major industry.
[edit] History
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The first known inhabitants of the Upper Peninsula were tribes speaking Algonquian languages. They arrived roughly around 800 AD and subsisted largely from fishing. Early tribes included the Menominee, Nocquet,and the Mishinimaki. Etienne Brulé 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.[1]
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 in 1763, the territory was ceded to Great Britain.
American Indian tribes who had been allies of the French found themselves increasingly dissatisfied with the British occupation, which brought new territorial policies. Whereas the French had long cultivated alliances among the Indians, the British post-war approach was essentially to treat the Indians as a conquered people. The resulting Pontiac's Rebellion included the capture of Fort Michilimackinac, near present-day Mackinaw City, Michigan, which was then the principal fort of the British in the Michilimackinac region.
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. [2]
A memorial statue in Hanko, Finland, commemorating the thousands of emigrants who left the country to start a new life in the United States, mainly in Michigan.
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). But 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 had elected state officials in late autumn 1835. Although the state government was unrecognized 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, finally agreed to accept the U.P. in exchange for the Toledo Strip in December 1836.
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 deal because the land in the Upper Peninsula seemed much less valuable than the land in the Toledo strip and was described in a federal report of the time as a "sterile region on the shores of Lake Superior destined by soil and climate to remain forever a wilderness".[1]
This feeling was reversed when rich mineral deposits (primarily copper and iron) were discovered in the 1840s. Though not initially profitable, the Upper Peninsula's mines eventually produced more mineral wealth than the California Gold Rush, especially after shipping was simplified with 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, though mining declined sharply after peaking in the 1920s. The last copper mine closed in 1995, although the majority of mines had closed decades before. Some iron mining continues near Marquette.[1]
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, with centuries of mining experience, followed by Irish, Germans, and French Canadians. Finnish immigrants began settling there in large numbers during the 1890s. Even in the early 20th century, 75% of the population was foreign-born.[2]
[edit] 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.[3]
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. [4] 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. [5]
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.[6] 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.[1]
- Further information: Protected areas of Michigan
[edit] 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, river otters, martens, fishers, gray wolves, 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.
[edit] Climate
The Upper Peninsula has an humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification system), and the Great Lakes have a great impact 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 decreased—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 100 inches (250 cm) of snow per year—especially in the Keweenaw Peninsula and Baraga, Marquette and Alger counties, where Lake Superior contributes to lake effect snow. Records of 390 inches (760 cm) of snow or more have been set in many communities in this area.[7] 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.[8]
Indeed, because of the howling storms across Lake Superior, it has been said that the lake effect snow makes the Keweenaw Peninsula the snowiest place east of the Rockies. Herman, Michigan, averages 236 inches (600 cm) of snow every year.[9] 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 come across the lakes. Summers tend to be warmer and winter nights much colder. Coastal communities have temperatures which are tempered by the Great Lakes. In summer, it might be 10 degrees Fahrenheit (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, and is locally known as "the banana belt."[10]
[edit] 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[11]. In 1973, the majority of the peninsula switched to EST.[12] Only the four counties of Gogebic, Iron, Dickinson, and Menominee stayed in Central Time.
[edit] Government
State prisons are located in Baraga, Marquette, Munising, Newberry and Kincheloe.
[edit] Politics
The current Congressman from the district containing the Upper Peninsula is Bart Stupak. He, the Upper Peninsula State Senator, and three of the four State Representatives whose districts contain parts of the Upper Peninsula are Democrats.
[edit] Superior (proposed state)
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Superior is the name of a longstanding 51st state proposal involving the secession of the Upper Peninsula from the rest of the state of Michigan. Named for Lake Superior, the idea has gained serious attention at times, though it is quite unlikely to ever come to fruition because of the strong connections that were cemented by the completion of the Mackinac Bridge, which gave the peninsula a direct highway connection to the rest of the state.[13]
Several prominent legislators including local politician Dominic Jacobetti formally attempted this legislation in the 1970s, with little traction.[14]
[edit] 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 312,153 according to the Census Bureau's July 1, 2006 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 towns 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 Towns of the Upper Peninsula
| City | Population | Area (sq mi)
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| Marquette | 19,661 | 11.4
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| Sault Ste. Marie | 16,542 | 14.8
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| Escanaba | 13,140 | 12.7
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| Menominee | 9,131 | 5.2
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| Iron Mountain | 8,154 | 7.2
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| Houghton | 7,134 | 4.3
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| Ishpeming | 6,535 | 8.7
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| Ironwood | 6,293 | 6.6
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| Kingsford | 5,549 | 4.3
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| Gladstone | 5,266 | 5.0
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| Negaunee | 4,576 | 13.8
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| Hancock | 4,323 | 2.5
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| Manistique | 3,583 | 3.2
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| Iron River | 3,122 | 3.5
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| Norway | 2,959 | 8.8
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| Newberry | 2,686 | 1.0
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| St. Ignace | 2,678 | 2.7
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| Munising | 2,539 | 5.4
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| Bessemer | 2,148 | 5.5
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| Laurium | 2,126 | 0.7
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| L'Anse | 2,107 | 2.6
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| Wakefield | 2,085 | 8.0
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| TOTAL | 114,544 | 123.7
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Counties of the Upper Peninsula
| County | Population | Land Area (sq mi) | Population Density (per sq mi)
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| Alger | 9,862 | 918 | 10.7
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| Baraga | 8,735 | 904 | 9.7
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| Chippewa | 38,413 | 1561 | 24.7
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| Delta | 38,520 | 1170 | 32.9
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| Dickinson | 27,427 | 766 | 35.8
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| Gogebic | 17,370 | 1102 | 15.8
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| Houghton | 36,016 | 1012 | 35.6
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| Iron | 13,138 | 1166 | 11.3
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| Keweenaw | 2,301 | 541 | 4.3
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| Luce | 7,024 | 903 | 7.8
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| Mackinac | 11,943 | 1022 | 11.7
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| Marquette | 64,634 | 1821 | 35.5
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| Menominee | 25,109 | 1043 | 24.3
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| Ontonagon | 7,818 | 1312 | 6.0
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| Schoolcraft | 8,903 | 1178 | 7.6
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| TOTAL | 317,258 | 16,420 | 19.3
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[edit] Economy
[edit] 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.
Logging continues to be an important industry. 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 is the main industry. The peninsula has large tracts of state and national forests, eastern arborvitae swamps, coastline, over 150 waterfalls, and very 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. In 2005, ShermanTravel, LLC published a list of worldwide travel destinations which included the U.P. in the tenth spot.[15] The article was republished in April 2006 by MSN.com.[16]
[edit] Notable attractions
[edit] Casinos
Indian Casinos have become popular in the U.P. One of the first Indian casinos in the country was started in Baraga County by the Ojibwa nation. Originally the casinos were simple, one-room affairs. Some of the casinos are now quite elaborate. There are also Kewadin Casinos in St. Ignace, Sault Sainte Marie, Hessel, Christmas and Manistique as well as the Chip-In Island Resort and Casino in Harris.
[edit] 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). Car ferries ran between the two peninsulas, and at the busiest times of year the wait was several hours. In winter, travel was only possible over the ice after the straits had solidly frozen.
Despite its rural character, the Upper Peninsula offers many transportation options.[19]
[edit] 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.
[edit] Interstate highway
[edit] US highways
[edit] Airports
There are six airports with commercial passenger service: Gogebic-Iron County Airport north of Ironwood, Houghton County Memorial Airport northeast of Hancock, 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. Scheduled airlines also serve Pellston Regional Airport,[22] which is about twelve miles (19 km) south of the Mackinac Bridge.
[edit] 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 Michigan and Canadian Sault Ste. Marie; and the 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 100 feet (30 m) of clearance for ships. Since rail traffic was discontinued in the Keweenaw, the lower deck is used to accommodate snowmobile traffic in the winter. This is the only land based link between the north and south section of the Keweenaw peninsula, and is crucial.[23]
[edit] Railways
[edit] 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.
[edit] Culture
Early settlers included multiple waves of people from Nordic countries. There are still active 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. The Upper Peninsula includes the only counties of the United States where a plurality of residents state their ancestry as Finish.[24] Some aspects of Finnish culture, such as the sauna and the concept of sisu, have been adopted generally 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. America's only college with Finnish roots, Finlandia University, is located in Hancock.[25] Street signs in Hancock are written in English with the corresponding Finnish name underneath.
Other sizeable ethnic communities in the Upper Peninsula include those of 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 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 over 150 years. However, other towns do have local newspapers.
[edit] 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. However, the typical high school graduate from the U.P. will likely look first to local universities, and then to the Lower Peninsula schools, rather than to Wisconsin schools (mainly because of the considerable tuition difference for in-state students).[citation needed]
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 freeway 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 themselves as closer to Northern Ontario.
[edit] Cuisine
The Upper Peninsula has a distinctive local cuisine. The pasty, a kind of meat turnover originally brought to the region by Cornish miners, is extremely 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 cardamom-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. Thimbleberry jam and maple syrup are highly prized local delicacies.[26] Fresh Great Lakes fish, such as the lake trout and whitefish, are commonly eaten, despite concerns of PCB contamination and elevated mercury concentrations. Smoked and pickled fish are also popular.
[edit] 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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 WWE 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.
- Mary Chase Perry Stratton founder of Pewabic Pottery, was born in Hancock, Michigan.[27]
- 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 (Into the Wild (film)) and musician, was born and raised in Negaunee, Michigan, attended Northern Michigan University and works with the band Metallica.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d Hunt, Mary (1997). Hunts Guide to Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
- ^ a b http://faculty.nmu.edu/upced/UPinfo/UPHIST.HTM
- ^ Michigan's Upper Peninsula
- ^ Michigan Geography from NETSTATE
- ^ http://www.earthscape.org/t2/scr01/scr01a.html
- ^ The Upper Peninsula of Michigan
- ^ Lake effect snow in Michigan
- ^ Mean Monthly and Annual Snowfall. climatesource.com. Retrieved on 2008-05-07.
- ^ Burt, Chistopher C., Contributor: Stroud, Mark Extreme Weather: A Guide and Resource Book (W. W. Norton & Company, 2007), page 80, (303 pages) ISBN 039333015X.
- ^ http://hunts-upguide.com/ Hunt's U.P. Guide.
- ^ Referendum Row. Time magazine (1967-07-07). Retrieved on 2007-07-25.
- ^ Law, Gwillim (2007-02-19). United States Time Zones. Statoids. Retrieved on 2007-07-25.
- ^ NBC Evening News for Friday, Aug 08, 1975, accessed November 6, 2006
- ^ The Dominic J. Jacobetti Collection, accessed November 6, 2006
- ^ Top 10 Summer Destinations. ShermansTravel. Retrieved on 2008-05-07.
- ^ Top 10 Summer Destinations. MSNBC. Retrieved on 2007-06-24.
- ^ Pine Mountain ski jump
- ^ Suicide Hill.
- ^ Transportation in the Upper Peninsula.
- ^ Interstate 75 @ Interstate-Guide.com
- ^ UP Transit: Find your way in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA
- ^ Pellston Regional Airport
- ^ Virtual Keweenaw Peninsula.
- ^ map
- ^ Keweenaw Peninsula. Retrieved on 2006-10-01.
- ^ Hunts Guide to Michigan's Upper Peninsula "http://hunts-upguide.com/specialty_foods.html" Hunts Guide to Michigan's Upper Peninsula March 31, 2007. Retrieved on March 31, 2007.
- ^ Detroit News
[edit] 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.
- Info Michigan, detailed information on 630 cities
- Exploring the North -- travel, history, general information.
- 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.
- Terry Pepper on lighthouses of the Western Great Lakes.
- U.P. native goes 'Into The Wild'
- Musician-actor keeps his connection to U.P. strong
- McCandless story has U.P. connection
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