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The Spirit of Place: U.P. Ghost Towns

Copper and iron mining provided a livelihood for many people in the Upper Peninsula. Eventually, though, their settlements went from boom to doom, leaving in their wake haunting reminders of a long-vanished time

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Mandan
Mandan
Photograph by Manfred W. Wenner

 Long before Michigan was molding steel into cars, its fortunes were shaped by the glittering possibilities of a different metal: copper. 
In the late 19th century, Michigan was the largest copper producer in the world. Over the course of the copper-rush heyday (1843-1967), more than 300 companies harvested ore from the shiny metallic veins that meander beneath the ground of the Upper Peninsula.

The glory days of U.P. copper (and later) iron mining created a bustling society that lingers today, mostly as ghostly ruins and preserved historic sites.

Tucked between the lakeshore and hardwood forests, some of the old boomtowns still stand, offering travelers in search of an autumn escape the opportunity to see the past as it’s reflected in quaint homes and churches, overgrown cemeteries, and the occasional historical museum.  

Finding some mining towns can require an almost archeological eye; their crumbling foundations are scattered among encroaching trees and scrub. But that doesn’t mean they’re not worth a visit; it just requires grabbing a guidebook and getting out of the car.

“Some of [the sites] are more photogenic than others,” says Lawrence Molloy, author of A Guide to Michigan’s Historic Keweenaw Copper District. “It’s neat to go to some of these sites and sit and just think. What was it like to be here? Could I live the life that they lived? Most of them were without electricity or the telegraph, though the telegraph came in eventually. There is a mystique about them.”

Other spots are overtly opulent, a grand reflection of copper’s commercial value. There’s the Laurium Manor Inn B&B, which was built for Thomas H. Hoatson, owner of the Calumet & Arizona Mining Co. The 45-room estate features silver-leaf ceilings, a triple grand staircase of hand-carved oak, and a 1,300-square-foot dining room. Built in 1908, when miners’ wages were 25 cents an hour, the house cost $50,000. Furnishings ran another $35,000.

Among the wildflowers and towering trees, one can almost hear the echo of voices of people from another time. White City, for example, was once a premier summer resort; its early 1900s attractions included a roller coaster, merry-go-round, tourist cottages, dance pavilion, bandstand, and 75-foot steamer dock.

The region, which attracted immigrants from 32 countries, had Greek candy shops, Syrian fruit stores, and Chinese laundries. And the library stocked newspapers in an array of languages; many ethnic groups had their own printing presses.

Today, in a tiny Eagle Harbor cemetery, one inscription on the tombstone of an Irish immigrant offers a poignant reason to tour the vestiges of the U.P. boom era. It reads: “Remember me as you pass by, as you are now, so once was I.”

In that spirit, here are a few U.P. ghost towns that are especially worth a drive across Big Mac.

1. Mandan

Pass Delaware on Highway 41 and head just about to Copper Harbor at the tip of the Keweenaw Peninsula, and you’ll find Mandan, which today is little more than a handful of crumbling houses in the middle of the woods, but once was home to about 300 people. Watch for the sign along the highway that marks the dirt road that runs to this true ghost town. Mandan was the site of one of the last copper mines to open, one of just a few that operated north of Delaware. Once, about 20 homes lined its main street. About four of those workers’ residences still stand. Also visible is one of the two large log cabins that housed management, and, on a small hill, there’s the foundation of a former school. Railroad buffs might spot the tracks of the old Keweenaw Central Railroad, which ran to Copper Harbor, though Molloy says the rails and ties are nearly gone. As a sign of changing times, present-day ATV and snowmobile paths run along the route of the former trains.

2. Fayette

This iron-mining town just east of Escanaba on the Lake Michigan shore is a good place to begin a tour of Upper Peninsula mining history. Fayette thrived after the Civil War into the 1890s. Today, it’s run by Michigan’s state park system, which means you’ll have a trained interpreter to guide you through its visitor center and 20 still-intact historic buildings, including the town hall, mine workers’ homes, and Fayette’s furnace complex. Then there’s the natural beauty: After an afternoon walking tour, hike the lush forests near the town and maybe set up camp along Fayette’s beautiful white beach, beside its gleaming white cliffs.

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