Schoolcraft County’s history is as deep as the forests
and lakes which attracted its original Native American
settlers, and the generations of pioneers who discovered
--- and continue to discover --- what this beautiful area
has to offer.
The first Europeans believed to have visited the area
were members of French explorer Jean Nicolet’s expedition,
who passed through the area in the summer of 1634 in search
of a route to the Orient (they got as far as Green Bay).
In the fall of 1679, Rene Robert de La Salle visited the
area abroad the Griffen, the first sailing ship to ply
the Great Lakes.
The early Native American residence, most of whom were
members of the Ojibwa tribe, settled around Indian Lake
and at the mouth of the French-named Manistique River.
In 1832, the “Snowshoe Bishop” Fredric Baraga established
a Catholic mission on the eastern shore of Indian Lake.
It was also during this time that Henry Rowe Schoolcraft,
Michigan’s first Indian Agent and the county’s namesake,
was mapping the area, documenting the lives of tribal
residence and negotiate treaties. Schoolcraft County was
officially organized in 1871, with Manistique designated
as the county seat.
The county’s first major industry was lumber. Beginning
in the early 1880s, logging companies began extracting
timber from the vast forests of white pine. The little
town of Seney, with its rail access to St. Ignace and
Marquette, and river route to Manistique, became a center
of the logging boom. During its heyday, Seney was a bustling
town of more than 20 saloons, 10 hotels, several stores
and about 3,000 residents.
Much of the timber harvested from the county’s forests
was floated down the river to Manistique, where it was
milled, loaded on ships and sent to communities around
the Great Lakes and beyond. But by the turn of the century,
what had seemed inexhaustible resources was gone: The
forests had been stripped, and the reign of “King Pine”
was over.
Southwest of Manistique, on the Garden Peninsula in Delta
County, is the site of another major 19th century industry.
During the mid-1800s raw iron ore was being shipped at
tremendous expense from the Upper Peninsula mines to the
foundries in the lower Great Lakes. To make the process
more cost-effective, a smelting operation was built at
Fayette. From 1867 until it closed in 1891, Fayette’s
blast furnaces produced more than 229,000 tons of iron,
using local hardwood for fuel and native limestone t purify
the iron ore.
Despite the demise of the timber and iron ore industries,
many Schoolcraft residents stayed on, supporting their
families through fishing, farming, and small business.
Pulpwood and paper manufacturing, and limestone mining
and processing, developed into major industries. The area’s
abundant wildlife, temperate summers and clear lakes and
rivers had long been a favorite vacation retreat from
the hustle and bustle of the Midwest’s cities, and with
the increase in winter-related recreation, tourism grew
into a major component of the county’s economy.
Residences are proud of their area’s rich heritage, and
they keep their history alive at a number of museums and
historic sites. The Bishop Baraga Mission and Indian Cemetery,
at Indian Lake, features replicas of the early log mission
and surrounding bark dwellings. Manistique is a jumping
of point to visit four historic Upper Peninsula lighthouses:
the Manistique East Breakwater Light, Seul Choix Point
Lighthouse and Museum, Peninsula Point Lighthouse and
Sand point Lighthouse and Museum.
The Schoolcraft County Historical Park, in Manistique,
features a museum and a historic 200-foot-tall brick water
tower which has recently been restored. The 80-year-old
structure, listed on the National and State historic registries,
is located near the city’s unique Siphon Bridge. The bridge
is part of a concrete flume built in 1919 to channel water
to the paper mill.
Fayette State Historic Park features a museum, and a
ghost town of 19 structures that includes several public
and commercial building, residences and the ruins of the
blast furnace complex. From ghost towns to lighthouses,
Schoolcraft County offers fun and education insights into
the past for visitors of all ages.