The state of Michigan is our overall destination for a springtime trip to
the north. Our real destination is
Mackinac Island, a place that has been on our bucket list for years. We traveled with Carolina Tours to visit this
magical place, sandwiched between stops at Frankenmuth and Dearborn.
Frankenmuth
Frankenmuth is a small city in Saginaw County, Michigan;
it is nicknamed “Little Bavaria” because the area was settled in 1845 by
conservative Lutheran immigrants from the Franconia region of Germany. These
pioneers traveled via canals and the Great Lakes from New York and then
traveled overland to the present location of the city. The area remained a magnet for other Germans
from the same region even after it lost its original purpose as a missionary post.
The Bavarian Inn has been a gathering-place
for generations - millions before us have come to stay and play, eat chicken
dinners and enjoy Bavarian hospitality.
We feasted on the Inn’s all-you-can-eat family-style chicken dinners.
The spread -- chicken soup, cabbage salad, mashed potatoes with gravy, string beans, buttered noodles, dressing, cranberry relish, fried chicken, and
rhubarb crisp for dessert -- right out of a grandma's cookbook.

The Inn is also a
good place to learn how to make pretzels. We had a lesson from a real expert, but ours
still looked a bit strange. This was not
a problem – they tasted great!

Zehnder's Holz
Brucke (German for wooden bridge) is located over the Cass River
and leads to the historical town center. It is built in a style similar to covered
bridges of the Black Forest or a river valley in Switzerland. The structure is constructed using
traditional covered-bridge timber framing techniques, using oak, spruce,
Douglas fir, and cedar. Wooden pegs and
trunnels were used instead of nails.

The Bavarian Belle is moored on the river
near the covered bridge. A local family
purchased this authentic stern-driven paddle-wheel riverboat, brought it by
truck (think WIDE LOAD) from the Mississippi River to Frankenmuth, carefully
restored it, and now offers one-hour narrated boat tours of the
Frankenmuth area. This was a wonderfully relaxing way to see the sights!
Located on the
town square, the Bavarian Inn Glockenspiel
Tower houses a 35-bell carillon, which rings four times a day. It also sounds the 5-bell Westminster chime
on each quarter hour. On a large stage
beneath the bells, the figures act out the legend of the Pied Piper of Hamlin;
this tale dates back to the 13th century and tells of a plague of
rats in the German town of Hamlin. The
carved wooden figures and the illuminated clock were imported from
Germany.


Also on the town
square, there is live entertainment
every night. These performers played
some traditional German tunes as well as familiar American golden oldies.
Bronner's
Christmas Wonderland claims to be the “World’s Largest Christmas Store,
and it may well be; the store covers 2.2 acres and contains some 50,000 ornaments, 500 Nativity scenes, a
Christmas-cookie café.


On the grounds
near the store, there is a replica of Austria's "Silent Night" chapel. The idea for this place took root when the
store’s founder (Wally Bronner) visited Austria in 1976 and saw the original
St. Nicholas church, where “Silent Night” was first performed, accompanied by
guitar, in 1818. Bronner collected
copies of the song in over 300 different languages.
Elsewhere around
town, there are plenty of shops to buy things to eat – fudge and taffy were
popular spots – and lots of folks seemed to enjoy the horse and buggy
rides. We’re holding out for Mackinac
Island.

Gnome-hunting is a free activity and a good way to explore the town and meet some
locals. We picked up a gnome hunt sheet
and a map at the visitor center and set out in search of the gnomes located in
35 places around town. They were indoors
and out, and none of them were easy to find (up high on shelves, hidden under
tables, perched on a tree limb). We were
promised a prize if we found at least 10 gnomes, but the visitor center was
closed when we got back from our trek around town. We’re saving our list for when we get back to
Frankenmuth!
Mackinaw City
Michigan has two
peninsulas – the Upper and the Lower. Mackinaw City is located at the very top
of the Lower Peninsula, where the closest point between the peninsulas is the
Straits of Mackinac – approximately 4 miles in length. Because of the distance and difficulty in
getting back and forth between the two peninsulas, the State Highway Department
started ferry service in the Straits area in 1923. Ferry boats were very popular and the demand
increased until in their last year of operation, they transported 900,000
vehicles. They simply couldn’t keep up with the demand, leading to the
construction of the Mackinac Bridge, which was opened on November 1, 1957.
The Mackinac Bridge is currently the third
longest suspension bridge in the world. The Akashi Kaikyo Bridge in Japan is
the longest, followed by the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark. The Mackinac Bridge is still the longest
suspension bridge in the western hemisphere. The total length of the Mackinac
Bridge is 26,372 feet.
Mackinaw City is also the place to catch the Mackinac Island Ferry. We hopped aboard Shepler’s Ferry, known as
the fastest way to get to the island – 16 minutes. It was very cloudy that afternoon, but we
still got some nice views of the bridge, as well as Mackinac landmarks – the
Grand Hotel, the Victorian cottages, and Fort Mackinac.
MACKINAC ISLAND
Mackinac Island
is a mere speck in gigantic Lake Huron, which forms the eastern border of
Michigan. The early Native Americans
thought the island was shaped like a turtle, and at least these turtle images were easy to
spot. The
island is only 2 miles wide and 3 miles long, but it holds great historic
significance for the state. Once the
center of the American fur trade, today Mackinac Island is a major summer
retreat for families and adventurers of all types. Mackinac Island State Park encompasses 82% of
the island; the entire island is listed as a National Historic Landmark.

Cars
have been banned on the island since
the late 1800s; Michigan State Route 185 is the only state highway in the
country that is not utilized by vehicles.
If you want to get around Mackinac, you have to travel by foot, bicycle
or horse. Fortunately, there are 70
miles of hiking, biking and horseback riding trails, as well as 1500 bikes for
rent and 500 horses to pull carriages. These
are needed for the islands 1 Million visitors and 500 permanent residents.
The Grand Hotel sits high on the green hillside, beckoning visitors to a bygone era of old world hospitality and charm. Back to a time of horse-drawn carriages, afternoon tea, and croquet on an endless lawn. An era of dining to chamber music and dancing the evening away. The hotel, which was built in 1887, is a grand example of Colonial Revival architecture. It is the world’s largest summer hotel and boasts that it has the world’s longest front porch (660 feet). Its slim lines, roof line curves and symmetry of the towering columns give the hotel a graceful appearance.



Just
beyond the lawn area, there is a trail down to the lake shore. There we found the monument memorializing the
big scene in the movie “Somewhere in Time,” which was filmed in and around the
hotel.
Inside
the hotel, each of the 385 guest rooms is uniquely decorated by designer
Carleton Varney. Ours was colorful, to
say the least: turquoise wallpaper,
purple carpet, lime green ceiling, and pink & purple flowered
bedspreads. If that wasn’t enough, the
bathroom was hot pink to match the beds.
The public areas were also done by Varney with Victorian-style furniture
and elegant wallpapers and carpets.


The
view from our room was lovely – we could see lots of Lake Huron, as well as the
nearby Round Island, with its iconic Round
Island Lighthouse. It was completed
in 1895 and operated until 1947 when a new automatic beacon was built. Today, the lighthouse serves as a sentinel
for the past, reminding visitors of the often precarious sailing and rich
history of the Straits of Mackinac.
Every
evening at the Grand Hotel is an event.
Dressing for dinner is still required – good thing we had advance
warning! Dinner in the Main Dining Room
is an elegant five course affair. After
dinner, there’s coffee and music in the Grand Parlor, followed by music for
dancing in the Terrace Room.

We mostly relied on our feet to get around the island – it’s not very big and there’s not much traffic in May. We did have a buggy ride island tour one morning – it really is a delightful way to travel. It was nice to ride through the inner sections of the state park - lots of wildflowers in bloom.

We mostly relied on our feet to get around the island – it’s not very big and there’s not much traffic in May. We did have a buggy ride island tour one morning – it really is a delightful way to travel. It was nice to ride through the inner sections of the state park - lots of wildflowers in bloom.

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Another great house, built in 1902, the
Michigan Governor's summer residence
on Mackinac Island is a three-story structure located on a bluff overlooking
the Straights of Mackinac. The residence was originally built as a summer
cottage for a Chicago attorney; it was purchased in 1944 by the Mackinac Island
State Park Commission and since then, the Commission has maintained the
residence. The house is approximately
7,100 square feet and has eleven bedrooms, nine and one-half bathrooms and a
full basement. It is open is used by the
Governor to host important events with national and state leaders. The house
was named to the National Register of Historical Places in 1997.
Historic
Fort Mackinac sits near the center
of the island and the Mackinac Island
State Park, on a bluff overlooking the village and the harbor. The fort was founded in 1780, and its
possession was traded several times between Britain and America several times in
the years after the Revolutionary War and before the War of 1812. All the buildings are original and include
some of the oldest public buildings in Michigan.
In
front of the fort is Missionary Bark
Chapel, is a reconstruction patterned after the chapels built on the island
in the late 1600s. According to
descriptions by Jesuit missionaries, these bark chapels were built among the
Indians of the Great Lakes. In such
primitive huts, far from civilization, the courageous French "black robes"
lived and sought to turn the minds of the savages to Christianity. Father Claude Dablon wintered on Mackinac
Island in 1670-71 to carry on his missionary work here. Wonder he didn’t freeze to death.


Behind
the fort, the Post Cemetery was the final resting place for Fort
Mackinac soldiers and their families. Local tradition is that both American and
British soldiers from the War of 1812 are buried here, as well as several
civilians. There are about 108 burials in the cemetery,
but only 39 of those graves are identified - the simple wooden grave markers
have long since decayed and disappeared.
Elsewhere
in the state park, there are some interesting geological features. Arch
Rock is a natural limestone arch formed during a post-glacial period when
high lake levels and wave action created openings in the rock. It stands 146 feet over the Lake Huron
shoreline--nearly 15 stories tall. In the local Indian tradition, the Great
Creator blew the breath of life into the newly formed earth and created Arch
Rock. The rock’s limestone formation took thousands of years by wind, water and
receding glaciers to be created. It was a bit foggy that morning, so horse and buggy made a nice way to get there!


Skull Cave is a small natural cave that was originally carved out of the rock by the natural processes of the long-since disappeared Lake Algonquin. The little cavern earned its current name in the 18th century when the local Native Americans began using the natural niche as a burial spot. After being used by countless generations of Native Americans, it was quite a grisly site by the time it was “discovered” by a fur trader in 1763. Looking for somewhere to hide, the trader took refuge in the cave and later wrote that he had spent the night on “nothing less than a heap of human bones and skulls, which covered the floor!”
Most
island activity is centered in the village
– a stretch of shops and restaurants along the shore near the ferry
landings. Carriages clip-clop down the
street while bicycles roll through town.
There may not be any cars here, but there are plenty of horse-drawn
wagons and buggies to transport everything that needs to move around the island
– people, hay, compost, recycling, sod, plants, groceries, goods and supplies
for shops and restaurants. There’s even
a taxi stand for the horse-drawn taxis.


Driving
a team of horses around the island may seem like fun, but traffic jams happen
here, as well as the island’s version of road rage (sometimes it’s the driver,
sometimes it’s the horse). The drivers
also take care of the horses – keeping them and the stables fresh and
clean. Fortunately for them, there’s
another team of workers to keep the streets reasonably clean. It’s still important to watch where you
step.


Mackinac
Island is well-known for its fudge,
especially the double chocolate variety.
Island fudge-makers import 10 tons of butter per year, as well as 10
tons of sugar per week during peak season to make their signature treat. Nearly 80% of the sugar used comes from the
state of Michigan. There are 14 fudge
shops on the island, most making their candy on marble-top tables right in
front of the shop, so you get a free show with your purchase.
Commerce isn't limited to fudge shops. The Straits of Mackinac was a center of the fur trade from the late 1680s, and by 1805, activity was centered in John Jacob Astor's American Fur Company. This is where furs and other trade goods were processed. A retail store was established in 1820 as an outlet so the company could sell surplus merchandise to employees, community residents and soldiers from the fort.
Stepping into Doud’s Market is America’s oldest family-operated grocery store. This Mackinac Island landmark is steeped in history — with reminders in the form of family pictures that stretch back to 1884 when it was founded by brothers James and Patrick Doud.
All over town, there are charming and/or historic houses and other buildings. Here are a few examples:

The Stuart House was built in 1817 to house the resident agent of Astor’s American Fur Trading Company. Robert Stuart was the agent living there until 1835, when the fur trade had greatly declined. It has been used as a boarding house and a hotel; today it houses the city museum.
The
Astor House was established as headquarters
for the American Fur Company, and for a time William Backhouse Astor lived here
and ran the business from here. Most of
the wealth of the Astor empire began on Mackinac Island in this house.
The Lake View House, now known as the Lake View Hotel, is one of the oldest continuously operated hotels on Mackinac Island. In the 1890s as Mackinac Island became a Midwestern tourist mecca, the hotel was enlarged; it’s still going strong today.
And then there are churches. Catholic missionaries may have been the first to arrive at Mackinac Island, but other denominations were soon to follow.
The
Union Congregational Church, locally known as the Little Stone Church, was established in 1900. Local residents and summer visitors donated
funds for its construction. The structure was built of Mackinac Island stones
in an eclectic Gothic style. Its stained glass windows tell the story
of the Protestant movement on the Island.
Sainte Anne Church: In 1670, Jesuit Father Charles Dablon founded a birchbark mission chapel on Mackinac Island. Abandoned in 1706 and reestablished around 1715, the new church was named Sainte Anne de Michilimackinac. The church is the nation's oldest dedicated to Saint Anne and maintains baptismal records dating from April 1695.
Trinity Episcopal Church was built in 1882 to house the parish that had been holding services on the island since 1837. For many years the congregation met in the post Chapel at Fort Mackinac and in the Court House. The church furnishings include an altar of hand-carved walnut, and two chancel chairs made by soldiers at the fort.
Dearborn is part of the Detroit metropolitan area. First settled in the late 18th century by French
farmers along the Rouge River, the community
grew with the establishment of the Detroit Arsenal on the Chicago Road linking Detroit and Chicago. It later grew into a
manufacturing hub for the automotive industry.
The city of Dearborn was the home of Henry
Ford, who bought up farmland just outside the city for his estate, Fair Lane,
and the Ford Motor Company World Headquarters. Today this area is also home to
the Dearborn Proving Grounds, the Henry Ford (a reconstructed historic village
and museum), the Henry Ford Centennial Library, the super-regional shopping
mall Fairlane Town Center, and the Dearborn Civic Center. The remaining open
land is planted with sunflowers and soybeans (Henry Ford's favorite). The crops
are never harvested.
Henry Ford (July 30, 1863 – April 7, 1947) was the founder of the
Ford Motor Company, and the sponsor of the development of the assembly line
technique of mass production. Although
Ford invented neither the automobile nor the assembly line, he developed and
manufactured the first automobile that middle class Americans could afford. In
doing so, Ford converted the automobile from an expensive curiosity into a
practical conveyance that would profoundly impact the landscape of the 20th
Century. His Model T automobile revolutionized transportation and American industry.
As the owner of the Ford Motor Company, he
became one of the richest and best-known people in the world. He is credited
with mass production of inexpensive goods coupled with high wages for workers.
Ford had a global vision, with consumerism as the key to peace. His commitment
to systematically lowering costs resulted in many technical and business
innovations, including a franchise system that put dealerships throughout most
of North America and in major cities on six continents. Ford left most of his
vast wealth to the Ford Foundation and arranged for his family to control the
company permanently.
The Henry
Ford Museum of American Innovation began as Henry Ford's personal
collection of historic objects, which he began collecting as far back as 1906. Today,
the 12-acre site is a collection of antique machinery, pop culture items, automobiles,
locomotives, aircraft, made-in-America artifacts and anything else that caught
Ford’s interest. Some items include:
An Oscar Mayer Wiener mobile.
An Oscar Mayer Wiener mobile.
The 1961 Lincoln Continental that
President John F. Kennedy was riding in when he was assassinated, as well
as vehicles that carried Presidents Eisenhower, FDR, and Teddy Roosevelt.


The rocking chair from Ford's Theatre in which President Abraham Lincoln was sitting when he was shot.
- .
A collection of 17th- and 18th-century violins including a Stradivarius.
Buckminster Fuller's prototype Dymaxion house.
The bus on which Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her seat, leading to the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
A 1940s diner and neon signs from other American classics.

Bill Elliott's record-breaking race car clocking in at over 212 MPH at Talladega in 1987
Large and small locomotives. The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Allegheny-class steam locomotive built by Lima Locomotive Works in Lima, Ohio, was the most powerful steam locomotive ever built.

And more: early airplanes, early tractors, and cars, cars, cars




































































































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