The Islands of Isle Royale

Little Dean Is.

Little Dean Is., photo by yooper1949

Wikipedia lists islands in Isle Royale National Park (but not this one):

  • Amygdaloid Island – has a ranger station
  • Barnum Island
  • Beaver Island – has a campground
  • Belle Isle – a small island just off the north shore of Isle Royale at the head of Belle Harbor. It is the site of a primitive campground and is visited every second day during the peak season by the island-circling ferry.
  • Caribou Island – has a campground
  • Grace Island – has a campground
  • Johns Island
  • Long Island
  • Menagerie Island – has a lighthouse
  • Mott Island – summer park headquarters
  • Passage Island – has a lighthouse and short trail
  • Raspberry Island – has a nature trail
  • Rock of Ages – has a lighthouse
  • Ryan Island – the largest island in the largest lake on the largest island in the largest freshwater lake in the world
  • Tookers Island – has a campground
  • Washington Island
  • Wright Island

Learn more from Isle Royale National Park (U.S. National Park Service) and check this out bigger (along with many more) in Carl’s spectacular Isle Royale Natonal Park slideshow.

Heidi Johnson and the angels in the architecture

Heidi Johnson, Third Floor, Men's Ward

Heidi Johnson, Third Floor, Men’s Ward, photo by mstephens7.

Michael told me yesterday that Heidi Johnson passed on. He has a post Remembering Heidi Johnson and took a tour of Building 50 with her (slideshow).

I didn’t know her well, but I’ve always had an enormous amount of respect for her work and her depth of passion for photography, and specifically her teaching of photography and Interlochen and her photography of the former Traverse City State Hospital. I don’t know what role (if any) her work played in the rebirth of the former mental institution as The Village at Grand Traverse Commons, but I do know that it did awaken the community to what an architectural and natural treasure it was.

On her web site, heidijohnson.com she wrote:

about the book Angels in the Architecture

I have been fascinated by the history of rural America for years and specifically with the history of the former Traverse City State Hospital in Traverse City Michigan (also called The Northern Michigan Asylum until 1911.) Based upon childhood memories of having an Aunt institutionalized there from the 1950’s – 1970’s to the belief that I was meant to tell this story lead me to embark upon a three year immersion into the early history of the facility as well as special permission to photograph inside the various structures (primarily Building 50) from 1997 -1998. This body of work evolved into a book which was published by Wayne State University Press in 2001 entitled Angels in the Architecture: A Photographic Elegy to an American Asylum

You can view an amazing gallery of Heidi Johnson’s photography through her site and learn more about the Traverse City State Hospital from Kirkbride Buildings.

Heidi’s obituary in the Record-Eagle directs memorials to the American Institute for Cancer Research and the Arthritis Foundation.

Fuel or Food?

Grain (1).jpg

Grain (1).jpg, photo by smartee_martee.

21 July 2008 … fields of grain in Solon, Michigan.

This is a part of Overnight Photo Trip July 2008 (slideshow). If it’s anything like his other sets, it’s sure to grow.

Turmoil

Turmoil

Turmoil, photo by rossmat5msu.

A long exposure of the remnants of a wooden breakwall. It’s part of Matt’s Ludington set (slideshow).

Isle Royale Sunset and the Great Lakes Sea Kayak Symposium

Round Is. sunset

Round Is. sunset, photo by yooper1949.

Carl took this photo at Herring Bay in Isle Royale National Park. It’s part of his super-cool Isle Royale National Park (slideshow) which, in addition to having many more kayak photos, has some incredible views of this amazing Michigan park including a sweet shot of the northern lights over Amygdaloid Island Ranger Station (plus he has them uploaded at “wallpaper size”).

This weekend, July 17-20, 2008, head up to Grand Marais for the 24th annual Great Lakes Sea Kayak Symposium. It’s the oldest kayaking symposium on the Great Lakes and offers paddlers of all ages and abilities for a weekend packed with fun and learning opportunities including on-the-water classes, classroom lectures, kayak demos and vendors, social events, a race and of course plenty of opportunities to paddle including guided tours of the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. Keynote speakers this year are adventure filmmaker and expedition sea-kayaker Justine Curgenven and Sam Crowley, who circumnavigated Ireland in 2007 in a sea kayak.

Reflections

Reflections

Reflections, photo by GR58.

Electric … be sure to check it out bigger.

solitude

solitude

solitude, photo by yodraws.

This photo is part of Yolanda’s Somewhere in Michigan set (slideshow) that includes some
cool dock photos.

I just noticed this is the third photo titled “solitude” I’ve posted to Michigan in Pictures.

View from the top of Sugarloaf Mountain … and a flight to Marquette

View from the top of Sugarloaf Mountain

View from the top of Sugarloaf Mountain, photo by kcox5342.

I believe that I have the best job in the world (or at least the part of it that includes Michigan in Pictures). Not only do I get to discover cool pictures like this view of Lake Superior from Sugarloaf Mountain near Marquette and cool sets of photos like the photographer’s Upper Peninsula of Michigan (slideshow).

I also get to stumble into the dawn of the next internet with things like kcox5342’s photo of Marquette’s lower harbor that uses a nifty script called flickrfly and Google Earth to fly to the location of photos.

If you have Google Earth installed, click the photo link above to fly to Marquette’s lower harbor!

You can also check out the location of Sugarloaf Mountain on the Absolute Michigan Map of Michigan.

In the Jacksonburg Public Square … History of Jackson, Michigan

Casler hardware 2

Casler hardware 2, photo by tstevensphoto.

The photo is part of Travis’s Jackson, MI set (slideshow). The marker denotes the location of the Jacksonburg Public Square – click through for full text of this marker and map of the location.

The best history online I’ve found is Jackson: The First One Hundred Years, 1829-1929 from the Ella Sharp Museum. It says, in part

Over one hundred and fifty years ago, a young New Yorker named Horace Blackman, a frontiersman from Ann Arbor and a Pottawattomie Indian guide, camped on the west bank of the Grand River at the intersection of what is now Jackson Street and Trail Street in the city of Jackson, Michigan. Blackman had been ‘spying out the land’ looking for a ‘location.’ Satisfied with what he saw, he purchased a quarter section and registered his one hundred and sixty acre claim. Several months later, he built himself a log cabin and then went home to collect his family, having become the founder of a future city.

…Jackson-for this is what the village would be called, after brief encounters with the names ‘Jacksonburgh’ and ‘Jacksonopolis’– had location. As the Indian trails clearly indicated, it was a cross-roads-a point through which people, ideas, information and materials going in various directions passed. Now, at a time when transportation had become a critical organizational link between the nation’s eastern populations and the frontier’s seemingly limitless resources and wealth, Jackson was in a position to benefit.

You can get much more at the link above and also check out Jackson, Michigan in Wikipedia.

The Last Days of Tiger Stadium

Tiger Stadium Usher 2, circa 1999

Tiger Stadium Usher 2, circa 1999, photo by LAWRENCEcreative.

Greenberg, Kailine, Manush, Heilmann, Kell, Newhouser, Jennings, Harwell – the stadium may be gone, but the names live on. Brett writes:

These are pictures taken from the last season of Tiger Stadium. Rather than watching all of the the games, I would find myself wandering the hallways and aisleways trying to capture moments significant to this iconic place…

I hope these pics bring back some great memories as we all wait for the final brick to fall on this historic landmark.

View his Tiger Stadium, circa 1999 slideshow (photo set). Do it, for real. The scenes he captured of the daily life of this grand old ballpark are priceless.

Although a series of bids to save all or part of the ballpark over the last several years, the Old Tiger Stadium Conservancy has until August 1st to prove it can raise $12-15 million to preserve the diamond, dugouts, 3,000 seats and an area that would house Hall of Fame Tiger’s broadcaster Ernie Harwell’s collection of sports memorabilia. Detroit News story.

Here’s some more Tiger Stadium Stuff: