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MACKINAC ISLAND

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 256 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MACKINAC

ISLAND  , a small island in the N.W. extremity of Lake Huron and a
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part of Mackinac county, Michigan, and a city and summer resort of the same name on the island., The city is on the S.E.
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shore, at the entrance of the Straits of Mackinac, about 7 M . N.E. of Mackinaw City and 6 m . E.S.E. of St Ignace . Pop . (1900), 665; (1904), 736; (1910), 714 . During the summer season, when thousands of
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people come here to enjoy the cool and pure air and the island's beautiful scenery, the city is served by the
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principal steamboat lines on the
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Great Lakes and by ferry to Mackinaw city (pop. in 1904, 696), which is served by the Michigan Central, the
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Grand Rapids &
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Indiana, and the
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Duluth, South Shore &
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Atlantic
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railways . The island is about 3 M. long by 2 M. wide . From the remarkably clear
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water of Lake Huron its shores rise for the most part in tall white
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limestone cliffs; inland there are strangely shaped rocks and forests of cedar, pine,
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fir, spruce,
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juniper, maple, oak, birch, and
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beech . Throughout the island there are numerous glens, ravines, and caverns, some of which are rich in associations with
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Indian legends . The city is an antiquated fishing and trading
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village with
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modern hotels, club-houses, and summer villas . Fort Mackinac and its grounds are included in a state reservation which embraces about one-
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half of the island . The
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original name of the island was Michilimackinac (" place of the big lame person " or " place of the big wounded person ") ; the name was apparently derived from an Algonquian tribe, the Mishinimaki or Mishinimakinagog, now
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extinct .

The island was long occupied by Chippewas, the

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Hurons had a village here for a short time after their expulsion from the East by the
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Iroquois, and subsequently there was an
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Ottawa village here . The first white settlement or station was established by the French in 1670 (abandoned in 1701) at Point Saint Ignace on the north side of the strait . In 1761 a fort on the south side (built in 1712) was surrendered to the
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British . By the treaty of Paris (1783) the right of the
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United States to this
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district was acknowledged; but the fort was held by the British until 1796 . In
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July 1812 a British force surprised the garrison, which had not yet learned that war had been declared . In August 1814 an
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American force under Colonel George Croghan (1791—1849) attempted to recapture the island but was repulsed with considerable loss . By the treaty of Ghent, however, the island was restored, in July 1815, to the United States; Fort Mackinac was maintained by the Federal govern-. ment until 1895, when it was ceded to the state . From 1820 to 184o the village was one of the principal stations of the American Fur
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Company . A Congregational
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mission was established among the Chippewas on the island in 1827, but was discontinued before 1845 . The city of Mackinac Island was chartered in 1899 . See W . C .

Richards, " The Fairy Isle of Mackinac," in the
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Magazine of American
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History (July 1891); and R . G . Thwaites, " The Story of Mackinac," in vol . 14 of the Collections of the State
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Historical Society of Wisconsin (Madison, 1898) .

End of Article: MACKINAC ISLAND
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