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SAULT SAINTE See also: Saint Mary's See also: river, at the outlet of Lake See also: Superior and at the E. end of the upper peninsula
.
Pop
.
(1890) 5760; (1900) 10,538, of whom 5329 were See also: foreign-See also: born; (1910 census), 12,615
.
It is served by the See also: Canadian Pacific, the See also: Duluth, See also: South See also: Shore & See also: Atlantic, and the Minneapolis, Saint See also: Paul & Sault Sainte See also: Marie See also: railways
.
A railway See also: bridge (3607 ft. long, completed in 1887) and steam ferries connect it with the Canadian See also: town of Sault Sainte Marie (pop
.
1901, 7169) on the opposite See also: side of the river
.
The See also: principal buildings are the See also: Court See also: House, City See also: Hall,
See also: Post Office, See also: Custom House and
See also: Carnegie Library (1905)
.
Fort See also: Brady, in the south-western See also: part of the city, is an See also: infantry garrison; the old Ft
.
Brady (built about 1822) in another part of the city is still See also: standing
.
The river is here nearly i m. wide and falls 20 ft. in three-fourths of a mile; it has been made navigable by See also: lock canals for vessels See also: drawing 20 ft. of See also: water
.
The See also: North West Fur See also: Company built a lock here in 1797–1798
.
A canal 5700 ft. long, navigable for vessels of 11.5 ft. draught, was completed by the See also: state in 1855
.
Between 187o and 1881 the Federal See also: government widened the canal to See also: loo ft., made the draught 16 ft., and built the Weitzel lock, 515 ft. long, 8o ft. wide, 6o ft. at See also: gate openings, with a lift of 18-2o ft.; in 1896 the See also: Poe lock (on the site of the old state locks), having a lift of 18-2o ft., and measuring 800 ft
.
X loo ft., was opened, and the canal and its approaches were deepened
.
In 1908 the government began the widening of the canal above the locks and the construction of a new lock, 1350 ft. long between See also: gates and having a draft of 24.5 ft. at extreme low-water
.
The estimated cost of this lock and approaches is $6,200,000
.
In 1907 the commerce passing here during the navigation season of eight months and twenty-three days amounted to 58,217,214 tons of freight, valued at more than $600,000,000; the commerce passing through the canals at this point is larger than that of any other canal in the See also: world
.
There is a See also: ship canal (I* m. long) on the Canadian side of the river, which was completed in 1895 at a cost of $3,750,000
.
From the rapids opposite the city two water-power See also: plants (of 50,000 and 10,000 h.p. respectively) derive their power; the larger, a See also: hydraulic water-power canal (costing, with power equipment, $6,500,000) is 11 m. long, and extends from the lake above to a power-house below the rapids; in this power-house are 320 turbines
.
The See also: total value of the factory product in 1904 was $2,412,481, an increase of 231.3 % over that of 1900
.
Much See also: hay and See also: fish are packed and shipped here
.
The place was long a favourite fishing-ground of the Chippewa See also: Indians
.
It was visited by the French missionaries Rambault and See also: Jogues in 1641 and by Pere Rene Menard in 166o
.
In 1668 Jacques Marquette founded a See also: mission here
.
In 1671 the governor-general of NewSee also: France called a See also: great council of the Indians here and in the name of the See also: king of France took formal possession of all the country S. to the Gulf of Mexico and W. to` the Pacific
.
The mission was abandoned in 1689; but as a trading post of minor importance—for a
See also: time protected by a palisade fort—the See also: settlement was continued
.
In 1879 Sault Sainte Marie was incorporated as a See also: village; in 1887 it was chartered as a city
.
For an account of the mission see See also: Antoine I
.
Rezek, See also: History of the Diocese of Sault Ste Marie and Marquette (2 vols., Houghton, Mich., 1906–1907) ; see also A
.
B
.
See also: Gilbert's " A Tale of Two Cities" in
See also: Historical Collections, vol
.
29 (See also: Lansing, 1901) of the Michigan See also: Pioneer and Historical Society
.
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