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Beaver Island (Lake Michigan)

Beaver Island is an island in Lake Michigan in the U.S. state of Michigan. At 55.8 sq mi (145 km2), it is the largest island in Lake Michigan and the third largest island in Michigan after Isle Royale and Drummond Island. The island is located approximately 32 miles (51 km) from the city of Charlevoix. Beaver Island had a total population of 657 at the 2010 census. Beaver Island is part of Charlevoix County.

Beaver Island
Beaver Island (largest), as seen from space
Beaver Island
Location of Beaver Island in Michigan
Geography
LocationLake Michigan
Coordinates45°40′N 85°32′W / 45.667°N 85.533°W / 45.667; -85.533
Area55.8 sq mi (145 km2)
Highest elevation696 ft (212.1 m)
Administration
StateMichigan
CountyCharlevoix County
TownshipsPeaine Township
St. James Township
Demographics
Population657 (2010)

Until 1856, Beaver Island was home to a unique American political and religious experiment, a Mormon theocracy and monarchy ruled by King James Strang, who unsuccessfully challenged Brigham Young for the post-Joseph Smith leadership of Mormonism. Despite failing to gain a majority following, Strang remained the self-appointed leader of a Mormon splinter group, who were known colloquially as the Strangites to distinguish them from the much larger and mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. After Strang's assassination that year, dispossessed Irish American fishermen from the County Donegal Gaeltacht returned, expelled the Strangites, and retook the island, which is now a popular vacation and tourist destination. Portions of the island and surrounding archipelago are protected as part of the Beaver Islands State Wildlife Research Area.

History edit

Prehistory edit

Ancient Stone Circles

There are at least two stone circle sites located on Beaver Island. The main site, Beaver Island Sun Circle (site no: 20CX65)[1] (aka Beaver Island Stone Circle, or Beaver Island Stonehenge), is an unusually symmetrical 397-foot diameter stone circle consisting of approximately 39 (up to 150) stones and boulders of various sizes, from 2 feet to 10 feet with a ground height of 6 inches to 4 feet, with some stones presenting the appearance of hand carved symbols and incised lines, hieroglyphs or pictographs including: geometric shapes, Algonquian thunderbirds, bulls, feathers, human faces/heads, human figures, and early Celtic writing.[2] An example of these face/head markings, the Carved Face Rock, is on display at the Mormon Print Shop Museum. The site is located on the northwestern side of the island bisected by Mrs Reddings Trail, south of Angeline's Bluff Lookout, near Peshawbestown, a historic Native American village. It is considered a sacred site by the Anishinaabemowin and Anishinaabe culture, as explained in 1990 by Frank Ettawageshik, Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians (LTBBOI) Tribal Chairman.[3]

The site was discovered in 1985 by Dr. Terri Bussey,[4] of the Grand Rapids Inter-Tribal Council, who would spend 32 summers researching and documenting the site. It was further investigated in 1988 at Bussey's request by Dr. Donald P. Heldman, Mackinac Island State Park Commission archaeologist, and Dr. Elizabeth B. Garland, Western Michigan University Anthropology professor.[5] The stone circle construction date has been estimated to be approximately 1,000 years ago, possibly produced by the Mississippian people, and was possibly used by the Odawa Indigenous peoples as a solar and lunar medicine wheel calendar [6] or for navigation. The site is astronomically aligned with the midsummer solstice,[7] the center stone positioned under the North Star, and appears to chart constellations like the Big Dipper.[8]

The validity of the site has been scrutinized and disputed since its discovery as being a misinterpreted common geological phenomenon,[9] such as a random scattering of rocks or glacial deposits by other archeologists like Dr. Charles Cleland, Michigan State University Anthropology professor, and Dr. Christian Feest, Austrian ethnologist and ethnohistorian that specializes in the Native Americans of Eastern North America and the Northeastern United States.[10] The site has been protected/owned since 1988[11] by the LTBBOI (Public Law: 103-324),[12] and interpreted by the Amik Circle Society, a 501(c)3 organization (EIN: 81-3233690) originally formed in the 1990s and dedicated to understanding and protecting "the many stone circles, mounds and burial sites found in the Islands."[13]

The island's second site discovered by M. T. Bussey in 2014, Fairy Stone Circle,[14] is located on the northeastern side of the island bisected by East Side Drive, north of Mike Boyles Beach Road, and shows similar astronomical alignments as the Beaver Island Sun Circle.

Pre-Settlement edit

The Odawa, who speak a a dialect of the Ojibwe language, lived on Beaver Island for at least 300 years prior to its settlement by more recent immigrants.[15] The region of Lake Michigan that surrounds Beaver Island has an unenviable reputation in the long history of shipwrecks on the Great Lakes,[16] and a wreck within swimming distance of the island itself has been proposed as the possible last resting place of La Salle's missing 1679 flagship Le Griffon,[17] which is widely considered the "Holy Grail" among Great Lakes shipwreck hunters.[18]

The Odawa population on Beaver Island was so large that a fur trading post was established there in the late 1830s. Despite Federal legislation criminalizing the sale of alcohol to Native Americans, the former location of the trading post is still known, revealingly, as "Whiskey Point".[19]

The Mormon Kingdom edit

 
1856 daguerreotype of James Strang, taken on Beaver Island the year of his death by J. Atkyn, itinerant photographer who later became one of Strang's assassins

Although Beaver Island is known today mostly for its beaches, forests, recreational harbor and seclusion, previously it was the site of a unique Latter Day Saint kingdom.

The island's association with Mormonism began with the death of Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement. Most Latter Day Saints considered Brigham Young to be his successor, but many others followed James J. Strang, who argued his own claim using a letter that he said Smith had written and mailed to him. Strang founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite), claiming it was the sole legitimate continuation of the church that Joseph Smith founded. His group initially settled in Voree, Wisconsin Territory, in 1844, and established a community there that persists today as an unincorporated community within the town of Burlington, Wisconsin. Seeking refuge from religious persecution, Strang and his followers moved from Voree to Beaver Island in 1848.

At the time, unlike the Danish-American settlement on nearby Garden Island,[19] Beaver Island was inhabited by mostly Irish Catholic immigrants. In particular they came from an Ulster Irish-speaking island (off the coast of County Donegal) called Arranmore (Irish: Árainn Mhór).

The Strangites flourished under their Prophet's rule and, due to the Island's strategic location, they became both an economic and a political power in the region at the expense of nearby Mackinac Island. The Strangites also founded the town of St. James, which was named in honor of Strang. They constructed a road denominated "King's Highway" into the interior of the island that remains one of its primary thoroughfares. The Strangites cleared land; constructed cabins, farms and other improvements; and attempted to establish themselves permanently on the island.

In fact, Strang became powerful enough to force the "Gentiles", or non-Mormons, of Beaver Island to pay tithes to his church. "Gentiles" who refused were allegedly subjected to flogging or violently driven off their land claims.[20][21] Nothing, however, would have been more infuriating to Irish Catholic immigrants, for whom the events of the Tithe War were still a recent memory, than having once more to pay tithes to a denomination other than their own.

Irish Americans on the island, who were not welcome in St. James, first moved to a new settlement around Cable Bay, on Beaver Island's southern tip. The Ojibwe and Odawa population, on the other hand, fled to nearby Garden Island, where they sided invariably with the Strangites' enemies[22] to the point that Strang later alleged that the Indians had been, "armed and hunting me for my life."[23]

After first decreeing eleven days before the election that, "every Gentile family must come to the harbor and be baptized into the Church of Zion or leave the island within ten days",[24] Strang was unanimously elected to the Michigan House of Representatives in 1853 and again in 1855. He founded the first newspaper in Northern Michigan, the Northern Islander. During his tenure in the State Legislature, he made the island the center of the new County of Manitou, which included the Beaver Islands, Fox Islands and North Manitou and South Manitou Islands, and set the county seat at St. James in Beaver Island. The State of Michigan, however, abolished Manitou County in 1895 (see below).

After meeting and falling in love with 17-year old Elvira Field during a mission trip in 1849, Strang declared that God had commanded him to become a polygamist,[25] contrary to his previous opposition to polygamy.[26] After allegedly eloping with Strang, Miss Field became the second of an ultimate five wives,[25] by whom Strang fathered a total of fourteen children.

James J. Strang proclaimed himself "King of Heaven and Earth", and was crowned on 8 July 1850 inside a large log "tabernacle" that his adherents erected, in an elaborate coronation ceremony.[27] On him was bestowed a crown that a witness described as "a shiny metal ring with a cluster of glass stars in the front",[28] a royal red robe, shield, breastplate, and wooden scepter.[27]

Meanwhile, ships sailing near Beaver Island routinely, "sailed into a crack in the Lake", even during the summer, when shipwrecks in the region were highly unusual. During Strang's rule and for decades afterwards, allegations of Mormon acts of piracy, wrecking through the use of false light beacons and the cutting of anchor cables by Strangites on skiffs, the mass murder of male shipwreck survivors, and the subjecting of attractive female shipwreck survivors to forced marriage, continued to be commonly told by Beaver Island residents, as well as by Great Lakes sailors and fishermen.[29]

In an interview with folklorist Ivan Walton, one old sailor later recalled, "Old Strang was a bad one. One time there was a fine old schooner anchored down here in Sand Bay to wait out a blow. She was a fine old schooner and when it came dark, them Mormons came done on her and murdered the whole crew except the two daughters of the Captain who were making the trip with him. Strang sees them and has him put on his boat and struck for the harbor with them but on the way one of the girls jumps overboard and they think she was drowned and went on but she swam back to the schooner and got a hold of the bob stays and there she was a-hanging when two Irishmen seeing the schooner and thinking she might be in trouble, rowed out and found the girl almost exhausted. Well, she told them her story and they took her back with them. One of the men was married and his wife took care of her and the fellow who wasn't married went to the nearest Mormon house and with two loaded pistols, stole a horse and rode as fast it could run right up Strang's big palace and went in and made them all put their hands up except the girl, who he told to go out and get on the horse and as soon as she did he backed out still keeping their hands up. There was old Strang and his five wives and some others and he got out and on the horse and rode with the girl. He later married her."[30]

According to Strang's biographer Miles Harvey, there are numerous well-documented cases of groups of Strangites, who saw non-Mormons as the enemy, making marauding raids in settlements around the shores of Lake Michigan. Their acts included timber piracy, counterfeiting, home invasions, armed robbery, and horse theft in Koshkonong, Wisconsin, Perrysburg, Ohio, Woodstock, Illinois, and the theft of fishing equipment from the refugee fishermen in Mackinac Island.[31] Furthermore, on July 13, 1853, Mormon fishermen from Beaver Island fought a pitched battle on Lake Michigan against fishermen from what is now Charlevoix, Michigan.[32]

Strang, however, insisted through his newspaper that all of these charges were lies motivated by Anti-Mormonism.[30]

Strang and his adherents often conflicted with their neighbors on the island and adjacent locales. While claiming dominion of only his church, Strang tended to exert authority over non-Strangites on the island also, and was regularly accused of forcibly seizing their property and ordering physical assaults against them. Meanwhile, the island and surrounding County were ruled with Strang as the political boss, while the Strangites imposed both a monarchy and theocracy upon local government that violated both the American system of Republicanism and the separation of church and state. Even before the new County's creation, Strang was powerful enough to order the Treasurer of Mackinac County to surrender one tenth of Beaver Island's tax revenue to his church.[33]

Open hostility between the two groups frequently became violent, and a growing number of Irish-American refugees fled to Mackinac Island. Other Irish-Americans once assaulted Strangites at the post office and, in what is still called the "Battle of Whiskey Point", Strang fired a cannon at a private army of Irish-American fishermen who had come to retake the island and expel the Strangite church.[34]

Meanwhile, one former Strangite later recalled that more and more Mormon families were, "leading a double life, seemingly good Mormons, but only waiting for the opportunity to get away".[35] The beginning of the end came when Strang ordered all Mormon women to wear bloomers instead of dresses. When two Mormon women refused obedience, Strang punished them by having their husbands flogged, an act that was rendered less unpopular after one of them was discovered in flagrante delicto while committing adultery. While recovering from their floggings, both outraged husbands vowed revenge against Strang. On June 16, 1856, the United States Navy gunboat USS Michigan entered the harbor of St. James and Strang was invited aboard. As Strang walked along the dock the two Mormon flogging victims followed by several other disaffected Strangites repeatedly shot the Mormon king from behind and pistol-whipped him as he lay dying. The shooters, Thomas Bedford and Alexander Wentworth, then boarded the gunboat, which refused to surrender them to the Mormon Sheriff and instead sailed away and disembarked both men in Mackinac Island. Mackinac’s own Sheriff Julius Granger, who also kept the Grove House, took both shooters into custody and lodged them at his boarding house. Bedford and Wentworth were briefly ‘tried,’ fined $1.25 each for the judges service, and released to a cheering supportive, and sympathetic crowd. No one was ever convicted of Strang's murder. Following the ‘trial’ the freed men departed Mackinac Island for Green Bay, Wisc.[36]

After Strang died of his wounds on July 9, 1856, mobs of dispossessed Irish fishermen from Mackinac Island and St. Helena Island arrived and expelled the Strangites, who then numbered approximately 2,600, from their claims on Beaver Island.

The Strangite tabernacle and Strang's royal palace no longer survive, neither does the Strangite regalia, but a printing shop that his disciples erected persists as the only Strangite-era building still existing on Beaver Island. The Mormon printing shop now houses a museum of local history. The Strangite church continues to exist, though not on Beaver Island, and numbers a maximum of 300 adherents.[37]

According to Frederick Stonehouse, "Whether Strang and his Mormons were guilty of the charges of piracy and murder their enemies levelled at them or not is unknown. In today's more politically correct climate, the feeling is that the charges were trumped up by their enemies, who were jealous of the success of the 'Saints'. As usual, the truth is likely somewhere between the two extremes. There is a persistent rumor of treasure on Beaver Island. As the old tale goes it is part of King Strang's ill-gotten gains and is 'buried' in Fox Lake in a large chest. Over the years, people have searched for it without result, but of course if someone did find it, is it wise to announce it to the world or just keep mum?"[38]

"America's Emerald Isle" edit

Irish Catholic fishermen from Gull Island, Mackinac Island and various port cities of mainland Michigan, and also emigrants from County Donegal, Ireland, rapidly replaced the Strangites in Beaver Island. Their community, which more immigration from the Gaeltacht increased, developed a unique identity that isolation from the mainland fostered. Catholic sermons and even quotidian conversations were in Ulster Irish for decades. By the middle of the 1880s the Island became the largest supplier of freshwater fish consumed in the US, yet overfishing and technological change ended this dominance by 1893.[15]

After the expulsion of the Strangites, local government in Manitou County, which included Beaver Island, almost ceased. Court sessions and elections were rarely held, county offices were often left vacant, and the region acquired a reputation for lawlessness. Michigan Governor John J. Bagley affirmed this reputation in 1877 when he advocated for abolition of the county.[39] A bill was introduced to this effect yet failed to be enacted. A second attempt in 1895 was more successful, and Beaver Island was incorporated into Charlevoix County while Fox and Manitou Islands were incorporated into Leelanau County.

The 24-room King Strang Hotel was built in 1901 by Capt. Manus Bonner. Originally named the Beaver Hotel by Bonner, in the 1930s the new owner, Everett Cole, renamed it the King Strang Hotel after James Jesse Strang, the Mormon leader of Beaver Island in the mid-19th century. The hotel was sold in March 1982, and was reopened as the King Strang Hotel Club, a private club where each member owns a share of stock in the club. The local club members consider it an escape and refuge from the Detroiters in the summer.[citation needed]

In addition to King Strang, the Island became the residence of two other locally famous persons. Father Peter Gallagher, a priest from 1865 to 1898, was a colorful and charismatic leader who dominated insular society. He once engaged one of his parishioners in a fistfight in the insular chapel.[15] Feodor Protar, who arrived in 1893, was a member of the religious movement founded by Leo Tolstoy. He served as a local doctor and friend-to-all while living as a recluse in a cabin in the interior of the Island. Protar died in 1925 and left many admirers.[40]

In 1938, John W. Green (1871–1963), a resident of Beaver Island, was recorded by folklorist and ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax singing traditional songs, which can be heard on the Library of Congress website.[41]

Logging, which was always an important part of the insular economy, greatly increased with the formation of the Beaver Island Logging Company in 1901. Docks, housing, railroads and a mill impacted the local scenery, while fishing continued as the primary economic activity. The collapse of the Great Lakes fish population caused by the accidental introduction of the lamprey eel by deep sea ships during the 1940s and '50s also caused the exodus of most of the residents, until tourism in the 1970s renewed interest in the Island.

Geography edit

The island is 13 miles (21 km) long, 3 to 6 miles (5 to 10 km) wide, and is part of Charlevoix County, Michigan. It is mostly flat and sandy, with large forested tracts. According to data of the US census, it has 55.773 square miles (144.45 square kilometres) of land, and a permanent population of 657 as of 2010.[42] The more densely populated part, which comprises a mere 6% of total insular land, is within Saint James Township on the northern part of the island. The census of 2010 reported its population as 365. St. James Township also includes Garden Island, High Island, Hog Island and several minor islands in Lake Michigan, which are all permanently uninhabited. Peaine Township, which comprises the remaining 94% of insular land, contains large parcels of state land which are managed as part of the Beaver Islands State Wildlife Research Area. The research area is mostly undeveloped, with some relictual homesteads within the township that were constructed in the clearings of successful farms of the nineteenth century. In 2010 the township had a population of 292.[42]

The island has several small to moderately sized lakes, including Lake Geneserath[43] in the southeast, Greenes Lake[44] and Fox Lake[45] in the central part, and Font Lake,[46] Egg Lake,[47] Round Lake[48] and Barneys Lake[49] in the northern part. There are only two named streams: Jordan River[50] that flows into Sand Bay on the eastern part of the island and Iron Ore Creek[51] that flows into Iron Ore Bay on the southern part.

Climate edit

The island is within a climatic region that has great seasonal differences in temperature, with warm to hot, and often humid, summers and cold, even severely cold, winters. According to the Köppen Climate Classification system, it has a humid continental climate, which is abbreviated "Dfb" on climatic maps.[52]

Climate data for Beaver Island (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1905–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 54
(12)
59
(15)
79
(26)
82
(28)
88
(31)
95
(35)
94
(34)
93
(34)
90
(32)
81
(27)
72
(22)
61
(16)
95
(35)
Average high °F (°C) 26.7
(−2.9)
28.3
(−2.1)
37.2
(2.9)
49.2
(9.6)
62.6
(17.0)
71.7
(22.1)
76.1
(24.5)
75.0
(23.9)
67.6
(19.8)
54.9
(12.7)
43.1
(6.2)
32.9
(0.5)
52.1
(11.2)
Daily mean °F (°C) 21.0
(−6.1)
21.3
(−5.9)
29.2
(−1.6)
40.2
(4.6)
52.3
(11.3)
61.9
(16.6)
67.2
(19.6)
66.9
(19.4)
60.0
(15.6)
48.4
(9.1)
37.5
(3.1)
27.9
(−2.3)
44.5
(6.9)
Average low °F (°C) 15.2
(−9.3)
14.3
(−9.8)
21.2
(−6.0)
31.3
(−0.4)
42.0
(5.6)
52.1
(11.2)
58.3
(14.6)
58.9
(14.9)
52.4
(11.3)
41.9
(5.5)
31.9
(−0.1)
23.0
(−5.0)
36.9
(2.7)
Record low °F (°C) −24
(−31)
−25
(−32)
−21
(−29)
2
(−17)
20
(−7)
30
(−1)
35
(2)
35
(2)
27
(−3)
10
(−12)
5
(−15)
−13
(−25)
−25
(−32)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.04
(52)
1.21
(31)
1.81
(46)
2.59
(66)
2.95
(75)
2.76
(70)
2.59
(66)
2.96
(75)
3.71
(94)
3.04
(77)
2.68
(68)
2.15
(55)
30.48
(774)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 23.1
(59)
14.6
(37)
10.7
(27)
3.6
(9.1)
0.2
(0.51)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
4.6
(12)
18.3
(46)
75.0
(191)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 10 7 7 8 9 9 8 8 9 9 9 10 101
Source 1: NOAA[53][54]
Source 2: Western Regional Climate Center (precipitation 1952–present)[55]

Economy edit

 
Iron Ore Bay on the southern part of Beaver Island. North Fox Island is visible on the horizon.

Historically, the primary industries in the island are fishing, logging and farming. Presently the economy centers in governmental services, tourism and residential and cottage construction. Recreational opportunities abound in the insular harbor, beaches, inland lakes and the state forest that includes much of the island. A golf course, nature trails, restaurants, hotels, a marina and other amenities are available.

The island describes itself as "America's Emerald Isle" in allusion to the Irish ancestry of many of its residents.

Central Michigan University owns and operates a research facility in the island, denominated the "CMU Biological Station". The station hosts classes and workshops for students and researchers. CMU also owns a former Coast Guard Boathouse on Whiskey Point in the northern part of the island and part of Miller's Marsh.

Transportation edit

Two small airlines serve the island: Island Airways and Fresh Air Aviation. Airplanes are twin engine propeller airplanes for 6–10 passengers. The flight to the island takes approximately 20 minutes, are available multiple times a day throughout the year and reservations often are accepted with only brief notice. Luggage generally is included in the cost of a ticket, with a "pounds per person" limit, and additional luggage is charged according to its weight in pounds. Pets may be transported also, with prices of such tickets premised on the size of pets. Island Airways' airplanes depart from Charlevoix to Welke Airport (6Y8), a privately owned yet publicly accessible airport in Peaine Township that is approximately one mile (1,600 meters) south of St. James. Fresh Air Aviation's airplanes depart from Charlevoix to the public airport of Peaine Township (KSJX), which is on the Western side, a little over 4 miles (6.4 km) from St. James.[citation needed]

 
St. James Light in Beaver Island Harbor, pre-WWII

Beaver Island Boat Company operates a scheduled automobile ferry service from Charlevoix during most of the year. Daily service is available from May through September, and a more limited service is available October through mid-December. The ferry runs on a seasonal schedule where the number of daily trips ranges from one to four trips departing from Charlevoix to the island.[56] The ferry is closed from January through March. Travelers are advised to verify the weather before boarding because rough waves can cause sea sickness. Visitors wishing to transport their own motor vehicles must make reservations in advance as ferry space is limited. Two ferry boats are in service, The Emerald Isle and the Beaver Islander, the latter of which is smaller. The journey is slightly more than two hours to two and one half hours, contingent on weather and which ferry is ridden. Dogs, bikes, canoes, kayaks, boats, and motorcycles can be transported aboard the ferry for a fee.[57]

Two lighthouses are on the island:

Archipelago edit

 
Annotated view of Garden and Hog island from orbit

The islands of the Beaver Islands archipelago include, in approximate order of size from largest to smallest:

Beaver Island

Gull, Hat, Pismire, and Shoe Islands comprise the Lake Michigan division of the Michigan Islands National Wildlife Refuge and are administered as a satellite of the Seney National Wildlife Refuge. Pismire and Shoe Islands are also part of the Michigan Islands Wilderness Area.

Events edit

Dark Sky Island edit

Beaver Island is a part of the Dark Sky Sanctuary which is designated to only 14 locations in the whole world.[58] The Dark Sky Sanctuary is used as a way to raise awareness for the benefits of reducing light pollution. The Dark Sky Sanctuary is not only a way to promote appreciation for the environment, but it also allows for the exploration of the night sky. In honor of Beaver Island being involved in the Dark SKy Sanctuary, Beaver Island Community Center creates events to bring the community together to view constellations, meteor showers, the Northern Lights, etc.[59]

Beaver Island Music Festival edit

The Beaver Island Music Festival brings music artists from around the world to perform in the wilderness of Beaver Island. Founded in 2003, the festival is centered around combining music and wilderness together. The Festival is catered to all ages, but is centered around nature at the core. The festival is typically during the third week of July, and it lasts three days. Some of the well known performers of the festival include Sponge, an American rock band founded in Detroit; Lipstick Jodi;[60] The Burney Sisters;[61] etc. The Beaver Island Music Festival involves local businesses and community members to establish itself as a community-wide organization.[62]

Beaver Island Bike Festival edit

The Beaver Island Bike Festival allows bikers to enjoy the scenery of Beaver Island at their own leisure. The festival occurs during the third week of June. Biker can bike 20 to 42 miles of self-paced biking. Campgrounds, rest stops, food, drinks, and restrooms are provided for those attending. Bikers can also visit the scattered historical sights and monuments throughout the island. There is also a downtown party to conclude the festival where music and entertainment is provided.[63]

Baroque on Beaver edit

Founded in 2001, Baroque on Beaver is an event where orchestral and vocal performers come to Beaver island during the end of July and beginning weeks of August. This event is presented by the Beaver Island Performing Arts Alliance (BIPAA), where they strive to bring Classical music to this remote Great Lakes island.[64]

Beaver Island Irish Féile edit

Beginning in 2019, the Beaver Island Irish Féile showcases the Irish heritage of Beaver Island. The event takes place during the second week of September. The event includes Irish traditional music and activities that center around the unique history of the Island.[65]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "20CX65: the "Other" Lake Michigan Stonehenge". JaySea Archaeology. March 13, 2022. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  2. ^ Bussey, M. T. Beaver Island Stone Circle Rising Time and Again. Beaver Island Historical Society, 2015.
  3. ^ Dammann, Sara Gay. Beaver Island Celebrates History. Petoskey News-Review (Petoskey, Mich.), 13 Jul 1990, p. 12-13.
  4. ^ Weeks, George. Beaver Island Stonehenge Poses Great Lakes Mystery. Lansing State Journal (Lansing, Mich.), 20 Jun 1988, p. 3B.
  5. ^ Garland, Elizabeth (January 1, 1988). "19-Archaeological Survey of the Environs of 20CX65, the Beaver lsland Sun Circle, Charlevoix County, Michigan". Archaeological Reports.
  6. ^ Schoonbeck, Patty, and Schoonbeck, Fred. What's Down There. Beaver Beacon (Beaver Island, Mich.), Aug-Sep 2014, p. 44.
  7. ^ "Is there a Michigan Stonehenge on Beaver Island? - Mysterious Michigan". February 20, 2008. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  8. ^ Dammann, Sara Gay. Unusual Find Stirs Beaver Island Debate. Petoskey News-Review (Petoskey, Mich.), 14 Jul 1988, p. 42-44.
  9. ^ Broder, David S. (September 1, 1991). "NOTES FROM BEAVER ISLAND". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  10. ^ Murray, Dianne. Historian: Beaver Island Find Needs Study. Petoskey News-Review (Petoskey, Mich.), 21 Jul 1988, p. 1-2.
  11. ^ Rock Circle Damaged. Detroit Free Press (Detroit, Mich.), 10 Sep 1988, p. 4A.
  12. ^ "Beaver Island Stone Circle Rising Time and Again". AllEvents.in. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  13. ^ Society, Amik Circle. "Beaver Island - A Story of Place". Amik Circle Society. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  14. ^ BARBER, Story by SALLY (May 1, 2017). "Beaver Island awakening: An uncrowded spring paradise". Traverse City Record-Eagle. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  15. ^ a b c "Beaver Island History from the Beaver Island Historical Society". Retrieved November 8, 2016.
  16. ^ William Ratigan (1977), Great Lakes Shipwrecks and Survivals, W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan. Pages 15-58.
  17. ^ Chris Kohl (2004), Shipwreck Tales of the Great Lakes, Seawolf Communications. Pages 42-49.
  18. ^ Sullivan, Patrick (July 25, 2005). "Treasure hunter sues for rights". Traverse City Record-Eagle. Traverse City, Michigan. Retrieved March 19, 2009.
  19. ^ a b Andrea Gutsche and Cindy Bisallion (1999), Mysterious Islands: Forgotten Tales of the Great Lakes, Lynx Images. Page 200.
  20. ^ Edward Butts (2004), Outlaws of the Lakes: Bootlegging and Smuggling from Colonial Times to Prohibition, The Lynx Images. Pages 56-57.
  21. ^ Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Page 194.
  22. ^ Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Pages 193-194.
  23. ^ Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Page 209.
  24. ^ Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Pages 208-209.
  25. ^ a b Andrea Gutsche and Cindy Bisallion (1999), Mysterious Islands: Forgotten Tales of the Great Lakes, Lynx Images. Page 204.
  26. ^ (August 12, 1847). Voree Herald as quoted in Fitzpatrick, Doyle C. (1970). The King Strang Story: A Vindication of James J, Strang, the Beaver Island Mormon King. National Heritage. ISBN 0-685-57226-9, pp. 74–5.
  27. ^ a b Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Pages 120-130.
  28. ^ *Weeks, Robert P. "For His Was the Kingdom, and the Power, and the Glory... Briefly." September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine Article in American Heritage Magazine, Vol. 21, Issue 4, June 1970.
  29. ^ Frederick Stonehouse (2004), Great Lakes Crime: Murder, Mayhem, Booze, and Broads, Avery Color Studios, Gwinn, Michigan. Pages 92-101.
  30. ^ a b Frederick Stonehouse (2004), Great Lakes Crime: Murder, Mayhem, Booze, and Broads, Avery Color Studios, Gwinn, Michigan. Page 99.
  31. ^ Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Pages 172-198, 202-204, 226-237.
  32. ^ Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Pages 231-233.
  33. ^ Edward Butts (2004), Outlaws of the Lakes: Bootlegging and Smuggling from Colonial Times to Prohibition, The Lynx Images. Pages 57-58.
  34. ^ *Strang, James J. Ancient and modern Michilimackinac, including an account of the controversy between Mackinac and the Mormons. This is an interesting article that expresses the point of view of Strang.
  35. ^ Miles Harvey (2020), The King of Confidence: A Tale of Utopian Dreamers, Frontier Schemers, True Believers, False Prophets, and the Murder of an American Monarch, Little, Brown and Company. Page 263.
  36. ^ King Strang’s Murder. Detroit News (Detroit, Mich.), 07 Dec 1882, No. 2760, p. 3, col. 3-4.
  37. ^ Depending on the source consulted; see http://www.adherents.com/Na/Na_191.html October 22, 2016, at the Wayback Machine.
  38. ^ Frederick Stonehouse (2004), Great Lakes Crime: Murder, Mayhem, Booze, and Broads, Avery Color Studios, Gwinn, Michigan. Page 100-101.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved July 5, 2016..
  40. ^ "Protar's House". Retrieved November 8, 2016.
  41. ^ green, john w. "Search results from Available Online, Green, John W." Library of Congress. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
  42. ^ a b "Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (DP-1): Peaine and St. James townships, Charlevoix County, Michigan". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  43. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lake Geneserath
  44. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Greenes Lake
  45. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Fox Lake
  46. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: FOnt Lake
  47. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Egg Lake
  48. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Round Lake
  49. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Barneys Lake
  50. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Jordan River
  51. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Iron Ore Creek
  52. ^ "Beaver Island, Michigan Köppen Climate Classification (Weatherbase)". Retrieved November 8, 2016.
  53. ^ "NowData - NOAA Online Weather Data". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved August 28, 2021.
  54. ^ "Station: ST James 4 SSW Beaver, MI". U.S. Climate Normals 2020: U.S. Monthly Climate Normals (1991-2020). National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved August 28, 2021.
  55. ^ "ST James 2 S Beaver IS, Michigan". Western Regional Climate Center. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  56. ^ "Beaver Island Ferry Schedules". Beaver Island Boat Company. Retrieved October 17, 2022.
  57. ^ The Internet site of the Beaver Island Boat Company publishes detailed schedules, prices and advice. ([1] October 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine).
  58. ^ "Dark Sky Island | Beaver Island Trails". Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  59. ^ "Community Calendar | BIC Center". Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  60. ^ "Lipstick Jodi | Indie-alt-pop". Retrieved December 14, 2022.
  61. ^ "The Burney Sisters". Retrieved December 14, 2022 – via Facebook.
  62. ^ "About Us – BIMF | Beaver Island Music Festival". bimf.net. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  63. ^ Exec, Chamber (November 27, 2018). "Events | Discover Beaver Island". Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  64. ^ nextlevel (October 30, 2021). "Who We Are Musicians Chorus Ensembles Staff and BIPAA". Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  65. ^ "Emerald Isle Irish Feile – September 9-11th, 2022, Beaver Island, Michigan". Retrieved November 17, 2022.

External links edit

  •   Geographic data related to Beaver Island (Lake Michigan) at OpenStreetMap
  • BeaverIsland.net
  • Beaver Island Virtual Tour
  • Beaver Island Chamber of Commerce
  • Satellite map of Beaver Island from Google Maps
  • Beaver Island Boat Company October 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Island Airways
  • Fresh Air Aviation
  • Central Michigan University Biological Station on Beaver Island
  • Technology a blessing, a curse for remote island, By Martha Irvine, Associated Press, November 8, 2010.
  • WVBI[2], the island's FM radio station.
  • WVBI BIC Center Community Calendar, an on-line calendar of events on Beaver Island.
  • Beaver Island Ferry Schedule

beaver, island, lake, michigan, parts, this, article, those, related, demographics, need, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, september, 2023, beaver, island, island, lake, michigan, state, mich. Parts of this article those related to demographics need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2023 Beaver Island is an island in Lake Michigan in the U S state of Michigan At 55 8 sq mi 145 km2 it is the largest island in Lake Michigan and the third largest island in Michigan after Isle Royale and Drummond Island The island is located approximately 32 miles 51 km from the city of Charlevoix Beaver Island had a total population of 657 at the 2010 census Beaver Island is part of Charlevoix County Beaver IslandBeaver Island largest as seen from spaceBeaver IslandLocation of Beaver Island in MichiganGeographyLocationLake MichiganCoordinates45 40 N 85 32 W 45 667 N 85 533 W 45 667 85 533Area55 8 sq mi 145 km2 Highest elevation696 ft 212 1 m AdministrationUnited StatesStateMichiganCountyCharlevoix CountyTownshipsPeaine TownshipSt James TownshipDemographicsPopulation657 2010 Until 1856 Beaver Island was home to a unique American political and religious experiment a Mormon theocracy and monarchy ruled by King James Strang who unsuccessfully challenged Brigham Young for the post Joseph Smith leadership of Mormonism Despite failing to gain a majority following Strang remained the self appointed leader of a Mormon splinter group who were known colloquially as the Strangites to distinguish them from the much larger and mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints After Strang s assassination that year dispossessed Irish American fishermen from the County Donegal Gaeltacht returned expelled the Strangites and retook the island which is now a popular vacation and tourist destination Portions of the island and surrounding archipelago are protected as part of the Beaver Islands State Wildlife Research Area Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Pre Settlement 1 3 The Mormon Kingdom 1 4 America s Emerald Isle 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Economy 4 Transportation 5 Archipelago 6 Events 6 1 Dark Sky Island 6 2 Beaver Island Music Festival 6 3 Beaver Island Bike Festival 6 4 Baroque on Beaver 6 5 Beaver Island Irish Feile 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editSee also History of Northern Michigan Prehistory edit Ancient Stone CirclesThere are at least two stone circle sites located on Beaver Island The main site Beaver Island Sun Circle site no 20CX65 1 aka Beaver Island Stone Circle or Beaver Island Stonehenge is an unusually symmetrical 397 foot diameter stone circle consisting of approximately 39 up to 150 stones and boulders of various sizes from 2 feet to 10 feet with a ground height of 6 inches to 4 feet with some stones presenting the appearance of hand carved symbols and incised lines hieroglyphs or pictographs including geometric shapes Algonquian thunderbirds bulls feathers human faces heads human figures and early Celtic writing 2 An example of these face head markings the Carved Face Rock is on display at the Mormon Print Shop Museum The site is located on the northwestern side of the island bisected by Mrs Reddings Trail south of Angeline s Bluff Lookout near Peshawbestown a historic Native American village It is considered a sacred site by the Anishinaabemowin and Anishinaabe culture as explained in 1990 by Frank Ettawageshik Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians LTBBOI Tribal Chairman 3 The site was discovered in 1985 by Dr Terri Bussey 4 of the Grand Rapids Inter Tribal Council who would spend 32 summers researching and documenting the site It was further investigated in 1988 at Bussey s request by Dr Donald P Heldman Mackinac Island State Park Commission archaeologist and Dr Elizabeth B Garland Western Michigan University Anthropology professor 5 The stone circle construction date has been estimated to be approximately 1 000 years ago possibly produced by the Mississippian people and was possibly used by the Odawa Indigenous peoples as a solar and lunar medicine wheel calendar 6 or for navigation The site is astronomically aligned with the midsummer solstice 7 the center stone positioned under the North Star and appears to chart constellations like the Big Dipper 8 The validity of the site has been scrutinized and disputed since its discovery as being a misinterpreted common geological phenomenon 9 such as a random scattering of rocks or glacial deposits by other archeologists like Dr Charles Cleland Michigan State University Anthropology professor and Dr Christian Feest Austrian ethnologist and ethnohistorian that specializes in the Native Americans of Eastern North America and the Northeastern United States 10 The site has been protected owned since 1988 11 by the LTBBOI Public Law 103 324 12 and interpreted by the Amik Circle Society a 501 c 3 organization EIN 81 3233690 originally formed in the 1990s and dedicated to understanding and protecting the many stone circles mounds and burial sites found in the Islands 13 The island s second site discovered by M T Bussey in 2014 Fairy Stone Circle 14 is located on the northeastern side of the island bisected by East Side Drive north of Mike Boyles Beach Road and shows similar astronomical alignments as the Beaver Island Sun Circle Pre Settlement edit The Odawa who speak a a dialect of the Ojibwe language lived on Beaver Island for at least 300 years prior to its settlement by more recent immigrants 15 The region of Lake Michigan that surrounds Beaver Island has an unenviable reputation in the long history of shipwrecks on the Great Lakes 16 and a wreck within swimming distance of the island itself has been proposed as the possible last resting place of La Salle s missing 1679 flagship Le Griffon 17 which is widely considered the Holy Grail among Great Lakes shipwreck hunters 18 The Odawa population on Beaver Island was so large that a fur trading post was established there in the late 1830s Despite Federal legislation criminalizing the sale of alcohol to Native Americans the former location of the trading post is still known revealingly as Whiskey Point 19 The Mormon Kingdom edit nbsp 1856 daguerreotype of James Strang taken on Beaver Island the year of his death by J Atkyn itinerant photographer who later became one of Strang s assassinsAlthough Beaver Island is known today mostly for its beaches forests recreational harbor and seclusion previously it was the site of a unique Latter Day Saint kingdom The island s association with Mormonism began with the death of Joseph Smith the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement Most Latter Day Saints considered Brigham Young to be his successor but many others followed James J Strang who argued his own claim using a letter that he said Smith had written and mailed to him Strang founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Strangite claiming it was the sole legitimate continuation of the church that Joseph Smith founded His group initially settled in Voree Wisconsin Territory in 1844 and established a community there that persists today as an unincorporated community within the town of Burlington Wisconsin Seeking refuge from religious persecution Strang and his followers moved from Voree to Beaver Island in 1848 At the time unlike the Danish American settlement on nearby Garden Island 19 Beaver Island was inhabited by mostly Irish Catholic immigrants In particular they came from an Ulster Irish speaking island off the coast of County Donegal called Arranmore Irish Arainn Mhor The Strangites flourished under their Prophet s rule and due to the Island s strategic location they became both an economic and a political power in the region at the expense of nearby Mackinac Island The Strangites also founded the town of St James which was named in honor of Strang They constructed a road denominated King s Highway into the interior of the island that remains one of its primary thoroughfares The Strangites cleared land constructed cabins farms and other improvements and attempted to establish themselves permanently on the island In fact Strang became powerful enough to force the Gentiles or non Mormons of Beaver Island to pay tithes to his church Gentiles who refused were allegedly subjected to flogging or violently driven off their land claims 20 21 Nothing however would have been more infuriating to Irish Catholic immigrants for whom the events of the Tithe War were still a recent memory than having once more to pay tithes to a denomination other than their own Irish Americans on the island who were not welcome in St James first moved to a new settlement around Cable Bay on Beaver Island s southern tip The Ojibwe and Odawa population on the other hand fled to nearby Garden Island where they sided invariably with the Strangites enemies 22 to the point that Strang later alleged that the Indians had been armed and hunting me for my life 23 After first decreeing eleven days before the election that every Gentile family must come to the harbor and be baptized into the Church of Zion or leave the island within ten days 24 Strang was unanimously elected to the Michigan House of Representatives in 1853 and again in 1855 He founded the first newspaper in Northern Michigan the Northern Islander During his tenure in the State Legislature he made the island the center of the new County of Manitou which included the Beaver Islands Fox Islands and North Manitou and South Manitou Islands and set the county seat at St James in Beaver Island The State of Michigan however abolished Manitou County in 1895 see below After meeting and falling in love with 17 year old Elvira Field during a mission trip in 1849 Strang declared that God had commanded him to become a polygamist 25 contrary to his previous opposition to polygamy 26 After allegedly eloping with Strang Miss Field became the second of an ultimate five wives 25 by whom Strang fathered a total of fourteen children James J Strang proclaimed himself King of Heaven and Earth and was crowned on 8 July 1850 inside a large log tabernacle that his adherents erected in an elaborate coronation ceremony 27 On him was bestowed a crown that a witness described as a shiny metal ring with a cluster of glass stars in the front 28 a royal red robe shield breastplate and wooden scepter 27 Meanwhile ships sailing near Beaver Island routinely sailed into a crack in the Lake even during the summer when shipwrecks in the region were highly unusual During Strang s rule and for decades afterwards allegations of Mormon acts of piracy wrecking through the use of false light beacons and the cutting of anchor cables by Strangites on skiffs the mass murder of male shipwreck survivors and the subjecting of attractive female shipwreck survivors to forced marriage continued to be commonly told by Beaver Island residents as well as by Great Lakes sailors and fishermen 29 In an interview with folklorist Ivan Walton one old sailor later recalled Old Strang was a bad one One time there was a fine old schooner anchored down here in Sand Bay to wait out a blow She was a fine old schooner and when it came dark them Mormons came done on her and murdered the whole crew except the two daughters of the Captain who were making the trip with him Strang sees them and has him put on his boat and struck for the harbor with them but on the way one of the girls jumps overboard and they think she was drowned and went on but she swam back to the schooner and got a hold of the bob stays and there she was a hanging when two Irishmen seeing the schooner and thinking she might be in trouble rowed out and found the girl almost exhausted Well she told them her story and they took her back with them One of the men was married and his wife took care of her and the fellow who wasn t married went to the nearest Mormon house and with two loaded pistols stole a horse and rode as fast it could run right up Strang s big palace and went in and made them all put their hands up except the girl who he told to go out and get on the horse and as soon as she did he backed out still keeping their hands up There was old Strang and his five wives and some others and he got out and on the horse and rode with the girl He later married her 30 According to Strang s biographer Miles Harvey there are numerous well documented cases of groups of Strangites who saw non Mormons as the enemy making marauding raids in settlements around the shores of Lake Michigan Their acts included timber piracy counterfeiting home invasions armed robbery and horse theft in Koshkonong Wisconsin Perrysburg Ohio Woodstock Illinois and the theft of fishing equipment from the refugee fishermen in Mackinac Island 31 Furthermore on July 13 1853 Mormon fishermen from Beaver Island fought a pitched battle on Lake Michigan against fishermen from what is now Charlevoix Michigan 32 Strang however insisted through his newspaper that all of these charges were lies motivated by Anti Mormonism 30 Strang and his adherents often conflicted with their neighbors on the island and adjacent locales While claiming dominion of only his church Strang tended to exert authority over non Strangites on the island also and was regularly accused of forcibly seizing their property and ordering physical assaults against them Meanwhile the island and surrounding County were ruled with Strang as the political boss while the Strangites imposed both a monarchy and theocracy upon local government that violated both the American system of Republicanism and the separation of church and state Even before the new County s creation Strang was powerful enough to order the Treasurer of Mackinac County to surrender one tenth of Beaver Island s tax revenue to his church 33 Open hostility between the two groups frequently became violent and a growing number of Irish American refugees fled to Mackinac Island Other Irish Americans once assaulted Strangites at the post office and in what is still called the Battle of Whiskey Point Strang fired a cannon at a private army of Irish American fishermen who had come to retake the island and expel the Strangite church 34 Meanwhile one former Strangite later recalled that more and more Mormon families were leading a double life seemingly good Mormons but only waiting for the opportunity to get away 35 The beginning of the end came when Strang ordered all Mormon women to wear bloomers instead of dresses When two Mormon women refused obedience Strang punished them by having their husbands flogged an act that was rendered less unpopular after one of them was discovered in flagrante delicto while committing adultery While recovering from their floggings both outraged husbands vowed revenge against Strang On June 16 1856 the United States Navy gunboat USS Michigan entered the harbor of St James and Strang was invited aboard As Strang walked along the dock the two Mormon flogging victims followed by several other disaffected Strangites repeatedly shot the Mormon king from behind and pistol whipped him as he lay dying The shooters Thomas Bedford and Alexander Wentworth then boarded the gunboat which refused to surrender them to the Mormon Sheriff and instead sailed away and disembarked both men in Mackinac Island Mackinac s own Sheriff Julius Granger who also kept the Grove House took both shooters into custody and lodged them at his boarding house Bedford and Wentworth were briefly tried fined 1 25 each for the judges service and released to a cheering supportive and sympathetic crowd No one was ever convicted of Strang s murder Following the trial the freed men departed Mackinac Island for Green Bay Wisc 36 After Strang died of his wounds on July 9 1856 mobs of dispossessed Irish fishermen from Mackinac Island and St Helena Island arrived and expelled the Strangites who then numbered approximately 2 600 from their claims on Beaver Island The Strangite tabernacle and Strang s royal palace no longer survive neither does the Strangite regalia but a printing shop that his disciples erected persists as the only Strangite era building still existing on Beaver Island The Mormon printing shop now houses a museum of local history The Strangite church continues to exist though not on Beaver Island and numbers a maximum of 300 adherents 37 According to Frederick Stonehouse Whether Strang and his Mormons were guilty of the charges of piracy and murder their enemies levelled at them or not is unknown In today s more politically correct climate the feeling is that the charges were trumped up by their enemies who were jealous of the success of the Saints As usual the truth is likely somewhere between the two extremes There is a persistent rumor of treasure on Beaver Island As the old tale goes it is part of King Strang s ill gotten gains and is buried in Fox Lake in a large chest Over the years people have searched for it without result but of course if someone did find it is it wise to announce it to the world or just keep mum 38 America s Emerald Isle edit Irish Catholic fishermen from Gull Island Mackinac Island and various port cities of mainland Michigan and also emigrants from County Donegal Ireland rapidly replaced the Strangites in Beaver Island Their community which more immigration from the Gaeltacht increased developed a unique identity that isolation from the mainland fostered Catholic sermons and even quotidian conversations were in Ulster Irish for decades By the middle of the 1880s the Island became the largest supplier of freshwater fish consumed in the US yet overfishing and technological change ended this dominance by 1893 15 After the expulsion of the Strangites local government in Manitou County which included Beaver Island almost ceased Court sessions and elections were rarely held county offices were often left vacant and the region acquired a reputation for lawlessness Michigan Governor John J Bagley affirmed this reputation in 1877 when he advocated for abolition of the county 39 A bill was introduced to this effect yet failed to be enacted A second attempt in 1895 was more successful and Beaver Island was incorporated into Charlevoix County while Fox and Manitou Islands were incorporated into Leelanau County The 24 room King Strang Hotel was built in 1901 by Capt Manus Bonner Originally named the Beaver Hotel by Bonner in the 1930s the new owner Everett Cole renamed it the King Strang Hotel after James Jesse Strang the Mormon leader of Beaver Island in the mid 19th century The hotel was sold in March 1982 and was reopened as the King Strang Hotel Club a private club where each member owns a share of stock in the club The local club members consider it an escape and refuge from the Detroiters in the summer citation needed In addition to King Strang the Island became the residence of two other locally famous persons Father Peter Gallagher a priest from 1865 to 1898 was a colorful and charismatic leader who dominated insular society He once engaged one of his parishioners in a fistfight in the insular chapel 15 Feodor Protar who arrived in 1893 was a member of the religious movement founded by Leo Tolstoy He served as a local doctor and friend to all while living as a recluse in a cabin in the interior of the Island Protar died in 1925 and left many admirers 40 In 1938 John W Green 1871 1963 a resident of Beaver Island was recorded by folklorist and ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax singing traditional songs which can be heard on the Library of Congress website 41 Logging which was always an important part of the insular economy greatly increased with the formation of the Beaver Island Logging Company in 1901 Docks housing railroads and a mill impacted the local scenery while fishing continued as the primary economic activity The collapse of the Great Lakes fish population caused by the accidental introduction of the lamprey eel by deep sea ships during the 1940s and 50s also caused the exodus of most of the residents until tourism in the 1970s renewed interest in the Island Geography editThe island is 13 miles 21 km long 3 to 6 miles 5 to 10 km wide and is part of Charlevoix County Michigan It is mostly flat and sandy with large forested tracts According to data of the US census it has 55 773 square miles 144 45 square kilometres of land and a permanent population of 657 as of 2010 42 The more densely populated part which comprises a mere 6 of total insular land is within Saint James Township on the northern part of the island The census of 2010 reported its population as 365 St James Township also includes Garden Island High Island Hog Island and several minor islands in Lake Michigan which are all permanently uninhabited Peaine Township which comprises the remaining 94 of insular land contains large parcels of state land which are managed as part of the Beaver Islands State Wildlife Research Area The research area is mostly undeveloped with some relictual homesteads within the township that were constructed in the clearings of successful farms of the nineteenth century In 2010 the township had a population of 292 42 The island has several small to moderately sized lakes including Lake Geneserath 43 in the southeast Greenes Lake 44 and Fox Lake 45 in the central part and Font Lake 46 Egg Lake 47 Round Lake 48 and Barneys Lake 49 in the northern part There are only two named streams Jordan River 50 that flows into Sand Bay on the eastern part of the island and Iron Ore Creek 51 that flows into Iron Ore Bay on the southern part Climate edit The island is within a climatic region that has great seasonal differences in temperature with warm to hot and often humid summers and cold even severely cold winters According to the Koppen Climate Classification system it has a humid continental climate which is abbreviated Dfb on climatic maps 52 Climate data for Beaver Island 1991 2020 normals extremes 1905 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 54 12 59 15 79 26 82 28 88 31 95 35 94 34 93 34 90 32 81 27 72 22 61 16 95 35 Average high F C 26 7 2 9 28 3 2 1 37 2 2 9 49 2 9 6 62 6 17 0 71 7 22 1 76 1 24 5 75 0 23 9 67 6 19 8 54 9 12 7 43 1 6 2 32 9 0 5 52 1 11 2 Daily mean F C 21 0 6 1 21 3 5 9 29 2 1 6 40 2 4 6 52 3 11 3 61 9 16 6 67 2 19 6 66 9 19 4 60 0 15 6 48 4 9 1 37 5 3 1 27 9 2 3 44 5 6 9 Average low F C 15 2 9 3 14 3 9 8 21 2 6 0 31 3 0 4 42 0 5 6 52 1 11 2 58 3 14 6 58 9 14 9 52 4 11 3 41 9 5 5 31 9 0 1 23 0 5 0 36 9 2 7 Record low F C 24 31 25 32 21 29 2 17 20 7 30 1 35 2 35 2 27 3 10 12 5 15 13 25 25 32 Average precipitation inches mm 2 04 52 1 21 31 1 81 46 2 59 66 2 95 75 2 76 70 2 59 66 2 96 75 3 71 94 3 04 77 2 68 68 2 15 55 30 48 774 Average snowfall inches cm 23 1 59 14 6 37 10 7 27 3 6 9 1 0 2 0 51 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 25 4 6 12 18 3 46 75 0 191 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 10 7 7 8 9 9 8 8 9 9 9 10 101Source 1 NOAA 53 54 Source 2 Western Regional Climate Center precipitation 1952 present 55 Economy edit nbsp Iron Ore Bay on the southern part of Beaver Island North Fox Island is visible on the horizon Historically the primary industries in the island are fishing logging and farming Presently the economy centers in governmental services tourism and residential and cottage construction Recreational opportunities abound in the insular harbor beaches inland lakes and the state forest that includes much of the island A golf course nature trails restaurants hotels a marina and other amenities are available The island describes itself as America s Emerald Isle in allusion to the Irish ancestry of many of its residents Central Michigan University owns and operates a research facility in the island denominated the CMU Biological Station The station hosts classes and workshops for students and researchers CMU also owns a former Coast Guard Boathouse on Whiskey Point in the northern part of the island and part of Miller s Marsh Transportation editTwo small airlines serve the island Island Airways and Fresh Air Aviation Airplanes are twin engine propeller airplanes for 6 10 passengers The flight to the island takes approximately 20 minutes are available multiple times a day throughout the year and reservations often are accepted with only brief notice Luggage generally is included in the cost of a ticket with a pounds per person limit and additional luggage is charged according to its weight in pounds Pets may be transported also with prices of such tickets premised on the size of pets Island Airways airplanes depart from Charlevoix to Welke Airport 6Y8 a privately owned yet publicly accessible airport in Peaine Township that is approximately one mile 1 600 meters south of St James Fresh Air Aviation s airplanes depart from Charlevoix to the public airport of Peaine Township KSJX which is on the Western side a little over 4 miles 6 4 km from St James citation needed nbsp St James Light in Beaver Island Harbor pre WWIIBeaver Island Boat Company operates a scheduled automobile ferry service from Charlevoix during most of the year Daily service is available from May through September and a more limited service is available October through mid December The ferry runs on a seasonal schedule where the number of daily trips ranges from one to four trips departing from Charlevoix to the island 56 The ferry is closed from January through March Travelers are advised to verify the weather before boarding because rough waves can cause sea sickness Visitors wishing to transport their own motor vehicles must make reservations in advance as ferry space is limited Two ferry boats are in service The Emerald Isle and the Beaver Islander the latter of which is smaller The journey is slightly more than two hours to two and one half hours contingent on weather and which ferry is ridden Dogs bikes canoes kayaks boats and motorcycles can be transported aboard the ferry for a fee 57 Two lighthouses are on the island Beaver Island Harbor Light St James Light erected in 1870 on the northern part of the Island which continues to aid navigation citation needed Beaver Island Head Lighthouse on the southern part of the Island erected in 1858 was deactivated in 1961 citation needed Archipelago edit nbsp Annotated view of Garden and Hog island from orbitThe islands of the Beaver Islands archipelago include in approximate order of size from largest to smallest Beaver Island Garden Island High Island South Fox Island Hog Island North Fox Island Gull Island Whiskey Island Ojibwa Island Trout Island Grape Island Hat Island Shoe Island Pismire IslandGull Hat Pismire and Shoe Islands comprise the Lake Michigan division of the Michigan Islands National Wildlife Refuge and are administered as a satellite of the Seney National Wildlife Refuge Pismire and Shoe Islands are also part of the Michigan Islands Wilderness Area Events editDark Sky Island edit Beaver Island is a part of the Dark Sky Sanctuary which is designated to only 14 locations in the whole world 58 The Dark Sky Sanctuary is used as a way to raise awareness for the benefits of reducing light pollution The Dark Sky Sanctuary is not only a way to promote appreciation for the environment but it also allows for the exploration of the night sky In honor of Beaver Island being involved in the Dark SKy Sanctuary Beaver Island Community Center creates events to bring the community together to view constellations meteor showers the Northern Lights etc 59 Beaver Island Music Festival edit The Beaver Island Music Festival brings music artists from around the world to perform in the wilderness of Beaver Island Founded in 2003 the festival is centered around combining music and wilderness together The Festival is catered to all ages but is centered around nature at the core The festival is typically during the third week of July and it lasts three days Some of the well known performers of the festival include Sponge an American rock band founded in Detroit Lipstick Jodi 60 The Burney Sisters 61 etc The Beaver Island Music Festival involves local businesses and community members to establish itself as a community wide organization 62 Beaver Island Bike Festival edit The Beaver Island Bike Festival allows bikers to enjoy the scenery of Beaver Island at their own leisure The festival occurs during the third week of June Biker can bike 20 to 42 miles of self paced biking Campgrounds rest stops food drinks and restrooms are provided for those attending Bikers can also visit the scattered historical sights and monuments throughout the island There is also a downtown party to conclude the festival where music and entertainment is provided 63 Baroque on Beaver edit Founded in 2001 Baroque on Beaver is an event where orchestral and vocal performers come to Beaver island during the end of July and beginning weeks of August This event is presented by the Beaver Island Performing Arts Alliance BIPAA where they strive to bring Classical music to this remote Great Lakes island 64 Beaver Island Irish Feile edit Beginning in 2019 the Beaver Island Irish Feile showcases the Irish heritage of Beaver Island The event takes place during the second week of September The event includes Irish traditional music and activities that center around the unique history of the Island 65 See also editPopulated islands of the Great Lakes List of islands of Michigan List of islands of the United StatesReferences edit 20CX65 the Other Lake Michigan Stonehenge JaySea Archaeology March 13 2022 Retrieved August 8 2023 Bussey M T Beaver Island Stone Circle Rising Time and Again Beaver Island Historical Society 2015 Dammann Sara Gay Beaver Island Celebrates History Petoskey News Review Petoskey Mich 13 Jul 1990 p 12 13 Weeks George Beaver Island Stonehenge Poses Great Lakes Mystery Lansing State Journal Lansing Mich 20 Jun 1988 p 3B Garland Elizabeth January 1 1988 19 Archaeological Survey of the Environs of 20CX65 the Beaver lsland Sun Circle Charlevoix County Michigan Archaeological Reports Schoonbeck Patty and Schoonbeck Fred What s Down There Beaver Beacon Beaver Island Mich Aug Sep 2014 p 44 Is there a Michigan Stonehenge on Beaver Island Mysterious Michigan February 20 2008 Retrieved August 8 2023 Dammann Sara Gay Unusual Find Stirs Beaver Island Debate Petoskey News Review Petoskey Mich 14 Jul 1988 p 42 44 Broder David S September 1 1991 NOTES FROM BEAVER ISLAND Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved August 8 2023 Murray Dianne Historian Beaver Island Find Needs Study Petoskey News Review Petoskey Mich 21 Jul 1988 p 1 2 Rock Circle Damaged Detroit Free Press Detroit Mich 10 Sep 1988 p 4A Beaver Island Stone Circle Rising Time and Again AllEvents in Retrieved August 8 2023 Society Amik Circle Beaver Island A Story of Place Amik Circle Society Retrieved August 8 2023 BARBER Story by SALLY May 1 2017 Beaver Island awakening An uncrowded spring paradise Traverse City Record Eagle Retrieved August 8 2023 a b c Beaver Island History from the Beaver Island Historical Society Retrieved November 8 2016 William Ratigan 1977 Great Lakes Shipwrecks and Survivals W B Eerdmans Publishing Co Grand Rapids Michigan Pages 15 58 Chris Kohl 2004 Shipwreck Tales of the Great Lakes Seawolf Communications Pages 42 49 Sullivan Patrick July 25 2005 Treasure hunter sues for rights Traverse City Record Eagle Traverse City Michigan Retrieved March 19 2009 a b Andrea Gutsche and Cindy Bisallion 1999 Mysterious Islands Forgotten Tales of the Great Lakes Lynx Images Page 200 Edward Butts 2004 Outlaws of the Lakes Bootlegging and Smuggling from Colonial Times to Prohibition The Lynx Images Pages 56 57 Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Page 194 Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Pages 193 194 Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Page 209 Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Pages 208 209 a b Andrea Gutsche and Cindy Bisallion 1999 Mysterious Islands Forgotten Tales of the Great Lakes Lynx Images Page 204 August 12 1847 Voree Herald as quoted in Fitzpatrick Doyle C 1970 The King Strang Story A Vindication of James J Strang the Beaver Island Mormon King National Heritage ISBN 0 685 57226 9 pp 74 5 a b Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Pages 120 130 Weeks Robert P For His Was the Kingdom and the Power and the Glory Briefly Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine Article in American Heritage Magazine Vol 21 Issue 4 June 1970 Frederick Stonehouse 2004 Great Lakes Crime Murder Mayhem Booze and Broads Avery Color Studios Gwinn Michigan Pages 92 101 a b Frederick Stonehouse 2004 Great Lakes Crime Murder Mayhem Booze and Broads Avery Color Studios Gwinn Michigan Page 99 Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Pages 172 198 202 204 226 237 Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Pages 231 233 Edward Butts 2004 Outlaws of the Lakes Bootlegging and Smuggling from Colonial Times to Prohibition The Lynx Images Pages 57 58 Strang James J Ancient and modern Michilimackinac including an account of the controversy between Mackinac and the Mormons This is an interesting article that expresses the point of view of Strang Miles Harvey 2020 The King of Confidence A Tale of Utopian Dreamers Frontier Schemers True Believers False Prophets and the Murder of an American Monarch Little Brown and Company Page 263 King Strang s Murder Detroit News Detroit Mich 07 Dec 1882 No 2760 p 3 col 3 4 Depending on the source consulted see http www adherents com Na Na 191 html Archived October 22 2016 at the Wayback Machine Frederick Stonehouse 2004 Great Lakes Crime Murder Mayhem Booze and Broads Avery Color Studios Gwinn Michigan Page 100 101 Leelanau Enterprise Manitou meant more than islands Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved July 5 2016 Protar s House Retrieved November 8 2016 green john w Search results from Available Online Green John W Library of Congress Retrieved February 19 2021 a b Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics 2010 Demographic Profile Data DP 1 Peaine and St James townships Charlevoix County Michigan United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 13 2012 U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Lake Geneserath U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Greenes Lake U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Fox Lake U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System FOnt Lake U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Egg Lake U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Round Lake U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Barneys Lake U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Jordan River U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Iron Ore Creek Beaver Island Michigan Koppen Climate Classification Weatherbase Retrieved November 8 2016 NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved August 28 2021 Station ST James 4 SSW Beaver MI U S Climate Normals 2020 U S Monthly Climate Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved August 28 2021 ST James 2 S Beaver IS Michigan Western Regional Climate Center Retrieved July 10 2013 Beaver Island Ferry Schedules Beaver Island Boat Company Retrieved October 17 2022 The Internet site of the Beaver Island Boat Company publishes detailed schedules prices and advice 1 Archived October 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine Dark Sky Island Beaver Island Trails Retrieved November 17 2022 Community Calendar BIC Center Retrieved November 17 2022 Lipstick Jodi Indie alt pop Retrieved December 14 2022 The Burney Sisters Retrieved December 14 2022 via Facebook About Us BIMF Beaver Island Music Festival bimf net Retrieved November 17 2022 Exec Chamber November 27 2018 Events Discover Beaver Island Retrieved November 17 2022 nextlevel October 30 2021 Who We Are Musicians Chorus Ensembles Staff and BIPAA Retrieved November 17 2022 Emerald Isle Irish Feile September 9 11th 2022 Beaver Island Michigan Retrieved November 17 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Beaver Island Michigan nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Beaver Island nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Beaver Islands nbsp Geographic data related to Beaver Island Lake Michigan at OpenStreetMap BeaverIsland net Beaver Island Virtual Tour Beaver Island Chamber of Commerce Satellite map of Beaver Island from Google Maps Beaver Island Boat Company Archived October 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine Island Airways Fresh Air Aviation Central Michigan University Biological Station on Beaver Island Technology a blessing a curse for remote island By Martha Irvine Associated Press November 8 2010 WVBI 2 the island s FM radio station WVBI BIC Center Community Calendar an on line calendar of events on Beaver Island Beaver Island Ferry Schedule Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beaver Island Lake Michigan amp oldid 1186951748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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