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The Thumb

The Thumb is a region and a peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan, so named because the Lower Peninsula is shaped like a mitten. The Thumb area is generally considered to be in the Central Michigan region, east of the Tri-Cities and north of Metro Detroit. The region is also branded as the Blue Water Area.

The Thumb
The Thumb
Coordinates: 43°36′N 83°00′W / 43.6°N 83.0°W / 43.6; -83.0
LocationMichigan, United States
Area
 • Total15,910 km2 (6,141 sq mi)
 • Land10,270 km2 (3,966 sq mi)

The counties that constitute the Thumb form the peninsula that stretches northward into Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay. There is no formal list of which counties are part of the Thumb, but virtually all definitions include Huron, Tuscola, and Sanilac counties, and most include Lapeer and St. Clair counties. The population of the Thumb region as of the 2020 census was 370,617.

Economy edit

 
A wind farm near Ubly

The Thumb region is very flat with fertile soil, the reason for its historical role as a chiefly agricultural area. Major agricultural products include sugar beets, navy beans,[1] corn, fruits, and fish from Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron. Manufacturing—particularly concerning the automotive industry—is also prevalent in Michigan's Thumb due to the region's proximity to the automotive centers of Detroit and Flint.

Industry edit

 
Detroit Edison's St. Clair Power Plant, once the largest in the world

The Thumb has many notable businesses, many linked to agriculture.

  • Intertape Polymer Group, Inc. has a major factory in Marysville.
  • Cargill Salt operates a large salt mine and factory in St. Clair. This is the only plant in the U.S.A. that produces Alberger salt, which is especially prized in the fast food industry because of its higher volume (due to its unique shape) and lower sodium content (for a given volume, not weight). This is part of Michigan's large salt-mining industry.
  • Cooperative Elevator Company has been named the top Michigan Agriculture Exporter by the Michigan Department of Agriculture.[2] Its headquarters are in Pigeon, and it has branch elevators in Deckerville, Akron, Gagetown, Sebewaing, Elkton, and Bad Axe.
  • Detroit Edison is the operator of three power plants in the Thumb area: St. Clair and Belle River Power Plants in East China Township, and Greenwood Energy Center in Greenwood Township.
  • Dow AgroSciences Harbor Beach manufactures agricultural chemicals: weed killer, fungicides, fertilizers and plant nutrients and herbicides.[3]
  • Mueller Industries owns and operates Mueller Brass in Port Huron.[4]
  • Grand Trunk Western Railway has a major rail yard in Port Huron Township.
  • Marysville Hydrocarbons is an ethanol plant in Marysville.
  • SMR Automotive manufactures rear view mirrors at facilities in Port Huron and Marysville.[5]
  • Port Huron-based P.J. Wallbank Spring manufactures components for transmissions.[6]
  • Port Huron's industrial park is home to many companies that produce plastic components for vehicles, such as Prism Plastics,[7] Huron Plastics Group, and International Automotive Components.[8]
  • Michigan Ethanol, a partner of Broin Companies, operates a corn ethanol production facility in southwest Caro.
  • Michigan Sugar Company, an agricultural cooperative owned by 1200 farmers, operates four plants in the area. It is the successor to the 100-year-old "Big Chief" and "Pioneer" Sugar companies.[9] Local plants are located in Caro, Sebewaing, Croswell, and headquarters in Bay City.
  • Domtar operates a paper mill in Port Huron. The plant will close in 2021.[10]
  • Dunn Paper is located at the mouth of the St. Clair River just north of the Blue Water Bridge and produces specialty papers.[11]
  • Keihin Michigan Manufacturing operates an auto part manufacturing plant in Capac, they build HVAC and intake manifold assemblies that are used in Honda vehicles.[12] The plant is scheduled to close in 2021.[13]
  • Champion manufactures small and mid size buses at their facility in Lapeer County's Imlay Township.
  • Sensient Technologies Corporation, Harbor Beach, makes food flavors and colors, yeast dehydrated products and vegetable protein extract.[14]
  • Star of the West Milling Co.[15] which has grain elevators in Vassar and Cass City, joined with Eastern Michigan Grain in Emmett.[16]
  • Huron Castings[17] produces shell molded steel castings in Pigeon.
  • Pigeon Telephone Co. has been meeting telecommunications needs of the rural communities it serves since 1908.[18]
  • Agri-Valley Services,[19] more commonly known as AVCI, is an internet service provider based out of Pigeon.
  • Thumb Cellular has been providing rural cellular service to the Thumb area since 1991.[20]

International Trade Corridor edit

The I-69 International Trade Corridor is a strategic commercial gateway between the Midwestern United States and Ontario, Canada, with multi-modal transportation infrastructure that offers a wide range of distribution options. The I-69 International Trade Corridor Next Michigan Development Corporation (NMDC) offers economic incentives to growing businesses, both existing and new, that utilize two or more forms of transportation to move their products and are located within the territory of the NMDC. The I-69 International Trade Corridor Next Michigan Development Corporation is the largest in the state of Michigan with 35 municipal partners.[21]

Constituent counties of the trade corridor are: Shiawassee, Genesee, Lapeer, and St. Clair counties.[22]

Tourism edit

 
The Pointe aux Barques Light, near the tip of the Thumb

Some towns, such as Bay Port, Caseville, Harbor Beach, Lakeport, Lexington, Port Austin, Port Hope, Port Huron, Port Sanilac, Sebewaing, and St. Clair enjoy seasonal tourism, due to their locations on Lake Huron, Saginaw Bay, or the St. Clair River. Tourism and farming drive the local economy.

The Tip of The Thumb Heritage Water Trail is a nonprofit citizens organization working with the Huron County Parks to establish and maintain a water trail along Michigan's Lake Huron's shoreline.[23]

Unique to the Thumb edit

Many of the residents commute for work to Metro Detroit, Flint or the Tri-Cities. Incorporated cities with 2,000+ population in the Thumb area are Port Huron, Marysville, Lapeer, St. Clair, Marine City, Algonac, Caro, Imlay City, Bad Axe, Vassar, Sandusky and Croswell. The majority of these cities are in the southern portion of the Thumb.

Unique features in the area include the following:

Traveling around the Thumb edit

A favorite of tourists who visit this area is traveling the Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay shoreline via M-25 (formerly US Highway 25 until 1973). M-25 starts at the end of I-69/I-94 in Port Huron at the foot of the Blue Water Bridge and ends in Bay City. The whole highway is about 150 miles (240 km), and passes through quaint cities and villages. Located along Lake Huron through which M-25 passes are five lighthouses: Fort Gratiot Lighthouse, Port Sanilac lighthouse, Pointe aux Barques Lighthouse, Harbor Beach Light, and the Port Austin Lighthouse.

The Great Lakes Circle Tour is a designated scenic road system connecting all of the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River.[29] Many visitors choose to begin the circle tour in Port Huron, from which they can circle Lake Huron. M-25 winds around the Thumb and along Saginaw Bay to Saginaw and Bay City. Lexington and Port Austin feature beaches and boardwalks that are favorites with visitors.

Lighthouse Tour edit

 
Lighthouse at Port Sanilac on Lake Huron

In order from east to west:

Area festivals and events edit

  • 2nd weekend in August, (Algonac to Sebewaing)
  • Art on the River, third week in June, St. Clair.
  • , downtown Port Huron, 3rd week in August.
  • . Archived from the original on 2008-01-20. around the state.
  • Bay Port Fish Sandwich Festival (Bay Port)
  • (St. Clair) Annual International Bicycling Event along the St. Clair River in Michigan and Ontario, Canada, involving two ferry boat crossings, first weekend in October.[30]
  • Boat Night[31] & Port Huron to Mackinac Boat Race[32] (Port Huron to Mackinac Island)[33]
  • Cheeseburger in Caseville Festival (Caseville)[34][35]
  • Croswell Agricultural Society Fair (Croswell) celebrating its 125th year in 2009
  • (Croswell)
  • Feast of the Sainte Claire sponsored by the Port Huron Museum of Arts and History, a large living reenactment of 18th century life—Memorial Day weekend, (Port Huron).
  • (Harbor Beach)
  • Huron County Fair (Bad Axe)[36]
  • Michigan Bean Festival Labor Day weekend (Fairgrove)
  • Farmer's Festival[37] (Pigeon)
  • Michigan Sugar Festival (Sebewaing)
  • "Port Huron Float Down" Third Sunday in August (Port Huron)
  • "The Original" Country Christmas Lighted Farm Implement Parade (Sandusky)
  • Tuscola County Pumpkin Festival (Caro)
  • (Sandusky)
  • St. Clair County 4-H Fair (Goodells County Park)
  • Thumbfest (Lexington)
  • Yale Bologna Festival (Yale)

Thumb counties edit

 
Counties of the Thumb of Michigan

Huron edit

Huron County is located at the tip of the Thumb. The county is surrounded on three sides by water – Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron, and has over 90 miles (140 km) of shoreline, from White Rock on Lake Huron to Sebewaing on Saginaw Bay, and more shoreline parks than any other county in the state.

The county's economy relies on agriculture and ranks as one of the top agricultural counties in Michigan. Rich farmland inland produces beans, sugar beets and grain, including most of the world's supply of navy beans.[38] Tourism is also important to Huron County with bay front and lakefront towns such as Sebewaing, Caseville, Port Austin, Port Hope, and Harbor Beach, attracting tourists from all over. Huron County borders Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron. There are two state parks – Sleeper State Park and Port Crescent State Park. Three roadside parks – Jenks Park, Brown Park, and White Rock Park. Also, Huron County maintains nine county parks along the shoreline, which are Caseville Park, Lighthouse Park, Stafford Park, McGraw Park, Philp Park, Port Austin Bird Creek Park, Wagener Park, Oak Beach Park, and Sebewaing Park.
The county seat is Bad Axe, located in the center of the county.

Lapeer edit

The origin of the name of the county is often disputed, but it may have derived from the French words la pierre, meaning "the stone". This name could be a reference to the rounded stones, or flint pebbles, found in the rivers and streams throughout the area. Another theory is that it may be an English variation of Le Pays Plat, meaning "the flat land", which is one of the original names given to the area by the French, and can be found on many early fur trader maps of the area. The idea is that "Le Pays" may have evolved into the current pronunciation, "Lapeer".

Lapeer County is in many ways different from the other counties of the Thumb. First, it is heavily influenced by its proximity to Flint and Detroit, so as a result, its economy depends more heavily on manufacturing than the other counties of the region. Second, although agriculture is still a key economic factor in Lapeer County, it is not as important to the economy as in the other counties. Although there are still a few large-scale farms located in the county, the numbers are not found to the same extent, and these days, most farming in Lapeer now takes place on smaller, independent farms, which usually supply the local markets only. Lastly, in addition to its economic and agricultural differences, Lapeer County's geography is very different from the other counties of the Thumb. Its topography is generally gently rolling to quite hilly, and unlike its neighbors, which are flatter, and border on Lake Huron or Lake St. Clair, Lapeer County is landlocked. The county still has hundreds of acres of inland lakes such as Barnes Lake, Miller Lake, Lake Neppessing, the Holloway Reservoir, Big Fish Lake, and Lake Metamora, and several state recreation areas, including the Ortonville Recreation Area and the Metamora-Hadley Recreation Area, which still bring in many campers and tourists.

Sanilac edit

Sanilac County has the largest area of land in the Thumb. Like other counties, Sanilac has fertile and flat land, great for growing crops. Towns like Lexington and Port Sanilac bring in many tourists from the Detroit Area. Sandusky is the county seat and largest city.

St. Clair edit

St. Clair County has the largest population in the Thumb, and is considered part of the Metro Detroit MSA. Many residents farther north in the Thumb, especially Sanilac County, travel to Port Huron for shopping and work. It is the farthest county to the east in Michigan, and most of the eastern border is the St. Clair River, which separates Michigan from Ontario. For the most part, St. Clair County is flat with an agricultural economy dominating in the north and west; in the 19th century, agriculture and lumbering were important east to the St. Clair River. Sugar beets were cultivated and annual festivals were held at harvest time. In addition, many farms had mixed agriculture. There are steep hills and small canyons near the Black River. Since the mid-20th century, manufacturing had dominated in and around Port Huron.

Tuscola edit

Like Huron County, Tuscola is mostly dependent on agriculture. Industries such as sugar refining and ethanol processing, as well as growing various grains and beans, make up most of the economy. Caro, one of the largest cities in the Thumb (the largest if you exclude St. Clair and Lapeer counties), is named after Cairo, Egypt and is the county seat. Tuscola County only has 18 miles (29 km) of shoreline along Saginaw Bay, so it is not as dependent on tourism as the other counties in the area. Tuscola County is economically tied to the surrounding region as well as to the Saginaw, Bay City, and Flint areas.

Borderline regions edit

The boundaries of what is included in the Thumb are often debated, but nearly all definitions include Huron, Sanilac, and Tuscola counties, known as the tri-county region. Disputed areas include:

Blue Water Area edit

The Blue Water Area is another term describing the Thumb of Michigan. The term usually applies to St. Clair County and surrounding areas. The title is also extended to include all of Michigan's Thumb. The name refers to the county being bordered by water: on the east is the St. Clair River, connecting Lake Huron to the north to Lake St. Clair. Below that is the Detroit River. The namesake Blue Water Bridge spans the St. Clair River, connecting Port Huron to Sarnia, Ontario. A similar name, "Blue Water Country," is used to describe the same region on the Canadian side.

Discover the Blue edit

Discover the Blue is a promotion by the Blue Water Area Convention and Visitor's Bureau.[39] It is designed to attract visitors to the shoreline of eastern Michigan. Communities participating in Discover the Blue include Algonac in St. Clair County (at the southern end of the Thumb) and others to the north, such as Port Austin (at the tip of the Thumb).

Geography edit

Land features edit

See also List of Michigan state parks and geography of Michigan.

  • The Thumb's landscape ranges from a flat sandy plain along the shores of Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay, to a gently rolling topography. This land is fertile and well suited for agriculture. The most unusual geographic formation is a rugged glacial moraine, known collectively as the Hadley Hills, which extends in a northeasterly direction through the center of the Thumb, from the southwestern portion of the peninsula.
  • All counties except for Lapeer border Saginaw Bay or Lake Huron.
  • The places with the highest elevation are all associated with the Hadley Hills, and are located in Lapeer County. They are: Pinnacle Point, at 1,262 feet (385 m) and Kerr (Cemetery) Hill, at 1,258 feet (383 m), both in Hadley Township; Mount Christie, at 1,251 feet (381 m), in Metamora Township; and a point near Mayville, reaching up to 1,050 feet (320 m) above sea level.
  • The lowest point in the Thumb region is the shore of Lake St. Clair, at a low of 574 feet (175 m) above sea level.
  • Huron County is very flat. It has large fields that were used for agriculture and now are the sites of numerous wind turbines to generate electricity.
  • The "tip of the Thumb" is Pointe Aux Barques, between Port Austin and Grindstone City.
  • Marlette is called the "heart of the Thumb," because of its central position on the peninsula.

Major rivers edit

The Thumb has many waterways.

History and local culture edit

 
Map of the Surveyed Part of the Territory of Michigan by Orange Risdon, 1825, showing an early, larger incarnation of Sanilac County, most of which had not yet been surveyed

Culture edit

Since the late 18th century, ethnic European Americans have displaced the Native American tribes that historically occupied this territory. Since the early 20th century, they have dominated the population and culture of the Thumb. The French were the first Europeans to arrive, and thus influenced much of the early culture. They were mostly engaged in the fur trading and lumber industries, and had relatively few settlers. After the British won the French and Indian War, they took over this former French territory.

Many of these new settlers were sent into the area by the British from Canada in an effort to establish their dominance over the Great Lakes. In 1783, control of the Thumb was officially transferred to the newly formed United States, after the American Revolution and by the Treaty of Paris. The British were a dominant influence until after the War of 1812, when the northern border was firmly defined and this area came under US control. The US organized the Northwest Territory, and American settlement of Michigan and the Thumb was well underway by the mid-19th century. Construction of the Erie Canal through Central New York created stronger connections with the port of New York and eastern markets. Settlers migrated west from New York and New England into Ohio and Michigan, seeking new territory.

As a result of this history, the land was settled primarily by people of ethnic English and Scots-Irish descent; many arrived from Canada. Other settlers of the same ancestry migrated from eastern states such as New York, and Pennsylvania, as well as from New England. Immigration from the British Isles took place through the century, and later 19th and 20th century residents included Polish and German immigrants who migrated from Europe through the Detroit area. Many of the customs, much of the regional lifestyle, and even the local accent, strongly reflect these origins. Some local radio stations have featured polka shows, and various ethnic festivals, such as the Polkafest, in Kinde, are representative of Eastern European cultures.

In the early years, Europeans encountered and traded with people of the Fox and Sauk tribes, already living in the area for centuries. There may have also been other tribes in the area such as the Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Kickapoo, but they would have been transient tribes, or found in very small numbers. All native Thumb area tribes are members of the Algonquian peoples, a large language family. Other tribes who migrated later into the area included the Wyandot (Huron), an Iroquoian language-speaking people; and the Ottawa. The displacement of native peoples took place in many areas during the settling of North America.

Historical events edit

  • The Port Huron area is one of oldest European settlements in the state of Michigan, first settled by French colonists.
  • Colonial-era forts such as Fort Gratiot (north of Port Huron) and Fort Sinclair (near present-day St. Clair) were built along the St. Clair River.
  • Bad Axe was named so because Captain Rudolph Papst found an old axe in 1861, when he was clearing land for the present-day Huron County seat.
  • The great Thumb Fire took place on September 5, 1881, in the Thumb area of Michigan. The fire, which burned over a million acres (4,000 km2) in less than a day, was the consequence of drought, hurricane-force winds, heat, the after-effects of the Port Huron Fire of 1871, and the ecological damage wrought by the era's logging techniques of clear cutting forests.
  • The Great Lakes Storm of 1913 was a November blizzard with hurricane-force winds; it devastated the Great Lakes Basin in the United States Midwest and the Canadian province of Ontario. The storm also battered and overturned large ships on four of the five Great Lakes, particularly Lake Huron.

Notable people (by town) edit

More comprehensive lists are available at individual cities, villages, etc. See local towns of interest at the bottom of the page for links.

Brown City edit

Cass City edit

Deckerville edit

  • Gabriel Rheaume – Writer – The Shores We Walk

Harbor Beach edit

Lapeer edit

Port Huron edit

Local elected officials edit

 
Congressional District 10, served by Republican Paul Mitchell

Local politicians in Washington and Lansing are listed below.

United States Congress edit

District 9 – Northern Macomb, and all of St Clair, Lapeer, Sanilac, Huron, and Tuscola counties.

District 8 – Saginaw/Bay City Area, and all of Genesee County.

Michigan House edit

32nd District – Northern Macomb and six townships in St Clair County.

  • Pamela Hornberger, Republican

81st District – Most of St Clair County, except Port Huron.

  • Gary Eisen, Republican

82nd District – All of Lapeer County.

  • Gary Howell, Republican

83rd District – City of Port Huron, the Townships of Fort Gratiot and Burtchville, and all of Sanilac County.

  • Andrew Beeler, Republican

84th District – All of Huron and Tuscola counties.

  • Phil Green, Republican

Michigan Senate edit

25th District – All of Huron, St Clair and Sanilac counties, and the Cities of Memphis, New Baltimore, and Richmond and the Townships of Armada and Richmond in Macomb County.

  • Dan Lauwers, Republican

31st District – All of Bay, Lapeer and Tuscola counties.

  • Kevin Daley, Republican

Colleges and universities edit

Museums edit

Harbor Beach edit

Marysville edit

  • Marysville Historical Museum – Marysville
  • Wills Ste. Claire Auto Museum – Marysville

Port Huron edit

 
Huron Light Ship Museum in the St. Clair River, Port Huron, Michigan

Elsewhere in the Thumb edit

Media edit

Radio edit

The Thumb Area Radio Region is an unranked market that is influenced by Detroit Radio Market, the Tri-Cities Radio Market and the Flint Market, with stations in Port Huron and Sarnia, Ontario, also serving the region.

Local radio stations in the Thumb area

Newspapers edit

Huron County newspapers
  • Harbor Beach Times
  • Huron County Press
  • Huron Daily Tribune[43]
  • The News Weekly
  • The Lakeshore Guardian
  • Thumb Blanket
Lapeer County newspapers
  • Buyer's Guide
  • The County Press[47]
  • LA View
  • Webco Press
Sanilac County newspapers
  • Brown City Banner
  • Buyers Guide
  • Camden Publications
  • Deckerville Recorder
  • Marlette Leader
  • Sandusky Tribune
  • Sanilac County News[48]
St. Clair County newspapers
  • Blue Water Shopper
  • Port Huron Times Herald[44]
  • The Thumb Print News
  • The Voice
  • The Yale Expositor
Tuscola County Newspapers
  • Tuscola County Advertiser[49]
  • Cass City Chronicle
  • Cass River Trader
  • Reese Reporter
  • Vassar Pioneer Times
  • Mayville Monitor

Broadcast television edit

The Lapeer County, St. Clair County and Sanilac County area lies in the Detroit Television Market. The far northern and western areas lie inside the Flint/Tri-Cities Television Market. The only broadcast TV station licensed to the Thumb region is WDCQ-TV, the PBS station licensed to Bad Axe.

Flint/Tri-Cities
Sarnia/Windsor Ontario
Detroit area
Alpena area

Transportation edit

 
Port Huron's two Blue Water Bridges, taken during the Port Huron to Mackinac Yacht Race

Borders edit

The border between Port Huron, Michigan and Sarnia, Ontario, is one of the busiest connections between Canada and the US. Crossings include the two Blue Water Bridges and the two St. Clair River Railway Tunnels. Ferries also connect to Canada at Marine City and Algonac.

Major highways edit

(organized by numbers)

  •   I-69 begins at the Blue Water Bridge, proceeds west through Flint, then Lansing, and then turns south to Angola, Indiana.
  •   I-94 has its eastern terminus at the U.S. side of the Blue Water Bridge in Port Huron, at the Sarnia, Ontario, Canada border, where together with I-69 it meets Ontario Highway 402.
  •   M-15
  •   M-19
  •   M-24
  •   M-25 is a highway of an arc-like shape closely following the outline of the Thumb along the Lake Huron/Saginaw Bay shoreline between Port Huron and Bay City. It is generally a scenic drive.
  •   M-29
  •   M-46 is a cross peninsular road, running across the mitten and the Thumb—from Port Sanilac on the Lake Huron shore; through Saginaw near Saginaw Bay; and then on to Muskegon on the Lake Michigan shore.[50] This east-west surface route nearly bisects the Lower Peninsula of Michigan latitudinally.
  •   M-53 (Van Dyke Road) is a gateway route to the Thumb of Michigan, carrying vacationers to the resorts and cottages on Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron in the vicinity of Caseville and Port Austin. It goes up the middle of the Thumb, and directly connects in Macomb County to the M-53 expressway. It is an important route for agricultural and manufactured goods.
  •   M-81
  •   M-90
  •   M-136
  •   M-138
  •   M-142

Rail edit

Area Amtrak stations are in Lapeer, Port Huron, and Flint. Local railroads are the Grand Trunk Western Railroad, CSX Transportation, Canadian National Railway, and the Huron and Eastern Railway. Pere Marquette Railway was a railroad that had lines throughout the Thumb; its lines are now either abandoned or in use by CSX, or Huron and Eastern.

Major railroad centers are Vassar, Bad Axe and Port Huron.

Transit edit

Blue Water Area Transit serves the city of Port Huron and surrounding areas.

Airports edit

The only international airport in the Thumb is St. Clair County International Airport about 6 miles (9.7 km) outside Port Huron. City airports include: Caro Municipal, Dupont-Lapeer Airport, Huron County Memorial Airport, Marine City Airport, Marlette Municipal, Sandusky City, and Yale Airport. Scheduled airline service is available from MBS International Airport[51] in Freeland and Flint Bishop International Airport.[52] While neither of these airports is in the Thumb, both are relatively close by.

Area codes edit

Area code 989 covers about half of the Thumb: Huron, Tuscola, and far northern Sanilac County (and the Marlette area). The Thumb's other half is covered by area code 810, which takes in most of Sanilac, Lapeer, Genesee and Saint Clair counties. All of Macomb County is served by area code 586, as is a small part of south-western Saint Clair County.

See also edit

State edit

Regional edit

Counties edit

Cities and villages edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Saginaw Valley Dry Bean and Sugar Beet Research Farm, 2009-03-28 at the Wayback Machine Michigan State University.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-12-01. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
  3. ^ "Macraes Blue Book".
  4. ^ "Mueller Industries".
  5. ^ Motherson Sumi Systems
  6. ^ "Our History - P.J. Wallbank Springs, Inc. | Spring Pack Manufacturing".
  7. ^ "Port Huron".
  8. ^ "IAC Group | About IAC".
  9. ^ "Michigan Sugar Company".
  10. ^ "Domtar Port Huron mill expected to close next year".
  11. ^ "Dunn Paper - Dunn to Perfection". from the original on 2018-06-15. Retrieved 2018-06-15.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-14. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
  13. ^ "Capac manufacturing facility slated to close".
  14. ^ "Macraes Blue Book".
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-10-07. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
  16. ^ "Eastern Michigan Grain".
  17. ^ "Huron Castings".
  18. ^ "Pigeon Telephone Company".
  19. ^ "AVCI".
  20. ^ "Thumb Cellular".
  21. ^ Next Michigan Development Corporation
  22. ^ http://i-69internationaltradecorridor.com/about/ International Trade Corridor
  23. ^ Tip of The Thumb Heritage Water Trail
  24. ^ "Bad Axe Historical Society, origin of Bad Axe's name".
  25. ^ "The Huron County Nature Center". Huron Nature Center.
  26. ^ "Kernan Memorial Nature Sanctuary".[permanent dead link]
  27. ^ Michigan Bean Soup recipe and history, the Honorable and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller IV, U.S. Senator.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-01-07.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-07-25.
  30. ^ "Blue Water Ramble/Clinton River Riders".
  31. ^ "Port Huron to Mackinaw Island Sailboat Race – Family Night". Flickr – Photo Sharing!. 10 July 2008.
  32. ^ . byc.com. Archived from the original on 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
  33. ^ Morris, Julie The Port Huron to Mackinac race, May 1, 2001 Detroit News
  34. ^ Cheesburger in Caseville at 2012-03-14 at the Wayback Machine Pure Michigan.
  35. ^ Campbell, Ron. August 13, 2010 Cheeseburger in Caseville festival turns town into 'Fun, wacky, tasteful and tacky' place March 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Bay City Times.
  36. ^ hostmaster (10 October 2016). "Welcome To Pure Michigan". Michigan. Archived from the original on 25 January 2017.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-28. Retrieved 2011-12-29.
  38. ^ . michiganbean.org. Archived from the original on 2009-03-28. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
  39. ^ "Blue Water Area Convention and Visitor's Bureau".
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-01-14.
  41. ^ Harbor Beach, Yesterday and Today, Compiled by the Harbor Beach Woman's Club. First Printing 1976, Revised Edition 1996.
  42. ^ "Port Huron Museum".
  43. ^ a b Huron Daily Tribune. "michigansthumb.com". Huron Daily Tribune.
  44. ^ a b "Port Huron – Home". The Times Herald.
  45. ^ "Bay City Times".
  46. ^ "Saginaw News".
  47. ^ "Front Page – February 3, 2016 – thecountypress.mihomepaper.com – The County Press".
  48. ^ "Front Page – February 3, 2016 – sanilaccountynews.mihomepaper.com – The Sanilac County News".
  49. ^ "Tuscola County Advertiser – Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868Tuscola County Advertiser – Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868 – Tuscola County Advertiser – Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868". Tuscola County Advertiser – Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868.
  50. ^ Garnell, Dan. . Michigan Highway Ends. Archived from the original on 2005-04-14.
  51. ^ "MBS International Airport".
  52. ^ "Flint Bishop International Airport".

Further reading edit

  • Ackerman, Emma J. Thumb Fires of 1871 and 1881. CMU Term Paper, 1968.
  • DuMond, Neva. Thumb diggings; adventures into Michigan's Thumb area. Lexington, Mich, 1962.
  • The Great Fire of 1881: A Collection of Stories. Caro, MI: Tuscola County Advertiser, 1981.
  • Hatt, R. T. — The petroglyphs, by D. J. Richards. — An archeological survey of the petroglyph site, by M. Papworth (republished from the Michigan archeologist, Dec. 1957) The Sanilac petroglyphs. Bloomfield Hills, Michigan: Cranbrook Institute of Science, 1958
  • House Party: Reminiscences by Traditional Musicians and Square Dance Callers in Michigan's Thumb Area. Port Huron, MI: Museum of Arts and History, 1982.
  • Schultz, Gerard. A History of Michigan's Thumb.
  • Smith, Dee. Treks into the Past: Historical Sketches of Michigan's Thumb. Decatur, MI: Heritage Valley Publishing, 1989.
  • Southgate, Jerry D. Thumb's Forest Fire of 1881. Central Michigan University Term Paper, 1967.

External links edit

  • Great Lakes Coast Watch
  • Seeing the Light: Terry Pepper on lighthouses of the Western Great Lakes.

thumb, this, article, about, geographical, region, michigan, body, part, thumb, other, uses, thumb, disambiguation, region, peninsula, state, michigan, named, because, lower, peninsula, shaped, like, mitten, area, generally, considered, central, michigan, regi. This article is about a geographical region in Michigan For the body part see Thumb For other uses see Thumb disambiguation The Thumb is a region and a peninsula of the U S state of Michigan so named because the Lower Peninsula is shaped like a mitten The Thumb area is generally considered to be in the Central Michigan region east of the Tri Cities and north of Metro Detroit The region is also branded as the Blue Water Area The ThumbPeninsulaThe ThumbCoordinates 43 36 N 83 00 W 43 6 N 83 0 W 43 6 83 0LocationMichigan United StatesArea Total15 910 km2 6 141 sq mi Land10 270 km2 3 966 sq mi The counties that constitute the Thumb form the peninsula that stretches northward into Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay There is no formal list of which counties are part of the Thumb but virtually all definitions include Huron Tuscola and Sanilac counties and most include Lapeer and St Clair counties The population of the Thumb region as of the 2020 census was 370 617 Contents 1 Economy 1 1 Industry 1 2 International Trade Corridor 2 Tourism 2 1 Unique to the Thumb 2 2 Traveling around the Thumb 2 3 Lighthouse Tour 2 4 Area festivals and events 3 Thumb counties 3 1 Huron 3 2 Lapeer 3 3 Sanilac 3 4 St Clair 3 5 Tuscola 4 Borderline regions 5 Blue Water Area 5 1 Discover the Blue 6 Geography 6 1 Land features 6 2 Major rivers 7 History and local culture 7 1 Culture 7 2 Historical events 8 Notable people by town 8 1 Brown City 8 2 Cass City 8 3 Deckerville 8 4 Harbor Beach 8 5 Lapeer 8 6 Port Huron 9 Local elected officials 9 1 United States Congress 9 2 Michigan House 9 3 Michigan Senate 10 Colleges and universities 11 Museums 11 1 Harbor Beach 11 1 1 Marysville 11 1 2 Port Huron 11 1 3 Elsewhere in the Thumb 12 Media 12 1 Radio 12 2 Newspapers 12 3 Broadcast television 13 Transportation 13 1 Borders 13 2 Major highways 13 3 Rail 13 4 Transit 13 5 Airports 14 Area codes 15 See also 15 1 State 15 2 Regional 15 3 Counties 15 4 Cities and villages 16 Notes 17 Further reading 18 External linksEconomy edit nbsp A wind farm near UblyThe Thumb region is very flat with fertile soil the reason for its historical role as a chiefly agricultural area Major agricultural products include sugar beets navy beans 1 corn fruits and fish from Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron Manufacturing particularly concerning the automotive industry is also prevalent in Michigan s Thumb due to the region s proximity to the automotive centers of Detroit and Flint Industry edit See also List of companies based in Michigan nbsp Detroit Edison s St Clair Power Plant once the largest in the worldThe Thumb has many notable businesses many linked to agriculture Intertape Polymer Group Inc has a major factory in Marysville Cargill Salt operates a large salt mine and factory in St Clair This is the only plant in the U S A that produces Alberger salt which is especially prized in the fast food industry because of its higher volume due to its unique shape and lower sodium content for a given volume not weight This is part of Michigan s large salt mining industry Cooperative Elevator Company has been named the top Michigan Agriculture Exporter by the Michigan Department of Agriculture 2 Its headquarters are in Pigeon and it has branch elevators in Deckerville Akron Gagetown Sebewaing Elkton and Bad Axe Detroit Edison is the operator of three power plants in the Thumb area St Clair and Belle River Power Plants in East China Township and Greenwood Energy Center in Greenwood Township Dow AgroSciences Harbor Beach manufactures agricultural chemicals weed killer fungicides fertilizers and plant nutrients and herbicides 3 Mueller Industries owns and operates Mueller Brass in Port Huron 4 Grand Trunk Western Railway has a major rail yard in Port Huron Township Marysville Hydrocarbons is an ethanol plant in Marysville SMR Automotive manufactures rear view mirrors at facilities in Port Huron and Marysville 5 Port Huron based P J Wallbank Spring manufactures components for transmissions 6 Port Huron s industrial park is home to many companies that produce plastic components for vehicles such as Prism Plastics 7 Huron Plastics Group and International Automotive Components 8 Michigan Ethanol a partner of Broin Companies operates a corn ethanol production facility in southwest Caro Michigan Sugar Company an agricultural cooperative owned by 1200 farmers operates four plants in the area It is the successor to the 100 year old Big Chief and Pioneer Sugar companies 9 Local plants are located in Caro Sebewaing Croswell and headquarters in Bay City Domtar operates a paper mill in Port Huron The plant will close in 2021 10 Dunn Paper is located at the mouth of the St Clair River just north of the Blue Water Bridge and produces specialty papers 11 Keihin Michigan Manufacturing operates an auto part manufacturing plant in Capac they build HVAC and intake manifold assemblies that are used in Honda vehicles 12 The plant is scheduled to close in 2021 13 Champion manufactures small and mid size buses at their facility in Lapeer County s Imlay Township Sensient Technologies Corporation Harbor Beach makes food flavors and colors yeast dehydrated products and vegetable protein extract 14 Star of the West Milling Co 15 which has grain elevators in Vassar and Cass City joined with Eastern Michigan Grain in Emmett 16 Huron Castings 17 produces shell molded steel castings in Pigeon Pigeon Telephone Co has been meeting telecommunications needs of the rural communities it serves since 1908 18 Agri Valley Services 19 more commonly known as AVCI is an internet service provider based out of Pigeon Thumb Cellular has been providing rural cellular service to the Thumb area since 1991 20 International Trade Corridor edit The I 69 International Trade Corridor is a strategic commercial gateway between the Midwestern United States and Ontario Canada with multi modal transportation infrastructure that offers a wide range of distribution options The I 69 International Trade Corridor Next Michigan Development Corporation NMDC offers economic incentives to growing businesses both existing and new that utilize two or more forms of transportation to move their products and are located within the territory of the NMDC The I 69 International Trade Corridor Next Michigan Development Corporation is the largest in the state of Michigan with 35 municipal partners 21 Constituent counties of the trade corridor are Shiawassee Genesee Lapeer and St Clair counties 22 Tourism edit nbsp The Pointe aux Barques Light near the tip of the ThumbSome towns such as Bay Port Caseville Harbor Beach Lakeport Lexington Port Austin Port Hope Port Huron Port Sanilac Sebewaing and St Clair enjoy seasonal tourism due to their locations on Lake Huron Saginaw Bay or the St Clair River Tourism and farming drive the local economy The Tip of The Thumb Heritage Water Trail is a nonprofit citizens organization working with the Huron County Parks to establish and maintain a water trail along Michigan s Lake Huron s shoreline 23 Unique to the Thumb edit Many of the residents commute for work to Metro Detroit Flint or the Tri Cities Incorporated cities with 2 000 population in the Thumb area are Port Huron Marysville Lapeer St Clair Marine City Algonac Caro Imlay City Bad Axe Vassar Sandusky and Croswell The majority of these cities are in the southern portion of the Thumb Unique features in the area include the following Algonac known as the Venice of Michigan because of its many canals citation needed Bad Axe was named after a broken axe found lodged in the knot of a tree at the clearing of the settlement s chief crossroads 24 Bay Port is the world s largest freshwater fishing port citation needed Harbor Beach is the home of the largest man made harbor and the Harbor Beach Light Harvest Wind Farm an electrical generation project of Exelon Wind and Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative Harvest II is scheduled for completion in December 2012 Huron County Nature Center includes a 120 acre 0 49 km2 wilderness arboretum that has been under the care of the Huron County Women s Clubs for more than 50 years 25 Kernan Memorial Nature Sanctuary is a 45 acre 180 000 m2 refuge with 4 000 feet 1 200 m of shoreline acquired October 30 1989 on Lake Huron in Huron County On the western coast of Whiskey Harbor this area is a great place to see migratory birds in early March and November 26 Kinde was once the bean capital of the world Michigan Bean soup has been a staple for over a hundred years in the U S Senate dining room Senate bean soup 27 Pigeon is the home of the Cooperative Elevator Company one of the largest grain elevators in the state Port Huron is the maritime capital of the Great Lakes where Lake Huron flows into the St Clair River This is the largest city in the Thumb area It was the boyhood home of Thomas Edison The Sanilac Petroglyphs were discovered after massive fires swept the Lower Peninsula in 1881 Native Americans created this unusual artwork 300 to 1 000 years ago The petroglyphs provide a glimpse into the lives of an ancient woodland people who occupied Michigan s Thumb area Sebewaing is the sugar beet capital of the world and home to one of the four Michigan Sugar Company factories in the Thumb region The sugar companies were organized with money from lumber barons such as Rasmus Hanson 28 St Clair boasts the world s largest boardwalk along freshwater the St Clair River Turnip Rock an unusual undercut sea stack at the extreme northern tip of the Thumb Michigan Underwater Preserves are protected areas of the Great Lakes on Michigan s coast There are nineteen major shipwrecks in the 276 square miles 710 km2 of the Thumb Area Bottomland Preserve and the Sanilac Shores Underwater Preserve which expands a total of 163 square miles 420 km2 of Lake Huron Caseville is the home of the annual Cheeseburger in Caseville festival a hometown festival devoted to Jimmy Buffett s song Cheeseburger in Paradise Traveling around the Thumb edit A favorite of tourists who visit this area is traveling the Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay shoreline via M 25 formerly US Highway 25 until 1973 M 25 starts at the end of I 69 I 94 in Port Huron at the foot of the Blue Water Bridge and ends in Bay City The whole highway is about 150 miles 240 km and passes through quaint cities and villages Located along Lake Huron through which M 25 passes are five lighthouses Fort Gratiot Lighthouse Port Sanilac lighthouse Pointe aux Barques Lighthouse Harbor Beach Light and the Port Austin Lighthouse The Great Lakes Circle Tour is a designated scenic road system connecting all of the Great Lakes and the St Lawrence River 29 Many visitors choose to begin the circle tour in Port Huron from which they can circle Lake Huron M 25 winds around the Thumb and along Saginaw Bay to Saginaw and Bay City Lexington and Port Austin feature beaches and boardwalks that are favorites with visitors Lighthouse Tour edit nbsp Lighthouse at Port Sanilac on Lake HuronIn order from east to west Huron Lightship Lake Huron St Clair River Port Huron Fort Gratiot Light Lake Huron St Clair River Port Huron Port Sanilac Light Lake Huron Port Sanilac Private White Rock Memorial Light Lake Huron White Rock Private Harbor Beach Light Lake Huron Harbor Beach Pointe aux Barques Light Lake Huron near Port Hope Port Austin Light Lake Huron Port Austin Charity Island Light Saginaw Bay Saginaw River Light Saginaw RiverArea festivals and events edit Antique and Yard Sale Trail 2nd weekend in August Algonac to Sebewaing Art on the River third week in June St Clair Art on the Avenue downtown Port Huron 3rd week in August Arts and Crafts shows calendar Archived from the original on 2008 01 20 around the state Bay Port Fish Sandwich Festival Bay Port Blue Water Ramble St Clair Annual International Bicycling Event along the St Clair River in Michigan and Ontario Canada involving two ferry boat crossings first weekend in October 30 Boat Night 31 amp Port Huron to Mackinac Boat Race 32 Port Huron to Mackinac Island 33 Cheeseburger in Caseville Festival Caseville 34 35 Croswell Agricultural Society Fair Croswell celebrating its 125th year in 2009 Croswell Swinging Bridge Festival Croswell Feast of the Sainte Claire sponsored by the Port Huron Museum of Arts and History a large living reenactment of 18th century life Memorial Day weekend Port Huron Harbor Beach Maritime Festival Harbor Beach Huron County Fair Bad Axe 36 Michigan Bean Festival Labor Day weekend Fairgrove Farmer s Festival 37 Pigeon Michigan Sugar Festival Sebewaing Port Huron Float Down Third Sunday in August Port Huron The Original Country Christmas Lighted Farm Implement Parade Sandusky Tuscola County Pumpkin Festival Caro Sanilac County 4 H Fair Sandusky St Clair County 4 H Fair Goodells County Park Thumbfest Lexington Yale Bologna Festival Yale Thumb counties edit nbsp Counties of the Thumb of Michigan Huron edit Huron County is located at the tip of the Thumb The county is surrounded on three sides by water Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron and has over 90 miles 140 km of shoreline from White Rock on Lake Huron to Sebewaing on Saginaw Bay and more shoreline parks than any other county in the state The county s economy relies on agriculture and ranks as one of the top agricultural counties in Michigan Rich farmland inland produces beans sugar beets and grain including most of the world s supply of navy beans 38 Tourism is also important to Huron County with bay front and lakefront towns such as Sebewaing Caseville Port Austin Port Hope and Harbor Beach attracting tourists from all over Huron County borders Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron There are two state parks Sleeper State Park and Port Crescent State Park Three roadside parks Jenks Park Brown Park and White Rock Park Also Huron County maintains nine county parks along the shoreline which are Caseville Park Lighthouse Park Stafford Park McGraw Park Philp Park Port Austin Bird Creek Park Wagener Park Oak Beach Park and Sebewaing Park The county seat is Bad Axe located in the center of the county Lapeer edit The origin of the name of the county is often disputed but it may have derived from the French words la pierre meaning the stone This name could be a reference to the rounded stones or flint pebbles found in the rivers and streams throughout the area Another theory is that it may be an English variation of Le Pays Plat meaning the flat land which is one of the original names given to the area by the French and can be found on many early fur trader maps of the area The idea is that Le Pays may have evolved into the current pronunciation Lapeer Lapeer County is in many ways different from the other counties of the Thumb First it is heavily influenced by its proximity to Flint and Detroit so as a result its economy depends more heavily on manufacturing than the other counties of the region Second although agriculture is still a key economic factor in Lapeer County it is not as important to the economy as in the other counties Although there are still a few large scale farms located in the county the numbers are not found to the same extent and these days most farming in Lapeer now takes place on smaller independent farms which usually supply the local markets only Lastly in addition to its economic and agricultural differences Lapeer County s geography is very different from the other counties of the Thumb Its topography is generally gently rolling to quite hilly and unlike its neighbors which are flatter and border on Lake Huron or Lake St Clair Lapeer County is landlocked The county still has hundreds of acres of inland lakes such as Barnes Lake Miller Lake Lake Neppessing the Holloway Reservoir Big Fish Lake and Lake Metamora and several state recreation areas including the Ortonville Recreation Area and the Metamora Hadley Recreation Area which still bring in many campers and tourists Sanilac edit Sanilac County has the largest area of land in the Thumb Like other counties Sanilac has fertile and flat land great for growing crops Towns like Lexington and Port Sanilac bring in many tourists from the Detroit Area Sandusky is the county seat and largest city St Clair edit St Clair County has the largest population in the Thumb and is considered part of the Metro Detroit MSA Many residents farther north in the Thumb especially Sanilac County travel to Port Huron for shopping and work It is the farthest county to the east in Michigan and most of the eastern border is the St Clair River which separates Michigan from Ontario For the most part St Clair County is flat with an agricultural economy dominating in the north and west in the 19th century agriculture and lumbering were important east to the St Clair River Sugar beets were cultivated and annual festivals were held at harvest time In addition many farms had mixed agriculture There are steep hills and small canyons near the Black River Since the mid 20th century manufacturing had dominated in and around Port Huron Tuscola edit Like Huron County Tuscola is mostly dependent on agriculture Industries such as sugar refining and ethanol processing as well as growing various grains and beans make up most of the economy Caro one of the largest cities in the Thumb the largest if you exclude St Clair and Lapeer counties is named after Cairo Egypt and is the county seat Tuscola County only has 18 miles 29 km of shoreline along Saginaw Bay so it is not as dependent on tourism as the other counties in the area Tuscola County is economically tied to the surrounding region as well as to the Saginaw Bay City and Flint areas Borderline regions editThe boundaries of what is included in the Thumb are often debated but nearly all definitions include Huron Sanilac and Tuscola counties known as the tri county region Disputed areas include St Clair County especially the southern portion as the county is now classified as part of Metro Detroit by the Census Bureau Lapeer County Richmond and northern Macomb County Genesee CountyBlue Water Area editThe Blue Water Area is another term describing the Thumb of Michigan The term usually applies to St Clair County and surrounding areas The title is also extended to include all of Michigan s Thumb The name refers to the county being bordered by water on the east is the St Clair River connecting Lake Huron to the north to Lake St Clair Below that is the Detroit River The namesake Blue Water Bridge spans the St Clair River connecting Port Huron to Sarnia Ontario A similar name Blue Water Country is used to describe the same region on the Canadian side Discover the Blue edit Discover the Blue is a promotion by the Blue Water Area Convention and Visitor s Bureau 39 It is designed to attract visitors to the shoreline of eastern Michigan Communities participating in Discover the Blue include Algonac in St Clair County at the southern end of the Thumb and others to the north such as Port Austin at the tip of the Thumb Geography editLand features edit See also List of Michigan state parks and geography of Michigan The Thumb s landscape ranges from a flat sandy plain along the shores of Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay to a gently rolling topography This land is fertile and well suited for agriculture The most unusual geographic formation is a rugged glacial moraine known collectively as the Hadley Hills which extends in a northeasterly direction through the center of the Thumb from the southwestern portion of the peninsula All counties except for Lapeer border Saginaw Bay or Lake Huron The places with the highest elevation are all associated with the Hadley Hills and are located in Lapeer County They are Pinnacle Point at 1 262 feet 385 m and Kerr Cemetery Hill at 1 258 feet 383 m both in Hadley Township Mount Christie at 1 251 feet 381 m in Metamora Township and a point near Mayville reaching up to 1 050 feet 320 m above sea level The lowest point in the Thumb region is the shore of Lake St Clair at a low of 574 feet 175 m above sea level Huron County is very flat It has large fields that were used for agriculture and now are the sites of numerous wind turbines to generate electricity The tip of the Thumb is Pointe Aux Barques between Port Austin and Grindstone City Marlette is called the heart of the Thumb because of its central position on the peninsula Major rivers edit The Thumb has many waterways The Cass River has many branches one of which flows into the Shiawassee River in the Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge at 43 22 42 N 83 59 04 W 43 37833 N 83 98444 W 43 37833 83 98444 less than 1 mile 2 km from where the Shiawassee merges with the Tittabawassee River to form the Saginaw River The Pinnebog Shebahyonk and Pigeon rivers all rise in the center of Huron County and empty into Saginaw Bay The St Clair River connects Lake Huron to Lake St Clair and is the farthest east border in Michigan It forms a low impression in eastern St Clair County and has a delta at its mouth North America s largest freshwater delta which includes Harsens Island and Walpole Island Ontario Ferries cross the river at Algonac and Marine City these being international border crossings The Black River rises near Minden City and flows into the St Clair River at Port Huron The Black River forms a basin in Sanilac County and northern St Clair County The north branch of the Flint River lies in northern Lapeer County It rises near North Branch The southern branch flows through the central and southern portion of Lapeer County originates in Brandon Atlas Hadley and Metamora townships before merging with the North Branch just north of the Holloway Reservoir History and local culture edit nbsp Map of the Surveyed Part of the Territory of Michigan by Orange Risdon 1825 showing an early larger incarnation of Sanilac County most of which had not yet been surveyedSee also Timeline of Michigan history Culture edit Since the late 18th century ethnic European Americans have displaced the Native American tribes that historically occupied this territory Since the early 20th century they have dominated the population and culture of the Thumb The French were the first Europeans to arrive and thus influenced much of the early culture They were mostly engaged in the fur trading and lumber industries and had relatively few settlers After the British won the French and Indian War they took over this former French territory Many of these new settlers were sent into the area by the British from Canada in an effort to establish their dominance over the Great Lakes In 1783 control of the Thumb was officially transferred to the newly formed United States after the American Revolution and by the Treaty of Paris The British were a dominant influence until after the War of 1812 when the northern border was firmly defined and this area came under US control The US organized the Northwest Territory and American settlement of Michigan and the Thumb was well underway by the mid 19th century Construction of the Erie Canal through Central New York created stronger connections with the port of New York and eastern markets Settlers migrated west from New York and New England into Ohio and Michigan seeking new territory As a result of this history the land was settled primarily by people of ethnic English and Scots Irish descent many arrived from Canada Other settlers of the same ancestry migrated from eastern states such as New York and Pennsylvania as well as from New England Immigration from the British Isles took place through the century and later 19th and 20th century residents included Polish and German immigrants who migrated from Europe through the Detroit area Many of the customs much of the regional lifestyle and even the local accent strongly reflect these origins Some local radio stations have featured polka shows and various ethnic festivals such as the Polkafest in Kinde are representative of Eastern European cultures In the early years Europeans encountered and traded with people of the Fox and Sauk tribes already living in the area for centuries There may have also been other tribes in the area such as the Potawatomi Ojibwe and Kickapoo but they would have been transient tribes or found in very small numbers All native Thumb area tribes are members of the Algonquian peoples a large language family Other tribes who migrated later into the area included the Wyandot Huron an Iroquoian language speaking people and the Ottawa The displacement of native peoples took place in many areas during the settling of North America Historical events edit The Port Huron area is one of oldest European settlements in the state of Michigan first settled by French colonists Colonial era forts such as Fort Gratiot north of Port Huron and Fort Sinclair near present day St Clair were built along the St Clair River Bad Axe was named so because Captain Rudolph Papst found an old axe in 1861 when he was clearing land for the present day Huron County seat The great Thumb Fire took place on September 5 1881 in the Thumb area of Michigan The fire which burned over a million acres 4 000 km2 in less than a day was the consequence of drought hurricane force winds heat the after effects of the Port Huron Fire of 1871 and the ecological damage wrought by the era s logging techniques of clear cutting forests The Great Lakes Storm of 1913 was a November blizzard with hurricane force winds it devastated the Great Lakes Basin in the United States Midwest and the Canadian province of Ontario The storm also battered and overturned large ships on four of the five Great Lakes particularly Lake Huron Notable people by town editMore comprehensive lists are available at individual cities villages etc See local towns of interest at the bottom of the page for links Brown City edit Robert Teet Wrestler authorCass City edit Brewster H Shaw retired United States Air Force colonel and former NASA astronaut Deckerville edit Gabriel Rheaume Writer The Shores We WalkHarbor Beach edit Frank Murphy Detroit mayor Michigan governor U S Attorney General and Justice of the United States Supreme Court Lapeer edit Marguerite de Angeli children s book author Newbery Award winner Danelle Gay Miss Michigan USA 2006 Terry Knight singer DJ manager Terry Knight and the Pack Grand Funk Railroad Jake Long offensive lineman Miami Dolphins Terry Nichols accomplice in the Oklahoma City bombing Jim Slater hockey player Atlanta ThrashersPort Huron edit Thomas Edison Inventor and entrepreneur settled in Port Huron from 1854 to 1863 Obadiah Gardner born in Port Huron he moved to Maine as a child where he lived and worked for the rest of his life being elected as US Senator from Maine Terry McMillan Award winning author of novels Waiting to Exhale and How Stella Got Her Groove BackLocal elected officials edit nbsp Congressional District 10 served by Republican Paul MitchellLocal politicians in Washington and Lansing are listed below United States Congress edit District 9 Northern Macomb and all of St Clair Lapeer Sanilac Huron and Tuscola counties Lisa McClain RepublicanDistrict 8 Saginaw Bay City Area and all of Genesee County Dan Kildee DemocratMichigan House edit 32nd District Northern Macomb and six townships in St Clair County Pamela Hornberger Republican81st District Most of St Clair County except Port Huron Gary Eisen Republican82nd District All of Lapeer County Gary Howell Republican83rd District City of Port Huron the Townships of Fort Gratiot and Burtchville and all of Sanilac County Andrew Beeler Republican84th District All of Huron and Tuscola counties Phil Green RepublicanMichigan Senate edit 25th District All of Huron St Clair and Sanilac counties and the Cities of Memphis New Baltimore and Richmond and the Townships of Armada and Richmond in Macomb County Dan Lauwers Republican31st District All of Bay Lapeer and Tuscola counties Kevin Daley RepublicanColleges and universities editSt Clair County Community College with the main campus in Port Huron and learning centers in Huron Sanilac and Lapeer counties Baker College with a campus in Cass City Sandusky and Port Huron University of Michigan Flint Saginaw Valley State University and Delta College while not in the Thumb are universities and colleges that attract many residents from the Thumb Museums editSee also List of museums in Michigan Harbor Beach edit Frank Murphy Memorial Museum and home 40 Grice House Museum Harbor Beach 41 Marysville edit Marysville Historical Museum Marysville Wills Ste Claire Auto Museum MarysvillePort Huron edit nbsp Huron Light Ship Museum in the St Clair River Port Huron MichiganPort Huron Museum a series of five museums Port Huron 42 Carnegie Center Port Huron Huron Lightship Port Huron Thomas Edison Depot Museum Port Huron USCGC Bramble WLB 392 Port Huron Fort Gratiot Lighthouse Port HuronElsewhere in the Thumb edit Sanilac County Historical Museum Port Sanilac Bad Axe Historical Society Museum Bad Axe Capac Historical Museum Capac Pointe aux Barques Lighthouse near Port Hope St Clair County Farm Museum Goodells Port Austin History Center Port AustinMedia editRadio edit The Thumb Area Radio Region is an unranked market that is influenced by Detroit Radio Market the Tri Cities Radio Market and the Flint Market with stations in Port Huron and Sarnia Ontario also serving the region Local radio stations in the Thumb area Newspapers edit The Huron Daily Tribune 43 is a daily newspaper serving the Upper Thumb Area of Michigan which includes all of Huron and portions of Tuscola counties The Times Herald 44 is a daily newspaper headquartered in Port Huron and distributed in St Clair and Sanilac counties It is owned by the Gannett Company Daily editions of the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News are available throughout the area The Bay City Times 45 and Saginaw News 46 are available in northern and western portions of the area while the Flint Journal is available in Lapeer County Huron County newspapersHarbor Beach Times Huron County Press Huron Daily Tribune 43 The News Weekly The Lakeshore Guardian Thumb Blanket Lapeer County newspapersBuyer s Guide The County Press 47 LA View Webco Press Sanilac County newspapersBrown City Banner Buyers Guide Camden Publications Deckerville Recorder Marlette Leader Sandusky Tribune Sanilac County News 48 St Clair County newspapersBlue Water Shopper Port Huron Times Herald 44 The Thumb Print News The Voice The Yale Expositor Tuscola County NewspapersTuscola County Advertiser 49 Cass City Chronicle Cass River Trader Reese Reporter Vassar Pioneer Times Mayville Monitor Broadcast television edit The Lapeer County St Clair County and Sanilac County area lies in the Detroit Television Market The far northern and western areas lie inside the Flint Tri Cities Television Market The only broadcast TV station licensed to the Thumb region is WDCQ TV the PBS station licensed to Bad Axe Flint Tri CitiesWSMH Fox 66 WEYI TV NBC CW 25 WJRT TV ABC 12 WNEM TV CBS MyTV 5 WDCQ TV PBS 19 Sarnia Windsor OntarioCBET DT CBC 9 CIII DT Global 22 29 CICO DT TVO 32 59 CKCO TV CTV 42 Detroit areaWJBK Fox 2 WDIV TV NBC 4 WXYZ TV ABC 7 WWJ TV CBS 62 WTVS PBS 56 WKBD CW50 WMYD MyTV 20 WADL independent 38 Alpena areaWBKB TV CBS ABC Fox MyTV 11Transportation edit nbsp Port Huron s two Blue Water Bridges taken during the Port Huron to Mackinac Yacht RaceBorders edit The border between Port Huron Michigan and Sarnia Ontario is one of the busiest connections between Canada and the US Crossings include the two Blue Water Bridges and the two St Clair River Railway Tunnels Ferries also connect to Canada at Marine City and Algonac Major highways edit organized by numbers nbsp I 69 begins at the Blue Water Bridge proceeds west through Flint then Lansing and then turns south to Angola Indiana nbsp I 94 has its eastern terminus at the U S side of the Blue Water Bridge in Port Huron at the Sarnia Ontario Canada border where together with I 69 it meets Ontario Highway 402 nbsp M 15 nbsp M 19 nbsp M 24 nbsp M 25 is a highway of an arc like shape closely following the outline of the Thumb along the Lake Huron Saginaw Bay shoreline between Port Huron and Bay City It is generally a scenic drive nbsp M 29 nbsp M 46 is a cross peninsular road running across the mitten and the Thumb from Port Sanilac on the Lake Huron shore through Saginaw near Saginaw Bay and then on to Muskegon on the Lake Michigan shore 50 This east west surface route nearly bisects the Lower Peninsula of Michigan latitudinally nbsp M 53 Van Dyke Road is a gateway route to the Thumb of Michigan carrying vacationers to the resorts and cottages on Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron in the vicinity of Caseville and Port Austin It goes up the middle of the Thumb and directly connects in Macomb County to the M 53 expressway It is an important route for agricultural and manufactured goods nbsp M 81 nbsp M 90 nbsp M 136 nbsp M 138 nbsp M 142Rail edit Main article Michigan Services Area Amtrak stations are in Lapeer Port Huron and Flint Local railroads are the Grand Trunk Western Railroad CSX Transportation Canadian National Railway and the Huron and Eastern Railway Pere Marquette Railway was a railroad that had lines throughout the Thumb its lines are now either abandoned or in use by CSX or Huron and Eastern Major railroad centers are Vassar Bad Axe and Port Huron Transit edit Blue Water Area Transit serves the city of Port Huron and surrounding areas Airports edit The only international airport in the Thumb is St Clair County International Airport about 6 miles 9 7 km outside Port Huron City airports include Caro Municipal Dupont Lapeer Airport Huron County Memorial Airport Marine City Airport Marlette Municipal Sandusky City and Yale Airport Scheduled airline service is available from MBS International Airport 51 in Freeland and Flint Bishop International Airport 52 While neither of these airports is in the Thumb both are relatively close by Area codes editArea code 989 covers about half of the Thumb Huron Tuscola and far northern Sanilac County and the Marlette area The Thumb s other half is covered by area code 810 which takes in most of Sanilac Lapeer Genesee and Saint Clair counties All of Macomb County is served by area code 586 as is a small part of south western Saint Clair County See also edit nbsp Michigan portalState edit MichiganRegional edit Flint Tri Cities and Tri Cities Lake Huron Metro DetroitCounties edit List of counties in MichiganCities and villages edit Akron Tuscola Algonac St Clair Applegate Sanilac Almont Lapeer Armada Macomb Bad Axe Huron Brown City Sanilac Lapeer Capac St Clair Caro Tuscola Carsonville Sanilac Caseville Huron Cass City Tuscola Clifford Lapeer Columbiaville Lapeer Croswell Sanilac Deckerville Sanilac Dryden Lapeer Elkton Huron Emmett St Clair Fairgrove Tuscola Forestville Sanilac Gagetown Tuscola Harbor Beach Huron Imlay City Lapeer Kinde Huron Kingston Tuscola Lapeer Lapeer Lexington Sanilac Marine City St Clair Marlette Sanilac Marysville St Clair Mayville Tuscola Melvin Sanilac Memphis St Clair Macomb Metamora Lapeer Millington Tuscola Minden City Sanilac North Branch Lapeer Otter Lake Lapeer Genesee Owendale Huron Peck Sanilac Pigeon Huron Port Austin Huron Port Hope Huron Port Huron St Clair Port Sanilac Sanilac Reese Tuscola Saginaw Richmond Macomb St Clair Romeo Macomb Sandusky Sanilac Sebewaing Huron St Clair St Clair Ubly Huron Unionville Tuscola Vassar Tuscola Yale St Clair Notes edit Saginaw Valley Dry Bean and Sugar Beet Research Farm Archived 2009 03 28 at the Wayback Machine Michigan State University Co Op Elevator Co Archived from the original on 2007 12 01 Retrieved 2008 02 07 Macraes Blue Book Mueller Industries Motherson Sumi Systems Our History P J Wallbank Springs Inc Spring Pack Manufacturing Port Huron IAC Group About IAC Michigan Sugar Company Domtar Port Huron mill expected to close next year Dunn Paper Dunn to Perfection Archived from the original on 2018 06 15 Retrieved 2018 06 15 About Keihin Michigan Manufacturing Archived from the original on 2011 08 14 Retrieved 17 January 2012 Capac manufacturing facility slated to close Macraes Blue Book Star of the West Milling Co Archived from the original on 2007 10 07 Retrieved 2008 02 07 Eastern Michigan Grain Huron Castings Pigeon Telephone Company AVCI Thumb Cellular 1 Next Michigan Development Corporation http i 69internationaltradecorridor com about International Trade Corridor Tip of The Thumb Heritage Water Trail Bad Axe Historical Society origin of Bad Axe s name The Huron County Nature Center Huron Nature Center Kernan Memorial Nature Sanctuary permanent dead link Michigan Bean Soup recipe and history the Honorable and Mrs John D Rockefeller IV U S Senator Rasmus Hanson biography Archived from the original on 2009 01 07 Great Lakes Circle Tour Archived from the original on 2010 07 25 Blue Water Ramble Clinton River Riders Port Huron to Mackinaw Island Sailboat Race Family Night Flickr Photo Sharing 10 July 2008 Port Huron to Mackinac Island Michigan Yacht Race byc com Archived from the original on 2009 04 10 Retrieved 2009 03 29 Morris Julie The Port Huron to Mackinac race May 1 2001 Detroit News Cheesburger in Caseville at Archived 2012 03 14 at the Wayback Machine Pure Michigan Campbell Ron August 13 2010 Cheeseburger in Caseville festival turns town into Fun wacky tasteful and tacky place Archived March 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bay City Times hostmaster 10 October 2016 Welcome To Pure Michigan Michigan Archived from the original on 25 January 2017 Farmer s Festival Archived from the original on 2011 08 28 Retrieved 2011 12 29 Michigan Bean Commission michiganbean org Archived from the original on 2009 03 28 Retrieved 2009 03 29 Blue Water Area Convention and Visitor s Bureau Harbor Beach attractions Archived from the original on 2008 01 14 Harbor Beach Yesterday and Today Compiled by the Harbor Beach Woman s Club First Printing 1976 Revised Edition 1996 Port Huron Museum a b Huron Daily Tribune michigansthumb com Huron Daily Tribune a b Port Huron Home The Times Herald Bay City Times Saginaw News Front Page February 3 2016 thecountypress mihomepaper com The County Press Front Page February 3 2016 sanilaccountynews mihomepaper com The Sanilac County News Tuscola County Advertiser Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868Tuscola County Advertiser Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868 Tuscola County Advertiser Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868 Tuscola County Advertiser Serving Eastern Michigan since 1868 Garnell Dan M 46 Michigan Highway Ends Archived from the original on 2005 04 14 MBS International Airport Flint Bishop International Airport Further reading editAckerman Emma J Thumb Fires of 1871 and 1881 CMU Term Paper 1968 DuMond Neva Thumb diggings adventures into Michigan s Thumb area Lexington Mich 1962 The Great Fire of 1881 A Collection of Stories Caro MI Tuscola County Advertiser 1981 Hatt R T The petroglyphs by D J Richards An archeological survey of the petroglyph site by M Papworth republished from the Michigan archeologist Dec 1957 The Sanilac petroglyphs Bloomfield Hills Michigan Cranbrook Institute of Science 1958 House Party Reminiscences by Traditional Musicians and Square Dance Callers in Michigan s Thumb Area Port Huron MI Museum of Arts and History 1982 Schultz Gerard A History of Michigan s Thumb Smith Dee Treks into the Past Historical Sketches of Michigan s Thumb Decatur MI Heritage Valley Publishing 1989 Southgate Jerry D Thumb s Forest Fire of 1881 Central Michigan University Term Paper 1967 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Thumb Great Lakes Coast Watch Seeing the Light Terry Pepper on lighthouses of the Western Great Lakes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Thumb amp oldid 1171553305, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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