Rice Memorial Clinic |
Buildings, Commercial Buildings, Hospitals, , |
[Photograph of the Rice Memorial Clinic, Copper Country Mental Health Center.]
Scanned: March 30, 2012 |
|
Sandy's in Liminga |
Buildings, , |
"Sandy" of Liminga was Sam Lahti who purchased this building which was built in 1928 as a Temperance Hall. Sandy built a ramp and serviced his own car first, then added on to the hall and later added a storage area. In 1950 he added the store. During the Great Depression, he went into the auto-truck dealership, later selling out to Don Jutunen in 1967. Roy Koskela opened for business in August of 1978. The building burned down on January 25, 1979.
Scanned: August 27, 2013 |
|
Sandy' General Store Sign |
Buildings, Buildings, Commercial Buildings, |
Sandy's General Store - beer, wine, grocieries, gas, oil, expert motor repair, used cars, information.
Scanned: September 6, 2013 |
|
Stanton Township Hall |
Buildings, Buildings, Public Buildings, |
Stanton Township Hall. [Located on Liminga Road in Atlantic Mine, Michigan.]
Scanned: September 6, 2013 |
|
Stanton Township - Building |
Buildings, Buildings, Commercial Buildings, |
Stanton Township - Building.
Scanned: September 6, 2013 |
|
Say Pasty |
Buildings, Public Buildings, Education, Education, Elementary, Persons |
Teacher Eva Eilola poses her pupils - school mascot at their feet - in front of the Heinola School on Rauhala Road in Stanton Township in 1919.
Scanned: September 6, 2013 |
|
Hay Truck |
Transportation, Roads, Agriculture, |
[Round bails being transported by a large truck.]
Scanned: September 9, 2013 |
|
Earle B Holman School |
Education, Buildings, |
[Earle B Holman School in Stanton Township.]
Scanned: September 9, 2013 |
|
Eagle River |
Transportation, Buildings, Dwellings, |
This is a general scene of Eagle River with the old warehouse and three of the main buildings. Courtesy of the Daily Mining Gazette, Houghton, Michigan.
Scanned: June 29, 2012 |
|
The Eagle River Lighthouse |
Aids to Navigation, Lighthousers, Historic Sites, |
The Eagle River Lighthouse around 1900. Courtesy of Terry Pepper of Roanoke, Indiana. By 1890, virtually the only vessel making its way into the decaying Eagle Harbor was the lighthouse tender on its annual suply trips. In its 1892 annual report, the Lighthouse Board noted that traffic patterns on the lake had changed, and that eastbound vessels were making a turn off Sand hills, some even miles to the west of Eagle River, and approximately midway between the coast lights of Ontonagon and Eagle Harbor. With the treacherous Sawtooth reef located just offshore at this point, the Board recommended to Congress that $20,000 be appropriated to decommission the light at Eagle River, and construct a new coast light at Sand Hills.
Scanned: June 29, 2012 |
|