
Biography - Margaret Mabelle Kariean |
Persons, Manners and Customs, Clothing and Dress, Woody Plants, Trees |
Mrs. Kariean displays the results of a day in the field. She says that the blueberries are less plentiful this season than they were last year. [Mrs. Kariean holds a roasting pot full of blueberries. She holds a cigarette in one hand and her glasses in the other. See comment section for story.]
Scanned: April 15, 2008 |
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Logging |
Persons, Woody Plants, Trees, Transportation |
William Emery logs in the vicinity of the Pinery. He consistently uses a horse to haul the pulp to central areas from which it is taken to the L'Anse Celotex plant to be manufactured into paper. The area here is thickly wooded and looks to the north and east into the environs of the Huron Mountain country. Other than the Porkies, this region is one of the few in the Upper Peninsula still conceived to be considerably untouched from the point of view of stone or metallic wealth. [Mr. Emery takes a rest on some of the logs that he has harvested.]
Scanned: March 10, 2009 |
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Keweenaw Point Rocket Launch |
Persons, Woody Plants, Trees, Transportation, Automotive |
All was not work at the chilly Keweenaw Point rocket center. Here, from left, Lenard Williams and Mike Brian stop for a coffee brew. Lenard is a native of Tennessee while Mike, born in England, was very interested in the Cousin Jack phases of Keweenaw County. The truck is on loan from the U.S. Army at the Michigan Tech Keweenaw Field Station, Franklin Township location. [The two men take time out for a pot of coffee in a wooded area.]
Scanned: March 5, 2009 |
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Diamond Drilling |
Persons, Miners, Woody Plants, Trees |
The first necessary item to be given attention in diamond drilling back in 1915 was the installation of the boiler. Here a group of drillers are assembled in the foothills of the Porcupine Mountains of Ontonagon County preparatory to diamond drilling for the Cole and McDonald Co. of Virginia, Minn. Hurontown's Walter Harvey indicates that the drilling was for the White Pine Co. It is known that the Extension sank a shaft in this area and it likely was this company and not the White Pine Co. which preceeded the current White Pine of Copper Range. [Image of two men standing next to the boiler which looks like it could belong to bootleggers of the prohobition era.]
Scanned: February 18, 2009 |
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Diamond Drilling |
Persons, Miners, Woody Plants, Trees |
The White Pine Extension came to an abrupt end in 1918 although it was admitted that there was copper in the area but not of the type usually desired at the time, native. Hurontown's Walter Harvey took these pictures as evidence of the days when the diamond drill operations were in effect. The land at present is not under the ownership of the Copper Range Co., which possesses considerable acreage in the White Pine regions of Ontonagon County. [Three of the miners stand in the doorway of a building resembling a shack.]
Scanned: February 19, 2009 |
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Forests - Estivant Pines |
Natural Resources, Forests and Forestry, Persons, Woody Plants, Trees |
The 200 acre stand of white pine forest, including the largest known tree of its kind in the State of Michigan , will be purchased this month by the Michigan Nature Association. The huge tree included in the area is 135 feet high and 23 1/2 feet in circumference. It is thought to be between 600 and 800 years old. [Three people look like miniatures of themselves next to the large pine.]
Scanned: February 10, 2009 |
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Eccentric Folks |
Woody Plants, Trees, Manners and Customs, Persons |
[Interesting group of men and women outside of a striped tent that has a sign which reads "Cock eye, Pork-a-pine, Parthridge Clerk.]
Scanned: October 8, 2013 |
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Lake Fanny Hooe |
Water, Lakes, Persons, Woody Plants, Trees |
View of Lake Fanny-Hooe - Copper Harbor
Scanned: June 15, 2009 |
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Waterfalls - Chocolay River |
Persons, Water, Rivers, Waterfalls, Woody Plants, Trees |
Falls on West Branch of Chocolay River [A man stands on a cliff near the falls.]
Scanned: June 22, 2009 |
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Memorial Union Building |
Buildings, Woody Plants, Trees, Persons |
The Memorial Building, opened on May 5, 1952 [A group of students stand outside the MUB (Michigan Tech Centennial Page 104)]
Scanned: April 15, 2008 |
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