A
Historic Treasure Preserved
Perhaps the most noticeable first impression visitors
get of Mackinac Island is the absence of automobiles! Visitors and residents
travel by foot, bicycle or horse
drawn carriage. This tempo is more comparable to the 19th century.
Tour carriages and taxis will take you wherever you want to go and it's
not long before you adjust to a slower pace most visitors have never known.
With over 80% of Mackinac Island in public hands you would expect little
development and, fortunately, that's true. Concerned with the disappearance
of America's finest natural treasures, Congress took steps in the early
1870s to ensure that some of these treasures would be preserved for posterity.
In 1872 the federal government designated Yellowstone America's first
national park. In 1875 portions
of federal land on popular Mackinac Island were given similar protection.
Other than issuing a small number of land leases for the sites of bluff
cottages, all development was stopped. This ensured the preservation of
most of the natural limestone formations such as Skull
Cave, Arch
Rock and Sugar
Loaf. Twenty years later, when the last U.S. army soldiers left Fort
Mackinac, all federal land, including the fort, became Michigan's first
state park. The newly appointed Park Commission limited all private development
in the park and required leaseholders to maintain the distinctive Victorian
architecture of their bluff cottages. In recent years the historical sites
and fort buildings such as the Officers'
Stone Quarters have been restored to their original condition and
brought to life through dioramas, period settings, guided tours and reenactments
for the benefit of the thousands of summer visitors.
When the Park Commission purchased a Victorian cottage near Fort Mackinac
in 1945 and designated it the Governor's
Summer Residence, it ensured politicians would beat a path to its
door. John Kennedy rocked on the porch with Governor G. Mennen Williams
in 1960 and won his important support for the Democratic nomination that
year. More recently Bill Clinton, Newt Gingrich and Bob Dole conferred
with state politicians here.

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