Keweenaw National Historical Park

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Keweenaw National Historical Park
Keweenaw National Historical Park
Location: Upper Peninsula, Michigan, USA
Nearest city: Calumet, Michigan
Area: 1,869 acres (7.56 km²)
Established: October 27, 1992
Total Visitation: Not available (in 2005)
Governing body: National Park Service in cooperation with other private and non-profit organizations.

Keweenaw National Historical Park is a unit of the U.S. National Park Service. Established in 1992, the park celebrates the life and history of the Keweenaw Peninsula in the Upper Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. As of 2006, it is a partly privatized park made up of two primary units, the Calumet Unit and the Quincy Unit, and 16 cooperating "Heritage Sites" located on federal, state, and privately owned land in and around the Keweenaw Peninsula. The National Park Service owns approximately 1,700 acres (6.8 km²) in the Calumet and Quincy Units.

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The Keweenaw Peninsula is the site of the most extensive known deposits of native copper in the world. Occurring here in relatively pure form, the red metal could be broken out of the rock and worked to make a wide variety of products, from jewelry and tools by its earliest miners to coins and electric wire by its final generations. Keweenaw copper was mined for approximately 7,000 years, from 5000 BCE until 1968. During the period for which records were kept, 1840-1968, more than 11 billion pounds (5 billion kg) of copper were mined here. During the peak production years of World War I, 1916-1917, the annual copper yield reached a maximum of 270 million pounds (125 million kg).

Hanka Homestead
Hanka Homestead

Two ethnic groups, the Cornish and the Finns, are especially important in the heritage of the Keweenaw National Historical Park. When news of the region's rich native copper was first widely published in the 1830s, many families from the English county of Cornwall immigrated to the Upper Peninsula, bringing the Cornish pasty and their region's knowledge of hard-rock mining with them. Several park Heritage Sites, including the log cabin village of "Old Victoria," recall Cornish heritage in the region.

Later in the 1800s, many families from Finland emigrated to the United States. Until 1918, Finland was a colony of Russia. A large percentage of these Finns settled in the Western Upper Peninsula because of perceived similiaries between their old and new homes, and found work in the Keweenaw. Finnish saunas can still be found throughout the area. Several park Heritage Sites, including the "Hanka Homestead", recall the Finnish influx.

The Calumet Unit of the Keweenaw National Historical Park includes many sites in and around the villages of Calumet and Laurium, which are not ghost towns but operating human communities that have survived the shutdown of their parent employer, the Calumet & Hecla mine, in 1968. By digging shafts into the rock, the men and owners of the Calumet & Hecla found geological formations of rock laced with nuggets of almost pure copper.

The Calumet & Hecla was the richest of the separate copper mines of the Keweenaw, and the towns built at the mine head reflect its productivity. A 1,200-seat opera house, huge churches built of Lake Superior brownstone, and mansions built by the mining bosses survive as memories of the Calumet mine's glory years.

Quincy Unit, Keweenaw National Historical Park
Quincy Unit, Keweenaw National Historical Park

The Quincy Unit of the Keweenaw National Historical Park commemorates one of the most remarkable feats of engineering in northern Michigan, the 9,000-foot-deep (2,700 m) Quincy Mine shaft. Nicknamed "Old Reliable" for its record of paying annual dividends for decades, the Quincy mine enjoyed a position on some of the same rich copper rock as the Calumet & Hecla. A private preservation foundation maintains the Quincy Mine's surface steam hoist, one of the largest in the world.

As of 2006, the Keweenaw National Historic Park operated in cooperation with the following 16 cooperating heritage sites:


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