440 likes | 554 Views
Michigan’s Forests Topic 1104. History of Logging in Michigan Mr. Christensen. Today’s Objectives. Identify characteristics of Michigan’s pre-settlement forests Identify individuals and events that impacted Michigan’s forests Describe Michigan’s Logging era and its aftermath
E N D
Michigan’s ForestsTopic 1104 History of Logging in Michigan Mr. Christensen
Today’s Objectives • Identify characteristics of Michigan’s pre-settlement forests • Identify individuals and events that impacted Michigan’s forests • Describe Michigan’s Logging era and its aftermath • Describe Michigan’s forests today, their economic impact, and how they are managed
The Forests of Michigan in 1840 From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Michigan’s Logging Era • 1840’s NewYork’s Forests cannot meet demand • From 1869 to 1900 Michigan is NO. 1 in logging • Michigan’s lumber value exceeds the value of the California gold rush by 1 Billion $ • 160 Billion Board Feet (four foot by eight foot stack five times to the moon and back)
Michigan in 1840 From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Michigan Logging • THE TARGET Cork Pine 300 years old 200 feet tall and 5 to 7 feet in diameter • Land is $1.25/acre • 1862--Homestead Act—160 acres • Surveyors • Timber Cruisers—look for Pine Groves
Logging Camps • Two foremen and seventy men • 20 teams of horses • 7 yoke of oxen • Cold Weather Job—ice roads • 4:00 AM until Dusk • Choppers/Sawyers/River Hogs/Boomers and Jam Crackers
Shanty Boys From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Choppers From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Skidders From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Logging in Winter From Michigan History Magazine at: http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/extra/logging/
Big Wheels invented by Silas Overpack in 1776 Silas Overpack From Michigan History Magazine at: http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/extra/logging/
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From the Mihcigan Forests Forever Teachers Guide website at http://www.dsisd.k12.mi.us/mff/
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Gabriel Horn From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Log Marks Log Marks 1842 • Log Piracy • Assist in sorting process From Michigan History Magazine at: http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/extra/logging/
Boomers From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Log Jam job for the Jam Crackers From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Log Jam on the Grand River in 1883 Jam Crackers would dynamite the log jams to break them up From Michigan History Magazine at : http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/extra/logging/
Narrow Gage Railways Introduced by Winfield Scott Gerrish in 1776 From Michigan History Magazine at: http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/extra/logging/
Sawmill at Menominee (1832) From Michigan History Magazine at: http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/extra/logging/
From the Mihcigan Forests Forever Teachers Guide website at http://www.dsisd.k12.mi.us/mff/
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies —http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Michigan 1840 p From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Results of Logging • Lumber Barons—men who made their fortunes in logging • Stumps were cleared and farming began • Massive fires in the debris and underbrush in 1871(Manistee/Saginaw 2 million acres), 1881(thumb 280 dead) and 1908 2 million acres • Erosion
From the Mihcigan Forests Forever Teachers Guide website at http://www.dsisd.k12.mi.us/mff/
From:Michigan EPIC Center for Michigan History Studies http://michiganepic.org/lumbering/LumberingBriefHistory.html
Return of Michigan’s Forests • Conservation Movement Teddy Roosevelt, Gifford Pinchot and John Muir • 1895 First State Park (Mackinac Island) • 1900 First State Forests (Roscommon & Crawford Counties • Great Depression—Land Abandoned—Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) 1933
Michigan 50 Camps Planted 500 million trees Fought Fires Built 7,000 miles of road Improved Streams Stocked Lakes with 150 million fish Build Seney Wildlife Refuge
State Forest System Four Million Acres 20% of Michigan’s Forests 2nd largest state forest system National Forests 2.6 Million Acres Threats Intensive browsing of deer Forest ownership/parcelization
Michigan’s Forests Today • 11.5 Billion Trees, more are added each year, they cover 53% of Michigan • Trees are smaller, fewer pine, tamarack and hemlock more aspens, red maple and paper birch. • Tallest tree—white pine 201 feet in (Marquette County) and largest tree Black Willow (Grand Traverse County)
Michigan’s Forest Industry Today • Forestry is a 12 Billion $ industry plus 3+ billion $ from forest based recreation • Forest industry provides 200,000 jobs and over 1.3 billion board feet of lumber annually • Highly mechanized forest harvest and replanting