Category: Picture of the Day

Picture of the Day for October 15, 2015

The Sand Point Lighthouse (also referred to as the Escanaba/Sand Point, Little Bay de Noc Light or the Escanaba Light as there is another Sand Point Lighthouse in Baraga) is a story-and-a-half rectangular building with an attached brick tower which faces land instead of the water and it is unknown if it was intentional or a blunder. The tower is topped with a cast iron lantern room which houses a fourth order Fresnel lens, emitting a fixed red light with a radiating power of 11.5 miles.

The light was lit for the first time on May 13, 1868, but not by John Terry, the appointed first keeper, but by Mary, his wife as John died a month before the lighthouse was ready. Mary Terry, who was one of the first women lighthouse keepers on the Great Lakes, continued to be the keeper for 18 years until March, 1886 when a suspicious fire severely damaged the building and killed the keeper Mary Terry. There is a certain amount of mystery about this fire as there were several unusual circumstances surrounding it. Many people thought that Mary Terry had been murdered, robbed, and the lighthouse set on fire. The south lighthouse door was open and the lock was found with the bolt shot forward as if the door had been forced open, not unlocked, and the fact that Mary was found in the oil room and not in her bedroom, led people to believe there was foul play although Mary’s gold coins were still in the building. A coroner’s jury ruling “that Mrs. Terry came to her death from causes and by means unknown, was the only one that could be rendered”.

But the death of Mary wasn’t the only incident at the Sand Point Lighthouse.  On July 6, 1906, eighteen-year-old Edith Rose was up in the lantern room polishing the lens when a lightning bolt hit the tower. The strike reportedly blew out all the windows in the lighthouse, demolished an organ, turned all the silverware in the lighthouse a deep brown, and ejected nails from the walls that burned holes in the carpets. Surprisingly, none of the three occupants of the lighthouse at the time were injured.

When Keeper Lewis Rose retired in 1913, Peter J. Peterson took charge at Escanaba, but just two months later he collapsed at the kitchen table and died while his wife was lighting the lamp. Mrs. Peterson was appointed temporary keeper, but not following Mary’s footsteps, Mrs. Peterson resigned shortly thereafter.

The lighthouse ceased operation in 1939 when the Coast Guard constructed an automated crib light several hundred feet offshore, which replaced the function and duties of the Sand Point Lighthouse and the building was used as housing for Coast Guard seaman who were assigned to duty in Escanaba, Michigan. In 1986, the Delta County Historical Society obtained a lease and went about the task re-furnished all the rooms in the lighthouse to appear as they would have at the turn of the twentieth century, including replacing part of the tower and lantern room which had been removed when the lighthouse was remodeled for living quarters, and opened the lighthouse to the public in July of 1990.

Sand Point Lighthouse

Sand Point Lighthouse

Picture of the Day for October 14, 2015

The only time I see a big body of water is on vacation, so I don’t get to see seagulls that often but I have noticed that if you want to see a lot of them at one time, you need to go to a harbor where fishing boats are as they wait for scraps. They ride the waves when floating on the water, perch on objects on land and even pick up a piece of 2×4 board to drop on my head as they fly over.

Feathers are very important to a bird so they spend lots of time caring for their feathers. Seagulls use their beaks and feet to clean and arrange their feathers as the preen. They have an uropygial gland (or preen gland) which produces an oil that waterproofs as well as conditions and improves flexibility of the feathers.

Seagull Preening

Seagull Preening

The video shows the seagull preening itself as the waves crash on the rock below.

 

 

Picture of the Day for October 13, 2015

Few waterfalls actually fall directly into Lake Superior but instead drop in elevation just before reaching its destination. But there are some which do, like Spray Falls in the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, which drops 70 feet directly into Lake Superior. You can’t hike around behind the falls since the cliff hasn’t been cut back into the rock and the lake it too chilly for swimming but the best views of the falls are from the lake.

Spray Falls

Spray Falls

Picture of the Day for October 12, 2015

Fayette Brown, of the The Jackson Iron Company, chose Lake Michigan’s Garden Peninsula at Snail Shell Harbor to establish a blast furnace close to mining, where the ore could be smelted into pig iron before being shipped to steel manufacturers to reduce the shipping cost by hauling the refined iron instead of the ore. Fayette was once one of the Upper Peninsula’s most productive iron-smelting operations which was in operation from 1867 to 1891 and the two blast furnaces produced 225,000 tons of pig iron during those years.

Fayette’s Blast Furnaces

Fayette's Blast Furnaces

Picture of the Day for October 10, 2015

The Great Chicago Fire, burned from October 8 to October 10, 1871, and destroyed thousands of buildings, killed an estimated 300 people but a more deadly fire also happened on that October 8 further north in Wisconsin. The town of Peshtigo was wiped out by a firestorm with a wall of flames a mile high and five miles wide traveling at 100 miles per hours which was hot enough to turn sand into glass. With over 1,875 square miles consumed by the fire that caused the most deaths by fire in United States history, with estimated deaths of around 1,500 people, possibly as many as 2,500. An accurate death toll has never been determined because local records were destroyed in the fire.

Very little survived the fire, but Father Pernin grabbed the tabernacle from St. Mary’s Church and pushed the wagon into the river as he spent six hours in the water. The next day the priest didn’t know what became of the tabernacle until a parishioner, who also survived, told him to follow him.

“I hurried with him to that part of the river into which I had pushed as far as possible my wagon containing the wooden tabernacle,” Father Pernin wrote. “This wagon had been blown over on its side by the storm; whilst the tabernacle itself had been caught up by the wind and cast on one of the logs floating on the water. Everything in the immediate vicinity of this spot had been blackened or charred by the flames; logs, trunks, boxes, nothing had escaped, yet, strange to say, there rose the tabernacle, intact in its snowy whiteness, presenting a wonderful contrast to the grimy blackness of the surrounding objects.” Father Pernin left the tabernacle where it had been found for two days, “so as to give all an opportunity of seeing it . . . The Catholics generally regarded the fact as a miracle, and it was spoken of near and far, attracting great attention.”

Peshtigo Fire Survivor

Peshtigo Fire Survivor

Picture of the Day for October 7, 2015

On a sunny October day, a flock of sheep are grazing on the green grass before it freezes as the colors of fall marches towards the white of winter. And like many families, there is a ‘black sheep’ in the flock which sticks out among the rest of the group. Black sheep in the past were used as marker sheep, often one black per hundred head, to give the sheepherder a quick estimate count if all the sheep were present and not lost.

Black Sheep in the Flock

Black Sheep in the Flock

Picture of the Day for October 6, 2015

Landscapes can change in a very short distance and it is interesting how one beach may be all sand and around the bend it is solid rocks or small rocks. And if there are small rocks on the beach, there has to be at least one “pretty” rock that hops into your pocket although sometime that pretty one may be elusive when a wave takes it out of your reach.

A Pretty Rock

A Pretty Rock