Tag: Michigan

Picture of the Day for March 16, 2017

This evening I saw my cat come racing to the porch like something had spooked him and I discovered he was getting hit by ice pellets. The ice continued to fall for a while making a noise as it hit the glass windows. These windows would not have stopped the freezing rain as the glass has been missing for a long time. The image is actually taken through two windows looking out into Lake Michigan. The lighter color, larger stones are the outside of the building and the smaller, darker bricks are the inside of the wall across the room of the large historic company store at Fayette Historic State Park.

A Window Through a Window

A Window Through a Window

Picture of the Day for January 17, 2016

On a very cold morning, the newly painted Marquette Harbor Light would stand out against the white snow. But with temperatures near -20 and -40 wind chills, I don’t venture out to the lighthouses in the winter time for a picture.

This lighthouse was constructed in 1866, after replacing the original light built in 1853, and a second story added in 1909. Until the opening of the major Minnesota mines in the 1890s, Marquette, Michigan, was the premier shipping port for iron ore on the Great Lakes and the lighthouse in the harbor was critical for the safe navigation.

Marquette Harbor Light

Marquette Harbor Light

Picture of the Day for December 24, 2015

If you happen to be driving around in the upper part of Michigan, you just might stumble upon a town called Christmas. And it is hard to miss Santa Claus, who towers over the surrounding buildings. And the street names for the town are Christmas Ave, St. Nicholas St, Mrs Claus Ln, Pinetree Rd, Mistletoe Ln, Jingle Bell Ln, Santa Ln, Tinsel Dr, Sleigh Way, Holly Dr, Evergreen Dr, Reindeer Run, Northpole Rd and even a Scrooge’s Alley.

Christmas in Michigan

Christmas in Michigan

Picture of the Day for November 20, 2015

The work week ended a long time ago for these kilns. These towers located in Schoolcraft county, Michigan, are the remains of kilns used by the White Marble Lime Company, founded by George Nicholson, Jr., in 1889. The kilns, which were fired by wood waste from the lumber industry, burned dolomite to produce quicklime for use as a building material and an ingredient in the manufacture of paper. As larger corporations were formed and the methods of producing lime were made more efficient, the company diversified; it established a sawmill and a shingle mill and became a dealer in forest products, as well as crushed stone, cement and builders’ supplies. In 1925 the company was reorganized as the Manistique Lime and Stone Company, and continued under that name until the Depression of 1929. And now the kiln towers are slowly depressing back into the ground.

Lime Kilns of the Past

Lime Kilns of the Past