National Register of Historic Places listings in Charlevoix County, Michigan
Appearance
(Redirected from List of Registered Historic Places in Charlevoix County, Michigan)
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Charlevoix County, Michigan.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Charlevoix County, Michigan, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map.[1]
There are 24 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 15, 2024.[2]
Current listings
[edit][3] | Name on the Register[4] | Image | Date listed[5] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Beaver Island Light Station | December 29, 1978 (#78001495) |
S of St. James on Beaver Island 45°34′35″N 85°34′21″W / 45.576389°N 85.5725°W | St. James | The yellow brick lighthouse keeper's dwelling at this site was constructed in 1866. The attached 46-foot (14 m) cylindrical tower was built in 1858, to replace an 1852 tower. The decagonal lantern room offers panoramic vistas of the Lake. The tower is open to the public from 8:00 a.m. though 9:00 p.m. during the summer. | |
2 | Boyne City Central Historic District | December 19, 2012 (#12001071) |
Water, Pearl, Lake, Ray & Main Sts. 45°12′46″N 85°00′48″W / 45.21278°N 85.0133°W | Boyne City | This district encompasses the primary commercial area of Boyne City, and the adjacent Pearl Street residential district. Buildings in the district date substantially from Boyne City's heyday in 1900-1910. | |
3 | Boyne City Water Works Building | August 14, 1998 (#98001060) |
210 E. Division St. 45°12′17″N 85°00′49″W / 45.204722°N 85.013611°W | Boyne City | This water works building served the Boyne City populace from 1910 until 1988, when a new pump building replaced it. It was vacant and unused until 2011, when it was refurbished and placed back into service as a booster station. | |
4 | Charlevoix City Park Site | March 16, 1972 (#72000602) |
Park between Bridge Street and Round Lake[6] 45°19′00″N 85°15′30″W / 45.316667°N 85.258333°W | Charlevoix | The site is a Woodland period occupation, approximately AD 1000 - AD 1300. | |
5 | Charlevoix South Pierhead Light | April 28, 2005 (#05000346) |
S pier at harbor entrance, 0.3 WNW of US 31 drawbridge 45°19′13″N 85°15′54″W / 45.320278°N 85.265°W | Charlevoix | The first light in Charlevoix, built in 1884, was located on the north pier. This light was replaced in 1948 with the current steel structure, which was located on the south pier. The lens and lantern from the old structure were transferred to the new one. | |
6 | Chicago and West Michigan Railroad Charlevoix Station | November 29, 1995 (#95001393) |
Chicago Ave. 45°19′03″N 85°14′35″W / 45.3175°N 85.243056°W | Charlevoix | This building, constructed in 1892, served rail passengers until 1962. It has been renovated, and is currently owned by the Charlevoix Historical Society. | |
7 | East Jordan Lumber Company Store Building | July 3, 2008 (#08000586) |
104 Main St. 45°09′15″N 85°07′39″W / 45.154246°N 85.127563°W | East Jordan | Built in 1899, this building shares a wall with the adjoining Votruba Block. Both buildings have been rehabilitated to form the Main Street Center office complex. | |
8 | Garden Island Indian Cemetery | February 17, 1978 (#78001494) |
On island, 45°48′10″N 85°30′30″W / 45.802778°N 85.508333°W | Garden Island[7] | Also designated 20CX12, this Indian Cemetery holds about 3500 graves, and has been called the largest Indian cemetery in the United States. | |
9 | Greensky Hill Mission | March 16, 1972 (#72000603) |
E of Charlevoix at jct. of US 31 and CR 630 45°19′42″N 85°11′05″W / 45.328333°N 85.184722°W | Charlevoix | This church was founded in 1844 by Peter Greensky (1807-1866) also known as Shagasokicki, a Chippewa chief who had been converted to Christianity and became a preacher. The first services were held in makeshift buildings of bark and boughs until the 1850s, when a church was constructed from lumber brought by canoe from Traverse City. | |
10 | Horton Bay General Store | September 23, 1991 (#91001411) |
05115 Boyne City Rd., Bay Township 45°17′06″N 85°04′48″W / 45.285°N 85.08°W | Horton Bay | Dating from 1877/78, the Horton Bay General Store is mentioned in two of Ernest Hemingway's short stories, "Up in Michigan" and "The Last Good Country." The store has operated more or less continuously since its construction. | |
11 | Horton Bay House-Red Fox Inn | April 7, 1995 (#95000372) |
05156 Boyne City Rd., Bay Township 45°17′06″N 85°04′45″W / 45.285°N 85.079167°W | Horton Bay | Dating from 1877/78, the Red Fox Inn is mentioned in Ernest Hemingway's short story, "Up in Michigan," and tradition has it that the inn's proprietor during the 1910s and 20s, Vollie Fox, taught Hemingway how to fish. It is now a memoriabili and book store. | |
12 | Horton Bay School | January 4, 2001 (#00001603) |
04991 Boyne City-Charlevoix Rd. 45°17′04″N 85°04′37″W / 45.2845°N 85.077°W | Bay Township | Built during the 1885/86 school year, this school was moved to its present location in the late 1940s, and served students until 1963. | |
13 | Loeb Farms Barn Complex | November 29, 1995 (#95001392) |
05052 M-66 Hwy. N., SE of Charlevoix, Marion Township 45°16′43″N 85°13′46″W / 45.278611°N 85.229444°W | Charlevoix | Now known as Castle Farms, this complex was constructed in 1918 by Albert Loeb, who was the Vice President of Sears, Roebuck and Company as a model farm to showcase livestock. | |
14 | Mormon Print Shop | January 25, 1971 (#71000386) |
Main and Forest Sts. 45°44′46″N 85°31′16″W / 45.746111°N 85.521111°W | St. James | The Mormon Print Shop was built in 1850 by the followers of James Strang, who founded a Mormon sect after the death of Joseph Smith. It is now used by the Beaver Island Historical Society as a historical museum, the Old Mormon Print Shop Museum | |
15 | Mt. McSauba Site | September 29, 1976 (#76001025) |
Near Mt. McSauba, north of Charlevoix, Michigan[8] 45°20′10″N 85°15′00″W / 45.336111°N 85.25°W | Charlevoix | Also designated 20CX23, the site is an encampment on a dune. | |
16 | O'Neill Site | May 27, 1971 (#71001019) |
5 km south of Charlevoix, Michigan[9] 45°17′10″N 85°20′40″W / 45.286111°N 85.344444°W | Charlevoix | Also designated 20CX18, this is a partially stratified Late Woodland period site. | |
17 | Pewangoing Quarry | June 20, 1972 (#72001471) |
Along Lake Michigan, north of Norwood, Michigan[10] 45°14′50″N 85°22′55″W / 45.247222°N 85.381944°W | Norwood Township | Also designated 20CX20, this site provided flint used in tool-making from the Early Archaic through Late Woodland periods. | |
18 | Pi-wan-go-ning Prehistoric District | October 3, 1973 (#73002153) |
Along Lake Michigan, north of Norwood, Michigan[11] 45°15′10″N 85°22′45″W / 45.252778°N 85.379167°W | Norwood | This district includes three sites: Pewangoning Quarry (20CX20); Whiskey Creek (20CX22); and Fritz Trail (20CX21) where chert was quarried. | |
19 | Pine River Site | November 15, 1972 (#72001472) |
Pine River channel[12] 45°19′10″N 85°15′40″W / 45.319444°N 85.261111°W | Charlevoix | Also designated 20CX19, this is a multicomponent site, with evidence of occupation during the Archaic (c. 3000 BC), Middle Woodland (c. AD 100), and Late Woodland periods (c. AD 1400). | |
20 | John J. and Eva Reynier Porter Estate | August 3, 1998 (#98000269) |
01787 M-66 S 45°10′44″N 85°09′45″W / 45.178889°N 85.1625°W | South Arm Township | Also known as Elm Pointe, this estate was built for John J. Porter and his wife Eva in about 1925. John J. Porter and his father William P. Porter headed the East Jordan Lumber Company and later the East Jordan Canning Company. The estate is now a public park, and houses the East Jordan Portside Art and Historical Society Museum. | |
21 | Feodar Protar Cabin | March 16, 1972 (#72000604) |
SW of St. James, on Beaver Island 45°42′13″N 85°33′48″W / 45.703611°N 85.563333°W | St. James | Constructed by an Irish settler in about 1860, this log cabin was the home of Feodar (or Feodor) Protar from 1893 to 1925. Protar, a somewhat eccentric Russian emigre, was a self-taught and unlicensed physician, and served as Beaver Island's only doctor for many years. | |
22 | Votruba Block | July 3, 2008 (#08000585) |
112 Main St. 45°09′16″N 85°07′39″W / 45.154352°N 85.127521°W | East Jordan | Built in 1899, this building shares a wall with the adjoining East Jordan Lumber Company Store Building. Both buildings have been rehabilitated to form the Main Street Center office complex. | |
23 | Wolverine Hotel | February 13, 1986 (#86000261) |
300 Water St. 45°12′54″N 85°00′58″W / 45.215°N 85.016111°W | Boyne City | The Wolverine Hotel, also known as the Dilworth Hotel or the Wolverine-Dilworth Inn, was built in 1911/12. It is the only remaining hotel in the Boyne area dating from the turn-of-the-century era when Boyne City was a booming lumber town. | |
24 | Wood Site | May 19, 1976 (#76001026) |
Along Lake Michigan[13] 45°22′00″N 85°07′00″W / 45.366667°N 85.116667°W | Hayes Township | The Wood Site was a seasonally occupied fishing camp used during the Late Woodland period. |
See also
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Charlevoix County, Michigan.
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Michigan
- Listings in neighboring counties: Antrim, Cheboygan, Emmet, Leelanau, Mackinac, Otsego, Schoolcraft
- List of Michigan State Historic Sites in Charlevoix County, Michigan
References
[edit]- ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved November 15, 2024.
- ^ Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ The NRIS gives the location of the Charlevoix City Park Site as "Address Restricted," bur references (United States Army. Corps of Engineers (1978), Charlevoix Harbor, Maintenance of Existing Structures, Negative Declaration and EA) place it between Bridge Street and Round Lake in Charlevoix. Geo-coordinates a approximate.
- ^ The NRIS lists the Garden Island Indian Cemetery as "Address Restricted." However, references place it on Garden Island. Geo-coordinates are approximate.
- ^ The NRIS lists the Mt. McSauba Site as "Address Restricted." However, references place it at Mt. McSauba. Geo-coordinates are approximate.
- ^ The NRIS lists the O'Neill site as "Address Restricted." However, references place it at the mouth of Inwood Creek. Geo-coordinates are approximate.
- ^ The NRIS lists the Pewangoing Quarry as "Address Restricted." However, references James Vol Hartwell (May 29, 2010), "Pi-wan-go-ning Arrowhead Quarry", Petosket News place it just North of Norwood, near Whiskey Creek. Geo-coordinates are approximate.
- ^ The NRIS lists the Pewangoing Quarry as "Address Restricted." However, references James Vol Hartwell (May 29, 2010), "Pi-wan-go-ning Arrowhead Quarry", Petosket News place it just North of Norwood, near Whiskey Creek. Geo-coordinates are approximate.
- ^ The NRIS lists the Pine River site as "Address Restricted." However, references (J. Alan Holman; Margaret B. Holman (2009), The Michigan Roadside Naturalist, University of Michigan Press, pp. 158–159, ISBN 9780472024599) place it at the north side of the Pine River channel. Geo-coordinates are approximate.
- ^ The NRIS lists the Wood site as "Address Restricted." However, references (H. R. Crane; James B. Griffin (1972), "UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN RADIOCARBON DATES XIV", Radiocarbon, 14 (1): 155–194, doi:10.1017/S0033822200001077) place it north of Charlevoix. Geo-coordinates are approximate.