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visitors to the Keweenaw found a peninsula, connected to the Upper
Peninsula mainland, at both east and west ends, with a series of
connected lakes (Portage Lake and Torch Lake), with a waterway and
swampy areas interconnecting them, and small creeks connected to
Lake Superior. [These were dredged out in the 1870's to form what is
now the Keweenaw Waterway].
Thus it was in the early 1800's, but with the discovery of copper in
the mid 1840's by Douglass Houghton, everything changed. Mining
came, along with people, from everywhere. As mining enterprises
sprung up on both sides of the waterway, along with the towns of
Hancock and Houghton, traveling across the dividing waterway became
a necessity throughout the year.
In the next decade, barges and small
boats ferried people, horses, and goods across the waterway, also
bringing commerce via the waterway to other communities such as
Dollar Bay, Lake Linden & Hubbell, White City, Jacobsville, and many
other settlements, and in winter, via roadways marked across the
ice, often a hazardous passage. In 1853, one Sam Eales, seeing a
need, obtained a ferry boat, the Lizzie Sutton, (later adding the
Liviathen (1858), and (1865) the Northern Light ferries). Fees at
the time were 10 cents for pedestrians (each way), 40 cents for each
horse, and 60 cents for a horse & buggy, but ice crossings were
still required in winter. But by the 1870s, it had become apparent
that something year round was now needed. On February 16, 1871, the
Houghton County Board of Supervisors granted rights to three men -
Messrs. Streeter, Gottstein, and Ames, to form a new company and
build a private wooden toll bridge across the waterway. This project
failed, due to piling problems on the north side, but the need was
recognized.
It would be January, 1875, when the
Board of Supervisors granted private investors George Shelden, and
James Edwards, authority to construct a (primarily) wooden, two lane
toll bridge, with a swing center section to pass maritime traffic,
and with their investment of $10,000, a new company was formed. By
September 30, 1875, the turntable for the swing section arrived on
the Cuyahoga, and by January, 1876, the bridge was in use. Bridge
tolls: 1 cent each for pedestrians (one way), 10 cents for single
horse draws (over and back), and 15 cents for double horse wagons
(over and back). (The ferries went out of business by late 1876,
after the bridge was opened). But rapidly increasing commerce in the
area, along with high maintenance costs, as well as a new need to
accommodate railroad traffic, caused the owners to sell the bridge
to Houghton County in 1891. Tolls were immediately abolished, the
plank roadway was raised and rebuilt, and a railroad level was added
underneath (1892).
In 1897, the Mineral Range Railroad
Company built a new iron swing type bridge, replacing the old wooden
bridge. This bridge also featured a two lane roadway, with a
railroad crossing underneath. New reconstructed support cribs were
also sunk. But on August 15, 1905, disaster struck, when the steamer
Northern Wave (Mutual Transit Lines), en route to the Quincy Smelter
to pick up copper ingots, smashed into the center section,
destroying much of it. The mishap was apparently caused by a mixup
in signals. The bridge would be replaced one year later, again with
an iron bridge, and center swing section, and a control house above
the roadway, over the center turnstile. This new bridge would have
118 ft. of clearance on the north maritime passage, and 108 ft. on
the south side passage. (Newspaper accounts of the period, gave
maritime traffic at 6,000 bridge openings per year, and up to 40
daily train crossings per day, both of which began to taper off by
1920). Although almost struck again in 1940 by the Steamer Maritana
(Hutchenson Lines), it narrowly avoided the collision by dropping
its anchors which caught the submarine telephone cables, stopping it
just short of the bridge. (This would happen again 20 years later).
Light signaling was added during WWII, to augment the steam whistles
already in use. The bridge served the communities until 1960.
In the late 1950s, the Michigan
Department of Transportation began studies on how best to replace
the aging bridge, with a more modern one, that would accommodate the
now much larger ships plying the waterway. It was decided to build
what would be become the worlds heaviest aerial lift bridge, which
was under construction by 1959, just to the West of the then current
bridge. This new bridge, with 4 traffic lanes above, and a railroad
crossing below, had it's ribbon cutting on Saturday, June 25, 1960.
But it almost didn't happen. During the night before, the Steamer
J.F. Schoelkoff (American Steamship Company), traveling westward,
signaled for the bridge to open, but the signals were not acted on.
Dropping all their anchors, they snagged the submarine telephone
cables in an eerie repeat of 20 years previously. Onlookers for the
ribbon cutting ceremonies were treated to the spectacle of a large
freighter jammed crossways in the waterway, just a quarter mile from
the Bridge. Area phone service was disrupted for nearly three days.
Telephone service to the bridge, and marine radios were installed
shortly after. That incident not withstanding, the new Portage Lake
Lift Bridge continues to well serve the area, as the possibility of
adding yet another new bridge may be explored.
[ Text and digital imaging by Roland
Bruce Burgan, 2005. Original photos: City of Hancock Archives ]. |
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Click picture to enlarge.
1878 - First
Wooden Swing Bridge - Portage Lake
Taken from the north side of Ruppe Dock and Warehouse in Hancock. |
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Click picture to enlarge.
1892 - Rebuilt
Wood Swing Bridge - Portage Lake
Taken from just west of Houghton end. Note new railroad line feeding
into bridge from the east bank (right side of photo), and white
control shack on left (west) side of swing section. |
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Click picture to enlarge.
Portage Lake
Bridge - August 15, 1905
Demolished swing section wreckage is loaded onto two barges for
removal. Shack on left was power feed (via submarine cables) to
controls and motors on swing turnstile. |
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Click picture to enlarge.
Portage Lake
Lift Bridge - Spring 1960 (Aerial)
This aerial photo, taken from east of bridges (looking west), shows
the rebuilt 1906 bridge. Note control house built above roadway on
center of swing section. Bridge construction area (Hancock side) is
on right side of photo immediately above new bridge, and just above
that (cluster of buildings on shore) was the Naval Reserve Training
Center. |
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Click picture to enlarge.
Portage Lake
Lift Bridge - Summer 1960
Old bridge can
clearly be seen in the photo taken from just west (looking east),
from the Hancock side construction materials area. |
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