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University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press

Cover Image for Ninety Years Crossing Lake Michigan
6 x 9. 296 pgs. 144 B&W photographs. (2008)

Cloth
978-0-472-07049-7
$70.00S  Available
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978-0-472-05049-9
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Subjects
History--American History / Michigan and the Great Lakes--History / Michigan and the Great Lakes--Maritime

Ninety Years Crossing Lake Michigan
The History of the Ann Arbor Car Ferries

Grant Brown, Jr.


Named a 2009 Michigan Notable Book

Winner: Historical Society of Michigan State History Award 2008


An illustrated book about the visionary, risky, and influential business of transporting loaded railroad cars across Lake Michigan


About the Book

"A must buy for anyone interested in the Great Lakes."
—Frederick Stonehouse, maritime historian

In 1892, the Ann Arbor Car Ferries shook the transportation world by doing what was then deemed impossible—carrying loaded railroad cars by ship across the sixty-two miles of open water between Frankfort, Michigan, and Kewaunee, Wisconsin. With passion, acuity, and remarkable detail, Grant Brown describes the nearly one hundred years of crossings—from their beginnings with James Ashley's bold new idea of car ferrying down to the last fight for survival before the Michigan Interstate Railway Company finally closed in 1982.

Crossing the lake with loaded freight cars was a treacherous task that presented daily obstacles. Knowledgeable people believed it was impossible to secure railcars from tipping over and sinking the ship. Weather and ice presented two near-insurmountable hurdles, making car ferrying doubly difficult in the winter, when nearly all shipping on the Great Lakes shut down. This vivid history gives voice to the crews and their ships as they battled the storms without modern navigational aids or adequate power.

Ninety Years Crossing Lake Michigan draws on ships' logs from various museums, over two thousand newspaper articles, annual reports from 1889 through 1976, and interviews with former employees. The result is a living history of the ships, the crews, and their adventures; of the men who built and ran the business; and of the enormous influence the vessels had on the communities they served.

Grant Brown, Jr., worked for S. D. Warren Company, a paper manufacturer, for thirty-seven years. He raced sailboats on Crystal Lake in northern Michigan for ten years while growing up, continued to do so in Boston and St. Louis, and has since returned to living and racing in Frankfort, Michigan. He spent eight years in the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve, where he learned navigation and shipboard procedure.

 

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