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Looking For Washtenaw's 'Hangers-On'

Looking For Washtenaw's 'Hangers-On' image
Parent Issue
Day
11
Month
June
Year
1987
Copyright
Copyright Protected

Sand Dunes of the Great Lakes - Highway US-2 Along Lake Michigan, 1939

Sand Dunes of the Great Lakes - Highway US-2 Along Lake Michigan, 1939 image
Year:
1939
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, August 10, 1939
Caption:
DUNES AND LAKE COMBINE FOR BEAUTY: Highway US-2 west from St. Ignace, relocated along the northern shore of Lake Michigan and paved several years ago, has become a scenic drive of rare charm. Pines, cedars, pin cherries, and other trees have gained a foothold among the drifted sands. Woods, waters, beaches, curving shores, headlands, boats in the distance, all contribute to the appeal of constantly changing pictures.

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee image
Year:
1973
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 7, 1973
Caption:
Shoreline residents in the Manistee area and elsewhere on the Lake Michigan coast have watched the waters of the lake slowly inch upward for the past three years. Docks went first, then cottages tumbled into the water. Some have tried various erosion controls -- pilings, breakwalls, rockpiles -- but the inexorable advance of the waters prevailed, as the photos left, right, and below [this photo] clearly show. The pilings, right, have helped some, but the water is coming around the ends. A recent storm pulled the footings out from under a number of trees, below right [this photo].

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee image
Year:
1973
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 7, 1973
Caption:
Shoreline residents in the Manistee area and elsewhere on the Lake Michigan coast have watched the waters of the lake slowly inch upward for the past three years. Docks went first, then cottages tumbled into the water. Some have tried various erosion controls -- pilings, breakwalls, rockpiles -- but the inexorable advance of the waters prevailed, as the photos left, right, and below [this photo] clearly show. The pilings, right, have helped some, but the water is coming around the ends. A recent storm pulled the footings out from under a number of trees, below right.

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee image
Year:
1973
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 7, 1973
Caption:
Shoreline residents in the Manistee area and elsewhere on the Lake Michigan coast have watched the waters of the lake slowly inch upward for the past three years. Docks went first, then cottages tumbled into the water. Some have tried various erosion controls -- pilings, breakwalls, rockpiles -- but the inexorable advance of the waters prevailed, as the photos left [this photo], right, and below clearly show. The pilings, right, have helped some, but the water is coming around the ends. A recent storm pulled the footings out from under a number of trees, below right.

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee, January 1973 Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee, January 1973 image
Year:
1973
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 7, 1973
Caption:
Sandy banks such as this are eaten away by each storm

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Erosion on Lake Michigan Shore near Manistee image
Year:
1973
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 7, 1973
Caption:
Erosion of the Lake Michigan shoreline north of Manistee has reached to the very foundation of this cottage

Pilings to Prevent Shore Erosion on Lake Michigan Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Pilings to Prevent Shore Erosion on Lake Michigan image
Year:
1973
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 7, 1973
Caption:
Shoreline residents in the Manistee area and elsewhere on the Lake Michigan coast have watched the waters of the lake slowly inch upward for the past three years. Docks went first, then cottages tumbled into the water. Some have tried various erosion controls -- pilings, breakwalls, rockpiles -- but the inexorable advance of the waters prevailed, as the photos left, right [this photo], and below clearly show. The pilings, right [this photo], have helped some, but the water is coming around the ends. A recent storm pulled the footings out from under a number of trees, below right.