Heritage
Trail highlights history, provides fun recreation
By Lorissa Juntti,
12, Sydney Dorow, 11 and Mariel Morton, 10.
In the future––planners
hope about five years from
now––there will be forty-eight miles of nicely maintained,
connected trails running from Republic in western Marquette County
to Chocolay Township in eastern Marquette County.
But for now,
the finished portion of this project, known as the Iron Ore Heritage
Trail, includes the long-established bike trail between downtown
Marquette and Harvey, along with a newer section that is a little
over two miles long and runs from Ishpeming to Negaunee.
This
new section, established and paved within the past two years,
already provides kids and families in the west end of the county
a place to exercise and enjoy the outdoors.
The trail can be used all year round. In the winter you can see
people cross country skiing and snowshoeing. In the summer you
see people walking, biking, and rollerblading on the smooth surface.
Robby Riutta, thirteen, of Ishpeming, feels it helps get people
active.
“
It gets a lot of people out that usually would stay inside and
stay on the couch,” Riutta said.
Carol Fulsher, the Recreation Development Specialist with the
Lake Superior Community Partnership, agrees that getting families
outdoors is one of the best things the trail has to offer.
“
It’s excellent for kids and families because, one, we need
to get you guys (kids) outside so you understand how important
being outdoors is, and two, because we want to get you on bikes
again,” she said. “With the amount of traffic on
the roads up there it’s difficult for kids to get on bikes
and it’s difficult for parents to teach their kids how
to ride a bike when you are competing with cars.”
Riutta said he uses it because it’s easier than biking
on the road.
“
I bike it a lot because it’s quicker to get to Negaunee
instead of taking the road,” he said.
The land the trail runs on between Negaunee and Ishpeming is
rich in local mining history and this area of the Heritage trail
can provide an education on the past.
Once you’re about a mile down the trail from Negaunee you’re
near the old Jackson Mine where three life-size miner statues
made of iron stand to represent mining’s importance in
our history. The miners are frozen in time: one is holding a
metal chisel, the other two hold sledgehammers to take turns
hitting it. Behind the statues is what’s left of the Jackson
Mine, the first mining site on the Marquette Range. Now it is
a big pit that is filled with water.
Near the iron men and the Jackson mine are four old iron cars
on a small section of train tracks. The cars used to be used
for mining. One has a number of seats so you can climb up and
sit in the car. The two others are filled with iron to show the
Upper Peninsula’s natural resources.
This is the general area where Negaunee was founded, but the
city was moved because Mining left the grounds too unsteady for
buildings. This historical area where iron ore was first discovered
was fenced off to the public for many years. When the Heritage
Trail was built the fences were partially removed and the area
became accessible to the public.
“
We did a survey one month after the trail was paved last year
and we found out that 456 people a day are using it,” Fulsher
said. “Before it was paved zero people were using it.”
The cost of paving the trail is very high. Fulsher said it costs
between $150,000 to $200,000 to pave one mile of trail. For example,
the cost to pave the trail between Ishpeming and Negaunee was
$450,000.
However, Flusher said, the trail can help bring money into the
area.
“
It’s an economic development project,” she said. “Sparta
Wisconsin, a tiny community in southeast Wisconsin, built a trail
25 years ago––32 miles of crushed limestone––and
they have 80,000 people using that trail every year. What that
means for the businesses is that 80,000 people now are exposed
to those businesses in Sparta.”
Even though there are some bigger issues surrounding the building
of the trail—the Economical development and the history
of the area—kids see it as a place to have fun.
Shawn Peterson, fourteen, of Ishpeming raced his friends back
from Negaunee to Ishpeming on his bike.
“
We just wanted to bike for a little bit and me and some of my
friends, once we got down there, we had nothing else to do so
we started to race. It was just for fun,” Peterson said.
Families can also have fun together on the trail. Jeff Bess,
nine, of Ishpeming said he likes going to the Heritage Trail
with is family.
“
We always bring food because we always find this one place and
we all just have a picnic there,” he said.
The paved section of trail between Negaunee and Ishpeming serves
many purposes and provides its resident’s with many opportunities.
The Iron Ore Heritage Trail brings families together while allowing
them to exercise in a historical atmosphere, and perhaps most
importantly, it allows kids to have fun.