The community is located at the northern tip of the
Keweenaw Peninsula and is the northernmost permanently populated community in the state. Due to its natural environment and surroundings, which include
Fort Wilkins Historic State Park, Copper Harbor is marketed as an all-season tourist destination.[5][6]
Etymology
The name of the community, Copper Harbor, alludes to the former use of its
harbor as a port for shipping
copper mined from local deposits during the mid-19th century.[7]
Copper Harbor was host to the first mineral land agency throughout the entire Lake Superior District. Captain Walter Cunningham was appointed by the
United States Department of War to act as a Special Agent to the area. As soon as wayfinding was established in the spring of 1843, Cunningham had come to the area and opened his office, which was thereafter named the "Government House". It was positioned on Porter's Island, a small rocky island just opposite of present-day downtown Copper Harbor.[6]
The Pittsburgh and Boston Copper Harbor Mining Company, formed by John Hayes of
Cleveland, Ohio, began excavating some pits near Haye's Point in Copper Harbor in 1844. It was a small development at first, but its
mine was modern for its time, and the company struck it rich in 1845. The Pittsburgh and Boston mine operations were some of the very first in the state of
Michigan.[6][9][10][11]
A few years later, the
Central Mine,
Cliff Mine, and others were opened and became successful.[12][11][13][6][9] However, by 1870 the copper resources in the community had been largely worked out.[10][6]
The community of Copper Harbor was listed as a newly-organized
census-designated place for the
2010 census, meaning it now has officially defined boundaries and population statistics.[14]
Geography
In 2010, Copper Harbor was listed as a
census-designated place. The CDP contains a total area of 2.43 square miles (6.29 km2), of which 1.51 square miles (3.91 km2) is land and 0.92 square miles (2.38 km2) (37.86%) is water.[15]
Copper Harbor is located at the northern edge of the
Keweenaw Peninsula, which also extends for several miles to the east. Copper Harbor has its own post office and
ZIP Code (49918).[16][17] Some areas within the community and the surrounding area may use the
Mohawk 49950 ZIP Code.[18]
Beyond the community center, there are thick forests, limited roadways, and few developments.[19][20]
Relative to other communities in the Keweenaw, Copper Harbor is 9 miles (14.5 km) from
Mandan, 12 miles (19.3 km) north of
Delaware, and 16 miles (25.7 km) east of
Eagle Harbor. The village of
Ahmeek is the nearest incorporated community at 30 miles (48.3 km) to the southwest.[6][9][21][22][23]
Climate
Copper Harbor has a
humid continental climate.[24] Summers are warm but rarely hot due to the moderating influence of Lake Superior, while winters are cold and snowy, albeit milder than areas on similar parallels to the west, due to the low-scale maritime moderation. Although winter temperatures are similar to those in the nearest large metropolitan city
Minneapolis, a couple of degrees latitude south-west, the main difference is that April is also a winter month in Copper Harbor, since the marine effects delay spring. The temperature lag effect is so great that March holds the town's record low, and April's record low temperatures are not much warmer than those of December.
Hunter's Point is the name of a flat point, running out from the west into
Lake Superior. It was named for an early settler of the area named Hunter who owned a tract of land on what is now Hunter's Point. He is buried in the Fort Wilkins Cemetery. Today, Hunter's Island is a
Grant Township park, hosting a wide variety of both
flora and
fauna alike. It is also a well-known stop for migratory birds.[27][6]
Just north of downtown Copper Harbor is
Fort Wilkins Historic State Park, an early restored frontier
United States Army base originally built in 1844 to protect the vital port of Copper Harbor from the
Ojibwe during the early years of the copper mining boom, America's first great mining rush. It became clear later that issues in the region were their own—rough and icy winters, isolation, and sheer loneliness.[6][30][9][20][31][32]
The Copper Harbor Schoolhouse, one of the oldest one-room schools in
Michigan, is found here. In 1999, this 140-year-old school had nine students who attended classes. The school district it lies in is called
Grant Township Schools, District No. 2. The District motto is "Searching For Knowledge" and the mascot of the schoolhouse is the Copper Harbor Prospectors.[33][9][34]
Lake Fanny Hooe, named after the mining Captain William Albutrtis' juvenile sister-in-law, borders Fort Wilkins and is well-known in the area for the origin of its name. This lake is one mile east of Copper Harbor, and runs parallel with the highway
M-26. The lake is two miles long and a quarter mile wide, with a total depth of thirty-five feet and numerous points.[9][6][36][37]
The historic
Copper Harbor Lighthouse is situated at the opening of the physical harbor itself. The
lighthouse was rebuilt in 1866, replacing an original light from 1849, and is only accessible via a short ride in a compact, open vessel from the Copper Harbor Marina. Taken out of service in 1933, the historic navigational aid is one of the oldest lighthouses on
Lake Superior. Within the yellow-bricked maritime post, furnishings from the era remain to conceptualize the life of the lighthouse keepers. Exhibits in the lighthouse museum cover both the lighthouse's history and the local shipwreck culture of the area.[31][38][6][9][32]
The historic
Copper Harbor Cemetery discloses the gravestones of some of the earliest settlers in the
Copper Country, with the first recorded interment in 1853 and a number of other tombstones that predate the year 1900.[39][9]
Characterized as "the most beautiful road in
Michigan,"[citation needed]Brockway Mountain Drive is a 8.9-mile (14.3 km) roadway that follows the spine of a 735-foot (224 m) ridge between the communities of Copper Harbor and
Eagle Harbor, and it is the highest-paved road between the
Rocky Mountains to the west and the
Allegheny Mountains in the east. The notoriously picturesque[citation needed] road was constructed during the 1930s in the midst of the
Great Depression by the
Works Progress Administration. It offers views of Lake Superior, and the Keweenaw Peninsula, as well the archipelago of
Isle Royale on an especially clear, transparent day. There is also a close on the drive called Brockway Mountain Lookout that offers a view of the community of Copper Harbor itself.[40][19][6][9][20][32]
In addition to the main 1849 Copper Harbor Lighthouse, the
Copper Harbor Front Range and Rear Range Lights, both completed in 1869, remain and are locally considered to be iconic, as well as being the subject of
memorabilia. The purpose of the Copper Harbor Range Lights was to do what the main lighthouse could not; it guided vessels and their sailors past the hazardous reefs on either side of the waterway.[41][22]
US 41 travels through Copper Harbor and has its northernmost terminus just east of the community.
M-26 has its northernmost terminus at U.S. Route 41 within the western portion of the community.
Ferry services
Copper Harbor contains a ferry port that provides transportation to
Isle Royale National Park. The Isle Royale Line, Inc. (formerly named
Isle Royale Ferry Service) operates the Isle Royale Queen IV out of Copper Harbor during the warmer months from May to September. The ferry takes 3.5 hours to travel 60 miles (97 km) across Lake Superior to
Rock Harbor.
^
abcdefghijklMonette, Clarence J. (1975). Some Copper Country Names And Places. Lake Linden, Michigan.
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cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
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^Lankton, Larry (2010). Hollowed Ground. Wayne State University Press. pp. 13–14.
ISBN9780814334904.
^Magnaghi, Russell M. (2009). Native Americans of Michigan's Upper Peninsula: A Chronology to 1900 (2nd ed.). Marquette, Michigan: Center for Upper Peninsula Studies.
ISBN978-0-557-33460-5.
^
abcdefghiMolloy, Lawrence J. (2011). A Guide to Michigan's Historic Keweenaw Copper District: Photographs, Maps, and Tours of the Keweenaw—Past and Present. Great Lakes GeoScience.
ISBN978-0-9791772-1-7.
^
abDunbar, Willis Frederick; May, George S. (1995). Michigan: A History of the Wolverine State. Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 358.
^
abWhittlesey, Charles (1852). 4000 Years of Copper Country History. Greenlee Printing.
^White, Mel (2016). National Geographic Complete National Parks of the United States (Second ed.). Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Partners.
ISBN978-1-4262-1692-3.
^"Station: Copper Harbor FT WILKINS, MI". U.S. Climate Normals 2020: U.S. Monthly Climate Normals (1991–2020). National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved September 2, 2021.
^
abNational Geographic Guide to State Parks of the United States (Fifth ed.). Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Partners. 2018.
ISBN978-1-4262-1885-9.
^
abcNational Geographic Guide to Scenic Highways & Byways: The 300 Best Drives in the U.S. Washington, D.C. 2018.
ISBN978-1-4262-1905-4.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
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^James, Barry C. (2000). Lighting the Way: A History Of The Copper Harbor Lighthouse. Copper Harbor, Michigan: Fort Wilkins Natural History Association.
ISBN0-9675103-0-9.