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Deep
Woods Frontier
A History of Logging in Northern Michigan
Theodore J. Karamanski |
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In
Deep Woods Frontier,
Theodore J. Karamanski examines the interplay between men and technology
in the lumbering of Michigan's rugged Upper Peninsula.
Three distinct periods emerged as the industry evolved.
The pine era was a rough pioneering time when trees were felled by axe and
floated to ports where logs were loaded on schooners for shipment to large
cities. When the bulk of the pine forests had been cut, other entrepreneurs
saw opportunity in the unexploited stands of maple and birch and harnessed
the railroad to transport logs. Finally, in the pulpwood era, "weed
trees," despised by previous loggers, are cut by chain saw, and moved
by skidder and truck.
Narrating the history of Michigan's forest industry,
Karamanski provides a dynamic study of an important part of the Upper Peninsula's
economy. |
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"Extremely
readable . . . valuable . . . it clarifies the character of northern Michigan
and helps define what distinguishes it from 'Below'"
— The Public Historian |