Upper Peninsula: America's Future Refuge (Part 1) episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 28, 2022 · 10 MIN

Upper Peninsula: America's Future Refuge (Part 1)

from Hometown History · host Shane Waters

In the year 2100, Michigan's Upper Peninsula might be the best place to live in North America, if you can handle the isolation. Right now, it's the emptiest region in the eastern United States, with sprawling sugar sand beaches completely abandoned on 85-degree summer days. If it were its own state, the UP would be the least populated in America by 50%, despite being larger than Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Delaware combined.Shane crossed the five-mile Mackinac Straits Bridge expecting to visit Isle Royale for the Michigan Islands series, but the island was on fire, covered in toxic algae blooms, and completely out of toilet paper. Instead, he discovered something better: a 350th birthday party, Victorian mining ghost towns, beaches made entirely of black stamp sand, and the only place on Earth where pure copper and pure silver form together naturally in the rock.The Upper Peninsula is mining country, home to historic gold, silver, copper, nickel, and iron rushes that built America's industrial age. It's also profoundly weird, empty, beautiful, and culturally isolated. You don't go to the UP to go anywhere else. You go there to go there, and then you go home.Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories exploring the unexpected places that shaped the nation. New episodes release Tuesdays.Show Notes: Why the Upper Peninsula could become North America's prime climate refuge by 2100How Shane's Isle Royale trip went hilariously wrong (fires, algae blooms, no toilet paper)The only place on Earth where pure copper and pure silver form together naturallyVictorian mining ghost towns with black sand beaches and epic mill ruinsWhat 56 volumes of local history signs reveal about America's mining heritageWhy sprawling beaches sit completely empty in perfect 85-degree weatherKey Figures:Clarence Manette - Local historian who produced 56 volumes of Upper Peninsula historyShane Waters - Your host, collecting copper chunks and slag instead of visiting burning islandsGeographic Focus:Mackinac Straits Bridge, St. Ignace, Marquette, Gay Michigan, Isle Royale, Lake SuperiorTags: Upper Peninsula Michigan, Michigan history, climate refuge, copper mining history, American mining history, Mackinac Bridge, forgotten history, local history, true story, Great Lakes history, Midwest history, Isle Royale, ghost towns, mining ghost towns, Victorian mining, pure copper, slag, stamp sand, Lake Superior, American historyCategory: HistoryChapter Markers: 0:00 - Introduction: The Gateway to America's Future Refuge 2:00 - The Isle Royale Disaster (That Wasn't) 4:30 - St. Ignace's 350th Birthday Party 6:00 - The Loneliest Peninsula: A Cultural Island 8:30 - Pure Copper and Pure Silver: Mining the UP 11:00 - Ghost Towns, Black Beaches, and What Shane Brought Home 12:30 - Preview: Crossing the Mackinac Bridge for Real Hometown History explores forgotten stories from small-town America. The overlooked events, hidden triumphs, and buried tragedies that shaped the country we live in. New episodes every Tuesday. Find every episode at mythsandmalice.com/hometown-historyAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

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Upper Peninsula: America's Future Refuge (Part 1)

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This episode was published on March 28, 2022.

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In the year 2100, Michigan's Upper Peninsula might be the best place to live in North America, if you can handle the isolation. Right now, it's the emptiest region in the eastern United States, with sprawling sugar sand beaches completely abandoned...

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