Sturgeon Bay

Nonfiction, Travel, Pictorials, Art & Architecture, Photography, History
Cover of the book Sturgeon Bay by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum, Arcadia Publishing Inc.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum ISBN: 9781439632888
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc. Publication: May 3, 2006
Imprint: Arcadia Publishing Language: English
Author: Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
ISBN: 9781439632888
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc.
Publication: May 3, 2006
Imprint: Arcadia Publishing
Language: English
Stretching midway across Wisconsin�s famous Door County peninsula, Sturgeon Bay has developed into the county�s business and industrial center. Divided by the waterway it�s named after, this small city provided a home to a working waterfront that once housed sawmills and docks for shipping ice, quarried stone, and, later, cherries. A canal dug from Sturgeon Bay to Lake Michigan in 1880 enabled ships to avoid the long passage over the tip of the peninsula. Sturgeon Bay became a shipbuilding capital, housing three major yards. The lively downtown districts on each side of the bay sported the typical hotels, taverns, stores, and blacksmith shops. Residents took pride in their newly formed schools, churches, and public services such as the Pioneer Fire Department. Families, fortunate to live in a land of great natural beauty, enjoyed recreational pursuits in the woods and on the water, whether it was perch fishing early on a summer morning or skating over the ice on a crisp winter afternoon.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Stretching midway across Wisconsin�s famous Door County peninsula, Sturgeon Bay has developed into the county�s business and industrial center. Divided by the waterway it�s named after, this small city provided a home to a working waterfront that once housed sawmills and docks for shipping ice, quarried stone, and, later, cherries. A canal dug from Sturgeon Bay to Lake Michigan in 1880 enabled ships to avoid the long passage over the tip of the peninsula. Sturgeon Bay became a shipbuilding capital, housing three major yards. The lively downtown districts on each side of the bay sported the typical hotels, taverns, stores, and blacksmith shops. Residents took pride in their newly formed schools, churches, and public services such as the Pioneer Fire Department. Families, fortunate to live in a land of great natural beauty, enjoyed recreational pursuits in the woods and on the water, whether it was perch fishing early on a summer morning or skating over the ice on a crisp winter afternoon.

More books from Arcadia Publishing Inc.

Cover of the book Loudoun County by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Hudson Bend and the Birth of Lake Travis by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Protecting Sanibel and Captiva Islands by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Marcy by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Lee County, Texas by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Antioch by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Denver's Sixteenth Street by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Cleveland's University Circle by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Sharon by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Hartford in World War I by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book The New York, Ontario and Western Railway by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Growing Up Greek in St. Louis by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book Randy Trabold's Northern Berkshire County by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book The Chiefs of Council Bluffs: Five Leaders of the Missouri Valley Tribes by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
Cover of the book The French & Indian War in North Carolina: The Spreading Flames of War by Maggie Weir, Ann Jinkins, Door County Historical Museum
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy