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Upper Peninsula Michigan Real Estate
Huey Real Estate, LLC
1-800 SEE-HUEY
PO Box 146
Marquette, MI 49855
p: 906-228-8889
f: 906-228-3831
e: huey@upwaterfront.com
 
Our About the UP section is designed to help you learn more about history, culture, daily life and of course the amazing opportunities for outdoor recreation in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

You can use the map below as a jumping off point for your exploration of the UP. It links to brief articles and photos posted here you can use the controls to zoom in or out and also click to view the larger map from Google (new window). If you have the free Google Earth program, you can visit the map in Google Earth. We've designed this to be something you can explore, so be sure to click photos to see them larger and to keep checking back as we'll be constantly adding to these pages!

Republic

 

Republic is a charming town in the Southwestern corner of Marquette county and is known as a year-round playground. Forests are crisscrossed with trails running alongside with rivers and lakes, much of which is the Escanaba River State Forest. Republic is made up of two small town centers separated by the huge, open-pit iron mine that now serves as a year-round visitor attraction with interpretive panels.

Republic link:

Republic, Michigan

View Republic 

Marquette History

The Marquette area was first settled by Ojibwa Indians who came into contact with french explorer and Jesuit missionary in 1669. Although the area had been officially "discovered" by the French, and the harbor was used for rest, fishing, and transport for both the French voyagers and the Ojibwa, it was not until the discovery of iron ore in the mid 1800s that the are was settled.  In 1849 iron ore was discovered in the area, and the Marquette Iron Company promptly founded the village of Iron Bay on September 14, 1849, to provide settlement opportunities for workers. The village was later renamed New Worcester. A second mining company came to the area in the form of the Cleveland-Cliffs Company. The Cleveland-Cliffs Company outlasted the Marquette Iron Company and renamed the town Marquette.  The village was platted in 1854, incorporated as a village in 1859 and as a city in 1871. The city of Marquette began as a shipping port for hematite ores and to this day continues to serve as a port for enriched iron pellets from nearby mines. In 1899 Northern Normal School, a teacher's college, was founded in Marquette. The college is now know as Northern Michigan University. During the Cold War the Marquette area was home to the K.I. Sawyer Air Force Base which was host to B-52H bombers and KC-135 tankers of the strategic air command. The base was closed in September of 1995 and now serves as the area's airport.

Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Marquette

Mount Marquette Vista Marquette, the largest city in Michigan's Upper Peninsula is known for its charm, natural beauty, easy access to the beautiful outdoors, strong sense of community and much more. The city has been designated as one of "America's Most Livable Communities," one of Michigan's "Cool Cities," and is a receipt of the "All-American City" award. It is also home to Northern Michigan University and one of two Olympic Training Center in the United States.

Nearby recreation includes: hiking, biking, kayaking, skiing, snowmobiling, ice-climbing, cross country skiing, show-shoeing, skiing, beach walking, kayaking, hunting and fishing, moose watching, golfing, touring nearby waterfalls and lighthouses, and much more.

Marquette links:
Marquette Country
City of Marquette
Wikipedia – Marquette
Marquette County

View Marquette

Bikes roll in Marquette

Bikes were rolling this weekend at the 2007 Superior Bike Fest in Marquette. $8,000 in cash was awarded to the winners, but the real prize was participation and competition. Here’s a shot of an early leader taken from the corner of Washington and Third St. in downtown Marquette.

The bikes roll!

Trillium in Alger County at Silver Lake

May is a favorite time of the year for me in the U.P. and if you missed it this year you should put it on your calendar for next year! I've been a little slow in editing my 2007 file of flower photos so these postings are not as timely as I'd like, but still I think definitely worth passing on. As you can see, trillium covered the forest floor this year as far as I could see.

Trillium in Alger County

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Flowing spring

Wandering the U.P. is always a voyage of discovery. This weekend I canoed, fished, and assisted in water sampling on and around a private lake that we have listed for sale southeast of Marquette. An extremely cold flowing spring was running hard out of the bedrock 40 feet up a rock bluff. There are reports of wells in this area that are running dry because of the unusually warm, dry weather, but this spring and the lake it flows to was unaffected. Apparently it is a strong upwelling from some deep aquifer. The water tumbles down the bank and joins many smaller seeps, which form a stream. A quarter mile further on that feeds the lake.

Flowing spring

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Look at the interesting lichen on this rock, and the crystal clear water behind it.

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Welcome to our updated v3 website!

You’ll find a number of changes and new features including:

• A fresh design
• Easier printing
• Larger photos of listings
• Satellite maps for every listing
• Easier navigation throughout the website
• Larger slideshow or "mouse over" photo viewing
• Higher placement in Google searches will benefit sellers
• A blog for keeping you up to date on what’s happening in the U.P.!

The new software will make future improvements easier and will allow us to offer additional features. We’ll appreciate your comments and suggestions.

Dick Huey

Canoe a foggy lake

Canoeing a foggy lake

Last night I was out in the canoe, and the lake was beautiful. Even the trout cooperated (for a while). We’re “catch and release” anyway, and a beautiful brown jumped several times and threw the hook on the third jump. That’s called a “long distance release.”

There's magic and mystery when fog blankets the lake. It can be a very introspective experience or at the extreme you can get lost. On a really big lake, or Superior, you need a compass. That's true whenever you leave the roads and wander about in the U.P. And wandering is important: Just like anywhere else you have to leave the big roads to find what makes an area unique and wonderful.

When I first visit the city I hear lots of noise, feel lost, and the city is a strange and of threatening place where I'm "on alert". But then instead of noise I start to identify the sounds of a bus, and garbage collection, street vendors and neighbors. As I learn where to go, what to do and how to get there it becomes a place I know and appreciate. The wilds of the U.P. are just like that: Familiar and friendly to us; mysterious and strange until you learn where to go and what to see. You have to learn the territory. And we can help with that.

Hiking the U.P.

This photo is uniquely Huron Mountains. It shows a narrow divide between rock ridges with a beaver dam that has captured the spring runoff and rainfall to form a long, narrow pond. There are nine beaver lodges on this one, but only one shows in this photo. This country looked just like this like a hundred and fifty years ago when the trappers and explorers were discovering and learning the secrets of this country, and you can still find scenes like this and enjoy the beauty today.

Hiking the U.P.

The moose is loose

This young bull moose, a yearling, visited my camp recently… and I had my camera handy! I followed him in my car, snapping photos through the passenger side window.

Moose on the loose

After a few hundred yards he stopped, peeked at me around a tree, and then came straight for the car! There was nothing aggressive about it, through. This is the time of the year when last year's calf gets kicked out of the family because the new one has arrived. I suppose this little bull was used to having a big moose around, and it was surely a little lonesome in the woods. He looked for all the world like someone looking for a friend to pal up with, and was checking me out. I guess I'm flattered.

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Finally he stood in this "King of the Woods" pose. That's what he'll be before long. I hope to see him then.

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Disclaimer
The information presented in this web site is and by nature will likely always be a "work in progress" subject to errors, omissions and revision. It is intended as a primer for those interested in buying U.P. real estate and contains personal observations and opinions with which others may disagree. It was obtained from sources deemed reliable, but is not warranted by Dick Huey or Huey Real Estate.