Article

Industrial Mining

Isle Royale and the Keweenaw are more similar than one would first think. Both the island and the peninsula have histories of industrial copper mining, with the Keweenaw having had the most mining operations. Even though companies heavily favored the mainland, there are striking similarities between how the two mining locations developed.

Mining frontiers have often followed a common pattern. Interest in an area rose from a discovery or from rumors that a valuable metal had been found. If the deposit warranted actual exploration, investments in settlements, roads, and other infrastructure were made. Upon further success, equipment and facilities were modernized to increase efficiency, and trained engineers and geologists would be hired to increase operations. Ultimately, deposits would play out and the mines would close, often leaving ghost towns or other industries to take mining’s place. Both are reflected in Michigan’s Copper Country.

On Isle Royale, there were three phases of historic mining. The first phase (1843-1855) started as a result of the regional mineral rush. Much of the era is represented by exploration activities, where small outfits canvassed the island archipelago for copper bearing exposures with little success.

The second (1873-1881) saw a reinvigorated interest due to an increase in copper prices resulting from the Civil War. Several companies purchased island acreages, but only two were capitalized enough to make a real go of it (Island Mining Company and the Minong Mining Company).

The final phase (1889-1893) was largely credited to a single man, Jacob Houghton, who continued to see potential on Isle Royale, despite all past failures. the early 1840s. Despite new mining technologies, a profitable copper resource was never located. This failure represented the end of copper exploration and mining on Isle Royale.


Isle Royale Mines

*The following map points are approximations to help protect the resources.*

Map of Isle Royale in Lake Superior featuring 3 groups of colored circles indicating mining phases. Yellow is phase 1, Orange is phase 2, and Red is phase 3.
Yellow is phase 1 (1843-1855). Orange is phase 2 (1873-1881). Red is phase 3 (1889-1893).

Esri, CGIAR, USGS | Province of Ontario, Esri Canada, Esri, TomTom, Garmin, SafeGraph, FAO, METI/NASA, USGS, EPA, NPS, USFWS, NRCan, Parks Canada

Mining on the Keweenaw can also be viewed in phases. In general, mines in the 1840s focused on exploiting mass copper (large pieces of nearly pure metal). Ideally, those mines had ready access to waterways, which eased travel, exploration, and transporting ore to smelters elsewhere. After a relatively short period, and realizing copper masses were sporadic and unreliable, mines either folded or switched focus to copper lodes (amygdaloid or conglomerate), which were more cost effective to mine and process. As more roads and rails were connected, these mines could exploit areas which were once inaccessible. The following map represents a small percentage of the total mines in the area (which numbered in the hundreds).

*The following map points are approximations to help protect the resources.*

Map focuses on the Keweenaw Peninsula which juts into Lake Superior. There are 3 groups of colored circles on the peninsula. Blue circles indicate Early Mass Mines. Red circles indicate Portage Lake Lodes. Green circles indicate Copper Range/Kearsarge.
Blue indicates phase 1 (Early mass mines), Red indicates phase 2 (Portage Lake lodes), Green indicates phase 3 (Copper Range/Kearsarge lodes)

Esri, CGIAR, USGS | Esri, TomTom, Garmin, SafeGraph, FAO, METI/NASA, USGS, EPA, NPS, USFWS

Recent historical research and subsequent archaeology performed has helped to illustrate these copper connections that have existed for years. The following virtual tour will feature some of the findings and insights gained at select mine sites.

*The following map points are approximations to help protect the resources.*

A map of Isle Royale, Lake Superior, and Keweenaw Peninsula featuring 4 numbered points. 1 and 4 are on the island. Two and 3 are on the peninsula.

NPS | Source: Airbus,USGS,NGA,NASA,CGIAR,NLS,OS,NMA,Geodatastyrelsen,GSA,GSI and the GIS User Community

Black and white photo. In the middle-ground, surrounded by birch and conifer trees, is a pile of dark rock on the shoreline and a man climbing it. In the foreground is calm water.
Siskowit mine poor rock pile in 1964.

National Visual Inventory Cards 60-299 / W.W. Dunmire

Siskowit Mine (est. 1844)
One common thread between the mines on Isle Royale and the Keweenaw is in how they developed a mine. In the dense wilderness isolated from major settlements, hard work and tenacity was needed to plant the seeds of a productive mine. In 1844, Siskowit Mining Company acquired 6 mineral claims as hopes ran high from Douglass Houghton's 1841 copper report. To make a claim, the company first needed to build and occupy a structure.

A photo of heavily worn ruins of moss-covered stone foundations surrounded by dense coniferous forest. has context menu
Ruins of Siskowit Mine stamp mill.

Andrew Anklam

How can history guide archaeology? Historic records exist from Siskowit Mining Company describing their efforts to "grow" a productive mine. Using these and other records, archaeologists recently braved the wilderness in search of the "claim cabins" described within. Although no definitive archaeological proof was found for these cabins, other structures were located, and future excavations may yield more definitive results.

Map of Isle Royale featuring a group of 7 colored squares representing mineral claims.

Andrew Anklam

To help understand how mining sites developed, Andrew Anklam used data from the archaeological studies and evidence from historical documents to create a taxonomy. With this tool, he was able to divide the development of sites into phases. The Siskowit Mining Company developed from several prospect sites to an exploratory mine and to developing mine. Some mines developed even further like the one we will explore next.
lose up map of Portage Lake area within the Keweenaw Peninsula featuring a band representing the mineral range which stretches left to right across the whole image. Several red dots are found along the mineral range band near Portage Lake.
A map highlighting locations of indigenous pits near Portage Lake.

Whittlesey, Charles. Ancient Mining on the Shores of Lake Superior. (Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1863; Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, no. 155)

Quincy Mine (est. 1846)
Another link between the mines of the Keweenaw and Isle Royale is mass copper. The early mines enthusiastically searched for their own bonanza of mass copper using the indigenous mine pits as guides.

In 2020, with similar enthusiasm, archaeologists sought to improve the understanding of how industrial mining companies used indigenous pits as a guide by inventorying around Quincy Mine. Although no definitive archaeological proof was found, hopes were not completely dashed as depression-like features were discovered, and future excavations may yield more conclusive results.
Photo of a large, red and grey industrial building. To the left is a smaller red building with a tall smokestack alongside it. To the right of these is a tall grey industrial building. Small trees and unkempt grass make up the foreground.
Quincy Mine industrial landscape

NPS photo

From its humble beginnings as a prospect site in 1846, Quincy Mine ultimately became one of the most successful mines on the Keweenaw.

Not all mines were as fortunate as Quincy.

A black and white photo of a wooden industrial building sitting on top of a large pile of rocks. Small shrubs and a man make up the foreground.
Delaware Mine rock pile and shafthouse.

Photo courtesy of Michigan Tech Archives.

Delaware Mine (est. 1847)

Delaware also used Indigenous pits as a guide to find mass copper. After little success, a transition to conglomerate mining brought brief optimism and investment but yielded similarly poor results.

Archaeologists surveyed the area of Delaware Mine and developed the following conclusions in their subsequent report:

A person stands in front of a collapsed wooden frame which is covering a hole in the ground. Conifers and Birch trees make up the background.
Delaware Mine shaft

NPS photo

"Most mine sites on the peninsula developed through all of these phases, but it is rare to find evidence for each phase together in one place. What makes Delaware Mine unique is that evidence for all mining phases is found throughout the property."

Although the mining company's hopes for wealth never came to fruition, today the site is a wealth of information on how Lake Superior mines developed.

Minong Mine on Isle Royale shares a similar industrial past.

A photo looking up from a cave-like hole. Sun shines through the birch trees and green bushes.
Looking out from a Minong shaft

NPS photo

Minong Mine (est. 1874)

Another connection that binds the mines of the Keweeenaw and Isle Royale is hope. Mining at Minong commenced in 1875 with optimism abound. From the Mining Company 1875 Prospectus: "… No spot in the Lake Superior country yet discovered shows anything like the amount [of precontact mining activity] seen on this property. This was undoubtedly the great mining centre of the ancients."

A person poses on a dilapidated rocky road with bright green grass flanking it. A dense forest makes up the background.
Minong railroad bed.

NPS photo

In the coming years this optimism fueled a flurry of site improvements including a stamp mill, railroad, office, warehouse, blacksmith shop, and dwellings.
Three people lean on a wooden circular fence that surrounds a large hole in the ground. Conifer trees surround them.
Hikers peer down a Minong shaft

NPS photo

From the Minong Copper Mining District National Historic Landmark Nomination: "Of the mining operations established on Isle Royale, the Minong Mining Company (1874-1883) was the largest and most productive. The company emphasized the size of the precontact pit concentration as evidence of vast subterranean mineral wealth, and the operation yielded nearly half a million pounds of copper during its period of operation."

Like many mining ventures on the Keweenaw and Isle Royale, optimism was short lived with mining having ceased in 1885.

Part of a series of articles titled Copper Connections.

Isle Royale National Park, Keweenaw National Historical Park

Last updated: March 6, 2024