Article

Ohio & Isle Royale Mining Company

rock pile surrounded by brush
Remnants of the Ransom townsite, the hub of Ohio & Isle Royale operations, circa 1960s.

Lawrence Rakestraw Collection

History

The Ohio and Isle Royale Company, like the Siskowit, was given permission by the Secretary of War to file on Isle Royale locations between Rock Harbor and Chippewa Harbor. A townsite named Ransom, after the Agent, Leander Ransom, was soon established. In 1847 forty or fifty men cleared land, built houses, planted a garden, and explored on the ridge north of the townsite for copper. Early prospects looked promising, and a smelter was built that year.

The venture was short-lived. The smelter was poorly constructed and did not work satisfactorily; their explorations did not prove rich enough in copper to justify working, and in 1849 the company left the island and located just east of Houghton on Portage Lake. Fire destroyed the mining buildings at Ransom in 1866. Ransom was subsequently the site of a sawmill, a garden supplying vegetables for Rock Harbor Lodge, a CCC Camp, and today is the location of Daisy Farm Lakeside Camp.

(Rakestraw, 1965)


Isle Royale National Park

Last updated: September 9, 2020