Au
Train
Located
on M-28 in Alger County, AuTrain was the original county seat for Alger
County.
AuTrain, a French
term meaning "at the shortcut or traverse" was one of
the earliest sites visited by white man as they traveled along Lake
Superior's south shore. The river was part of an ancient Indian
route between Lakes Superior and Michigan, the
region itself known as the Land of Hiawatha.
One of Alger
County's oldest settlements, AuTrain was first inhabited by
white men in 1856 when William Cameron began hunting and trapping
here.
Logging had began along
the Au Train River in 1861.
Royal Whittlesey built
a sawmill in 1862 and logging of Norway pine for
dock pilings was begun in earnest. Later, choice white pine was hewed into
squared timbers for shipment to England.
The AuTrain River and its tributaries were filled with the big logs bound
for mills in Lower Michigan, Rock River,
Marquette, and later, to Munising. By 1873 the Sault Ste.
Marie and Grand Island State Road Extension was
completed to the village.
The
population of AuTrain had a big increase in 1877 when a number of
families moved from Bay Furnace near Munising when that iron-making
community was destroyed by fire. Among the new residents were the
Movans, Doucettes, Larmonds, Carriers and Reffruschinn's, who built
small shingled cabins where the Alger-Smith Company had begun
lumbering operations.
In time, the town consisted of thirty homes, one blacksmith shop, a bay
furnace, another sawmill and a government lighthouse.
The Detroit,
Mackinac & Marquette Railroad reached the village in 1881.
A school was built shortly thereafter which also served as the
social, political and religious center of the
community. In 1883 a post office was
established.
A high point in
AuTrain's history came in 1885 when the northern part of
Schoolcraft County was organized as Alger County, with AuTrain
becoming the county seat. The next year, a town
site was platted and a shingle mill was built. A
business district typical of a county seat and
sawmill town soon developed. There were several stores, two hotels,
saloons and the AuTrain Alpha--the county's first newspaper.
Commercial fishing became an important industry and the beautiful
AuTrain Lake and River attracted a growing number of tourists after
advent of the railroad in 1881.
Settlers began homesteads south of the village on AuTrain Lake, the
first taken out by Emma Nellson in 1885, with others by Charles
Paulson and Alec McKinnon.
The
largest logging drive took place in 1887 when 10 million feet of pine logs
were floated down the Au Train River.
One of the area's
prominent early developers was Charles Schaffer of
Marquette who was known as the "Charcoal King" because of his
extensive activities throughout the region in
the manufacture of charcoal for iron making. He
platted the village and donated land for the courthouse and
cemetery.
Brownstone was quarried four miles west for building purposes, and it
was used in construction of the county's first jail in 1890.
After the turn-of-the-century, the Standard Tie Company began extensive
logging operations in the area, but by 1919, the last logs were
boomed on the AuTrain River, ending a colorful
era.
In 1902, the county seat was moved to Munising, which was rapidly
becoming the county's industrial and commercial center.
During its history, AuTrain was an important transit and
stopover point for both Indians and white men, a sawmill town, county
seat, commercial fishing port and resort center. Tourism and
recreation now give the village its livelihood.
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