Settlement patterns

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Also known as: Great Lakes State

Settlement in the rugged western half of the Upper Peninsula largely has revolved around the mining industry. Ironwood, Iron Mountain, Hancock, Houghton, and Marquette are among the larger cities, all located near mines or their port facilities. Sault Sainte Marie, the major city in the eastern Upper Peninsula, overlooks the Soo Locks on the shipping route that links Lake Huron with Lake Superior. Throughout the peninsula, many residents are involved in forestry.

Geographic and historical forces unite the eastern segment of the Upper Peninsula with roughly the northern half of the Lower Peninsula to create the area known as northern Michigan. This area has long been the centre of the state’s forestry industry; many of the woodlands are owned by the state and national government. The towns of northern Michigan serve as regional centres for tourists and farmers and often as headquarters for government services. Many of the larger communities have attracted small-scale manufacturing; others serve as important harbours. Cities of northern Michigan include Sault Sainte Marie, Petoskey, Ludington, Manistee, Cadillac, Alpena, Escanaba, and Traverse City, on Grand Traverse Bay.

Although the northern portion of the Lower Peninsula is a productive farming area in places, the state’s strongest and most diverse agricultural foundation lies in southern Michigan—the area to the south of the lateral corridor between Bay City and Muskegon. Southern Michigan also contains most of the state’s large cities and industrial centres including Detroit (one of the largest in the country) and its many suburbs, as well as Flint, Saginaw, Lansing, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, and Battle Creek.

Economy

Michigan’s economy, originally based on small-scale agriculture, became dependent on lumbering and mining by the late 19th century. Lumbering of vast white pine forests proceeded at a feverish pace between the 1830s and 1905, until the forests’ wealth was virtually exhausted. By the 1980s, iron and copper mines had opened in the western Upper Peninsula, fueling new settlement there. Advances in transportation aided economic development during this period; in 1855 the first of the Soo Locks on the St. Marys River was completed, enabling passage of deep water vessels between Lake Superior and the other Great Lakes.

In the second decade of the 20th century the automotive industry began to dominate Michigan’s economy. Since that time, Michigan remained tied to the fortunes of the auto companies, despite contributions from other manufacturing activities, tourism, and the agriculture and (albeit reduced) forestry sectors. The oil embargo of the late 1970s, combined with a dramatic increase in imports of foreign cars and a national economic recession, caused an economic crisis in Michigan. Between 1979 and 1982 the state’s unemployment level rose sharply and became the highest in the country. The auto industry made a modest recovery over the next two decades, but it again suffered major losses when gasoline prices spiked and U.S. economic growth slowed in the early 21st century. Largely in response to the fluctuation of the auto industry, Michigan’s government and business leaders initiated programs to expand the state’s manufacturing base, to attract new high-technology firms, and to promote the service sector of the economy; tourism and education, in particular, have continued to do well.

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Agriculture and forestry

Diverse agricultural activities have long been a stable element of Michigan’s economy. Since the late 20th century, however, the number of farms in the state has been declining, both as smaller holdings are purchased and consolidated by larger agribusiness enterprises and as the suburbs expand into the surrounding farmlands. With its fertile soils and favourable climate, however, Michigan has remained a major agricultural state.

The state’s dairy industry, one of the country’s leaders in the production of milk, is especially strong. Hogs are also important; they are raised in the southwestern part of the state. Corn is the principal field crop, followed by soybeans and wheat. All are grown primarily in the southern region, along with abundant quantities of sugar beets, dry beans, hay, potatoes, and blueberries. Michigan is well known for its fruit production. Not only is the state a top producer of blueberries, but it also yields some three-fourths of the country’s total crop of tart cherries and is a major source of apples, sweet cherries, and peaches. Many of the state’s orchards are concentrated along the Lake Michigan shore. In terms of monetary value, however, vegetable production exceeds that of fruit, with Michigan being a notable source of cucumbers, celery, asparagus, carrots, and pumpkins. Christmas trees, mushrooms, and maple syrup are other important products.

As forests have continued to recover from the exploitation of the late 19th century and as more marginal farmland has reverted back to forest, Michigan’s timber industry has experienced a revival. The state’s forests are a major source of hardwoods, but they also yield pulpwoods in significant quantities. Large tracts of woodland remain protected, however.

Resources

The western segment of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula has for generations been the site of mining activities, and the region has remained one of the country’s chief producers of iron ore. Changes in the U.S. steel industry have affected iron ore mining in the state, however, and in 1984 all mining activities in the Menominee Iron Range ceased, although production continues at two open-pit surface mines in the Marquette Iron Range. Copper was mined aggressively in the Upper Peninsula in the second half of the 19th century, but during the 20th century the state’s industry was eclipsed by more productive mines in the western United States. Michigan’s last regularly operating copper mine closed in the late 1990s.

Limestone, gravel, and sand are the principal nonmetal products of the state’s mining industry. The limestone quarry at Rogers City, on the northeast coast of the Lower Peninsula, is one of the largest in the world; much of its product is used in steel mills, as aggregate (used in the production of concrete and mortar), or as an ingredient in cement. An immense deposit of halite (rock salt) lies beneath the Lower Peninsula, although little has been extracted. Gypsum is also abundant in the region; it is mined and used in the manufacture of wallboard. Historically, coal was also mined in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula, but, because the coal seams are deep and thin, the industry was not economically viable, and all production ceased in the mid-20th century.