???????? Dossin Great Lakes Museum @ Belle Isle Conservancy, Detroit, Michigan
Dossin Great Lakes Museum @ Belle Isle Conservancy, Detroit, Michigan. Located on Strand Drive on Belle Isle, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum is dedicated to showcasing the story of the Great Lakes, with a special emphasis on Detroit’s role in regional and national maritime history.
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Live in the D: Dossin Great Lakes Museum
You have to check out the Dossin Great Lakes Museum on Belle Isle.
Dossin Great Lakes Museum
In 1956 the Dossin family donated to the city of Detroit's Historical Commission a check for $125,000 for a Maritime Marine Museum to be built on Belle Isle, they even donated their famous boat Miss Pepsi which they retired a few years before that, the boat sits in it's own little building right next to the entrance of the museum.
The museum was dedicated and opened in 1960 with about 100,000 visitor by december 1960, In 1968 the River Room which consisted of a multi-purpose auditorium and exhibit hall and a window wall to allow visitors to watch the boats on the river was added to the museum.
Showcased in the museum is the pilot house from the freighter the William Clay Ford, visiters can pretend to be piloting their own freighter on the great lakes, even talking on the radio to other vessels.
A periscope from the submarine USS Tambor shows the river and the skyline of Detroit.
Also is the Gothic Room which was removed from the elegant river boat called City of Detroit III, the room was saved after the ship was scrapped in 1955, in 1965 the museum raised the $15,000 to purchase it. it took two years to refinish the room to it's original state.
Also there is a ship model gallery featuring ships that used to navigate the great lakes dating back to 1679.
To view their website go to detroithistorical.org
The Great Lakes Maritime Institute's webpage Click Here
Explore Michigan's Maritime History at the Dossin Great Lakes Museum
Explore Michigan's maritime history at the Dossin Great Lakes Museum. MLive filmed the museum on Belle Isle off of Detroit. It has such artifacts as an anchor from the Edmund Fitzgerald, and canons from the war of 1812.
Dossin Great Lakes Museum S.S. William Clay Ford Pilot House Walk Through
Walking through the S.S. William Clay Ford Pilot House, where visitors can captain one of the city's most noted freighters at Dossin Great Lakes Museum, on Belle Isle, Detroit MI.
Detroit Historical Museum | Pure Michigan
The Detroit Historical Museum -- located in Detroit's Cultural Center on Woodward Avenue -- opened on November 23, 2012 after undergoing exciting renovations that include the installation of a number of new exhibitions. Bob Bury, Executive Director and CEO of the museum, fills us in on what's new at the museum.
Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum & Lighthouse,...Whitefish Point Michigan!
History
Construction on the first light began in 1847, and the lighthouse was said to resemble that at Old Presque Isle Light.
First lit in 1849, it was one of the first lighthouses on the shores of Lake Superior and is also the oldest active light on the lake. The original structure was outfitted with Lewis lamps, which were thereafter upgraded to a Fourth Order Fresnel lens.
The current structure, while modern looking, is a Civil War relic. Built in 1861, the iron skeletal steel framework was designed to relieve stress caused by high winds. A similar design is used at Manitou Island light in Lake Superior. It was equipped with a Third Order Fresnel lens.
The DCB-224 Carlisle & Finch aerobeacon in operation at Whitefish Point on November 3, 2007.
The light-emitting diode lantern installed at Whitefish Point in August 2011.
In 1968, the light was replaced with a DCB-224 aero beacon manufactured by the Carlisle & Finch Company. According to Volume 7 of the U.S. Coast Guard light list, it was visible for a distance of 26 nautical miles (48 km) in clear weather conditions, and had two unevenly spaced eclipses, and two flashes within every 20 second period. Putting aside questions of nostalgia, aesthetics, or appreciation for the engineering of a bygone era (as exemplified by the Fresnel lens), this iteration of lighthouse illumination was itself incredibly effective, and an endangered remnant of another bygone era.
The station was automated in 1971.
In 2011, the U.S. Coast Guard Local Notice to Mariners reported reduced intensity of the Whitefish Point light from June 7, 2011 until August 16, 2011 when the DCB-224 Series Carlisle & Finch aerobeacon lens was changed to a light-emitting diode (LED) lantern with a reduced range of 15 nautical miles (28 km) as permitted by Coast Guard rules and regulations adopted in 2003 for private aids to navigation. The aerobeacon lens is stored in a building on the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum complex for possible future public display.
The lighthouse is home to the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum, which has many shipwreck artifacts, including artifacts from shipwrecks in the Whitefish Point Underwater Preserve and the SS Edmund Fitzgerald's bell which was recovered from the wreck in 1995. The Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum is open for during the tourist season from 10 am to 6 pm, every day through October 31. The organization that operates the museum got 80.079% of its funding from the public in the year 2010.
The light is considered to iconic, and has been the subject of memorabilia. An official Michigan Historical Marker was erected in 1974. It is Registered Site L0272. The marker notes:
This light, the oldest on Lake Superior, began operating in 1849, though the present tower was constructed later. An early stopping place for Indians, Voyageurs, Coureur des bois and Jesuit missionaries, the point marks the course change for ore boats and other ships navigating this treacherous coastline to and from St. Mary's Canal. Since 1971 the light, fog signal, and radio beacon have been automated and controlled from Sault Ste. Marie.
The keepers were: 1848--1851: James B. Van Renselaer 1851--1853: Amos Stiles 1853--1856: William C. Crampton 1856--1859: Belloni McGulpin 1859--1861: Charles Garland 1861--1864: Joseph Kemp 1864--1868: Thomas Stafford 1868--1874: Edward Ashman 1874--1882: Charles J. Linke 1882--1883: Edward Chambers 1883--1903: Charles Kimball 1903--1931: Robert Carlson
Whitefish Point is on the Lake Superior coastline known as the Graveyard of the Great Lakes. The numerous shipwrecks of Whitefish Bay—including those of the Comet, John B. Cowle, Drake, Samuel Mather, Miztec, Myron, Niagara, John M. Osborn, Sagamore, Superior City, and Vienna—are protected for future generations of sports divers by the Whitefish Point Underwater Preserve.
The site is a venue for remembrance of the S.S. Edmund Fitzgerald, and extending back to the loss in 1816 of the very first ship known to sail on Superior, the sixty-foot trading vessel Invincible, which upended in gale force winds and towering waves near there. Every loss was tragic.
There are critics that claim that the stewardship of the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society over this lighthouse caused it to be overdeveloped. Michigan Audubon Society filed a lawsuit that accused the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society of overdeveloping Whitefish Point and United States Fish & Wildlife Service of not protecting the site.The lawsuit was settled in 2002 when the parties agreed to govern the site with a management plan.
Touring Tahquamenon Falls & Whitefish Point Shipwreck Museum
Hey there, fellow stitchers! No, this is not a crochet video...once again. But it does have some cool views of waterfalls, the airplane, and the mackinac bridge. After visiting my sister in North Carolina, I flew out to Detroit Michigan and headed up north for a little trip before school started up. This was my first time visiting Tahquamenon Falls and Whitefish Point and man was this a cool experience!
I'll be making a video to update on my first week of school, explaining my school and work schedule and maybe talk about some crochet projects I'm working on. Please subscribe to keep up with my crazy life and give this video a thumbs up if you like waterfalls too :)
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Detroit Michigan
Belle Isle, officially Belle Isle Park, is a 982-acre (1.534 sq mi) island park in the Detroit River, between the United States mainland and Canada. Owned by the City of Detroit, it is managed as a state park by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources through a 30 year lease initiated in 2013.[1] Belle Isle is the largest city-owned island park in the United States and is the third largest island in the Detroit River after Grosse Ile and Fighting Island. It is connected to mainland Detroit by the MacArthur Bridge.
The island is home to the Belle Isle Aquarium, the Belle Isle Conservatory, the Belle Isle Nature Zoo, the Detroit Yacht Club on an adjacent island, the James Scott Memorial Fountain, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, a Coast Guard station, a municipal golf course and numerous monuments. It also previously housed a Nature Center where visitors were able to traverse wooded trails and view wildlife natural habitats, a former Belle Isle Zoo, riding stables and the Detroit Boat Club. The island includes a half-mile (800 m) swimming beach.
Drone Exploration of Belle Isle, Detroit, MI (DJI Phantom 4 Pro) [4K]
Belle Isle is a 982-acre (1.534 sq mi; 397 ha) island park in the Detroit River between Michigan and Ontario. The U.S.-Canada border is in the channel south of Belle Isle such that the island is not in Canada. Owned by the city of Detroit, Belle Isle is managed as a state park by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources through a 30-year lease initiated in 2013; it was previously a city park. Belle Isle is the largest city-owned island park in the United States and is the third largest island in the Detroit River after Grosse Ile and Fighting Island. It is connected to mainland Detroit by the MacArthur Bridge.
The island is home to the Belle Isle Aquarium, the Belle Isle Conservatory, the Belle Isle Nature Center, the Detroit Boat Club, the James Scott Memorial Fountain, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, a municipal golf course, a half-mile swimming beach, and numerous monuments, among other attractions. It is also the site of a Coast Guard station. The Detroit Yacht Club sits on an adjacent island, connected to Belle Isle by a bridge. The former Belle Isle Zoo site is now closed.
2:32 – James Scott Memorial Fountain
3:30 – Belle Isle Casino
4:56 – MV Robert S. Pierson
7:57 – Dossin Great Lakes Museum
8:35 – Belle Isle Conservatory and Garden
9:32 – Nancy Brown Peace Carillon
10:38 – Remick Band Shell
11:16 – Flynn Pavilion
Belle Isle Changes
This week we are on location at the Dossin Great Lakes Museum on Belle Isle in Detroit where we take an indepth look at all of the operational changes to the Island due to the State of Michigan's leasing of the Island. We close the show with a special tribute to Angelo Henderson.
Belle Isle Park Detroit, Michigan
island park in the Detroit River, between the United States mainland and Canada
Was out for a morning exercise cycling and came here for fun, few miles ride to get to this place from the house i was at in South West Detroit Neighborhood
I HAVE THE WHOLE THING RECORDED ON GO PRO BUT I think i deleted it one night when i was thinking to my self seeing i don't have a computer to edit the footage
Belle Isle Park
Rich with history and natural beauty, Belle Isle Park is a Detroit gem and a Michigan state park. The 987-acre island park features the Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory, the Belle Isle Aquarium, Dossin Great Lakes Museum, giant slide, athletic fields, picnic areas, tennis courts, Belle Isle Nature Zoo, the James Scott Memorial Fountain and more attractions popular with all ages and interests. The park includes three lakes, 150 acres of wooded area and spectacular views of the Detroit and Windsor skyline. Rentals available for: Watercraft, Bike, Snow Sports. Food and ice sales available. Recreation Passport Required for entry.
Accessible Features Historical Site Family-friendly Open Year-Round
(844) 235-5375
Belle Isle Park
99 Pleasure Drive,
Detroit, MI 48207
island park in the Detroit River, between the United States mainland and Canada
Pure Michigan - History of Michigan's Great Lakes Video Project
The Group Video Project for the Class of the History of Michigan's Great Lakes. Video by Kevin Hartshorne, Narration by Kevin Hartshorne, Images provided by Google Images, and Kevin Hartshorne, Edited by Kevin Hartshorne, Music: Forest Relaxation, Cider House
Throwback Trip To Belle Isle in Detroit Michigan
This is a trip we made to Belle Isle Park in the summer of 2016. Also in the beginning of the video we travel past The Heidelberg Project
Belle Isle, officially Belle Isle Park, is a 982-acre (1.534 sq mi; 397 ha) island park in the Detroit River, between the United States mainland and Canada. Owned by the City of Detroit, it is managed as a state park by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources through a 30-year lease initiated in 2013. Belle Isle is the largest city-owned island park in the United States and is the third largest island in the Detroit River after Grosse Ile and Fighting Island. It is connected to mainland Detroit by the MacArthur Bridge.
The island is home to the Belle Isle Aquarium, the Belle Isle Conservatory, the Belle Isle Nature Zoo, the Detroit Yacht Club on an adjacent island, the James Scott Memorial Fountain, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, a Coast Guard station, a municipal golf course and numerous monuments. It also previously housed a Nature Center where visitors were able to traverse wooded trails and view wildlife natural habitats, a former Belle Isle Zoo, riding stables and the Detroit Boat Club. The island includes a half-mile (800 m) swimming beach.
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Detroit Historical Museum
The Detroit Historical Museum is one of the best places to experience the vast and storied history of one of America's greatest industrial cities. Long known as the place where automobiles are manufactured, Detroit was once the center of this industry for nearly the entire world and continues to play an important role today.
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WN@TL - ROVing Great Lakes Shipwrecks. Caitlin Zant. 2019.10.30
This week (October 30) we rove into the freshwater abysses of Superior & Michigan as Caitlin Zant, maritime archeologist with the Wisconsin Historical Society, speaks on “Exploring the Deep: Investigating Three New Great-Lakes Shipwrecks with ROVs.”
Here’s how she describes her presentation:
Using prototype technology, archaeologists and ROV pilots team up to investigate three of the newest and deepest shipwreck discoveries in the Great Lakes. See footage from the converted car ferry Harriet B. in 650 feet of water off Two Harbors, Minnesota — the deepest archaeological survey of a shipwreck on the Great Lakes, the schooner Antelope located in 310 feet of water off Michigan Island, Wisconsin, and dive deep inside the car-filled hold of the steamer Senator in 450 feet of water off Port Washington, Wisconsin.
Links:
wisconsinshipwrecks.org
wihist.org/WIShipwrecks
wisconsinhistory.org/Records/Article/CS4070
youtube.com/channel/UCsnXFZFaqyg5Gx4nMqSrKNg
About the Speaker:
Caitlin Zant joined the Wisconsin Historical Society as a Maritime Archaeologist 4.5 years ago, after attending the Maritime Studies Program at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina for graduate school. In her six years of working as a maritime archaeologist, Caitlin has been involved with over 35 archaeological projects, and has assisted in nominating 20 shipwrecks to the National and State Register of Historic Places.
Caitlin has primarily focused her studies on the maritime history of the Great Lakes, specifically within Wisconsin. Prior to becoming a Maritime Archaeologist, Caitlin studied History and Geography at Carthage, graduating in 2012.
Greater Detroit Resource Recovery Facility and Belle Isle B-Roll (1989)
2015.008.294
U-Matic S tape containing b-roll footage shot inside and outside of the Greater Detroit Resource Recovery Facility, followed by footage shot around several sites on Belle Isle--the James Scott Memorial Fountain, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, the Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory, Central Avenue, Central Avenue, and the Detroit Yacht Club.
The tape begins with footage shot at the Greater Detroit Resource Recovery Facility. Here the camera rolls as loader tractors move trash around in large piles inside the facility, garbage trucks dump their trash, and garbage is ferried along on a conveyor belt. The camera then moves to the facilities exterior for pans across its grounds, before returning to the interior area. Here, the crew films the large trash pile, conveyor belts, a mechanical claw, and a worker in a control room.
The next portion of the video was shot on Belle Isle. It begins with footage of the James Scott Fountain, including zooms from several of the figures decorating it. From the fountain's grounds the camera also is zoomed in and out from the corner of the Casino, the foot of Central Avenue, and the top of Harbortown Spinnaker Tower.
Additional shots follow of the statue of James Scott, people visiting the fountain, people relaxing and exercising on the grass adjacent to the fountain, and the Renaissance Center on the city's skyline.
The camera then moves outside of the Dossin Great Lakes Museum. These shots feature the United States Coast Guard cutter, and the cannons. From the south side of the Strand in front of the Dossin, the camera also gets shots of the Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory across the canal to the north, and of nearby bridges over the canal. During this portion part of a WJR radio broadcast can be heard, including an advertisement for Edmund T. Ahee Jewelry. A man and woman are also filmed walking along the Strand to the west of the Dossin.
The camera then moves to Central Avenue, for a zoom out from the Alpheus Starkey Williams Monument, revealing the road to the east. During this stretch of the tape, several motorcyclists are also shown driving across one of the park's fields. The camera also gets a close-up of the sign in front of the Belle Isle Zoo, and several shots of the Belle Isle Playscape from the road.
The final portion of the tape was shot from Riverbank Drive to the south of the Detroit Yacht Club. From here, the camera pans around the club's marina, and zooms out from its sign.
The recording is on a UCA-30s U-Matic S tape with a handwritten 3M label on its top. The tape is housed in a black plastic latching case with a handwritten City of Detroit Department of Public Information Video Production label on its cover. The case also contains a handwritten shot list:
City Clips #2 Belle Isle
Trash incinerator inside work vague shot 00 - 6:52
Trash incinerator outside plant shot 6:52 - 9:10
Trash incinerator inside work shorts 9:10 - 10:04
Conveyor belt 10:04 - 15:17
Control center 15:17 - 16:18
Belle Isle Fountain 16:18- 1 7:26
Belle Isle House 17:26 - 18:16
Wide Shot of Lawn Area 18:16 - 19:05
Harbor Town 19:05 - 19:59
Statue 19:59 - 20:30
Fountain w/ people 20:30 - 20:46
People on Grass (couple) 20:46 - 21:04
Ren Cen w/ people 21:04 - 21:47
People on Grass 21:47 - 22:08
Dossin Great Lakes Museum shots 22:08 - 24:00
Plant Conservatory shots 24:00 - 24:40
bridge x-ing 24:40 - 24:50
man fishing on bridge 24:50 - 25:19
Plant Conservatory shots 25:19 - 27:01
Couple walking on belle Isle 27:01 - 27:26
Plant Conservatory shots 27:26 - 28:37
intersection statue 28:37 - 29:44
motorcyclist 29:44 - 30:06
intersection statue 30:06 - 30:24
Biking Detroit Belle Isle
Biking Belle Isle
Detroit, MI
Biking around the east end of Belle Isle the week after the Grand Prix was on Belle Isle
The statue ahead is of Major General Alpheus Starkey Williams who had a distinguished military career as lieutenant colonel of the first Michigan Infantry in the Mexican War, later appointed to brigadier general of volunteers by Lincoln, then commander of Twelfth Corps at the battles of South Mountain, Antietam, and Gettysburg, as well as Sherman's campaigns in I864-1865. He was elected to Congress in 1874 and died in 1878 before the expiration of his second term. The monument was unveiled in 1921.
To the right here is the Old Horse Barn designed in 1894 by George Mason for the working horses on the island. From the early 1900’s until 1928 it was the location of the Detroit Zoo. It is currently being used for island maintenance and storage.
The Belle Isle Athletic Pavilion (built in 1898) and tennis courts.
This side of the island (facing Windsor) is also a great place to watch the large freighters that pass by frequently.
To the right here is a U.S. Coast Guard station.
There is incredible fishing for silver bass in the lagoon to the right!
The Belle Isle Zoo is on left and the golf range a little further on the right
The Detroit Yacht Club on the right.
Belle Isle beach on right.
Great views of the Detroit riverfront from this side of the island.
There are many picnic pavilions and restrooms on the island.
The Dossin Great Lakes Museum ahead on the left.
The Seahorses were my favorite in the aquarium.
The Conservatory is amazing!!
TASHMOO Crowd, Launch of the EDMUND FITZGERALD, and c. 1962 River Traffic
2015.011.006
Silent 16mm film beginning with black and white c. 1928 Detroit News newsreel footage of Michigan State Pharmaceutical Association members disembarking from the excursion boat TASHMOO (continued from the end of reel 2015.011.022), followed by color footage of the launch of the EDMUND FITZGERALD on June 7, 1958, and then c. 1962 black and white footage of the Wyandotte Transportation Company freighter WYANDOTTE, the laker SNEATON, and the American Steamship Company freighter ADAM E. CORNELIUS as shot from a beach. The EDMUND FITZGERALD footage captures workers hammering the supports beneath the freighter in preparation for it's launch, and the crowds gathered at Great Lakes Engineering Works. The launch is filmed from an elevated position above the center of the slip into which the freighter slides. An Allied Film Laboratory logo appears at the beginning of the reel.
Places to see in ( Detroit - USA )
Places to see in ( Detroit - USA )
Detroit is the largest city in the midwestern state of Michigan. Near Downtown, the neoclassical Detroit Institute of Arts is famed for the Detroit Industry Murals painted by Diego Rivera, and inspired by the city’s ties to the auto industry, giving it the nickname Motor City. Detroit is also the birthplace of Motown Records, whose chart-topping history is on display at their original headquarters, Hitsville U.S.A.
Detroit is the largest city in the US state of Michigan, known for its Motown sound, rock music, world class museums, automobile culture, sports teams, arts, and theatres. After decades of decline and population loss, Detroit has seen many of its historic buildings renovated, and its downtown core bustling with new developments and attractions. Detroit offers many things to see and do, an exciting travel destination filled with technological advance and historic charm.
Districts of Detroit Michigan :
Downtown
Detroit's central business district, contains most of the prominent skyscrapers in Detroit, the nation's second largest theatre district, several parks, three casinos, and three major league sporting venues.
Midtown-New Center
Detroit's cultural center, home to several world class museums, art galleries, and Wayne State University.
East Side
Detroit's eastside, a collection of former blue collar neighborhoods that have suffered from extensive urban decay, has many hidden gems worth checking out in a car, including Belle Isle and The Heidelberg Project.
Southwest Side
Detroit's southwestside, an industrial region home to trendy and ethnically diverse Corktown and Mexicantown neighborhoods.
West Side
Detroit's westside, a large residential area that has a mix of numerous historic neighborhoods with mansions and blue collar neighborhoods built in the early 20th century.
Hamtramck-Highland Park
While never annexed with the city of Detroit, the cities of Hamtramck and Highland Park are entirely landlocked by Detroit and function as neighborhoods of the city. Hamtramck has a large Polish population and is known for its numerous bars and restaurants.
Detroit is known as the world's Automobile Capital and Motown (for Motor Town), the city where Henry Ford pioneered the automotive assembly line, with the world's first mass produced car, the Model T. During World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt called Detroit the Arsenal of Democracy. Today, the region serves as the global center for the automotive world. Headquartered in metro Detroit, General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler all have major corporate, manufacturing, engineering, design, and research facilities in the area. Hyundai, Toyota, Nissan, among others, have a presence in the region.
A lot to see in Detroit Michigan such as :
The Henry Ford
Belle Isle Park
Renaissance Center
Detroit Institute of Arts
Comerica Park
Detroit Zoo
Eastern Market, Detroit
Greektown, Detroit
Corktown, Detroit
Ambassador Bridge
Motown Museum
Hart Plaza
The Guardian Building
Campus Martius Park
Fox Theatre
MotorCity Casino Hotel
The Heidelberg Project
Joe Louis Arena
Belle Isle Aquarium
MGM Grand Detroit
Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory
Detroit Historical Society
Detroit Riverfront Conservancy
Fair Lane, Home of Clara and Henry Ford
Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History
Greektown Casino
Michigan Science Center
Michigan Central Train Depot
William G. Milliken State Park and Harbor
Pewabic Pottery
Grand Circus Park
Dossin Great Lakes Museum
RiverWalk
Ford Piquette Avenue Plant
New Center
Edsel & Eleanor Ford House
Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit
Belle Isle Nature Center
Palmer Park
Detroit Riverwalk
Indian Village
Dequindre Cut
Islamic Center of America
Rouge Park
Windsor Sculpture Park
The Spirit of Detroit
Zug Island
Brush Park
Detroit Historical Museum
Historic Fort Wayne
( Detroit - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Detroit . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Detroit - USA
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