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Keweenaw National Historical ParkThe heavy snowfalls on the Keweenaw Penisula required the use of the Russell Snow Plow to keep the railroads to mines open. NPS Photo.
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Keweenaw National Historical Park
Bookstore
 
Visitors browse through a selection of items at a sales outlet operated by the Isle Royale Natural History Association at Keweenaw National Historical Park headquarters.
NPS Photo: Dan Johnson
Visitors browse through a selection of items at a sales outlet for the Isle Royale Natural History Association located at Keweenaw National Historical Park Headquarters.

The Isle Royale Natural History Association currently provides interpretive products relating to Keweenaw National Historical Park for purchase at park headquarters in Calumet, Michigan.

 
Cover of book Cradle to Grave by Larry Lankton
Cradle to Grave by Larry Lankton
Read about the rise and and decline of the copper mining industry on Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula.
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Cover of book Beyond the Boundaries by Larry Lankton
Beyond the Boundaries by Larry Lankton
Read about everyday life in the copper mining heyday on the Keweenaw Peninsula.
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Miners pose outside the #5 Tamarack Mine shaft in this 1908 photograph by Adolph F. Isler. Keweenaw NHP Archives.  

Did You Know?
The Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan was home to one of our nation's first mineral rushes. Prospectors seeking copper travelled there in the middle 1840's, a few years before the "49'ers" sought gold out west. The story of this rush is told today at Keweenaw National Historical Park.

Last Updated: July 25, 2006 at 00:22 EST