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Manistee County Historical Museum |
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Cache:
This cache was hidden as part of the tRails Meandering North-Easterly Geocache Rail Tour, presented by Silent Whistles, the Manistee County Historical Museum and the Crawford County Historical Society and Museum. Record the milepost value contained on and/or in each cache container on the Ticket to Manistee form. See the To Claim a Prize section below for specific tour requirements. See the Resources section below for links to the Ticket to Manistee, Tour Cache List, and a Recommended Driving Route Map.
You are looking for a soda preform just off the grade, well south of the site of the Pine Park station.

Charles Conn Michigan Railroad Collection, Clarke Historical Library, Central Michigan University.
Pine Park Station, formerly Wylie's Station.
Pine Park:
Pine Park was the station name for a stop at the National Music Camp at Interlochen. The camp was founded in 1928. Much of the information regarding this site was provided by an one of the contributors listed below, Mr James Hannum. Mr. Hannum remembers taking the train on numerous occasions from his home downstate to spend time at the camp. He was housed in one of the cabins along Saginaw Street, shown in the overhead image below. During his visits, be became curious about the railroad and explored many of the nearby sites.

Image courtesy of Traverse Area District Library Pennington Collection.
Wylie Cooperage, on Duck Lake.
When the railroad reached the Interlochen area, businesses and mills sprang up. One such business was the Wylie Cooperage (barrell makers). It was in business from 1890 until the mill burned in 1914. What was left of the mill was pushed into the lake. By 1915, the supporting town of Wylie was all but abandoned. The area between the lakes was purchased by the State of Michigan in 1917 for Interlochen State Park. The area north of the park including the Wylie site, became popular camps for girls (Camp Interlochen in 1918) and boys (Camp Penn Loch in 1922). The music camp was established in 1928.

Google Earth imagery annotated by AGHudley - 2018.
2012 aerial imagery annotated with the Cooperage and Pine Park depot.
The imagery above shows the plat of the company village of Wylie superimposed over 2012 aerial imagery. The railroad and sidings for the cooperage (blue), the cooperage itself (blue), and the Pine Park Depot (red) are added to the image. Also, the pale yellow curving road west of the depot is the current State Park Entrance road. Everything south of the Wylie plat is Interlochen State Park. Wylie and north belongs to Interlochen Center for the Arts.
M&NE Main Line, Manistee-Traverse City:
1912 M&NE timetable, Mike Hankwitz collection.
Construction of the main line began from Manistee in the spring of 1887. The line opened for freight business in October, 1888 and was completed as far as Bear Creek, 18 miles from Manistee, on January 14th, 1889. On April 28th, 1889, the line reached Lemon Lake, 25 miles from Manistee. By September 29th, 1889, the line was open to Nessen City, 33 miles from Manistee. On June 1st, 1890, the line was nearly 45 miles long and had reached Interlochen. On October 13th, 1890, the rails reached Lake Ann, 52 miles from Manistee and only twelve miles from Traverse City, as the crow flies. A direct route would not be taken, however, and after winding another 18 miles north, then east, then south-east, the line reached Traverse City on June 25th, 1892.
The line's sole purpose at its inception was to haul logs. The company purchased some passenger cars and began passenger service on January 6th, 1889, with the first train reaching Bear Creek, 20 miles from Manistee (notice that this date conflicts with the date in the previous paragraph for when the line actually opened to Bear Creek, with the information from two different sources). The service was immediately popular and the M&NE began running two passenger trains daily. Through passenger service between Manistee and Traverse City was never a big draw but local passenger service was very popular. As time went on and the logging business dwindled, the railroad turned its attention to agriculture and general freight.
After the Pere Marquette took over the line, it reduced its redundant footprint in the area by closing the M&NE main line between Kaleva and Solon in Leelanau County on April 10th, 1933, using its own line (the former Chicago and West Michigan main line to Petoskey) between Kalava and Traverse City instead. The Interstate Commerce Commision authorized the abandonmenton of the closed M&NE line between Kaleva and Solon on June 19th, 1934. In 1947, the C&O merged the PM into itself, it took control of the M&NEx. In 1954, the C&O abandoned the five miles between Solon and Hatchs. On November 30th, 1955, the C&O officially merged the M&NE into the parent company, thus ending the identity of the M&NE. It then then abandoned its own line between Baldwin and Kaleva in 1956, favoring the M&NE route between Manistee and Kaleva. In 1982, the C&O abandoned its line from Kaleva to Grawn and all of the remaining M&NE trackage outside of Manistee.
Sources:
- Manistee and Northeastern Railroad, michiganrailroads.com (RRHX)
- M&NE History, Trainweb.org
- Manistee and Northeastern Railroad (Wikipedia)
- Pere Marquette Historical Society: M&NE
- Manistee County Historical Museum
- Crawford County Historical Society
- History of Manistee and Northeastern Railway Company, Erwin F. Olsen © 1956 E.F. Olsen, UofM Digital Library and HathiTrust.
- New atlas and directory of Grand Traverse County, Michigan, S.E. Pond & Co., 1895, UofM Digital Library
- Standard atlas of Grand Traverse County, Michigan , G.A. Ogle & Co., 1908, UofM Digital Library
- Traverse Area District Library
- Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads of the State of Michigan, for years 1889-1906, Google Books
- Michigan State Gazetteer and Business Directory, Google Books
- Michigan Place Names, Walter Romig, © 1986 Wayne State University Press
- Michigan Railroads and Railroad Companies, Graydon M. Meints © 1992, Michigan State University Press
- Michigan Railroad Lines, Graydon M. Meints © 2005, Michigan State University Press
- Michigan Railroad Atlas, Volumes 1-4, Graydon M. Meints © 2017, Michigan State University Libraries
- In the Pines, An Atlas of Michigan Logging Railroads, James S. Hannum, M.D., © 2017 Hannum House Publications


To claim a prize:
- Download and print the Ticket to Manistee (see Resources) and take it with you caching.
- As an aide, download and print the RMNE Recommended Route Map (see Resources).
- Follow the instructions on that form to find the required number and combination of the hides.
- All hides in the tour are identified on the Ticket to Manistee and in the bookmark list.
- Look for Mile Post values on the cache labels and log books to record on the form.
- Please do not record the Mile Post values in your on-line log or they will be deleted.
- Please do not post photos showing the Mile Post values with your on-line log.
- Please do not post photos showing answers to field puzzles with your on-line log.
- Each individual GC account holder making the find must sign and date the paper log book in the cache with their GC account name. No group logs please.
- Send the completed form via US Mail to the address on the form or scan and send a digital copy using GC email or the GC message center. Each GC account holder must send in a form. One prize per completed form. One prize per GC Account. Multiple forms per mailing is encouraged.
Once your answers have been verified, the prize will be sent back to you via US Mail to the address you provide on the form, while supplies last. One hundred prizes have been minted..
Resources:
Contributors:
I would like to express my special thanks to the following people and organizations who have helped either directly or indirectly with this project:
- Charles Conn for allowing me to use of his collection of photographs at the Clarke Historical Library. Mr. Conn thought this would be a good non-profit way to share some history.
- Mark Fedder and the Manistee County Historical Museum for being gracious cohosts.
- Mike Hankwitz and Charles Showalter, both of whom provided a portion of their digital collection, both private and that of the Manistee County Historical Museum, in support of this project.
- The Crawford County Historical Society for being gracious cohosts and providing materials.
- The Traverse City District Library, for help with and blessing to use their digital library.
- Dr. James Hannum, for sharing research, opinions and guidance along the right of way.
- James Harlow for sharing many items out of his collection and his memories.
- Dale Berry and michiganrailroads.com, always a source of great information.
- Graydon Meints, for his hard work and research which would have taken years to do on my own.
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