Hartwick Pines State Park

Hartwick Pines State Park

Infobox_protected_area | name = Hartwick Pines State Park
iucn_category = V


caption =
locator_x =
locator_y =
location = Michigan, USA
nearest_city = Grayling, Michigan
lat_degrees = 44
lat_minutes = 44
lat_seconds = 50
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 84
long_minutes = 40
long_seconds = 7
long_direction = W
area = 9,672 acres (39.2 km²)
established =
visitation_num =
visitation_year =
governing_body = Michigan Department of Natural Resources

Hartwick Pines State Park is a 9,672-acre (39.2 km²) State Park in the U.S. state of Michigan, located in Crawford County near Grayling and Interstate 75. It is the third largest state park on Michigan's Lower Peninsula and the state's fifth-biggest park overall. The park contains an old growth forest of white pines and red pines that resembles the appearance of all of Northern Michigan prior to the logging era.

Hartwick Pines Logging Museum

The "Hartwick Pines" are a 49-acre (0.2 km²) old-growth remnant of a pine grove that was withdrawn from logging by a local timbering firm in 1927. At that time, very little old-growth pine remained in northern Michigan. One of the heirs of the firm's original owners, Karen Michelson Hartwick, donated the grove, which was then 85 acres (0.35 km²) in size, and 8,000 surrounding acres (32.4 km²) of cutover land to the state of Michigan as a memorial to the logging industry.

The state accepted the gift and worked with the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) to build the "Hartwick Pines Logging Museum" adjacent to the grove. The museum was erected in 1934-1935. It contains recreated exhibit rooms, photographs and artifacts of the lumber boom years of northern Michigan. The museum is located in two replica logging camp buildings and also contains outdoor exhibits of logging equipment and an enclosed steam-powered sawmill that is operated during summer special events. The Logging Museum is administered by the Michigan Department of History, Arts and Libraries' Michigan Historical Museum.

The Park Today

On November 11, 1940, the Armistice Day Blizzard badly damaged the Hartwick Pines old-growth pine grove. 36 acres (0.15 km²) of old trees were destroyed by windthrow from this and other storms, leaving behind the 49 acres that remain alive as of 2007.

The Michigan Forest Visitor Center opened in 1995 and is a year-round facility. The building contains an exhibit hall on the history of the forests in Michigan, an auditorium, classroom space, a bookstore operated by the non-profit Friends of Hartwick Pines and restrooms.

A State Park Motor Vehicle Permit fee is charged to enter the park. Visitors are encouraged to park at the visitor center and walk an accessible trail to the big trees. The "Old Growth Forest Trail" to the pine grove is a loop 1¼ miles (2 km) long. The Old Growth Forest is an even-aged stand of pines estimated to be between 350-375 years old. The tallest trees are between 150-160 feet tall, and have a girth of more than four feet DBH (Diameter at breast height). These Eastern White Pine are some of the largest trees in the eastern United States.

Hartwick Pines State Park also contains a campground, a day use area, and a network of four-season trails for summer hiking and winter cross-country skiing. The park offers a number of programs and special events throughout the entire year.

ee also

* Interlochen State Park for the other stand of virgin Eastern White Pine in the Lower Peninsula.
* Lumberman's Monument
* Michigan logging wheels

External links

* [http://www.michigan.gov/hartwickpines Hartwick Pines State Park]
* [http://www.michigan.gov/loggingmuseum Hartwick Pines Logging Museum]
* [http://www.unep-wcmc.org/wdpa/sitedetails.cfm?siteid=22566&level=nat World Database on Protected Areas - Hartwick Pines State Park]


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