The
Victorian Era: A Resort Meca
It was the Victorians who made Mackinac Island one
of the nation's most favored summer resorts. In the post-Civil War industrial
age and before automobiles, vacationers traveled by large lake excursion
boats from Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago and Detroit to the cooler climes
of Mackinac Island. They danced to Strauss' waltzes, listened to Sousa's
stirring marches, dined on whitefish and strolled along the broad decks.
To accommodate overnight guests boat and railroad companies built summer
hotels, such as the Grand
Hotel in the late 19th century. Victorians, like travelers everywhere,
shopped
for souvenirs, and Mackinac shops supplied them.
In the 1890's wealthy Midwestern industrialists who wanted to spent more
than a few nights on Mackinac built their own summer
cottages on the east and west bluffs. Soon a social life including
tennis, hiking, bicycling, examining the local natural wonders, and at
the turn of the century, golf at on the new Wawashkamo
Golf Course.

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