In the 1920s, Dr. William E. McNamara of Lansing, Michigan purchased 32,000 acres of land in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.[2] In 1927, McNamara organized the Hiawatha Sportsman's Club for the purpose of hunting, fishing, and relaxing in a relatively unspoiled environment.[4] In 1930, the club, led by McNamara, put together a team or architects and contractors to construct a hotel on club property. The original design specified a hotel with 50 rooms and a screened porch 88 feet (27 m) long running along the front of the building. However, the Great Depression changed economic conditions, and the original design was scaled down to one containing 16 rooms, a lobby, and a 56 feet (17 m) screened porch. The final building included design elements from both Philadelphia architect George Bunn and Lansing architect Harold G. Benriter.[2]
The building was constructed in 1931, using logs cut on the club's property and limestone from a quarry also on the club's property.[2] The limestone fireplace in the lobby was designed and constructed by Barryton, Michigan masons Lloyd, Martin and Lormer Eisenbach.[2] The lodge served as a quiet facility for club members to stay at, in contrast to cabins on Lake Millecoquins that could also be rented.[5]
However, in 1962, the nearby dining hall burned down, and was not replaced.[5] Members use of the lodge decreased. The lodge is currently used by the Hiawatha Sportsman's Club as a library and museum, and it is not open to the public.[2]
Description
The Hiawatha Sportsman's Club's Manitou Lodge is sited on a bluff overlooking Naubinway and Lake Michigan.[2] The lodge is "an excellent example" of log construction.[2] It is still in original condition, and consists of a lobby and sleeping rooms. The main section is a gable-end structure with a low pitched roof, and contains the lobby. The lobby interior showcases exposed roof beams and a large limestone fireplace. A 12 feet (3.7 m) by 56 feet (17 m) screened porch runs along the south side of the building, and provides a view of the lake. Two gable-end wings on the north side, mirror images of each other, house the sleeping rooms.[2]
^ abcdefghij"Manitou Lodge". Michigan State Housing Development Authority: Historic Sites Online. Archived from the original on December 24, 2012. Retrieved May 21, 2012.