About this ebook
Stretching 265 miles, the majestic Grand River is Michigan's longest waterway, and it was once considered one of the Midwest's most important.
The river starts as a trickle just south of Jackson and gains power as it surges toward Lake Michigan in Grand Haven. Trappers first used the river to trade with the Native American villages along its banks. Later, the lumber industry transported logs via the Grand. The river shaped the towns and cities that grew up along its banks, providing them with transportation and power for manufacturers, including the once-renowned Grand Rapids furniture industry. Fertile farmlands have always played an important role in the history of the Grand River Valley. Today, the river is used primarily for recreation, including boating, fishing, and, in Grand Ledge, rock climbing.
Norma Lewis
Norma Lewis has lived in southwest Michigan for about thirty years and is now in Grand Haven. She loves local history and enjoys the thrill of the hunt when doing researching, mainly because she almost always finds something better than what she thought she was looking for. This is her seventeenth book and her ninth with Arcadia Publishing/The History Press. Along with local histories, she writes silly animal books for children.
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Grand River - Norma Lewis
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INTRODUCTION
Let us pick more than 200 years ago as the starting point for when the Grand River began impacting people. That is when the Native Americans known as the Three Fires settled along its banks. One of those groups, the Ottawa, discovered the rapids of the river and named the area Owashtanong, meaning an ideal place to live. These rapids are now synonymous with the name of Michigan’s second-largest city, Grand Rapids.
Michigan’s history can be traced by following the meandering route of the Grand River. The river traverses north and west from its start in the Irish Hills below Jackson to its end at Grand Haven. At 265 miles, it is Michigan’s longest river. The Red Cedar, which flows through the campus of Michigan State University, and the Looking Glass, Maple, Flat, Thornapple, and Rogue Rivers comprise the main tributaries that feed into the Grand River. It flows through seven counties before emptying into Lake Michigan.
The Grand River watershed is the second-largest in Michigan, draining water from parts of the 15 southern and western counties. The watershed serves to connect primarily agricultural communities such as Olivet, Eaton Rapids, Portland, Ionia, Lake Odessa, and Saranac, along with urban areas like Lansing and Grand Rapids. The wetlands, marshes, and bogs filter out pollutants, in turn supporting a unique biodiversity both in the water and on land. As 13 percent of the Lake Michigan watershed, the Grand River is a critical component of the health of the lake itself.
Grand Rapids, Grand River Avenue, Grand Ledge, the Grand Valley, Grand Valley State University, many businesses—in fact, almost every name in Michigan that starts with Grand was inspired by the river. Red Flannel Day in Cedar Springs harks back to the latter part of the 19th century, when lumberjacks poled logs from the nearby pine and oak forests down the Grand River. Every decade, the river is celebrated with a two-week expedition along its entire length that puts a spotlight on its challenges and opportunities. People from all walks of life, students, professors, business leaders, government officials, scientists, and historians come together to paddle from Liberty Center near Jackson to Grand Haven.
It is an opportunity to celebrate the river’s story, much of it marked by decades of abuse going back to the mid-1800s. The development of southern Michigan cities linked by railroads generated increased human and industrial waste. Clearing of white pine forests clogged the Grand River with sawdust. Logging brought more sediment into the river. In the late 1880s, one Grand Rapids resident described the river as an open sewer covered with a green odiferous scum mixed with oil from the gas works.
In 1905, the Grand Rapids Evening Press predicted that in a century the Grand River would be more sewer than river.
By the 1950s and 1960s, the plight of the United States’ rivers gained attention when the Cuyahoga River in the Cleveland, Ohio, area began randomly catching fire. The Clean Water Act passed in 1972 limits the amounts of pollutants that may be discharged, thus allowing rivers and lakes to reclaim their water quality, along with providing incalculable benefits to the nation’s health and that of all living organisms. Beginning in the 1990s, Grand Rapids spent over $200 million to improve its sewer system and reduce the overflow of sewage waste into the river by 99 percent. Fishing has come back to the Grand, and the river now supports nearly 100 species of fish.
There is still work to be done. More than 10 dams along the Grand River and approximately 200 more on its tributaries no longer serve a purpose and collect runoff water in impoundments. The runoff water is a mix of dirt, oil, and debris along with sediment containing dangerous herbicides, fertilizer, and insecticides. Development also causes problems resulting in fewer wetlands to filter those pollutants. These stresses to the Grand River are exacerbated by flooding.
April 2013 tested Grand Rapids’ preparedness for flooding, and the city barely passed. Day after day of rain caused widespread flooding when the water rose to a record high. In harm’s way were downtown buildings and neighborhoods, including the city’s wastewater treatment plant. Residents were called upon to fill sandbags in an attempt to hold off the expected water rise and floating, untreated sewage that would accompany it. Fortunately, the three to four inches of rain forecast never came, and