Huron Mountain Club Explained

Huron Mountain Club
Type:Private club
Vat Id:(for European organizations) -->
Purpose:To establish a remote hunting and fishing club for outdoor enthusiasts
Headquarters:Marquette County, Michigan
Membership:50
Owners:-->

The Huron Mountain Club is a private club whose land holdings in Marquette County, in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, constitutes one of the largest tracts of primeval forest in the Great Lakes region. Formed circa 1890, the club comprises 50 dwellings clustered inside nearly 26,000 acres of private land, including area in and around the Huron Mountains. The club began as a remote hunting and fishing club for outdoor enthusiasts. The original charter limited membership to 50 partners.[1] The property comprises 13 inland lakes and approximately 40,000 acres of old-growth forest.

Through its long association with the non-profit Huron Mountain Wildlife Foundation, the Huron Mountain Club has been the site of a wide range of research in field biology and geology. Naturalist Aldo Leopold produced a plan for preserving the tract in 1938.[2] The ensuing research facility at Ives Lake was started in the 1960s, after it passed from a member family's hands into Club ownership.

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Notes and References

  1. News: Pace . Emily . May 9, 2008 . Behind the Gates . The club has a limit of 100 associates and 50 permanent member families who own cabins on the nearly 26,000 acres of land . Upper Michigan's Source . Negaunee, MI . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120323014538/http://www.uppermichiganssource.com/news/news_story.aspx?id=132343 . March 23, 2012 .
  2. Flaspohler . David J. . Meine . Curt. Planning for Wildness: Aldo Leopold's Report on Huron Mountain Club . Journal of Forestry . 104 . 1 . January–February 2006 . 32–42 . Society of American Foresters . Bethesda, MD . 0022-1201 . Leopold integrated ideas from several disciplines, producing a plan that emphasized the establishment of core and buffer zones in protected areas, reduction of overabundant native species, relaxation of predator control policies, and integration of research in the management of protected areas. .