Turtle Island (Lake Erie)

Turtle Island

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Turtle Island (Lake Erie)
Geography
Location Lake Erie
Coordinates 41°45′09″N 83°23′28″W / 41.75250°N 83.39111°W / 41.75250; -83.39111Coordinates: 41°45′09″N 83°23′28″W / 41.75250°N 83.39111°W / 41.75250; -83.39111
Area 1.5 acres (0.61 ha)
Administration
United States
States Michigan / Ohio
Counties Monroe County, Michigan / Lucas County, Ohio
Demographics
Population Uninhabited

Turtle Island is a remote 1.5-acre (0.61 ha) island in the western portion of Lake Erie in the United States. The island has an unusual political status, as its ownership is divided between the U.S. states of Michigan and Ohio, even though the island has no residents or use. Turtle Island is located about five miles (8.0 km) northeast of the mouth of the Maumee River in Maumee Bay. Today, the island houses several abandoned structures and the ruins of Turtle Island Light, a lighthouse dating back to 1866. According to the Census Bureau, most of the island lies in Jerusalem Township in Lucas County, Ohio with the smaller Michigan portion being part of Erie Township.

History

The Miami tribe was the first to inhabit the small island prior to 1800. They used the island primarily to gather seagull eggs. The island was named after Miami chief Mishikinakwa (c.1747–1812), who was an influential Indian leader in the Northwest Territory during the American Revolution.[1] Nicknamed Little Turtle, he later became popular among the American people after dissenting from his native tribe in the pursuit of peace negotiations with the Americans.[2][3]

The British operated a small fort on the island around 1794 in defense of the mouth of the Maumee River, but the fort was soon abandoned. There are conflicting accounts as to who maintained ownership of the island during this time. Local folklore alludes to the belief that the Indians owned the island and used it as a military fort, while others claim the British held control of it until losing it during the War of 1812. Official accounts of the history of Turtle Island date back to 1827, when the island itself was sold at a federal government auction in nearby Monroe, Michigan. Turtle Island was believed to not even be a true island on its own but rather a former extension of Little Cedar Point Peninsula.[3] The island was bought but sold back to the United States four years later.[2]

Early 1900s

With the completion of the Toledo Harbor Light in 1904, the shallower shipping lane around Turtle Island was rerouted to deeper waters, and the lighthouse on Turtle Island was abandoned.[1] Turtle Island Light was officially decommissioned on May 15, 1904. Federal officials removed the components of the lighthouse but left all the structures in place. The island was sold at an auction to A. H. Merrill for $1,650 in December 1904. The island went unused and was subsequently vandalized over the next 30 years. Most of the original structures were completely stripped of their elements. In the late 1920s, The Blade of Toledo reported on the status of the island by saying, “Vandals have wrecked the house, stealing everything that could be salvaged from the structure except the grim, bare walls which stand as a monument to the service this light rendered for nearly half a century.”[3]

In 1933, A. H. Merrill transferred ownership of the island to George Merrill. He signed a lease with the Associated Yacht Club of Toledo (AYC) for them to build a series of docks and use the island for recreational purposes. However, the AYC ran out of money during the Great Depression and was forced to abandon their plans for rejuvenating Turtle Island. The AYC attempted to work with the state of Ohio to receive funding to revamp the island, but the state determined the cost of restoring the island would exceed its beneficial use by the public since the island was too small and remote. The AYC abandoned the island in 1937, and the island continued to decay with no improvements.[2] The lighthouse keeper's headquarters were demolished, and the island suffered further damage from strong winds and waves during the 1965 Palm Sunday tornado outbreak.[4]

Border dispute

The rough location of the Michigan-Ohio boundary running through Turtle Island.

The small strip of land surrounding the mouth of the Maumee River was under the jurisdiction of the Michigan Territory, because the borders originally drawn up for the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 set a territorial boundary as a straight line from the southernmost edge of Lake Michigan. When Ohio became the first in the Northwest Territory to gain statehood in 1803, the state’s northern border did not include this important area, which was later given to the Michigan Territory when it was formally organized in 1805. Turtle Island fell under the jurisdiction of the Michigan Territory, and when the first Turtle Island Light was constructed in 1831, it was within the boundaries of the territory. When Toledo was founded in 1833, it was part of the Michigan Territory, and the Port of Toledo operated the lighthouse. Because Ohio disputed Michigan's ownership over this area, it led to the heated Toledo War, a border dispute between the Michigan Territory and the state of Ohio for the area known as the Toledo Strip. In late 1836, President Andrew Jackson intervened on behalf of Ohio and gave the Toledo Strip to Ohio in exchange for Michigan getting the Upper Peninsula when it became a state soon after on January 26, 1837.

The Toledo Strip and the city of Toledo became part of Ohio, but Turtle Island remained part of the Michigan Territory. The lighthouse was still operated by the Port of Toledo, but the island was still claimed and charted as Michigan territory within Monroe County. Control of the island was not disputed by either state, and the political status of the island was forgotten after the lighthouse was decommissioned in 1904. The state boundary of Ohio and Michigan remained unchanged from 1837 until 1973 when the status of Turtle Island was finally recognized and resolved long after tensions over the Toledo War had ended. The Supreme Court of the United States intervened, and on February 22, 1973, an agreement was reached between the two states. The state lines were redrawn for the last time to cut exactly through the center of the tiny island's 190' diameter sea wall[5] at a 45° angle,[6] while the ruins of the lighthouse itself were included in the Ohio half.[2] The island was divided between Monroe County and Ohio's Lucas County. This was merely an act of politics, as the island had been abandoned and continually decaying for the past 70 years. The Michigan half fell under the jurisdiction of Erie Township, while the city of Toledo assumed full control over the other half.

Current status

Construction of new structures on the island was halted by a court order.

The island remains privately owned, and Turtle Island only has remnants of structures still standing.[3] In February 2002, the owner of the island attempted to build three new buildings on the island with the reported intent of using them for summer vacation rentals. Authorities in Monroe County issued a decree to stop the construction, because the owner failed to get the building permits to build on the Michigan side of the island.[7] The decree was ignored, but the structures were never completely finished before they were mostly destroyed by large ice packs during the winter of 2009.[2][8] Erie Township, which has jurisdiction over the Michigan half of Turtle Island, has planned to remove the now-destroyed structures from the island and clean up the remaining debris. This action has not taken place yet, because the cost of doing so would be too expensive. The township has continually debated on what to do with the island.[9]

The only thing that remains of the 1866 Turtle Island Light is the tower, although the top of the tower was blown off during a windstorm on Palm Sunday in 1965, exposing the iron spikes that once held the lantern in place. Continued efforts at restoring the lighthouse have been unsuccessful. Portions of the concrete wall constructed to originally protect the lighthouse have also eroded away, further exposing the island. Lighthouse Digest lists the decaying Turtle Island Light as critically endangered on its Doomsday List of threatened lighthouses.[10][11] Even though the island is remote, it is currently closed to the public, although it is impossible for this to be enforced.

Turtle Island is one of at least 18 islands that straddle U.S. state lines. Some of the others include South Rigolets Island (30.352, -88.393) which straddles the Alabama-Mississippi state line, Long Island (34.970, -85.670) which straddles the Alabama-Tennessee state line, State Line Island (35.007, -88.190) which straddles the Alabama-Tennessee state line and Padanarum Island (41.652, -80.520) that straddles the Ohio-Pennsylvania line. Padanarum Island became joined to the Pennsylvania mainland when water levels in Pymatuning Reservoir were reduced for safety reasons. A swampy isthmus that still floods during high water now connects it to the mainland. Others are:

References

  1. 1 2 Staff (2010). "Turtle Island Lighthouse". Ohio City Productions. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Archinger, Warren (December 20, 2004). "Ohio Lighthouses—Turtle Island Light, Maumee Bay—Lake Erie". Mudjaw Systems. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Anderson, Kraig (2010). "Turtle Island, Ohio". Lighthousefriends.com. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  4. "Turtle Island Light". Lighthouse Depot. 2010. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  5. "Ohio–Michigan Boundary Line; Lake Erie–Mich. Comp. Laws Section 2.321". March 26, 1945. Retrieved March 6, 2014.
  6. "Ohio and Michigan Boundary Line: H.C.R. 38 of 1947" (PDF). State of Michigan Legislature. May 20, 1947. Retrieved March 6, 2014.
  7. Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of the United States: Ohio". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  8. "Turtle Island Light". Lighthouse.Boatnerd.com. 2010. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  9. Mark, Reiter (May 29, 2008). "Erie Township seeks bids to remove buildings". The Blade (Toledo, OH). Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  10. "The Doomsday List". Lighthouse Digest. 2010. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  11. Rowlett, Russ. "The Doomsday List". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
  12. Lewis and Clark and Julia Butler Hansen National Wildlife Refuges Draft CCP/EIS Chapter 2. Alternatives, Goals, Objectives, and Strategies (PDF). Washington, DC: United States Fish and Wildlife Service. p. 2-27. Retrieved 2016-04-20.

External links

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