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Mission House (Mackinac Island)

Mission House
Mission House Mackinac Island August 2011.jpg
Mission House in 2011
Mission House (Mackinac Island) is located in Michigan
Mission House (Mackinac Island)
Mission House (Mackinac Island) is located in the US
Mission House (Mackinac Island)
Location Huron St, Mackinac Island, Michigan
Coordinates 45°51′4″N 84°36′26″W / 45.85111°N 84.60722°W / 45.85111; -84.60722Coordinates: 45°51′4″N 84°36′26″W / 45.85111°N 84.60722°W / 45.85111; -84.60722
Area 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built 1825
Built by Martin Heydenburk
NRHP Reference # 71000410
Added to NRHP April 16, 1971

The Mission House on Mackinac Island is a historic structure owned by the state of Michigan. Built in 1825, it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is operated as part of the Mackinac Island State Park. The Mission House is a wood-frame structure covered in clapboard siding and constructed in a U shape. The center section is three stories, and the flanking wings are two stories. The front facade has a single-story porch covering the entrance in the center.

In 1823, missionaries William Montague Ferry and his wife Amanda founded a mission on the southeast corner of Mackinac Island at the location since known as Mission Point. In 1825, the couple built this mission house at the site. It is the centerpiece of a major effort by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions to disseminate Christianity among the Native Americans of the upper Great Lakes. It is also a standing remnant of the fur trade era of Great Lakes history.

The Mission House was designed as a combination school complex and boardinghouse for students of Native American, meti, and Euro-American ancestry. The students were boarded at the school, taught manual crafts and rudimentary liberal arts, and trained to adopt the standards and living patterns characteristic of New England and the American East Coast. In 1827, 112 students were enrolled in the school.

The Mission House was constructed as a two-story building. It was built in a spare, utilitarian style suitable for its purpose. There has been little exterior decoration on the building since its original construction in 1825. The dormitory structure was built with local sawn timbers from nearby Mill Creek, and a close study of these timbers enabled archeologists to reconstruct what kind of steel saw had been used to cut the logs and even how fast the saw blade had moved.

The Mission House was the largest structure of a complex that also included a church, the Mission Church (built 1829-30), and nearby fields for training students in agriculture. The Ferry family lived in this house for 12 years, from 1825 until 1837. Here their son, Thomas W. Ferry, a future U.S. Senator, was born in 1827.


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