Mackinac National Park

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File:Mackinac National Park map.jpg
Map of Mackinac National Park published in 1890
File:Arch Rock Mackinac Island.jpg
Arch Rock on Mackinac Island

Mackinac National Park was a United States national park that existed from 1875 to 1895 on Mackinac Island in northern Michigan, making it the second U.S. national park after Yellowstone National Park. The Template:Convert park was created in response to the growing popularity of the island as a summer resort. Its creation was largely the result of efforts by United States Senator Thomas W. Ferry, a native of the island. Senate Bill 28 "to set aside a certain portion of the island of Mackinaw and the straits of Mackinaw, within the State of Michigan as a national park" was introduced December 2, 1874, and signed by President Ulysses S. Grant on March 3, 1875.<ref>Congressional Record, Senate, 43rd Congress, 1st Session, page 12, December 2, 1874</ref><ref>Congressional Record, Senate, 43rd Congress, 2nd Session, page 2210, March 3, 1874</ref> The national park covered Template:Convert while the fort retained Template:Convert and the remainder of the island was privately owned.<ref name= "annals">Annals of Fort Mackinac, Dwight H. Kelton, Detroit Free Press Printing Co., 1887</ref>

The park grounds abutted Fort Mackinac, which continued to serve as a United States Army garrison during the operation of the park, as well as island geological features such as Arch Rock and Sugar Loaf. The fort's commander ran the park and federal troops served as park caretakers, as at Yellowstone. The park had the authority to construct roads and trails and to lease small numbers of lots for buildings to offset its expenses, as no federal money was provided to run the park. The park lands also had to be available to the army for military training and in time of war.<ref name= "annals" />

In 1895, the fort was decommissioned and, at the request of Michigan Governor John T. Rich, the park and fort was turned over to the State of Michigan, becoming Mackinac Island State Park, the first state park in Michigan.<ref>Pruning the Parks: Mackinac National Park (1875-1895), National Parks Traveller, Bob Janiskee, May 10, 2011</ref> The park was established on the condition that it remain a state park or it would revert to the United States. This restriction caused a problem in the 1960s when the city proposed to lease land from the park for an expanded airport for the island. The lease to the city was ruled a non-park use but the park, on its own, expanded and continues to run the airport.<ref>Report of the Attorney General, State of Michigan, 1963</ref>

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