Elizabeth Park (Michigan)

Elizabeth Park is a county park mostly located on an artificial island in the Detroit River in southern Wayne County, Michigan. The park is sometimes but rarely referred to as Slocum's Island — the historic name of the island on which the park is located. The park is located within the city limits of Trenton along Jefferson Avenue and just north of the Wayne County Bridge leading to Grosse Ile. Elizabeth Park is recognized as the first county park established in the state of Michigan.[1][2]

Elizabeth Park
Entrance to Elizabeth Park
Location within the state of Michigan
LocationTrenton, Michigan
Coordinates42°07′56″N 83°10′49″W
Area162 acres (65 ha)
Created1919
Administered byWayne County Park System

The island is separated from the mainland by a narrow canal and is located on the western shores of the Detroit River in the Trenton Channel. The island itself is commonly referred to as Elizabeth Park, and the name Slocum's Island has largely fallen into disuse. While Elizabeth Park occupies the northern portion of the island, the portion south of Grosse Ile Parkway is occupied by the large Trenton Channel Power Plant.

History

The area was occupied by the Native American tribe the Wyandot for several centuries before Europeans arrived to colonize the area. The Wyandot settled the village of Maguagon along the banks of the Detroit River, which was the site of the minor Battle of Maguaga during the War of 1812. The area was soon settled as Truaxton in 1816 by Abram Caleb Truax, who was a French Major who decided to stay in the area after the war.[3] In 1827, Lewis Cass, the governor of the Michigan Territory, organized Monguagon Township with Truax as the first township supervisor. As a part of the township, the area of Truaxton was renamed Trenton in 1847 and incorporated as a village in 1855.

Giles Bryan Slocum (1808–1884), who was an early businessman and landowner, moved to Truaxton in 1834. He built Truaxton's first dock along the Detroit River in that summer. He would later manage docks up and down the Detroit River. He used his wealth to purchase three miles (4.8 km) of Truaxton's riverfront. He built his large estate on what he called Slocum's Island, which was partially separated from the mainland by his own constructed canal. Slocum married Sophia Truax (daughter of Abram Caleb Truax) in 1838, and she inherited his estate when he died in 1884. She continued to live on Slocum's Island with her only daughter, Elizabeth Nichols (née Slocum). Sophia Truax died in 1912, and Nichols then inherited the island.[4]

Nichols died in 1919, and her children inherited the property. They donated the estate to the Wayne County Park Trustees in October 1919 on the condition that it be set aside as "Elizabeth Park" in honor of their mother.[1][5] The Slocum estate, which consisted of 162 acres (65 ha), was given to the county and organized as Michigan's first county park.[1][2] The donation was helpful in the creation of the Wayne County Park System, which had been hindered by a lack of funding to acquire their own properties. Though the new park system continued to have no funding afterward, the development of Elizabeth Park was made possible by financial support from the Michigan Department of Transportation, which improved the canal, created bridges connecting the island to the mainland, and built the road that circles the park.[5]

Recent status

One of the three pedestrian bridges connecting the island to the mainland portion of the park

In 2003, the park underwent an over $1 million renovation of the crumbling Southshore Riverwalk, which was an original element of Elizabeth Park. The Northshore Riverwalk is also being improved at a cost of $1.2 million. This riverwalk is closer to the Trenton populace and is expected to draw in more visitors from the surrounding commercial district.[2] The park includes a marina on the southern end near Grosse Ile Parkway.[6] Fishing and boating remain very popular activities. Walking, skating, or fishing can be done from the 1,300 feet (396 m) of riverwalks, and the interior of the park contains hiking and cycling trails, a baseball field, skatepark, playground, and a large picnic area.[1]

The unique pedestrian bridges that cross the canal and connect Elizabeth Park to the mainland were constructed in the early stages of the park's development. There are three walkway bridges — all named Elizabeth Park Walkway Bridge — at different locations. All three of these bridges are still structurally sound but are in desperate need of restoration.[7] The only automobile bridge that crosses the canal is an arch bridge called the Elizabeth Drive Bridge on the north end of the park. The 59.7 ft (18.2 m) bridge was constructed in 1923 and retains most of its original features. However, like the pedestrian bridges, the Elizabeth Drive Bridge is in poor shape. The Michigan Historic Bridge Inventory lists the bridge as eligible for entry into the National Register of Historic Places.[8][9]

Elizabeth Park is also mentioned for possible inclusion into the Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge, which is still in its preliminary stages of development. Since Elizabeth Park is owned by Wayne County, it is unsure at this time if the park would be included into the expanding refuge or if it would just include the surrounding waterways.[10]

In 2013 the foot bridges around Elizabeth Park were restored, the wrought iron railings were salvaged, cleaned an replace on the new bridges. They were dedicated in May 2014.

Trenton Channel Power Plant

The Trenton Channel Power Plant occupies the portion of Slocum's Island directly south of Elizabeth Park.

Quite the contrast to Elizabeth Park, the portion of Slocum's Island south of Grosse Ile Parkway is occupied by the large, coal-burning Trenton Channel Power Plant, which is owned and operated by DTE Energy. This property was not part of Giles Bryan Slocum's original property that was donated to the county in 1919 but has since been included as part of the island when the original canal around Slocum's property was expanded southward. The Detroit Edison Company, a present-day subsidiary of DTE Energy, purchased the southern portion of the island and constructed the Trenton Channel Power Plant in 1949. Much of their property is on the mainland surrounding West Jefferson Avenue. The main building — the two smokestack power station — is the only portion located on what is now technically the southern portion of Slocum's Island.

Despite its nature, the power plant works closely with environmental organizations to ensure the area is free of pollutants. For their efforts, the Trenton Channel Power Plant was awarded the Wildlife Habitat Council's Corporate Habitat of the Year award in 2004 “ 14 years ago”. DTE Energy regularly spreads crushed limestone along the banks of the Detroit River on Slocum's Island, because such an item provides a popular nesting habitat for native common terns. Common terns were once plentiful in the region before industrialism drove out all but a small number of them.[11][12] Other birds, such as the bald eagles, peregrine falcons, and great blue herons also use the grounds for habitat.[12]

gollark: It's one thing to go "the universe is complicated, therefore an intelligent being of some sort created it" (not that I think you demonstrated this!) but it's quite another to go "therefore all the ridiculous and complicated lore of [SOME RELIGION] is also true".
gollark: That sounds like one of those things where they test a ridiculous amount of ways to extract information/random noise from the Bible and, amazingly, find that sometimes random noise seems like an interesting thing.
gollark: They weren't very *good* steam engines; they were missing steel or something.
gollark: No, I mean what do they interact with and what's the evidence of it.
gollark: > without a creation there is no world staying aliveAgain, please actually explain this?

See also

References

  1. Wayne County Department of Public Services (2010). "Elizabeth Park". Retrieved March 15, 2010.
  2. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (2008). "Elizabeth South Shore Riverwalk". Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  3. City of Trenton. "Trenton City History". Archived from the original on October 8, 2008. Retrieved March 15, 2010.
  4. Leake, Paul (1912). History of Detroit, a chronicle of its progress, its industries, its institutions, and the people of the fair City of the straits. Lewis Publishing. pp. 913–917. Retrieved March 15, 2010. Giles Bryan Slocum.
  5. Wayne County Department of Public Services (2010). "Historic Summary of Wayne County Parks". Retrieved March 15, 2010.
  6. Michigan Department of Natural Resources (2010). "Elizabeth Park Marina". Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  7. Historic Bridges (2010). "Elizabeth Park Walkway Bridges". Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  8. Michigan Department of Transportation (2009). "Elizabeth Pk. Dr. / Eliz. Pk. Canal". Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  9. Historic Bridges (2010). "Elizabeth Drive Bridge". Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  10. Metropolitan Affairs Coalition (Oct 2001). "A Conservation Vision for the Lower Detroit River Ecosystem" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-08-21. Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  11. Cooperative Conservation America. "DTE Energy Trenton Channel Power Plant". Archived from the original on January 16, 2009. Retrieved March 15, 2010.
  12. Wildlife Habitat Council (July 2005). "A Portfolio of DTE Energy's Activities with the Wildlife Habitat Council" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 9, 2010. Retrieved March 15, 2010.
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