THANK YOU!!

With your support, The Ridges has purchased the Sandpiper property in Baileys Harbor!
This will eventually be the sight of the new The Ridges Sanctuary Interpretive Center.
Thank you helping further the vision of the founders in 1937.

Quick Info

Office
920-839-2802
PO Box 152
Baileys Harbor, WI 54202

Nature Center
Mon-Sat: 9 AM - 4 PM
Sunday: 12 PM - 3 PM
920-839-1101
Get Directions
Nature Store Online

Trails
Open daily
$5 adult
Free for members and if under 18
Download Trails Map

History

SHARE a MEMORY of  Your Connection to The Ridges Sanctuary

The Ridges Memory Project is seeking your submissions for a special collection of personal memories we are putting together in honor of our 75th anniversary coming up in 2012. A few sentences or detailed paragraphs are all welcome, as we want to hear your favorite memory, to know how this special place has touched you, or lessons you have learned from time spent at the Sanctuary. Photos are very welcome and will be returned!

Contact Cathleen Haskins at 262-949-4617; cathleenhaskins@yahoo.com ; The Ridges Sanctuary at 920-839-2802, or info@ridgessanctuary.org.

More about the Memories Project


A History of The Ridges Sanctuary

The Ridges Sanctuary – a Living Museum (1.3MB PDF) by Albert M. Fuller (article originally appeared in the Summer 1962 issue of Lore Magazine — reproduced by permission of Lore Magazine)

Ridges Sanctuary, an Exciting Story Untold (279KB PDF) by Paul M. McMahon (article originally appeared in the Milwaukee Journal on 8/16/1959 — reproduced by permission of Milwaukee Journal)

The Ridges… In Pause Between Seasons (496KB PDF) by Peter Geniesse (article originally appeared in the Post-Crescent on 12/25/1986 — reproduced by permission of the Post-Crescent)

Virgin Timber on Peninsula Not to be Sold (745KB PDF) (article originally appeared in the Milwaukee Journal on 6/3/1951 — reproduced by permission of the Milwaukee Journal)


Emma Toft’s Family History

Conservation Ethic Goes Back to Early Settlers (753KB PDF) by Ruby Voeks Toft (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 11/27/1992 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)
Sketch of Emma (3/96)
Bets Were Off When Shipmates Saw Will Toft’s Rowing Speed (609KB PDF) by Ruby Voeks Toft (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 12/1/1992 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)


Ridges’ Naturalist Learned Lessons from ‘Miss Emma’

Ridges’ Naturalist Learned Lessons from ‘Miss Emma’ (613KB PDF) by Roy Lukes (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 2/25/1982 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)

Emma Toft and Roy Lukes at Ridges Upper Rangelight


Emma Toft Celebrated

Toft Remembered on her 100th Birthday (518KB PDF) by Estelle Zahn (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 2/17/1991 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)

Wisconsin’s First Lady of Conservation (640KB PDF) by Roy Lukes (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 3/13/1998 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)

Emma Who Saved the Ridges (3.6MB PDF) by Paul G. Hayes (article originally appeared in the Milwaukee Journal Magazine on 3/31/1991 — reproduced by permission of Milwaukee Journal Magazine)

Sketch of Emma (3/96)

Miss Emma Leaves a Legacy for Generations to Come (485KB PDF) by Keta Steebs (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 2/1982 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)

Emma Toft Set Down Boy’s Adventure With a Deer (310KB PDF) by Emma Toft (article reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)

Emma Toft Given Bronze Medal for Conservation (353KB PDF) (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 9/22/1964 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)

Artist With Lens Remembers Emma Toft (808KB PDF) (article originally appeared in the Door County Advocate on 3/9/1982 — reproduced by permission of Door County Advocate)


Olivia Traven

Olivia Traven Scanned Articles (1.2MB PDF) (various authors)

Olivia Traven – Women of Northeast Wisconsin Nominee Project Application (510KB PDF)


The Baileys Harbor Rangelights

Upper RangelightsMany visitors to The Ridges Sanctuary are greeted by two lighthouses, the  Baileys Harbor Range Lights. The Range Lights were built in 1869, at a cost of $6,000. Six similar range lights were built on the Great Lakes at the time, although today the buildings in Baileys Harbor are the only ones of their style and class still standing in their original positions. The Range Lights, along with the Cana Island Light, replaced the first beacon of safety, the Baileys Harbor Light, which was built in 1852.

At the time they were built, the Range Lights were considered a more effective way to keep ships off the treacherous reefs and shallows at the entrance to Baileys Harbor. From the water, a sailor got “on range” by lining up vertically the white light in the Upper Range Light, which shone at a height of 39 feet above the water, with the Lower Range Light’s red beacon, fixed at 22 feet above the water.

The Upper Range Light is a one-and-a-half story, seven-room home with a rectangular tower on the south gable, directly above the front door. The tower, or lantern room, which houses the lens, gives the building its schoolhouse appearance.

The south side of the lantern room was simply a large thick window with a curved top. A fifth-order Fresnel lens illuminated a fixed white light toward Lake Michigan and above the Lower Range Light. The fifth order of light was a relatively small but common-sized light used in Great Lakes harbors.

Nearly 1,000 feet to the south, a small wooden structure housed a steamer lens and a fixed red light. The Lower Range Light rises from a fieldstone foundation. Its first floor is about 8 feet square. The second story, however, is octagonal with a rectangular light window that faces south to Lake Michigan. A much smaller window was located directly opposite the light window. Through this window the keeper could monitor the light from the Upper Range Light.

At the time the lights were constructed, the town of Baileys Harbor was the county seat and a busy logging center, shipping cordwood, cedar posts, poles, and hemlock bark (for tanning leather) to other Great Lakes ports. A safe harbor also was essential to the peninsula, especially on the Lake Michigan side, because the road between Baileys Harbor and Sturgeon Bay – today’s State Highway 57 — wasn’t build until 1870.

Fabien Truedell was the first keeper of the Range Lights. He took his post on December 1, 1869, about a month before the lights actually went into operation. Although Truedell was in his seventies when he became the light keeper, he was the first to walk the long boardwalk between the buildings, carrying fuel for the lamps.

On September 3, 1872, Marcus Shaler became the lighthouse keeper. His tenure was cut short by an outbreak of typhoid fever in the winter of 1874-75. One of the victims of this deadly season was Shaler’s wife, Lucy, and so great was his grief that he resigned his post in April of 1875.

Shaler was replaced by Joseph Harris, Jr., the son of the editor of The Door County Advocate. Harris kept the lights burning from 1875 to 1881 and his wife, Rosalie, gave birth to the first baby born at the Range Lights, a daughter they named Mabel.

On October 15, 1880, Baileys Harbor was struck by the disastrous Alpena Blow, a freak weather event that occurred when the prevailing northeast winds suddenly and unexpectedly switched to south winds. Harris stood helplessly by as nine schooners were damaged in Baileys Harbor. One of those schooners, the Lettie May, which was “loaded with sundries,” eventually washed up near the Range Lights.Upper Rangelights

Henry Gattie was stationed at the Range Lights for 27 years. Gattie came to the Range Lights an eligible, rather handsome bachelor, and his name and social doings appeared often in the newspaper’s society column. Many girlish hearts were broken when he married a local woman, Eva Hendrick.

Gattie was keeper when the lights were converted to an unmanned acetylene gas system in 1923. The Lighthouse Service transferred Gattie to Cana Island, but he periodically checked on the now locked and silent Range Lights.

The buildings remained empty for several years before a new use for them was found. In 1930 the Range Light buildings were converted to electricity, and the town’s Lutheran minister and his family moved into the Upper Range Light, which gained new life as a parsonage.

A new threat to the Range Lights emerged in 1934, when the Bureau of Lighthouses deeded the land, which comprised about 30 acres, and the buildings on it to the Door County Park Commission (DCPC). The DCPC considered the area a fine place for a trailer park, and began hauling in rock to fill the swales along the trail between the Range Light structures. This was a pivotal act in the history of the Range Lights, one that changed the course of their future.

Many people were outraged at the DCPC’s decision, especially those who had come to know the fragrant arbutus and beautiful and rare orchids growing there. The “Baileys Harbor Bog,” with its more than 25 orchid species, was too precious to be turned into a trailer park. Action was needed.

Since the land was county property, these residents could take steps to prevent the development. The course they chose was to form The Ridges Sanctuary which, in 1937, secured a lease of the land from the county. The plans for a trailer park went no further and the Range Lights land was protected.

The private, non-profit organization called The Ridges Sanctuary continued to protect the land, and the town’s Lutheran ministers continued to live in the Range Light Residence through the 1950′s. In 1964 the Sanctuary hired its first full-time employee and the Upper Range Light was offered as summer housing. It later became the home of the resident naturalist for many years. Today it provides housing for seasonal naturalists, although its primary function is as an office for the staff of the Sanctuary.

In 1969, 100 years after the Range Lights were built, the lanterns were removed from both buildings and a directional light was installed near the beach. Despite The Ridges’ best efforts to find them, the whereabouts of the beautiful Fresnel lamps remains a mystery. Shortly after the lights disappeared, the electricity was disconnected from the two lantern rooms and the electric poles removed from the range line.

By 1990, the two Range Lights, the oil house and the two-hole privy were on the National Register of Historic Places. A new 99-year lease between the county and The Ridges Sanctuary included those buildings and the original 30 acres of land.

The buildings were in sore need of repair. Dry rot had taken a mighty toll on the sill plates of the Lower Range Light, making the little building’s existence precarious. The roof and exterior paint of the Upper Range Light needed attention too, and cosmetic repairs on the buildings’ interiors were also necessary.

Although The Ridges Sanctuary did not own the buildings outright, it began a fund-raising campaign to restore the Range Lights. More than $70,000 was raised, almost all of it private money, and the restoration and repair work was completed. In 1993, with the lighthouses standing strong again, the time was right to focus attention on the boardwalk that once stretched along what is now the Range Light Trail. This last phase of restoration included not only constructing 2,400 square feet of boardwalk, but also the widening of the trail corridor itself.

In 1996 the Upper Range Light was rewired and a new line was brought in underground to the Lower Range Light. Both lantern rooms were now ready to act as beacons again. Two replacement lights (unfortunately not Fresnel lenses), on loan from the U.S. Coast Guard, were placed in the lantern rooms and are lighted occasionally.

The Ridges Sanctuary staff and volunteers have become the new keepers of the lights. This was a logical step, given the location of the Range Lights and the dedication of those who saved and preserved them.

The historic Baileys Harbor Range Lights are open for public viewing during the Door County Maritime Museum’s annual Lighthouse Festival, and to groups by special appointment for a small fee. During the remainder of the year, the Range Lights are not open to the public, but can be viewed from the Sanctuary’s hiking trails.


More Information
For more information on Door County lighthouses, click here.

For information about other Wisconsin lighthouses and lighthouse tours, click here.

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