"""When I landed at Manistique from the Goodrich Line's City of Ludington at exactly midnight, May 29th 1893, I stepped into a strange new world such as I had never seen or even dreamed of. I was only seventeen and had lived for two years on a cattle ranch on the treeless plains of eastern Colorado northeast of Fort Lupton. I had never seen a ship, a large body of water, a sawmill, or even a big tree. The screaming saws in five big mills, running twenty-four hours a day; the scent of new lumber and the pine woods; the hoarse whistles of lake steamers; the tall masts of lumber schooners in the harbor; and the flickering flames and red glow from the open burners reflected across the water and in the sky against the dark and somber background of the immense forest when they discovered a new and unexplored area. I could hardly wait for morning to dawn."" Lynn McGlothlin Emerick spent early years in the Upper Peninsula town of Manistique, Michigan, where she heard stories from her grandfather, William Crowe about life in the white pine lumbering days. After college, she served as a speech pathologist in Michigan and Minnesota. Later, settled in the U.P., she held positions as emergency medical services planner, director of a County Commission on Aging and an independent consultant. With her husband, Dr. Lon Emerick, she wrote and published nine books of history, travel and humor, including the 50th anniversary edition of Lumberjack-- all set in the region and released by their company, North Country Publishing Ann McGlothlin Weller spent summer weeks in Manistique, Michigan, as a child and graduated from high school there. She worked on the school newspaper, interned at the weekly Manistique Pioneer-Tribune, obtained a journalism degree from Michigan State, wrote letters at the Library of Congress for elected officials, became an editor for Gale Research Company, and completed her career as a communications person for the Michigan Department of Commerce and Michigan State Housing Development Authority. Now living in Holland, Michigan, Ann operates Services for Publishers, a freelance editing and proofreading business, and writes a twice-monthly e-letter about diversity events and issues."
"""A book I wish I had written...crammed full of early historical logging-related photos...a reproduction beautifully edited."" -- Woods N Water News, November 2002 ""Besides true stories of everyday life...sets the record straight on logging camps and lumberjacks ...historical photos and important glossary."" -- Michigan Out-of-Doors, December 2002 ""The book is a treasury of primary source material as well as a thick slice-of-life of another time."" -- Grand Rapids Press, October 13, 2002 ""The lumber barons, the lumberjacks, and the town people who worked in the mills-as well as the happenings of that period... are recalled by one who lived among them. I hope it will be an inspiration to others to set down their memories of the days of falling pine and belt-driven sawmills. Already too much of this story has passed beyond recall... a valuable addition not only to the history of Manistique, but to the state as well."" --Ferris E. Lewis, Michigan History, Lansing ""An authentic first-hand account... which tells the whole story of big-scale lumbering during the 1890s and early 1900s. Chapter by enthralling chapter, Crowe recounts the times involved in the 'big pine' operations... it rivals anything so far written... rich in description and alive with thrilling episodes."" --Marquette Mining Journal ""First-hand accounts of the dramatic ""big cut"" by participant-observers are always illuminating. William S. Crowe's reminiscence of his years in the woods and the early days of Manistique, at the north end of Lake Michigan in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, was a classic in the 1950s. His granddaughters Lynn McGlothin Emerick and Ann McGlothin Weller have done a real service by republishing Lumberjack with ample photos and notes. Their book led to a WNMU public TV special and DVD on Upper Peninsula logging. Its success inspired and helped fund subsequent public TV productions on other aspects of U.P. history. These specials help preserve and disseminate stories of that distinctive corner of American landscape and culture."" --Mary Hoffman Hunt, Midwestern Guides ""Lumberjack is the seminal book on logging. Focusing on Manistique, meticulously researched, Lumberjack explores the early days of logging and the lifestyles of the countless loggers that filled the woods in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. William Crowe, the author, was a logger himself who collected and relates real stories from the men who were there. This is a mandatory book for anyone interested in the history of the Upper Peninsula. --Mikel B. Classen, author - Historian, True Tales: The Forgotten History of the U.P. and Faces Places & Days Gone By."