| The
Kalamazoo River
 |
 |
|
Two views of the river from Art Work of
City of Kalamazoo, 1894. |
The
village of Kalamazoo was named after the river that flows through
it, and the destinies of the two entities have always been
intertwined. The
origin
of the name of the Kalamazoo River is an interesting story all its
own. The river runs
about 150 miles along a northwesterly track from its various springs
in Hillsdale and Jackson counties to its mouth at Lake Michigan near
the village of Saugatuck. Its
basin drains about 2,200 square miles of land, and has a very gentle
fall of about two feet per mile.
Throughout
its history the Kalamazoo River has shaped the fortunes of the
communities along its banks. In
the years before railroads and highways, it was a major artery for
transportation in southwestern Michigan.
The river has provided power for gristmills and hydroelectric
dams and water for agriculture. Over the years anglers have tried
their hand at catching an abundant variety of fish, bathers have
used its waters to cool off on hot summer days, and boaters have
enjoyed many quiet mornings paddling downstream while taking in its
natural beauty. Lastly,
the abundant supply of water and the ease with which the river could be
used to dispose of wastes brought many industries to the communities
along its shores.
There
is evidence that the Potawatomi tribe used the river for
transportation and had at least one small village at a point on its
banks where several overland trails converged.
This was also the location of one of the best fords of the
river for many miles in either direction.
It is no surprise, then, that when Titus Bronson platted
the village that would soon become Kalamazoo, he did so on the west
bank of the river near that same spot.
Nathan Harrison, another early settler, ran a ferry
shuttling settlers and their goods from one side of the river to the
other. The first
bridge over the Kalamazoo River was built near what is now East Main
Street in 1835.
 |
|
Laying little bridge west of East Main
Bridge, date unknown, but c1870-95. |
|
Kalamazoo Public Library Photograph
P-189 |
The
Kalamazoo River also enjoyed a brief period as an important corridor
for shipping. Although
Native Americans and trappers had doubtless been traveling the river
for centuries, the first recorded instance of river navigation took
place in 1834. Oka Town
and Abijah Chichester, two men from Allegan, sailed a raft of
lumber down the river to Saugatuck.
The goal of the river trade was to transport finished goods
from the Great Lakes ports to inland settlements and return
downstream with the produce of the settlers.
Soon afterwards many other rafts and flatboats were
built by enterprising traders to carry goods up and down the
navigable stretch of the river between Allegan and Saugatuck.
In 1838 the flat-bottomed steamboat Trowbridge was put into
service on the river. However,
river transportation was slow and often inconvenient (especially
when traveling upriver), and Kalamazoo, the largest settlement on the
river, was above the shoals near Otsego, so goods traveling to and
from the village were usually hauled the last few miles overland.
When the railroad finally reached Kalamazoo in 1846, traffic
on the river began to decline.
 |
|
|
"The
woods around them were the unpeopled forest of Michigan, and
the small winding reach of placid water that was just
visible in the distance was an elbow of the Kalamazoo, a
beautiful little river that flows westward, emptying its
tribute into the vast expanse of Lake Michigan."
-
James Fenimore Cooper, 1848
|
|
|
|
These
days
the only boats you will see along the Kalamazoo River are the
canoes, kayaks, and small fishing boats of people seeking a quiet
afternoon of recreation. Accounts
from early Kalamazoo residents tell of a river that was quiet and
beautiful. Young
couples could canoe for miles in solitude.
The fishing was good, and anglers could often catch enough
bass, salmon, or catfish for several meals.
Youngsters cooled off in swimming holes up and down the
stream. One of the more
popular places to swim in the early 1900's was known as "the
box" and was located right in the city just upstream from the
old East Main Street bridge. Older
residents can remember days when dozens of children would gather
there to swim and play.
As
time progressed and Kalamazoo grew, the river became more and more
polluted. Many of the
chemicals dumped into the river by the paper industry were
especially destructive to the river.
By 1945 the Stream Control Commission proclaimed "The
condition of the river, a source of industrial cooling water, is
such that agricultural uses have been severely impaired, fish life
is largely non-existent, and the value for industrial processing
purposes has been heavily impaired..." Most people who lived
in Kalamazoo in the 40's, 50's and 60's avoided the river if at all
possible. They report
that it exuded a foul odor, was devoid of fish, and was too toxic
for swimming. In short,
the Kalamazoo had become an 'industrial river.'
Since
the environmental movements of the 1970's, the Kalamazoo River has
been making a slow comeback. Gradual
reductions in pollution have allowed some types of fish to return to
the river, although the
State of Michigan has a website that issues limitations on the
quantity of Kalamazoo River fish a person should eat.
The smell of the river is almost gone in many places and
canoeists can once again enjoy the water.
Boat launches and picnic areas are scattered along the
river's banks as recreational uses of the river gradually overcome
industrial ones. Some
important decisions remain. Citizens
must decide what to do about the carcinogenic PCBs that remain
buried in the river sediment and behind dams.
Perhaps, if this is done, the future of the Kalamazoo River
will continue to brighten.
|
For further information, we suggest
these sources:
|
H 977.417
H67u |
Durant, Samuel W. History
of Kalamazoo County, Michigan. Originally published
by Everts & Abbot in 1880. Reprinted by Unigraphic
in 1976, page 57. |
| |
History Room Subject File: Kalamazoo
River |
H
977.41 U58.1 |
Kalamazoo River, Mich.,
Kalamazoo and Vicinity: Letter from the Secretary of the Army.
Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1955. |
H
387
L265 |
Lane, Kit. Built
on the Banks of the Kalamazoo. Douglas, MI: Pavilion
Press, 1993. |
H
977.41
L265 |
Lane, Kit.
The Kalamazoo. Douglas, MI: Pavilion Press, 2006. |
H
977.418 W72 |
Williams, Owen W. The
Kalamazoo River: A Local History up to the Civil War. History
Seminar of Kalamazoo College, typescript, 1948. |
| Web Page |
Kalamazoo
River Superfund Site |
| Web Page |
Kalamazoo
River Watershed Site |
| Web Page |
State
of Michigan Fish Advisory Site |
Written by Alex Forist, Kalamazoo Public Library staff,
December 2005.
return to All About Kalamazoo
menu
|