Gooseberry River

Gooseberry River
Country United States
Basin
Main source 47°17′12″N 91°36′41″W / 47.286798°N 91.61135°W / 47.286798; -91.61135
River mouth Lake Superior
Basin size 85 square miles (220 km2)
Physical characteristics
Length 23 miles (37 km)

Gooseberry River is a 23-mile stream in Lake County, Minnesota, USA, draining into Lake Superior. It is known for its waterfalls, near its mouth in Gooseberry Falls State Park. The Gooseberry, like many of its neighboring streams, has an irregular discharge highly dependent on runoff from rain and snow melt. The region around the river was heavily forested and much logging took place during the early 20th century. The forest has since regrown and the falls and mouth of the river are now a thriving tourist destination.

Name

The English name for the Gooseberry River first appeared in 1823 on a map made by Major Stephen Harriman Long during his expedition of the Canada–US border region.[1] There are two competing theories about the origin of the Gooseberry's name. The Ojibwe name for the river is shab-on-im-i-kan-i-sibi, which translates to River Place of Gooseberries.[2] Alternatively, the name has been taken as an translation of the name of the French explorer Groseilliers.[3] The name Reviere de Groseilliers appeared on early French maps of the area as early as 1670, and Groseilliers visited the North Shore region in the 1660s.[1] The puzzle of the true origin has not been solved conclusively, and the state park lists both as plausible explanations.[4]

Topography

Gooseberry River has no lake or reservoir serving as its headwaters,[5] rising in a gully in T. 56 N. R. 10 W. at an elevation of 1700 feet.[6] From here it falls 1100 feet[7] over 23 miles[8] until it enters Lake Superior in Silver Creek Township. The main branch of the Gooseberry River drains a watershed of 27.3 square miles, approximately one quarter wetlands and three quarters forest.[9] The total area drained by the Gooseberry river, including all tributaries, is 85 square miles.[6] Major tributaries include the Little Gooseberry River, Skunk Creek, and Mink Creek.[10]

The most distinctive features of Gooseberry River are the Gooseberry Falls, three waterfalls in close succession near Highway 61 in Gooseberry Falls State Park. They begin .95 miles from the mouth of the river 120 feet above lake level, and end .75 miles from the mouth at 7 feet above lake level.[11] Another fall is located between 1.8 and 1.85 miles from the mouth.[11] The bed of the river near the falls is a basalt flow lying over an Amygdaloid flow. The Amygadloids erode faster than basalt, which then breaks off in large pieces, causing the high cliffs over which the river flows.[12] Below the falls, the river cuts a large channel through mostly clay.[12] To the northeast, a large basalt[12] cliff rises 75 feet above lake level.[13] To the southwest of the mouth is a lower cliff of only 10 feet, which was probably once attached to the high bluff before the river cut a channel between them.[13] At the mouth, the flow of the river meets the opposing force of storms on the lake, kicking up a bar of red pebbles and chalcedony agates.[13]

Due to the lack of a headwater, the Gooseberry's flow comes nearly entirely from runoff.[5] Accordingly, the flow is heaviest during the spring snow melt,[5] and comparatively the river may run nearly dry during the summer.[14]

Ecology

Gooseberry River is populated by brook, brown, and rainbow trout in the stretches above the barrier falls, and sees runs of steelhead in April and May.[14] It is situated in a mixed evergreen, aspen, and birch forest with colonies of Arctic–alpine plants which enjoy Lake Superior's moderating effect on the local climate.[4]

Human use

Gooseberry River appears on French maps as the Reviere des Groseilliers as early as the 1670s.[1] The region remained largely undeveloped until the 1870s, when commercial fishers moved into the north shore region.[15] Loggers followed in the 1890s. In July 1899, Colonel John H. Knight and former Senator of Wisconsin William Freeman Vilas, owners of the Superior Lumber Company, acquired for $1,000,000 land around the Gooseberry River estimated to contain four hundred million feet of standing pine.[16] Logs felled from the forests around the Gooseberry were rafted to Knight and Vilas's lumber mills in Ashland, Wisconsin.[17] One year later, these lands were acquired, along with Knight and Vilas's Ashland mill, by Thomas Nestor of the Nestor Logging Company for $1,250,000.[18] The Nestor Logging Company set up its headquarters at the mouth of the Gooseberry, and built a logging railroad running inland to harvest the thick pine stands in the region.[15] The railway was removed by 1908, but when the Virginia & Rainy Lake Company began logging further inland, the Nestor grade was once again used to build a spur line to connect the project with the Duluth & Northern Minnesota Railway.[19] In the upper reaches of the watershed of the Gooseberry and its tributaries, communities began to grow on the Alger Line.[20] One, London, was located where the Alger Line passed over the headwaters of the tributary Dago Creek at 47°12′11″N 91°34′12″W / 47.203°N 91.57°W / 47.203; -91.57.[21] A sleigh road connecting Two Harbors and Beaver Bay ran alongside the railway through the upper Gooseberry watershed.[20] Logging and fire exhausted the pine by the 1920s, and loggers moved out of the region.[15] The Alger Line ceased to operate in 1923 and London became a ghost town.[20] A few houses were reported standing in the 1950s,[20] but more modern reports claim only foundations remain.[22] The site is now the subject of ghost stories.[22]

A bridge was built over the Gooseberry near the falls in 1922 to service Minnesota State Highway 61, the only highway to Canada along the North Shore.[23] The original bridge, Bridge no. 3585, was built by the Illinois Steel Bridge Company.[24] It was expanded to include a third arch so as to widen the road in 1937.[23] In 1990 a decision was made to replace the deteriorating bridge with another arch bridge evocative of the original.[23] This replacement bridge, #38010, was inspected after the collapse of the 35W Mississippi River bridge in 2007 due to design similarities. No critical deficiencies were found.[25] The original truss bridge had an arch of 150 feet, and the modern bridge has an arch of 154 feet.[23]

The region around the falls was placed under protection by the legislature in 1933, and in 1934 the Civilian Conservation Corps began developing this land into what would become Gooseberry Falls State Park, which opened in 1937.[15] Emergency CCC Camp #1720 operated from May to October 1934, and CCC Camp #2710 operated from July 1934 to May 1941, building more than 80 structures in the park's distinctive style.[26] The park now receives over six hundred thousand visits annually.[15]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gooseberry River.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Nute, Grace Lee. "Gooseberry Falls State Park: Its History and Natural History." p. 27. Minnesota Conservation Volunteer 10 (May–June 1947) 27–30.
  2. Morse-Kahn, Deborah. Lake Superior's Historic North Shore, A Guided Tour. p. 85. Minnesota Historical Society, 2008.
  3. Upham, Warren (2001). Minnesota Place Names: A Geographical Encyclopedia. Minnesota Historical Society Press. p. 314.
  4. 1 2 "Gooseberry Falls State Park Map" (PDF). Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 Simonowicz, Nina. Waterfalls Along the North Shore, 2012. Accessed June 1, 2012.
  6. 1 2 Minnesota State Drainage Commission; Eberhart, Adolph Olsen; Ralph, Georg A.; Follansbee, Robert. Report of the water resources investigation of Minnesota, 1909 Vol. 1. p. 521.
  7. "Great Lakes Atlas: Factsheet #1". United States Environmental Protection Agency. April 11, 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-10.
  8. United States Environmental Protection Agency. Assessment Data for Minnesota, Beaver-Lester Watershed , 2006. Accessed June 2, 2012.
  9. Lake Superior Streams. Gooseberry River Watershed Accessed June 2, 2012.
  10. USGS Topographical Map, Two Harbors. . Accessed June 2, 2012.
  11. 1 2 Leverett, Frank. Moraines and Shore Lines of the Lake Superior Basin. Shorter Contributions to General Geology, 1928. United States Geological Survey. p. 11.
  12. 1 2 3 Schwartz, G. M. A Guidebook to Minnesota Trunk Highway No. 1. Minnesota Geological Survey, Bulletin no. 20. 1925. p. 72.
  13. 1 2 3 Winchell, N. H. The Geological and Natural History Survey of Minnesota, The Tenth Annual Report for the Year 1881. p. 37. St. Paul, 1882.
  14. 1 2 Johnson, Mickey. Flyfisher's Guide to Minnesota. p. 163. United States of America, 2001.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 Gooseberry Falls Park Info, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 2012. Accessed August 29, 2012.
  16. "Chips and Clips". The Forester. American Forestry Association. July 1899. p. 168. Retrieved 22 January 2013.
  17. "Chequamegon Bay Notes". American Lumberman: 33. November 11, 1899.
  18. King, Frank Alexander (2003). Minnesota Logging Railroads. University of Minnesota Press. p. 76.
  19. King, Frank Alexander (2003). Minnesota Logging Railroads. University of Minnesota Press. p. 123.
  20. 1 2 3 4 Wolff, Julius F., Jr. (Spring 1955). "Some Vanished Settlements of the Arrowhead Country" (PDF). Minnesota History Magazine: 181.
  21. "London in Lake County, MN". Retrieved 23 January 2013.
  22. 1 2 Stansfield, Charles A., Jr. (2012). Haunted Minnesota. Stackpole Books. p. 11.
  23. 1 2 3 4 "Gooseberry River, Lake County MN" (PDF). Modern Steel Construction. July 2000. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  24. "Bridge No. 3585". Library of Congress. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  25. "Special Bridge Inspection Report, Bridge #38010" (PDF). Minnesota Departement of Transportation. 2007. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  26. "CCC Buildings Photo Album" (PDF). Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
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