We see people new to the area (most with primary residences within a day's drive) buying vacation homes and cabins, many with families. And there is a return of people once connected to the area in their youth, and now finding their way back. New, active retirees are choosing to move to the Northwoods year-round. We are seeing less of passing the family home/cabin along the generations, and instead younger families appear to be staying closer to home and waiting for a future opportunity for a second home. It's been so much fun meeting so many new people this summer, and also connecting with faces I remember as young children! How time does fly...
Reflecting on time, people, and place has led me to a renewed appreciation and interest in Presque Isle's history... it sure is a rich one! Recently our genealogy group put together a cemetery walk, visiting the grave sites of six people with amazing stories about their way of life from the early 1900s. Fromlogging barons, to a blind couple raising children without electricity (and keeping a pristine home), to a double-murder in the woods -- these stories were uniquely brought back to life by area actors and actresses. I hope they repeat this offering again, as it was a really interesting evening!
And so I find that after 40 years in Presque Isle, there is still (and always will be), much more that this little Town and its people -- new and old alike -- have to teach me.







