Inscription
Timber and the 1862 Homestead Act began drawing people to Prudenville in 1870. Named for early developer Peter Pruden, the community was also known as Edna for a time. As the commercial center of Roscommon County, Prudenville boasted a post office, two hotels, many businesses, and a school. In 1887, the Roscommon Lumber Company ended logging operations in Michigan. The area’s next economic surge came in the 1920s with paved roads, electricity, automobiles and tourism.
[Back]: In 1882, the Roscommon Lumber Company built a “stand alone” railroad to move timber. A 700-foot- long trestle above the East Bay of Houghton Lake allowed logging crews to push logs off the train cars into the water. Logs floated across the lake to the Muskegon River, then down the river to the mills at Muskegon. Locally, the company employed more than seven hundred people and logged 175 million board feet of white and Norway pine between 1882 and 1887.
Location
Sources
More markers in Roscommon
Terney House
Roscommon, MI
William J. Terney, lumber baron and Civil War veteran, moved to the Roscommon area in 1887 and erected this house in the late 1880s.
Gerrish
Roscommon, MI
Near this site on April 5, 1880, area residents met at the Gerrish Logging Camp to elect officers for their newly organized township.
Pioneer House
Roscommon, MI
The Pioneer House opened in the early 1870s as a boardinghouse for lumbermen.
