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May is National Historic Preservation Month, a time set aside to highlight the important work of organizations working to preserve historic places like Port Oneida. Locally, in Leelanau County, there are 25 nationally recognized historic places and 18 additional state recognized historic sites, with several organizations which operate to support their preservation. Mae Stier writes that she and her husband Tim Egeler—a descendent of the Egelers and Kelderhouses, who were early settlers to Leelanau—spent the summer leading up to their wedding learning the names of family members. “When we committed to creating our future together, we did so by standing under a giant old oak tree that looked out at the Manitou Islands, on a farmstead that members of his family had once cared for.”

Come join a special program on Monday, Oct. 1, from 7-9 p.m. at the Eyaawing Museum & Cultural Center celebrating Indigenous People’s Day. Professor Mathew Fletcher, author of The Eagle Returns: The Legal History of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa Indians, will give a presentation on his book. Fletcher is a Professor at Michigan State University’s College of Law and the Director of the Indigenous Law and Policy Center.