Fishtown Preservation
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Home
  • Events
    • 2025 Friends of Fishtown 5K
    • Giving Tuesday 2024 ~ A time for Tug Love
  • Visit | Stay
    • Shanties
    • Fish Tugs
    • Fishtown Shops and Charters
    • Art Shanty 2025
      • 2025 Art Shanty Lineup
      • Art Shanty Opportunity 2025
    • Fishtown’s Vacation Rental—The Otherside
    • Photo Galleries
    • Our Community
    • Directions and Map
  • About
    • Fishtown Board
      • Honoring Kathryn Eckert Omoto, 1935-2022 – by Berkley W. Duck
    • Fishtown Staff
    • Commercial Fishing Today and Q & A
    • Internships
    • FAQs
    • Our Partners
    • Fishtown Newsletters
    • News from Fishtown
    • Media / Press Coverage
  • Support
    • Donate to Fishtown
    • Become an Anchor
    • Our Business Anchors
    • Get Involved
  • Fishtown Forever
  • Contact
Navigation
Search the site...
  • Home
  • History
  • Shanties
  • Rising to the Occasion

Rising to the Occasion

August 8, 2010 / Fishtown / Shanties
0

by Kathryn Eckert and Craig Miller

When you walk down to Fishtown this summer, you will almost certainly notice the fresh appearance of the Steffens & Stallman Shanty. New cedar shingles, lightly tinted to approximate the color of weathered wood, rise on the exterior walls of the now-stabilized building. Green rolled asphalt roofing material covers the roof. Wooden doors and windows, repaired and replaced in their enframements, are painted to match historic white and gray samples found in historic photographs and on the building itself. Historically appropriate light fixtures connected to newly installed electrical wiring and outlets light illuminate both inside and out. In three hectic weeks this spring, Easling Construction Company raised our sagging shanty to nationally recognized historic preservation standards.

 

Before: Steffens & Stallman Shanty

Before

As these standards require, the rehabilitation of the Steffens & Stallman Shanty, planned by historical architect Richard A. Neumann of Petoskey, retains and respects the historic character of the shanty, as well as stabilizing and extending the building’s life. Designing and executing work in this manner ensures that Fishtown will retain its designation on the National Register of Historic Places at the national level of significance. This listing qualifies Fishtown for matching grants-in-aid through the National Trust for Historic Preservation and other entities.

Indeed, the Steffens & Stallman Shanty project sets the standard for future work at Fishtown. It represents the first phase of work on buildings as set forth in the Fishtown Preservation Society’s master historic preservation plan.

After: Steffens & Stallman Shanty

After

Funds for the project were provided by generous donors like you. Because of your financial support for this project, we owe you a debt of gratitude. We invite your continuing assistance for the rehabilitation of other buildings in subsequent phases of our long-term plan. With financial contributions like yours, we can provide access to this authentic, active commercial and sports fishing village so that others, too, will feel inspired by a sense of stewardship, responsibility and community.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

How to Reach Us

Fishtown Preservation
Office location and hours
203 E. Cedar Street
P.O. Box 721
Leland, MI 49654M-F 9:00-4:00 (year-round)
(231) 256-8878
(231) 256-2517 (fax)
info@fishtownmi.org
Facebook.com/FishtownMI

You Make the Difference

With your help, we're preserving the past and the present of Fishtown. Please contribute today.





(c) 2013 Fishtown Preservation - Web Design by History By Design and Alyeska.
  • Log In
  • Sitemap
  • Archives
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • DONATE