Mackinac Island has always been a part of me. I grew up an hour away, visited historic Fort Mackinac on an eighth-grade class trip and even worked on Mackinac Island. So, when I learned my father-in-law had never been to Mackinac Island, I knew I needed to take my family there.
My parents-in-law drove from Mt. Pleasant to our Cheboygan, Mich. home the night before our visit. Early the next morning, my husband, three-year-old daughter (who only wanted to see the “horsies”), my parents-in-law and I packed into our truck to catch an early ferry boat across the Straits of Mackinac to Mackinac Island.
Plan your own trip to Mackinac Island
Finally, the carriage tour stopped at our premier destination – Fort Mackinac – built 150 feet above the Straits of Mackinac during the American Revolution. We checked out the Kids’ Quarters in the Officers’ Stone Quarters (Michigan’s oldest public building), which was filled with uniforms just my daughter’s size, a giant, playable fife and a half-sized cannon with a pull-string for that original cannon blast sound.
While my husband and parents-in-law explored other buildings, my daughter and I danced on the parade ground to live fife music and marched like the soldiers. I can never really find the rhythm, but it didn’t matter right then. There’s something about Mackinac Island that lets a person relax and dance.
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Lunch on Mackinac Island
Lunch at the Tea Room Restaurant within Fort Mackinac was a special treat. We watched Great Lakes freighters move slowly through the Straits while we leaned against the white picket fence, the scent of fresh water on the cool September breeze.
As the time for the last carriage departure of the day neared, I stood guard at the fort exit like the soldiers before me. My parents-in-law had decided to tour one last exhibit – “An Island Famous in These Regions” – in the Soldiers’ Barracks. As the carriage pulled up, I saw that only a couple seats were left open. I quickly called my mother-in-law while pleading for the carriage driver to wait just a couple minutes longer. He did. They finally came rushing out, both wishing for an entire day at the fort, and boarded the carriage. They got the last two seats.
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Fudge Sampling on Mackinac Island
My husband, daughter and I walked back, but that was for the best. We held hands and took our final stroll down Fort Hill Road to meet my parents-in-law downtown. And, of course, to buy some world-famous Mackinac Island fudge.
How to get free fudge on Mackinac Island(Originally written by Jolene Priest and published on June 3, 2017)
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