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The French Side
Fishing Village Historic District lies along the
east bank of the East Twin River, starting near the
merger with the West Twin River and their entry into
Lake Michigan. It is made up of riverfront docking
and boat servicing areas, fishing sheds and
warehouses, a few retail stores and homes closely
related in a ten block space aligned between the
East Twin River, East and Jackson Streets. The
boundaries take on the configuration of a
fisherman's boot. The district is historically
significant as the only area identified with the
Great Lakes commercial fishing industry for 165
years, longer than any other city on the Great
Lakes; continuously being known for having the
largest fleet, and possessing a continuity of ethnic
family involvement. This ten block district is the
best remaining group of related resources that can
be associated with the commercial fishing industry
and the city's French Canadian ethnic identity. The
fishing industry was a major factor in the
development of Two Rivers and the fishermen have
been leading producers on the Great Lakes since the
middle of the nineteenth century. The mixed
architectural stock of this still functioning area
was built and used for business and residence by the
families associated with the fishing industry. Among
the first settlers in Two Rivers were the French
Canadians who established themselves on the East
Side close to the fishing banks.

The
French Canadians of Two Rivers are descendants of
immigrants from France who have settled in Quebec
since the seventeenth century. It was between 1840
and 1870 that French speaking Canadians migrated to
Two Rivers. Some came by the St Lawrence River and
the Great Lakes in mackinaws to engage in fishing,
while others such as sawyers, (ship's) carpenters,
coopers or shingle makers came for the lumber
industry. Coming during this early period were the
LeClairs, Allies, Gauthiers, Gagnons, LaFonds,
Vaudreuils, Lonzos (Lonzeau), and the Sanvilles,
most of whom have carried on fishing operations into
the 1950s. Today the LeClair and LaFond families are
still represented. Commercial fishing in Two Rivers
began when Captain Joseph P. Edwards and his crew,
who come out of Green Bay, landed their first seine
of whitefish between Two Rivers and Manitowoc in
1837. In 1838, J. P. Clark (an enterprising young
Detroiter and native of New York state who later
become one of the nation's leading industrialists
and merchants) looked over the area preparatory to
the establishment of this place as his initial
fishing point on Lake Michigan. He and his crew of
twenty sailed the schooner GAZELLE, distributing the
fish caught here to other ports.
Casper Hanson and H.C. Scove were shipbuilders on
the French Side in 1872. Scows, canal boats, tugs,
and schooners were built by someeighty men building
several boats at one time. They built five three masted schooners: H.M. SCOVE, BERTIE CALKINS,
GRANGER, J. O. THAYER and JOHN SCHUTTE. As early as
1854, seventy-four steamers and forty-one sailing
vessels stopped at Two Rivers.
Two
Rivers fishermen experienced the transition form the
earliest method of seining off the beaches, to
pond-net then gill-net fishing with sailing
mackinaws of the nineteenth century, to steam-driven
tugs and present day diesel-powered vessels.
The
French Canadians must be credited with the true
development of commercial fishing in Two Rivers.

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