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2012 - by Compiled by Jim Neff
Caberfae Peaks History
I'm compiling a history of Caberfae Peaks. This is an ongoing process, so if you have material to add or
corrections to make please feel free to contact me at neffzone@yahoo.com.
CABERFAE PEAKS HISTORY PART 1 –
BEGINNINGS Compiled by Jim Neff
Caberfae Peaks near Cadillac, Michgan stands alone as the first
destination ski resort in Michigan history and one of the first in the country. Celebrating 75 years in 2012,
making it the fourth oldest ski resort in the United States, it has been a touchstone for thousands of Midwest
skiers spanning generations.
The resort's name has Scottish roots. Caberfae, the Scottish name for
Stag’s Head, was granted to Colin Fitzgerald, founder of the MacKenzie family in the year 1255 by King Alexander
III of Scotland, whose life Fitzgerald saved from a hunted stag deer. The name of Caberfae was applied to the land
around the present ski area by Kenneth MacKenzie of Chicago in 1919. Because of his ancestral background and the
large number of deer herds in the area, he called it Caberfae.
The area originally encompassed 28 square miles and was intended as a
cattle ranch. The ranch ended as a failure after 7 years and the land, in part, was purchased by the United States
Government for National Forest purposes. A fire tower was erected near the top of the highest peak.
During the 1930's, some residents of Indiana, Grand Rapids and
Cadillac were participating in winter sports, and were interested in starting a local ski area. The United States
Forest Service co-operated, and a winter ski area was created, with a Civilian Conservation Corps building and a
single ski run, known as "Number One" being built. The first ski lift, a rope tow, was powered by a Ford Model A
car engine. This engine was later replaced by a Packard Motor Car engine.
The first official opening of Caberfae was held in January of 1937. In
1939, operation and control of the area was turned over to a newly created group, the Caberfae Winter sports Club,
Inc., which was formed by the Caberfae Ski Club and the Cadillac Chamber of Commerce. The new group was issued a
non-profit permit to operate the ski area by the U.S. Forest Service. Five hundred and eighty acres were set aside
for development of a year round recreation area, including the prime highlands with steep and heavily forested
north and west facing slopes for skiing.
Vestiges of those early efforts still remain today. The first run
carved from the forest, Number One, now comprises the lower left side of North Peak. An area then known as “The
Bowl” is now the site of South Peak.
Before the 1942-43 season, a dozen more trails were cleared and
several rope tows were installed. World War II intervened and the ski area was not operated during that time. The
area remained closed until the winter of 1946-47.
CABERFAE PEAKS HISTORY PART 2 – THE START OF
SOMETHING BIG Compiled by Jim Neff
The end of World War II signaled the reopening of Caberfae Ski Resort
near Cadillac, Michigan. Many American service personnel returning from Europe had been introduced to skiing during
the war and this fact spurred a increased interest in the sport here at home. When Caberfae reopened for the
1946-47 season an estimated two million Americans had taken up skiing. Boyne Mountain would not open until 1948 and
Crystal Mountain didn't open until 1956, so Caberfae stood ready to take its place as Michigan's premiere
destination ski resort.
By the 1948-49 season, the resort boasted of 14 runs and 7 electric
tows. The “electric” tow ropes were a major improvement from the gasoline engines that powered tows at many other
ski areas. One of Caberfae's most famous lifts was a double rope that took skiers to the top by following a path
between the Number One and the Number Four (now Canyon) runs.
In addition to these “modern lifts,” Caberfae had gentle slopes for
novice skiers, a 15 acre slalom bowl for competitive skiers, a thirty meter ski jump, two toboggan runs, cross
country ski trails, a snowshoe trail, a ski patrol, and ski instructors to provide lessons. Amenities included
parking for 700 cars, ski rentals, and food service. A 5,900 square foot day lodge known as the Upper Deck opened
in 1950, giving skiers a new place to warm up and trade tales. The resort was so popular that the Central United
States Ski Association utilized Caberfae as the site of several important sanctioned events and documented that
attendance at Caberfae exceeded that of any other Midwestern ski area.
By the time Caberfae progressed into the mid-1950s the resort was
booming as Michigan's largest winter sports area. An improved highway system and regularly scheduled “snow trains”
made Caberfae accessible to over 35,000 skiers a season. On busy weekends it was not uncommon for crowds to exceed
4,000 skiers per day.
By this time Caberfae was calling itself the “Midwest Ski Capital.” To
bolster that claim, a 1954 advertisement detailed what the resort had to offer: 27 expert and graduating
intermediate ski runs, 16 large capacity ski tows, a large rustic shelter with lounge and cafeteria, a triple
practice area, a 25-acre slalom bowl, a modern ski shop, and new equipment rental facilities.
The ad also promoted a Learn to Ski Week package comprised of six days
of skiing, lodging, meals, ski tow fees, and ski instruction for $52.50. Deals like this just made the resort even
more popular. A postcard from the 1956-57 season (issued by Avery Studios of Saranac, Michigan) noted that 47,000
skiers visited Caberfae that winter.
Snowmaking came to the slopes of Caberfae in 1957 too, so the resort
was able to augment the annual natural snowfall. That was followed by adding three more runs the following winter,
the largest single terrain expansion to date.
Not every improvement went as planned, however. What was to be the
resort's first chair lift was purchased from Mt. Snow, Vermont in 1957. Set up along the west side of the Number
One run, the 2,000 foot, 104 bench double chair was not a typical cable lift, but instead utilized a series of
chain conveyors (and was in fact called a "conveyor lift"). In addition to being very slow and incredibly noisy,
the overhead chains spewed greese on the skiers riding on the chairs. Making matters worse, a poor design caused
many of the metal parts to warp over the off-season. After running for the 1959-60 season, the chair was dismantled
and sent back to the manufacturer.
Undaunted and drawing on it's rich history, Caberfae was still poised
to enter the 1960s on a roll.
CABERFAE HISTORY PART THREE – TRANSITION
TIME
Compiled by Jim Neff
As the 1960s dawned Caberfae was still in
expansion mode. Five T-Bar lifts were added between 1959 and 1963: Bull Nose, Number One, Stag's Head, West Ridge,
and Tournament. Added to the array of tow ropes this gave Caberfae twenty lifts servicing 35 trails during the
mid-60s. Also on hand to greet the new decade was a 15 member instructional staff. It was not uncommon for the ski
school to teach as many as 500 lessons per day on a weekend.
Skiers still flocked to
Caberfae, 32,000 during the 1963-64 season, and Caberfae clung to its roots as the friendly and affordable ski
resort it had always been. It had tremendous community support. The reality, however, was that the resort had to
have great Christmas weeks in order to be profitable and during the 1965 and 1966 holday periods a dearth of snow
put the resort in a perilous financial status. Even new snowmaking that covered 80% of its slopes for the 66/67
season was not enough to save the day. As a result, the ski area was sold to a private stock company in 1967, thus
ending thirty years of management by a non-profit board of directors.
The sale, though, spurred a
flurry of activity over the next few years. During the summer of 1967 two chair lifts went up and both were in
operation in time for the Chirstmas week. The Number One chair replaced the double rope tow between the Number One
and Number Four (Canyon) runs. Further east, the Bo Buck chair gave skiers access to new terrain. Caberfae had
entered the chair lift era.
In 1968, the Skyview
cafeteria opened. With huge picture windows, a fireplace in the center, and complete food service the Skyview
quickly became a popular meeting place. That was followed in 1969 by the opening of the Edelweiss Lodge (now the
MacKenzie Lodge). this 31,000 square foot hotel offered on-slope lodging in 36 rooms, a restaurant, a comfortable
lounge, and several meeting rooms.
With all this in place,
Caberfae still was a major player in the ski industry. A 1971 postcard from the era shows a group of college
students on spring break under a banner that says: "Caberfae - Where the boys and girls are." This was a spin-off
from the popular teen movie "Where the Boys Are" and Caberfae's way of saying "We're still the place to
be."
Through the late 1970s
Caberfae was an expansive operation. The ski ski area boasted a huge amount of terrain, but it was a far-flung
operation. This made the extension of snowmaking to the outer boundaries a tough proposition. Many places at
Caberfae were so far away from the resort's base area that constructing chair lifts to them was cost prohibitive.
In 1975 an additional T-Bar, #6, was added to the service on West Ridge.
As the 1970s drew to a close, however,
financial difficulties became a reality for the resort. A transition was in Caberfae's future.
CABERFAE HISTORY PART 4 -- REBIRTH AND
RESURGENCE Compiled by Jim Neff
By the time the 1980s began, Caberfae was a failing operation. The
stock company that owned the area was looking to either sell or close the area and bankruptcy loomed. Things look
bleak for the dean of Michigan's ski resorts.
That was until the Meyer Family of Cadillac, locals who had been
skiing Caberfae since they were kids, bought the ski area. In addition to guiding Caberfae out of bankruptcy, they
also set a course to reclaim the resort's former glory.
Caberfae became Caberfae Peaks with the development and opening of
South Peak in 1983 (fully completed in 1986) and North Peak in 1992. A triple chair on South and a quad
chair on North gave the resort an entry into its future. Today those peaks give Caberfae 490 feet of vertical
and a commanding 360-degree vista of the Manistee National Forest from their summits.
Along with terrain development, in 1988 a land swap with the Forest
Service gave the new owners control over the resort’s property. Due to this a more realistic resort footprint was
created and over time the rope tows and T-Bars were removed along with the outer reaches of the terrain they
serviced, like North Ridge, West Ridge, Bull Nose and Tournament.
In 1991 the Shelter rope tow was replaced with a double chair and in
1992 another double replaced the old Instructors rope tow. This brought the chair lift total to five (at the
time).
While the outside operation was being transformed, so was the core
skier service area. The result can be seen in today’s base area that includes a ticket office building and a rental
building which opened in 1996, the Blackmer Day Lodge which debuted in 1999 as northern Michigan’s biggest day
lodge, the refurbished 36-room MacKenzie Lodge hotel (formerly the Edelweiss), and a swimming pool/hot tub in front
of the MacKenzie.
The momentum has launched today's Caberfae Peaks back into the
spotlight as one of the state's top ski areas. Skiers are now lured by a $99 season pass, lift ticket deals (like
4-for-$49 punch cards), weekly email blast deals, and Internet coupons on the resort’s state-of-the-art
website.
Every year visitors see improvements, like this year's widening of
Smiling Irishmen, a beginner run off the top of North Peak outside and the debut of Beattie's Bar and Grill in the
MacKenzie Lodge.
These changes have given the resort a new identity and attitude,
something that surprises skiers returning to Caberfae after a several year hiatus and delights skiers visiting the
resort for the first time. Celebrating 75 years in 2012, the original Michigan destination ski resort is not only
back, it’s better than ever.
Note: The history of Caberfae Peaks Ski Resort exists in bits and
pieces all over the Cadillac community, in file cabinets, dresser drawers, and personal recollections. Jim Neff is
currently compiling these pieces into a single written record. What you've just read is only the beginning of the
project. There may be errors and omissions. This is just the short version for now so we can get started. Everyone
is invited to add to the story or point out mistakes. This is an ongoing project so feel free to contact Jim
at neffzone@yahoo.com.
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