Images from https://www.google.com/search?q=horse+carriage+passes+the+Grand+Hotel+on+Mackinac+Island&rlz=1C1LENP_enUS569US569&es_sm=122&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAWoVChMItviT2dvbxgIVDBmUCh19xgE8&biw=1600&bih=731#imgrc=_
No motorized vehicles are allowed on the island, except an ambulance and a police car and snow mobiles in the winter. People get around on bicycles, on horse back, in horse-drawn carriages and on foot.
The island was the second U.S. National Park, after Yellowstone National Park, but it was turned over to the state of Michigan. Now, eighty percent of the island is Michigan State Park.
Opened in 1887, the Grand Hotel is celebrating its 128th anniversary this summer. Five U.S. Presidents have visited: Harry Truman, John F. Kennedy, Gerald Ford (who was raised in Michigan and helped to build cabins on the island as a Boy Scout) George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton.
Thomas Edison demonstrated his phonograph for the public for the first time on the hotel’s porch, as well as demonstrating other new inventions during Edison’s frequent stays. Mark Twain spoke frequently at the Grand Hotel during his speaking tours. In recent years, Russian leaders Vladimir Putin and Dmitri Medvedev have visited.
The Grand Hotel, is the largest summer hotel in the world and has the world’s longest front porch. The Grand Hotel is a National Historic Landmark and is considered by many travel experts to be one of the best hotels in the world.
The Grand Hotel charges ten dollars each to visit the hotel and grounds. The fee was instituted in 2011, probably because without the fee the hotel would be swarmed with the thousands of day trippers from the mainland who could take all of the seats on the porch. It may be the longest porch in the world, but it can’t fit everyone!
Info from https://catherinesherman.wordpress.com/2012/07/24/grand-hotel-mackinac-island-michigan/
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