people:clarence_monette

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Clarence J. Monette

Clarence J. Monette

Clarence J. Monette
Full Name Clarence Joseph Monette
Born January 13, 1935
Died October 30, 2012
Birthplace Lake Linden, Michigan
Occupation Historian, Author, Educator
Known For Copper Country Local History Series
Associated With Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan Technological University

Clarence Joseph Monette (January 13, 1935 – October 30, 2012) was an American historian, educator, author, and preservationist whose writings became an important part of the historical record of Michigan's Copper Country. Through dozens of books documenting communities, railroads, mining operations, businesses, and local institutions throughout the Keweenaw Peninsula, Monette preserved a significant body of historical information that might otherwise have been lost. His work remains widely consulted by historians, genealogists, museums, and local history organizations throughout northern Michigan. 1) 2)

Monette was born in Lake Linden, Michigan, during the final years of the Copper Country's traditional mining era. Growing up in the region exposed him to communities whose identities had been shaped by copper mining, rail transportation, and immigrant settlement. These experiences helped cultivate an appreciation for local history that would later define much of his life's work. 3)

He graduated from Lake Linden-Hubbell High School in 1953 before entering military service. Following his service in the United States Army, which included assignments in Germany, he returned to the Upper Peninsula and continued his education. 4)

Monette became associated with Michigan Technological University in Houghton, where he worked for many years within the university's Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) program. His administrative and instructional responsibilities brought him into contact with generations of students while allowing him to pursue his growing interest in regional history. 5)

Although best known today as a historian, his professional career reflected a combination of military service, education, and public engagement that remained closely connected to the communities of the Upper Peninsula.

Beginning in the 1970s, Monette undertook an ambitious effort to document the history of Michigan's Copper Country. His publications examined individual communities, mining locations, railroads, businesses, churches, schools, and notable residents throughout Houghton and Keweenaw counties. 6)

His works covered locations including Lake Linden, Calumet, Laurium, Copper Harbor, Eagle Harbor, Eagle River, Delaware, Gay, Baltic, and numerous former mining settlements that had received limited attention in larger historical studies. 7)

Unlike many academic historians who focused on broad historical themes, Monette concentrated on preserving local records, photographs, oral histories, newspaper accounts, and community memories. This approach made his books particularly valuable to researchers seeking detailed information about specific locations and families.

Monette's writing coincided with a period when many historic mining communities were experiencing population decline and the loss of historic structures. Through extensive research and publication, he helped preserve information about places that were rapidly disappearing from living memory. 8)

His books became a bridge between earlier generations of Copper Country residents and modern researchers seeking to understand the region's unique history. Museums, historical societies, libraries, and genealogy organizations frequently relied upon his work as a starting point for further research.

Throughout his career, Monette participated in numerous historical and preservation organizations throughout the Upper Peninsula. He supported efforts to document mining history, preserve historic sites, and promote public understanding of the Copper Country's cultural heritage. 9)

His involvement extended beyond writing and included active participation in local historical initiatives and community projects.

Clarence Monette occupies a distinctive place in Michigan historiography. While many historians concentrated on statewide or national subjects, Monette devoted much of his career to documenting the stories of individual towns, families, railroads, mines, and institutions throughout the Keweenaw Peninsula. 10)

Today, his publications remain valuable reference works for historians, genealogists, students, and residents interested in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Through his dedication to local history, he preserved a substantial portion of the historical record of the Copper Country and helped ensure that future generations would have access to the stories of the communities that built the region. 11)

* Copper Country * Keweenaw Peninsula * Lake Linden, Michigan * Michigan Technological University * Quincy Mine * Copper Range Railroad


1) Clarence J. Monette Collection, Michigan Technological University Archives. https://michigantech.libraryhost.com/repositories/2/resources/54
2) Library of Michigan Author Records – Clarence Monette. https://libraryofmichigan.state.mi.us/authors/Author/Details/1598
3) mtuarchives
4) mtuarchives
5) mtuarchives
6) librarymichigan
7) mtuarchives
8) mtuarchives
9) mtuarchives
10) librarymichigan
11) mtuarchives

people clarence_monette historian author copper_country keweenaw upper_peninsula michigan

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