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Marguerite Gahagan was an early Michigan conservation journalist who founded
The North Woods Call in 1953, following a career at
The Detroit News. In 1959, Marguerite purchased ten wooded acres in Roscommon and moved herself and
The Call to the site of today’s Gahagan Preserve. She was known as a hard-driving reporter who made weekly visits gathering the latest news from field stations of what was then the Michigan Conservation Department. The view from her cabin inspired her regular column
“Pine Whispers” which chronicled the daily events of her woodland sanctuary. In 1969 she sold
The Call to Glen Sheppard. On January 5, 2011, Mr.
Sheppard passed, ending more than fifty years of Michigan's first and most
enduring conservation newspaper.
When Marguerite passed in 1997, she gave her ten-acre property and her cabin home as a nature preserve. The property consists of mature pine forests, cedar swamps and the beginnings of Tank Creek, which feeds into the South Branch of the Au Sable River. The preserve is affiliated with the Roscommon Metropolitan Recreation Authority and includes another fifty acres, which were acquired later.
Click here to
read a past Pine Whispers related to this month in history.
Imagine Marguerite sitting at her typewriter, peering
through the picture window of her small, remote cabin. This
is how she saw the world.
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