Last updated: August 28, 2020
Article
Farmer Camp
History
n 1901, Kneut Kneutson purchased one mile of Rock Harbor shoreline containing the Snug Harbor area. Kneutson and descendents developed "Park Place" - later renamed Rock Harbor Lodge - and catered to guests until the park service concessions took over the property in 1944. Kneutson's daughter Bertha and her husband Matt Farmer conveyed .88 acres of shoreline west of the Rock Harbor Lodge to their son Earl Weston Farmer and his wife Mary M. Farmer on May 25, 1935.
On August 18,1937 E.G. Willemin - on behalf of the National Park Service - advised Earl and Mary Farmer of their options for the property (life lease or cash value through condemnation). As these negotiations began Earl's grandfather, Kneutson, advised Earl to add Mary and the children to the life lease. At that time, sons Wes, Mike, Gerald and David Farmer were all between the ages of 7 and 12.
In October of 2002 Mary Farmer died. Her husband Earl Farmer had passed in 1981. Signed five-year Special Use Permits (expiration 2007) are now on file from Matthew Weston Farmer and from Gerald Thomas Farmer. A permit was sent to John Murray Farmer, residing in Calumet, MI, but signed copy not on file. These are the only children eligible for special use permits.
Status
The Farmer Camp retains three residential structures. The Farmer House was a family summer cabin built by Weston Farmer on land given by his mother, Bertha Farmer, during the recreational phase of Isle Royale. It is one of the last built before the National Park Service was established.