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TRAUNIK
POINTS
OF INTEREST

Lily's of Traunik

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As of spring, 2008, the classic 1926 Mikulich's general store, at Traunik's four-corners, has now become an espresso coffee bar, grocery, health food store, and gift shop. It carries fair trade and organic goods whenever possible, without being too expensive for the neighborhood, it's hoped. (Fair trade goods support small producers and workers around the world.)

There are farm-fresh eggs, local produce in season, plus bulk herbs and spices, cold-pressed oils, and Higher Grounds fresh-roasted coffee beans from Traverse City.
Dee Morgan bought the building when the store closed in 1986. She continued it until 2003 as "Morgan's General Store," with functional housewares and gifts.

To make the store a gathering place again, A.J. and Jeff Fischer have worked through a lot of regulatory hoops and installed new coolers, a freezer, and sinks. (They gave the old post office to the Alger County Historical Museum.)

Local people are thrilled to see the local landmark occupied again. Opening in a chilly April, with snowy weather, the store was busy, without any advertising, because farmers and neighbors spread the word.

Ten years ago, A.J. and Jeff, then screen printers in Fort Lauderdale, bought a 100-year-old limestone house in nearby Chatham as their off-season home. In summers, A.J. came back to build up the garden. She is a builder and renovator of stone houses. The Fischers had hoped to find a stone building in rural Leelanau County. But prices were much too high. Coming upon Chatham on a trip through the U.P., it seemed just fine.

Now the Fischers have sold their Florida business. They're full of enthusiasm about Traunik. It seems remote but isn't far from Escanaba, Rapid River (22 miles south), Au Train, Munising, and the rural commuter zone by Marquette, 38 miles to the northwest. They want Lily's to be practical, inspiring, and broadly appealing without competing directly with other local grocers.

There are Michigan beers, wines, organic chocolates, sulfite-free organic wine, Krause's Organic meats from Engadine, and Amy's Organics in the freezer. A.J. intends to bake breads, muffins, spelt cookies, cheesecake, and more, to take home or eat here. And she's knowledgeable about the homeopathic remedies she sells.

Amy is proud of her Vietnamese hanging lanterns, made of pine, silk, and paper. Some are shaped like stars.
Glycerine and French milled soaps, herbal household cleansers, cards and postcards, recycled paper by the ream — there's quite a variety of useful specialties.

Ask about the upstairsovernight apartment, intended as a romantic getaway for one couple. (May, 2008)
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On H-44 at H-01 in Traunik, 4 miles north of Trenary, 6 miles south of M-94 at Eben. (906) 446-3392. lilysgoods.com Tues-Sat 10-6. Wheelchair-accessible

 

 
 
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Region: Pictured Rocks/Munising/Au Train
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TRAUNIK

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In about 1900 many Slovenian country people came from their homeland around Ljubljana, bordering Italy, Austria, and Hungary, to work in Upper Peninsula mines and lumber camps. Michigan was well known in Slovenia because of the energetic activities of Slovenian missionaries, beginning with Father Frederick Baraga, the legendary Snowshoe Priest.

Slovenes who worked in Michigan lumber camps settled in this neighborhood. Their Slovenian hall, cemetery, general store, and tidy two-room school remain today, neatly arranged around the intersection of Limestone-Traunik Road (H-44) and Eben Depot Road (H-01).

Coming upon Traunik is a little like falling into a time warp. The story goes that storekeeper and postmaster Louis Mikulech commemorated his native Slovenian village when he changed the settlement's name from Buckeye Landing (commemorating the Buckeye Land & Lumber Company) to Traunik. Pronounced "TRAW-nik," it means "meadow" in Slovenian.

For a look back at Mikulich's general store, and how it was truly one-stop shopping, visit traunik.com. In spring, 2008, it reopened as Lily's coffeehouse and health food and gift shop.

The Traunik Slovenian Hall has been preserved thanks to the efforts of native son and current resident Frank Bartol, a retired Northern Michigan University English teacher. "It was too precious to go down," he says. Many such landmark buildings could be safeguarded, he maintains, "if the people who love an area would pony in" to acquire and maintain them. The hall, not open to the public, is now used for occasional weddings and two polka dances a year. Occasionally it hosts a big reunion with visitors from Slovenia.

Frank wrote for the historical marker: "To this place [the Slovenian settlers] came, beginning in 1912, and when enough had formed a community, they named it ‘Traunik.' . . . They brought with them a willingness to work and a determination to succeed. Out of the forests they shaped fields, homes, and a good life for their families. This monument has been placed here. . . by their children and grandchildren, now scattered about the world but tied by invisible bonds to this spot, where once the night air was filled with Slovenian melodies." (—March, 2008)


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