User:Nashoid/Devilfish: Difference between revisions
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== History == | == History == | ||
=== Early History === | |||
First inhabited by the Ojibwe people, European civilization was not familiar with the area until the late 1600s, when French fur traders began settling in the area. Several small settlements were made, largely centered on logging and fishing. | |||
In 1854, the Grand Portage Indian Reservation was established as part of a treaty with the Ojibwe people. However, no less than twenty years later, significant copper reserves were found on and near the reservation land. The Grand Portage Mining Company, founded in 1876 by William J. Stannard, quickly established itself in the region. | |||
==== The Grand Portage Mining Company ==== | |||
Stannard, through a combination of tactics such as bribery and ballot stuffing, quickly established his company as a local monopoly. By the late 1800s, almost 70% of Devilfish's workforce was paid by the GPMC or one of its subsidiaries. As his power grew, Stannard even had large swathes of the Grand Portage Reservation annexed, leaving only a small chunk of land remaining. | |||
=== | In the late 1800s, Devilfish was wracked by the so-called Union Wars, a series of conflicts lasting almost two decades between GMPC management and the Devilfish Brotherhood of Miners. Over 600 were killed in skirmishes between the workers and GMPC men, culminating in the Crescent Lake Massacre of 1899, when the National Guard was called in to evict striking DBM workers from a mine. Twenty were killed and another hundred injured, and after desperate negotiations mediated by the state, a tense stalemate has existed ever since. | ||
As demand for copper rapidly rose in the 20th century, mining in Devilfish rapidly transitioned from underground mining to open pits. The largest of which, Farquhar Mine, remained operating until 2003. A combination of tightening environmental regulations and an abundance of cheaper foreign copper lead to mine closures beginning in the 70s. GMPC eventually went bankrupt in 1988, resulting in thousands losing pensions and retirement funds. The EPA to date has designated twenty-seven different Superfund sites in Cook County alone, as the successors to the GPMC have so far declined to address the century of pollution the city faces. | |||
==== Changing Times ==== | |||
As the rest of the world reeled from the advent of parahumanity, Devilfish found itself relatively isolated, as few members of the emerging "cape culture" found themselves attracted to the former economic powerhouse. PRT records suggest that there weren't even any capes in the region until the 1992 trigger of the villain [[Tyrannochorus]], although the common consensus is that those who triggered in Devilfish found better opportunities elsewhere. | |||
However, as of 2019 a surge in parahuman activity has been seen in the Devilfish area, with the local [[Devilfish PRT|PRT field office]] reporting a startling rise in parahuman-involved crime. The cause of the spike seems unclear, but ongoing plans are being made to address it. | |||
== Geography == | == Geography == | ||
=== Neighborhoods & Communities === | === Neighborhoods & Communities === | ||
==== Grand Portage Reservation ==== | |||
While most of the tribal lands were annexed during the city’s copper boom, a few square miles of Native land occupy the northeastern chunk of the region. They operate a fairly-successful casino. | |||
==== Pineland Colony ==== | |||
The local Hutterite colony, established in 1927. Since their Minister was fatally shot by a drunk farmer a few years back, they’ve become rather isolationist. | |||
=== Climate === | === Climate === | ||
Line 69: | Line 91: | ||
=== Tourism === | === Tourism === | ||
==== Historic Colville ==== | |||
A small tourist trap on the shores of Lake Superior, this tiny community is a time capsule back to the early 1900s. Features a candy store (with fresh fudge and taffy!), a narrow-gauge scenic railroad, and a daily shootout at high noon. | |||
=== Events === | === Events === | ||
=== Recreation === | === Recreation === | ||
==== Northshore Arena ==== | |||
Hockey is the big sport in the city, and this arena is where it all happens. Renovated in 2006, it’s home to the Devilfish Orediggers (and the ladies’ team, the Canaries). | |||
====Camp Gunflint Summer Camp==== | |||
Originally a lakeside resort, financial mismanagement resulted in the properties being sold and renovated. The American Camp association rents out the Facilities to a variety of organizations. | |||
Having been utilized heavily by the local Boy-Scout, and Girl-Scout troops, a variety of local church youth groups, as well as the local LGBT-Youth Advocacy coalition. | |||
Rumors have it that the facilities have been used on occasion by Ward teams from across the state of Minnesota. This rumor is unconfirmed, but interested parties willing to do some digging through legal documents, would find that the facilities have passed an inspection by the Youth Guard, and the staff attended a training seminar around the same time. | |||
== Education == | == Education == | ||
==== Eagle Mountain High School ==== | |||
Home of the creatively-chosen Eagles, this high school is the largest in Devilfish, with 3500+ students. A leaked internal memo shows that teachers have recently been required to take the PRT’s Wards Educator Training Seminar. | |||
==== Divinity School ==== | |||
The local Christian combined school, this facility boasts the highest staff salary rates in the city, and a competitive sports program makes it a favorite for college scouts offering athletic scholarships. | |||
=== Higher Education === | === Higher Education === | ||
==== Devilfish State University ==== | |||
The city’s public university, well-known for its mining engineering and geology programs. | |||
==== Taylor College ==== | |||
Surrounding the shores of Taylor Lake, this community college recently started offering the city’s first PRT-accredited Parahuman Studies program. | |||
== Infrastructure == | == Infrastructure == | ||
=== Utilities === | === Utilities === | ||
==== Blueberry Island Nuclear Power Station ==== | |||
{{fuck around and find out}} | |||
Commissioned in 1968, this facility on the shores of Lake Superior supplies all of the region’s power (with the surplus being exported). After a controversial accident in 1989 (a safety interlock failed during routine maintenance, resulting in two worker fatalities), it was taken over by the Department of Energy and is currently run under the Midwest Power Administration. | |||
==== Brule River Waste Treatment Plant ==== | |||
'''Brule River Power Plant''' | |||
The Brule River Power Plant is a large, eight-story brick building that was opened in 1902 by the Porter Light & Rail Company on the titular Brule River. The plant was decommissioned in 1969 as Devilfish phased out coal power in favor of nuclear with the opening of the station on Blueberry Island, and currently the building is in a state of disrepair. The degradation of asbestos used in pipe insulation and heat-resistant cement has led to the building being declared unsafe, but its status as a historical site and the cost of demolition has kept it standing. | |||
== Industry == | == Industry == | ||
===Historic Industry=== | |||
==== Farquar Mine Superfund Site ==== | |||
Officially known as Farquhar Mine, the Pit was at one time the largest operation of the Grand Portage Mining Company. It was closed in 2003 when it became too expensive to operate. Since then, it’s been slowly filling up with putrid brown water. | |||
====Mulligan Quarry ==== | |||
Formerly the Mulligan Quarry, it was closed after legal troubles, its proximity to the city, and the wide open expanse of flat rock, has occasionally seen the site used by parahumans for power experimentation. | |||
====Closed Mining Operations==== | |||
The Deckard Company Iron Mine was abandoned in 1983, when the owner filed for bankruptcy. The location was sold, and then sold again, and then the company it was sold for went under. And as a result the actual ownership of the mine is debatable, and is caught up in bureaucratic limbo. | |||
The Horsehead Copper Mine was condemned in 1993 after a collapsed tunnel resulted in flooding from a small nearby aquifer. A majority of the tunnels are flooded with the murky waters, there are some relatively tunnels and chambers that remain relatively untouched and usable. | |||
Abandoned in 2003, the Intrepid Creek Copper Mine's prior owner having closed the operation, when the ore mined was no longer profitable. Proper procedures were followed, and the mining equipment, building facilities, and waste were dismantled or removed. As of now the process of Mine reclamation in in-progress. | |||
== Media == | == Media == |
Revision as of 02:31, 31 July 2024
Devilfish, Minnesota | |
---|---|
City | |
City of Devilfish | |
Country | United States |
State | Minnesota |
County | Cook County, Minnesota |
Founded | 1861 |
Named for | Northern Pike |
Government | |
• Type | Commission |
• Mayor | Susan Gilliam |
• Commissioners |
|
Area | |
• City | 220 sq mi (600 km2) |
Elevation | 620 ft (200 m) |
Highest elevation (Eagle Mountain) | 2,301 ft (700 m) |
Lowest elevation (Lake Superior) | 601 ft (200 m) |
Population (2019) | 115,584 |
• Urban | 254,812 |
Demonym(s) | Devilfishian |
Time zone | CST |
• Summer (DST) | CDT |
ZIP Codes |
55200-55299 |
Area codes | 218 |
Devilfish is a city in the US state of Minnesota and the county seat of Cook County. Its metropolitan area comprises the third-largest in the state, after Minneapolis and (narrowly) Duluth. It is also the third-largest city on Lake Superior with a population of 252,447 in 2020.
The city has a rich history of mining dating back to the 1800s, however changing economic times have left the city in a financial slump. While reclamation (and associated industries) continue in some limited fashion, tourism and agriculture are beginning to take a larger share of the city's wealth.
"Devilfish" is a nickname for the Northern Pike, a fish common in the region, after which the city was named.
History
Early History
First inhabited by the Ojibwe people, European civilization was not familiar with the area until the late 1600s, when French fur traders began settling in the area. Several small settlements were made, largely centered on logging and fishing.
In 1854, the Grand Portage Indian Reservation was established as part of a treaty with the Ojibwe people. However, no less than twenty years later, significant copper reserves were found on and near the reservation land. The Grand Portage Mining Company, founded in 1876 by William J. Stannard, quickly established itself in the region.
The Grand Portage Mining Company
Stannard, through a combination of tactics such as bribery and ballot stuffing, quickly established his company as a local monopoly. By the late 1800s, almost 70% of Devilfish's workforce was paid by the GPMC or one of its subsidiaries. As his power grew, Stannard even had large swathes of the Grand Portage Reservation annexed, leaving only a small chunk of land remaining.
In the late 1800s, Devilfish was wracked by the so-called Union Wars, a series of conflicts lasting almost two decades between GMPC management and the Devilfish Brotherhood of Miners. Over 600 were killed in skirmishes between the workers and GMPC men, culminating in the Crescent Lake Massacre of 1899, when the National Guard was called in to evict striking DBM workers from a mine. Twenty were killed and another hundred injured, and after desperate negotiations mediated by the state, a tense stalemate has existed ever since.
As demand for copper rapidly rose in the 20th century, mining in Devilfish rapidly transitioned from underground mining to open pits. The largest of which, Farquhar Mine, remained operating until 2003. A combination of tightening environmental regulations and an abundance of cheaper foreign copper lead to mine closures beginning in the 70s. GMPC eventually went bankrupt in 1988, resulting in thousands losing pensions and retirement funds. The EPA to date has designated twenty-seven different Superfund sites in Cook County alone, as the successors to the GPMC have so far declined to address the century of pollution the city faces.
Changing Times
As the rest of the world reeled from the advent of parahumanity, Devilfish found itself relatively isolated, as few members of the emerging "cape culture" found themselves attracted to the former economic powerhouse. PRT records suggest that there weren't even any capes in the region until the 1992 trigger of the villain Tyrannochorus, although the common consensus is that those who triggered in Devilfish found better opportunities elsewhere.
However, as of 2019 a surge in parahuman activity has been seen in the Devilfish area, with the local PRT field office reporting a startling rise in parahuman-involved crime. The cause of the spike seems unclear, but ongoing plans are being made to address it.
Geography
Neighborhoods & Communities
Grand Portage Reservation
While most of the tribal lands were annexed during the city’s copper boom, a few square miles of Native land occupy the northeastern chunk of the region. They operate a fairly-successful casino.
Pineland Colony
The local Hutterite colony, established in 1927. Since their Minister was fatally shot by a drunk farmer a few years back, they’ve become rather isolationist.
Climate
Economy
Top Employers
Government
Local Government
Politics
Arts and Culture
Tourism
Historic Colville
A small tourist trap on the shores of Lake Superior, this tiny community is a time capsule back to the early 1900s. Features a candy store (with fresh fudge and taffy!), a narrow-gauge scenic railroad, and a daily shootout at high noon.
Events
Recreation
Northshore Arena
Hockey is the big sport in the city, and this arena is where it all happens. Renovated in 2006, it’s home to the Devilfish Orediggers (and the ladies’ team, the Canaries).
Camp Gunflint Summer Camp
Originally a lakeside resort, financial mismanagement resulted in the properties being sold and renovated. The American Camp association rents out the Facilities to a variety of organizations. Having been utilized heavily by the local Boy-Scout, and Girl-Scout troops, a variety of local church youth groups, as well as the local LGBT-Youth Advocacy coalition.
Rumors have it that the facilities have been used on occasion by Ward teams from across the state of Minnesota. This rumor is unconfirmed, but interested parties willing to do some digging through legal documents, would find that the facilities have passed an inspection by the Youth Guard, and the staff attended a training seminar around the same time.
Education
Eagle Mountain High School
Home of the creatively-chosen Eagles, this high school is the largest in Devilfish, with 3500+ students. A leaked internal memo shows that teachers have recently been required to take the PRT’s Wards Educator Training Seminar.
Divinity School
The local Christian combined school, this facility boasts the highest staff salary rates in the city, and a competitive sports program makes it a favorite for college scouts offering athletic scholarships.
Higher Education
Devilfish State University
The city’s public university, well-known for its mining engineering and geology programs.
Taylor College
Surrounding the shores of Taylor Lake, this community college recently started offering the city’s first PRT-accredited Parahuman Studies program.
Infrastructure
Utilities
Blueberry Island Nuclear Power Station
- Mod note: This location has a notably strong security presence. If you are doing an event at this location, ping the Lore Mods and don't expect a fair fight.
Commissioned in 1968, this facility on the shores of Lake Superior supplies all of the region’s power (with the surplus being exported). After a controversial accident in 1989 (a safety interlock failed during routine maintenance, resulting in two worker fatalities), it was taken over by the Department of Energy and is currently run under the Midwest Power Administration.
Brule River Waste Treatment Plant
Brule River Power Plant
The Brule River Power Plant is a large, eight-story brick building that was opened in 1902 by the Porter Light & Rail Company on the titular Brule River. The plant was decommissioned in 1969 as Devilfish phased out coal power in favor of nuclear with the opening of the station on Blueberry Island, and currently the building is in a state of disrepair. The degradation of asbestos used in pipe insulation and heat-resistant cement has led to the building being declared unsafe, but its status as a historical site and the cost of demolition has kept it standing.
Industry
Historic Industry
Farquar Mine Superfund Site
Officially known as Farquhar Mine, the Pit was at one time the largest operation of the Grand Portage Mining Company. It was closed in 2003 when it became too expensive to operate. Since then, it’s been slowly filling up with putrid brown water.
Mulligan Quarry
Formerly the Mulligan Quarry, it was closed after legal troubles, its proximity to the city, and the wide open expanse of flat rock, has occasionally seen the site used by parahumans for power experimentation.
Closed Mining Operations
The Deckard Company Iron Mine was abandoned in 1983, when the owner filed for bankruptcy. The location was sold, and then sold again, and then the company it was sold for went under. And as a result the actual ownership of the mine is debatable, and is caught up in bureaucratic limbo.
The Horsehead Copper Mine was condemned in 1993 after a collapsed tunnel resulted in flooding from a small nearby aquifer. A majority of the tunnels are flooded with the murky waters, there are some relatively tunnels and chambers that remain relatively untouched and usable.
Abandoned in 2003, the Intrepid Creek Copper Mine's prior owner having closed the operation, when the ore mined was no longer profitable. Proper procedures were followed, and the mining equipment, building facilities, and waste were dismantled or removed. As of now the process of Mine reclamation in in-progress.