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Leelanau News updated Wednesday February 8, 2012
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Great Indoor Folk Festival ~ Feb 12, 2012
The 4th Annual Great Indoor Folk Festival takes place this Sunday, February 12 in Building 50 at the Grand Traverse Commons. The festival runs from noon to 5:30, and it is family-friendly and free, though you're encouraged to donate through "busker buckets."

There will be 6 different stages with over 50 musicians on seven different stages.   read more »

Coming Events (add your own!)
Empire Winterfest (Feb 11), ÊTraverse City Winter Microbrew Festival (Feb 11), Glen Arbor Winterfest (Feb 18), ÊSleeping Bear Snowshoe Hikes (Every Saturday). Check the Leelanau Calendar.

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October 12, 2009

Stefan Habsburg-Lothringen & Leelanau's Bohemian Heritage

Filed under: history,Leelanau,maple city,news,northport,traverse city — Andrew McFarlane @ 10:54 am

Over at the Traverse City Convention & Visitor's Bureau, Mike Norton has an interesting feature titled Bohemian Rhapsody: A Fall Trip to Gill’s Pier that begins:

St. Wenceslaus ChurchHigh on a lofty ridge, about a half-hour’s drive from Traverse City, the cemetery of St. Wenceslaus Catholic Church may have one of the best views in Michigan - a wide vista of Lake Michigan and the distant Manitou Islands framed by lush orchards and vineyards.

But it's a modest cemetery, and equally modest is the headstone beside the plain steps that lead up from the parking lot. Only the inscription is startling — at least to anyone even remotely familiar with world history:

Stefan Habsburg-Lothringen
Aug 15, 1932 - Nov 12, 1998
B. Archduke of Austria, Vienna Austria U.S. Citizen 1961

Technically, the full title should be "His Imperial and Royal Highness Archduke and Prince Stefan of Austria; Prince Stefan of Hungary, Bohemia, and Tuscany." Scion of an ancient and powerful family whose empire included more than half of Europe — and for a brief time even Mexico - until it was dissolved in 1918. A man who lived almost his entire life in exile (including five years in Transylvania as a resident of Castle Bran, the one built by Count Dracula) and finally found rest here on Michigan's scenic Leelanau Peninsula, beside a church dedicated to a saint who was himself a Duke of Bohemia.

Prince Stefan's fate is only the most dramatic chapter in a little-known saga: the story of Traverse City's Bohemians. Beginning in the middle of the 19th century, these industrious Central European immigrants (not the garret-dwelling artists celebrated in Puccini's La Boheme, but inhabitants of what's now the Czech Republic) helped turn this region from a raw lumber settlement into the thriving resort area it is today...

Read the rest of the article for more about Leelanau & Traverse City's Bohemian heritage and learn more about at Archduke Stefan of Austria on Wikipedia (including the fact that he established a division for advanced research at General Motors in Detroit).

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