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Sister
Bay – the hub of the Door Peninsula With abundant hotels and restaurants, unique galleries and proximity to key attractions, it’s easy to understand why visitors and residents call Sister Bay the northern hub of the Door Peninsula. The heart of the village sits alongside the waters of Green Bay, where Hwy. 57 ends and intersects with Hwy. 42. Convenient
location “We are really centrally located for what you want to see in Door County, just miles from neighboring towns and minutes away from Peninsula State Park (in Fish Creek),” says Terry Zielke, president, Sister Bay Advancement Association.
“I advise going shopping or to a restaurant, or to Sturgeon Bay for a movie. You can always get a book. We have a very nice library,” she says of the Village’s new library on Mill Rd. “We help with hotel reservations here – I know who is full or has an opening.”
The schoolhouse, built in 1866, remained open until 1881, when a larger school replaced it. Walls, made from logs, are original. The floor and ceiling were replaced after area residents moved the schoolhouse in 1978 from its original location on Hill Rd. Continue your journey into Sister Bay’s past with a visit to the Old Anderson House Museum, located on the south edge of the village on Hwy. 57 and Fieldcrest Rd. Staffed by volunteers of the Sister Bay Historical Society, the Museum is open weekends and holidays mid-May through Mid-October. There’s no admission charge, but a donation is accepted. This former home of Alex and Emma Anderson, who moved to Sister Bay from Marinette in 1895, was restored from 1994 through 1997 by Sister Bay residents. Now, it showcases furnishings and memorabilia of life and times in northern Door County more than 100 years ago. While you are there, members of the Historical Society will proudly share their plans for further development of this site, where the village acquired 6.4 acres of adjoining property in 1999. Four vintage buildings—a granary, machine shed, barn and migrant worker cabin--are being restored (Corner of the Past). Step over to the machine shed to view old photographs showing early settlers and merchants, a destructive fire of 1912, the steamships at Roeser Dock and the early logging and ice industries. Zielke, who grew up in Sister Bay, tells his own stories about the past. When the logging industry was bullish in Sister Bay, he recalls jumping off the logs—stacked 40 feet high on the dock—and into the water. “That was great fun,” he says. “And Bunda’s right here was a big city department store. Husby’s (Husby’s Food and Spirits) is now a bar and serves food, but Emma Husby herself used to serve ice-cream there. It was real special.” Special
shopping
Throughout summer, blues, jazz, ragtime, swing, country, Cajun and other musicians entertain the crowds who gather at the Beach Park Pavilion 3 p.m. Wednesdays for Concerts in the Park. Nearby, the Sister Bay Marina shows off its recent improvements –new break walls, additional slips, showers and rest room facilities. There are 100 slips here and 34 are available for transient boaters. Always
a Party Shortly
afterward is Sister Bay Fall Festival, held each October during the
weekend following Columbus Day. The highlight of the festival is the
annual ping pong ball drop 2 p.m. Sunday, when 5,000 balls—offering
discounts and prizes from area merchants-- are dropped from a helicopter
onto a crowd gathered on Bay Shore Drive, which is closed for the
entire three-day festival.
If
you only have a day in Sister Bay
To
learn more Donna Marie Pocius is an Egg Harbor, Wisconsin-based freelance writer and regular contributor to DoorCountyNavigator.com Editor’s
Note: Places to Stay Resorts
and Inns B&Bs Places
to Dine Real
Estate Century
21 Door Properties Go Sailing! Visit our Town Series page for Egg Harbor Visit our Town Series page for Baileys Harbor
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