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All the United States Michigan Detroit Belle Isle Aquarium

Belle Isle Aquarium

The Beaux-Arts aquarium boasts a vast collection of saltwater and freshwater fish on an island in the Detroit River.

Detroit, Michigan

Added By
Christopher Linton
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A postcard from the inside of the aquarium, dating to 1907 or 1908.   Detroit Publishing Company Collection, Newberry Library
  Eric M. Livak Hale
A postcard dating to 1907 or 1908.   Detroit Publishing Company/New York Public Library Digital Collections
The collection includes many species of paddle-nosed gar.   VasenkaPhotography
  VasenkaPhotography
A postcard depicting the aquarium at nearby conservatory, circa 1900.   Curt Teich Postcard Archives Digital Collection, Newberry Library
Fish sign   evilgreentriangle / Atlas Obscura User
Aquarium ceiling   evilgreentriangle / Atlas Obscura User
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On opening day, in 1904, some 5,000 visitors queued up to file past 44 fish tanks and beautiful green-tiled walls, the color of water-slicked algae. Over the next few years, thousands of visitors continued to shuffle through each day.

At the time, the Beaux Arts building was one of the largest aquariums in the world, and a dispatch in the Detroit News noted "there or only some six or seven other permanent aquaria known."   

Designed by architects Albert Kahn and George D. Mason, the building featured a massive central tank, grand pillars, and an ornate facade. Above the entrance is a carving of Neptune, the Roman god of the seas, and the city's seal and motto: Speramus meliora; resurget cineribus (“We hope for better things; it will rise from the ashes”).

Over the next hundred years, this small structure on an island in the Detroit River, partway between the U.S. and Canada, would become the oldest continually operating aquarium in America.

Local legend says that the basement was home to a Prohibition-era speakeasy, and that, during a time of cinched purses and hungry bellies, a sea turtle named "Big Pete" was sold to the local fish market, where it was fated to become soup. 

The building rebounded over the years: Tanks made from wood and glue were replaced with sturdy concrete ones, and at its height, the collection included more than 3,600 fish.

The tanks were full of freshwater and saltwater fish until 2005, when the cash-stripped city closed the aquarium as a cost-cutting measure. Local citizens voted to reopen it, and spent years lobbying to do so. The Belle Isle Conservancy, a nonprofit volunteer group, restored and reopened the building in 2012. 

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Aquariums Water

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The aquarium is open Friday to Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free, but there is a cost to drive a car onto the island.

Community Contributors

Added By

ronin

Edited By

paulypaul, hrnick, jklumpp, jessicahester1...

  • paulypaul
  • hrnick
  • jklumpp
  • jessicahester1
  • evilgreentriangle

Published

October 14, 2010

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Sources
  • https://www.belleisleconservancy.org/belle-isle-aquarium
  • http://historicdetroit.org/building/belle-isle-aquarium/
  • https://www.newspapers.com/clip/4035645/belle_island_aquarium_opens/
  • Wikipedia: Belle Isle Aquarium: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belle_Isle_Aquarium
Belle Isle Aquarium
3 Inselruhe Ave
Detroit, Michigan, 48207
United States
42.337941, -82.985608
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