Barton Hills residents are entitled to register and store their boats at the waterfront. Contact the BHMC for more details.
Barton Pond is an impoundment of the Huron River created by a Detroit Edison Barton Dam installed in 1912 for hydroelectric power. Barton Dam is one of Ann Arbor's four dams on the Huron River. It was designed by engineer Gardner Stewart Williams and architect Emil Lorch. Detroit Edison Co., who was the owner of the pond sold Barton dam along with Argo, Geddes, and Superior dams to the city in 1963. In 1982, Ann Arbor voters approved a ballot proposal to reactivate its hydropower plant. To maximize output and revenue, the city stopped lowering the pond in the winter.
The pond is used for sailing, fishing, kayaking and canoeing. There are no speed boats or jet skis. It is home to a wide variety of wild life.
Barton Pond is a lake located within the Huron River watershed (Hydrologic Unit Code [HUC] 04174500), contiguous with the Huron River, which flows 125 miles from its headwaters at Big Lake, near Pontiac in Oakland County, to its mouth at the northwest corner of Lake Erie in Monroe County. Historically, the Huron River flowed through Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti as a natural, unaltered river. Today the river system is fragmented by dams, with 96 dams located along the river to date (Hay Chmielewski et al. 1995).
Barton pond's 181 acre freshwater reservoir is the main source (~85%) of drinking water for the City of Ann Arbor. This presents a unique challenge to utilize innovative techniques and study treatment effectiveness due to the inability to use herbicides. Barton Pond is also actively used for recreational swimming, boating and fishing.
Huron River Watershed has identified in its September 2020 plan high priority tributary work regarding erosion issues on the North Shore of Barton Pond. Two Tributaries at Minoma Park (east of the boathouse and at Otsego Par are the highest contributor into the middle river watershed with extremely steep valleys and high walls have the highest erosion rate in the Watershed at 0.30 tons/yr/ft or 476.1 tons per year.
The boathouse, located on Barton Shore Drive in Barton Hills, was built in the summer of 1937 by the Edison Company.
https://www.bartonboatclub.com/
Barton Boat Club was formed in 1937 to sail on the pond. BHMC leases the land and house to BBC.
The club hosts regattas and parties on Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day. The put-in and take-out days are also occasions for food and fun. After the end of the sailing season, club meetings and parties are held at non-club locations.
Persons wishing to look over the club can stop by on any Sunday afternoon during the racing season. The club located at 446 Barton Shore Drive,Ann Arbor, MI. The gate usually opens at one and stays open until five clock.
More information including membership details can be found here: https://www.bartonboatclub.com/ or here https://www.facebook.com/BartonBoatClub/
Wind on the pond is channeled through the nearby hills. The shifts and gusts can be challenging. It is often said that if you master the winds of Barton Pond, you can sail anywhere.
Most of the sailors keep their boats on land and launch from the shoreline. During the sailing season, there are docks where sailboats can be rigged for sailing. At the end of the sailing season, boats can be stored in the clubhouse.
In 2022, the pond froze so smoothly that Papa Lama was able to iceboat for several weeks. Much better conditions than in 1938 (below.)
Occasionally the weather cooperates well enough for residents to clear off a patch of snow and skate or play broomball!
These events are loads of fun but done at residents own risk without support or endorsement from BHMC.
Copyright: Donated by the Ann Arbor News. © The Ann Arbor News
https://aadl.org/aa_news_19370604-new_boat_club_formed_to_promote_sailing_on_barton
Photographer: Eck Stanger
UNDERDOWN WINS CATBOAT RACE: Milton Underdown of Barton Hills is shown finishing ahead of the field in the 2 1/2 mile catboat race held on the Barton Hills pond yesterday afternoon. Underdown in his Barton Cat finished a length ahead of Prof. Arthur B. Moehlman, also of Barton Hills. Prof. Robert Angell, a non-resident member of the Barton Boat club, is shown in the background at the right far behind the two leaders. Angell finished third in the contest - the last match race of the season for club members.
whipping across Barton Pond made for anything but smooth sailing when this picture was taken, but Boat Club members Donald B. and William H. Trow, of 931 Oakdale Rd., set their canvas and took off across the choppy waters.
Every Saturday afternoon between now and December, the junior members of the Barton Boat club will hold races on the Barton Pond.
Below are shown four of the Tiger class boats which were sailed in Saturday’s race. The winner was Dave Olmstead with Bill Fisher as his crew in Boat No. 4. Lynn Walton and his crew Jim Guthe in Boat No. 8 finished second while Don Trow and Dave Firestone in Boat No. 10 were third. The No. 9 boat in the above picture was piloted by Bill Underdown
to rig their sailboats prior to an afternoon's sport. The club has been in existence since 1936. At first composed almost exclusively of Barton Hills residents, it now is made up of about half townspeople and has become more and more a sailing club and less a social group. The club rents a boathouse (not shown) from the Barton Hills Improvement Association. The house provides winter storage space for the 18 boats owned by members.
Not "the Flying Dutchman," but a 15-foot centerboard sailboat brought here from Holland by Dr. George Moore of Barton Shore Dr. is pictured above. The craft is being readied for use in Barton Pond by (left) Tom Moore, Penny Moore and the orthodontist.
Club members gather on a designated afternoon in the early summer to wield sledge hammers on piles and lay out the dock. Weed-clearing is another necessary Saturday afternoon task for the folks who would rather sail than practically anything else.
Four Boat Club small fry stare at a submerged rowboat off the dock, while a fifth looks doubtfully at the intruding photographer. Cautious parents take no chances, shallow water or not. Life preservers are part of the regular juvenile gear.
Henry Finney of 2015 Geddes Ave., a University sophomore, is busy with a usual sailing afternoon occupation. He scorns the club's pump this time in favor of manual labor on his 12-foot Tiger. Finney's father is University composer in residence, Ross Lee Finney.
Johnny Ogden, at the tiller, and Hickman Price (not shown) each 12, started in the boat building business early. They spent the winter, under supervision, constructing the gaff rig pram. A friend, Walter Slocum, 13, waves at the photographer.
Sailor-publisher Larry Prakken and his wife move out of the harbor in a 14-foot Rhodes Bantam.
Doctor co-owners Gus Raney and Paul Mori tack across the pond in the boat club's only Comet. The Comet is 16 feet long. Raney, an assistant resident in radiology at University Hospital, lives at 1449 university Terrace; Mori, a junior clinical instructor in radiology, lived at 1301 Prescott Ave.
A full crew mans the 16-foot fiberglass Rebel. Owner Dr. William Michel of 406 Keech Ave., an assistant resident in pediatrics at the University Hospital, sits back to enjoy the cruise, while a guest, Tom Sherman, and the sons of the two, both named Billy, help pilot the craft.
Tom Lyndon, commodore of the Barton Boat Club, sits this one out as he acts as race chairman of the first race. Lyndon, secretary of the Michigan Brighton Service, lived at 2640 Kenilworth Dr.
Five different types of boats wait for the blast of the horn as they maneuver for a starting position in a Sunday afternoon race. Shown from the left are a fiberglass Rebel, a Rhodes Bantam, a gaff rig pram, a Tiger and a Comet. Although the Rebel, the largest boat, came in first, the final winner will be determined by corrected time on the basis of the boats' handicaps.
The end of a Sunday of sailing at the Barton Boat Club finds small boats moored in the tiny harbor. The wind has dropped, and in the background, two becalmed boats make for port with the help of paddles.
Many sail parties are planned in preparation for the opening race in May. Assembled on the boathouse Barton Boat club skippers, gathered to mend the sail of a fellow member, are (left to right) Harry P. Hawkins, Commodore Brian McCabe, Dean Willard Olson, Robert Leary and Dr. William Grabb, racing chairman, and his son David. Rhodes.
Bantams and Snipes are the two main classes of boats on Barton Pond. The Snipe has 117 square feet of sail in the main and overlapping jib and the Rhodes Bantam has 125 square feet of sail.
An early bird in the Barton Boat Club, Larry Prakken, isn't taking any changes on not being ready for the first race.
After a thorough washing, he will scrape off the loose paint and apply an anti-fouling paint to the boat's hull for protection. All boats require some maintenance, even the fiberglass hulls. Loose fittings and leaks must also be checked before the start of the first race.
Many Barton racers agree that it's easier to spread the maintenance chores over the year rather than do touch-up jobs during the sailing season!
Barton Boat Club members are anxiously awaiting the first sailing day. Since the snow melted the unassembled dock in front of the club house overlooking Barton Pond has become a gathering place for both young and seasoned skippers. The club, located on Barton Shore Drive in Barton Hills, was built in the summer of 1937 by the Detroit Edison Co., the present (1962) owner of the pond. With sunny days just around the corner, many members will be taking their crafts out of the boat house for repairs in preparation for the first race, May 13.
Barton skippers don't hesitate to help a mate carry his boat from the club house, because all have the same job to do. After the nicks, scrapes and gouges are smoothed down with sandpaper, the hull is filled with a plastic wood filler before the boat can be painted and varnished. During the sailing season, daily maintenance includes keeping bilges dry, decks swabbed and cockpits tidy. All Barton boaters will agree that their favorite sport entails a lot of work, even before the craft hits the water.
Rigging their Snipe boat as practice for the boat races today and tomorrow are Mrs. Brian F. McCabe (right), whose husband, Dr. McCabe, is racing chairman for the regatta, and Mrs. Richard L. Massman at the sails. Racing and social events are scheduled through tomorrow evening for club members and guest clubs that will be at Barton Pond for the event
Dr. William Beierwaltes turns his Gannet-class craft into the dock after a race at Barton Pond.
Mrs. R. C. Stewart is an enthusiastic racer, she often takes along her part-collie dog, Gillie, for companionship. He has become a seasoned sailor, too.
Newcomers to senior race competition at the Barton Boat Club, Bruce Janiszewski (left) and John Flinn, got set for an afternoon of sailing one day last week in their fiberglass snipe. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Janiszewski of E. Ann Street and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Flinn of Underdown Road.
There's more work to sailing than any lubberly person who's ever been conked by a swinging boom can imagine. Here, sailors in the lead boat add a new dimension to the expression "Put your backs into it!' as they lean against their close-hauled sails in a Snipe-class race on Barton Pond Monday.
by Grace Shackman of the Ann Arbot Observer
Its fortunes are tied to a changing river.
"Some don't know we exist. Others think you have to live in Barton Hills to join," says architect Jan Culbenson, longtime Barton Hills Boat Club member. In fact, the club has existed since 1937, and no, you don't have to live in Barton Hills to join.
At its heyday, the club regularly hosted two-day regattas, competing with clubs from as far away as New York stare. In those halcyon days there was a waiting list, with Barton Hills folks given priority. Today, the races are just for fun among the members, and there is no wait list. Only three of the thirty-sixe member famlies live in the village and everyone pays the same yearly fee of $355.
Barton Pond was created in 1912-13, when a Detroit Edison subsidiary dammed the Huron and built a hydropower plant. Alexander Dow, then president of Edison thought the hilly land on the pond's north shore would make a wonderful place for high-level Edison employees to live and developed Barton Hills in the 1920s.
The idea for the boat club started with John Waite, a U-M law prof and Barton Hills resident. In 1937 be approached his friend Robert Angell, a sociology professoror who didn't live in Barton Hills but was a sailing enthusiast. Together they enlisted another Barton Hills resident, Art Moehlman.
Waite and Moehlman went to Huron Farms, Edison's real estate branch, to ask permission. Huron Farms agreed to rent the land to them and build a boat dock and rustic clubhouse but balked at the suggestion of building tennis courts.
That June, the Ann Arbor News announced that "A new boat club has been formed by Barton Hills residents and other sailing enthusiasts to stimulate sailing on Barton Pond." The article reported that there were already twenty-two members, fourteen from Barton Hills and eight from elsewhere. They had ten small sailboats and planned to buy ten more.
Moelman was elected the club's first "commodore." B 1939 the club was in t full swing, competing in regattas with the Orchard Lake Club (near Pontiac) on each other's waters. Closer to home, they challenged the U-M Sailing Club, who beat them in a race that year.
Every Sunday morning the club members raced against one another on Barton Pond. At the end of the season, the person with the most cumulative points was declared champion. They also held separate races for children.
Newspaper reports about the club ceased during World War II but started up again in 1947. By 1955 they were clearly in full gear as the Ann Arbor News published a full-page spread illustrated with eleven pictures. "Usually every Sunday about half a dozen boats race when there's a breeze," the paper reported. It went on to say that "although competitions are important for serious sailors, others find the quiet wooded spot ideal for relaxing and that boats moored in the middle often use for swimming."
The rule of the club has always been no motorboats, with the exception of the motorized float used by the race committee. Composed of two or three people, the committee would determine the path of races based on wind conditions and then set up buoys to guide the participants. A race was usually four times around the cours, ending upwind. The committee would blow a horn to start the race, then monitor it and enforce the rules. Infractions were penalized by sending the offender around in a circle, costing it valuable time.
Since the boats varied in size, time to complete the course was adjusted by a handicap based on the size and sail of each craft. By 1962 things had been simplified by limiting competitors to two standard types, two-person Snipes and one-person Bantams (later replaced by Lasers).
In the 1960s, opponents included the Jolly Roger Sailing Club of Toledo and the Goguac Yacht Club from Battle Creek. The list of regatta partners continued to grow in the 1970s, and some Barton Hills members were such serious sailors that they competed in regattas as far away as Mackinac or Bermuda.
Attorney Bruce Laidlaw, who had learned to sail at Camp Michigania, joined in the early 1970s. A friend asked him to help her sail her Snipe, but because the club had reached its limit of fifty-five member families, he had to start as an associate member. He remembers at their first race, one of the participants got so mad at a race committee ruling, "that he sailed to the committee boat and said 'I'm going home.' I was horrified, thinking 'what kind of club is this?' " Though he now spends summers up north, he is still the club's webmaster.
Architect Russ Serbay joined at about the same time as Laidlaw, also because a friend needed a second on her Snipe. He remembers that many club members became friends with members of competing clubs. Serbay and other members put up some of the visiting participants in regattas at their homes, and their guests usually returned the favor when the Barton Boat Club competed in their towns. Regattas always ended with a big party, usually at someone's house or at member Harry Hawkins' business on South State.
The club members continued to race one another on Sundays, though in the afternoon instead of the morning. On Memorial Day, the Fourth of July, and Labor Day, they had big picnics and still do. Often members continued coming to parties long after they stopped sailing.
Children were always included. The club's fleet includes smaller boats called Optimists that are good for young people to learn on. The kids all wear life jackets and do capsize drills as well as sailing instruction. Younger ones enjoy hanging out by the water, playing in the mud, while teenagers are drafted to help with the heavy work of hauling boats in and out of the water.
Present commodore Meghan Allen and her husband, Matt, introduced their son, Zach, to sailing when he was three. Jan and Carey Culbertson's sons, Chris and Josh, also started coming at an early age and as young men still love the club. For many years Josh recruited a bunch of his friends to help at year-end workdays. One even came back to help after he'd moved to Chicago.
What could be called the club's golden years ended in the 1980s, when the water along the shoreline gradually became overgrown with weeds. Hawkings, a member since 1954, explains that "in order to keep Baton Pond clear and not clog up the dam with weeds, [Edison] would lower the pond during the worst part of winter -- and thus burst all the weed seeds." Lower water also meant the dock and boats could be left out all winter, since they wouldn't be hurt by freezing and thawing. According to Laura Rubin, executive director of the Huron River Watershed Council, lowering water levels is a common practice on recreational lakes.
Edison sold Barton and its other Ann Arbor dams to the city in 1963. In 1982, Ann Arbor voters approved a ballot proposal to reactivate its hydropower plant. To maximize output and revenue, the city stopped lowering the pond in the winter, and the weeds began to encroach.
Now, to reach clear water, club members first must untangle the weeds that stick to their boats. It is a little easier with the smaller Lasers but really challenging with the Snipes.
As the area where boats could sail shrank, so did club membership. The regattas with other clubs stopped. And moving the dock and boats each season increased the workload.
About fifteen years ago the boat club tried introducing weevils to kill the milfoil clogging the pond. The weevils ate the milfoil, but other weeds sprang up to take their place. Chemical weed killers are out of the question because Ann Arbor gets its drinking water from Barton Pond.
Rubin points out that it is a man-made problem. "Dams are temporary structures. Rivers move matter and sediments; damns stop both." She explains that since it is a man-made problem it can have a man-made solution, like lowering the water again.
If the city did that, though, it would lose money because the dam would generate less electricity. Some years ago, the loss was estimated at about $15,000 a year. The watershed council has tried to broker a deal several times, but the boat club could afford to pay only $2,000, and neither Barton Hills nor Ann Arbor was willing to cover the difference. The village said it was the city's problem, while the city was not interested in spending money to benefit the village.
As sailing got more difficult, the club stuck to its rule about no motorboats but it now allows any kind of human-powered vessel, including kayaks, canoes, and paddleboats. When they race, there is a winner in each category.
At the club's low point last year, membership decreased to twenty-four families, and there was a real concern that it might have to close. But new members have since joined, including Noah Hall, who recently moved to Ann Arbor after spending the last four summers with his children on a houseboat on the Detroit River. hall was looking for a place to access the Huron, and Rubin suggested the Barton Hills Boat Club. He often thanks her.
Though the sailing isn't what it once was, the setting is as beautiful as ever. Chris Culbertson says he often comes by after work, not to sail, but to wind down.
"I come out here and put my phone down and hear the birds in the trees and the wind,' he says. "When I think of home, it's hard not to think of the boat club."