Top Five Weirdest Attractions in Michigan
by Sarah Sala
Mr. Chicken the Plastic-Legged Rooster
Jackson, Michigan
After having his legs and feet froze off in a winter storm, Mr. Chicken was fitted with fully functional prosthetics by Dr. England. Once word of this inspirational bird got out his story was ran in newspapers from South Africa to Hawaii. Ironically, Mr. Chicken was ripped to pieces six months later by a raccoon, plastic legs and all, but visitors come every year to place flowers at his gravestone in the animal hospital where he was buried. There is no charge to visit this special needs chicken.
The Catholic Shrine Nun-Doll Museum
Indian River, Michigan
This delightfully offbeat museum exists as the world’s largest display of nun-dolls, donators to the museum having been officially blessed by Pope John Paul II. The shrine contains various types of dolls, ranging from large cloth dolls to plastic Barbie dolls, clad in their habits and situated in a variety of religious poses. The museum exists to “promot[e] vocations to the Priesthood and Religious life.
The Circus Train Wreck Memorial
Durand, Michigan
One night in the early 1900’s two trains from the Barnum and Baily Circus were running to close to each other and as they approached the station the second train plowed into the back of the first, killing all forty of the sleeping circus performers instantly, along with their entire menagerie of animals. The animals, including a full-sized elephant named Biggie, were buried on the railroad right-of-way with giant mounds marking their graves. The unknown circus performers were buried in Lovejoy Cemetery where an obelisk memorializes the calamity to this day.
World Champion Cow of the Insane
Traverse City, Michigan
Opened in 1885, the Northern Michigan Asylum was so vast it had orchards, vineyards, vegetables gardens, field crops and livestock from chickens to horses to pigs.
Accordingly, its most famous animal resident was Traverse Colantha Walker: a grand champion milk cow who produced 200,114 pounds of milk and 7,525 pounds of butterfat during her lifetime. When she died in 1932 the residents rallied to hold a banquet in her honor and buried her outside the brick dairy barn that had been her home. While the asylum closed in 1989, her marble tombstone remains on the grounds.
Krupp’s Novelty Shop and Lawn Ornament Capital of the World
Lennon, Michigan
Host to a wild array of concrete yard art, the pieces range from the all-too-popular R2D2 to flamingos, deer, brains, pointing hands, religious figures, mushrooms, shi tzus, spiders, lawn jockeys and Snow White and the seven dwarfs. The entire collection is for sale and be sure to check out the discount corner of the lawn where you can find headless dogs and handless jockeys. As if the yard isn’t crowded enough, live rabbits roam in-between the statues and the place is rumored to have a yellow-jacket infestation.
Mr. Chicken the Plastic-Legged Rooster
Jackson, Michigan
After having his legs and feet froze off in a winter storm, Mr. Chicken was fitted with fully functional prosthetics by Dr. England. Once word of this inspirational bird got out his story was ran in newspapers from South Africa to Hawaii. Ironically, Mr. Chicken was ripped to pieces six months later by a raccoon, plastic legs and all, but visitors come every year to place flowers at his gravestone in the animal hospital where he was buried. There is no charge to visit this special needs chicken.
The Catholic Shrine Nun-Doll Museum
Indian River, Michigan
This delightfully offbeat museum exists as the world’s largest display of nun-dolls, donators to the museum having been officially blessed by Pope John Paul II. The shrine contains various types of dolls, ranging from large cloth dolls to plastic Barbie dolls, clad in their habits and situated in a variety of religious poses. The museum exists to “promot[e] vocations to the Priesthood and Religious life.
The Circus Train Wreck Memorial
Durand, Michigan
One night in the early 1900’s two trains from the Barnum and Baily Circus were running to close to each other and as they approached the station the second train plowed into the back of the first, killing all forty of the sleeping circus performers instantly, along with their entire menagerie of animals. The animals, including a full-sized elephant named Biggie, were buried on the railroad right-of-way with giant mounds marking their graves. The unknown circus performers were buried in Lovejoy Cemetery where an obelisk memorializes the calamity to this day.
World Champion Cow of the Insane
Traverse City, Michigan
Opened in 1885, the Northern Michigan Asylum was so vast it had orchards, vineyards, vegetables gardens, field crops and livestock from chickens to horses to pigs.
Accordingly, its most famous animal resident was Traverse Colantha Walker: a grand champion milk cow who produced 200,114 pounds of milk and 7,525 pounds of butterfat during her lifetime. When she died in 1932 the residents rallied to hold a banquet in her honor and buried her outside the brick dairy barn that had been her home. While the asylum closed in 1989, her marble tombstone remains on the grounds.
Krupp’s Novelty Shop and Lawn Ornament Capital of the World
Lennon, Michigan
Host to a wild array of concrete yard art, the pieces range from the all-too-popular R2D2 to flamingos, deer, brains, pointing hands, religious figures, mushrooms, shi tzus, spiders, lawn jockeys and Snow White and the seven dwarfs. The entire collection is for sale and be sure to check out the discount corner of the lawn where you can find headless dogs and handless jockeys. As if the yard isn’t crowded enough, live rabbits roam in-between the statues and the place is rumored to have a yellow-jacket infestation.

