What is new for Northwoods Drifter in 2026


The best kind of community work often happens without fanfare. For more than twenty years, Fran Swanson has shown up for Bayfield — tending parks, preserving local history, supporting students, and keeping the town’s cultural spaces humming along.
Now the Bayfield Heritage Association is making sure her work doesn’t go unnoticed. Swanson has been named the 2025–2026 recipient of the Jerry & Mary Phillips Bayfield Award for Volunteerism, with a public celebration planned for June 17, 2026.
It’s the kind of recognition that reminds us how much small Northwoods communities depend on people who give their time, year after year, without asking for credit.
Swanson’s volunteer footprint stretches across nearly every corner of Bayfield’s civic life. She’s worked with the town’s parks, archives, and library. She’s supported local stages and performing arts venues.
Her contributions also extended into Bayfield schools, where she served as a classroom assistant, and the Bayfield Carnegie Heritage Center, a cultural hub for the community.
What stands out isn’t just the breadth of her work — it’s the consistency. Two decades of service means she was there during lean budget years and busy tourist seasons alike, helping keep public spaces accessible and local institutions running.

In places like Bayfield, volunteers aren’t just helpful extras. They’re often the reason libraries stay open, parks stay maintained, and community events happen at all.
Municipal budgets in small Northwoods towns are tight. Tourism brings revenue, but it’s seasonal. Year-round operations for museums, heritage centers, and public programs often rely on residents willing to pitch in without a paycheck.
Swanson’s work touches several pillars that define life up north:
When one person shows up consistently across all those areas, the impact compounds. Communities remember who was there when it mattered.
The Jerry & Mary Phillips Bayfield Award for Volunteerism recognizes residents who’ve made sustained contributions to community life. The Bayfield Heritage Association presents it annually.
The Heritage Association itself operates out of 30 N. Broad St. in downtown Bayfield. It’s a nonprofit history center focused on the people, industries, and events that shaped the region — exactly the kind of institution that depends on volunteer energy to stay viable.
In small Northwoods towns, the line between preserving history and making it often comes down to residents who care enough to show up.
The June celebration will be held at the Heritage Association’s Bayfield location, giving the community a chance to publicly thank Swanson for work that was mostly done quietly, behind the scenes.

Bayfield sits on the Lake Superior shore, known for its lakefront scenery, parks, and role as a gateway to the Apostle Islands. Tourism drives much of the local economy, but maintaining the town’s appeal requires constant care.
Parks need upkeep. Heritage sites need programming. Libraries need staffing. Schools need extra hands. Cultural venues need event coordination.
That work doesn’t happen automatically. It happens because people like Swanson choose to invest time in maintaining public spaces and cultural institutions that serve both residents and visitors.
The result is a town that feels cared for — not just in summer when tourists arrive, but year-round when locals depend on those same resources.

The public celebration on June 17, 2026, will give the community a chance to recognize Swanson’s contributions in person. It’s scheduled at the Bayfield Heritage Association, one of the very institutions she’s helped support over the years.
For anyone who’s benefited from Bayfield’s parks, attended a local performance, or used the library’s resources, there’s a good chance Swanson’s work played a part in keeping those spaces accessible and well-maintained.
Her story also serves as a reminder that thriving Northwoods communities aren’t built by tourists or seasonal visitors alone. They’re built by residents who show up, do the work, and stick around for the long haul.
That’s the kind of service worth celebrating — and the kind that keeps small towns strong, season after season.
Written by
Mike has been coming up or living in the Northwoods since his childhood. He is also an avid outdoorsman, writer and supper club aficionado.
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