
The Beginning of Buck Hills
It began as a school project. Ward Creech, a geography teacher and principal of Benzonia High School, gave his students an assignment: find the best place in Benzie County to start a ski area. After much research and deliberation, the class determined the Buck Hills Range offered the best combination of terrain and snowfall.
In 1956, Buck Hills Ski Club opened. The first rope tow was powered by an old pick-up truck engine. A warming hut was built from donated lumber procured in large part thanks to the tenacity of Althea Petritz. Grooming the three downhill trails was everyone’s job, sidestepping uphill to create what passed for “corduroy” in those days.
The Flip of a Coin
In 1981 sole ownership of Crystal Mountain came down to a coin flip between George Petritz and Robert Meyer. The winner would make the first offer, leaving it to the other to accept or counter. Mr. Petritz won the toss, made an offer which Mr. Meyer accepted.
Since then, Crystal Mountain has been owned by the Petritz family for whom playing outdoors is in their DNA – downhill and cross-country skiing, kayaking, biking, swimming and golf are just a few of the activities that George and Althea shared with their kids, and the MacInnes family has continued this passion and lifestyle.
Vision to Village
In 1989, Crystal Mountain embarked on a master plan called Emergent Directions which continues to guide resort development – more than $200 million in the last quarter century. Iteratively and carefully the resort has evolved into a community with a pedestrian-friendly village that not only welcomes guests but is also a place many families call home.
Crystal Mountain is many things to many people. It is 59 downhill trails and 36 championship holes of golf. A place where some exchange wedding vows and others share innovative ideas… but at its core, it is a place to connect with self, others, nature and ideas.







