Presque Isle was inhabited by
Noquet and
Ojibwe Native Americans before the arrival of Europeans in the 17th century. The last chieftain of the local Ojibwe,
Charlie Kawbawgam, who died in 1903 at the age of 103, is buried at the park alongside his wife, Charlotte. In the late 1800s, Presque Isle was occupied by a federally owned lighthouse.
Peter White has been credited with inducing the federal government to grant the land to the city of Marquette for the purpose of turning it into a park. On July 12, 1886, the
United States Congress passed a bill ceding control of the land to
Michigan. White also raised the money needed to plant
Lombardy Poplar trees in the park, and to build a paved road to and around it. In 1891, the new road led one local organization to declare that the city had "one of the most charming and picturesque drives in the world". The road was repaved in 1999. ==The park==