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Mackinac and Island
In 1822, Astor established the Astor House on Mackinac Island as headquarters for the reorganized American Fur Company, making the island a metropolis of the fur trade.
Other travels took him southwest to Philadelphia and New York City in 1854, and west across the Great Lakes region in 1861, visiting Niagara Falls, Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Mackinac Island.
Passing the Straits of Mackinac, La Salle and the Griffon made landfall on Washington Island, off the tip of the Door Peninsula on the Wisconsin side of Lake Michigan.
Lake Huron viewed from Arch Rock at Mackinac Island
* Mackinac Island
* Mackinac Island, in Michigan, which celebrates a weeklong lilac festival and lilac parade each June.
* Chicago to Mackinac – founded in 1898 with five boats, the race runs from Chicago, IL to Mackinac Island on the northern tip of Michigan covering over 300 miles of freshwater racing.
At the time of founding, the county seat was the community of Michilimackinac Island on Michilimackinac Island, later known as Mackinac Island, Michigan.
In 1882 the county seat was moved from Mackinac Island to St. Ignace.
* Mackinac Island is within the county.
* Mackinac Island Airport ( Mackinac Island )
Numerous companies operate ferries to Bois Blanc Island and Mackinac Island.
Ferries to and from Mackinac Island sail from St. Ignace and Mackinaw City, while the Bois Blanc Island ferry sails from Cheboygan.
* Island House ( Mackinac Island )
* Mackinac Island
* Trinity Church ( Mackinac Island )

Mackinac and is
In Michigan, there is fine color on route 27 up to the Mackinac Straits, while the views around Marquette and Iron Mountain in the Upper Peninsula are spectacular.
To the east, its basin is conjoined with that of Lake Huron through the wide Straits of Mackinac, giving it the same surface elevation as its easterly counterpart.
Its surface averages 577 feet ( 176 m ) above sea level, the same as Lake Huron, to which it is connected through the Straits of Mackinac.
The Mackinac Bridge ( ) is a suspension bridge spanning the Straits of Mackinac to connect the non-contiguous Upper and Lower peninsulas of the U. S. state of Michigan.
At, the Mackinac Bridge is the longest suspension bridge with two towers between anchorages in the Western Hemisphere.
However, because of the long leadups to the anchorages on the Mackinac, from shoreline to shoreline it is much longer at than the Akashi-Kaikyo (
Hydrologically, it comprises the easterly portion of Lake Michigan – Huron, having the same surface elevation as its westerly counterpart, to which it is connected by the wide Straits of Mackinac.
Lake Huron is separated from Lake Michigan, which lies at the same level, by the narrow Straits of Mackinac, making them geologically and hydrologically the same body of water ( sometimes called Lake Michigan-Huron and sometimes described as two ' lobes of the same lake ').
Mackinac County is a county in the Upper Peninsula of the U. S. state of Michigan.
The county's name is claimed to be a corruption of the French term " Michilimackinac ," which referred to the Straits of Mackinac area as well as the French settlement at the tip of the lower peninsula.
* St. Ignace is the northern terminus of the Mackinac Bridge.
* The Mackinac Island Town Crier is the weekly seasonal newspaper of Mackinac Island.
* The St. Ignace News is the weekly newspaper for the Upper Peninsula area of the Mackinac Straits.
Emmet County is located at the top of the mitten-shaped Lower Peninsula of Michigan, with Lake Michigan to the west, the Straits of Mackinac to the north, Cheboygan County to the east, and Charlevoix County to the south.
The meaning is thought to be the same as the meaning in the case of Mackinac Island and Straits area in Michigan, which comes from the Ojibway word for turtle ( Michilimackinac means Great Turtle ).
Harrisville is situated along the Lake State Railway, formerly the Detroit and Mackinac Railway ( D & M ).
About to the north is Mackinaw City and the Mackinac Bridge and the north end of the lower peninsula's I-75.
About to the north is Mackinaw City and the Mackinac Bridge and the north end of the lower peninsula's I-75.
* Lachine is an unincorporated community near the southern boundary of the township on M-65 less than a mile north of its junction with M-32 at It was founded in 1909 as a station on a branch of the Detroit and Mackinac Railway, named by a railroad conductor from Lachine, Quebec, Canada.
* Bolton is an unincorporated community in the township approximately northwest of Alpena along the partially abandoned Detroit and Mackinac Railway at.
* Cathro is an unincorporated community in the township approximately northwest of Alpena along the Detroit and Mackinac Railway at.
Mackinaw City and the Mackinac Bridge are about to the north and Gaylord is to the south.

Mackinac and home
In approximately 1890, Cheboygan became the home port for ferryboats to nearby Bois Blanc, an island in the Straits of Mackinac.
* In Michigan, the Upper Peninsula's Trenary has the largest outhouse race but Mackinaw City is home to an annual and largest " outhouse race south of the Mackinac Bridge ".
The bay is also home to the annual Ugotta Regatta hosted by the Little Traverse Yacht Club in Harbor Springs, and involving many of the same boats as the Chicago and Port Huron to Mackinac races, held the two weekends before.
He took an interest in Mackinac Island, Michigan as a summer home.
In 1904, construction was completed on his mansion which he named Stonecliffe which was the largest private home on Mackinac Island.
* The Straits of Mackinac is home to lake ferries that take passengers to Mackinac Island from either Mackinaw City in the Lower Peninsula or St. Ignace in the Upper Peninsula.
According to Anishinaabe-Ojibwa tradition, what became known as Mackinac Island in Michigan was the home of Gitche Manitou.

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