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Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal (northwestern entrance)

 
Idlewild, WI, United States of America
Address is taken from a point 1673 yards away.
 
Information about the place
Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal (northwestern entrance) is a minor waterways place at the junction of Lake Michigan (Western route) with Lake Michigan (Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal).
 
Green Bay is on Lake Michigan (Western route), 38.43 miles to the southwest. Jacksonport is on Lake Michigan (Western route), 69.54 miles to the east. Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal (southeastern entrance) is on Lake Michigan (Western route), 9.92 miles to the southeast.
 
 
The nearest place in the direction of Jacksonport is Egg Harbor; 18.84 miles away.
 
The nearest place in the direction of Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal (southeastern entrance) is Sawyer Harbor; 1.73 miles away.

Mooring here is unrated.

 
 
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Nearest facilities

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No information

CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:
water point
rubbish disposal
chemical toilet disposal
place to turn
self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
 
 
Geograph
 
Wikipedia

Wikipedia has a page about Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal

The Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal is a shipping canal connecting Sturgeon Bay on Green Bay with Lake Michigan, across the Door Peninsula, at the city of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, United States. The canal allows shipping to transit directly from Lake Michigan to Green Bay, avoiding the dangerous Porte des Morts strait. The canal is approximately 1.3 miles in length, dug through the eastern side of the Door Peninsula in a northwest to southeast orientation. There are no locks. At its northwestern end, it connects to a dredged channel in Sturgeon Bay which in turn leads to Green Bay. The canal was dug by a private group headed by then-president of Chicago and North Western Railway, William B. Ogden, between July 8, 1872 and the late fall of 1881. Although smaller craft began using the canal in 1880, it was not open for large-scale watercraft until 1890.

The cost of completing the 1.3 mile cut in 1881 was $291,461.69.

In 1893, the Ogden private investors group sold all interest in the canal to the United States government. Since that time, the canal has been maintained by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

The original canal was 100 feet (30 m) wide and 6 feet (1.8 m) deep. As of May 2016, the canal was 125 feet (38 m) wide and 20 feet (6.1 m) deep. A jetty extends into Lake Michigan 1,350 feet (410 m) and 800 feet (240 m) wide at the mouth.

Several famous lighthouses mark the course of the canal and channel, including the Sturgeon Bay Canal Lighthouse at the eastern entrance on the northern side of the canal (approximately 230 feet from Lake Michigan) next to the Coast Guard Station Sturgeon Bay; the Sturgeon Bay Canal North Pierhead Light on the Lake Michigan coastline; and the Sherwood Point Lighthouse in Idlewild, on the far western end, on the southern shore of the outer edge of Sturgeon Bay.

Other Wikipedia pages that might relate to Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal
[Sturgeon Bay (disambiguation)] Office, the main post office in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal, a shipping canal connecting Sturgeon Bay with Lake Michigan This disambiguation [Sturgeon Bay] Peninsula. The bay is connected to Lake Michigan by the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal. Three bridges cross the bay, including the historic Sturgeon Bay Bridge, and [Sturgeon Bay Canal North Pierhead Light] southern entrance to the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal. There are two lighthouses at this location, the other being the Sturgeon Bay Canal Lighthouse. Light List [Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin] square miles (4.77 km2) is water. Sturgeon Bay is at the natural end of Sturgeon Bay; the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal was built across the remainder of the [Sturgeon Bay Canal Light] Wisconsin. Situated on the east side of the south entrance to the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal, it was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 [List of canals in the United States] Ship Channel (California) St. Clair Flats Canal St. Lawrence Seaway (New York into Canada) Shinnecock Canal (New York) Soo Locks (Michigan) Sturgeon Bay [Bay Shipbuilding Company] purchased Sturgeon Bay Shipbuilding and then Christy Corporation in 1970, which were adjacent on the east side of the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal. Sturgeon Bay Shipbuilding [Coast Guard Station Sturgeon Bay] Station Sturgeon Bay is a United States Coast Guard station located on Lake Michigan and the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal in the Town of Sturgeon Bay in Door [Door Peninsula] a popular tourism destination. With the 1881 completion of the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal, the northern half of the peninsula became an island. Limestone
 
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