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Lake George is an unincorporated community in Lincoln Township, Clare County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The town is at the northern end of Lake George at 43°57′48″N 84°56′49″W / 43.96333°N 84.94694°W / 43.96333; -84.94694
Lake George is a lake in Chippewa County, Michigan, United States, and Algoma District, Northwestern Ontario, Canada, [1] [2] [3] that lies between Sugar Island in Michigan on the west and the Ontario mainland on the east. The lake is in the Great Lakes Basin and is part of Lake Huron and the St. Marys River.
Lake George is a recreational lake on the Indiana–Michigan state line, [3] located two-thirds in Steuben County, Indiana, and one-third in Branch County, Michigan. Nearby towns are Angola and Fremont in Indiana, and Coldwater and Kinderhook in Michigan.
Lake George is an unincorporated area in the northwest part of the township at [ 5 ] Phelps is an unincorporated community in the southern portion of the township at 43°54′54″N 84°55′25″W / 43.9150218°N 84.9236376°W / 43.9150218; -84.9236376
George Lake 158 acres (64 ha) Baraga County: George Lake 535 acres (217 ha) Branch County: Lake George: Chippewa County, Michigan and Algoma District, Northwestern Ontario: 1623177 Lake George 129 acres (52 ha) Clare County: Lake Gerald 356 acres (144 ha) Houghton County: Gilead Lake 130 acres (53 ha) 49 feet (15 m) Branch County: Gilletts Lake
George Hingston Lake (1847–1900), politician in the early days of colonial South Australia; George Lake (footballer) (1889–1918), English footballer; George Lake Aerodrome, a privately owned ice runway located on George Lake, Nunavut, Canada; St. George Lake, a lake in Waldo County, Maine; Lake George, a crime thriller film by Jeffrey Reiner
The island lies between Lake George and Lake Nicolet, and to the north of Neebish Island and St. Joseph Island.Pine Island is just east of its southern tip. Vehicle access to the island is via a ferry service at its northwestern tip, connecting east of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.
George R. Donner was the captain of the O.M. McFarland, a coal freighter. On April 28, 1937 – Donner's 58th birthday – the ship picked up 9,800 tons of coal in Erie, Pennsylvania , and then traveled west through the lakes, bound for Port Washington, Wisconsin .