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Nov. 20—The Parks, Recreation and Forestry Department has a plan for improving the city's parks and outdoor recreational spaces in 2024. The Parks and Recreation Commission approved spending ...
Pattison State Park is a 1,436-acre (581 ha) Wisconsin state park south of Superior, Wisconsin. Situated on the Black River, the park contains both Big Manitou Falls, the highest waterfall in Wisconsin at 165 feet (50 m), and Little Manitou Falls, which is 30 feet (9.1 m). Pattison State Park was established in 1920. [1]
The Caboose Park and Superior History Trail is located at 834 W. Highway 60. The Superior Ore Cart was installed just in time for the ribbon cutting and dedication ceremony of the park and trail on April 25, 2015. Three of the main trails are the U.S. 60 History Trail, the Mining History Trail and the Copper Corridor Ore Cart Trail.
Sep. 28—SUPERIOR — City officials, neighbors and veteran organization representatives gathered Tuesday, Sept. 27 in East End to unveil a new sign at Carl Gullo Park and share the story of the ...
Park in a garage, if possible. Cover the windshield with a tarp, large towel or old sheet folded a few times or purchase a commercial windshield cover, as long as any snowfall is expected to be light.
Superior: Queen Anne-style home with four-story turret, built around 1890 by Pattison, a lumber and mining baron and mayor of Superior. Became the Superior Children's Home orphanage from 1920 to 1962. Now the Fairlawn Museum. [16] 15: Roosevelt Terrace: Roosevelt Terrace: January 12, 2005
The Wisconsin Point Light is a lighthouse located in Superior, on Wisconsin Point, in Douglas County, Wisconsin, United States. The light and attached fog horn building sits within a 10-mile (16 km) long sand bar – stretching between the ports of Duluth and Superior. This sand bar makes the Duluth–Superior Harbor one of the safest harbors ...
Aerial view of the Sleeping Giant View of Lake Superior and surrounding area from the Top of the Giant trail terminus. Sleeping Giant Provincial Park, established in 1944 as Sibley Provincial Park and renamed in 1988, is a 244-square-kilometre (94 sq mi) park located on the Sibley Peninsula in Northwestern Ontario, east of Thunder Bay.