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WIS 29 (Shawano Avenue) / WIS 32 north / Dousman Street: Northern end of WIS 32 overlap: 174.75: 281.23: 170A: US 141 south / CTH-HS (Velp Avenue) Southern end of US 141 overlap; former exit 170: 175.16– 175.43: 281.89– 282.33: 170B: I-43 south / LMCT – Milwaukee: Northern terminus of I-41 and I-43; northern end of I-41 overlap; former ...
As a bi-state highway, US 141 is a state trunk highway in Wisconsin and a state trunkline highway in Michigan. In Wisconsin, the segment through the Green Bay area is not on the National Highway System (NHS), [2] except for about four blocks along Broadway Avenue that is part of an intermodal connector with the Port of Green Bay. [3]
Harbor Lights Lake is a reservoir in Suamico, Wisconsin, Brown County, Wisconsin, United States. Harbor Lights Lake is small and right along the Green Bay. Over 300 people live on the lake. [1] The lake is maintained by the Harbor Lights Lake Association, consisting of about 135 properties.
Big Suamico was the unofficial name for the river, township, and village called Suamico. It was used to distinguish themselves from the Little Suamico River and Township immediately north in Oconto County. The Suamico and Fort Howard Road was the first declared county road in Brown County laid out between Big Suamico and Fort Howard in 1849–1850.
Little Suamico is a town in Oconto County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 5536 at the 2020 census. The population was 5536 at the 2020 census. Communities
Interstate 41 (I-41) is a 175.00-mile-long (281.64 km) north–south Interstate Highway connecting the interchange of I-94 and U.S. Route 41 (US 41), located about a mile (1.6 km) south of the Wisconsin–Illinois border at the end of the Tri-State Tollway in metropolitan Chicago, to an interchange with I-43 in metropolitan Green Bay, Wisconsin.
The Henry House in Suamico, Wisconsin is a historic house from the "lumber era" of local history, which appears to be the only structure from that era surviving in the township. [2] It is a simple side-gabled boarding house built by the Weed Brothers around 1869. It has also been known as Weed Mill Inn. [3] [4]
In 2022, the taproom moved from Navarino St. to the corner of Clark St. & 2nd Street in Algoma. In 2020, Ahnapee Brewery opened a second location in Suamico, WI, which houses all of the brewery's production and another taproom. [3]