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Sugar Loaf is a bluff on the Mississippi River topped by a rock pinnacle, overlooking the city of Winona, Minnesota, United States. [3] The name "Sugar Loaf" is sometimes taken to mean just the rock pinnacle, which was created by quarrying in the 19th century.
Sugarloaf Cove Interpretive Center: Schroeder: Cook: Arrowhead: website, operated by the North Shore Stewardship Association, education, preservation and restoration of North Shore of Lake Superior: Tamarack Nature Center: White Bear: Ramsey: Minneapolis–Saint Paul: website, operated by the County, 320-acre preserve within Bald Eagle-Otter ...
An actual sugarloaf, after which many mountains are named.. The name Sugarloaf or Sugar Loaf applies to numerous raised topographic landforms worldwide: mountains, hills, peaks, summits, buttes, ridges, rock formations, bornhardt, inselberg, etc. Landforms resembling the characteristic conical shape of a sugarloaf were often so named.
Sugar Loaf Brewery or Bub's Brewery is a former brewery in Winona, Minnesota, United States.It was established in 1862 at the foot of Sugar Loaf, the prominent river bluff from which it took its name.
Cove is an unincorporated community in South Harbor Township, Mille Lacs County, Minnesota, United States, near Onamia. The community is located along State Highway 27 ( MN 27 ) near 100th Avenue. References
Sugarloaf (mountain), a list of other mountains with the same name; Sugar Loaf (Winona, Minnesota), a bluff on the Mississippi River in Winona, Minnesota; Sugar Loaf Island (California), the westernmost island in California in Humboldt County; Sugarloaf Island, California, one of the Farallon Islands offshore of San Francisco, California
Sugarloaf Provincial Park has an alpine ski resort on the unnamed mountain ridge that is adjacent to but separate from Sugarloaf Mountain. During the winter months, the alpine ski resort offers a variety of alpine skiing for all enthusiasts ranging from beginner to expert, as well as other winter activities such as snowshoeing, cross country skiing, ice skating, snowmobiling, and sleigh rides.
In 1996, the North Shore Commercial Fishing Museum opened in Tofte. The museum is Minnesota's first dedicated to commercial fishing, and chronicles the history of the Scandinavian immigrants and communities of the North Shore region of Lake Superior, especially their importance to the national commercial fishing industry of the 1880s to 1940s.