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Lac Vieux Desert: Vilas: Northern Pike 38 lbs. 0 oz. not available 08/06/1952 Lake Puckaway: Green Lake: Perch, White 1 lbs. 6 oz. 13.0 03/14/2020 Chequamegon Bay: Bayfield: Perch, Yellow 3 lbs. 4 oz. not available 1954 Lake Winnebago: Winnebago: Pumpkinseed 1 lb. 3.4 oz. 11.125 05/31/2020 Silver Lake: Washington: Redhorse, Golden 3 lbs. 1.4 oz ...
Lac Vieux Desert is a lake in the United States divided between Gogebic County, Michigan, and Vilas County, Wisconsin. [1] Fed primarily by springs in the surrounding swamps, it is the source of the Wisconsin River , which flows out of its southwest corner.
Vilas County has more lakes than any other county in Wisconsin, [1] with 563 named and 755 unnamed lakes covering 93,889 acres. Lac Vieux Desert near Phelps, at 4017 acres, is the largest.
The current International Game Fish Association (IGFA) all-tackle world record tiger muskie is a 23.21-kilogram (51 lb 3 oz) specimen that was caught on July 16, 1919, by John Knobla at Lac Vieux-Desert, Michigan, while the current IGFA all-tackle length world record, pending as of August 18, 2024, is a 115-centimetre (45 in) individual caught ...
Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa (or the Gete-gitigaaning in the Anishinaabe language) is a federally recognized band of the Lake Superior Chippewa, many of whom reside on the Lac Vieux Desert Indian Reservation, located near Watersmeet, Michigan. It is approximately 45 miles southeast of Ironwood, Michigan in Gogebic County.
Lac La Belle: 1,205 acres (488 ha) 30 feet (9.1 m) Keweenaw County: 629901 Lac Vieux Desert: 4,370 acres (1,770 ha) 38 feet (12 m) Gogebic County, Michigan and Vilas County, Wisconsin 1579612 Lake Fanny Hooe: 227 acres (92 ha) 40 feet (12 m) Keweenaw County: 625823 Lake of the Clouds: 133 acres (54 ha) Ontonagon County: 623493 Lake of the Woods
The 2020 census results may be inaccurate for places like the Lac Vieux Desert Reservation owing to the Census Bureau's implementation of differential privacy protections. [3] [4] Of the total reservation population, 205 people were living on the northern section in the unincorporated community of Watersmeet, Michigan.
By 1783, the Ojibwa had gained the entire Lac du Flambeau region to the southwest of Trout Lake as part of their territory, and during this era maintained six main villages in the Manitowish Waters and Lac du Flambeau areas. These included sites at Lac du Flambeau, Turtle Portage, Trout Lake, Lac Vieux Desert, Pelican Lake, and the Wisconsin River.