Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Timms Hill or Timm's Hill is the highest natural point in the U.S. state of Wisconsin [3] and is located in north-central Wisconsin in Timms Hill County Park in the Town of Hill in Price County. After being surveyed by Quentin Stevens of Ogema Telephone Co in 1962, Timms Hill was discovered to have an elevation of 1,951.5 ft (595 m).
Timms Hill, the highest natural point in Wisconsin, at 1951.5 feet, is located in the Town of Hill, Price County. Price County is a county in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. As of the 2020 census, the population was 14,054. [1] Its county seat is Phillips. [2]
Timms Hill, the highest natural point in Wisconsin at 1951.5 feet, is located in the Town of Hill, Price County.. According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 35.7 square miles (92.6 km 2), of which, 35.0 square miles (90.8 km 2) is land and 0.7 square miles (1.8 km 2) is water.
Location of Wisconsin in the United ... Timms Hill is the highest natural point in Wisconsin at 1,951.5 ft (594.8 m); it is located in the town of Hill, Price ...
Location of Ogema, Wisconsin. ... Timms Hill, the highest geographic point in the state of Wisconsin (1,951.5 feet), is located just outside Ogema. Demographics
Timms Hill, the highest natural point in Wisconsin is located in the Northern Highlands in the Town of Hill, Price County. The Northern Highland was once a mountain range similar to the Alps or Rocky Mountains of today. Over hundreds of millions of years, these mountains were worn and flattened out by erosion and glaciation. The region is ...
The Ice Age Trail is a National Scenic Trail stretching 1,200 miles (1,900 km) in the state of Wisconsin in the United States. [1] [2] The trail is administered by the National Park Service, [3] and is constructed and maintained by private and public agencies including the Ice Age Trail Alliance, a non-profit and member-volunteer based organization with local chapters. [4]
The source is Spirit Lake near Timms Hill. The Ojibwe name for the river was Manatokikewe Sebe (Stooping Spirit River). [1] The river flows nearly west to east. About one mile from its mouth, the Wisconsin Valley Improvement Company maintains a dam which forms the Spirit River Flowage.