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The Pigeon River is a small river flowing to Lake Michigan on the western Lower Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan.The river is approximately 12.9 miles (20.8 km) long [4] [a] and drains an area of 61.7 square miles (160 km 2) [6] [b] in a generally rural area situated between the cities of Holland and Grand Haven.
Pigeon River (Ottawa County, Michigan), rising in Ottawa County's Olive Township, flowing east to west into Pigeon Lake and then Lake Michigan at Port Sheldon [4] Pigeon River (St. Joseph River), rising in northern Indiana and flowing mostly westward through southern Michigan into the St. Joseph River near the Michigan-Indiana border northwest ...
The Pigeon River, also known as the East Branch Pigeon River, is a 37.9-mile-long (61.0 km) [2] stream in Huron County in the Thumb of the U.S. state of Michigan. The stream rises from the confluence of Appin and Livingston drains [1] in southern Sheridan Township. It flows north and west to empty into the Saginaw Bay of Lake Huron in Caseville [1]
From there the river flows north 47.4 miles (76.3 km) [1] through private land and the Pigeon River Country State Forest to Mullett Lake. Much of the Pigeon River is classified by the Michigan Department Natural Resources (DNR) as a blue ribbon trout stream [ 2 ] with special fishing regulations to conserve and enhance the trout fishery.
Map of Michigan rivers Tahquamenon River. In alphabetical order. A–C Anna River ... Pigeon River (Ottawa County), empties into Lake Michigan; Pigeon River (St ...
English: This is a locator map showing Huron County in Michigan. For more information, see Commons: ... Pigeon River (Huron County, Michigan) Pinnebog River;
Caseville is a city in Huron County in the U.S. state of Michigan, located at the mouth of the Pigeon River on Saginaw Bay of Lake Huron. [4] The population was 652 at the 2020 census . The city is surrounded by Caseville Township .
[5] [6] The United States Land Office, located in downtown White Pigeon, is the oldest surviving U.S. Land office in the state of Michigan. [7] Following the cession of Native American lands in this area by leaders of regional tribes, the U.S. government sold more than 250,000 acres of land in Michigan for $1.25 an acre in the 1830s to settlers ...