Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Michigan's Adventure is a 250-acre (1.0 km 2) amusement park in Muskegon County, Michigan, about halfway between Muskegon and Whitehall. It is the largest amusement park in the state and has been owned and operated by Six Flags since 2024.
The center piece is an upscale resort called The Mountain Grand Lodge and Spa. [1] Boyne Mountain has continued use of the first chairlift built, constructed by the Union Pacific Railroad in 1936 for use at its new resort in Sun Valley, Idaho. It is also the location of Avalanche Bay, the largest indoor water park in Michigan. [2]
Historic Mill Creek, formerly known as Historic Mill Creek State Park and Historic Mill Creek Discovery Park, is a state park, nature preserve, and historic site in the United States state of Michigan. It is run by Mackinac State Historic Parks, the operating arm of the Mackinac Island State Park.
Wolverine Wildcat is a wooden roller coaster at Michigan's Adventure, an amusement park near Muskegon, Michigan. It first opened in 1988 before Cedar Fair purchased the park. It is located in Timbertown, near the Timbertown Railway Station.
Thunderhawk is an inverted roller coaster located at Michigan's Adventure amusement park in Muskegon, Michigan. Designed and built by Vekoma, the roller coaster originally debuted in 1998 as Serial Thriller at Geauga Lake in Aurora, Ohio. It was renamed Thunderhawk in 2004 following Cedar Fair's acquisition of the park. After Geauga Lake's ...
Outdoor Adventure Center: Wayne: 0.94 acres 0.38 ha: 2015: Detroit River: In historic Globe Building, adjacent to William G. Milliken State Park and Harbor. Ralph A. MacMullan Conference Center: Crawford: 32 acres 13 ha: 1941: Higgins Lake: Within North Higgins Lake State Park: Saginaw River Headwaters Recreation Area: Saginaw: 334 acres 135 ha ...
The Adventure Mining Company is located at 200 Adventure Avenue in Greenland, Michigan. [4] The Adventure Mine operated in Greenland from 1850 until 1920, and consisted of five shafts, one of which descended 1,300 feet (400 m) beneath the surface. [6] Although the site seemed promising, the mine never turned a profit. [6]
Media in category "Michigan's Adventure" This category contains only the following file. Michigan's Adventure Logo.svg 489 × 205; 12 KB