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Pillager is located in Sylvan Township (T133N R30W), on the left (north) bank of the Crow Wing River, just east of Lake Placid.According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 0.88 square miles (2.28 km 2), of which 0.85 square miles (2.20 km 2) is land and 0.03 square miles (0.08 km 2) water.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 34.7 square miles (89.9 km 2), of which 30.8 square miles (79.7 km 2) is land and 3.9 square miles (10.1 km 2) (11.24%) is water. The city of Pillager is located entirely within Sylvan Township geographically but is a separate entity.
Cass County is a county in the central part of the U.S. state of Minnesota.As of the 2020 census, the population was 30,066. [2] Its county seat is Walker. [3] The county was formed in 1851, and was organized in 1897.
Rock Lake is a lake located in Cass County, Minnesota, USA. [1] It has an area of 240 acres (0.97 km 2) and a water clarity of 3.5 ft (1.1 m) with a maximum depth of 22 feet (6.7 m). [citation needed] A smaller lake branches from it, with a smaller stream flowing into it. Rock Lake is weedy and a habitat for Northern Pike and Large Mouth Bass.
The Crow Wing River is a 113-mile-long (182 km) [5] tributary of the Mississippi River in Minnesota, United States.The river rises at an elevation of about 1391 feet in a chain of 11 lakes in southern Hubbard County, Minnesota, and flows generally south, then east, [6] entering the Mississippi at Crow Wing State Park northwest of Little Falls, Minnesota.
Hoot Lake Dam; Diversion Dam Otter Tail: Otter Tail Power: 1913 Gravity: 10 3.0 Hoot Lake 99 122 1.0 Otter Tail: Wildlife; hydroelectric; water supply International Falls Dam ‡; Rainy Lake Dam [note 1] Koochiching; Fort Frances: Boise Cascade; H2O Power 1909; 2017 [7] Gravity Arch: 38 12 Rainy Lake: 4,000,000 4,900,000 14.4 Rainy
Industry located along the riverbanks and used the river as a source of water and as a discharge point for the waste materials generated by their companies. Few cities and villages used the river for drinking water, because the shallow sand aquifer along the river provided easy access to well water. Wastewater, however, was and still is ...
The core areas of the reservation were established by the 1855 treaty of Washington, which formed three smaller reservations for the Pillager Band of Chippewa Indians at Leech Lake, Cass Lake, and Lake Winnibigoshish. These reservations were reshaped and consolidated by new treaties in 1864 and 1867, when the United States sought with little ...