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The community of Devils Lake is on the northern end of the lake and Manitou Beach is at the southwest end. Together, the communities are part of a census-designated place named Manitou Beach–Devils Lake that encompasses the entire lake and the smaller Round Lake to the southeast. The lake drains into Bean Creek on the southwest, just north of ...
Manitou Beach–Devils Lake is a census-designated place (CDP) in Lenawee County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population of the CDP was 2,032 at the 2020 census . It is located within Rollin Township to the south and Woodstock Township to the north.
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Entering Lenawee County, the tornado traversed the Irish Hills and approached Manitou Beach–Devils Lake. As it struck Manitou Beach–Devils Lake, the tornado destroyed the Manitou Beach Baptist Church; of the 50 people then in attendance for Palm Sunday services, 26 failed to reach shelter in time and were stranded beneath debris for up to ...
Deer Lake (Michigan) Lake Delta; Devils Lake (Michigan) Dockery Lake (Michigan) Dollar Lake (Independence Township, Michigan) Douglas Lake (Cheboygan County, Michigan) Duck Lake (Grand Traverse County, Michigan) Duck Lake (Kalamazoo County)
Lake Delta: Eaton County: Devils Lake 813 acres (329 ha) Alpena County: Devils Lake: 1,312 acres (531 ha) 63 feet (19 m) Lenawee County: Dewey Lake 226 acres (91 ha) Cass County: 624618 Diamond Lake 1,020 acres (410 ha) 62 feet (19 m) Cass County: 624634 Lake Diane 266 acres (108 ha) Hillsdale County: Dickenson Lake 231 acres (93 ha) Chippewa ...
Devils River is a 2.4-mile-long (3.9 km) [1] river in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is located mostly in Alpena County south of the city of Alpena. The mouth is on Thunder Bay of Lake Huron near the small community of Ossineke in Sanborn Township. The north branch rises as the outflow of Devils Lake a few mile north
[5] [6] The first operating railroad in Michigan was a horse-drawn train running between Adrian and Toledo in 1836. [7] Adrian grew quickly, with the sixth largest population in the state when Michigan was admitted to the Union in 1837, and the third largest population in the state by 1860 . [ 8 ]