Ahnapee River

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Native nameAanapii (Ojibwe)
Ahnapee River
The Ahnapee River below the dam at Forestville
Native nameAanapii (Ojibwe)
Location
CountryUnited States
StateWisconsin
RegionDoor Peninsula
Physical characteristics
SourceGardner Swamp
  locationWisconsin
  coordinates44°46′08″N 87°32′21″W / 44.76889°N 87.53917°W / 44.76889; -87.53917
MouthLake Michigan
  location
Algoma, Wisconsin
  coordinates
44°36′30″N 87°25′59″W / 44.60833°N 87.43306°W / 44.60833; -87.43306
Length15 mi (24 km)
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftSilver Creek

The Ahnapee River is a 14.7-mile-long (23.7 km)[1] river on the Door Peninsula in eastern Wisconsin in the United States. It rises in Door County, Wisconsin, and flows through Kewaunee County into Lake Michigan at the city of Algoma. Its name has been ascribed as coming from the Ojibwe word aanapii meaning "when?".

The Ahnapee rises in southern Door County and flows generally southeastwardly into northeastern Kewaunee County, past the village of Forestville, where it is dammed. Downstream of Forestville the river becomes a freshwater estuary of Lake Michigan and is paralleled by a rail trail called the Ahnapee State Trail.[2] It joins Lake Michigan at the city of Algoma.[3] The length of the river from Forestville to Algoma has ten public access points.[4]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI