Muskallonge Lake State Park

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Coordinates46°40′35″N 85°38′09″W / 46.67639°N 85.63583°W / 46.67639; -85.63583
Area217 acres (88 ha)
Elevation643 feet (196 m)
Muskallonge Lake State Park
Beachfront
Beachfront along Muskallonge Lake
Muskallonge Lake State Park is located in Michigan
Muskallonge Lake State Park
Location within the state of Michigan
Muskallonge Lake State Park is located in the United States
Muskallonge Lake State Park
Muskallonge Lake State Park (the United States)
LocationDeer Park, McMillan Township, Luce County, Michigan, United States
Coordinates46°40′35″N 85°38′09″W / 46.67639°N 85.63583°W / 46.67639; -85.63583
Area217 acres (88 ha)
Elevation643 feet (196 m)
Established1956[1]
Administered byMichigan Department of Natural Resources
DesignationMichigan state park
WebsiteOfficial website Edit this at Wikidata

Muskallonge Lake State Park is a state park located in Luce County in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is located in Deer Park about 16 miles (25.7 km) east of Grand Marais along H-58.

The park encompasses 217 acres (87.8 ha) between the shores of Lake Superior and Muskallonge Lake where Native Americans once had an encampment and where a station of the United States Life-Saving Service once stood.[2]

The park occupies land just west of Deer Park, a 19th-century mill town that all but disappeared once the forests on which its mill depended were gone.[3] The state park is also the site of former Station Muskallong Lake (Coast Guard Station #295; later called Station Deer Park),[4] one of five such stations along the coast of Lake Superior between Munising and Whitefish Point in the Upper Peninsula. It was part of U.S. Life-Saving Service District 10 (later part of District 11). The other four stations along Lake Superior's "Shipwreck Coast" were Grand Marais, Two Heart, Crisp Point Light, and Vermilion Point.

Deer Park Life-Saving Station was in service from 1876 to 1909. The park was transferred from the Forestry Division to Parks and Recreation Division in 1957.[5]

Activities and amenities

The park offers swimming and fishing and includes a 159-site campground, boat launch, picnic area, playground, and trails for hiking and snow-mobiling.[2] The park has the darkest skies for a state park in the entire state of Michigan, which makes the state park a great place for astronomy.[6]

Images

See also

References

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