Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal

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The Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal highlighted on a 1997 NOAA chart. The dredged portion is in red; the part dug through the peninsula is in yellow.
The Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal highlighted on a 1997 NOAA chart. The dredged portion is in red; the part dug through the peninsula is in yellow.

The Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal is a shipping canal connecting Sturgeon Bay on the Bay of Green Bay with Lake Michigan, across the Door Peninsula, at the city of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin.

The canal is approximately seven miles in length, and consists of two parts: a dredged portion of Sturgeon Bay, and a 1.3-mile canal dug through the Door Peninsula. This shorter portion was dug by a private group headed by then-president of Chicago and North Western Railway, William B. Ogden, between July 8, 1872 and the late fall of 1881. Although smaller craft began using the canal in 1880, it was not open for large-scale watercraft until 1890.

The cost of making the 1.3 mile cut up to 1881 was $291,461.69.

In 1893, the Ogden private investors group sold all interest in the canal to the United States government. Since that time, the canal has been maintained by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

The original canal was 7,400 feet long (2.3 km), 100 feet wide (32.2 m), and 6 feet deep (1.9 m). As of June 1997 the canal was 7 miles long (11.3 km), 125 feet wide (38m), and 16½ to 21½ feet deep (5 to 6½ m). A jetty extends into Lake Michigan 1,350 feet (410 m) and 800 feet wide (242 m) at the mouth.

Several famous lighthouses mark the course of the canal, including the Sturgeon Bay Canal Lighthouse halfway along the northern side of the canal (approximately 0.4 miles from Lake Michigan, on the north side of the canal); the Sturgeon Bay Canal North Pierhead Light on the Lake Michigan coastline; and the Sherwood Point Lighthouse in Idlewild, on the far western end, on the southern shore of the outer edge of Sturgeon Bay.

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