Petoskey, Michigan
USA /
Michigan /
Petoskey /
World
/ USA
/ Michigan
/ Petoskey
World / United States / Michigan
city, county seat
Petoskey is a city and coastal resort community in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 6,080. It is the county seat of Emmet County.
Petoskey and the surrounding area are notable for being the setting of several of the Nick Adams stories by Ernest Hemingway, who spent his childhood summers on nearby Walloon Lake, as well as being the place where for Calliope, the protagonist of Jeffrey Eugenides' Middlesex, events take a severe and lasting turn. Petoskey was also the location where 50,000 passenger pigeon birds were killed each day in the late 19th century, prior to their complete extinction in the early 20th century.
Petoskey is also famous for a high concentration of Petoskey stones, the state stone of Michigan. Petoskey is the birthplace of information theorist Claude Shannon and Civil War historian Bruce Catton and is the boyhood home of singer/songwriter Sufjan Stevens.
The name "Petoskey" is said to mean "where the light shines through the clouds" in the language of the Odawa Indians (Little Traverse Bay Band), who are the original inhabitants. The Petoskey stone and the city were named after Chief Ignatius Petosega (1787–1885), who founded the community. Petosega's father was a French Canadian fur trader andhis mother was an Odawa (Ottawa) Indian.
This city was the northern terminus of the Chicago and West Michigan Railway.
Petoskey and the surrounding area are notable for being the setting of several of the Nick Adams stories by Ernest Hemingway, who spent his childhood summers on nearby Walloon Lake, as well as being the place where for Calliope, the protagonist of Jeffrey Eugenides' Middlesex, events take a severe and lasting turn. Petoskey was also the location where 50,000 passenger pigeon birds were killed each day in the late 19th century, prior to their complete extinction in the early 20th century.
Petoskey is also famous for a high concentration of Petoskey stones, the state stone of Michigan. Petoskey is the birthplace of information theorist Claude Shannon and Civil War historian Bruce Catton and is the boyhood home of singer/songwriter Sufjan Stevens.
The name "Petoskey" is said to mean "where the light shines through the clouds" in the language of the Odawa Indians (Little Traverse Bay Band), who are the original inhabitants. The Petoskey stone and the city were named after Chief Ignatius Petosega (1787–1885), who founded the community. Petosega's father was a French Canadian fur trader andhis mother was an Odawa (Ottawa) Indian.
This city was the northern terminus of the Chicago and West Michigan Railway.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petoskey,_Michigan
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 45°22'11"N 84°57'27"W
- Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan 132 km
- Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario 142 km
- Escanaba, Michigan 178 km
- Marquette, Michigan 237 km
- Negaunee, Michigan 245 km
- Rhinelander, Wisconsin 356 km
- Tomahawk, Wisconcin 375 km
- Merrill, Wisconsin 376 km
- Wakefield, Michigan 409 km
- Thunder Bay,Ontario 488 km
- Walloon Lake 8.7 km
- Little Traverse Bay 8.8 km
- Crooked Lake 11 km
- Lake Charlevoix 18 km
- Burt Lake 25 km
- Douglas Lake 32 km
- Warner Township 33 km
- Jordan Township 34 km
- Mullett Lake 37 km
- Treetops North Resort 42 km