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2007
Memberships Now Due!!
|
OUR
GOAL:
"To
preserve and protect Blockhouse Lake and its surroundings, and to
enhance the water quality, fishery, boating safety, and aesthetic
values of Blockhouse Lake, as a public recreational facility for today
and for future generations." |
Blockhouse Lake is a 242 acre shallow lake located
in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest about six miles east of Park
Falls, Wisconsin. According to legend, the first permanent
structure built on the lake was made in the shape of a large square
block,
hence the name. Others have suggested that it was named because
ice blocks were cut from the lake during the winter and shipped to
icehouses in Milwaukee, Chicago, and other cities to the south.
Whatever the origin, the name first appears on Wisconsin maps around
1900.
During the logging era of the 1870s and 1880s,
Blockhouse was used to help flush logs down the Flambeau River, which
lies just a quarter-mile to the south. The connecting creek
would be dammed, then blown in the spring to move logs downstream to
the Chippewa River and ultimately to the sawmills in Eau Claire.
After the main logging era ended, rail lines were run out to the lake
and beyond, and it was used as a source of water for the steam engines
and for recreation.
The
average depth of Blockhouse Lake is 5 feet, with
a maximum depth of about 10 feet. It has 3 1/2 miles of
shoreline, of which 85 per cent is privately owned. The
National Forest
Service maintains a public boat landing on the northeast end of the
lake. Major fish species present include northern pike,
largemouth bass,
black crappie, bluegill and pumpkinseed. The Blockhouse
Lake Association in cooperation with the Wisconsin Department of
Natural Resources operates an aerator during the winter months to
maintain oxygen levels and prevent excessive fish kills.
Those of us who live, work and
play here invite you to learn
more about the lake and the Blockhouse Lake Association.
Please click on
one of the sections
below.