Maumee River
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| Maumee River | |
|---|---|
| The Maumee River at Grand Rapids, Ohio | |
| Origin | Fort Wayne, Indiana by the confluence of the St. Joseph and St. Marys. |
| Mouth | Lake Erie |
| Basin countries | USA |
| Length | 130 mi (209 km) |
| Source elevation | 750 ft (229 m) |
| Mouth elevation | 571 ft (174 m) |
| Avg. discharge | 5,297 ft³/s (150 m³/s) |
| Basin area | 6,354 mi² (16,458 km²) |
The Maumee River is a river in northwestern Ohio and northeastern Indiana in the United States. It is formed at Fort Wayne, Indiana by the confluence of the St. Joseph and St. Marys rivers, and meanders northeastwardly for about 130 mi (209 km) through an agricultural region of glacial moraines before flowing into the Maumee Bay of Lake Erie at the city of Toledo, Ohio. It was designated an Ohio State Scenic River on July 18, 1974.
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[edit] History
Historically the river was also known as the "Miami" and in treaties with Native Americans, and as early as 1671 the river was called Miami of the Lake (in contrast to the "Miami of the Ohio" or the Great Miami River) or in French, Miami du Lac. Maumee is a form of the Native American word Me-ah-me, of which Miami is another form. Another theory behind the name is that the word Maumee comes from the Chippewa word Omaumeg, which means people who live on the peninsula.The Battle of Fallen Timbers, the final battle of the Northwest Indian War, was fought 3/4 mile (1.2 km) north of the banks of the Maumee River. After this decisive victory for General Anthony Wayne, all of the greater Maumee River Valley area was ceded to the United States in 1795. Prior to the development of canals, portages between the rivers were important trade routes and were safeguarded by forts such as Fort Loramie, Fort Recovery, and Fort Defiance. In honor of General Wayne's victory on the banks of the Maumee, the primary bridge crossing the river near downtown Toledo is the Anthony Wayne Suspension Bridge.
A dispute over control of the Maumee River region led to the so-called Toledo War between Ohio and the Michigan Territory.
[edit] Natural History
The watershed of the Maumee River was a large wetland known as the Great Black Swamp before it was mostly drained and converted into farmland. The wetland was the remains of Glacial Lake Maumee, the proglacial ancestor of Lake Erie.
[edit] Transportation
The mouth of the river at Lake Erie is wide and supports considerable commercial traffic, including oil, grain, and coal. However, about 12 miles upstream, in the town of Maumee, Ohio, the river becomes much shallower and supports only recreational navigation above that point. The abandoned Miami and Erie Canal paralleled the Maumee between Defiance, Ohio and Toledo; portions of its towpath are currently maintained for recreational use. The Wabash and Erie Canal continued on from Defiance to Fort Wayne, crossing the "summit" to the Wabash River valley. Both were important pre-railway transportation methods in the 1840-60 period. The Miami and Erie was north of the river, until it crossed an aqueduct and turned south at Defiance, headed for Cincinnati. The Wabash canal was south of the Maumee until it reached Fort Wayne.
[edit] Watershed
The Maumee has the largest watershed of any Great Lakes river with 6,354 mi² (16,458 km²) draining into the Maumee River. Its watershed includes a portion of southern Michigan. In addition to its source tributaries the St. Joseph and St. Marys Rivers, the Maumee's principal tributaries are the Auglaize River and the Tiffin River, which join it at Defiance from the south and north, respectively.
[edit] Islands
There are several small islands in the section of the Maumee River in Northwest Ohio. The names[1], [2] of the islands are:
- Indian Island - near Farnsworth Park west of Toledo, Ohio
- Missionary Island - near Farnsworth Park west of Toledo, Ohio
- Granger Island - near Waterville, Ohio
- Butler Island - near Side Cut Metropark
- Bluegrass Island - near Side Cut Metropark
- Aubadon Island - the largest island in the Maumee River, formerly Ewing Island, near Fort Miami Park in Maumee, Ohio
- Marengo Island - near Maumee, Ohio
- Horseshoe Island - near Walbridge Park in Toledo, Ohio
- Clark Island - near Walbridge Park in Toledo, Ohio
- Corbutt Island - in Toledo, Ohio
- Grassy Island - near Cullen Park in Toledo, Ohio
- Preston Island - near Defiance, Ohio
[edit] Walleye run
According to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, the annual walleye run up the Maumee River is one of the largest migrations of riverbound walleyes east of the Mississippi. The migration of the walleye normally starts in early March and runs through the end of April. Although the first week of April is "historically" the peak of the migration, Mother Nature normally dictates when the actual peak takes place. When river flows rise due to snow melt-off and the river water temperature reaches 40 - 50 degrees Fahrenheit, the resident population of walleyes welcome their relatives from the Western end of Lake Erie's waters and also from the Detroit River and Lake St. Clair in Michigan. Although you will see boats on the river during the spring migration, by far the most popular method of fishing for these walleye is by wading out into the river and casting.
[edit] Cities and towns along the river
- Antwerp, Ohio
- Defiance, Ohio
- Florida, Ohio
- Fort Wayne, Indiana
- Grand Rapids, Ohio
- Maumee, Ohio
- Napoleon, Ohio
- New Haven, Indiana
- Perrysburg, Ohio
- Rossford, Ohio
- Toledo, Ohio
- Waterville, Ohio
[edit] See also
- List of Indiana rivers
- List of Ohio rivers
- Great Black Swamp
- USS Maumee (AO-2) — a fleet oiler built in 1915.
[edit] Further reading
Arthur Benke & Colbert Cushing, "Rivers of North America". Elsevier Academic Press, 2005 ISBN 0-12-088253-1
[edit] References
1. Google Map of the Maumee River
2. Sidecut Metropark History
[edit] External links
Protected Areas of Ohio | |
|---|---|
| National Park Service | Cuyahoga Valley National Park • Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park • Hopewell Culture National Historical Park • First Ladies National Historic Site • James A. Garfield National Historic Site • William Howard Taft National Historic Site • David Berger National Memorial • Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial |
| National Forests | Wayne National Forest |
| State Parks | Adams Lake • Alum Creek • A.W. Marion • Barkcamp • Beaver Creek • Blue Rock • Buck Creek • Buckeye Lake • Burr Oak • Caesar Creek • Catawba Island • Cleveland Lakefront • Cowan Lake • Crane Creek • Deer Creek • Delaware • Dillon • East Fork • East Harbor • Findley • Forked Run • Fox Island • Geneva • Grand Lake St. Marys • Great Seal • Guilford Lake • Harrison Lake • Headlands Beach • Hocking Hills • Hueston Woods • Independence Dam • Indian Lake • Jackson Lake • Jefferson Lake • John Bryan • Kelleys Island • Kiser Lake • Lake Alma • Lake Hope • Lake Logan • Lake Loramie • Lake Milton • Lake White • Little Miami • Madison Lake • Malabar Farm • Marblehead Lighthouse • Mary Jane Thurston • Middle Bass Island • Maumee Bay • Mohican • Mosquito Lake • Mt. Gilead • Muskingum River • Nelson Kennedy Ledges • Paint Creek • Pike Lake • Portage Lakes • Punderson • Pymatuning • Quail Hollow • Rocky Fork • Salt Fork • Scioto Trail • Shawnee • South Bass Island • Stonelick • Strouds Run • Sycamore • Tar Hollow • Tinker's Creek • Van Buren • West Branch • Wolf Run |
| State Forests | |
| State Nature Preserves | Acadia Cliffs • Adams Lake Prairie • Audubon Islands • Augusta-Anne Olsen • Aurora Sanctuary • Baker Woods • Evans Beck Memorial • Betsch Fen • Bigelow Cemetery • Blackhand Gorge • Bonnet Pond • Boord • Brown's Lake Bog • Burton Wetlands • Caesar Creek Gorge • Lou Campbell • Carmean Woods • Cedar Bog • Chaparral Prairie • Christmas Rocks • Clear Creek • Clear Fork Gorge • Clifton Gorge • Howard Collier • Compass Plant Prairie • Conkle's Hollow • Copperrider-Kent Bog • Crabill Fen • Cranberry Bog • Crane Hollow • Crooked Run • Culberson Woods • Davey Woods • Davis Memorial • Marie J. Desonier • Drew Woods • Dupont Marsh • Eagle Creek • Emerald Hills • Erie Sand Barrens • Etawah Woods • Flatiron Lake Bog • Fowler Woods • Frame Lake Fen • Gahanna Woods • Gallagher/Springfield Fen • Goll Woods • Goode Prairie • Gott Fen • Greenbelt • Greenville Falls • Gross Memorial Woods • Hatch-Otis • Halls Creek • Headlands Dunes • Hueston Woods • Hutchins (Highland) • Irwin Prairie • Jackson Bog • Johnson Ridge • Johnson Woods • Karlo Fen • Kendrick Woods • Kessler Swamp • Kiser Lake Wetlands • Kitty Todd • Knox Woods • Kyle Woods • Ladd Natural Bridge • Lake Kathatine • Lakeside Daisy • Lawrence Woods • Little Rocky Hollow • Mantua Bog • Marsh Wetlands • McCracken Fen • Mentor Marsh • Milford Center Railroad Prairie • Miller • Morris Woods • Mud Lake Bog • Myersville • Newberry • North Pond • North Shore Alvar • Novak Sanctuary • Old Woman Creek • Owens/Liberty Fen • Pallister • Pickerington Ponds • Portage Lakes Wetland • Prairie Road Fen • William C. McCoy • Raven Rock • Rhododendeon Cove • Rockbridge • Rome • Rothenbuhler Woods • Saltpetre Cave • Sears Woods • Seymour Woods • Shallenberger • Sharon Woods Gorge • Sheepskin Hollow • Sheick Hollow • Sheldon Marsh • Siegenthaler-Kaestner Esker • Smith Cemetery • Spring Beauty Dell • Spring Brook Sanctuary • Springville Marsh • Stage's Pond • Strait Creek Prairie • Stratford Woods • Swamp Cottonwood • Edward Thomas • Tinker's Creek • Travertine Fen • Triangle Lake Bog • Trillium Trails • Walter Tucker • Tummonds • Warder-Perkins • Whipple • White Pine Bog Forest • Zimmermand Prairie |
| State Scenic Rivers | Big Darby Creek • Chagrin River • Conneaut Creek • Cuyahoga River • Grand River • Greenville Creek • Kokosing River • Little Beaver Creek • Little Darby Creek • Little Miami River • Maumee River • Mohican River • Olentangy River • Sandusky River • Stillwater Creek |
| Ohio Department of Natural Resources (web) | |

