Charlevoix South Pier Lighthouse | Lake Michigan Destinations
Northern Michigan Lighthouses
Lighthouses are a navigational tool for mariners, a point of reference in travel on and off land, and a thing of beauty and history. In Northern Michigan, there are many working lighthouses that assist boaters. And here you’ll find historic lighthouses where lighthouses keepers once lived and worked that have been preserved, restored and are open to visitors.
From the Straits of Mackinac to Charlevoix, this part of Up North Michigan has a variety of lighthouses. Many of these elegant structures were built in the 1800s and are now maintained by volunteers and historical organizations.
Tour historic lighthouses and get a glimpse of what life was like for the lighthouse keeper and his family. The keeper at McGulpin Point moved his family to nearby Mackinaw City in the winter months so his children could go to school but he traveled back to the lighthouse once a week on snowshoes to report on the lake and ice conditions. See the living quarters where the keeper’s families raised children and view Lake Michigan from the top of the elegant towers. Lake Michigan can be calm and glass-like or wild and turbulent just as it was in the lighthouse keeper’s day. Some things don’t change.
Two Northern Michigan Lighthouses, McGulpin Point Lighthouse and Old Mackinac Point Lighthouse, are open for tours. Just down the hillside from McGulpin Point Lighthouse is McGulpin Rock first noted by French Explorers in 1615. Other working Northern Michigan Lighthouses can be seen from the water. In Harbor Springs, the Little Traverse Lighthouse can be seen from the water and from the shoreline around Little Traverse Bay.
Still gracing the Northern Michigan waters as they have for more than a century, these lighthouses are a special Up North treat.
Lighthouses in Northern Michigan
There are thirteen Lake Michigan lighthouses to visit in our Northern Michigan region, with many more in the Straits of Mackinac. The Straits of Mackinac are the short waterways between the Michigan’s Upper and Lower Peninsulas, traversed by the Mackinac Bridge.
- South Pier Lighthouse, Charlevoix
- Beaver Island Head Light, Beaver Island
- Petoskey Lighthouse, Petoskey
- Little Traverse Lighthouse, Harbor Springs
- Squaw Island Lighthouse, Squaw Island
- Lansing Shoal Light, Newton Township
- Skillagalee Lighthouse, Ile Aux Galets
- Gray’s Reef Lighthouse, Mackinaw City
- White Shoal Lighthouse, Mackinaw City
- St. Helena Island Lighthouse, Mackinaw City
- Waugoshance Shoal Light, Mackinaw City
- McGulpin Point Lighthouse, Mackinaw City
- Old Mackinac Point Lighthouse, Mackinaw City
Northern Michigan Destinations
More Lighthouses Around Lake Michigan
Algoma Pierhead Lighthouse
The Algoma Light, is a red, steel structure overlooking Lake Michigan. In 1932, the lighthouse that is in place today was relocated to Algoma.
Old Mackinac Point Historic Lighthouse
The majestic Straits of Mackinac and the Mackinac Bridge are the backdrop for the Old Mackinac Point Lighthouse in Mackinaw City, Michigan.
Kewaunee Pierhead Lighthouse
The Kewaunee Pierhead Lighthouse is one of only 6 in Wisconsin where a fifth-order Fresnel lens is still in use.
Ludington North Breakwater Light
Ludington’s North Breakwater Lighthouse is Ludington’s focal point and The Weather Channel ranks it in the top 10 lighthouses in the U.S.
Little Traverse Lighthouse
The Little Traverse Lighthouse, also called the Harbor Springs Lighthouse or Harbor Point Lighthouse, was first lit in 1884.
McGulpin Point Lighthouse
First lit in 1869, the McGulpin Point Lighthouse was a pivotal navigational tool for ships on Lake Michigan.