Casino Mole Lake

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  • Mole Lake Casino 3084 State Highway 55 Crandon, Wisconsin 54520 1-800-236-9466 1-800-236-WINN 715-478-5290. Potawatomi Carter Casino Hotel Highway 32 P.O. Box 430 Wabeno, Wisconsin 54566 (715) 473-2021 800) 487-9522.
  • Mole Lake is more than just great games and hot casino action. It's your complete entertainment destination! Mole Lake Casino & Lodge is located just seven m.
  • Restaurants near Mole Lake Casino, Crandon on Tripadvisor: Find traveler reviews and candid photos of dining near Mole Lake Casino in Crandon, Wisconsin.
Mole Lake Casino is a casino in Wisconsin. Mole Lake Casino is close to Dinesen-Motzfeldt-Hettinger Log House.
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Notable Places in the Area

Dinesen-Motzfeldt-Hettinger Log House

The Dinesen-Motzfeldt-Hettninger Log House is located in the community of Mole Lake, Wisconsin in the city of Crandon, Wisconsin. Dinesen-Motzfeldt-Hettinger Log House is situated 460 metres northeast of Mole Lake Casino. Photo: Royalbroil, CC BY-SA 3.0.

Localities in the Area

Mole Lake

Mole Lake, Wisconsin is a census-designated place located in the town of Nashville in Forest County, Wisconsin, United States. Photo: Royalbroil, CC BY-SA 3.0.

Nashville

Nashville is a town in Forest County, Wisconsin, United States. Nashville is situated 6 km northwest of Mole Lake Casino. Photo: Royalbroil, CC BY-SA 3.0.

Jennings

Jennings is an unincorporated community located in the town of Schoepke, Oneida County, Wisconsin, United States. Jennings is situated 8 km west of Mole Lake Casino.

Mole Lake Casino

  • Type: Casino
  • Location: Wisconsin, Midwest, United States, North America
  • Address: 3084 State Highway 55, Crandon 54520
  • Latitude: 45.4845° or 45° 29' 4.4' north
  • Longitude: -88.9736° or 88° 58' 24.9' west
  • OpenStreetMap ID: way 823666429
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In the Area

Localities

  • LennoxHamlet, 8 km west
  • Post LakeHamlet, 10 km southwest
  • CrandonTown, 11 km northeast
  • Forest County Potawatomi CommutyReservation, 13 km northeast
  • WoodlawnHamlet, 13 km southeast
  • PearsonHamlet, 14 km south

Landmarks

  • Mole LakeLake, 650 metres southwest
  • Rice LakeLake, 1 km north
  • Oak LakeLake, 3 km east
  • Bishop LakeLake, 3 km west
  • Little Sand LakeLake, 4½ km east
  • Crandon/Steve Conway Municipal AirportAerodrome, 5 km northeast

Other Places

  • Gliske CreekStream, 1½ km north
  • Logan CreekStream, 3 km west
  • Squaw CreekStream, 4½ km west
  • K Lookout TowerTower, 4½ km south
  • Sherman Corners5 km north
  • Outlet CreekStream, 5 km east

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In the early autumn when the leaves begin to change color, the members of the Sokaogon Chippewa Community make their way to Rice Lake, one of the remaining ancient wild rice beds in the state of Wisconsin. The annual harvest of wild rice, an essential part of the Native American diet, has altered very little in the hundreds of years that the Community has lived here.

Family clans migrated from eastern Canada to Madeline Island a thousand years ago, led by a vision that their journey would end in a land where the 'food grows on water' - Manoomin or wild rice. The Sokaogon Chippewa Community's journey ended here in this area of abundant wild rice.

Competition from the Sioux resulted in the Battle of Mole Lake in 1806. Today there stands a marker on Highway 55 in Mole Lake to mark the battleground where more than 500 warriors were slain in fierce hand-to-hand battle.

Sokaogon means 'Post in the Lake' people, because of a spiritual significance of a post, possibly the remains of a petrified tree, that stood in nearby Post Lake.

The Sokaogon Chippewa Community is also known as the Lost Tribe because the legal title to the 12 mile square reservation from the treaty of 1854 was lost in a shipwreck on Lake Superior. Under the provisions of the 1934 Reorganization Act, 1,745 acres of land were purchased for the Mole Lake Reservation. In 1930, a roll had been taken in the Mole Lake area and 199 Native Americans were determined to be in the Band.

According to Tribal history, Tribal Members were promised this land by a treaty signed with President Franklin Pierce. The agent, who was to confirm the treaty and secure the land for them, drowned on his return trip from Washington. The Tribe, under the leadership of Chief Willard Ackley, finally and after a long struggle, received federal recognition and reservation status in 1937.

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To this day, the Tribe actively pursues any knowledge or document to support their claim to the original treaty lands.

The Sokaogon (Mole Lake) Chippewa Community enjoys three beautiful lakes either on or adjacent to the small reservation: Mole Lake, Bishop Lake and Rice Lake, which lies at the headwaters of the Wolf River.

Mole Lake Casino Lodge

The Mole Lake Casino & Lodge is located seven miles south of Crandon on Highway 55, and 30 miles east of Rhinelander. The Casino offers live entertainment and dancing, full service bars, the Cafe Manoomin restaurant, 12 blackjack tables, and more than 500 slot machines.

The Casino is open every day.

The Mole Lake area boasts hundreds of miles of snowmobile trails, hiking and mountain biking trails, ATV/UTV trails, and cross-country ski trails. There are over 800 lakes, 82 trout streams and 400,000 acres of public wilderness land teeming with wildlife in the vicinity.

If you are looking for bald eagles, they are easy to spot soaring above Mole Lake and nearby lakes and streams.

While you're in the area, be sure to explore and experience the Nicolet-Wolf River Scenic Byway. The Byway is a 145-mile route traversing parts of the state’s north-central counties of Forest, Langlade, Oneida and Vilas. Here you’ll discover communities where life moves at a slower pace and centers around time-honored traditions and values.

Enjoy beautiful scenery dotted with majestic vistas, winding roads, and family owned businesses offering hometown hospitality.

If you know anything about Mole Lake, you know that the name Ackley is well-known throughout the reservation. Chances are you also know that the name comes from one of the most iconic figures in the Tribe's modern history.

Every December 25th, the Sokaogon Chippewa Community celebrates the life of our last hereditary Chief, Willard Ackley. The day is recognized as a National Holiday within the Tribe.

'We loved and revered him. He spent his life working to make the lives of his people better,' said Tribal Elder Fred Ackley, Jr., who is a nephew of the Sokaogon Chief.

Born on December 25, 1889, in a traditional Ojibwe wigwam along the shores of what the old people called 'Dry Lake' (now called Bishop Lake), Chief Ackley is said to have been one of the last born into 'the old ways' of the Sokaogon.

'The thing about Chief Ackley is, he wasn't voted in as Tribal Chairman,' says Mr. Ackley, Jr. 'He was chosen by the people the old way - he came to us down through heaven, through the sky, and was put here as an Ogema (Ojibwe word for Chief).'

Mole Lake Casino Promotions

Chief Ackley is well known across the six Ojibwe Bands in Wisconsin and beyond, even working to help his relatives of the Lac Vieux Desert community, just north of Watersmeet, in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

Mr. Ackley, Jr., himself a respected Ojibwe Elder, spoke of the Chief's many deeds and desire to preserve the Sokaogon Chippewa culture. 'He spent much of his life fighting to establish the Mole Lake reservation. He saw what was happening to Indian people here. He saw how his people were forced to move off their land,' he said.

The Treaty of 1854, also known as the second Treaty of LaPointe, established the various reservations of the Ojibwe. Although this was to include the Mole Lake and St. Croix Bands, both were left without a land base and placed the people of each Tribe in great peril. Oral history passed down among the Ojibwe tells of corrupt government land and military agents using firewater and a language barrier in denial of each Tribe's land claim.

Despite the seemingly insurmountable task, Chief Ackley continued his quest for repatriation for his people, and in 1939 Mole Lake was granted 1,680 acres of reservation land.

It is said Chief Ackley was an expert in many Ojibwe customs, from the use of traditional plant medicines, to hunting and fishing, to the creation of birch bark crafts. He taught many in the ways of the natural laws. He was also an ambassador of goodwill and advocated for the advancement of Indian people into the 20th century. To this day, his legacy lives on among the people of Mole Lake.

Casino Mole Lake

'He was a true leader of the people. He represented the Great Spirit, and everything that's good about Indian people,' said Mr. Ackley, Jr. 'He taught myself and many others what it means to be a good person - to be a good human being. Through him our Tribe has survived.'