Looking Glass River
The Looking Glass River in the U.S. state of Michigan is a river flowing through the central region of the Lower Peninsula. It is a tributary of the Grand River. The Looking Glass River is about long, has no dams, and borders many wetlands and woodlots.
Name
Nineteenth-century sources have transcribed the alternate name of Wabenasebee for the river. That name may refer to the large Chippewa settlement of Wabwahnahseepee that had existed, just north of modern De Witt, when European settlers first arrived.Course
It rises in Conway [Township, Michigan|Conway Township] in northeast Livingston [County, Michigan|Livingston County] and flows north into Shiawassee County, passing between Morrice and Bancroft as it turns westward and passes just south of Laingsburg on the western edge of Shiawassee. It then runs through the southern portion of Clinton County, including DeWitt. It flows into the Grand River in Portland in southeast Ionia County.The stream starts as a slow soft-bottom waterway. On the between the Livingston County line and Laingsburg the river averages wide. There is more activity in the lower stretch below DeWitt, where there is good fishing and canoeing.