Beaver Island is also the name of an unincorporated community comprising the settled areas of the island.
His organization still exists today (though not on Beaver Island), numbering up to 300 adherents.
In addition to its murdered "king," Beaver Island would later become the home of two other persons who proved locally noteworthy.
The county seat was at St. James on Beaver Island.
Once upon a time, Beaver Island had a king, the only one this country has ever known.
By any or all of these conveyances, as well as one's own two feet, one can get to know Beaver Island in a few beautiful days.
It lies approximately four miles (6 km) west of the much larger Beaver Island.
His body was discovered about 11 a.m. in 15 feet of water at Beaver Island.
There are still today a number of families on Beaver Island that trace their roots to Arranmore.
Seavey later became a marshal himself and he is generally accepted to have retired to his home somewhere around Beaver Island in the 1920s.