No, it does not. It is the only one of the Great Lakes entirely within the u.s
Lake Michigan is the only lake, of the Great Lakes, that doesn't border or belong to Canada.
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The American independance had been signed in September 1783 (Traité de Paris). That document given to USA the Michigan territory's rights, which belonged to Canada before that date.
Lake Michigan, it dose not border Canada, unless you consider Lake Michigan and Lake Huron one lake since they hydrological connected. Lake Michigan is border by Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Indiana but not Ontario (Canada). Check it out on Google maps.
Lakes do not flow anywhere; if they did, then they wouldn't be lakes. They'd be rivers. Assuming that you meant to ask, "Which of the Great Lakes belong to both the U.S. and Canada?" then, all but one of the Great Lakes -- Lake Michigan -- belong to both the U.S. and Canada. Lake Huron, Ontario, Erie and Superior are all divided by an international border between Canada and the U.S. All of Lake Michigan is contained within the U.S.
All the Great lakes are shared by Canada and the US except lake Michigan which has no Canadian shoreline.
Canada