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ABOUT MILWAUKEE
Introduction.
Milwaukee, the largest city in Wisconsin,
is located in the southeastern corner of the state on the shore of Lake
Michigan. Although it is one of the nation’s leading industrial cities and the
commercial hub of the state, it was beer that made Milwaukee famous. For
decades some of the nation’s leading brewers called Milwaukee home. The smell
of brewing beer was a familiar aroma in the city, and institutions from the
city’s most historic theater to its baseball team have names connected with the
brewing industry. But by the mid-1990s the city’s association with beer was
receding as all but one of the major breweries closed.
The Milwaukee River, which
flows from north to south through the city, is joined just south of the city’s
downtown by its tributaries, the Menomonee and the Kinnickinnic. From that
confluence it flows eastward through a short channel to empty into Milwaukee
Bay on Lake Michigan. The lake itself is Milwaukee’s most important natural
resource: the source of its drinking water, a recreational magnet, and a major
influence on local weather. January temperatures, which the lake keeps warmer
than those inland, average a high of -3°C (26°F) and a low of -11°C (12°F).
Temperatures in July, cooled by the lake, average a high of 27°C (80°F) and a
low of 17°C (62°F). Milwaukee’s average annual precipitation is 840 mm (33 in).
A number of Native Americans made their homes in the Milwaukee area before the arrival of whites.
That diversity was continued after the community was founded in the 1830s. In
the following years waves of immigrants were drawn to Milwaukee, and each
ethnic group lent the city unique attributes. The city’s name is believed to be
derived from the Native American Mahn-ah-wauk, most often translated as good land.
Milwaukee & the
Metropolitan Area.
The city of Milwaukee covers
a land area of 248.9 sq km (96.1 sq mi). Nearly one-half of the area was added
through annexations between 1945 and 1960. As a result, there is still farmland
within the city limits. Milwaukee is also the seat of Milwaukee County and the
heart of a metropolitan area that includes Waukesha, Washington, and Ozaukee
counties. The entire metropolitan area covers 3,781 sq km (1,460 sq mi).
Suburban and outlying population centers include the cities of West
Allis, Waukesha, Wauwatosa, Brookfield, New Berlin, Greenfield, and Menomonee
Falls.
Milwaukee lies on a series
of bluffs overlooking Lake Michigan, and the city retains the charm of broad
tree-lined streets, parks, woods, and lakes. The older industrial section of
the city extends inland from Lake Michigan, mainly along the Menomonee River.
The central business district lies just north, along both banks of the
Milwaukee River. Numerous bridges connect the two sides of the downtown.
Farther north are many of the city’s most fashionable residential areas.
Milwaukee’s rivers divide
the city into large geographic districts, each with its own personality. The
East Side is a center for nightlife and specialty shopping. The North Side is a
stronghold of African American culture. The West Side is a multiethnic,
mixed-income section of town, and the South Side is the home of Milwaukee’s
largest Polish and Hispanic communities. Several neighborhoods, including
Walker’s Point, Brewer’s Hill, and the Third Ward, are showcases for
restoration efforts, while others such as Bay View, Pigsville, and Layton
Park have maintained their traditional characters for generations. Individual
suburbs range from industrial Cudahy, built around a packing plant, to affluent
River Hills, built around a country club.
Population.
Milwaukee’s population
decreased in the later half of the 20th century. The number of its inhabitants
peaked in 1960 at 741,324; the city experienced its sharpest decline in the
1970s. The population in 2000 was 596,974. Meanwhile, the surrounding
four-county metropolitan area has continued to grow in population, rising from
1,397,143 in 1980 to 1,500,741 in 2000.
Historic patterns of ethnic
diversity have persisted. According to the 2000 census, whites make up 50
percent of the population, blacks 37.3 percent, Asians 2.9 percent, Native
Americans 0.9 percent, and Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders 0.1
percent. People of mixed heritage or not reporting race are 8.8 percent of
inhabitants. Hispanics, who may be of any race, are 12 percent of the populace. The number of Hispanics in the city
doubled during the 1990s. People from Southeast Asia, particularly Hmongs and Lao, were Milwaukee’s
fastest-growing ethnic group in the 1980s.
Education and Culture.
The University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee (founded in 1885 as a teachers college and joined with the
state university system in 1956) is the region’s largest institution of higher
learning, with nearly 23,000 students. Marquette
University (1881), with more than 10,600 students, is the largest private
school. Other four-year institutions in the Milwaukee area include Alverno
College (1887), Cardinal Stritch University (1937),
Concordia University
Wisconsin (1881), Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design (1974),
Milwaukee
School of Engineering (1903), Mount Mary College (1913), and
Wisconsin Lutheran
College (1973). Milwaukee Area Technical College (1912) serves nearly 65,000
students with a full range of vocational programs on four campuses.
As Wisconsin’s principal
metropolis, Milwaukee has cultural resources of national standing, among them
the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Milwaukee Ballet Company, and Milwaukee
Repertory Theater. Other major institutions include the Milwaukee Public
Museum, a pioneer in interpreting natural and cultural history, and the Central
Library, housed in a neoclassical-style landmark on the western edge of
downtown. The Milwaukee County War Memorial Complex, dedicated to the county
residents who died in the nation’s wars, consists of a performing arts center and
three museums located around the city. It includes the Milwaukee Art Museum,
home of a celebrated modern art collection; the Charles Allis Art Museum,
housed in a mansion built by an early-20th-century industrialist; and Villa
Terrace, noted for its beautiful grounds.
Milwaukee has preserved an
unusually large number of its historic buildings. The better-known examples
include City Hall (1895), a civic shrine rooted in Germanic architectural
styles; the Pabst Mansion (1893), built for pioneer brewer Frederick Pabst; and
Saint Josaphat’s Basilica (1901), the city’s largest church and a monument to
the Polish immigrants who built it. The restored Pabst Theater (currently the
Marcus Center for the Performing Arts) is home to
concerts and theatrical presentations.
In recent years, Milwaukee
has developed a reputation as a city of festivals. Summerfest, an 11-day music
festival held on its own lakefront grounds, is a showcase for acts ranging from
alternative rock to country music. During the rest of the summer months, the
park is the site of weekend festivals staged by Milwaukee’s major ethnic
groups: Italian, Irish, German, African American, Arab, Polish, Mexican, Native
American, and Asian. The Great Circus Parade, featuring the world’s largest
collection of ornate circus wagons, is another staple of Milwaukee’s festival
season. The Wisconsin State Fair is held annually in nearby West Allis.
Recreation.
The largest single unit of
Milwaukee County’s extensive park system is Whitnall Park, a vast green space
that includes a botanical garden, a golf course, and a nature center. The
Mitchell Park Domes are three beehive-shaped glass structures that house
collections of plants from tropical and arid regions, as well as changing
seasonal displays. The Milwaukee County Zoo exhibits animals from every
continent in settings that resemble their native habitats. Preservation of the
Lake Michigan shoreline for public use has been a priority for decades. One of
the park system’s most popular features is Lincoln Memorial Drive, a generous
strip of lakefront land that stretches north from Milwaukee’s downtown.
The city supports two major
league sports teams: the Milwaukee Brewers in baseball and the Milwaukee Bucks
in basketball. The Milwaukee Brewers play in Miller Park, a new baseball stadium with a
retractable roof that opened in April 2001. The Milwaukee Bucks’ home court is
the Bradley Center, a state-of-the-art facility that seats 18,700 spectators.
Economy.
As recently as 1960,
manufacturing accounted for more than 40 percent of the four-county
metropolitan area’s employment. Recessions, mergers and acquisitions, and
global competition reduced that proportion to 24 percent by 1990. Membership in
labor unions has suffered a corresponding decline. Despite these massive
shifts, manufacturing is still the foundation of the local economy.
In keeping with its popular
image, Milwaukee remains a leading producer of beer. Miller Brewing, one of the
nation’s largest brewers, has its headquarters in the city. But makers of iron
and steel products employ far more residents. Milwaukee is the home of Briggs
& Stratton (small engines), Allen-Bradley (industrial controls), Towers
Automotive (electric motors and water heaters), Harley-Davidson (motorcycles),
Harnischfeger Industries (mining and material handling equipment), Johnson
Controls (automotive systems and building control systems), and Master Lock
(security products).
The service sector of the
economy has shown particular growth since the 1970s. Milwaukee’s largest
nonmanufacturing employers include Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance (one of
the nation’s largest life insurers), a variety of health-care providers, and
major banks. The city also serves as a wholesale trade center for Wisconsin and
for a wide region that includes parts of Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, and
Michigan.
The commercial importance of
the city stems in part from its function as a major port on the Great Lakes.
The port serves vessels engaged in cross-lake shipping as well as larger
vessels that enter the lakes through the St. Lawrence Seaway.
The principal highway to
Milwaukee is Interstate 94, which connects the city with Chicago to the south
and Madison to the west. Interstate 43 ties Milwaukee to other lakeshore
communities to the north. Commercial air transportation is provided through
General Mitchell International Airport.
Government.
Milwaukee has two levels of
local government - city and county - that overlap but generally complement each
other. The city of Milwaukee is headed by an elected mayor and a 17-member
Common Council. City jurisdiction extends over fire and police protection,
waste removal, public housing, library services, street maintenance, and the
Port of Milwaukee. Milwaukee County, guided by an elected county executive and
25 supervisors, administers welfare programs, court and correctional systems,
expressways, public parks, and Mitchell International Airport. Officials on
both levels serve four-year terms. Each council member represents
a district of the city and acts as its administrator, with responsibility to
the citizens for the services they receive.
History.
Dozens of Native Americans lived in the Milwaukee region over the centuries, among them the Winnebago,
Sac (Sauk), Fox, Ojibwa, Ottawa, and, by 1700, Potawatomi.
They were joined in the 1600s by fur traders who made Milwaukee a minor outpost
in the commercial empire of New France.
Native settlement and the
fur trade both came to an end in the 1830s. Endowed with a sheltering bay and a
deep river, Milwaukee attracted the attention of speculators who hoped to make
the site a metropolis. The first public land sale was held in 1835, and the
city of Milwaukee incorporated in 1846, two years before Wisconsin became a state.
The city’s first mayor was Solomon Juneau, a French-Canadian fur trader who had
come to Milwaukee in 1818.
Yankees from the eastern
United States dominated pioneer Milwaukee, but 64 percent of the city’s
residents were foreign-born by 1850. Although Irish and English families were
numerous, the greatest number of immigrants came from Germany. They established
singing societies and dramatic groups that made Milwaukee the "Deutsch-Athen"
(German Athens) of America, a reference to its cultural sophistication. They
also laid the foundations of a prosperous brewing industry. By 1856 there were
more than two dozen breweries in Milwaukee, all owned and operated by
German-speaking residents.
Milwaukee flourished as a
commercial center at first, exporting the products of Wisconsin’s farms and
importing finished goods from the East and from Europe. In the early 1860s
Milwaukee was the largest shipper of wheat on earth. After the American Civil
War (1861-1865), the city turned increasingly to manufacturing as its economic
base. Industrialists like Edward Allis, Henry Harnischfeger, and Frederick
Layton joined the great brewing families - the Pabsts, Blatzes, Millers, and
Uihleins (Schlitz) - at the top of the social order.
The lure of industrial jobs
brought thousands of new immigrants to Milwaukee, among them Poles and
Italians. By the late 1800s the city had developed a rich collection of ethnic
neighborhoods, each centered around its own places of worship and homegrown
businesses. During the same years, the city struggled to adjust to its new
economic and social circumstances. Labor unrest, political strife, and charges
of corruption dominated public discourse.
A reform movement gathered
momentum at the turn of the century, and socialists were prominent in its
leadership. Rooted in ideals carried over from Europe and drawing on the
strength of Milwaukee’s working-class wards, the socialists captured the
mayor’s office for the first time in 1910. They would govern the city for most
of the next 50 years; Emil Seidel from 1910 to 1912, Daniel Hoan from 1916 to
1940, and Frank Zeidler from 1948 to 1960. It was during the socialist heyday
that Milwaukee gained its reputation for efficient municipal services,
scandal-free government, and clean streets.
Milwaukee’s role as a manufacturing
center expanded during World War I (1914-1918) and the boom that followed in
the 1920s. Severe labor shortages brought hundreds of African Americans and Hispanics to
the city, many of them recruited by labor agents working for local industries.
The Great Depression of the 1930s practically flattened the region’s economy,
but industries recovered completely with the approach of the nation’s
involvement in World War II (1939-1945).
A downtown renaissance began
in 1982 with the opening of the Grand Avenue Mall, an enclosed shopping center
anchored by an elegant 1916 commercial arcade. The mall has been the catalyst
for more than $1 billion in public and private redevelopment. Projects
constructed in the mid-1990s included a new convention center and a new baseball
stadium. Comparable energy has transformed some of Milwaukee’s oldest
neighborhoods, and the growth of the city’s ethnic festivals indicates that
Milwaukeeans are taking new pride in one of their community’s oldest assets:
ethnic diversity.
Information provided by MSN
Encarta, 2003.
See the following links for
more information on Milwaukee.
City of Milwaukee.
Official government web site for the city of Milwaukee.
OnMilwaukee.
Extensive resource guide for all that’s happening in and around Milwaukee.
360Milwaukee.
Take a virtual tour of Milwaukee!
Milwaukee Convention and Visitors Bureau.
Experience all that Milwaukee has to offer.
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