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Wikipedia

Milwaukee

Milwaukee (/mɪlˈwɔːki/ mil-WAW-kee),[14] officially the City of Milwaukee, is the most populated city in the U.S. state of Wisconsin and the county seat of Milwaukee County. With a population of 577,222 at the 2020 census, Milwaukee is the 31st largest city in the United States,[15][16] the fifth-largest city in the Midwestern United States,[17] and the second largest city on Lake Michigan's shore behind Chicago.

Milwaukee, Wisconsin
City of Milwaukee
Clockwise from top: Milwaukee skyline from Discovery World, downtown at night along the Milwaukee Riverwalk, inside the Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee City Hall, Burns Commons in the East Side neighborhood, and the historic Mitchell Building
Nickname(s): 
Cream City,[1] Brew City,[2] Beer Capital of the World,[3] Miltown,[4] The Mil, MKE, The City of Festivals,[5] The German Athens of America,[6] The 414[7]
Interactive map of Milwaukee
Coordinates: 43°03′N 87°57′W / 43.05°N 87.95°W / 43.05; -87.95Coordinates: 43°03′N 87°57′W / 43.05°N 87.95°W / 43.05; -87.95
Country United States
StateWisconsin
CountiesMilwaukee, Washington, Waukesha, Ozaukee
IncorporatedJanuary 31, 1846; 176 years ago (1846-01-31)
Founded bySolomon Juneau, Byron Kilbourn, and George H. Walker
Named forPotawatomi for “gathering place by the water”
Government
 • TypeStrong mayor-council
 • MayorCavalier Johnson (D)
Area
 • City96.81 sq mi (250.75 km2)
 • Land96.18 sq mi (249.12 km2)
 • Water0.63 sq mi (1.63 km2)
Elevation
617 ft (188 m)
Population
 • City577,222
 • Estimate 
(2021)[10]
569,330
 • Rank31st in the United States
1st in Wisconsin
 • Density6,001.48/sq mi (2,317.04/km2)
 • Urban
1,306,795 (US: 38th)
 • Urban density2,818.3/sq mi (1,088.2/km2)
 • Metro1,574,731 (US: 40th)
DemonymMilwaukeean
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
ZIP Codes
53172, 532XX
Area code414
FIPS code55-53000[12]
GNIS feature ID1577901[13]
Amtrak stationMilwaukee Intermodal Station (MKE)
Major airportMilwaukee Mitchell International Airport (MKE)
Interstates
U.S. Routes
Websitecity.milwaukee.gov

It is the main cultural and economic center of the Milwaukee metropolitan area, the fourth-most densely populated metropolitan area in the Midwest.[18] Milwaukee is considered a global city, categorized as "Gamma minus" by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network,[19] with a regional GDP of over $102 billion in 2020.[20]

Today, Milwaukee is one of the most ethnically and culturally diverse cities in the U.S.[21] However, it continues to be one of the most racially segregated, largely as a result of early-20th-century redlining.[22] Its history was heavily influenced by German immigrants in the 19th century, and it continues to be a center for German-American culture, specifically becoming well known for its brewing industry. In recent years, Milwaukee has been undergoing its largest construction boom since the 1960s.[23] Major additions to the city since the turn of the 21st century include the Wisconsin Center, American Family Field, The Hop (streetcar system), an expansion to the Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee Repertory Theater, the Bradley Symphony Center,[24] and Discovery World, as well as major renovations to the UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena. Fiserv Forum opened in late 2018, and hosts sporting events and concerts. Since 1968, Milwaukee has been home to Summerfest, one of the largest music festivals in the world. With regard to education, Milwaukee is home to the Medical College of Wisconsin, UW-Milwaukee, Marquette University, MSOE, and several other universities and colleges. The city is home to two major professional sports teams − the Bucks and the Brewers. It is home to several Fortune 500 companies, including Northwestern Mutual, WEC Energy Group, Rockwell Automation, and Harley-Davidson.[25]

History

Name

The name "Milwaukee" comes from the Algonquian word millioke, meaning "good", "beautiful", and "pleasant land" (compare Potawatomi: minwaking, Ojibwe: ominowakiing) or "gathering place [by the water]" (Potawatomi: manwaking, Ojibwe: omaniwakiing).[26][27]

Native American peoples

Indigenous cultures lived along the waterways for thousands of years. The first recorded inhabitants of the Milwaukee area were various Native American tribes: the Menominee, Fox, Mascouten, Sauk, Potawatomi, and Ojibwe (all Algic/Algonquian peoples), and the Ho-Chunk (Winnebago, a Siouan people). Many of these people had lived around Green Bay[28] before migrating to the Milwaukee area about the time of European contact.

In the second half of the 18th century, the Native Americans living near Milwaukee played a role in all the major European wars on the American continent. During the French and Indian War, a group of "Ojibwas and Pottawattamies from the far [Lake] Michigan" (i.e., the area from Milwaukee to Green Bay) joined the French-Canadian Daniel Liénard de Beaujeu at the Battle of the Monongahela.[29] In the American Revolutionary War, the Native Americans around Milwaukee were some of the few groups to ally with the rebel Continentals.[30]

After the American Revolutionary War, the Native Americans fought the United States in the Northwest Indian War as part of the Council of Three Fires. During the War of 1812, they held a council in Milwaukee in June 1812, which resulted in their decision to attack Chicago[31] in retaliation against American expansion. This resulted in the Battle of Fort Dearborn on August 15, 1812, the only known armed conflict in the Chicago area. This battle convinced the American government to remove these groups of Native Americans from their indigenous land. After being attacked in the Black Hawk War in 1832, the Native Americans in Milwaukee signed the 1833 Treaty of Chicago with the United States. In exchange for ceding their lands in the area, they were to receive monetary payments and lands west of the Mississippi in Indian Territory.[32]

European settlement and thereafter

 
Statue of Solomon Juneau, who helped establish the city of Milwaukee

Europeans had arrived in the Milwaukee area prior to the 1833 Treaty of Chicago. French missionaries and traders first passed through the area in the late 17th and 18th centuries. Alexis Laframboise, coming from Michilimackinac (now in Michigan), settled a trading post in 1785 and is considered the first resident of European descent in the Milwaukee region.[33] Early explorers called the Milwaukee River and surrounding lands various names: Melleorki, Milwacky, Mahn-a-waukie, Milwarck, and Milwaucki, in efforts to transliterate the native terms. In the 19th century, the populace of the western side of Milwaukee used the spelling "Milwaukee", while on the eastern side "Milwaukie" was used until the modern-day spelling became accepted in the 1880s.[34]

One story on the origin of Milwaukee's name says,

[O]ne day during the thirties of the last century [1800s] a newspaper calmly changed the name to Milwaukee, and Milwaukee it has remained until this day.[35]

The spelling "Milwaukie" lives on in Milwaukie, Oregon, named after the Wisconsin city in 1847, before the current spelling was universally accepted.[36]

Milwaukee has three "founding fathers": Solomon Juneau, Byron Kilbourn, and George H. Walker. Solomon Juneau was the first of the three to come to the area, in 1818. He founded a town called Juneau's Side, or Juneautown, that began attracting more settlers. In competition with Juneau, Byron Kilbourn established Kilbourntown west of the Milwaukee River. He ensured the roads running toward the river did not join with those on the east side. This accounts for the large number of angled bridges that still exist in Milwaukee today.[37] Further, Kilbourn distributed maps of the area which only showed Kilbourntown, implying Juneautown did not exist or the river's east side was uninhabited and thus undesirable. The third prominent developer was George H. Walker. He claimed land to the south of the Milwaukee River, along with Juneautown, where he built a log house in 1834. This area grew and became known as Walker's Point.[38]

The first large wave of settlement to the areas that would later become Milwaukee County and the City of Milwaukee began in 1835, following removal of the tribes in the Council of Three Fires. Early that year it became known that Juneau and Kilbourn intended to lay out competing town-sites. By the year's end both had purchased their lands from the government and made their first sales. There were perhaps 100 new settlers in this year, mostly from New England and other Eastern states. On September 17, 1835, the first election was held in Milwaukee; the number of votes cast was 39.[39]

By 1840, the three towns had grown, along with their rivalries. There were intense battles between the towns, mainly Juneautown and Kilbourntown, which culminated with the Milwaukee Bridge War of 1845. Following the Bridge War, on January 31, 1846, the towns were combined to incorporate as the City of Milwaukee, and elected Solomon Juneau as Milwaukee's first mayor.[40]

 
Illustrated map of Milwaukee in 1872

Milwaukee began to grow as a city as high numbers of immigrants, mainly German, made their way to Wisconsin during the 1840s and 1850s. Scholars classify German immigration to the United States in three major waves, and Wisconsin received a significant number of immigrants from all three. The first wave from 1845 to 1855 consisted mainly of people from Southwestern Germany, the second wave from 1865 to 1873 concerned primarily Northwestern Germany, while the third wave from 1880 to 1893 came from Northeastern Germany.[41] In the 1840s, the number of people who left German-speaking lands was 385,434, in the 1850s it reached 976,072, and an all-time high of 1.4 million immigrated in the 1880s. In 1890, the 2.78 million first-generation German Americans represented the second-largest foreign-born group in the United States. Of all those who left the German lands between 1835 and 1910, 90 percent went to the United States, most of them traveling to the Mid-Atlantic states and the Midwest.[41]

By 1900, 34 percent of Milwaukee's population was of German background.[41] The largest number of German immigrants to Milwaukee came from Prussia, followed by Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover, and Hesse-Darmstadt. Milwaukee gained its reputation as the most German of American cities not just from the large number of German immigrants it received, but for the sense of community which the immigrants established here.[42]

Most German immigrants came to Wisconsin in search of inexpensive farmland.[42] However, immigration began to change in character and size in the late 1840s and early 1850s, due to the 1848 revolutionary movements in Europe.[43] After 1848, hopes for a united Germany had failed, and revolutionary and radical Germans, known as the "Forty-Eighters", immigrated to the U.S. to avoid imprisonment and persecution by German authorities.[44]

One of the most famous "liberal revolutionaries" of 1848 was Carl Schurz. He later explained in 1854 why he came to Milwaukee,

"It is true, similar things [cultural events and societies] were done in other cities where the Forty-eighters [sic] had congregated. But so far as I know, nowhere did their influence so quickly impress itself upon the whole social atmosphere as in 'German Athens of America' as Milwaukee was called at the time."[45]

Schurz was referring to the various clubs and societies Germans developed in Milwaukee. The pattern of German immigrants to settle near each other encouraged the continuation of the German lifestyle and customs. This resulted in German language organizations that encompassed all aspects of life; for example, singing societies and gymnastics clubs. Germans also had a lasting influence on the American school system. Kindergarten was created as a pre-school for children, and sports programs of all levels, as well as music and art were incorporated as elements of the regular school curriculum. These ideas were first introduced by radical-democratic German groups, such as the Turner Societies, known today as the American Turners. Specifically in Milwaukee, the American Turners established its own Normal College for teachers of physical education and a German-English Academy.[46]

Milwaukee's German element is still strongly present today. The city celebrates its German culture by annually hosting a German Fest in July[47] and an Oktoberfest in October. Milwaukee boasts a number of German restaurants, as well as a traditional German beer hall. A German language immersion school is offered for children in grades K–5.[48]

 
Milwaukee's Lake Front Depot in 1898

Although the German presence in Milwaukee after the Civil War remained strong and their largest wave of immigrants had yet to land, other groups also made their way to the city. Foremost among these were Polish immigrants. The Poles had many reasons for leaving their homeland, mainly poverty and political oppression. Because Milwaukee offered the Polish immigrants an abundance of low-paying entry level jobs, it became one of the largest Polish settlements in the USA.[49]

 
Wisconsin Street with Pabst Building, Milwaukee, 1900

For many residents, Milwaukee's South Side is synonymous with the Polish community that developed here. The group maintained a high profile here for decades, and it was not until the 1950s and 1960s that families began to disperse to the southern suburbs.[50]

By 1850, there were seventy-five Poles in Milwaukee County and the US Census shows they had a variety of occupations: grocers, blacksmiths, tavernkeepers, coopers, butchers, broommakers, shoemakers, draymen, laborers, and farmers. Three distinct Polish communities evolved in Milwaukee, with the majority settling in the area south of Greenfield Avenue. Milwaukee County's Polish population of 30,000 in 1890 rose to 100,000 by 1915. Poles historically have had a strong national cultural and social identity, often maintained through the Catholic Church.[51] A view of Milwaukee's South Side skyline is replete with the steeples of the many churches these immigrants built that are still vital centers of the community.[citation needed]

St. Stanislaus Catholic Church and the surrounding neighborhood was the center of Polish life in Milwaukee. As the Polish community surrounding St. Stanislaus continued to grow, Mitchell Street became known as the "Polish Grand Avenue". As Mitchell Street grew more dense, the Polish population started moving south to the Lincoln Village neighborhood, home to the Basilica of St. Josaphat and Kosciuszko Park. Other Polish communities started on the East Side of Milwaukee. Jones Island was a major commercial fishing center settled mostly by Kashubians and other Poles from around the Baltic Sea.[52]

Milwaukee has the fifth-largest Polish population in the U.S. at 45,467, ranking behind New York City (211,203), Chicago (165,784), Los Angeles (60,316) and Philadelphia (52,648).[53] The city holds Polish Fest, an annual celebration of Polish culture and cuisine.[54]

In addition to the Germans and Poles, Milwaukee received a large influx of other European immigrants from Lithuania, Italy, Ireland, France, Russia, Bohemia and Sweden, who included Jews, Lutherans, and Catholics. Italian Americans total 16,992 in the city, but in Milwaukee County, they number at 38,286.[53] The largest Italian-American festival in the area, Festa Italiana, is held in the city, while Irishfest is the largest Irish-American festival in southeast Wisconsin.[55] By 1910, Milwaukee shared the distinction with New York City of having the largest percentage of foreign-born residents in the United States.[56] In 1910, whites represented 99.7% of the city's total population of 373,857.[57] Milwaukee has a strong Greek Orthodox Community, many of whom attend the Greek Orthodox Church on Milwaukee's northwest side, designed by Wisconsin-born architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Milwaukee has a sizable Croatian population, with Croatian churches and their own historic and successful soccer club The Croatian Eagles at the 30-acre Croatian Park in Franklin, Wisconsin.[citation needed]

Milwaukee also has a large Serbian population, who have developed Serbian restaurants, a Serbian K–8 School, and Serbian churches, along with an American Serb Hall. The American Serb Hall in Milwaukee is known for its Friday fish fries and popular events. Many U.S. presidents have visited Milwaukee's Serb Hall in the past. The Bosnian population is growing in Milwaukee as well due to late-20th century immigration after the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina.[citation needed]

During this time, a small community of African Americans migrated from the South in the Great Migration. They settled near each other, forming a community that came to be known as Bronzeville. As industry boomed, more migrants came and African-American influence grew in Milwaukee.[58]

 
A slum area of Milwaukee from 1936

By 1925, around 9,000 Mexicans lived in Milwaukee, but the Great Depression forced many of them to move back south. In the 1950s, the Hispanic community was beginning to emerge. They arrived for jobs, filling positions in the manufacturing and agricultural sectors. During this time there were labor shortages due to the immigration laws that had reduced immigration from eastern and southern Europe. Additionally, strikes contributed to the labor shortages.[59]

In the mid-20th century African Americans from Chicago moved to the north side of Milwaukee.[citation needed] Milwaukee's East Side has attracted a population of Russians and other Eastern Europeans who began migrating in the 1990s after the end of the Cold War.[citation needed] Many Hispanics of mostly Puerto Rican and Mexican heritage live on the south side of Milwaukee.[citation needed]

During the first sixty years of the 20th century, Milwaukee was the major city in which the Socialist Party of America earned the highest votes. Milwaukee elected three mayors who ran on the ticket of the Socialist Party: Emil Seidel (1910–1912), Daniel Hoan (1916–1940), and Frank Zeidler (1948–1960). Often referred to as "Sewer Socialists", the Milwaukee Socialists were characterized by their practical approach to government and labor.[60]

Historic neighborhoods

 
The historic Third Ward

In 1892, Whitefish Bay, South Milwaukee, and Wauwatosa were incorporated. They were followed by Cudahy (1895), North Milwaukee (1897) and East Milwaukee, later known as Shorewood, in 1900. In the early 20th century, West Allis (1902), and West Milwaukee (1906) were added, which completed the first generation of "inner-ring" suburbs.

In the 1920s, Chicago gangster activity came north to Milwaukee during the Prohibition era. Al Capone, noted Chicago mobster, owned a home in the Milwaukee suburb Brookfield, where moonshine was made. The house still stands on a street named after Capone.[61]

In the 1930s the city was severely segregated via redlining and is apparent to this day. In 1960, African American residents made up 15 percent of the Milwaukee's population, yet the city was still among the most segregated of that time. And as of 2019, at least three out of four black residents in Milwaukee would have to move in order to establish racially integrated neighborhoods.[62]

By 1960, Milwaukee had grown to become one of the largest cities in the United States. Its population peaked at 741,324. In 1960, the Census Bureau reported city's population as 91.1% white and 8.4% black.[63]

By the late 1960s, Milwaukee's population had started to decline as people moved to suburbs, aided by federal subsidies of highways. They moved to take advantage of new housing and lower taxation.[64] Milwaukee had a population of 594,833 by 2010, while the population of the overall metropolitan area increased. Given its large immigrant population and historic neighborhoods, Milwaukee avoided the severe declines of some of its fellow "Rust Belt" cities.

 
Brady Street, Milwaukee

Since the 1980s, the city has begun to make strides in improving its economy, neighborhoods, and image, resulting in the revitalization of neighborhoods such as the Historic Third Ward, Lincoln Village, the East Side, and more recently Walker's Point and Bay View, along with attracting new businesses to its downtown area. These efforts have substantially slowed the population decline and have stabilized many parts of Milwaukee.

Milwaukee's European history is evident today. Largely through its efforts to preserve its history, Milwaukee was named one of the "Dozen Distinctive Destinations" by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 2006.[65]

Historic Milwaukee walking tours provide a guided tour of Milwaukee's historic districts, including topics on Milwaukee's architectural heritage, its glass skywalk system, and the Milwaukee Riverwalk.

 
Panorama map of Milwaukee, with a view of the City Hall tower, c. 1898

Geography

 
Aerial view from the north – the Menomonee River, Kinnickinnic River, and Milwaukee River are visible in the foreground; Wind Point in the background.

Milwaukee lies along the shores and bluffs of Lake Michigan at the confluence of three rivers: the Menomonee, the Kinnickinnic, and the Milwaukee. Smaller rivers, such as the Root River and Lincoln Creek, also flow through the city.

Milwaukee's terrain is sculpted by the glacier path and includes steep bluffs along Lake Michigan that begin about a mile (1.6 km) north of downtown. In addition, 30 miles (48 km) southwest of Milwaukee is the Kettle Moraine and lake country that provides an industrial landscape combined with inland lakes.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 96.80 square miles (250.71 km2), of which, 96.12 square miles (248.95 km2) is land and 0.68 square miles (1.76 km2) is water.[66] The city is overwhelmingly (99.89% of its area) in Milwaukee County, but there are two tiny unpopulated portions that extend into neighboring counties.[citation needed][A]

Cityscape

 
Downtown Milwaukee from E. State St., 2008. Yankee Hill Apartments are near left, Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist near left-center, the Pfister Hotel right-center, and Milwaukee City Hall far right.
 
Downtown Milwaukee from the Milwaukee River

North–south streets are numbered, and east–west streets are named. However, north–south streets east of 1st Street are named, like east–west streets. The north–south numbering line is along the Menomonee River (east of Hawley Road) and Fairview Avenue/Golfview Parkway (west of Hawley Road), with the east–west numbering line defined along 1st Street (north of Oklahoma Avenue) and Chase/Howell Avenue (south of Oklahoma Avenue). This numbering system is also used to the north by Mequon in Ozaukee County, and by some Waukesha County communities.

Milwaukee is crossed by Interstate 43 and Interstate 94, which come together downtown at the Marquette Interchange. The Interstate 894 bypass (which as of May 2015 also contains Interstate 41) runs through portions of the city's southwest side, and Interstate 794 comes out of the Marquette interchange eastbound, bends south along the lakefront and crosses the harbor over the Hoan Bridge, then ends near the Bay View neighborhood and becomes the "Lake Parkway" (WIS-794).

One of the distinctive traits of Milwaukee's residential areas are the neighborhoods full of so-called Polish flats. These are two-family homes with separate entrances, but with the units stacked one on top of another instead of side-by-side. This arrangement enables a family of limited means to purchase both a home and a modestly priced rental apartment unit. Since Polish-American immigrants to the area prized land ownership, this solution, which was prominent in their areas of settlement within the city, came to be associated with them.[67]

The tallest building in the city is the U.S. Bank Center.

Climate

Milwaukee's location in the Great Lakes Region often has rapidly changing weather, producing a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfa), with cold, snowy winters, and hot, humid summers. The warmest month of the year is July, when the 24-hour average is 73.3 °F (22.9 °C), while January is the coldest month, with a 24-hour average of 24.0 °F (−4.4 °C).

Because of Milwaukee's proximity to Lake Michigan, a convection current forms around mid-afternoon in light wind, resulting in the so-called "lake breeze" – a smaller scale version of the more common sea breeze. The lake breeze is most common between the months of March and July. This onshore flow causes cooler temperatures to move inland usually 5 to 15 miles (8 to 24 km), with much warmer conditions persisting further inland. Because Milwaukee's official climate site, Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport, is only 3 miles (4.8 km) from the lake, seasonal temperature variations are less extreme than in many other locations of the Milwaukee metropolitan area.

As the sun sets, the convection current reverses and an offshore flow ensues causing a land breeze. After a land breeze develops, warmer temperatures flow east toward the lakeshore, sometimes causing high temperatures during the late evening. The lake breeze is not a daily occurrence and will not usually form if a southwest, west, or northwest wind generally exceeds 15 mph (24 km/h). The lake moderates cold air outbreaks along the lakeshore during winter months.

Aside from the lake's influence, overnight lows in downtown Milwaukee year-round are often much warmer than suburban locations because of the urban heat island effect. Onshore winds elevate daytime relative humidity levels in Milwaukee as compared to inland locations nearby.

Thunderstorms in the region can be dangerous and damaging, bringing hail and high winds. In rare instances, they can bring a tornado. However, almost all summer rainfall in the city is brought by these storms. In spring and fall, longer events of prolonged, lighter rain bring most of the precipitation. A moderate snow cover can be seen on or linger for many winter days, but even during meteorological winter, on average, over 40% of days see less than 1 inch (2.5 cm) on the ground.[68]

Milwaukee tends to experience highs that are 90 °F (32 °C) on or above seven days per year, and lows at or below 0 °F (−18 °C) on six to seven nights.[68] Extremes range from 105 °F (41 °C) set on July 24, 1934 down to −26 °F (−32 °C) on both January 17, 1982 and February 4, 1996.[69] The 1982 event, also known as Cold Sunday, featured temperatures as low as −40 °F (−40 °C) in some of the suburbs as little as 10 miles (16 km) to the north of Milwaukee.

Climate data for Milwaukee (Mitchell International Airport), 1991–2020 normals,[B] extremes 1871–present[C]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 63
(17)
71
(22)
84
(29)
91
(33)
95
(35)
104
(40)
105
(41)
103
(39)
99
(37)
89
(32)
77
(25)
68
(20)
105
(41)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 50.5
(10.3)
52.8
(11.6)
67.1
(19.5)
79.5
(26.4)
85.8
(29.9)
92.0
(33.3)
93.4
(34.1)
91.7
(33.2)
88.1
(31.2)
79.9
(26.6)
65.5
(18.6)
53.4
(11.9)
95.0
(35.0)
Average high °F (°C) 30.9
(−0.6)
34.2
(1.2)
44.2
(6.8)
54.7
(12.6)
66.5
(19.2)
76.8
(24.9)
81.9
(27.7)
80.3
(26.8)
73.5
(23.1)
61.3
(16.3)
47.8
(8.8)
36.1
(2.3)
57.3
(14.1)
Daily mean °F (°C) 24.0
(−4.4)
27.1
(−2.7)
36.4
(2.4)
46.3
(7.9)
57.1
(13.9)
67.6
(19.8)
73.3
(22.9)
72.3
(22.4)
65.0
(18.3)
53.0
(11.7)
40.4
(4.7)
29.5
(−1.4)
49.3
(9.6)
Average low °F (°C) 17.2
(−8.2)
20.0
(−6.7)
28.7
(−1.8)
37.8
(3.2)
47.8
(8.8)
58.4
(14.7)
64.7
(18.2)
64.2
(17.9)
56.4
(13.6)
44.7
(7.1)
33.1
(0.6)
23.0
(−5.0)
41.3
(5.2)
Mean minimum °F (°C) −4.5
(−20.3)
1.0
(−17.2)
10.6
(−11.9)
25.6
(−3.6)
36.3
(2.4)
45.7
(7.6)
54.7
(12.6)
55.0
(12.8)
42.3
(5.7)
30.6
(−0.8)
17.9
(−7.8)
3.2
(−16.0)
−7.9
(−22.2)
Record low °F (°C) −26
(−32)
−26
(−32)
−10
(−23)
12
(−11)
21
(−6)
33
(1)
40
(4)
42
(6)
28
(−2)
15
(−9)
−14
(−26)
−22
(−30)
−26
(−32)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 1.79
(45)
1.69
(43)
2.20
(56)
3.86
(98)
3.54
(90)
4.38
(111)
3.40
(86)
3.65
(93)
3.16
(80)
2.78
(71)
2.24
(57)
1.88
(48)
34.57
(878)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 14.9
(38)
11.8
(30)
6.7
(17)
2.1
(5.3)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.76)
2.5
(6.4)
10.4
(26)
48.7
(124)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 11.4 10.0 10.7 12.2 11.7 11.1 9.5 9.5 8.6 10.3 10.2 10.3 125.5
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 10.0 8.1 5.0 1.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 2.6 7.3 35.1
Average relative humidity (%) 72.3 71.9 71.4 68.5 68.5 69.7 71.5 74.9 75.4 72.5 74.5 75.9 72.3
Average dew point °F (°C) 11.7
(−11.3)
15.4
(−9.2)
24.6
(−4.1)
33.6
(0.9)
43.7
(6.5)
54.3
(12.4)
60.6
(15.9)
60.4
(15.8)
53.4
(11.9)
41.4
(5.2)
30.4
(−0.9)
18.3
(−7.6)
37.3
(3.0)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 140.2 151.5 185.4 213.5 275.5 304.5 321.1 281.2 215.1 178.0 112.8 104.8 2,483.6
Percent possible sunshine 48 51 50 53 61 66 69 65 57 52 38 37 56
Average ultraviolet index 1 2 4 5 7 8 8 8 6 3 2 1 5
Source 1: NOAA (relative humidity, dew point, and sun 1961–1990)[69][70][68][71]
Source 2: Weather Atlas [72]
Climate data for Milwaukee
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average sea temperature °F (°C) 37.5
(3.0)
36.0
(2.2)
36.2
(2.4)
38.2
(3.4)
40.8
(4.9)
53.3
(11.8)
67.9
(19.9)
71.9
(22.2)
66.9
(19.4)
54.9
(12.8)
46.9
(8.3)
40.1
(4.5)
49.2
(9.6)
Source: Weather Atlas [72]

Climate change

According to the United States' Environmental Protection Agency, Milwaukee is threatened by ongoing climate change which is warming the planet. These risks include worsened heat waves because many of its residents do not possess air conditioners, concerns about the water quality of Lake Michigan, and increased chances of flooding from intense rainstorms.[73] In 2018, Milwaukee mayor Tom Barrett announced that the city would uphold its obligations under the Paris Agreement, despite the United States' withdrawal, and set a goal moving a quarter of the city's electricity sources to renewable energy by 2025. These have included expansions in the city's solar power-generating capacity and a wind turbine's installation near the Port of Milwaukee. Other actions being taken include local incentives for energy-saving upgrades to homes and businesses.[74]

Water

In the 1990s and 2000s, Lake Michigan experienced large algae blooms, which can threaten aquatic life. Responding to this problem, in 2009 the city became an "Innovating City" in the Global Compact Cities Program. The Milwaukee Water Council was also formed in 2009.[75] Its objectives were to "better understand the processes related to freshwater systems dynamics" and to develop "a policy and management program aimed at balancing the protection and utilization of freshwater". The strategy used the Circles of Sustainability method. Instead of treating the water quality problem as a single environmental issue, the Water Council draws on the Circles method to analyze the interconnection among ecological, economic, political and cultural factors.[76] This holistic water treatment helped Milwaukee win the US Water Alliance's 2012 US Water Prize.[77] In 2009 the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee also established the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee School of Freshwater Sciences, the first graduate school of limnology in the United States.

There are more than 3,000 water fountains in the Milwaukee Public School District, 183 had lead levels above 15 parts per billion (ppb). 15 ppb is the federal action level in which effort needs to be taken to lower these lead levels.[78] In Milwaukee, more than 10% of children test positive for dangerous lead levels in their blood.[79]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
18401,700
185020,0611,080.1%
186045,246125.5%
187071,44057.9%
1880115,58761.8%
1890204,46876.9%
1900285,31539.5%
1910373,85731.0%
1920457,14722.3%
1930578,24926.5%
1940587,4721.6%
1950637,3928.5%
1960741,32416.3%
1970717,099−3.3%
1980636,212−11.3%
1990628,088−1.3%
2000596,974−5.0%
2010594,833−0.4%
2020577,222−3.0%
2021 (est.)569,330[10]−1.4%
U.S. Decennial Census[80]
2010–2020[9]

Milwaukee is the 31st most populous city in the United States, and anchors the 39th most populous Metropolitan Statistical Area in the United States. Its combined statistical area population makes it the 29th most populous Combined Statistical Area of the United States. In 2012, Milwaukee was listed as a gamma global city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network.

2020 census

As of the census of 2020,[81] the population was 577,222. The population density was 6,001.2 inhabitants per square mile (2,317.1/km2). There were 257,723 housing units at an average density of 2,679.5 per square mile (1,034.6/km2). Ethnically, the population was 20.1% Hispanic or Latino of any race. When grouping both Hispanic and non-Hispanic people together by race, the city was 38.6% Black or African American, 36.1% White, 5.2% Asian, 0.9% Native American, 9.0% from other races, and 10.1% from two or more races.

The 2020 census population of the city included 1,198 people incarcerated in adult correctional facilities and 9,625 people in university student housing.[82]

According to the American Community Survey estimates for 2016-2020, the median income for a household in the city was $43,125, and the median income for a family was $51,170. Male full-time workers had a median income of $42,859 versus $37,890 for female workers. The per capita income for the city was $24,167. About 19.6% of families and 24.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 35.1% of those under age 18 and 14.5% of those age 65 or over.[83] Of the population age 25 and over, 84.4% were high school graduates or higher and 24.6% had a bachelor's degree or higher.[84]

Racial and ethnic groups

 
Map of racial distribution in Milwaukee, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people:  White  Black  Asian  Hispanic  Other
Racial and ethnic composition as of the 2020 census[85]
Race or Ethnicity
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race Alone Total [D]
Black or African American (NH) 37.8% 37.8
 
40.1% 40.1
 
White (NH) 32.3% 32.3
 
35.4% 35.4
 
Hispanic or Latino[E] 20.1% 20.1
 
Asian (NH) 5.2% 5.2
 
5.8% 5.8
 
Native American (NH) 0.4% 0.4
 
1.4% 1.4
 
Pacific Islander (NH) 0.03% 0.03
 
0.10% 0.1
 
Other 0.5% 0.5
 
1.0% 1
 

According to the 2010 Census, 44.8% of the population was White (37.0% non-Hispanic white), 40.0% was Black or African American, 0.8% American Indian and Alaska Native, 3.5% Asian, 3.4% from two or more races. 17.3% of Milwaukee's population was of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin (they may be of any race) (11.7% Mexican, 4.1% Puerto Rican).[86]

Racial composition 2020 2010 2000 1990 1980
Black or African American 37.8% 39.2% 36.9% 30.2% 22.9%
White (Non-Hispanic) 32.3% 37.0% 45.5% 60.8% 71.4%
Hispanic or Latino 20.1% 17.3% 12.0% 6.3% 4.2%
Asian 5.2% 3.5% 2.9% 1.8% 0.7%
Mixed 3.6% 2.2%

According to the 2006–2008 American Community Survey, 38.3% of Milwaukee's residents reported having African American ancestry and 20.8% reported German ancestry. Other significant population groups include Polish (8.8%), Irish (6.5%), Italian (3.6%), English (2.8%), and French (1.7%). According to the 2010 United States Census, the largest Hispanic backgrounds in Milwaukee as of 2010 were: Mexican (69,680), Puerto Rican (24,672), Other Hispanic or Latino (3,808), Central American (1,962), South American (1,299), Cuban (866) and Dominican (720).[87]

The Milwaukee metropolitan area was cited as being the most segregated in the U.S. in a Jet Magazine article in 2002.[88] The source of this information was a segregation index developed in the mid-1950s and used since 1964. In 2003, a non-peer reviewed study was conducted by hired researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee which claimed Milwaukee is not "hypersegregated" and instead ranks as the 43rd most integrated city in America.[89] According to research by demographer William H. Frey using the index of dissimilarity method and data from the 2010 United States Census, Milwaukee has the highest level of black-white segregation of any of the 100 largest metropolitan areas in the United States.[90] Through continued dialogue between Milwaukee's citizens, the city is trying to reduce racial tensions and the rate of segregation.[91] With demographic changes in the wake of white flight, segregation in metropolitan Milwaukee is primarily in the suburbs rather than the city as in the era of Father Groppi.[92][93]

In 2015, Milwaukee was rated as the "worst city for black Americans" based on disparities in employment and income levels.[94] The city's black population experiences high levels of incarceration and a severe educational achievement gap.[95]

In 2013, Mark Pfeifer, the editor of the Hmong Studies Journal, stated Hmong in Milwaukee had recently been moving to the northwest side of Milwaukee; they historically lived in the north and south areas of Milwaukee.[96] The Hmong American Peace Academy/International Peace Academy, a K–12 school system in Milwaukee centered on the Hmong community, opened in 2004.[96]

Religion

 
St. Josaphat Basilica, in Milwaukee's historic Lincoln Village.

As of 2010, approximately 51.8% of residents in the Milwaukee area said they regularly attended religious services. 24.6% of the Milwaukee area population identified as Catholic, 10.8% as Lutheran, 1.6% as Methodist, and 0.6% as Jewish.[97] The Milwaukee metro area contains the majority of the state's Jewish population,[98] and has a long history of Jewish immigration from German-speaking and Eastern European countries.[99]

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee and the Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee are headquartered in Milwaukee. The School Sisters of the Third Order of St Francis have their mother house in Milwaukee, and several other religious orders have a significant presence in the area, including the Jesuits and Franciscans. Milwaukee, where Father Josef Kentenich was exiled for 14 years from 1952 to 1965, is also the center for the Schoenstatt Movement in the United States. St. Joan of Arc Chapel, the oldest church in Milwaukee, is on the Marquette University campus. St. Josaphat Basilica was the first church to be given the Basilica honor in Wisconsin and the third in the United States. Holy Hill National Shrine of Mary, Help of Christians, northwest of Milwaukee, in Hubertus, Wisconsin, was also made a Basilica in 2006.

Milwaukee is home for several Lutheran synods, including the Greater Milwaukee Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS), which operates Concordia University Wisconsin in Mequon and Milwaukee Lutheran High School, the nation's oldest Lutheran high school; and the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), which was founded in 1850 in Milwaukee.

The St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Cathedral is a landmark of the Serbian community in Milwaukee, located by the American Serb hall, which the congregation also operated until putting it up for sale in January 2021 due to financial challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[100]

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has a presence in the Milwaukee area. The Milwaukee area has two stakes, with fourteen wards and four branches among them. The closest temple is the Chicago Illinois Temple. The area is part of the Wisconsin Milwaukee Mission.[101]

2000 census

About 30.5% of households in 2000 had children under the age of 18 living with them. 32.2% of households were married couples living together, 21.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 41.8% were non-families. 33.5% of all households were single individuals, and 9.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.50 people per household, with the average family size at 3.25 people per family.

In 2000, the Census estimated at least 1,408 same-sex households in Milwaukee, or about 0.6% of all households in the city.[102] Gay-friendly communities have developed primarily in Walker's Point, but also in Bay View, Historic Third Ward, Washington Heights, Riverwest, and the East Side. In 2001, Milwaukee was named the #1 city for lesbians by Girlfriends magazine.[103]

The city's population was spread out, with 28.6% under the age of 18, 12.2% from 18 to 24, 30.2% from 25 to 44, 18.1% from 45 to 64, and 10.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 31 years. For every 100 females, there were 91.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87.2 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $32,216, and the median income for a family was $37,879. Males had a median income of $32,244 versus $26,013 for females. The per capita income for the city was $16,181. 21.3% of the population and 17.4% of families were below the poverty line. In 2010, rent increased an averaged 3% for home renters in Milwaukee.[104] Out of the total population, 31.6% of those under the age of 18 and 11.0% of those 65 and older were living below the poverty line.

Economy

Early economy

Milwaukee's founding fathers had a vision for the city: they knew it was perfectly situated as a port city, a center for collecting and distributing produce. Many of the new immigrants who were pouring into the new state of Wisconsin during the middle of the 19th century were wheat farmers. By 1860, Wisconsin was the second ranked wheat-growing state in the country and Milwaukee shipped more wheat than any place in the world. Railroads were needed to transport all this grain from the wheat fields of Wisconsin to Milwaukee's harbor. Improvements in railways at the time made this possible.

There was intense competition for markets with Chicago, and to a lesser degree, with Racine and Kenosha. Eventually Chicago won out due to its superior financial and transposition status, as well as being a hub on major railroad lines throughout the United States. Milwaukee did solidify its place as the commercial capital of Wisconsin and an important market in the Midwest.[105]

 
Rail tracks along the industrial Menomonee Valley, ancestral home of the Menominee Indians

Because of its easy access to Lake Michigan and other waterways, Milwaukee's Menomonee Valley has historically been home to manufacturing, stockyards, rendering plants, shipping, and other heavy industry.[106]

Reshaping of the valley began with the railroads built by city co-founder Byron Kilbourn to bring product from Wisconsin's farm interior to the port. By 1862 Milwaukee was the largest shipper of wheat on the planet, and related industry developed. Grain elevators were built and, due to Milwaukee's dominant German immigrant population, breweries sprang up around the processing of barley and hops. A number of tanneries were constructed, of which the Pfister & Vogel tannery grew to become the largest in America.

In 1843 George Burnham and his brother Jonathan opened a brickyard near 16th Street. When a durable and distinct cream-colored brick came out of the clay beds, other brickyards sprang up to take advantage of this resource. Because many of the city's buildings were built using this material it earned the nickname "Cream City", and consequently the brick was called Cream City brick. By 1881 the Burnham brickyard, which employed 200 men and peaked at 15 million bricks a year, was the largest in the world.

Flour mills, packing plants, breweries, railways and tanneries further industrialized the valley. With the marshlands drained and the Kinnickinnic and Milwaukee Rivers dredged, attention turned to the valley.

Along with the processing industries, bulk commodity storage, machining, and manufacturing entered the scene. The valley was home to the Milwaukee Road, Falk Corporation, Cutler-Hammer, Harnischfeger Corporation, Chain Belt Company, Nordberg Manufacturing Company and other industry giants.

Early in the 20th century, Milwaukee was home to several pioneer brass era automobile makers, including Ogren (1919–1922).[107]

Brewing

Milwaukee became synonymous with Germans and beer beginning in the 1840s. The Germans had long enjoyed beer and set up breweries when they arrived in Milwaukee. By 1856, there were more than two dozen breweries in Milwaukee, most of them owned and operated by Germans. Besides making beer for the rest of the nation, Milwaukeeans enjoyed consuming the various beers produced in the city's breweries. As early as 1843, pioneer historian James Buck recorded 138 taverns in Milwaukee, an average of one per forty residents. Today, beer halls and taverns are abundant in the city, but only one of the major breweries—Miller—remains in Milwaukee.[105]

 
Entrance to Miller Brewery in Milwaukee
 
The Pabst Brewery Complex, closed in 1997, before its redevelopment

Milwaukee was once the home to four of the world's largest beer breweries (Schlitz, Blatz, Pabst, and Miller), and was the number one beer producing city in the world for many years. As late as 1981, Milwaukee had the greatest brewing capacity in the world.[108] Despite the decline in its position as the world's leading beer producer after the loss of two of those breweries, Miller Brewing Company remains a key employer by employing over 2,200 of the city's workers.[109] Because of Miller's position as the second-largest beer-maker in the U.S., the city remains known as a beer town. The city and surrounding areas are seeing a resurgence in microbreweries, nanobreweries and brewpubs with the craft beer movement.[110]

The historic Milwaukee Brewery in "Miller Valley" at 4000 West State Street, is the oldest functioning major brewery in the United States. In 2008, Coors beer also began to be brewed in Miller Valley. This created additional brewery jobs in Milwaukee, but the company's world headquarters moved from Milwaukee to Chicago.

In addition to Miller and the heavily automated Leinenkugel's brewery in the old Blatz 10th Street plant, other stand-alone breweries in Milwaukee include Milwaukee Brewing Company, a microbrewery in Walker's Point neighborhood; Lakefront Brewery, a microbrewery in Brewers Hill; and Sprecher Brewery, a German brewery that also brews craft sodas. Since 2015, nearly two dozen craft brewing companies have been established in the city.[111][112]

Three beer brewers with Wisconsin operations made the 2009 list of the 50 largest beermakers in the United States, based on beer sales volume. Making the latest big-breweries list from Wisconsin is MillerCoors at No. 2. MillerCoors is a joint venture formed in 2008 by Milwaukee-based Miller Brewing Co. and Golden, Colorado-based Molson Coors Brewing Company. The Minhas Craft Brewery in Monroe, Wisconsin, which brews Huber, Rhinelander and Mountain Crest brands, ranked No. 14 and New Glarus Brewing Company, New Glarus, Wisconsin, whose brands include Spotted Cow, Fat Squirrel and Uff-da, ranked No. 32.[113]

Present economy

Milwaukee is the home to the international headquarters of six Fortune 500 companies: Johnson Controls, Northwestern Mutual, Manpower, Rockwell Automation, Harley-Davidson and WEC Energy Group.[114] Other companies based in Milwaukee include Briggs & Stratton, Brady Corporation, Baird (investment bank), Alliance Federated Energy, Sensient Technologies, Marshall & Ilsley (acquired by BMO Harris Bank in 2010),[115] Hal Leonard, Direct Supply, Rite-Hite, the American Society for Quality, A. O. Smith, Rexnord, Master Lock, Marcus Corporation, REV Group, American Signal Corporation,[116] GE Healthcare, Diagnostic Imaging and Clinical Systems, and MGIC Investments. The Milwaukee metropolitan area ranks fifth in the United States in terms of the number of Fortune 500 company headquarters as a share of the population. Milwaukee also has a large number of financial service firms, particularly those specializing in mutual funds and transaction processing systems, and a number of publishing and printing companies.

Service and managerial jobs are the fastest-growing segments of the Milwaukee economy, and health care alone makes up 27% of the jobs in the city.[117]

Culture

 
Milwaukee's skyline visible from a sailboat out on Lake Michigan

Milwaukee is a popular location for sailing, boating, and kayaking on Lake Michigan, ethnic dining, and cultural festivals. Often referred to as the City of Festivals[citation needed], Milwaukee has various cultural events which take place throughout the summer at Henry Maier Festival Park, on the lake. Museums and cultural events, such as Jazz in the Park, occur weekly in downtown parks. A 2011 study by Walk Score ranked Milwaukee 15th most walkable of fifty largest U.S. cities.[118] In 2018, the city was voted "The Coolest City in the Midwest" by Vogue.[119]

Museums

Art

  • The Milwaukee Art Museum is perhaps Milwaukee's most visually prominent cultural attraction; especially its $100 million wing designed by Santiago Calatrava in his first American commission.[120] The museum includes a brise soleil, a moving sunscreen that unfolds similarly to the wing of a bird.
  • The Grohmann Museum, at Milwaukee School of Engineering contains the world's most comprehensive art collection dedicated to the evolution of human work.[121] It houses the Man at Work collection, which comprises more than 700 paintings and sculptures dating from 1580 to the present. The museum also features a rooftop sculpture garden.
  • Haggerty Museum of Art, on the Marquette University campus houses several classical masterpieces and is open to the public.
  • The Villa Terrace Decorative Arts Museum is the former home of Lloyd Smith, president of the A.O. Smith corporation, and has a terraced garden, an assortment of Renaissance art, and rotating exhibits.[122]
  • Charles Allis Art Museum, in the Tudor-style mansion of Charles Allis, hosts several changing exhibits every year in the building's original antique furnished setting.

Science and natural history

 
The Calling I-beams
  • The Milwaukee Public Museum has been Milwaukee's primary natural history and human history museum for 125 years, with over 150,000 square feet (14,000 m2) of permanent exhibits.[123] Exhibits feature Africa, Europe, the Arctic, Oceania, and South and Middle America, the ancient Western civilizations ("Crossroads of Civilization"), dinosaurs, the tropical rainforest, streets of Old Milwaukee, a European Village, live insects and arthropods ("Bugs Alive!") a Samson Gorilla replica, the Puelicher Butterfly Wing, hands-on laboratories, and animatronics. The museum also contains an IMAX movie theater/planetarium. Milwaukee Public Museum owns the world's largest dinosaur skull.[124]
  • Discovery World, Milwaukee's largest museum dedicated to science, is just south of the Milwaukee Art Museum along the lake front. Visitors are drawn by its high-tech, hand-on exhibits, salt water and freshwater aquariums, as well as touch tanks and digital theaters. A double helix staircase wraps around the 40-foot (12 m) kinetic sculpture of a human genome. The S/V Dennis Sullivan Schooner Ship docked at Discovery World is the world's only re-creation of an 1880s-era three-masted vessel and the first schooner to be built in Milwaukee in over 100 years. It teaches visitors about the Great Lakes and Wisconsin's maritime history.
  • Betty Brinn Children's Museum[125] is geared toward children under ten years of age and is filled with hands-on exhibits and interactive programs, offering families a chance to learn together. Voted one of the top ten museums for children by Parents Magazine, it exemplifies the philosophy that constructive play nurtures the mind.
  • Mitchell Park Horticultural Conservatory (Mitchell Park Domes or, simply, the Domes) is a conservatory at Mitchell Park. It is owned and operated by the Milwaukee County Park System, and replaced the original Milwaukee Conservatory which stood from 1898 to 1955. The three domes display a large variety of plant and bird life. The conservatory includes the Tropical Dome, the Arid Dome and the Show Dome, which hosts four seasonal (cultural, literary, or historic) shows and one Christmas exhibit held annually in December for visitors to enjoy. The Domes are deteriorating rapidly "and the popular horticultural conservatory will close within a few years unless $30 million is found to do just basic repairs."[126]

Social and cultural history

  • Pabst Mansion Built in 1892 by beer tycoon Frederick Pabst, this Flemish Renaissance Mansion was once considered the jewel of Milwaukee's famous avenue of mansions called the "Grand Avenue". Interior rooms have been restored with period furniture, to create an authentic replica of a Victorian Mansion. Nationally recognized as a house museum.
  • Milwaukee County Historical Society features Milwaukee during the late 19th century through the mid-20th century. Housed within an architectural landmark, the Milwaukee's Historical Society features a panoramic painting of Milwaukee, firefighting equipment, period replicas of a pharmacy and a bank, and Children's world – an exhibit that includes vintage toys, clothes and school materials. The museum houses a research library, where scenes from the movie Public Enemies were shot.
  • Wisconsin Black Historical Society,[127] whose mission is to document and preserve the historical heritage of African descent in Wisconsin, exhibiting collecting and disseminating materials depicting this heritage.
  • America's Black Holocaust Museum, founded by lynching survivor James Cameron, featured exhibits which chronicle the injustices suffered throughout history by African Americans in the United States. The museum first closed in July 2008 as a result of financial difficulties.[128] The museum reopened in 2012 as a virtual museum with the original building demolished. As of 2018 a new building housing the museum has opened.[129][130]
  • Jewish Museum Milwaukee,[131] is dedicated to preserving and presenting the history of the Jewish people in southeastern Wisconsin and celebrating the continuum of Jewish heritage and culture.
  • Mitchell Gallery of Flight, at Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport, Milwaukee's aviation and historical enthusiasts experience the history of Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport with a visit to the Gallery of Flight. Exhibits include General Billy Mitchell; replicas of past and present aircraft including the Lawson Airline, the first commercial airliner; the Graf Zeppelin II, the sistership to the tragically legendary Hindenburg; a 1911 Curtis Pusher, an airplane with the propeller in the rear of the plane; and the present day giant of the sky, the 747. Other exhibits include commercial air memorabilia, early aviation engines and airport beacons.
  • Harley-Davidson Museum, opened in 2008, pays tribute to Harley-Davidson motorcycles and is the only museum of its type in the world.[citation needed]
  • Chudnow Museum of Yesteryear

Arenas and performing arts

Performing arts groups and venues include:

In 1984 ComedySportz was founded in Milwaukee by native Dick Chudnow and has since become a franchise, with numerous venues throughout the United States and England. In July 2009 the ComedySportz world championship returned to Milwaukee to coincide with its 25th anniversary.

Public art and monuments

Milwaukee has some 75 sculptures to honor the many people and topics reflecting the city's history.[132] Among the more prominent monuments are:

Additionally, Milwaukee has a burgeoning mural arts scene. Black Cat Alley is a well-known arts destination in a one-block alleyway in the East Side neighborhood of Milwaukee, recognized for its street art mural installations. It is behind the historic Oriental Theatre and includes both temporary and semi-permanent installations by a variety of artists and art groups. Another highly visible corridor of street art in Milwaukee is on the south side in the Walker's Point neighborhood, especially along 5th and 2nd streets.

Festivals

 
Henry Maier Festival Grounds during Summerfest

The city hosts an annual lakefront music festival called Summerfest. Listed in the 1999 Guinness Book of World Records as the largest music festival in the world, in 2017 Summerfest attracted 831,769.[133] The adjacent city of West Allis has been the site of the Wisconsin State Fair for over a century.

Milwaukee hosts a variety of primarily ethnically themed festivals throughout the summer. Held generally on the lakefront Summerfest grounds, these festivals span several days (typically Friday plus the weekend) and celebrate Milwaukee's history and diversity. Festivals for the LGBT (PrideFest) and Polish (Polish Fest) communities are typically held in June. Summerfest spans 11 days at the end of June and beginning of July. There are French (Bastille Days), Greek, Italian (Festa Italiana) and German (German Fest) festivals in July. The African, Arab, Irish (Irish Fest), Mexican, and American Indian events wrap it up from August through September.[134] Milwaukee is also home to Trainfest, the largest operating model railroad show in America, in November.

Cuisine

Milwaukee's ethnic cuisines include German, Italian, Russian, Hmong, French, Serbian, Polish, Thai, Japanese, Chinese, Mexican, Indian, Korean, Vietnamese, Turkish, Middle Eastern, and Ethiopian.[citation needed]

Milwaukee County hosts the Zoo-A La Carte at the Milwaukee County Zoo, and various ethnic festivals like Summerfest, German Fest, and Festa Italiana to celebrate various types of cuisine in summer months.[citation needed]

Music

 
Aerial view of "Jazz in the Park", Cathedral Square Park

Milwaukee has a long history of musical activity. The first organized musical society, called "Milwaukee Beethoven Society" formed in 1843, three years before the city was incorporated.[135]

The large concentrations of German and other European immigrants contributed to the musical character of the city. Saengerfeste were held regularly.[136]

In the early 20th century, guitarist Les Paul and pianist Liberace were some of the area's most famous musicians. Both Paul, born in Waukesha, and Liberace, born in West Allis, launched their careers in Milwaukee music venues. Paramount Records, primarily a jazz and blues record label, was founded in Grafton, a northern suburb of Milwaukee, in the 1920s and 1930s. Hal Leonard Corporation, founded in 1947 is one of the world's largest music print publishers, and is headquartered in Milwaukee.[137] More recently, Milwaukee has a history of rock, hip hop, jazz, soul, blues, punk, ska, industrial music, electronica, world music, and pop music bands.

Milwaukee's most famous music venue is Summerfest. Founded in 1968, Summerfest features 700–800 live musical acts across 12 stages during 11 days over a 12-day period beginning in late June; while the dates adjust each year, Summerfest always includes July 4. On the Summerfest grounds, the largest venue is the American Family Insurance Amphitheater with a 23,000 person capacity. Adjacent is the BMO Harris Pavilion, which has a capacity of roughly 10,000. The BMO Harris Pavilion also hosts numerous concerts and events outside of Summerfest; other stages are also used during the numerous other festivals held on the grounds.

Venues such as Pabst Theater, Marcus Center for Performing Arts, the Helene Zelazo Center for the Performing Arts, Marcus Amphitheater (Summerfest Grounds), Riverside Theater, the Northern Lights Theater, and The Rave frequently bring internationally known acts to Milwaukee. 'Jazz in the Park', a weekly jazz show held at downtown Cathedral Square Park, has become a summer tradition; free, public performances with a picnic environment.[138] Nearby Pere Marquette Park hosts "River Rhythms" on Wednesday nights.

The Milwaukee area is known for producing national talents such as Steve Miller (rock), Wladziu Valentino Liberace (piano), Al Jarreau (jazz), Eric Benet (neo-soul), Speech (hip hop), Daryl Stuermer (rock), Streetz-n-Young Deuces (Hip-Hop), BoDeans (rock), Les Paul (jazz), the Violent Femmes (alternative), Coo Coo Cal (rap), Die Kreuzen (punk), Andy Hurley of Fall Out Boy (punk), Eyes To The Sky (hardcore), Rico Love (R&B), Andrew 'The Butcher' Mrotek of The Academy Is... (alt-rock), Showoff (pop-punk), The Promise Ring (indie), Lights Out Asia (post-rock), the Gufs (alt rock), Brief Candles (rock), IshDARR (rap), Decibully (indie), and Reyna (synth-pop).[citation needed][importance?]

Sports

 
American Family Field (formerly known as Miller Park), home of the Brewers
 

Currently, Milwaukee's sports teams include:

Club Sport Founded Current League Stadium
Milwaukee Bucks Basketball 1968 Eastern and Central (NBA) Fiserv Forum
Milwaukee Brewers Baseball 1970 National League (MLB) American Family Field
Milwaukee Bavarians Soccer 1929[139] United Premier Soccer League Heartland Value Fund Stadium
Marquette Golden Eagles Basketball 1916 Big East Conference (NCAA) Fiserv Forum
Milwaukee Panthers Basketball 1956 Horizon League (NCAA) UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena
Milwaukee Admirals Hockey 1970 American Hockey League UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena
Milwaukee Wave Indoor soccer 1984 Major Arena Soccer League UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena
Brewcity Bruisers Roller Derby 2006 WFTDA UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena
Milwaukee Milkmen Baseball 2018 American Association of Independent Professional Baseball Franklin Field
USL Milwaukee Soccer 2022 USL Championship Iron District Stadium
FC Milwaukee Torrent Soccer 2015 NPSL (Men's Team) WPSL (Women's Team) Hart Park Stadium

The city currently has no teams in the NFL or NHL, two of the major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada. Milwaukee supported the NFL's Milwaukee Badgers in the 1920s, and today the city is considered a home market for the NFL's Green Bay Packers.[140] The team split its home schedule between Green Bay and Milwaukee from 1933 to 1994, with the majority of the Milwaukee games being played at County Stadium.[141] Former season ticketholders for the Milwaukee games continue to receive preference for one pre-season and the second and fifth regular season games at Lambeau Field each season, along with playoff games through a lottery under the "Gold Package" plan.[142] The Packers' longtime flagship station is Milwaukee-based WTMJ AM 620.[143]

Milwaukee has a rich history of involvement in professional and nonprofessional sports, since the 19th century. Abraham Lincoln watched cricket in Milwaukee in 1849 when he attended a game between Chicago and Milwaukee. In 1854, the Milwaukee Cricket Club had 150 members.[144]

Milwaukee was also the host city of the International Cycling Classic, which included the men's and women's Superweek Pro Tour races, featuring professional and amateur cyclists and teams from across the U.S. and more than 20 foreign countries.

The city's two major professional sports teams are the Milwaukee Brewers of MLB and the Milwaukee Bucks of the NBA. The Milwaukee Bucks have won two NBA Championships, in 1971 and 2021.

Parks and recreation

 
Panoramic view of Lake Park, c. 1890.
 
Leisure boats on the Milwaukee River

Milwaukee County is known for its well-developed Parks of Milwaukee park system.[145] The "Grand Necklace of Parks", designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, designer of New York's Central Park, includes Lake Park, River Park (now Riverside Park), and West Park (now Washington Park). Milwaukee County Parks offer facilities for sunbathing, picnics, grilling, disc golf, and ice skating.[146] Milwaukee has over 140 parks with over 15,000 acres (6,100 ha) of parks and parkways. In its 2013 ParkScore ranking, The Trust for Public Land, a national land conservation organization, reported Milwaukee had the 19th best park system among the 50 most populous U.S. cities.[147]

Parks and nature centers

Milwaukee's parks are home to several nature centers. The Urban Ecology Center offers programming for adults and children from its three branches located in Riverside Park, Washington Park, and the Menomonee Valley (near Three Bridges Park).[148] The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources operates a nature center at Havenwoods State Forest.[149] The city is also served by two nearby suburban nature centers. Wehr Nature Center is operated by Milwaukee County in Whitnall Park, located in Franklin, Wisconsin. Admission is free, and parking costs $4 per vehicle.[150] The Schlitz Audubon Nature Center in Bayside, Wisconsin charges admittance fees for visitors.

The Monarch Trail, on the Milwaukee County Grounds in Wauwatosa, is a 1.25-mile (2 km) trail that highlights the fall migration of the monarch butterflies.[151]

During the summer months, Cathedral Park in Downtown Milwaukee hosts "Jazz in the Park" on Thursday nights.[152] Nearby Pere Marquette Park hosts "River Rhythms" on Wednesday nights.

Public and farmers markets

Milwaukee Public Market, in the Third Ward neighborhood, is an indoor market that sells produce, seafood, meats, cheeses, vegetables, candies, and flowers from local businesses.

Milwaukee County Farmers Markets, held in season, sell fresh produce, meats, cheeses, jams, jellies, preserves and syrups, and plants. Farmers markets also feature artists and craftspeople. Locations include: Aur Farmers Market, Brown Deer Farmers Market, Cudahy Farmers Market, East Town Farm Market, Enderis Park Farmers Market, Fondy Farmers Market, Mitchell Street Market, Riverwest Gardeners' Market, Silver Spring Farmers Market, South Milwaukee Farmers Market, South Shore Farmers Market, Uptown Farmers Market, Wauwatosa Farmers Market, West Allis Farmers Market, and Westown Market on the Park.

Government and politics

Milwaukee has a mayor-council form of government. With the election of Mayor John O. Norquist in 1988, the city adopted a cabinet form of government with the mayor appointing department heads not otherwise elected or appointed—notably the Fire and Police Chiefs. While this gave the mayor greater control of the city's day-to-day operations, the Common Council retains almost complete control over the city's finances and the mayor, with the exception of his proposed annual budget, cannot directly introduce legislation. The Common Council consists of 15 members, one from each district in the city.[citation needed]

Milwaukee has a history of giving long tenures to its mayors; from Frank Zeidler to Tom Barrett, the city had only four elected mayors (and one acting) in a 73-year period.[153] When 28-year incumbent Henry Maier retired in 1988, he held the record for longest term of service for a city of Milwaukee's size,[citation needed] and when Barrett retired in 2021, he was the longest-serving mayor of any of the United States' 50 largest cities.[154]

In addition to the election of a Mayor and Common Council on the city level, Milwaukee residents elect county representatives to the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisors, as well as a Milwaukee County Executive. The current County Executive is David Crowley.[citation needed]

Milwaukee has been a Democratic stronghold for more than a century at the federal level.[155] At the local level, Socialists often won the mayorship and (for briefer periods) other city and county offices during much of the first sixty years of the 20th century. The city is split between seven State Senate districts, each of which is divided between three state Assembly districts. All but four state legislators representing the city are Democrats; the four Republicans—two in the State Assembly and two in the State Senate—represent outer portions of the city that are part of districts dominated by heavily Republican suburban counties. In 2008, Barack Obama won Milwaukee with 77% of the vote.[156] Tim Carpenter (D), Lena Taylor (D), Robyn Vining (D), LaTonya Johnson (D), Chris Larson (D), Alberta Darling (R), and Dave Craig (R) represent Milwaukee in the State Senate; Daniel Riemer (D), JoCasta Zamarripa (D), Marisabel Cabrera (D), David Bowen (D), Jason Fields (D), LaKeshia Myers (D), Sara Rodriguez (D), Dale P. Kooyenga (R), Kalan Haywood (D), David Crowley (D), Evan Goyke (D), Jonathan Brostoff (D), Christine Sinicki (D), Janel Brandtjen (R), and Mike Kuglitsch (R) represent Milwaukee in the State Assembly.

Milwaukee makes up the overwhelming majority of Wisconsin's 4th congressional district. The district is heavily Democratic, with victory in the Democratic primary often being considered tantamount to election.[157] The district is currently represented by Democrat Gwen Moore. A Republican has not represented a significant portion of Milwaukee in Congress since Charles J. Kersten lost his seat in the 5th district in 1954 to Democrat Henry S. Reuss. The small portions of the city extending into Waukesha and Washington counties are part of the 5th District, represented by Republican Scott L. Fitzgerald.

Milwaukee's Mexican Consultate serves 65 counties in Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.[158]

Crime

In 2001 and 2007, Milwaukee ranked among the ten most dangerous large cities in the United States.[159][160] Despite its improvement since then, Milwaukee still fares worse when comparing specific crime types to the national average (e.g., homicide, rape, robbery, aggravated assault)[161][162] The Milwaukee Police Department's Gang Unit was reactivated in 2004 after Nannette Hegerty was sworn in as chief. In 2006, 4,000 charges were brought against suspects through Milwaukee's Gang Unit.[163] In 2013 there were 105 murders in Milwaukee and 87 homicides the following year.[164] In 2015, 146 people were killed in the city.[165] In 2018, Milwaukee was ranked the eighth most dangerous city in the US.[166]

In 2020, Milwaukee recorded 189 homicides,[167] exceeding the all-time homicide record of 174 which was set in 1993.[168]

Poverty

As of 2016, Milwaukee currently ranks as the second poorest U.S. city with over 500,000 residents, falling behind only Detroit.[169] In 2013, a Point-In-Time survey estimated 1,500 people were homeless on Milwaukee's streets each night.[170] The city's homeless and poor are aided by several local nonprofits, including the Milwaukee Rescue Mission.

Election results

Milwaukee city vote
by party in presidential elections
Year Democratic Republican Third Parties
2020[171] 78.83% 194,661 19.60% 48,414 1.57% 3,875
2016[172] 76.55% 188,657 18.43% 45,411 5.02% 12,377
2012[173] 79.27% 227,384 19.72% 56,553 1.01% 2,896
2008[174] 77.82% 213,436 21.03% 57,665 1.15% 3,152
2004[175] 71.83% 198,907 27.35% 75,746 0.82% 2,268

Education

 
The John P. Raynor, S.J. Library at Marquette University

Primary and secondary education

Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS) is the largest school district in Wisconsin and thirty third in the nation. As of 2007, it had an enrollment of 89,912 students[176] and as of 2006 employed 11,100 full-time and substitute teachers in 323 schools. Milwaukee Public Schools operate as magnet schools, with individualized specialty areas for interests in academics or the arts. Washington High School, Riverside University High School, Rufus King High School, Ronald Wilson Reagan College Preparatory High School, Samuel Morse Middle School for the Gifted and Talented, Golda Meir School, Milwaukee High School of the Arts, and Lynde & Harry Bradley Technology and Trade School are some of the magnet schools in Milwaukee. In 2007, 17 MPS high schools appeared on a national list of "dropout factories"—schools where fewer than 60% of freshmen graduate on time.[177]

Milwaukee is also home to over two dozen private or parochial high schools, such as Marquette University High School, and many private and parochial middle and elementary schools. In 1990, Milwaukee became the first city in the United States to offer a school voucher program.

Of persons in Milwaukee aged 25 and above, 86.9% have a high school diploma, and 29.7% have a bachelor's degree or higher. (2012)[178]

Higher education

Milwaukee area universities and colleges:

Media

 
The WITI TV Tower is in Shorewood, off of the Oak Leaf Trail, just north of Capitol Drive.

Milwaukee's daily newspaper is the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel which was formed when the morning paper the Milwaukee Sentinel merged with the afternoon paper Milwaukee Journal. The city has two free distribution alternative publications, Shepherd Express and Wisconsin Gazette. Other local newspapers, city guides and magazines with large distributions include M Magazine, Milwaukee Magazine, The Bay View Compass, Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service, Milwaukee Independent, Riverwest Currents, The Milwaukee Courier and Milwaukee Community Journal. Urban Milwaukee and OnMilwaukee.com are online publications providing political and real-estate news as well as stories about cultural events and entertainment. The UWM Post is the independent, student-run weekly at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.

Milwaukee's major network television affiliates are WTMJ 4 (NBC), WITI 6 (Fox), WISN 12 (ABC), WVTV 18 (CW), WVTV-DT2 24 (MyNetworkTV), and WDJT 58 (CBS). Spanish-language programming is on WTSJ-LD 38 (Azteca America) and WYTU-LD 63 (Telemundo). Milwaukee's public broadcasting stations are WMVS 10 and WMVT 36.

Other television stations in the Milwaukee market include WMKE-CD 7 (Quest), WVCY 30 (FN), WBME-CD 41 (Me-TV), WMLW-TV 49 (Independent), WWRS 52 (TBN), Sportsman Channel, and WPXE 55 (ION)

There are numerous radio stations throughout Milwaukee and the surrounding area.

There are two cable PEG channels in Milwaukee: channels 13 and 25.

Until 2015, Journal Communications (a NYSE-traded corporation) published the Journal Sentinel and well over a dozen local weekly newspapers in the metropolitan area. At that time, Journal was split into the Journal Media Group for publishing, while the television and radio stations went to the E. W. Scripps Company (Journal founded WTMJ-TV, along with WTMJ and WKTI). As a result, it was criticized for having a near-monopoly in local news coverage.[179][180] Journal Media Group merged with Gannett in 2017, while Scripps sold the radio stations in 2018 to Good Karma Brands, effectively splitting off the monopoly completely.

Infrastructure

Health care

Milwaukee's health care industry includes several health systems. The Milwaukee Regional Medical Complex, between 8700 and 9200 West Wisconsin Avenue, is on the Milwaukee County grounds. This area includes the Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Froedtert Hospital, BloodCenter of Wisconsin, the Ronald McDonald House, Curative Rehabilitation, and the Medical College of Wisconsin. Aurora Health Care includes St. Luke's Medical Center, Aurora Sinai Medical Center, Aurora West Allis Medical Center, and St. Luke's SouthShore. Wheaton Franciscan Healthcare includes St. Joseph's Hospital, St. Francis Hospital, The Wisconsin Heart Hospital, Elmbrook Memorial (Brookfield), and other outpatient clinics in the Milwaukee area. Columbia St. Mary's Hospital is on Milwaukee's lakeshore and has established affiliations with Froedtert Hospital and the Medical College of Wisconsin. The Medical College of Wisconsin is one of two medical schools in Wisconsin and the only one in Milwaukee.

Other health care non-profit organizations in Milwaukee include national headquarters of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology and the Endometriosis Association.

Transportation

Airports

 
Timmerman Field

Milwaukee has two airports: Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport (KMKE) on the southern edge of the city, which handles the region's commercial traffic, and Lawrence J. Timmerman Airport (KMWC), known locally as Timmerman Field, on the northwest side along Appleton Avenue.

Mitchell is served by twelve airlines,[181] which offer roughly 240 daily departures and 245 daily arrivals. Approximately 90 cities are served nonstop or direct from Mitchell International. It is the largest airport in Wisconsin and the 34th largest in the nation.[182] The airport terminal is open 24 hours a day. Since 2005, Mitchell International Airport has been connected by the Amtrak Hiawatha train service, which provides airport access via train to Chicago and downtown Milwaukee. Southwest, Frontier Airlines, American Airlines, United Airlines, Air Canada, and Delta Air Lines are among the carriers using Milwaukee's Mitchell International Airport gates.[181] In July 2015, it served 610,271 passengers.[183]

Intercity rail and bus

 
Milwaukee Intermodal Station

Milwaukee's Amtrak station was renovated in 2007 to create Milwaukee Intermodal Station near downtown Milwaukee and the Third Ward to provide Amtrak riders access to Greyhound Lines, Jefferson Lines, 24 hour Megabus service, and other intercity bus operators. The station itself replaces the previous main railway station, Everett Street Depot. Milwaukee is served by Amtrak's Hiawatha Service passenger train up to seven times daily between Milwaukee Intermodal Station and Chicago Union Station, including a stop at the Milwaukee Airport Railroad Station, Sturtevant, Wisconsin, and Glenview, Illinois. Amtrak's Empire Builder stops at Milwaukee Intermodal Station and connects to Chicago and the Pacific Northwest, with several stops along the way.

In 2010, $800 million in federal funds were allocated to the creation of high-speed rail links from Milwaukee to Chicago and Madison,[184] but the funds were rejected by the then newly elected Governor of Wisconsin Scott Walker.[185] and the trains were sold to Michigan. In 2016, WisDOT and IDOT conducted studies to upgrade service on the Amtrak Hiawatha line from seven to ten times daily between downtown Milwaukee and downtown Chicago.[186][187] As a result of the 2021 infrastructure bill and the "Amtrak Connects Us" initiative, the Milwaukee Intermodal Station is again projected to serve passenger trains to Madison and Green Bay, with the goal of the new routes being operational by 2035.[188]

Transit

  •  
    Two MCTS buses
    Bus: The Milwaukee County Transit System provides bus services within Milwaukee County. The Badger Bus station in downtown Milwaukee provides bus service between Milwaukee and Madison. An East/West Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line between downtown and the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center is also currently under construction.[189]
  •  
    A Milwaukee streetcar
    Streetcar: A modern streetcar system, The Hop, connects Milwaukee Intermodal Station, downtown Milwaukee, and Ogden Avenue on the city's Lower East Side. The line began service November 2, 2018 with future plans for extensions the lakefront and surrounding neighborhoods.[190][191]
  • Commuter rail: Milwaukee currently has no commuter rail system. Previous efforts to develop one proposed a 0.5% sales tax in Milwaukee, Racine and Kenosha counties to fund an expansion of Metra's Union Pacific / North Line from Kenosha to Milwaukee Intermodal Station. However, Wisconsin repealed the legislation authorizing such efforts in June 2011, and the project is now defunct.[192]

Highways

 
Milwaukee at 3:03:05 AM in 2015. Photo reversed from the original so north would point up.

Three of Wisconsin's Interstate highways intersect in Milwaukee. Interstate 94 (I-94) comes north from Chicago to enter Milwaukee and continues west to Madison. The stretch of I-94 from Seven Mile Road to the Marquette Interchange in Downtown Milwaukee is known as the North-South Freeway. I-94 from downtown Milwaukee west to Wisconsin 16 is known as the East-West Freeway.

I-43 enters Milwaukee from Beloit in the southwest and continues north along Lake Michigan to Green Bay via Sheboygan and Manitowoc. I-43 southwest of I-41/I-894/US 41/US 45 Hale Interchange is known as the Rock Freeway. I-43 is cosigned with I-894 East and I-41/US 41 South to I-94 is known as the Airport Freeway. At I-94, I-43 follows I-94 to the Marquette Interchange. I-43 continues north known as the North-South Freeway to Wisconsin Highway 57 near Port Washington.

Approved in 2015, Interstate 41 follows I-94 north from the state line before turning west at the Mitchell Interchange to the Hale Interchange and then north to Green Bay via Fond du Lac, Oshkosh and Appleton. I-41/US 41/US 45 from the Hale Interchange to Wisconsin Hwy 145 is known as the Zoo Freeway.

Milwaukee has two auxiliary Interstate Highways, I-894 and I-794. I-894 bypasses downtown Milwaukee on the west and south sides of the city from the Zoo Interchange to the Mitchell Interchange. I-894 is part of the Zoo Freeway and the Airport Freeway. I-794 extends east from the Marquette Interchange to Lake Michigan before turning south over the Hoan Bridge toward Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport, turning into Highway 794 along the way. This is known as the Lake Freeway.

Milwaukee is also served by three US Highways. U.S. Highway 18 (US 18) provides a link from downtown to points west heading to Waukesha along Wells Street, 17th/16th Streets, Highland Avenue, 35th Street, Wisconsin Avenue, and Blue Mound Road. US 41 and US 45 both provide north–south freeway transportation on the western side of the city. The freeway system in Milwaukee carries roughly 25% of all travel in Wisconsin.[193]

Milwaukee County is also served by several Wisconsin highways. These include the following:

  • Hwy. 24 (Forest Home Avenue)
  • Hwy. 32 (Chicago Avenue, College Avenue, S. Lake Drive, Howard Avenue, Kinnickinnic Avenue, 1st Street, Pittsburgh Avenue, Milwaukee Street, State Street, Prospect Avenue NB/Farwell Avenue SB, Bradford Avenue, N. Lake Drive, Brown Deer Road)
  • Hwy. 36 (Loomis Road)
  • Hwy. 38 (Howell Avenue, Chase Avenue, 6th Street)
  • Hwy. 57 (27th Street, Highland Avenue, 20th Street, Capitol Drive, Green Bay Avenue)
  • Hwy. 59 (Greenfield Avenue/National Avenue)
  • Hwy. 100 (Ryan Road, Lovers Lane Road, 108th Street, Mayfair Road, Brown Deer Road)
  • Hwy. 119 (Airport Spur)
  • Hwy. 145 (Fond du Lac Ave, Fond du Lac Freeway)
  • Hwy. 175 (Appleton Avenue, Lisbon Avenue, Stadium Freeway)
  • Hwy 181 (84th Street, Glenview Avenue, Wauwatosa Avenue, 76th Street)
  • Hwy. 190 (Capitol Drive)
  • Hwy. 241 (27th Street)
  • Hwy. 794 (Lake Parkway)

In 2010, the Milwaukee area was ranked the 4th best city for commuters by Forbes.[194]

Water

 
The Lake Express Terminal

Milwaukee's main port, Port of Milwaukee, handled 2.4 million metric tons of cargo through its municipal port in 2014.[195] Steel and salt are handled at the port.

Milwaukee connects with Muskegon, Michigan, through the Lake Express high-speed auto and passenger ferry. The Lake Express travels across Lake Michigan from late spring to the fall of each year.

Bicycle

Milwaukee has over 105 miles (169 km) of bicycle lanes and trails, most of which run alongside or near its rivers and Lake Michigan. The Oak Leaf Trail, a multi-use recreational trail, provides bicycle trails throughout the city and county. Still pending are the creation of bicycle lanes along major commuting routes, such as the Hoan Bridge connector between downtown and the suburbs to the south. The city has also identified over 250 miles (400 km) of streets on which bike lanes will fit. It has created a plan labeling 145 miles (233 km) of those as high priority for receiving bike lanes.[196] As part of the city's Bicycle and Pedestrian Task Force's mission to "make Milwaukee more bicycle and pedestrian friendly", over 700 bike racks have been installed throughout the city.[197] The Bicycle Federation of Wisconsin[198] holds an annual Bike to Work Week. The event, held in May each year, has frequently featured a commuter race between a car, a bus, and a bike; and also a morning ride into work with the mayor. In 2006, Milwaukee obtained bronze-level status from the League of American Bicyclists,[199] a rarity for a city its size.[200]

In 2009, the Milwaukee County Transit System began installing bicycle racks to the front of county buses.[201] This "green" effort was part of a settlement of an asbestos lawsuit filed by the state against the county in 2006.[202] The lawsuit cites the release of asbestos into the environment when the Courthouse Annex was demolished.[203]

In August 2014, Milwaukee debuted a bicycle sharing system called Bublr Bikes, which is a partnership between the City of Milwaukee and a local non-profit, Midwest Bike Share (dba Bublr Bikes).[204][205] As of September 2016, the system operates 39 stations throughout downtown, the East Side, and the UW-Milwaukee campus area and near downtown neighborhoods. The City of Milwaukee installed another ten Bublr Bikes stations in October 2016, and the adjacent suburb of Wauwatosa installed eight stations in September 2016, which will bring the system size to 58 stations by the end of 2016. More stations are scheduled for installation in the Village of Shorewood and the City of West Allis in 2017. Future system expansion in the City of Milwaukee is also expected as the City was awarded a second federal Congestion Mitigation/Air Quality (CMAQ) program grant ($1.9 million) to add more stations starting in 2018.[206]

Walkability

A 2015 study by Walk Score ranked Milwaukee as the 15th most walkable out of the 50 largest U.S. cities.[207] As a whole, the city has a score of 62 out of 100. However, several of the more densely populated neighborhoods have much higher scores: Juneautown has a score of 95; the Lower East Side has a score of 91; Yankee Hill scored 91; and the Marquette and Murray Hill neighborhoods both scored 89 each.[208] Those ratings range from "A Walker's Paradise" to "Very Walkable."

Modal characteristics

According to the 2016 American Community Survey, 71% of working city of Milwaukee residents commuted by driving alone, 10.4% carpooled, 8.2% used public transportation, and 4.9% walked. About 2% used all other forms of transportation, including taxicab, motorcycle, and bicycle. About 3.4% of working city of Milwaukee residents worked at home.[209] In 2015, 17.9% of city of Milwaukee households were without a car, which increased to 18.7% in 2016. The national average was 8.7 percent in 2016. Milwaukee averaged 1.3 cars per household in 2016, compared to a national average of 1.8 per household.[210]

City development

On February 10, 2015, a streetcar connecting the Milwaukee Intermodal Station with the city's Lower East Side was approved by the Common Council, bringing decades of sometimes acrimonious debate to a pause. On a 9–6 vote, the council approved a measure that established the project's $124 million capital budget, its estimated $3.2 million operating and maintenance budget and its 2.5-mile (4.0 km) route, which includes a lakefront spur connecting the line to the proposed $122 million, 44-story Couture. Construction on the Milwaukee Streetcar began March 2017, with initial operation by mid-2018.[191][211] The Lakefront service is expected to start operation by 2019.[191]

Northwestern Mutual Tower and Commons stands 550 feet (170 m) tall and has 32 stories, making it the second tallest building in Milwaukee.[212][213]

Fiserv Forum, a new multipurpose arena at 1111 Vel R. Phillips Avenue, has been built to accommodate the Milwaukee Bucks and Marquette Golden Eagles, as well as college and professional ice hockey games. Construction on the $524 million project began in November 2015 and opened to the public on August 26, 2018.[214] The arena is intended to be the focal point of a "live block" zone that includes public space surrounded by both commercial and residential developments. The arena has a transparent facade and a curved roof and side that is meant to evoke the water forms of nearby Lake Michigan and the Milwaukee River.[215]

In popular culture

Notable people

Sister cities

Milwaukee's sister cities are:[221]

Friendship cities

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The part in Washington County is bordered by the southeast corner of Germantown, while the part in Waukesha County is bordered by the southeast corner of Menomonee Falls, north of the village of Butler. Both areas were annexed to Milwaukee for industrial reasons; the Waukesha County portion contains a Cargill plant for Ambrosia Chocolate (known as "the Ambrosia triangle"), while the Washington County portion contains a Waste Management facility.[citation needed]
  2. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  3. ^ Records kept January 1871 to February 1941 at the Weather Bureau Office and at General Mitchell Int'l since March 1941. For more information, see Threadex
  4. ^ The total for each race includes those who reported that race alone or in combination with other races. People who reported a combination of multiple races may be counted multiple times, so the sum of all percentages will exceed 100%.
  5. ^ Hispanic and Latino origins are separate from race in the U.S. Census. The Census does not distinguish between Latino origins alone or in combination. This row counts Hispanics and Latinos of any race.

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Further reading

External links

  • Official website
  • Greater Milwaukee Convention Bureau
  • Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce
  • State of the Re:Union
  • Sanborn fire insurance maps: 1894 vol 1 vol 2

milwaukee, this, article, about, city, within, county, wisconsin, county, itself, county, wisconsin, other, uses, disambiguation, ɔː, officially, city, most, populated, city, state, wisconsin, county, seat, county, with, population, 2020, census, 31st, largest. This article is about the city within Milwaukee County Wisconsin For the county itself see Milwaukee County Wisconsin For other uses see Milwaukee disambiguation Milwaukee m ɪ l ˈ w ɔː k i mil WAW kee 14 officially the City of Milwaukee is the most populated city in the U S state of Wisconsin and the county seat of Milwaukee County With a population of 577 222 at the 2020 census Milwaukee is the 31st largest city in the United States 15 16 the fifth largest city in the Midwestern United States 17 and the second largest city on Lake Michigan s shore behind Chicago Milwaukee WisconsinCityCity of MilwaukeeClockwise from top Milwaukee skyline from Discovery World downtown at night along the Milwaukee Riverwalk inside the Milwaukee Art Museum Milwaukee City Hall Burns Commons in the East Side neighborhood and the historic Mitchell BuildingFlagSealLogoNickname s Cream City 1 Brew City 2 Beer Capital of the World 3 Miltown 4 The Mil MKE The City of Festivals 5 The German Athens of America 6 The 414 7 Interactive map of MilwaukeeCoordinates 43 03 N 87 57 W 43 05 N 87 95 W 43 05 87 95 Coordinates 43 03 N 87 57 W 43 05 N 87 95 W 43 05 87 95CountryUnited StatesStateWisconsinCountiesMilwaukee Washington Waukesha OzaukeeIncorporatedJanuary 31 1846 176 years ago 1846 01 31 Founded bySolomon Juneau Byron Kilbourn and George H WalkerNamed forPotawatomi for gathering place by the water Government TypeStrong mayor council MayorCavalier Johnson D Area 8 City96 81 sq mi 250 75 km2 Land96 18 sq mi 249 12 km2 Water0 63 sq mi 1 63 km2 Elevation617 ft 188 m Population 2020 9 City577 222 Estimate 2021 10 569 330 Rank31st in the United States1st in Wisconsin Density6 001 48 sq mi 2 317 04 km2 Urban1 306 795 US 38th Urban density2 818 3 sq mi 1 088 2 km2 Metro 11 1 574 731 US 40th DemonymMilwaukeeanTime zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT ZIP Codes53172 532XX 53172 53201 53216 53218 53228 53233 53234 53237 53259 53263 53267 53268 53274 53278 53288 53290 53293 53295Area code414FIPS code55 53000 12 GNIS feature ID1577901 13 Amtrak stationMilwaukee Intermodal Station MKE Major airportMilwaukee Mitchell International Airport MKE InterstatesU S RoutesWebsitecity wbr milwaukee wbr govIt is the main cultural and economic center of the Milwaukee metropolitan area the fourth most densely populated metropolitan area in the Midwest 18 Milwaukee is considered a global city categorized as Gamma minus by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network 19 with a regional GDP of over 102 billion in 2020 20 Today Milwaukee is one of the most ethnically and culturally diverse cities in the U S 21 However it continues to be one of the most racially segregated largely as a result of early 20th century redlining 22 Its history was heavily influenced by German immigrants in the 19th century and it continues to be a center for German American culture specifically becoming well known for its brewing industry In recent years Milwaukee has been undergoing its largest construction boom since the 1960s 23 Major additions to the city since the turn of the 21st century include the Wisconsin Center American Family Field The Hop streetcar system an expansion to the Milwaukee Art Museum Milwaukee Repertory Theater the Bradley Symphony Center 24 and Discovery World as well as major renovations to the UW Milwaukee Panther Arena Fiserv Forum opened in late 2018 and hosts sporting events and concerts Since 1968 Milwaukee has been home to Summerfest one of the largest music festivals in the world With regard to education Milwaukee is home to the Medical College of Wisconsin UW Milwaukee Marquette University MSOE and several other universities and colleges The city is home to two major professional sports teams the Bucks and the Brewers It is home to several Fortune 500 companies including Northwestern Mutual WEC Energy Group Rockwell Automation and Harley Davidson 25 Contents 1 History 1 1 Name 1 2 Native American peoples 1 3 European settlement and thereafter 1 4 Historic neighborhoods 2 Geography 2 1 Cityscape 2 2 Climate 2 2 1 Climate change 2 3 Water 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 Racial and ethnic groups 3 3 Religion 3 4 2000 census 4 Economy 4 1 Early economy 4 2 Brewing 4 3 Present economy 5 Culture 5 1 Museums 5 1 1 Art 5 1 2 Science and natural history 5 1 3 Social and cultural history 5 2 Arenas and performing arts 5 3 Public art and monuments 5 4 Festivals 5 5 Cuisine 5 6 Music 6 Sports 7 Parks and recreation 7 1 Parks and nature centers 7 2 Public and farmers markets 8 Government and politics 8 1 Crime 8 2 Poverty 8 3 Election results 9 Education 9 1 Primary and secondary education 9 2 Higher education 10 Media 11 Infrastructure 11 1 Health care 11 2 Transportation 11 2 1 Airports 11 2 2 Intercity rail and bus 11 2 3 Transit 11 2 4 Highways 11 2 5 Water 11 2 6 Bicycle 11 2 7 Walkability 11 2 8 Modal characteristics 11 3 City development 12 In popular culture 13 Notable people 14 Sister cities 14 1 Friendship cities 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Milwaukee Name Edit The name Milwaukee comes from the Algonquian word millioke meaning good beautiful and pleasant land compare Potawatomi minwaking Ojibwe ominowakiing or gathering place by the water Potawatomi manwaking Ojibwe omaniwakiing 26 27 Native American peoples Edit Indigenous cultures lived along the waterways for thousands of years The first recorded inhabitants of the Milwaukee area were various Native American tribes the Menominee Fox Mascouten Sauk Potawatomi and Ojibwe all Algic Algonquian peoples and the Ho Chunk Winnebago a Siouan people Many of these people had lived around Green Bay 28 before migrating to the Milwaukee area about the time of European contact In the second half of the 18th century the Native Americans living near Milwaukee played a role in all the major European wars on the American continent During the French and Indian War a group of Ojibwas and Pottawattamies from the far Lake Michigan i e the area from Milwaukee to Green Bay joined the French Canadian Daniel Lienard de Beaujeu at the Battle of the Monongahela 29 In the American Revolutionary War the Native Americans around Milwaukee were some of the few groups to ally with the rebel Continentals 30 After the American Revolutionary War the Native Americans fought the United States in the Northwest Indian War as part of the Council of Three Fires During the War of 1812 they held a council in Milwaukee in June 1812 which resulted in their decision to attack Chicago 31 in retaliation against American expansion This resulted in the Battle of Fort Dearborn on August 15 1812 the only known armed conflict in the Chicago area This battle convinced the American government to remove these groups of Native Americans from their indigenous land After being attacked in the Black Hawk War in 1832 the Native Americans in Milwaukee signed the 1833 Treaty of Chicago with the United States In exchange for ceding their lands in the area they were to receive monetary payments and lands west of the Mississippi in Indian Territory 32 European settlement and thereafter Edit Statue of Solomon Juneau who helped establish the city of Milwaukee Europeans had arrived in the Milwaukee area prior to the 1833 Treaty of Chicago French missionaries and traders first passed through the area in the late 17th and 18th centuries Alexis Laframboise coming from Michilimackinac now in Michigan settled a trading post in 1785 and is considered the first resident of European descent in the Milwaukee region 33 Early explorers called the Milwaukee River and surrounding lands various names Melleorki Milwacky Mahn a waukie Milwarck and Milwaucki in efforts to transliterate the native terms In the 19th century the populace of the western side of Milwaukee used the spelling Milwaukee while on the eastern side Milwaukie was used until the modern day spelling became accepted in the 1880s 34 One story on the origin of Milwaukee s name says O ne day during the thirties of the last century 1800s a newspaper calmly changed the name to Milwaukee and Milwaukee it has remained until this day 35 The spelling Milwaukie lives on in Milwaukie Oregon named after the Wisconsin city in 1847 before the current spelling was universally accepted 36 Milwaukee has three founding fathers Solomon Juneau Byron Kilbourn and George H Walker Solomon Juneau was the first of the three to come to the area in 1818 He founded a town called Juneau s Side or Juneautown that began attracting more settlers In competition with Juneau Byron Kilbourn established Kilbourntown west of the Milwaukee River He ensured the roads running toward the river did not join with those on the east side This accounts for the large number of angled bridges that still exist in Milwaukee today 37 Further Kilbourn distributed maps of the area which only showed Kilbourntown implying Juneautown did not exist or the river s east side was uninhabited and thus undesirable The third prominent developer was George H Walker He claimed land to the south of the Milwaukee River along with Juneautown where he built a log house in 1834 This area grew and became known as Walker s Point 38 The first large wave of settlement to the areas that would later become Milwaukee County and the City of Milwaukee began in 1835 following removal of the tribes in the Council of Three Fires Early that year it became known that Juneau and Kilbourn intended to lay out competing town sites By the year s end both had purchased their lands from the government and made their first sales There were perhaps 100 new settlers in this year mostly from New England and other Eastern states On September 17 1835 the first election was held in Milwaukee the number of votes cast was 39 39 By 1840 the three towns had grown along with their rivalries There were intense battles between the towns mainly Juneautown and Kilbourntown which culminated with the Milwaukee Bridge War of 1845 Following the Bridge War on January 31 1846 the towns were combined to incorporate as the City of Milwaukee and elected Solomon Juneau as Milwaukee s first mayor 40 Illustrated map of Milwaukee in 1872 Milwaukee began to grow as a city as high numbers of immigrants mainly German made their way to Wisconsin during the 1840s and 1850s Scholars classify German immigration to the United States in three major waves and Wisconsin received a significant number of immigrants from all three The first wave from 1845 to 1855 consisted mainly of people from Southwestern Germany the second wave from 1865 to 1873 concerned primarily Northwestern Germany while the third wave from 1880 to 1893 came from Northeastern Germany 41 In the 1840s the number of people who left German speaking lands was 385 434 in the 1850s it reached 976 072 and an all time high of 1 4 million immigrated in the 1880s In 1890 the 2 78 million first generation German Americans represented the second largest foreign born group in the United States Of all those who left the German lands between 1835 and 1910 90 percent went to the United States most of them traveling to the Mid Atlantic states and the Midwest 41 By 1900 34 percent of Milwaukee s population was of German background 41 The largest number of German immigrants to Milwaukee came from Prussia followed by Bavaria Saxony Hanover and Hesse Darmstadt Milwaukee gained its reputation as the most German of American cities not just from the large number of German immigrants it received but for the sense of community which the immigrants established here 42 Most German immigrants came to Wisconsin in search of inexpensive farmland 42 However immigration began to change in character and size in the late 1840s and early 1850s due to the 1848 revolutionary movements in Europe 43 After 1848 hopes for a united Germany had failed and revolutionary and radical Germans known as the Forty Eighters immigrated to the U S to avoid imprisonment and persecution by German authorities 44 One of the most famous liberal revolutionaries of 1848 was Carl Schurz He later explained in 1854 why he came to Milwaukee It is true similar things cultural events and societies were done in other cities where the Forty eighters sic had congregated But so far as I know nowhere did their influence so quickly impress itself upon the whole social atmosphere as in German Athens of America as Milwaukee was called at the time 45 Schurz was referring to the various clubs and societies Germans developed in Milwaukee The pattern of German immigrants to settle near each other encouraged the continuation of the German lifestyle and customs This resulted in German language organizations that encompassed all aspects of life for example singing societies and gymnastics clubs Germans also had a lasting influence on the American school system Kindergarten was created as a pre school for children and sports programs of all levels as well as music and art were incorporated as elements of the regular school curriculum These ideas were first introduced by radical democratic German groups such as the Turner Societies known today as the American Turners Specifically in Milwaukee the American Turners established its own Normal College for teachers of physical education and a German English Academy 46 Milwaukee s German element is still strongly present today The city celebrates its German culture by annually hosting a German Fest in July 47 and an Oktoberfest in October Milwaukee boasts a number of German restaurants as well as a traditional German beer hall A German language immersion school is offered for children in grades K 5 48 Milwaukee s Lake Front Depot in 1898 Although the German presence in Milwaukee after the Civil War remained strong and their largest wave of immigrants had yet to land other groups also made their way to the city Foremost among these were Polish immigrants The Poles had many reasons for leaving their homeland mainly poverty and political oppression Because Milwaukee offered the Polish immigrants an abundance of low paying entry level jobs it became one of the largest Polish settlements in the USA 49 Wisconsin Street with Pabst Building Milwaukee 1900 For many residents Milwaukee s South Side is synonymous with the Polish community that developed here The group maintained a high profile here for decades and it was not until the 1950s and 1960s that families began to disperse to the southern suburbs 50 By 1850 there were seventy five Poles in Milwaukee County and the US Census shows they had a variety of occupations grocers blacksmiths tavernkeepers coopers butchers broommakers shoemakers draymen laborers and farmers Three distinct Polish communities evolved in Milwaukee with the majority settling in the area south of Greenfield Avenue Milwaukee County s Polish population of 30 000 in 1890 rose to 100 000 by 1915 Poles historically have had a strong national cultural and social identity often maintained through the Catholic Church 51 A view of Milwaukee s South Side skyline is replete with the steeples of the many churches these immigrants built that are still vital centers of the community citation needed St Stanislaus Catholic Church and the surrounding neighborhood was the center of Polish life in Milwaukee As the Polish community surrounding St Stanislaus continued to grow Mitchell Street became known as the Polish Grand Avenue As Mitchell Street grew more dense the Polish population started moving south to the Lincoln Village neighborhood home to the Basilica of St Josaphat and Kosciuszko Park Other Polish communities started on the East Side of Milwaukee Jones Island was a major commercial fishing center settled mostly by Kashubians and other Poles from around the Baltic Sea 52 Milwaukee has the fifth largest Polish population in the U S at 45 467 ranking behind New York City 211 203 Chicago 165 784 Los Angeles 60 316 and Philadelphia 52 648 53 The city holds Polish Fest an annual celebration of Polish culture and cuisine 54 In addition to the Germans and Poles Milwaukee received a large influx of other European immigrants from Lithuania Italy Ireland France Russia Bohemia and Sweden who included Jews Lutherans and Catholics Italian Americans total 16 992 in the city but in Milwaukee County they number at 38 286 53 The largest Italian American festival in the area Festa Italiana is held in the city while Irishfest is the largest Irish American festival in southeast Wisconsin 55 By 1910 Milwaukee shared the distinction with New York City of having the largest percentage of foreign born residents in the United States 56 In 1910 whites represented 99 7 of the city s total population of 373 857 57 Milwaukee has a strong Greek Orthodox Community many of whom attend the Greek Orthodox Church on Milwaukee s northwest side designed by Wisconsin born architect Frank Lloyd Wright Milwaukee has a sizable Croatian population with Croatian churches and their own historic and successful soccer club The Croatian Eagles at the 30 acre Croatian Park in Franklin Wisconsin citation needed Milwaukee also has a large Serbian population who have developed Serbian restaurants a Serbian K 8 School and Serbian churches along with an American Serb Hall The American Serb Hall in Milwaukee is known for its Friday fish fries and popular events Many U S presidents have visited Milwaukee s Serb Hall in the past The Bosnian population is growing in Milwaukee as well due to late 20th century immigration after the war in Bosnia Herzegovina citation needed During this time a small community of African Americans migrated from the South in the Great Migration They settled near each other forming a community that came to be known as Bronzeville As industry boomed more migrants came and African American influence grew in Milwaukee 58 A slum area of Milwaukee from 1936 By 1925 around 9 000 Mexicans lived in Milwaukee but the Great Depression forced many of them to move back south In the 1950s the Hispanic community was beginning to emerge They arrived for jobs filling positions in the manufacturing and agricultural sectors During this time there were labor shortages due to the immigration laws that had reduced immigration from eastern and southern Europe Additionally strikes contributed to the labor shortages 59 In the mid 20th century African Americans from Chicago moved to the north side of Milwaukee citation needed Milwaukee s East Side has attracted a population of Russians and other Eastern Europeans who began migrating in the 1990s after the end of the Cold War citation needed Many Hispanics of mostly Puerto Rican and Mexican heritage live on the south side of Milwaukee citation needed During the first sixty years of the 20th century Milwaukee was the major city in which the Socialist Party of America earned the highest votes Milwaukee elected three mayors who ran on the ticket of the Socialist Party Emil Seidel 1910 1912 Daniel Hoan 1916 1940 and Frank Zeidler 1948 1960 Often referred to as Sewer Socialists the Milwaukee Socialists were characterized by their practical approach to government and labor 60 Historic neighborhoods Edit Main article Neighborhoods of Milwaukee The historic Third Ward In 1892 Whitefish Bay South Milwaukee and Wauwatosa were incorporated They were followed by Cudahy 1895 North Milwaukee 1897 and East Milwaukee later known as Shorewood in 1900 In the early 20th century West Allis 1902 and West Milwaukee 1906 were added which completed the first generation of inner ring suburbs In the 1920s Chicago gangster activity came north to Milwaukee during the Prohibition era Al Capone noted Chicago mobster owned a home in the Milwaukee suburb Brookfield where moonshine was made The house still stands on a street named after Capone 61 In the 1930s the city was severely segregated via redlining and is apparent to this day In 1960 African American residents made up 15 percent of the Milwaukee s population yet the city was still among the most segregated of that time And as of 2019 at least three out of four black residents in Milwaukee would have to move in order to establish racially integrated neighborhoods 62 By 1960 Milwaukee had grown to become one of the largest cities in the United States Its population peaked at 741 324 In 1960 the Census Bureau reported city s population as 91 1 white and 8 4 black 63 By the late 1960s Milwaukee s population had started to decline as people moved to suburbs aided by federal subsidies of highways They moved to take advantage of new housing and lower taxation 64 Milwaukee had a population of 594 833 by 2010 while the population of the overall metropolitan area increased Given its large immigrant population and historic neighborhoods Milwaukee avoided the severe declines of some of its fellow Rust Belt cities Brady Street Milwaukee Since the 1980s the city has begun to make strides in improving its economy neighborhoods and image resulting in the revitalization of neighborhoods such as the Historic Third Ward Lincoln Village the East Side and more recently Walker s Point and Bay View along with attracting new businesses to its downtown area These efforts have substantially slowed the population decline and have stabilized many parts of Milwaukee Milwaukee s European history is evident today Largely through its efforts to preserve its history Milwaukee was named one of the Dozen Distinctive Destinations by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 2006 65 Historic Milwaukee walking tours provide a guided tour of Milwaukee s historic districts including topics on Milwaukee s architectural heritage its glass skywalk system and the Milwaukee Riverwalk Panorama map of Milwaukee with a view of the City Hall tower c 1898Geography Edit Aerial view from the north the Menomonee River Kinnickinnic River and Milwaukee River are visible in the foreground Wind Point in the background Milwaukee lies along the shores and bluffs of Lake Michigan at the confluence of three rivers the Menomonee the Kinnickinnic and the Milwaukee Smaller rivers such as the Root River and Lincoln Creek also flow through the city Milwaukee s terrain is sculpted by the glacier path and includes steep bluffs along Lake Michigan that begin about a mile 1 6 km north of downtown In addition 30 miles 48 km southwest of Milwaukee is the Kettle Moraine and lake country that provides an industrial landscape combined with inland lakes According to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 96 80 square miles 250 71 km2 of which 96 12 square miles 248 95 km2 is land and 0 68 square miles 1 76 km2 is water 66 The city is overwhelmingly 99 89 of its area in Milwaukee County but there are two tiny unpopulated portions that extend into neighboring counties citation needed A Cityscape Edit See also List of tallest buildings in Milwaukee Downtown Milwaukee from E State St 2008 Yankee Hill Apartments are near left Cathedral of St John the Evangelist near left center the Pfister Hotel right center and Milwaukee City Hall far right Downtown Milwaukee from the Milwaukee River North south streets are numbered and east west streets are named However north south streets east of 1st Street are named like east west streets The north south numbering line is along the Menomonee River east of Hawley Road and Fairview Avenue Golfview Parkway west of Hawley Road with the east west numbering line defined along 1st Street north of Oklahoma Avenue and Chase Howell Avenue south of Oklahoma Avenue This numbering system is also used to the north by Mequon in Ozaukee County and by some Waukesha County communities Milwaukee is crossed by Interstate 43 and Interstate 94 which come together downtown at the Marquette Interchange The Interstate 894 bypass which as of May 2015 also contains Interstate 41 runs through portions of the city s southwest side and Interstate 794 comes out of the Marquette interchange eastbound bends south along the lakefront and crosses the harbor over the Hoan Bridge then ends near the Bay View neighborhood and becomes the Lake Parkway WIS 794 One of the distinctive traits of Milwaukee s residential areas are the neighborhoods full of so called Polish flats These are two family homes with separate entrances but with the units stacked one on top of another instead of side by side This arrangement enables a family of limited means to purchase both a home and a modestly priced rental apartment unit Since Polish American immigrants to the area prized land ownership this solution which was prominent in their areas of settlement within the city came to be associated with them 67 The tallest building in the city is the U S Bank Center Climate Edit See also Climate change in Wisconsin Milwaukee s location in the Great Lakes Region often has rapidly changing weather producing a humid continental climate Koppen Dfa with cold snowy winters and hot humid summers The warmest month of the year is July when the 24 hour average is 73 3 F 22 9 C while January is the coldest month with a 24 hour average of 24 0 F 4 4 C Because of Milwaukee s proximity to Lake Michigan a convection current forms around mid afternoon in light wind resulting in the so called lake breeze a smaller scale version of the more common sea breeze The lake breeze is most common between the months of March and July This onshore flow causes cooler temperatures to move inland usually 5 to 15 miles 8 to 24 km with much warmer conditions persisting further inland Because Milwaukee s official climate site Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport is only 3 miles 4 8 km from the lake seasonal temperature variations are less extreme than in many other locations of the Milwaukee metropolitan area As the sun sets the convection current reverses and an offshore flow ensues causing a land breeze After a land breeze develops warmer temperatures flow east toward the lakeshore sometimes causing high temperatures during the late evening The lake breeze is not a daily occurrence and will not usually form if a southwest west or northwest wind generally exceeds 15 mph 24 km h The lake moderates cold air outbreaks along the lakeshore during winter months Aside from the lake s influence overnight lows in downtown Milwaukee year round are often much warmer than suburban locations because of the urban heat island effect Onshore winds elevate daytime relative humidity levels in Milwaukee as compared to inland locations nearby Thunderstorms in the region can be dangerous and damaging bringing hail and high winds In rare instances they can bring a tornado However almost all summer rainfall in the city is brought by these storms In spring and fall longer events of prolonged lighter rain bring most of the precipitation A moderate snow cover can be seen on or linger for many winter days but even during meteorological winter on average over 40 of days see less than 1 inch 2 5 cm on the ground 68 Milwaukee tends to experience highs that are 90 F 32 C on or above seven days per year and lows at or below 0 F 18 C on six to seven nights 68 Extremes range from 105 F 41 C set on July 24 1934 down to 26 F 32 C on both January 17 1982 and February 4 1996 69 The 1982 event also known as Cold Sunday featured temperatures as low as 40 F 40 C in some of the suburbs as little as 10 miles 16 km to the north of Milwaukee Climate data for Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport 1991 2020 normals B extremes 1871 present C Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 63 17 71 22 84 29 91 33 95 35 104 40 105 41 103 39 99 37 89 32 77 25 68 20 105 41 Mean maximum F C 50 5 10 3 52 8 11 6 67 1 19 5 79 5 26 4 85 8 29 9 92 0 33 3 93 4 34 1 91 7 33 2 88 1 31 2 79 9 26 6 65 5 18 6 53 4 11 9 95 0 35 0 Average high F C 30 9 0 6 34 2 1 2 44 2 6 8 54 7 12 6 66 5 19 2 76 8 24 9 81 9 27 7 80 3 26 8 73 5 23 1 61 3 16 3 47 8 8 8 36 1 2 3 57 3 14 1 Daily mean F C 24 0 4 4 27 1 2 7 36 4 2 4 46 3 7 9 57 1 13 9 67 6 19 8 73 3 22 9 72 3 22 4 65 0 18 3 53 0 11 7 40 4 4 7 29 5 1 4 49 3 9 6 Average low F C 17 2 8 2 20 0 6 7 28 7 1 8 37 8 3 2 47 8 8 8 58 4 14 7 64 7 18 2 64 2 17 9 56 4 13 6 44 7 7 1 33 1 0 6 23 0 5 0 41 3 5 2 Mean minimum F C 4 5 20 3 1 0 17 2 10 6 11 9 25 6 3 6 36 3 2 4 45 7 7 6 54 7 12 6 55 0 12 8 42 3 5 7 30 6 0 8 17 9 7 8 3 2 16 0 7 9 22 2 Record low F C 26 32 26 32 10 23 12 11 21 6 33 1 40 4 42 6 28 2 15 9 14 26 22 30 26 32 Average precipitation inches mm 1 79 45 1 69 43 2 20 56 3 86 98 3 54 90 4 38 111 3 40 86 3 65 93 3 16 80 2 78 71 2 24 57 1 88 48 34 57 878 Average snowfall inches cm 14 9 38 11 8 30 6 7 17 2 1 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 76 2 5 6 4 10 4 26 48 7 124 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 11 4 10 0 10 7 12 2 11 7 11 1 9 5 9 5 8 6 10 3 10 2 10 3 125 5Average snowy days 0 1 in 10 0 8 1 5 0 1 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 6 7 3 35 1Average relative humidity 72 3 71 9 71 4 68 5 68 5 69 7 71 5 74 9 75 4 72 5 74 5 75 9 72 3Average dew point F C 11 7 11 3 15 4 9 2 24 6 4 1 33 6 0 9 43 7 6 5 54 3 12 4 60 6 15 9 60 4 15 8 53 4 11 9 41 4 5 2 30 4 0 9 18 3 7 6 37 3 3 0 Mean monthly sunshine hours 140 2 151 5 185 4 213 5 275 5 304 5 321 1 281 2 215 1 178 0 112 8 104 8 2 483 6Percent possible sunshine 48 51 50 53 61 66 69 65 57 52 38 37 56Average ultraviolet index 1 2 4 5 7 8 8 8 6 3 2 1 5Source 1 NOAA relative humidity dew point and sun 1961 1990 69 70 68 71 Source 2 Weather Atlas 72 Climate data for MilwaukeeMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage sea temperature F C 37 5 3 0 36 0 2 2 36 2 2 4 38 2 3 4 40 8 4 9 53 3 11 8 67 9 19 9 71 9 22 2 66 9 19 4 54 9 12 8 46 9 8 3 40 1 4 5 49 2 9 6 Source Weather Atlas 72 Climate change Edit According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Milwaukee is threatened by ongoing climate change which is warming the planet These risks include worsened heat waves because many of its residents do not possess air conditioners concerns about the water quality of Lake Michigan and increased chances of flooding from intense rainstorms 73 In 2018 Milwaukee mayor Tom Barrett announced that the city would uphold its obligations under the Paris Agreement despite the United States withdrawal and set a goal moving a quarter of the city s electricity sources to renewable energy by 2025 These have included expansions in the city s solar power generating capacity and a wind turbine s installation near the Port of Milwaukee Other actions being taken include local incentives for energy saving upgrades to homes and businesses 74 Water Edit In the 1990s and 2000s Lake Michigan experienced large algae blooms which can threaten aquatic life Responding to this problem in 2009 the city became an Innovating City in the Global Compact Cities Program The Milwaukee Water Council was also formed in 2009 75 Its objectives were to better understand the processes related to freshwater systems dynamics and to develop a policy and management program aimed at balancing the protection and utilization of freshwater The strategy used the Circles of Sustainability method Instead of treating the water quality problem as a single environmental issue the Water Council draws on the Circles method to analyze the interconnection among ecological economic political and cultural factors 76 This holistic water treatment helped Milwaukee win the US Water Alliance s 2012 US Water Prize 77 In 2009 the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee also established the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee School of Freshwater Sciences the first graduate school of limnology in the United States There are more than 3 000 water fountains in the Milwaukee Public School District 183 had lead levels above 15 parts per billion ppb 15 ppb is the federal action level in which effort needs to be taken to lower these lead levels 78 In Milwaukee more than 10 of children test positive for dangerous lead levels in their blood 79 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 18401 700 185020 0611 080 1 186045 246125 5 187071 44057 9 1880115 58761 8 1890204 46876 9 1900285 31539 5 1910373 85731 0 1920457 14722 3 1930578 24926 5 1940587 4721 6 1950637 3928 5 1960741 32416 3 1970717 099 3 3 1980636 212 11 3 1990628 088 1 3 2000596 974 5 0 2010594 833 0 4 2020577 222 3 0 2021 est 569 330 10 1 4 U S Decennial Census 80 2010 2020 9 Milwaukee is the 31st most populous city in the United States and anchors the 39th most populous Metropolitan Statistical Area in the United States Its combined statistical area population makes it the 29th most populous Combined Statistical Area of the United States In 2012 Milwaukee was listed as a gamma global city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network 2020 census Edit As of the census of 2020 81 the population was 577 222 The population density was 6 001 2 inhabitants per square mile 2 317 1 km2 There were 257 723 housing units at an average density of 2 679 5 per square mile 1 034 6 km2 Ethnically the population was 20 1 Hispanic or Latino of any race When grouping both Hispanic and non Hispanic people together by race the city was 38 6 Black or African American 36 1 White 5 2 Asian 0 9 Native American 9 0 from other races and 10 1 from two or more races The 2020 census population of the city included 1 198 people incarcerated in adult correctional facilities and 9 625 people in university student housing 82 According to the American Community Survey estimates for 2016 2020 the median income for a household in the city was 43 125 and the median income for a family was 51 170 Male full time workers had a median income of 42 859 versus 37 890 for female workers The per capita income for the city was 24 167 About 19 6 of families and 24 6 of the population were below the poverty line including 35 1 of those under age 18 and 14 5 of those age 65 or over 83 Of the population age 25 and over 84 4 were high school graduates or higher and 24 6 had a bachelor s degree or higher 84 Racial and ethnic groups Edit Map of racial distribution in Milwaukee 2010 U S Census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic Other Racial and ethnic composition as of the 2020 census 85 Race or Ethnicity NH Non Hispanic Race Alone Total D Black or African American NH 37 8 37 8 40 1 40 1 White NH 32 3 32 3 35 4 35 4 Hispanic or Latino E 20 1 20 1 Asian NH 5 2 5 2 5 8 5 8 Native American NH 0 4 0 4 1 4 1 4 Pacific Islander NH 0 03 0 03 0 10 0 1 Other 0 5 0 5 1 0 1 According to the 2010 Census 44 8 of the population was White 37 0 non Hispanic white 40 0 was Black or African American 0 8 American Indian and Alaska Native 3 5 Asian 3 4 from two or more races 17 3 of Milwaukee s population was of Hispanic Latino or Spanish origin they may be of any race 11 7 Mexican 4 1 Puerto Rican 86 Racial composition 2020 2010 2000 1990 1980Black or African American 37 8 39 2 36 9 30 2 22 9 White Non Hispanic 32 3 37 0 45 5 60 8 71 4 Hispanic or Latino 20 1 17 3 12 0 6 3 4 2 Asian 5 2 3 5 2 9 1 8 0 7 Mixed 3 6 2 2 According to the 2006 2008 American Community Survey 38 3 of Milwaukee s residents reported having African American ancestry and 20 8 reported German ancestry Other significant population groups include Polish 8 8 Irish 6 5 Italian 3 6 English 2 8 and French 1 7 According to the 2010 United States Census the largest Hispanic backgrounds in Milwaukee as of 2010 were Mexican 69 680 Puerto Rican 24 672 Other Hispanic or Latino 3 808 Central American 1 962 South American 1 299 Cuban 866 and Dominican 720 87 The Milwaukee metropolitan area was cited as being the most segregated in the U S in a Jet Magazine article in 2002 88 The source of this information was a segregation index developed in the mid 1950s and used since 1964 In 2003 a non peer reviewed study was conducted by hired researchers at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee which claimed Milwaukee is not hypersegregated and instead ranks as the 43rd most integrated city in America 89 According to research by demographer William H Frey using the index of dissimilarity method and data from the 2010 United States Census Milwaukee has the highest level of black white segregation of any of the 100 largest metropolitan areas in the United States 90 Through continued dialogue between Milwaukee s citizens the city is trying to reduce racial tensions and the rate of segregation 91 With demographic changes in the wake of white flight segregation in metropolitan Milwaukee is primarily in the suburbs rather than the city as in the era of Father Groppi 92 93 In 2015 Milwaukee was rated as the worst city for black Americans based on disparities in employment and income levels 94 The city s black population experiences high levels of incarceration and a severe educational achievement gap 95 In 2013 Mark Pfeifer the editor of the Hmong Studies Journal stated Hmong in Milwaukee had recently been moving to the northwest side of Milwaukee they historically lived in the north and south areas of Milwaukee 96 The Hmong American Peace Academy International Peace Academy a K 12 school system in Milwaukee centered on the Hmong community opened in 2004 96 Religion Edit St Josaphat Basilica in Milwaukee s historic Lincoln Village As of 2010 approximately 51 8 of residents in the Milwaukee area said they regularly attended religious services 24 6 of the Milwaukee area population identified as Catholic 10 8 as Lutheran 1 6 as Methodist and 0 6 as Jewish 97 The Milwaukee metro area contains the majority of the state s Jewish population 98 and has a long history of Jewish immigration from German speaking and Eastern European countries 99 The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee and the Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee are headquartered in Milwaukee The School Sisters of the Third Order of St Francis have their mother house in Milwaukee and several other religious orders have a significant presence in the area including the Jesuits and Franciscans Milwaukee where Father Josef Kentenich was exiled for 14 years from 1952 to 1965 is also the center for the Schoenstatt Movement in the United States St Joan of Arc Chapel the oldest church in Milwaukee is on the Marquette University campus St Josaphat Basilica was the first church to be given the Basilica honor in Wisconsin and the third in the United States Holy Hill National Shrine of Mary Help of Christians northwest of Milwaukee in Hubertus Wisconsin was also made a Basilica in 2006 Milwaukee is home for several Lutheran synods including the Greater Milwaukee Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod LCMS which operates Concordia University Wisconsin in Mequon and Milwaukee Lutheran High School the nation s oldest Lutheran high school and the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod WELS which was founded in 1850 in Milwaukee The St Sava Serbian Orthodox Cathedral is a landmark of the Serbian community in Milwaukee located by the American Serb hall which the congregation also operated until putting it up for sale in January 2021 due to financial challenges caused by the COVID 19 pandemic 100 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints has a presence in the Milwaukee area The Milwaukee area has two stakes with fourteen wards and four branches among them The closest temple is the Chicago Illinois Temple The area is part of the Wisconsin Milwaukee Mission 101 2000 census Edit About 30 5 of households in 2000 had children under the age of 18 living with them 32 2 of households were married couples living together 21 1 had a female householder with no husband present and 41 8 were non families 33 5 of all households were single individuals and 9 5 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 50 people per household with the average family size at 3 25 people per family In 2000 the Census estimated at least 1 408 same sex households in Milwaukee or about 0 6 of all households in the city 102 Gay friendly communities have developed primarily in Walker s Point but also in Bay View Historic Third Ward Washington Heights Riverwest and the East Side In 2001 Milwaukee was named the 1 city for lesbians by Girlfriends magazine 103 The city s population was spread out with 28 6 under the age of 18 12 2 from 18 to 24 30 2 from 25 to 44 18 1 from 45 to 64 and 10 9 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 31 years For every 100 females there were 91 6 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 87 2 males The median income for a household in the city was 32 216 and the median income for a family was 37 879 Males had a median income of 32 244 versus 26 013 for females The per capita income for the city was 16 181 21 3 of the population and 17 4 of families were below the poverty line In 2010 rent increased an averaged 3 for home renters in Milwaukee 104 Out of the total population 31 6 of those under the age of 18 and 11 0 of those 65 and older were living below the poverty line Economy EditEarly economy Edit Milwaukee s founding fathers had a vision for the city they knew it was perfectly situated as a port city a center for collecting and distributing produce Many of the new immigrants who were pouring into the new state of Wisconsin during the middle of the 19th century were wheat farmers By 1860 Wisconsin was the second ranked wheat growing state in the country and Milwaukee shipped more wheat than any place in the world Railroads were needed to transport all this grain from the wheat fields of Wisconsin to Milwaukee s harbor Improvements in railways at the time made this possible There was intense competition for markets with Chicago and to a lesser degree with Racine and Kenosha Eventually Chicago won out due to its superior financial and transposition status as well as being a hub on major railroad lines throughout the United States Milwaukee did solidify its place as the commercial capital of Wisconsin and an important market in the Midwest 105 Rail tracks along the industrial Menomonee Valley ancestral home of the Menominee Indians Because of its easy access to Lake Michigan and other waterways Milwaukee s Menomonee Valley has historically been home to manufacturing stockyards rendering plants shipping and other heavy industry 106 Reshaping of the valley began with the railroads built by city co founder Byron Kilbourn to bring product from Wisconsin s farm interior to the port By 1862 Milwaukee was the largest shipper of wheat on the planet and related industry developed Grain elevators were built and due to Milwaukee s dominant German immigrant population breweries sprang up around the processing of barley and hops A number of tanneries were constructed of which the Pfister amp Vogel tannery grew to become the largest in America In 1843 George Burnham and his brother Jonathan opened a brickyard near 16th Street When a durable and distinct cream colored brick came out of the clay beds other brickyards sprang up to take advantage of this resource Because many of the city s buildings were built using this material it earned the nickname Cream City and consequently the brick was called Cream City brick By 1881 the Burnham brickyard which employed 200 men and peaked at 15 million bricks a year was the largest in the world Flour mills packing plants breweries railways and tanneries further industrialized the valley With the marshlands drained and the Kinnickinnic and Milwaukee Rivers dredged attention turned to the valley Along with the processing industries bulk commodity storage machining and manufacturing entered the scene The valley was home to the Milwaukee Road Falk Corporation Cutler Hammer Harnischfeger Corporation Chain Belt Company Nordberg Manufacturing Company and other industry giants Early in the 20th century Milwaukee was home to several pioneer brass era automobile makers including Ogren 1919 1922 107 Brewing Edit Further information Beer in Milwaukee Milwaukee became synonymous with Germans and beer beginning in the 1840s The Germans had long enjoyed beer and set up breweries when they arrived in Milwaukee By 1856 there were more than two dozen breweries in Milwaukee most of them owned and operated by Germans Besides making beer for the rest of the nation Milwaukeeans enjoyed consuming the various beers produced in the city s breweries As early as 1843 pioneer historian James Buck recorded 138 taverns in Milwaukee an average of one per forty residents Today beer halls and taverns are abundant in the city but only one of the major breweries Miller remains in Milwaukee 105 Entrance to Miller Brewery in Milwaukee The Pabst Brewery Complex closed in 1997 before its redevelopment Milwaukee was once the home to four of the world s largest beer breweries Schlitz Blatz Pabst and Miller and was the number one beer producing city in the world for many years As late as 1981 Milwaukee had the greatest brewing capacity in the world 108 Despite the decline in its position as the world s leading beer producer after the loss of two of those breweries Miller Brewing Company remains a key employer by employing over 2 200 of the city s workers 109 Because of Miller s position as the second largest beer maker in the U S the city remains known as a beer town The city and surrounding areas are seeing a resurgence in microbreweries nanobreweries and brewpubs with the craft beer movement 110 The historic Milwaukee Brewery in Miller Valley at 4000 West State Street is the oldest functioning major brewery in the United States In 2008 Coors beer also began to be brewed in Miller Valley This created additional brewery jobs in Milwaukee but the company s world headquarters moved from Milwaukee to Chicago In addition to Miller and the heavily automated Leinenkugel s brewery in the old Blatz 10th Street plant other stand alone breweries in Milwaukee include Milwaukee Brewing Company a microbrewery in Walker s Point neighborhood Lakefront Brewery a microbrewery in Brewers Hill and Sprecher Brewery a German brewery that also brews craft sodas Since 2015 nearly two dozen craft brewing companies have been established in the city 111 112 Three beer brewers with Wisconsin operations made the 2009 list of the 50 largest beermakers in the United States based on beer sales volume Making the latest big breweries list from Wisconsin is MillerCoors at No 2 MillerCoors is a joint venture formed in 2008 by Milwaukee based Miller Brewing Co and Golden Colorado based Molson Coors Brewing Company The Minhas Craft Brewery in Monroe Wisconsin which brews Huber Rhinelander and Mountain Crest brands ranked No 14 and New Glarus Brewing Company New Glarus Wisconsin whose brands include Spotted Cow Fat Squirrel and Uff da ranked No 32 113 Present economy Edit Rockwell Automation Headquarters and Allen Bradley Clock Tower Milwaukee is the home to the international headquarters of six Fortune 500 companies Johnson Controls Northwestern Mutual Manpower Rockwell Automation Harley Davidson and WEC Energy Group 114 Other companies based in Milwaukee include Briggs amp Stratton Brady Corporation Baird investment bank Alliance Federated Energy Sensient Technologies Marshall amp Ilsley acquired by BMO Harris Bank in 2010 115 Hal Leonard Direct Supply Rite Hite the American Society for Quality A O Smith Rexnord Master Lock Marcus Corporation REV Group American Signal Corporation 116 GE Healthcare Diagnostic Imaging and Clinical Systems and MGIC Investments The Milwaukee metropolitan area ranks fifth in the United States in terms of the number of Fortune 500 company headquarters as a share of the population Milwaukee also has a large number of financial service firms particularly those specializing in mutual funds and transaction processing systems and a number of publishing and printing companies Service and managerial jobs are the fastest growing segments of the Milwaukee economy and health care alone makes up 27 of the jobs in the city 117 Culture Edit Milwaukee s skyline visible from a sailboat out on Lake Michigan Milwaukee Art Museum Milwaukee is a popular location for sailing boating and kayaking on Lake Michigan ethnic dining and cultural festivals Often referred to as the City of Festivals citation needed Milwaukee has various cultural events which take place throughout the summer at Henry Maier Festival Park on the lake Museums and cultural events such as Jazz in the Park occur weekly in downtown parks A 2011 study by Walk Score ranked Milwaukee 15th most walkable of fifty largest U S cities 118 In 2018 the city was voted The Coolest City in the Midwest by Vogue 119 Museums Edit Art Edit The Milwaukee Art Museum is perhaps Milwaukee s most visually prominent cultural attraction especially its 100 million wing designed by Santiago Calatrava in his first American commission 120 The museum includes a brise soleil a moving sunscreen that unfolds similarly to the wing of a bird The Grohmann Museum at Milwaukee School of Engineering contains the world s most comprehensive art collection dedicated to the evolution of human work 121 It houses the Man at Work collection which comprises more than 700 paintings and sculptures dating from 1580 to the present The museum also features a rooftop sculpture garden Haggerty Museum of Art on the Marquette University campus houses several classical masterpieces and is open to the public The Villa Terrace Decorative Arts Museum is the former home of Lloyd Smith president of the A O Smith corporation and has a terraced garden an assortment of Renaissance art and rotating exhibits 122 Charles Allis Art Museum in the Tudor style mansion of Charles Allis hosts several changing exhibits every year in the building s original antique furnished setting Science and natural history Edit The Calling I beams Discovery World The Milwaukee Public Museum has been Milwaukee s primary natural history and human history museum for 125 years with over 150 000 square feet 14 000 m2 of permanent exhibits 123 Exhibits feature Africa Europe the Arctic Oceania and South and Middle America the ancient Western civilizations Crossroads of Civilization dinosaurs the tropical rainforest streets of Old Milwaukee a European Village live insects and arthropods Bugs Alive a Samson Gorilla replica the Puelicher Butterfly Wing hands on laboratories and animatronics The museum also contains an IMAX movie theater planetarium Milwaukee Public Museum owns the world s largest dinosaur skull 124 Discovery World Milwaukee s largest museum dedicated to science is just south of the Milwaukee Art Museum along the lake front Visitors are drawn by its high tech hand on exhibits salt water and freshwater aquariums as well as touch tanks and digital theaters A double helix staircase wraps around the 40 foot 12 m kinetic sculpture of a human genome The S V Dennis Sullivan Schooner Ship docked at Discovery World is the world s only re creation of an 1880s era three masted vessel and the first schooner to be built in Milwaukee in over 100 years It teaches visitors about the Great Lakes and Wisconsin s maritime history Betty Brinn Children s Museum 125 is geared toward children under ten years of age and is filled with hands on exhibits and interactive programs offering families a chance to learn together Voted one of the top ten museums for children by Parents Magazine it exemplifies the philosophy that constructive play nurtures the mind Mitchell Park Horticultural Conservatory Mitchell Park Domes or simply the Domes is a conservatory at Mitchell Park It is owned and operated by the Milwaukee County Park System and replaced the original Milwaukee Conservatory which stood from 1898 to 1955 The three domes display a large variety of plant and bird life The conservatory includes the Tropical Dome the Arid Dome and the Show Dome which hosts four seasonal cultural literary or historic shows and one Christmas exhibit held annually in December for visitors to enjoy The Domes are deteriorating rapidly and the popular horticultural conservatory will close within a few years unless 30 million is found to do just basic repairs 126 Social and cultural history Edit Pabst Mansion Pabst Mansion Built in 1892 by beer tycoon Frederick Pabst this Flemish Renaissance Mansion was once considered the jewel of Milwaukee s famous avenue of mansions called the Grand Avenue Interior rooms have been restored with period furniture to create an authentic replica of a Victorian Mansion Nationally recognized as a house museum Milwaukee County Historical Society features Milwaukee during the late 19th century through the mid 20th century Housed within an architectural landmark the Milwaukee s Historical Society features a panoramic painting of Milwaukee firefighting equipment period replicas of a pharmacy and a bank and Children s world an exhibit that includes vintage toys clothes and school materials The museum houses a research library where scenes from the movie Public Enemies were shot Wisconsin Black Historical Society 127 whose mission is to document and preserve the historical heritage of African descent in Wisconsin exhibiting collecting and disseminating materials depicting this heritage America s Black Holocaust Museum founded by lynching survivor James Cameron featured exhibits which chronicle the injustices suffered throughout history by African Americans in the United States The museum first closed in July 2008 as a result of financial difficulties 128 The museum reopened in 2012 as a virtual museum with the original building demolished As of 2018 a new building housing the museum has opened 129 130 Jewish Museum Milwaukee 131 is dedicated to preserving and presenting the history of the Jewish people in southeastern Wisconsin and celebrating the continuum of Jewish heritage and culture Mitchell Gallery of Flight at Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport Milwaukee s aviation and historical enthusiasts experience the history of Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport with a visit to the Gallery of Flight Exhibits include General Billy Mitchell replicas of past and present aircraft including the Lawson Airline the first commercial airliner the Graf Zeppelin II the sistership to the tragically legendary Hindenburg a 1911 Curtis Pusher an airplane with the propeller in the rear of the plane and the present day giant of the sky the 747 Other exhibits include commercial air memorabilia early aviation engines and airport beacons Harley Davidson Museum opened in 2008 pays tribute to Harley Davidson motorcycles and is the only museum of its type in the world citation needed Chudnow Museum of YesteryearArenas and performing arts Edit Performing arts groups and venues include Bel Canto Chorus First Stage Children s Theater Florentine Opera Marcus Center for the Performing Arts Miller High Life Theatre Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra Milwaukee Youth Arts Center Milwaukee Ballet Milwaukee Repertory Theater Milwaukee Opera Theatre Milwaukee Public Theatre Milwaukee Youth Theatre Pabst Theater Pioneer Drum and Bugle Corps Present Music The Melody Top The Rave Eagles Ballroom Riverside Theater Skylight Music Theatre Wisconsin Conservatory of Music Turner Hall Fiserv Forum Miller Park UW Milwaukee Panther Arena Marcus Amphitheater on the Henry Maier Festival Park Summerfest Grounds In 1984 ComedySportz was founded in Milwaukee by native Dick Chudnow and has since become a franchise with numerous venues throughout the United States and England In July 2009 the ComedySportz world championship returned to Milwaukee to coincide with its 25th anniversary The Rave Eagles Ballroom Milwaukee Youth Arts Center Turner HallPublic art and monuments Edit Main article List of public art in Milwaukee Milwaukee has some 75 sculptures to honor the many people and topics reflecting the city s history 132 Among the more prominent monuments are Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben Tadeusz Kosciuszko Casimir Pulaski Solomon Juneau Abraham Lincoln George Washington Bronze Fonz Pope John Paul II Martin Luther King Jr The Victorious Charge Leif Ericson Jacques Marquette Goethe Schiller Monument Immigrant Mother Letter Carriers Monument a memorial to the National Association of Letter Carriers Leif Ericson monument Tadeusz Kosciuszko monument in Kosciuszko Park in Historic Lincoln Village Additionally Milwaukee has a burgeoning mural arts scene Black Cat Alley is a well known arts destination in a one block alleyway in the East Side neighborhood of Milwaukee recognized for its street art mural installations It is behind the historic Oriental Theatre and includes both temporary and semi permanent installations by a variety of artists and art groups Another highly visible corridor of street art in Milwaukee is on the south side in the Walker s Point neighborhood especially along 5th and 2nd streets Festivals Edit Henry Maier Festival Grounds during Summerfest The city hosts an annual lakefront music festival called Summerfest Listed in the 1999 Guinness Book of World Records as the largest music festival in the world in 2017 Summerfest attracted 831 769 133 The adjacent city of West Allis has been the site of the Wisconsin State Fair for over a century Milwaukee hosts a variety of primarily ethnically themed festivals throughout the summer Held generally on the lakefront Summerfest grounds these festivals span several days typically Friday plus the weekend and celebrate Milwaukee s history and diversity Festivals for the LGBT PrideFest and Polish Polish Fest communities are typically held in June Summerfest spans 11 days at the end of June and beginning of July There are French Bastille Days Greek Italian Festa Italiana and German German Fest festivals in July The African Arab Irish Irish Fest Mexican and American Indian events wrap it up from August through September 134 Milwaukee is also home to Trainfest the largest operating model railroad show in America in November Cuisine Edit See also Candy Raisins Milwaukee s ethnic cuisines include German Italian Russian Hmong French Serbian Polish Thai Japanese Chinese Mexican Indian Korean Vietnamese Turkish Middle Eastern and Ethiopian citation needed Milwaukee County hosts the Zoo A La Carte at the Milwaukee County Zoo and various ethnic festivals like Summerfest German Fest and Festa Italiana to celebrate various types of cuisine in summer months citation needed Music Edit Aerial view of Jazz in the Park Cathedral Square Park Milwaukee has a long history of musical activity The first organized musical society called Milwaukee Beethoven Society formed in 1843 three years before the city was incorporated 135 The large concentrations of German and other European immigrants contributed to the musical character of the city Saengerfeste were held regularly 136 In the early 20th century guitarist Les Paul and pianist Liberace were some of the area s most famous musicians Both Paul born in Waukesha and Liberace born in West Allis launched their careers in Milwaukee music venues Paramount Records primarily a jazz and blues record label was founded in Grafton a northern suburb of Milwaukee in the 1920s and 1930s Hal Leonard Corporation founded in 1947 is one of the world s largest music print publishers and is headquartered in Milwaukee 137 More recently Milwaukee has a history of rock hip hop jazz soul blues punk ska industrial music electronica world music and pop music bands Milwaukee s most famous music venue is Summerfest Founded in 1968 Summerfest features 700 800 live musical acts across 12 stages during 11 days over a 12 day period beginning in late June while the dates adjust each year Summerfest always includes July 4 On the Summerfest grounds the largest venue is the American Family Insurance Amphitheater with a 23 000 person capacity Adjacent is the BMO Harris Pavilion which has a capacity of roughly 10 000 The BMO Harris Pavilion also hosts numerous concerts and events outside of Summerfest other stages are also used during the numerous other festivals held on the grounds Pabst Theater Venues such as Pabst Theater Marcus Center for Performing Arts the Helene Zelazo Center for the Performing Arts Marcus Amphitheater Summerfest Grounds Riverside Theater the Northern Lights Theater and The Rave frequently bring internationally known acts to Milwaukee Jazz in the Park a weekly jazz show held at downtown Cathedral Square Park has become a summer tradition free public performances with a picnic environment 138 Nearby Pere Marquette Park hosts River Rhythms on Wednesday nights The Milwaukee area is known for producing national talents such as Steve Miller rock Wladziu Valentino Liberace piano Al Jarreau jazz Eric Benet neo soul Speech hip hop Daryl Stuermer rock Streetz n Young Deuces Hip Hop BoDeans rock Les Paul jazz the Violent Femmes alternative Coo Coo Cal rap Die Kreuzen punk Andy Hurley of Fall Out Boy punk Eyes To The Sky hardcore Rico Love R amp B Andrew The Butcher Mrotek of The Academy Is alt rock Showoff pop punk The Promise Ring indie Lights Out Asia post rock the Gufs alt rock Brief Candles rock IshDARR rap Decibully indie and Reyna synth pop citation needed importance Sports EditMain article Sports in Milwaukee American Family Field formerly known as Miller Park home of the Brewers Fiserv Forum home of the Bucks and Golden Eagles Currently Milwaukee s sports teams include Club Sport Founded Current League StadiumMilwaukee Bucks Basketball 1968 Eastern and Central NBA Fiserv ForumMilwaukee Brewers Baseball 1970 National League MLB American Family FieldMilwaukee Bavarians Soccer 1929 139 United Premier Soccer League Heartland Value Fund StadiumMarquette Golden Eagles Basketball 1916 Big East Conference NCAA Fiserv ForumMilwaukee Panthers Basketball 1956 Horizon League NCAA UW Milwaukee Panther ArenaMilwaukee Admirals Hockey 1970 American Hockey League UW Milwaukee Panther ArenaMilwaukee Wave Indoor soccer 1984 Major Arena Soccer League UW Milwaukee Panther ArenaBrewcity Bruisers Roller Derby 2006 WFTDA UW Milwaukee Panther ArenaMilwaukee Milkmen Baseball 2018 American Association of Independent Professional Baseball Franklin FieldUSL Milwaukee Soccer 2022 USL Championship Iron District StadiumFC Milwaukee Torrent Soccer 2015 NPSL Men s Team WPSL Women s Team Hart Park StadiumThe city currently has no teams in the NFL or NHL two of the major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada Milwaukee supported the NFL s Milwaukee Badgers in the 1920s and today the city is considered a home market for the NFL s Green Bay Packers 140 The team split its home schedule between Green Bay and Milwaukee from 1933 to 1994 with the majority of the Milwaukee games being played at County Stadium 141 Former season ticketholders for the Milwaukee games continue to receive preference for one pre season and the second and fifth regular season games at Lambeau Field each season along with playoff games through a lottery under the Gold Package plan 142 The Packers longtime flagship station is Milwaukee based WTMJ AM 620 143 Milwaukee has a rich history of involvement in professional and nonprofessional sports since the 19th century Abraham Lincoln watched cricket in Milwaukee in 1849 when he attended a game between Chicago and Milwaukee In 1854 the Milwaukee Cricket Club had 150 members 144 Milwaukee was also the host city of the International Cycling Classic which included the men s and women s Superweek Pro Tour races featuring professional and amateur cyclists and teams from across the U S and more than 20 foreign countries The city s two major professional sports teams are the Milwaukee Brewers of MLB and the Milwaukee Bucks of the NBA The Milwaukee Bucks have won two NBA Championships in 1971 and 2021 Parks and recreation EditMain article Parks of Milwaukee Panoramic view of Lake Park c 1890 Leisure boats on the Milwaukee River Havenwoods State Forest entrance Mitchell Park Horticultural Conservatory The Domes Milwaukee County is known for its well developed Parks of Milwaukee park system 145 The Grand Necklace of Parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted designer of New York s Central Park includes Lake Park River Park now Riverside Park and West Park now Washington Park Milwaukee County Parks offer facilities for sunbathing picnics grilling disc golf and ice skating 146 Milwaukee has over 140 parks with over 15 000 acres 6 100 ha of parks and parkways In its 2013 ParkScore ranking The Trust for Public Land a national land conservation organization reported Milwaukee had the 19th best park system among the 50 most populous U S cities 147 Parks and nature centers Edit Milwaukee s parks are home to several nature centers The Urban Ecology Center offers programming for adults and children from its three branches located in Riverside Park Washington Park and the Menomonee Valley near Three Bridges Park 148 The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources operates a nature center at Havenwoods State Forest 149 The city is also served by two nearby suburban nature centers Wehr Nature Center is operated by Milwaukee County in Whitnall Park located in Franklin Wisconsin Admission is free and parking costs 4 per vehicle 150 The Schlitz Audubon Nature Center in Bayside Wisconsin charges admittance fees for visitors The Monarch Trail on the Milwaukee County Grounds in Wauwatosa is a 1 25 mile 2 km trail that highlights the fall migration of the monarch butterflies 151 During the summer months Cathedral Park in Downtown Milwaukee hosts Jazz in the Park on Thursday nights 152 Nearby Pere Marquette Park hosts River Rhythms on Wednesday nights Public and farmers markets Edit The Milwaukee Public Market Milwaukee Public Market in the Third Ward neighborhood is an indoor market that sells produce seafood meats cheeses vegetables candies and flowers from local businesses Milwaukee County Farmers Markets held in season sell fresh produce meats cheeses jams jellies preserves and syrups and plants Farmers markets also feature artists and craftspeople Locations include Aur Farmers Market Brown Deer Farmers Market Cudahy Farmers Market East Town Farm Market Enderis Park Farmers Market Fondy Farmers Market Mitchell Street Market Riverwest Gardeners Market Silver Spring Farmers Market South Milwaukee Farmers Market South Shore Farmers Market Uptown Farmers Market Wauwatosa Farmers Market West Allis Farmers Market and Westown Market on the Park Government and politics EditMain article Government of Milwaukee See also List of mayors of Milwaukee Milwaukee has a mayor council form of government With the election of Mayor John O Norquist in 1988 the city adopted a cabinet form of government with the mayor appointing department heads not otherwise elected or appointed notably the Fire and Police Chiefs While this gave the mayor greater control of the city s day to day operations the Common Council retains almost complete control over the city s finances and the mayor with the exception of his proposed annual budget cannot directly introduce legislation The Common Council consists of 15 members one from each district in the city citation needed Milwaukee has a history of giving long tenures to its mayors from Frank Zeidler to Tom Barrett the city had only four elected mayors and one acting in a 73 year period 153 When 28 year incumbent Henry Maier retired in 1988 he held the record for longest term of service for a city of Milwaukee s size citation needed and when Barrett retired in 2021 he was the longest serving mayor of any of the United States 50 largest cities 154 In addition to the election of a Mayor and Common Council on the city level Milwaukee residents elect county representatives to the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisors as well as a Milwaukee County Executive The current County Executive is David Crowley citation needed Milwaukee has been a Democratic stronghold for more than a century at the federal level 155 At the local level Socialists often won the mayorship and for briefer periods other city and county offices during much of the first sixty years of the 20th century The city is split between seven State Senate districts each of which is divided between three state Assembly districts All but four state legislators representing the city are Democrats the four Republicans two in the State Assembly and two in the State Senate represent outer portions of the city that are part of districts dominated by heavily Republican suburban counties In 2008 Barack Obama won Milwaukee with 77 of the vote 156 Tim Carpenter D Lena Taylor D Robyn Vining D LaTonya Johnson D Chris Larson D Alberta Darling R and Dave Craig R represent Milwaukee in the State Senate Daniel Riemer D JoCasta Zamarripa D Marisabel Cabrera D David Bowen D Jason Fields D LaKeshia Myers D Sara Rodriguez D Dale P Kooyenga R Kalan Haywood D David Crowley D Evan Goyke D Jonathan Brostoff D Christine Sinicki D Janel Brandtjen R and Mike Kuglitsch R represent Milwaukee in the State Assembly Milwaukee makes up the overwhelming majority of Wisconsin s 4th congressional district The district is heavily Democratic with victory in the Democratic primary often being considered tantamount to election 157 The district is currently represented by Democrat Gwen Moore A Republican has not represented a significant portion of Milwaukee in Congress since Charles J Kersten lost his seat in the 5th district in 1954 to Democrat Henry S Reuss The small portions of the city extending into Waukesha and Washington counties are part of the 5th District represented by Republican Scott L Fitzgerald Milwaukee s Mexican Consultate serves 65 counties in Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan 158 Crime Edit In 2001 and 2007 Milwaukee ranked among the ten most dangerous large cities in the United States 159 160 Despite its improvement since then Milwaukee still fares worse when comparing specific crime types to the national average e g homicide rape robbery aggravated assault 161 162 The Milwaukee Police Department s Gang Unit was reactivated in 2004 after Nannette Hegerty was sworn in as chief In 2006 4 000 charges were brought against suspects through Milwaukee s Gang Unit 163 In 2013 there were 105 murders in Milwaukee and 87 homicides the following year 164 In 2015 146 people were killed in the city 165 In 2018 Milwaukee was ranked the eighth most dangerous city in the US 166 In 2020 Milwaukee recorded 189 homicides 167 exceeding the all time homicide record of 174 which was set in 1993 168 Poverty Edit As of 2016 update Milwaukee currently ranks as the second poorest U S city with over 500 000 residents falling behind only Detroit 169 In 2013 a Point In Time survey estimated 1 500 people were homeless on Milwaukee s streets each night 170 The city s homeless and poor are aided by several local nonprofits including the Milwaukee Rescue Mission Election results Edit Milwaukee city vote by party in presidential elections Year Democratic Republican Third Parties2020 171 78 83 194 661 19 60 48 414 1 57 3 8752016 172 76 55 188 657 18 43 45 411 5 02 12 3772012 173 79 27 227 384 19 72 56 553 1 01 2 8962008 174 77 82 213 436 21 03 57 665 1 15 3 1522004 175 71 83 198 907 27 35 75 746 0 82 2 268Education Edit Merrill Hall at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee The John P Raynor S J Library at Marquette University Wisconsin Lutheran College Primary and secondary education Edit Main article Milwaukee Public Schools Milwaukee Public Schools MPS is the largest school district in Wisconsin and thirty third in the nation As of 2007 it had an enrollment of 89 912 students 176 and as of 2006 employed 11 100 full time and substitute teachers in 323 schools Milwaukee Public Schools operate as magnet schools with individualized specialty areas for interests in academics or the arts Washington High School Riverside University High School Rufus King High School Ronald Wilson Reagan College Preparatory High School Samuel Morse Middle School for the Gifted and Talented Golda Meir School Milwaukee High School of the Arts and Lynde amp Harry Bradley Technology and Trade School are some of the magnet schools in Milwaukee In 2007 17 MPS high schools appeared on a national list of dropout factories schools where fewer than 60 of freshmen graduate on time 177 Milwaukee is also home to over two dozen private or parochial high schools such as Marquette University High School and many private and parochial middle and elementary schools In 1990 Milwaukee became the first city in the United States to offer a school voucher program Of persons in Milwaukee aged 25 and above 86 9 have a high school diploma and 29 7 have a bachelor s degree or higher 2012 178 Higher education Edit Milwaukee area universities and colleges Alverno College The Art Institute of Wisconsin Bryant and Stratton Cardinal Stritch University Carroll University Waukesha Concordia University Wisconsin Herzing University Marquette University Medical College of Wisconsin Wauwatosa Milwaukee Area Technical College Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design Milwaukee School of Engineering Mount Mary University Nashotah House Saint Francis de Sales Seminary University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin Institute for Torah Study Wisconsin Lutheran CollegeMedia EditSee also List of television stations in Wisconsin and List of radio stations in Wisconsin The WITI TV Tower is in Shorewood off of the Oak Leaf Trail just north of Capitol Drive Milwaukee s daily newspaper is the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel which was formed when the morning paper the Milwaukee Sentinel merged with the afternoon paper Milwaukee Journal The city has two free distribution alternative publications Shepherd Express and Wisconsin Gazette Other local newspapers city guides and magazines with large distributions include M Magazine Milwaukee Magazine The Bay View Compass Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service Milwaukee Independent Riverwest Currents The Milwaukee Courier and Milwaukee Community Journal Urban Milwaukee and OnMilwaukee com are online publications providing political and real estate news as well as stories about cultural events and entertainment The UWM Post is the independent student run weekly at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Milwaukee s major network television affiliates are WTMJ 4 NBC WITI 6 Fox WISN 12 ABC WVTV 18 CW WVTV DT2 24 MyNetworkTV and WDJT 58 CBS Spanish language programming is on WTSJ LD 38 Azteca America and WYTU LD 63 Telemundo Milwaukee s public broadcasting stations are WMVS 10 and WMVT 36 Other television stations in the Milwaukee market include WMKE CD 7 Quest WVCY 30 FN WBME CD 41 Me TV WMLW TV 49 Independent WWRS 52 TBN Sportsman Channel and WPXE 55 ION There are numerous radio stations throughout Milwaukee and the surrounding area There are two cable PEG channels in Milwaukee channels 13 and 25 Until 2015 Journal Communications a NYSE traded corporation published the Journal Sentinel and well over a dozen local weekly newspapers in the metropolitan area At that time Journal was split into the Journal Media Group for publishing while the television and radio stations went to the E W Scripps Company Journal founded WTMJ TV along with WTMJ and WKTI As a result it was criticized for having a near monopoly in local news coverage 179 180 Journal Media Group merged with Gannett in 2017 while Scripps sold the radio stations in 2018 to Good Karma Brands effectively splitting off the monopoly completely Infrastructure EditHealth care Edit Milwaukee s health care industry includes several health systems The Milwaukee Regional Medical Complex between 8700 and 9200 West Wisconsin Avenue is on the Milwaukee County grounds This area includes the Children s Hospital of Wisconsin Froedtert Hospital BloodCenter of Wisconsin the Ronald McDonald House Curative Rehabilitation and the Medical College of Wisconsin Aurora Health Care includes St Luke s Medical Center Aurora Sinai Medical Center Aurora West Allis Medical Center and St Luke s SouthShore Wheaton Franciscan Healthcare includes St Joseph s Hospital St Francis Hospital The Wisconsin Heart Hospital Elmbrook Memorial Brookfield and other outpatient clinics in the Milwaukee area Columbia St Mary s Hospital is on Milwaukee s lakeshore and has established affiliations with Froedtert Hospital and the Medical College of Wisconsin The Medical College of Wisconsin is one of two medical schools in Wisconsin and the only one in Milwaukee Other health care non profit organizations in Milwaukee include national headquarters of the American Academy of Allergy Asthma and Immunology and the Endometriosis Association Transportation Edit Airports Edit Timmerman Field Milwaukee has two airports Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport KMKE on the southern edge of the city which handles the region s commercial traffic and Lawrence J Timmerman Airport KMWC known locally as Timmerman Field on the northwest side along Appleton Avenue Mitchell is served by twelve airlines 181 which offer roughly 240 daily departures and 245 daily arrivals Approximately 90 cities are served nonstop or direct from Mitchell International It is the largest airport in Wisconsin and the 34th largest in the nation 182 The airport terminal is open 24 hours a day Since 2005 Mitchell International Airport has been connected by the Amtrak Hiawatha train service which provides airport access via train to Chicago and downtown Milwaukee Southwest Frontier Airlines American Airlines United Airlines Air Canada and Delta Air Lines are among the carriers using Milwaukee s Mitchell International Airport gates 181 In July 2015 it served 610 271 passengers 183 Intercity rail and bus Edit Milwaukee Intermodal Station Milwaukee s Amtrak station was renovated in 2007 to create Milwaukee Intermodal Station near downtown Milwaukee and the Third Ward to provide Amtrak riders access to Greyhound Lines Jefferson Lines 24 hour Megabus service and other intercity bus operators The station itself replaces the previous main railway station Everett Street Depot Milwaukee is served by Amtrak s Hiawatha Service passenger train up to seven times daily between Milwaukee Intermodal Station and Chicago Union Station including a stop at the Milwaukee Airport Railroad Station Sturtevant Wisconsin and Glenview Illinois Amtrak s Empire Builder stops at Milwaukee Intermodal Station and connects to Chicago and the Pacific Northwest with several stops along the way In 2010 800 million in federal funds were allocated to the creation of high speed rail links from Milwaukee to Chicago and Madison 184 but the funds were rejected by the then newly elected Governor of Wisconsin Scott Walker 185 and the trains were sold to Michigan In 2016 WisDOT and IDOT conducted studies to upgrade service on the Amtrak Hiawatha line from seven to ten times daily between downtown Milwaukee and downtown Chicago 186 187 As a result of the 2021 infrastructure bill and the Amtrak Connects Us initiative the Milwaukee Intermodal Station is again projected to serve passenger trains to Madison and Green Bay with the goal of the new routes being operational by 2035 188 Transit Edit Two MCTS busesBus The Milwaukee County Transit System provides bus services within Milwaukee County The Badger Bus station in downtown Milwaukee provides bus service between Milwaukee and Madison An East West Bus Rapid Transit BRT line between downtown and the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center is also currently under construction 189 A Milwaukee streetcarStreetcar A modern streetcar system The Hop connects Milwaukee Intermodal Station downtown Milwaukee and Ogden Avenue on the city s Lower East Side The line began service November 2 2018 with future plans for extensions the lakefront and surrounding neighborhoods 190 191 Commuter rail Milwaukee currently has no commuter rail system Previous efforts to develop one proposed a 0 5 sales tax in Milwaukee Racine and Kenosha counties to fund an expansion of Metra s Union Pacific North Line from Kenosha to Milwaukee Intermodal Station However Wisconsin repealed the legislation authorizing such efforts in June 2011 and the project is now defunct 192 Highways Edit The Hoan Bridge Milwaukee at 3 03 05 AM in 2015 Photo reversed from the original so north would point up Three of Wisconsin s Interstate highways intersect in Milwaukee Interstate 94 I 94 comes north from Chicago to enter Milwaukee and continues west to Madison The stretch of I 94 from Seven Mile Road to the Marquette Interchange in Downtown Milwaukee is known as the North South Freeway I 94 from downtown Milwaukee west to Wisconsin 16 is known as the East West Freeway I 43 enters Milwaukee from Beloit in the southwest and continues north along Lake Michigan to Green Bay via Sheboygan and Manitowoc I 43 southwest of I 41 I 894 US 41 US 45 Hale Interchange is known as the Rock Freeway I 43 is cosigned with I 894 East and I 41 US 41 South to I 94 is known as the Airport Freeway At I 94 I 43 follows I 94 to the Marquette Interchange I 43 continues north known as the North South Freeway to Wisconsin Highway 57 near Port Washington Approved in 2015 Interstate 41 follows I 94 north from the state line before turning west at the Mitchell Interchange to the Hale Interchange and then north to Green Bay via Fond du Lac Oshkosh and Appleton I 41 US 41 US 45 from the Hale Interchange to Wisconsin Hwy 145 is known as the Zoo Freeway Milwaukee has two auxiliary Interstate Highways I 894 and I 794 I 894 bypasses downtown Milwaukee on the west and south sides of the city from the Zoo Interchange to the Mitchell Interchange I 894 is part of the Zoo Freeway and the Airport Freeway I 794 extends east from the Marquette Interchange to Lake Michigan before turning south over the Hoan Bridge toward Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport turning into Highway 794 along the way This is known as the Lake Freeway Milwaukee is also served by three US Highways U S Highway 18 US 18 provides a link from downtown to points west heading to Waukesha along Wells Street 17th 16th Streets Highland Avenue 35th Street Wisconsin Avenue and Blue Mound Road US 41 and US 45 both provide north south freeway transportation on the western side of the city The freeway system in Milwaukee carries roughly 25 of all travel in Wisconsin 193 Milwaukee County is also served by several Wisconsin highways These include the following Hwy 24 Forest Home Avenue Hwy 32 Chicago Avenue College Avenue S Lake Drive Howard Avenue Kinnickinnic Avenue 1st Street Pittsburgh Avenue Milwaukee Street State Street Prospect Avenue NB Farwell Avenue SB Bradford Avenue N Lake Drive Brown Deer Road Hwy 36 Loomis Road Hwy 38 Howell Avenue Chase Avenue 6th Street Hwy 57 27th Street Highland Avenue 20th Street Capitol Drive Green Bay Avenue Hwy 59 Greenfield Avenue National Avenue Hwy 100 Ryan Road Lovers Lane Road 108th Street Mayfair Road Brown Deer Road Hwy 119 Airport Spur Hwy 145 Fond du Lac Ave Fond du Lac Freeway Hwy 175 Appleton Avenue Lisbon Avenue Stadium Freeway Hwy 181 84th Street Glenview Avenue Wauwatosa Avenue 76th Street Hwy 190 Capitol Drive Hwy 241 27th Street Hwy 794 Lake Parkway In 2010 the Milwaukee area was ranked the 4th best city for commuters by Forbes 194 Water Edit The Lake Express Terminal Milwaukee s main port Port of Milwaukee handled 2 4 million metric tons of cargo through its municipal port in 2014 195 Steel and salt are handled at the port Milwaukee connects with Muskegon Michigan through the Lake Express high speed auto and passenger ferry The Lake Express travels across Lake Michigan from late spring to the fall of each year Bicycle Edit The Oak Leaf Trail on the East Side Milwaukee has over 105 miles 169 km of bicycle lanes and trails most of which run alongside or near its rivers and Lake Michigan The Oak Leaf Trail a multi use recreational trail provides bicycle trails throughout the city and county Still pending are the creation of bicycle lanes along major commuting routes such as the Hoan Bridge connector between downtown and the suburbs to the south The city has also identified over 250 miles 400 km of streets on which bike lanes will fit It has created a plan labeling 145 miles 233 km of those as high priority for receiving bike lanes 196 As part of the city s Bicycle and Pedestrian Task Force s mission to make Milwaukee more bicycle and pedestrian friendly over 700 bike racks have been installed throughout the city 197 The Bicycle Federation of Wisconsin 198 holds an annual Bike to Work Week The event held in May each year has frequently featured a commuter race between a car a bus and a bike and also a morning ride into work with the mayor In 2006 Milwaukee obtained bronze level status from the League of American Bicyclists 199 a rarity for a city its size 200 In 2009 the Milwaukee County Transit System began installing bicycle racks to the front of county buses 201 This green effort was part of a settlement of an asbestos lawsuit filed by the state against the county in 2006 202 The lawsuit cites the release of asbestos into the environment when the Courthouse Annex was demolished 203 In August 2014 Milwaukee debuted a bicycle sharing system called Bublr Bikes which is a partnership between the City of Milwaukee and a local non profit Midwest Bike Share dba Bublr Bikes 204 205 As of September 2016 the system operates 39 stations throughout downtown the East Side and the UW Milwaukee campus area and near downtown neighborhoods The City of Milwaukee installed another ten Bublr Bikes stations in October 2016 and the adjacent suburb of Wauwatosa installed eight stations in September 2016 which will bring the system size to 58 stations by the end of 2016 More stations are scheduled for installation in the Village of Shorewood and the City of West Allis in 2017 Future system expansion in the City of Milwaukee is also expected as the City was awarded a second federal Congestion Mitigation Air Quality CMAQ program grant 1 9 million to add more stations starting in 2018 206 Walkability Edit A 2015 study by Walk Score ranked Milwaukee as the 15th most walkable out of the 50 largest U S cities 207 As a whole the city has a score of 62 out of 100 However several of the more densely populated neighborhoods have much higher scores Juneautown has a score of 95 the Lower East Side has a score of 91 Yankee Hill scored 91 and the Marquette and Murray Hill neighborhoods both scored 89 each 208 Those ratings range from A Walker s Paradise to Very Walkable Modal characteristics Edit According to the 2016 American Community Survey 71 of working city of Milwaukee residents commuted by driving alone 10 4 carpooled 8 2 used public transportation and 4 9 walked About 2 used all other forms of transportation including taxicab motorcycle and bicycle About 3 4 of working city of Milwaukee residents worked at home 209 In 2015 17 9 of city of Milwaukee households were without a car which increased to 18 7 in 2016 The national average was 8 7 percent in 2016 Milwaukee averaged 1 3 cars per household in 2016 compared to a national average of 1 8 per household 210 City development Edit On February 10 2015 a streetcar connecting the Milwaukee Intermodal Station with the city s Lower East Side was approved by the Common Council bringing decades of sometimes acrimonious debate to a pause On a 9 6 vote the council approved a measure that established the project s 124 million capital budget its estimated 3 2 million operating and maintenance budget and its 2 5 mile 4 0 km route which includes a lakefront spur connecting the line to the proposed 122 million 44 story Couture Construction on the Milwaukee Streetcar began March 2017 with initial operation by mid 2018 191 211 The Lakefront service is expected to start operation by 2019 191 Northwestern Mutual Tower and Commons stands 550 feet 170 m tall and has 32 stories making it the second tallest building in Milwaukee 212 213 Fiserv Forum a new multipurpose arena at 1111 Vel R Phillips Avenue has been built to accommodate the Milwaukee Bucks and Marquette Golden Eagles as well as college and professional ice hockey games Construction on the 524 million project began in November 2015 and opened to the public on August 26 2018 214 The arena is intended to be the focal point of a live block zone that includes public space surrounded by both commercial and residential developments The arena has a transparent facade and a curved roof and side that is meant to evoke the water forms of nearby Lake Michigan and the Milwaukee River 215 In popular culture EditThe American sitcom Happy Days was set in Milwaukee and ran for 11 seasons from 1974 to 1984 becoming one of the most successful sitcoms in American television history It presented an idealized vision of life in the 1950s and early 1960s Midwestern United States The American sitcom Laverne amp Shirley which played for eight seasons on ABC from January 27 1976 to May 10 1983 followed the lives of Laverne DeFazio and Shirley Feeney two friends and roommates who work as bottle cappers in the fictitious Shotz Brewery in late 1950s Milwaukee The 2004 sports comedy film Mr 3000 takes place in Milwaukee and features actor Bernie Mac as a member of the Milwaukee Brewers 216 In the 1992 movie Wayne s World the two main characters Wayne and Garth meet rock star Alice Cooper after a show in Milwaukee Cooper engages in a discussion with them and his band about Milwaukee and where the city s name comes from 217 218 The 2011 comedy film Bridesmaids starring Kristen Wiig Maya Rudolph and Rebel Wilson had multiple scenes set in Milwaukee 219 The 1989 film Major League written and directed by David S Ward that stars Tom Berenger Charlie Sheen Wesley Snipes James Gammon Bob Uecker Rene Russo Margaret Whitton Dennis Haysbert and Corbin Bernsen was principally shot in Milwaukee despite being set in Cleveland because it was less expensive and the producers were unable to work around the schedules of the Cleveland Indians and Cleveland Browns Milwaukee County Stadium then the home of the Milwaukee Brewers and three Green Bay Packers games per season doubled as Cleveland Stadium for the film although several exterior shots of Cleveland Stadium were used including some aerial shots taken during an Indians game 220 Notable people EditMain article List of people from MilwaukeeSister cities EditMilwaukee s sister cities are 221 Bomet Kenya Daegu South Korea Galway Ireland Irpin Ukraine King Cetshwayo South Africa Medan Indonesia Tarime District Tanzania Zadar Croatia Friendship cities Edit Ningbo China 222 See also Edit Geography portal North America portal United States portal Wisconsin portal Cities portal1947 Wisconsin earthquake Great Lakes megalopolis Flag of Milwaukee Wisconsin Seal of Milwaukee Wisconsin National Register of Historic Places listings in Milwaukee WisconsinNotes Edit The part in Washington County is bordered by the southeast corner of Germantown while the part in Waukesha County is bordered by the southeast corner of Menomonee Falls north of the village of Butler Both areas were annexed to Milwaukee for industrial reasons the Waukesha County portion contains a Cargill plant for Ambrosia Chocolate known as the Ambrosia triangle while the Washington County portion contains a Waste Management facility citation needed Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Records kept January 1871 to February 1941 at the Weather Bureau Office and at General Mitchell Int l since March 1941 For more information see Threadex The total for each race includes those who reported that race alone or in combination with other races People who reported a combination of multiple races may be counted multiple times so the sum of all percentages will exceed 100 Hispanic and Latino origins are separate from race in the U S Census The Census does not distinguish between Latino origins alone or in combination This row counts Hispanics and Latinos of any race References Edit Henzl Ann Elise December 27 2019 How Milwaukee Got The Nickname Cream City wuwm com WUWM Retrieved August 17 2021 Official Brew City Map visitmilwaukee org Retrieved August 17 2021 Milwaukee Beer Capital of the World beerhistory com Retrieved August 17 2021 Snyder Molly August 30 2008 Nicknames for Milwaukee and Wisconsin onmilwaukee com Retrieved August 17 2021 The City of Festivals visitmilwaukee org Retrieved August 17 2021 Tolzmann Don Heinrich A Center of German Culture Milwaukee Wisconsin gamhof org Retrieved August 17 2021 Tarnoff Andy April 14 2021 The 411 on the 414 area code onmilwaukee com Retrieved August 17 2021 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 7 2020 a b QuickFacts Milwaukee city Wisconsin United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 24 2021 a b City and Town Population Totals 2020 2021 United States Census Bureau May 29 2022 Retrieved May 31 2022 2020 Population and Housing State Data United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 22 2021 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey October 25 2007 Retrieved January 31 2008 27 Things People From Milwaukee Have To Explain To Out Of Towners Movato com Population and Housing Unit Estimates Retrieved May 21 2020 Bureau U S Census U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 11 2016 The Largest Cities In The Midwest worldatlas com January 4 2019 Retrieved March 7 2021 Bureau US Census Population Change for Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas Census gov The World According to GaWC 2020 GaWC Research Network Globalization and World Cities Retrieved August 31 2020 Total Gross Domestic Product for Milwaukee Waukesha West Allis WI MSA fred stlouisfed org January 2021 Retrieved February 9 2022 Mak Adrian June 24 2020 Most Diverse Cities in the U S advisorsmith com Retrieved March 7 2021 Leah Foltman amp Malia Jones February 28 2019 How Redlining Continues To Shape Racial Segregation In Milwaukee Extraordinary building boom is reshaping Milwaukee s skyline Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved March 21 2017 First Look Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra s Bradley Symphony Center OnMilwaukee March 25 2021 Retrieved April 28 2021 Dill Molly May 21 2018 Wisconsin has 9 companies on 2018 Fortune 500 list biztimes com Milwaukee Business News Retrieved March 7 2021 Bruce William George 1936 A Short History of Milwaukee Milwaukee Wisconsin The Bruce Publishing Company p 15 LCCN 36010193 Ojibwe Dictionary Freelang Retrieved March 25 2007 White Richard 1991 The Middle Ground New York Cambridge University Press p 146 ISBN 9781139495684 Fowler William 2005 Empires at War New York Walker amp Company p 68 ISBN 9780802719355 White Richard 1991 The Middle Ground New York Cambridge University Press p 400 ISBN 9781139495684 Keating Ann 2012 Rising Up from Indian Country Chicago University of Chicago Press p 137 Potawatomi Treaties and Treaty Rights Milwaukee Public Museum www mpm edu Retrieved March 2 2021 St Pierre T Histoire des Canadiens du Michigan et du comte d essex Ontario Cahiers du septentrion vol 17 Sillery Quebec Septentrion 2000 1895 What Does Milwaukee Mean Anyway Milwaukee Magazine January 29 2018 Retrieved March 2 2021 Bruce William George 1936 A Short History of Milwaukee Milwaukee Wisconsin The Bruce Publishing Company pp 15 16 LCCN 36010193 From Milwaukee Wis to Milwaukie Ore OnMilwaukee August 3 2016 Retrieved March 2 2021 Bridges Encyclopedia of Milwaukee emke uwm edu Retrieved October 3 2018 Walker s Point Encyclopedia of Milwaukee Retrieved March 2 2021 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Watrous Jerome A 1909 Memoirs of Milwaukee County from the Earliest Historical Times Vol I Madison Wisconsin Western Historical Association pp 265 267 City of Milwaukee City of Milwaukee Incorporated page 164 1846 page 314 1851 PDF Office of the Secretary of State of Wisconsin Archived from the original PDF on June 5 2007 Retrieved April 8 2007 a b c Bungert Heike Cora Lee Kluge and Robert C Ostergren Wisconsin German Land and Life Madison Max Kade Institute for German American Studies 2006 a b Conzen Kathleen Neils Immigrant Milwaukee 1836 1860 Cambridge Massachusetts and London England Harvard University Press 1976 Conzen Kathleen Neils The German Athens Milwaukee and the Accommodation of Its Immigrants 1836 1860 PhD diss vol 1 University of Wisconsin Madison 1972 Dippel Christian Heblich Stephan May 24 2020 Leadership and Social Movements The Forty Eighters in the Civil War PDF UCLA Anderson p 7 Archived from the original PDF on January 12 2021 Retrieved March 2 2021 Milwaukee and Watertown as Seen by Schurz in 1854 The Milwaukee Journal October 21 1941 Accessed February 5 2013 Rippley LaVern J and Eberhard Reichmann trans The German Americans An Ethnic Experience Max Kade German American Center and Indiana University Purdue University at Indianapolis accessed February 5 2013 Milwaukee s German Fest canceled over COVID 19 concerns TMJ4 February 5 2021 Retrieved March 2 2021 Milwaukee German Immersion School 5 milwaukee k12 wi us Retrieved April 24 2015 Introduction Milwaukee Polonia Retrieved March 2 2021 Poles Encyclopedia of Milwaukee Retrieved March 2 2021 The Nation of Polonia Polish Russian Immigration and Relocation in U S History Classroom Materials at the Library of Congress Library of Congress Library of Congress Retrieved March 2 2021 Beutner Jeff Yesterday s Milwaukee Jones Island Fishing Village 1898 Urban Milwaukee Retrieved March 2 2021 a b Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved April 5 2020 Polish Fest celebrates the 100th anniversary of the rebirth of a nation Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved October 3 2018 Muehlhans Karides Susan Aus dem Egerland nach Milwaukee Archived from the original on April 23 2010 Retrieved April 25 2009 Milwaukee Neighborhoods Photos and Maps 1885 1992 University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Retrieved December 5 2017 Historical Census Statistics On Population Totals By Race 1790 to 1990 and By Hispanic Origin 1970 to 1990 For Large Cities And Other Urban Places In The United States U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Retrieved December 24 2011 Geenen Paul H 2006 Milwaukee s Bronzeville 1900 1950 Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 4061 0 Wisconsinhistory org additional text Milwaukee Socialism The Emil Seidel Era UWM Libraries Digital Collections Retrieved March 2 2021 Nan Bialek November 11 2010 It s everyday life that keeps local historian fascinated But the Hollywood worthy moments aren t bad either Leah Foltman amp Malia Jones February 28 2019 How Redlining Continues To Shape Racial Segregation In Milwaukee Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places Earliest Census to 1990 U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Glabere Michael Milwaukee A Tale of Three Cities in From Redlining to Reinvestment Community Responses to Urban Disinvestment edited by Gregory D Squires Philadelphia Temple University Press 2011 p 151 and passim Dozen Distinctive Destinations Milwaukee National Trust for Historic Preservation 2006 Archived from the original on February 22 2010 US Gazetteer files 2010 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 12 2012 Retrieved November 18 2012 Cross John A 2017 Ethnic Landscapes of America Cham Switzerland Springer p 310 ISBN 978 3 319 54009 2 a b c Summary of Monthly Normals 1991 2020 National Climatic Data Center Archived from the original on May 5 2021 Retrieved May 5 2021 a b Normals and Extremes for Milwaukee and Madison National Weather Service Retrieved February 23 2017 NOWData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 5 2021 WMO Climate Normals for MILWAUKEE GEN MITCHELL WI 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved July 25 2020 a b Milwaukee Wisconsin USA Monthly weather forecast and Climate data Weather Atlas Retrieved July 4 2019 What Climate Change Means for Wisconsin PDF United States Environmental Protection Agency August 2016 Henderson Alison April 17 2020 Milwaukee Remains Committed to the Paris Climate Agreement Shepherd Express Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Our History PDF Thewatercouncil com Milwaukee Water Council Circles of Sustainability Archived July 2 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Cities Programme Retrieved on July 12 2013 2012 Prize Winners Archived December 11 2015 at the Wayback Machine U S Water Alliance Retrieved on July 12 2013 MPS Milwaukee Public Schools releases results of water quality testing mps milwaukee k12 wi us Retrieved January 8 2021 Files Emily May 7 2019 What Milwaukee s Lead Problem Means For Children www wuwm com Retrieved January 8 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original on February 12 2020 Retrieved April 5 2020 Milwaukee is most segregated city U S Census analysis Jet magazine December 16 2002 Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Murphy Bruce January 12 2003 Study explodes myth of area s hypersegregation Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on July 12 2006 Retrieved February 28 2022 Frey William H 2018 Diversity Explosion How New Racial Demographics Are Remaking America Second ed Washington D C Brookings Institution Press p 177 ISBN 978 0 8157 2398 1 Levine Marc V May 2004 Citizens and MMFHC Respond to Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Article Getting the Facts Right on Segregation in Milwaukee PDF Fair Housing Keys The Metropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing Council Pawasarat John January 2003 Racial Integration in Urban America A Block Level Analysis of African American and White Housing Patterns University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Employment and Training Institute Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved March 8 2007 Quinn Lois M October 2004 Assumptions and Limitations of the Census Bureau Methodology Ranking Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation in Cities and Metro Areas PDF University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Employment and Training Institute Archived from the original PDF on October 10 2008 Retrieved March 8 2007 Why Milwaukee Is the Worst Place to Live for African Americans Bloomberg com October 30 2015 Downs Kenya March 5 2015 Why Is Milwaukee So Bad For Black People NPR a b Pabst Georgia Report shows growth in Hmong community Milwaukee Journal Sentinel January 6 2013 Retrieved March 2 2014 Metro Area Membership Report Milwaukee Waukesha West Allis WI CMSA Association of Religion Data Archives 2012 Archived from the original on October 16 2015 Retrieved September 11 2015 Sheskin Ira M Dashefsky Arnold 2018 United States Jewish Population 2017 American Jewish Year Book 2017 The Annual Record of the North American Jewish Communities American Jewish Year Book 117 179 284 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 70663 4 5 ISBN 978 3 319 70662 7 Retrieved August 1 2022 Cohen Sheila Terman September 25 2019 What Happened To Wisconsin s Once Thriving Smaller Jewish Communities WisContext Retrieved August 1 2022 Meyer Maredithe January 26 2021 Iconic Milwaukee venue Serb Hall up for sale BizTimes Milwaukee Business News Retrieved March 2 2021 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Official Website 2011 Retrieved April 11 2011 Toosi Nahal August 22 2001 Census finds more same sex households Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on February 20 2007 Retrieved November 24 2006 Killian Erin June 2002 Vital Statistics Milwaukee Magazine Archived from the original on January 14 2006 Retrieved November 24 2006 Tom Daykin July 8 2010 Apartment rents rise industrial vacancies drop office vacancies increase Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved October 26 2010 a b Milwaukee County Historical Society Milwaukee Timeline 1800s Milwaukeehistory net Archived from the original on June 10 2010 Retrieved July 2 2010 Menomonee River Valley History Menomonee River Valley Retrieved March 2 2021 Clymer Floyd 1950 Treasury of Early American Automobiles 1877 1925 New York Bonanza Books p 153 Milwaukee Loses Beer Capital Title as Breweries Shut off Tap Chicago Tribune Retrieved April 25 2021 Connected to Wisconsin its people and its economy PDF Miller Brewing Company February 2005 Archived from the original PDF on August 22 2006 Demand for better beer foments a new brewery boom in Milwaukee Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved February 9 2017 Noel Josh Late to the craft beer scene Milwaukee s small brewers are a big hit chicagotribune com Retrieved March 16 2019 Murphy Dan January 28 2019 Welcome to Milwaukee s Brewery Boom 22 New Breweries to Try milwaukeemag com Retrieved March 16 2019 Three state breweries make largest list The Business Journal of Milwaukee Milwaukee bizjournals com April 14 2009 Retrieved July 2 2010 Judy Newman Wisconsin State Journal May 10 2013 Ten Wisconsin companies make the Fortune 500 list for 2013 madison com Marshall amp Ilsley s Shotgun Marriage Deal Journal WSJ Blogs wsj com December 20 2010 Retrieved on 2013 07 12 A O Smith Archived from the original on October 24 2008 Retrieved March 23 2008 Milwaukee s 10 largest employers UWM edu 2004 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved February 28 2022 2011 City and Neighborhood Rankings Walk Score 2011 Retrieved August 28 2011 Perez Christina July 10 2018 Why Milwaukee Is the Midwest s Coolest and Most Underrated City Travel Vogue Retrieved December 11 2019 Museum Info Santiago Calatrava Milwaukee Art Museum Retrieved October 16 2008 Peterson s October 15 2011 Cool Colleges 101 The Midwestern Region of the United States Part II of IV Peterson s ISBN 9780768935707 Villa Terrace Decorative Arts Museum Villaterracemuseum org Archived from the original on August 5 2016 Retrieved August 14 2016 Permanent Exhibits Milwaukee Public Museum Retrieved January 23 2018 By New dinosaur exhibit to open in Milwaukee Journal Times Retrieved February 28 2018 bbcmkids org bbcmkids org Retrieved July 28 2013 Behm Don June 25 2018 Decision time is quickly approaching for the future of the leaking aging Mitchell Park Domes JS online Retrieved April 1 2019 Wisconsin Black Historical Society and Museum African American Heritage and Culture Resource Archived from the original on February 10 2012 de beste bron van informatie over blackholocaustmuseum Deze website is te koop blackholocaustmuseum org Archived from the original on September 8 2012 Retrieved September 10 2012 America s Black Holocaust Museum reopens at online site Milwaukee Journal Sentinel March 4 2012 Retrieved February 9 2015 America s Black Holocaust Museum Bringing Our History To Light abhmuseum org Retrieved September 24 2018 Preserving our Jewish heritage for future generations JMM March 27 2020 APWA Reporter Online Apwa net Archived from the original on January 17 2011 Retrieved July 2 2010 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Machine Green Bay Packers Flannery Jerome The American Cricket Annual for 1890 p 9 The Milwaukee County Parks Department was named the 2009 winner of the National Recreation and Park Association s NRPA Gold Medal Award in the Park and Recreation Management Program nrpa org Milwaukee County Parks Countyparks com February 22 2010 Retrieved July 2 2010 City Profiles Milwaukee Archived February 23 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Trust for Public Land Retrieved on July 2 2013 Urban Ecology official website Retrieved March 24 2021 Havenwoods official website Retrieved March 24 2021 Wehr Nature Center official website Retrieved March 24 2021 Annysa Johnson Activists hope engineering school won t disturb Monarch Trail Thousands of monarchs fly south annually along path through Milwaukee County Grounds Milwaukee Journal Sentinel September 14 2008 Jazz In The Park Urban Milwaukee Retrieved July 2 2010 Foran Chris A century of Milwaukee mayors from Dan Hoan to Cavalier Johnson How they got in and how they left Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved December 23 2021 Hess Corrinne December 22 2021 Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett resigns Wednesday to take ambassador post Wisconsin Public Radio Retrieved December 23 2021 O Neill Joseph February 18 2020 How Milwaukee Could Decide the Next President The New Yorker Retrieved February 19 2020 Tabular Statement of the Votes Given for President and Vice President at a Fall General Election Held in the Several Wards Villages and Election Districts in the County of Milwaukee on the 4th Day of November 2008 PDF County milwaukee gov Retrieved July 26 2018 Editorial 4th Congressional District Moore Hoze in primaries Milwaukee Journal Sentinel September 4 2004 Archived from the original on May 13 2007 Retrieved June 1 2016 Tom Daykin Mexican Consulate to open Milwaukee office Milwaukee Journal Sentinel January 6 2016 Retrieved December 29 2016 see e g Violent crime rankings 2001 Milwaukee is ranked seventh among large cities Archived March 8 2012 at 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October 26 2020 Retrieved March 27 2021 Kennedy Bruce February 18 2015 America s 11 Poorest Cities CBS News Archived from the original on August 5 2016 Retrieved August 3 2016 Milwaukee Continuum of Care January 2013 Point in Time Summary PDF Milwaukee Continuum of Care January 30 2013 Retrieved July 26 2016 City of Milwaukee Election Commission 2020 General Election Results Retrieved April 18 2021 City of Milwaukee Election Commission 2016 General Election Results Retrieved April 18 2021 City of Milwaukee Election Commission 2012 General Election Results Retrieved April 18 2021 City of Milwaukee Election Commission 2008 General Election Results Retrieved April 18 2021 City of Milwaukee Election Commission 2004 General Election Results Retrieved April 18 2021 Borsuk Alan J October 16 2007 The face of Milwaukee Public Schools is changing Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on February 12 2008 Retrieved July 2 2010 Borsuk Alan J October 30 2007 Local drop out factories Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on December 8 2010 Retrieved March 27 2009 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Milwaukee County Wisconsin Census Bureau QuickFacts Retrieved September 25 2018 Duel in Milwaukee Time January 3 1972 Hoffmann Gregg WisBiz In Depth Newspaper chain ownership explodes in state Archived July 18 2011 at the Wayback Machine wisbusiness com January 31 2005 a b Mitchell Airport Airline Information mitchellairport com Retrieved November 1 2017 April passenger numbers soar to 20th straight record month Wisbusiness com Archived from the original on September 30 2011 Mitchell Airport Air Traffic Report PDF mitchellairport com Retrieved September 14 2015 Held Tom January 28 2010 Wisconsin lands 800 million for high speed rail Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved July 2 2010 Hubbuch Chris Walker defends rejecting fed funds for passenger rail La Crosse Tribune December 4 2011 Amtrak Hiawatha upgrade of up to 200M would add three routes per day Bizjournals com Retrieved March 15 2017 Wisconsin Department of Transportation Chicago Milwaukee Intercity Passenger Rail Corridor Wisconsindot gov Retrieved March 15 2017 More Trains More Cities Better Service PDF AmtrakConnectsUs com Retrieved October 31 2022 East West BRT eastwestbrtmke com Grand opening for the new Milwaukee streetcar called The Hop set for Nov 2 jsonline com Retrieved October 28 2018 a b c Construction for Milwaukee s streetcar project to begin in early April FOX6Now com February 17 2017 Retrieved March 15 2017 KRMonline Home Maps sewrpc org October 5 2009 Retrieved May 12 2012 Report Nearly 1 200 Wisconsin Bridges In Deficient Condition Wisconsin Public Radio February 2 2018 Retrieved February 5 2018 Levy Francesca February 16 2010 Best And Worst Cities For Commuters Forbes com Retrieved July 2 2010 Port of Milwaukee 2014 Annual Report Retrieved September 14 2015 City of Milwaukee Bike Lanes and Bike Routes Archived from the original on June 19 2008 Retrieved March 22 2008 City of Milwaukee Bicycle and Pedestrian Task Force Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved March 22 2008 Wisconsin Bike Fed Archived from the original on May 18 2019 Retrieved January 25 2015 League of American Bicyclists Bicycle Friendly Community Campaign bicyclefriendlycommunity org Archived from the original on December 11 2009 Retrieved July 2 2010 Patenaude Joel Madison Makes Sense Silent Sports Archived from the original on June 2 2008 Bikes on Buses Milwaukee County Transit System Archived from the original on March 28 2010 Retrieved June 12 2009 County hopes bike racks on buses cancel out asbestos Plan may settle environmental lawsuit by state Archived February 22 2008 at the Wayback Machine Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Hissom Doug February 13 2008 Rack and Roll City reaches accord on Kilbourn Tower settlement Onmilwaukee com Initial locations announced for Milwaukee bike share program BizTimes com August 6 2014 Archived from the original on August 8 2014 Retrieved February 28 2022 Eyes on Milwaukee Bublr Bike Share System Is Launched Urban Milwaukee Station Locations bublrbikes bcycle com Retrieved February 10 2016 2015 City and Neighborhood Rankings Walk Score 2015 Retrieved August 24 2015 Milwaukee neighborhoods on Walk Score Walk Score Retrieved May 9 2016 Means of Transportation to Work by Age Census Reporter Retrieved May 18 2018 Car Ownership in U S Cities Data and Map Governing December 9 2014 Retrieved May 18 2018 Milwaukee Streetcar Follow Our Momentum Themilwaukeestreetcar com Retrieved March 15 2017 Schneider Keith October 10 2017 In the Heart of Milwaukee a Gleaming Tower Leads an Urban Renewal The New York Times Northwestern Mutual officially opens 32 story skyscraper in Milwaukee Jsonline com Retrieved July 26 2018 Davis Scott Check out the Milwaukee Bucks chic new 524 million arena Business Insider Retrieved July 9 2019 Mary Louise Schumacher New Arena Unveiled Design for new Bucks arena aims to embrace idea of modern architecture Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on November 13 2015 Retrieved November 6 2015 Hansen Kristine March 21 2020 Movies and TV Shows with Milwaukee Connections to Stream While You re at Home Milwaukee Magazine Carole Nicksin Retrieved March 30 2022 Alice Cooper Was Slightly Off or Wisconsin Place Names and their Native Language Origins Milwaukee Public Library November 5 2014 Retrieved May 3 2022 Wayne s World 1992 Alice Cooper Alice Cooper IMDB Retrieved May 3 2022 imdb locations Bridesmaids 1 Milwaukee s Sister Cities Official Website of the City of Milwaukee Retrieved September 6 2020 Schmid John July 21 2008 New statues are today s mane event Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on June 5 2012 Retrieved July 2 2010 Further reading EditFure Slocum Eric June 2013 Contesting the Postwar City Working Class and Growth Politics in 1940s Milwaukee Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107036352 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Milwaukee Wisconsin Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Milwaukee Official website Greater Milwaukee Convention Bureau Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce Milwaukee featured on NPR sState of the Re Union Sanborn fire insurance maps 1894 vol 1 vol 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Milwaukee amp oldid 1132270812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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