| |
Wisconsin State Guide
Wisconsin is a state in the United States, and is located
in the Great Lakes region. The capital of the state is Madison, and its
current governor is Jim Doyle.
The Wisconsin area, bordered by the current-day states of Iowa, Minnesota,
Michigan and Illinois, as well as Lakes Michigan and Superior, has been
part of United States territory since the end of the American Revolution;
the Wisconsin Territory (which included parts of other current states)
was formed on July 3, 1836. Wisconsin ratified its constitution March
13, 1848 and was admitted to the Union on May 29, 1848 as the thirtieth
state.
Wisconsin's rural economy was originally based farming (especially dairy),
mining, and lumbering. In the 20th century tourism became important,
and many people living on former farms commuted to jobs elsewhere. Large-scale
industrialization began in the late 19th century in the southeast of
the state, with the city of Milwaukee as its major center. In recent
decades, service industries, especially medicine and education, have
become dominant. Wisconsin's landscape, largely shaped by the Wisconsin
glaciation of the last Ice Age, makes the state popular for both tourism
and many forms of outdoor recreation.
Since its founding, Wisconsin has been ethnically heterogeneous, with
Yankees being among the first to arrive from New York and New England.
They continue to dominate the state's heavy industry, finance, politics
and education. Large numbers of European immigrants followed them, including
German Americans, mostly between 1850 and 1900, Scandinavian Americans
and smaller groups of Belgians, Swiss, Finns, Irish Americans and others;
in the twentieth century, large numbers of Polish Americans and African-Americans
came, settling mainly in Milwaukee.
Today, 42.6% of the population is of German ancestry, making Wisconsin
one of the most German-American states in the United States. Since 1970
the Hmong have settled in Wisconsin. Numerous ethnic festivals are held
throughout Wisconsin to celebrate its heritage.
During the period of the Civil War, Wisconsin was a Republican and pro-Union
stronghold. Ethno-religious issues in the late 19th century caused a
brief split in the Republican coalition. Through the first half of the
20th century, Wisconin's politics were dominated by Robert La Follette
and his sons, originally of the Republican Party, but later of their
own Progressive Party. Since 1945, the state has maintained a close balance
between Republicans and Democrats. Republican Senator Joe McCarthy was
a major national figure in the early 1950s. Recent leading Republicans
include former Governor Tommy Thompson and Congressman F. James Sensenbrenner,
Jr.; prominent Democrats include governor Jim Doyle, Senators Herb Kohl
and Russ Feingold, and Congressman Dave Obey.
Wisconsin State Guide - History
In 1634, Frenchman Jean Nicolet became Wisconsin's first
European explorer, landing at Red Banks, near modern-day Green Bay in
search of a passage to the Orient. The French controlled the area until
it was ceded to the British in 1763.
After the American Revolutionary War, Wisconsin was
part of the U.S. Northwest Territory. It was then governed as part
of Indiana Territory,
Illinois Territory, and Michigan Territory. Settlement began when
the first two public land offices opened in 1834. Wisconsin Territory
was organized on July 3, 1836, and it became the 30th state on
May 29,
1848.
The state mineral is galena, otherwise known as lead sulfide, which
reflects Wisconsin's early mining history. Many town names such as Mineral
Point recall a period in the 1820s, 1830s, and 1840s, when Wisconsin
was an important mining state. When Indian treaties opened up southwest
Wisconsin to settlement, thousands of miners — many of them immigrants
from Cornwall, England — flocked to the "lead rush" in
southeastern areas. Wisconsin produced more than half of the nation's
lead; Belmont was briefly the state capital. By the 1840s, the easily
accessible deposits were worked out, and experienced miners were drawn
to the California Gold Rush. This period of mining before and during
the early years of statehood directly led to the development of state's
nickname, the "Badger State". Many miners and their families
lived in the mines in which they worked until adequate above-ground
shelters were built and were thus compared to badgers.
In the 1830-60 period, large numbers of Yankees from New England and
New York flocked to Wisconsin. Some became farmers but most settled in
towns or cities where they set up businesses, factories, mills, banks,
schools, libraries, colleges, and voluntary societies. They created many
Congregational, Presbyterian and Methodist churches that still exist.
The Yankees created the Republican party in 1854—the first local
meeting in the country came in Ripon. They gave strong support to the
Civil War effort, as well as to reforms such as abolition, woman suffrage
and, especially, prohibition.
Even larger numbers of Germans arrived, so that the state became over
one-third German. Most became farmers, especially known for the dairy
industry. Others moved to Milwaukee and smaller cities setting up breweries
and becoming craftsmen, machinists and skilled workers who were in high
demand as the state industrialized. The Germans were split along religious
lines. Most Germans were Catholic or Lutheran, with some Lutherans forming
the Wisconsin Synod and others joining the Missouri Synod. The Catholics
and Lutherans created their own network of parochial schools, through
grade 8. Smaller numbers of Germans were Methodists, Jews, or anticlerical
liberals (especially intellectual refugees). Politically they tended
toward the Democratic party, but 30-40% voted Republican. Whenever the
Republicans seemed to support prohibition, they shifted somewhat toward
the Democrats. When nativist Republicans led by governor William Hoard
passed the Bennett Law in 1889 that would shut down German language schools,
both Catholic and Lutheran, they revolted and helped elect the Democrats
in 1890. In World War I, German culture came under heavy attack in Wisconsin.
Senator LaFollette became their protector and Germans strongly supported
his wing of the Republican party after that.
Scandinavians comprised the third largest ethnic block, with Norwegians,
Danes, Swedes and Finns becoming farmers and lumberjacks in the western
and northern districts. A large Danish settlement in Racine gave the
only large urban presence. The great majority were Lutheran, of various
synods. The Scandinavians supported prohibition and voted Republican;
in the early 20th century the were the backbone of the LaFollette movement.
Irish Catholics came to Milwaukee and Madison and smaller cities as railroad
workers. They quickly became prominent in local government and in the
Democratic party. They wrestled with the German Catholics for control
of the Catholic church in the state.
Wisconsin State Guide - Name
"Wisconsin" is thought to be an English version
of a French adaptation of an Indian word. It may come from the Ojibwe
word Miskwasiniing, meaning "Red-stone place," which was probably
the name given to the Wisconsin River, and was recorded as Ouisconsin
by the French and changed to its current form by the English. The modern
Ojibwe name, however, is Wiishkoonsing or Wazhashkoonsing, meaning "muskrat-lodge
place" or "little muskrat place." Other theories are that
the name comes from words meaning "Gathering of the Waters" or "Great
Rock." Wisconsin originally was applied to the Wisconsin River,
and later to the area as a whole when Wisconsin became a territory.
Wisconsin State Guide - Geography
The state is bordered by the Montreal River; Lake Superior
and Michigan to the north; by Lake Michigan to the east; by Illinois
to the south; and by Iowa and Minnesota to the west. Part of the state's
boundaries includes the Mississippi River and St. Croix River in the
west, and the Menominee River in the northeast.
With its location between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River, Wisconsin
is home to a wide variety of geographical features. The state is divided
into five distinct regions. In the north, the Lake Superior Lowland occupies
a belt of land along Lake Superior. Just to the south, the Northern Highland
includes the state's highest point, Timms Hill, as well as massive forests
and thousands of small glacial lakes. In the middle of the state, the Central
Plain possesses some unique sandstone formations like the Dells of the Wisconsin
River in addition to rich farmland. The Eastern Ridges and Lowlands region
in the southeast is home to many of Wisconsin's largest cities. In the southwest,
the Western Upland is a rugged landscape with a mix of forest and farmland.
The varied landscape of Wisconsin makes the state a vacation destination
popular for outdoor recreation. Winter events include skiing, ice fishing
and snowmobile derbies. Wisconsin has many lakes of varied size; in fact
Wisconsin contains 11,188 square miles (28,977 km²) of water, more
than all but three other states (Alaska, Michigan & Florida). The distinctive
Door Peninsula, which extends off of the eastern coast of the state, contains
one of the state's most beautiful tourist destinations, Door County. The
area draws thousands of visitors yearly to its quaint villages, seasonal
cherry picking, and ever-popular fish boils.
Areas under the management of the National Park Service include the following:
* Apostle Islands National Lakeshore along Lake Superior
* Ice Age National Scenic Trail
* North Country National Scenic Trail
* Saint Croix National Scenic Riverway
Wisconsin State Guide - Demographics
The state has always been ethnically heterogeneous.
Large numbers of German Americans arrived between 1850 and 1900, centering
in Milwaukee, but also settling in many small cities and farm areas in
the southeast. Scandinavian Americans settled in lumbering and farming
areas in the northwest. Small colonies of Belgians, Swiss, Finns and
other groups came to the state. Irish Catholics mostly came to the cities.
After 1900, Polish immigrants came to Milwaukee, followed by African
Americans from 1940 on.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2005, Wisconsin has an estimated
population of 5,536,201, which is an increase of 32,668, or 0.6%, from
the prior year and an increase of 172,486, or 3.2%, since the year 2000.
This includes a natural increase since the last census of 119,347 people
(that is 361,534 births minus 242,187 deaths) and an increase from net
migration of 60,701 people into the state. Immigration from outside the
United States resulted in a net increase of 46,106 people, and migration
within the country produced a net increase of 14,595 people. The top
5 states with a net increase of migration into Wisconsin are 1) Illinois,
2) California, 3) Indiana 4) New York and 5) Pennsylvania. The U.S. Census
Bureau has also projected that Wisconsin will have 5,727,000 residents
by the year 2010, a 6.77% increase since the 2000 census. If this projection
were to come true, Wisconsin would have drawn the 2nd highest percentage
population increase of the entire Great Lakes region. (Minnesota 10.21%,
Michigan 4.94%, Illinois 4.01%, Indiana 5.3%, New York 2.4%, Pennsylvania
2.4%, and Ohio 1.96%) Source: US Census. The center of population of
Wisconsin is located in Green Lake County, in the city of Markesan.
As of 2004, there are 229,800 foreign-born residents in the state (4.2%
of the state population), and an estimated 41,000 undocumented workers
living in the state, accounting for 18% of the foreign-born population.
The five largest ancestry groups in Wisconsin are: German (42.6%), Irish
(10.9%), Polish (9.3%), Norwegian (8.5%), English (6.5%)
Wisconsin, with many cultural remnants of its heavy German settlement,
is known as perhaps the most "German-American" state in the
Union. People of Scandinavian descent, especially Norwegians, are heavily
concentrated in some western parts of the state. Wisconsin has the highest
percentage of residents of Polish ancestry of any state. Menominee County
is the only county in the eastern United States with an American Indian
majority.
86% of Wisconsin's African American population lives in one of five
cities: Milwaukee, Racine, Madison, Kenosha and Beloit while Milwaukee
itself is home to nearly three-fourths of the state's African Americans.
Milwaukee ranks in the top 10 major U.S. cities with the highest humber
of African Americans per capita. In the Great Lakes region, only Detroit
and Cleveland have a higher percentage of African Americans.
33% of Wisconsin's Asian population is Hmong, with significant communities
in Milwaukee, Wausau, Green Bay, Sheboygan, Appleton, La Crosse, Stevens
Point, Madison, and Eau Claire.
6.4% of Wisconsin's population was reported as under 5, 25.5% under
18, and 13.1% were 65 or older. Females made up approximately 50.6% of
the population.
Wisconsin State Guide - Economy
According to the 2004 U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
report, Wisconsin’s gross state product was $211.7 billion. The
per capita personal income was $32,157 in 2004.
The economy of Wisconsin is driven by agriculture, healthcare and manufacturing.
Although manufacturing accounts for a far greater part of the state's
income than farming, Wisconsin is usually recognized primarily as a farming
state. Wisconsin produces more dairy products than any other state in
the United States except California, and it leads the nation in cheese
production. Although California has overtaken Wisconsin in the production
of milk and butter, Wisconsin still produces more milk per capita than
any other state in the Union. In addition to dairying, Wisconsin ranks
first in the production of corn for silage, cranberries, ginseng, and
snap beans for processing. Wisconsin is also a leading producer of oats,
potatoes, carrots, tart cherries, maple syrup, and sweet corn for processing.
Given Wisconsin's strong agricultural tradition, it is not surprising
that a large part of the state's manufacturing sector deals with food
processing. Some well known food brands produced in Wisconsin include
Oscar Mayer, Tombstone and Jack's frozen pizza, and Johnsonville Bratwursts.
Kraft Foods alone employs over five thousand people in the state. Milwaukee
is a major producer of beer and the home of Miller Brewing Company's
world headquarters, the nation's second largest brewer.
In addition to food processing, Wisconsin is home to several transportation
equipment and machinery manufacturers. Major Wisconsin companies in these
categories include the Kohler Company, Rockwell Automation, Johnson Controls,
Briggs & Stratton, Miller Electric, Milwaukee Electric Tool Company,
Oshkosh Truck, and Harley-Davidson. Wisconsin also ranks first nationwide
in the production of paper products; the lower Fox River from Lake Winnebago
to the Bay of Green Bay has twenty-four paper mills along its 39-mile
(63 km) stretch. The largest paper companies with operations in Wisconsin
are Kimberly-Clark and Georgia-Pacific, both of which rank among the
state's top ten employers.
Healthcare is a growing sector of the economy with key players such
as GE Healthcare, Epic Systems, and Tomotherapy.
Tourism is also a major industry in Wisconsin. Tourism destinations
such as the House on the Rock near Spring Green, Circus World Museum
in Baraboo, and the collection of attractions around Wisconsin Dells
each draw thousands of visitors every year, and festivals such as Summerfest
and the EAA Oshkosh Airshow always attract large crowds.
Wisconsin collects personal income tax based on 4 income level brackets,
which range from 4.6% to 6.75%. The state sales tax of 5%. Fifty-eight
counties have an additional sales tax of 0.5%. Retailers who make sales
subject to applicable county taxes must collect 5.5% sales tax on their
retail sales. Sales of motor vehicles, boats, snowmobiles, mobile homes
45 feet (13.7 m) or less in length, trailers, semi-trailers, all-terrain
vehicles, and aircraft are subject to the county use tax rather than
county sales tax.
The most common property tax assessed on Wisconsin residents is the
real property tax, or their residential property tax. Wisconsin does
not impose a property tax on vehicles but does levy an annual registration
fee. Property taxes are the most important tax revenue source for Wisconsin's
local governments, as well as major methods of funding school districts,
vocational technical colleges, special purpose districts and tax incremental
finance districts. Equalized values are based on the full market value
of all taxable property in the state, except for agricultural land. In
order to provide property tax relief for farmers, the value of agricultural
land is determined by its value for agriculture uses, rather than for
its possible development value. Equalized values are used to distribute
state aid payments to counties, municipalities, and technical colleges.
Assessments prepared by local assessors are used to distribute the property
tax burden within individual municipalities.
Wisconsin does not assess a tax on intangible personal property. Wisconsin
does not collect inheritance taxes. Wisconsin's estate tax is decoupled
from the federal estate tax laws; therefore the state imposes its own
estate tax.
Wisconsin State Guide - Law and Government
The capital is Madison and the largest city is Milwaukee.
Politics
Much of the state's political history involved coalitions among different
ethnic groups. The most famous controversy dealt with foreign language
teaching in schools. This was fought out in the Bennett Law campaign
of 1890, when the Germans switched to the Democratic Party, who won a
major victory.
Lawmakers in Wisconsin
The state has supported Democrats in the last five presidential contests.
However both the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections were close, with
Wisconsin receiving heavy doses of national advertising because it was
a "swing" or pivot state. Democrats Al Gore carried the presidential
vote in 2000 by only 5,700 votes, John Kerry in 2004 by 14,000 votes.
Republicans have strongholds in the Fox Valley and suburban Milwaukee
(especially Waukesha County). Democrat strongholds include the City of
Milwaukee, Madison and the state's Native American reservations. Most
of Wisconsin's small towns and rural areas are swing regions.
* Wisconsin's political history encompasses, on the one hand, Fighting
Bob La Follette and the Progressive movement; and on the other, Joe McCarthy,
the controversial anti-Communist censured by the Senate during the 1950s.
* In the early 20th century, the Socialist party had a base in Milwaukee; it
faded out in the late 1950s, largely due to the red scare and racial tensions.
The first Socialist mayor of a large city in the United States was Emil Seidel,
elected mayor of Milwaukee in 1910; another Socialist, Daniel Hoan, was mayor
of Milwaukee from 1916 to 1940.
* William Proxmire, a Democratic Senator (1957-89) dominated the Democratic
party for years; he was best known for attacking waste and fraud in federal
spending.
* Democrat Russ Feingold was the only Senator to vote against the Patriot Act
in 2001.
* Democrat Tammy Baldwin from Madison is the only openly lesbian U.S. Representative.
* In 2004, Gwen Moore, a Democrat from Milwaukee, became Wisconsin's first
(and thus far, only) African-American U.S. Representative.
Political issues
Since the anti-Vietnam movement in the late 1960s, the university community
in Madison has supported a liberal Democratic party, known for support
for gay rights and environmentalism, and for anti-war sentiment.
In 1982, sexual orientation was added by the state legislature as a
protected category under existing anti-discrimination laws. However,
in November 2006, voters approved a referendum banning gay marriages
or civil unions in the state by a margin of 59% to 41%.
Wisconsin State Guide - Important Cities and Villages
Wisconsin's self-promotion as "America's Dairyland" sometimes
leads to a mistaken impression that it is an exclusively rural state.
However, Wisconsin contains cities and towns of all sizes, and over 68%
of Wisconsin residents live in urban areas. Milwaukee is slightly larger
than Boston and part of a largely developed string of cities that stretches
down the western edge of Lake Michigan into greater Chicago and also
into northwestern Indiana. Milwaukee is also the 22nd-largest city in
the country, with around 580,000 inhabitants. This string of cities along
the western edge of Lake Michigan is generally considered to be an example
of a megalopolis. Madison's triple identity as state capital, university
town and working city gives it a cultural richness unusual in a city
its size. Madison is also a very fast-growing city, that has around 220,000
people. Medium-size cities dot the state and anchor a network of working
farms surrounding them. Cities and villages are incorporated urban areas
in Wisconsin. Towns are unincorporated minor civil divisions of counties.
Cities in Wisconsin with population of 50,000 or more (as of the 2005
census estimate) include:
* Milwaukee, population 578,887 (1,709,926 in metropolitan area), largest
city
* Madison, population 221,551 (588,885 in metropolitan area), state capital
* Green Bay, population 101,203 (295,473 in metropolitan area)
* Kenosha, population 95,240, part of Chicagoland
* Racine, population 85,855, part of the Milwaukee metropolitan area
* Appleton, population 70,217 (213,102 in metropolitan area)
* Waukesha, population 67,658 part of the Milwaukee metropolitan area
* Oshkosh, population 63,485 (159,008 in metropolitan area)
* Eau Claire, population 62,570 (148,337 in metropolitan area)
* Janesville, population 61,962 (154,794 in metropolitan area)
* West Allis, population 58,798, part of the Milwaukee metropolitan area
* La Crosse, population 50,287 (128,592 in metropolitan area)
Wisconsin State Guide - Colleges and Universities
Public education in Wisconsin includes both the 26-campus
University of Wisconsin System, headquartered in Madison, and the 16-campus
Wisconsin Technical College System which coordinates with the University
of Wisconsin. Notable private colleges and universities include Marquette
University, Beloit College,and Lawrence University, among others.
* Alverno College
* Baptist College of Ministry
* Beloit College
* Cardinal Stritch University
* Carroll College
* Carthage College
* Concordia University Wisconsin
* Edgewood College
* Lakeland College
* Lawrence University
* Maranatha Baptist Bible College
* Marian College
* Marquette University
* Medical College of Wisconsin
* Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design
* Milwaukee School of Engineering
* Mount Mary College
* Mount Senario College
* Nashotah House
* Northland Baptist Bible College
* Northland College
* Ripon College
* St. Norbert College
* Silver Lake College
* Viterbo University
* University of Wisconsin System
o University of Wisconsin Eau Claire
o University of Wisconsin Green Bay
o University of Wisconsin La Crosse
o University of Wisconsin Madison (flagship campus)
o University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
o University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
o University of Wisconsin Parkside
o University of Wisconsin Platteville
o University of Wisconsin River Falls
o University of Wisconsin Stevens Point
o University of Wisconsin Stout
o University of Wisconsin Superior
o University of Wisconsin Whitewater
* Wisconsin Lutheran College
* Wisconsin School of Professional Psychology
Wisconsin State Guide - Professional Sports Teams
Wisconsin is represented by major league teams in the
three most popular spectator sports in the United States: American football,
baseball, and basketball. The Green Bay Packers have been part of the
National Football League since the league's second season in 1921 and
currently hold the record for the most NFL titles, earning the city of
Green Bay the nickname "Titletown".
Eau Claire, WI is the home of NASCAR driver: Paul Menard
Club - Sport - League
Green Bay Packers - Football - National Football League
Milwaukee Brewers - Baseball - Major League Baseball
Milwaukee Bucks - Basketball - National Basketball Association
Milwaukee Admirals - Ice hockey - American Hockey League
Milwaukee Wave - Soccer - Major Indoor Soccer League
Green Bay Blizzard - Arena football - af2
Wisconsin Timber Rattlers - Baseball - Midwest League
Beloit Snappers - Baseball - Midwest League
Article Source: Wikipedia
|
|
|
|