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Apostle Islands National Lakeshore

Headquartered in the charming resort village of Bayfield (on the Chequamegon Bay of Lake Superior), this preserve includes 22 islands, six lighthouses, old brownstone quarries and a preserved fishing camp. It offers a chance to slow the pace of your ...

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Bayfield


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Chippewa Falls

Chippewa Falls, 12 mi/19 km north of Eau Claire, sits on the Chippewa River, just west of Lake Wissota. Recognized as one of the best small towns in the U.S., Chippewa Falls offers visitors an abundance of recreational opportunities: hiking, biking a...

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Door County

This beautiful recreational area is a peninsula bordered on one side by Green Bay and on the other by Lake Michigan. The waters have sculpted the shoreline into scenic, rocky cliffs and caves. It's a relaxing place to rent a cabin and fish, water-ski...

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Great River Road

Running along the state's western border, the Great River Road follows the course of the mighty Mississippi River, passing many interesting attractions along the way. This is a chance to trace the paths of the stern-wheelers Mark Twain wrote about, r...

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Green Bay

The oldest city in the state, Green Bay was founded by missionaries in 1669. Throughout its history, the town's strategic position at the head of Green Bay made it a vital transportation and shipping center. For most people, though, it's the Packers,...

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La Crosse

La Crosse's business district includes almost one hundred nationally registered historic buildings displaying a variety of architectural styles from Greek revival to Neo-Classical. Visitors can also take a riverboat cruise on a late 19th century stea...

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Lake Geneva

Lake Geneva, in the southeast part of Wisconsin about 40 mi/65 km southwest of Milwaukee, is a 5,000-acre/2,025-hectare lake—a perfect place for watersports. Elegant mansions can be viewed during a cruise on one of the boats of the Geneva Lake Cruise...

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Lake Pepin, WI

If you're looking for countryside that large numbers of vacationers haven't yet discovered, try this beautiful stretch of the Mississippi River that's surrounded by high bluffs (it stretches southeast from Red Wing, Minnesota). You can just drive thr...

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Madison, WI

Madison, Wisconsin's, secret is out: Consistently ranked by national magazines as one of the best places to live in the U.S. And Madison's population is growing more than twice as fast as the rest of the state. Some of the new folks are drawn to the ...

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Manitowoc

Manitowoc features many maritime attractions, and a beautiful landscape complete with forests, lakes, and attractive beaches. Local county museums bring the heritage of the region alive with agricultural demonstrations, and exhibits. In Manitowo...

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Marinette

"Your City on the Bay" The beautiful community of Marinette is nestled along the shoreline of the scenic Bay of Green Bay and offers an attractive blend - the warmth and charm of a small community and the modern, progressive thinking of a city on-the...

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Milwaukee

Most visitors associate Milwaukee with Harley Davidsons and beer. But this city is sure to surprise many first-timers. Milwaukee has a thriving and well-supported arts community, including the Calatrava-designed Milwaukee Art Museum. There is also a ...

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Northwoods

This large region in the northeast portion of the state is heavily forested (at least for now—it's the heart of the Wisconsin paper industry). Relive the state's lumberjack days at the logging museum in Rhinelander—it contains a full-scale reproducti...

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Oshkosh

Oshkosh is located 80 mi/130 km northwest of Milwaukee on the shore of Lake Winnebago in the east-central part of Wisconsin. Its factory-outlet stores at The Shops at Oshkosh are a shopper's dream, including the factory store where Oshkosh B'Gosh clo...

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Pepin

Located on the shores of Lake Pepin on Wisconsin State Highway 35, the tiny town of Pepin, with fewer than 1,000 residents, bears the distinction of being the birthplace of author Laura Ingalls Wilder. Laura’s days in Pepin are detailed in her first ...

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Prairie du Chien


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Sheboygan

A busy port on Lake Michigan, Sheboygan is the site of Sheboygan Indian Mound Park, which contains several animal-shaped ceremonial mounds that were constructed between AD 500 and 1000. The Sheboygan County Historical Museum has several buildings fro...

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Spring Green

Located in southwestern Wisconsin, 115 mi/185 km west of Milwaukee, this town is a pilgrimage site for students of modern architecture. Frank Lloyd Wright built Taliesin, one of his Prairie School masterpieces, south of town. The history of Taliesin ...

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Sturgeon Bay

Sturgeon Bay is the perfect all-seasons getaway and is proud to feature Door County's widest selection of specialty shops, fine restaurants, museums and lodging accommodations with year-round service. Stroll through charming downtown with its quaint ...

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Wisconsin Dells

An area of towering sandstone cliffs (up to 150 ft/45 m tall) along the Wisconsin River 100 mi/160 km northwest of Milwaukee, the Wisconsin Dells has been a popular travel attraction since the 1800s. Nature has been joined by man-made attractions, ma...

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Wisconsin


Our favorite coffee culture is in Wisconsin. Not lattes and cappuccinos, just good cups of strong hospitality that go hand-in-hand with our favorite memories of the state: sitting on the porch of a lakeside cabin, blowing steam into the cool air; pouring from a Thermos while floating in a canoe on a serene lake; washing down some homemade pie. Coffee isn't about waking up in Wisconsin. It's a way of slowing down and enjoying what's around you.

And there's plenty to enjoy: The scenery ranges from dramatic river bluffs, abundant forests, Great Lakes, lesser lakes and rolling pastures full of cattle. Milwaukee mixes fine museums with its blue-collar factories, and some fairly small towns—Spring Green and Richland Center—are graced by the architectural wonders of native son Frank Lloyd Wright.

Geography

Much of the state consists of gently rolling plains, but northern Wisconsin is heavily forested. Limestone and sandstone bluffs overlook the Mississippi River on the state's western edge. The state's distinctive geology is due in large part to great ancient glaciers. Those huge waves of ice carved and molded the land and left nearly 15,000 inland lakes behind. Lake Michigan forms the state's eastern boundary and Lake Superior part of its northern border.

History

Long before the era of modern architecture, Native Americans of the Effigy Mound Culture (AD 500—1100) created great earthen figures of birds, animals and people. Many of them can still be seen today. The Menominee, Winnebago and Dakota peoples were also residents of what's become present-day Wisconsin.

Europeans first saw Wisconsin in 1634, when French explorer Jean Nicolet entered the territory. For more than a century, French missionaries and fur traders worked in the area. During that time, other Native Americans moved into Wisconsin fleeing wars in the east. The Ojibwe, Sauk, Fox, Huron, Kickapoo, Ottawa and Potawatomi were among these migrants, and their arrival instigated battles with the tribes that were already living in the area.

France lost its North American holdings to the British in 1763, and the English kept their hold on the region for the next 50 years. Even though much of the Great Lakes area officially came under U.S. jurisdiction after the Revolutionary War, it wasn't until the end of the War of 1812 that the British finally withdrew. The Native Americans of the region violently resisted the increasing incursions by settlers, but the Black Hawk War of 1832 put an end to organized opposition. As more newcomers arrived, the state's economy began to diversify: The fur trade was still lucrative, but lead mining and agriculture became more important. The growth in population led to statehood in 1848.

Wisconsin, the birthplace of the antislavery Republican Party, was foursquare for the Union in the Civil War. The state's first industrial giants were the owners of the huge lumber companies that felled the northern forests, and beer production became important in Wisconsin after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 destroyed that city's breweries. European immigration from the mid-1800s to 1920 provided the workforce that contributed to the growth of the state's industrial base, which soon included heavy manufacturing, dairy production, ironworking and tanning. The cultural and religious practices of the newcomers—largely Germans, Norwegians and Poles—still remain ingrained in Wisconsin's smaller communities.

Although small, family-run dairy farms still exist in Wisconsin, they continue to decline as larger corporate farms increase their holdings. Key crops include corn, soybeans, cranberries, oats, beets, beans, carrots and potatoes. Although California now produces more milk, Wisconsin remains the nation's top cheese maker. In the north, paper manufacturing is king; and food processing, machinery manufacturing and meatpacking are major employers in Milwaukee. Recent decades have seen a significant shift from manufacturing to service employment—tourism is Wisconsin's second-largest industry. Technology is really just beginning to play a major role in the state's economy. Medical-equipment manufacturing is a rising sector in Milwaukee, and biotech companies are fueling growth in the Madison area.

Snapshot

Wisconsin's main attractions include biking, birding, canoeing, hiking, Door County sightseeing, Milwaukee, brewery and winery tours, fishing, hunting, sailing, cheese-factory tours, the Great River Road, Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Madison, Native American culture, boating, camping, skiing, train excursions and snowmobiling.

Tavelers interested in a relaxing vacation with outdoor activities, inspiring natural beauty and friendly people will have a great time in Wisconsin. Most visitors will find something to enjoy there, but they should be aware that Wisconsin's beauty is that of hills, bluffs and dells, rather than dramatic mountains and valleys.

Potpourri

The Green Bay Packers are the only professional football team that's a nonprofit, publicly held corporation. The corporation's structure limits the amount of shares one person can hold and prohibits the selling of shares for a profit. These measures have helped the team keep a community focus, which is rare in the big-money sports world. Home games are consistently sold out, and the waiting list for season tickets is several decades long. Many people will their season tickets to the next generation.

Scuba divers along the Wisconsin shore of Lake Superior have begun pulling up logs that sank in the lake more than 100 years ago. The logs, cut from Wisconsin's legendary old-growth forests, have been kept perfectly intact by Lake Superior's icy waters. A company in Ashland reclaims the fine-grained wood for use in custom furniture and cabinetry.

The Hamburger Hall of Fame is found in Seymour. The first inductee, Charles Nagreen, is the person who had the brilliant idea of flattening a meatball and making it into a sandwich. He did it in 1885.

Move over, Jonah: Visitors can walk through a four-story muskie fish at the National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame in Hayward.

The leisure practice of inner-tubing down the Apple River (beer can in hand) has given Somerset the nickname "tubing capital of the world."

When you're in Door County, look for the houses that still have the traditional sod roofs. Goats are sometimes placed on them to keep the grass trimmed.

The state boasts several interesting capitals: Bloomer is the jump-rope capital of the U.S., Berlin is the fur-and-leather capital, Ellsworth is the cheese-curd capital, Mount Horeb is the troll capital of the world, Sauk-Prairie is the cow-chip-throwing capital, Monroe is the Swiss-cheese capital and Lake Tomahawk is the snowshoe-baseball capital of the world. Other Wisconsin towns boast unusual slogans: Ettrick claims to be "Fun City, USA," Beaver Dam is the "Home of 15,000 Busy Beavers," Lodi is the "Home of Susie the Duck," Babcock is "Where the Last Passenger Pigeon Was Killed" and Sparta is "Home of the Big Fiberglass Animals." (Please note that we have not verified these claims.)

The Ice-Age National Scientific Reserve has five units across the state. Each unit has trails that will take you through geological reminders of the glaciers that once covered the state. There's also an Ice-Age Interpretive Center in St. Croix Falls and the Henry S. Reuss Ice Age Visitors Center in Campbellsport.

As you pass through Jacksonport in Door County, note that you are on the 45th parallel, exactly halfway between the equator and the North Pole.

In Door County restaurants, you may be served booyah, a hearty stew of chicken, beef and vegetables brought to the state by Walloon-speaking Belgian immigrants. Booyah is said to derive from the Walloon term meaning "to boil."

The world-famous Mustard Museum is located in Mount Horeb, 20 mi/32 km southwest of Madison. Mustard enthusiasts and curious tourists tour and sample curator Barry Levenson's collection and attend the National Mustard Day celebration each summer. The museum was featured on the Oprah Winfrey Show and was once the answer to a Jeopardy question.




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