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Wisconsin History
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Wisconsin History

This information is now located at my business site: Genealoger.com. You will be redirected shortly. Thank you for your interest in my site. Duane Bogenschneider


Wisconsin Facts

Statehood: May 29, 1848
Capital: Madison
Nickname: Badger State
State Animal: Badger
State Beverage: Milk
State Bird: American Robin
State Dance: Polka
State Dog: American Water Spaniel
State Domesticated Animal: Dairy Cow
State Fish: Muskellunge (Musky)
State Flower: Wood Violet
State Fossil: Trilobite Calymene Celebra
State Grain: Corn
State Insect: Honey Bee
State Mineral: Galena
State Motto: Forward
State Rock: Red Granite
State Soil: Antigo Silt Loam
State Song: On Wisconsin
State Symbol of Peace: Mourning Dove
State Tree: Sugar Maple
State Wildlife Animal: White-tailed Deer
Area: 56,153 sq. mi; 26th largest state
Highest Point: Timms Hill at 1952 ft.
Lowest Point: 581 ft on the shore of Lake Michigan

Wisconsin entered the Union on May 29th, 1848, as the 30th state. The state is named for the Wisconsin River, the name of which is derived from the French version of an Indian term which may mean, "gathering at the waters" or "place of the beaver." Wisconsin's nickname, the Badger State, refers to the miners who burrowed into the hillsides like badgers while searching for lead in the 1820's.


A Brief Wisconsin History

Wisconsin was first inhabited by varied Native American tribes in the 17th century. They included the Algonquian-speaking Menominee, Kickapoo, Miami, the Siouan-speaking Winnebago, Dakota (or Sioux) and Iowa. In the mid-1600's other groups entered Wisconsin, including the Fox, Sac, Potawatomi and Ojibewa (Chippewa).

The Wisconsin region was first explored for France by Jean Nicolet, who landed at Green Bay in 1634. Jean Nicolet, a native of France, was the first explorer to reach the area while searching for the Northwest Passage to China in 1634. The French lost possession of Wisconsin and all of its territories east of the Mississippi to Great Britain during the French and Indian War.

In 1660 a French trading post and Roman Catholic mission were established near present-day Ashland.

Great Britain obtained the region in settlement of the French and Indian Wars in 1763; British possession of Wisconsin ended in 1783, when Britain signed the treaty ending the American Revolution. Because the U.S. government had no effective control over Wisconsin, it remained under  unofficial British control. Fur trade continued as the foundation of Wisconsin's economy.

The first wave of American settlers in Wisconsin came in the 1820's as a result of a lead mining boom in northwest Illinois and southwest Wisconsin. The movement of white settlers into the Midwest caused intense conflict when the federal government and settlers attempted to move Native Americans from their lands. Federal policies included uprooting entire tribes and forcing them to resettle west of the Mississippi. When the Sac people tried to return in 1832, the Black Hawk war started ending in the Bad Axe Massacre with less than 1000 Native Americans surviving. Other Wisconsin tribes either left the area, or negotiated reservation lands.

The region was successively governed as part of the territories of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan between 1800 and 1836, when it became a separate territory.

No longer having opposition from the Native Americans, a second wave of settlers came to Wisconsin and in 1836 the Wisconsin Territory was organized. Around the 1840's a third wave of settlers came to Wisconsin, attracted by good farmland. At that time the state became the nation's leading wheat producer. On May 29, 1848, Wisconsin was admitted to the Union as the 30th state.


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Last modified: 10/25/08