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Milwaukee skyline
Milwaukee skylineMilwaukee skyline from Lake Michigan view.

Milwaukee

Wisconsin, United States
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Also known as:Mahn-a-waukee Seepe

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Milwaukee,city, seat (1835) of Milwaukee county, southeasternWisconsin, U.S. It is a port of entry onLake Michigan, where the Milwaukee, Menomonee, and Kinnickinnic rivers join and flow into Milwaukee Bay, about 90 miles (145 km) north ofChicago. Milwaukee, the state’s largest city, forms the core of a five-countymetropolitan area that includes such suburbs asWaukesha,Wauwatosa, andWest Allis and the city ofRacine, about 30 miles (50 km) south. The area alsoconstitutes the northern extent of a heavily urbanized region that stretches southward along the lake through Chicago to northwesternIndiana. Inc. 1846. Area city, 97 square miles (251 square km). Pop. (2010) 594,833; Milwaukee–Waukesha–West Allis Metro Area, 1,555,908; (2020) 577,222; Milwaukee-Waukesha Metro Area, 1,574,731.

History

The Milwaukee region was once home to severalNative American peoples, including thePotawatomi,Menominee,Fox,Sauk, and Ho-Chunk Nation (Winnebago). French missionary and explorerJacques Marquette camped there in 1674, and fur traders soon followed. The area was opened to settlement after agreements with the Native Americans in the 1830s. In 1835 three settlers bought land in the area and began an intense rivalry: Solomon Juneau, who had arrived in 1818, founded Juneautown north of the Menomonee River and east of theMilwaukee River; Byron Kilbourn founded Kilbourntown north of the Menomonee and west of the Milwaukee; and George Walker founded Walker’s Point, which did not begin to develop until 1850, south of the Menomonee. Juneau and Kilbourn constantly clashed on the building of streets and bridges, each purposely constructing them so that they would not line up with those of the othercommunity. The situation climaxed in 1845 when three bridges were burned by angry mobs; the following year an agreement was signed to make Milwaukee a single community.

Milwaukee grew as amanufacturing and distribution centre in the second half of the 19th century. Flour milling, leathertanning, and iron founding were all major industries. However, Milwaukee became best known forbeer production, which began in 1840. German immigrants subsequently opened several large breweries and made Milwaukee a national centre of the industry. For a time the city was the region’s primary lake port for eastbound shipments, particularlywheat. With the arrival of therailroad and the growth of Chicago as a national rail hub, Milwaukee’s importance as a shipping point declined in the late 19th century.

Tower Bridge over the Thames River in London, England. Opened in 1894. Remains an Important Traffic Route with 40,000 Crossings Every Day.
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Europeanimmigration was largely responsible for Milwaukee’s growth.German settlers played an important and sustained part in the city’s development; a wave of immigration that occurred after Germany’s unsuccessful revolution in 1848 contributed wealthy andcultured refugees. As the city’s largestethnic group, the Germans developed their own society that included schools, churches, and breweries.Irish formed the second largest group beginning in the mid-19th century. Large influxes of Poles and Italians occurred toward the end of the century. In 1910 immigrants or their childrenconstituted some three-fourths of the city’s population. Although Europeans continued to arrive after 1900, the influx of African Americans from the South became increasingly significant.

map of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, c. 1900
map of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, c. 1900Map of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, c. 1900 from the 10th edition of theEncyclopædia Britannica.

After theAmerican Civil War the city found itself involved with labour unions, disputes, and strikes, which lasted until the turn of the 20th century. A Progressive-era reform movement brought Milwaukee a reputation for clean and efficient government. The city is also noted for having had three socialist mayors, Emil Seidel (1910–12), Daniel Webster Hoan (1916–40), and Frank P. Zeidler (1948–60).

Growth was slowed by theGreat Depression of the 1930s, but armament production duringWorld War II brought newprosperity. The city’s population, which had grown steadily for decades, reached a peak of some 750,000 in the mid-1960s, after which it gradually began to decline. The proportion ofAfrican American residents continued to rise and constituted nearly two-fifths of the city’s population by 2000. Milwaukee remained a leading manufacturing city until the 1980s, by which time many plants had closed; even beer production declined, and, at the beginning of the 21st century, only one major brewery remained in the city.

The contemporary city

Milwaukee at night
Milwaukee at nightBuildings along the Milwaukee River at night, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Milwaukee subsequently developed a much more diversified economy, with services (including health care, finance and banking, and insurance) and high-technology industries becoming major factors. Manufacturing (including medical equipment, mining machinery, engines, leather goods, electronics, padlocks, and motorcycle parts), shipping, and brewing are still important; printing,food processing (including meat products and snack foods), andconventions and tourism also contribute to the economy. The Port of Milwaukee is open year-round and accessible to the largest ships using theGreat Lakes and theSt. Lawrence Seaway; the major cargoes handled includesteel, heavy machinery, and forest products. In addition, the city has extensive road and rail systems and an international airport.

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Marquette UniversityAlumni Memorial Union (centre) at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WisconsinMilwaukee Art Museum (centre front), Wisconsin. It comprises three buildings: the War Memorial Center (1957), designed by Eero Saarinen; the Kahler Building (1975), by David Kahler; and the Quadracci Pavilion (2001), by Santiago Calatrava.

Among Milwaukee’s many institutions ofhigher education areMarquette University (1881),Alverno College (1887),Cardinal Stritch University (1937), the Medical College of Wisconsin (1893),Mount Mary University (1913), Milwaukee School of Engineering (1903), Milwaukee Area Technical College (1912), and theUniversity of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (1885). Milwaukee has asymphony orchestra andballet and opera companies, as well as other theatre and music organizations. Notable among the city’s museums are the Milwaukee Public Museum, containing exhibits on naturalhistory, and theMilwaukee Art Museum, which includes an extensive collection of European and American art. TheCaptain Frederick Pabst Mansion (1892), a 37-room home built by one of the city’s early major brewers, offers tours.

Miller Park
Miller ParkMiller Park, Milwaukee Brewers Major League Baseball stadium.

Milwaukee has an extensive park system with a scenic lakeshore (Lincoln Memorial) drive. TheMilwaukee County Zoo, on the western edge of the city, features animals exhibited in natural-lookingenvironments, and the Mitchell Park Horticultural Conservatory, known as the Domes, consists of three beehive-shaped greenhouses. The city is known for its many annual sporting events and festivals; the major events include Summerfest (a music festival; June–July), an art festival (June), the Great Downer Avenue Bike Race (July),Oktoberfest (September), and the Lakefront Marathon (October). In addition, the Milwaukee Mile race track (in operation since 1903) hosts several auto-racing events each summer. There are also numerous ethnic festivals celebrating thediverse cultural backgrounds of the city’s inhabitants. The city’s professional sports teams include theBrewers (baseball) and theBucks (basketball). The latter’s Athens-born star,Giannis Antetokounmpo, led the Bucks to anNBA championship in 2021.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated byMeg Matthias.

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