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Town of Trenton

[1] Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission, A Land Use Plan for the Town of Trenton: 2010 (Waukesha, WI: Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Committee, 1997), 1; Western Historical Company, History of Washington and Ozaukee Counties, Wisconsin (Chicago, IL: Western Historical Company, 1881), 443.

[2] U.S. Census Bureau, 2010 Census of Population and Housing, Population and

Town of Waukesha

[1] The History of Waukesha County, Wisconsin (Chicago, IL: Western Historical Company, 1880), 793.

[2] History of Waukesha County, 793.

[3] History of Waukesha County, 794.

[4] History of Waukesha County, 582.

[5] Theron W. Haight, ed., Memoirs of Waukesha County (Madison, WI: Western Historical Association, 1907), 342.

Town of Wayne

[1] Winding through the Town of Wayne: 1848-1998 150th Anniversary (Town of Wayne, WI: n.p., 1998), 10-11; Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission, A Land Use Plan for the Town of Wayne: 2020 (Waukesha, WI: Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Committee, 1999), 2-3.

[2] Winding through the Town of Wayne, 53; Southeastern Wisconsin

Transportation

[1] John Gurda, The Making of Milwaukee (Milwaukee: Milwaukee County Historical Society, 1999), 9; Harold M. Mayer, “By Water, Land, and Air: Transportation for Milwaukee County,” in Trading Post to Metropolis: Milwaukee County’s First 150 Years, ed. Ralph M. Aderman (Milwaukee: Milwaukee County Historical Society, 1987), 325-326.

[2] Gurda, Making of Milwaukee

Transportation Policy

[1] Bayrd Still, Milwaukee: History of a City (Madison: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1948) 44-46; Wisconsin Marine Historical Society, Maritime Milwaukee (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2011).

[2] Maritime Milwaukee, 7-27; History, General Mitchell International Airport website, last accessed June 2, 2017.

[3] Still, Milwaukee, 51. The first of the

Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church

[1] History of Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church (Milwaukee: The Church, 1972), [1-2].

[2] Trinity is the second-oldest Missouri Synod congregation in the region, behind the Trinity Freistadt Lutheran Church in Mequon. “The History of Trinity Lutheran Church—Milwaukee,” Trinity Lutheran Church, accessed November 21, 2016.

[3] History of Trinity Evangelical Lutheran

Ukrainians

[1] Alice Ann Conner, “Ukrainians End Easter with a Kiss,” The Milwaukee Journal, April 6, 1977.

[2] Myron B. Kuropas, The Ukrainian Americans: Roots and Aspirations, 1884-1954 (Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press, 1991), 397-406.

[3] U.S. Bureau of the Census, Ancestry, First Response—Ukrainian, 1980-2010, tabulated at http://

Unitarian Universalists

[1] First Unitarian Society of Milwaukee (Milwaukee, WI), The First Unitarian Society of Milwaukee: Centenary (Milwaukee, WI: The First Unitarian Society of Milwaukee, 1942); First Unitarian Society of Milwaukee (Milwaukee, WI), Historical Sketch of the First Unitarian Church of Milwaukee (Milwaukee: King, Fowle & Co., 1892).

[2] First Unitarian Society, Historical

United Church of Christ

[1] Both of these earliest Milwaukee area congregations continue into the twenty-first century as First Congregational United Church of Christ, Waukesha, and St. Paul’s United Church of Christ, Colgate. See “Short Course in the History of the United Church of Christ,” United Church of Christ website, last accessed August 14, 2017 for more on the history

United Migrant Opportunity Services, Inc. (UMOS)

[1] United Migrant Opportunity Services, Inc. Helping People Help Themselves: Celebrating 20 Years of Service, 20th Anniversary Album. Milwaukee: United Migrant Opportunities Services, [1985?].

[2] United Migrant Opportunity Services, Inc. Helping People Help Themselves.

[3] Marc Simon Rodriguez, The Tejano Diaspora: Mexican Americanism and Ethnic Politics in Texas and Wisconsin

United Performing Arts Fund

[1] John Gurda, The Making of Milwaukee (Milwaukee: Milwaukee County Historical Society, 1999), 400.

[2] “United Performing Arts Fund Mission Statement,” United Performing Arts Fund, Inc., http://www.upaf.org/who-we-are, accessed September 26, 2013 (information now available at “Mission,” United Performing Arts Fund, accessed July 8, 2016); United Performing Arts Fund, Inc., 2012 Annual Report & Donor

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

[1] “2016-17 Facts and Impact,” University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee website, last accessed April 4, 2017.

[2] An excellent institutional history is Frank A. Cassell, J. Martin Klotsche, and Frederick I. Olson, The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee: A Historical Profile, 1886-1992 (Milwaukee: UWM Foundation, 1992).

[3] Detailed annual enrollment figures since 1956 are available in the University

University of Wisconsin-Washington County

[1] Karen Herzog, “Merger of University of Wisconsin Campuses Goes Full Steam Ahead, Despite Calls to Slow Down,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, November 9, 2017.

[2] History, University of Wisconsin-Colleges website, accessed May 15, 2016.

[3] Fine and Performing Arts, University of Wisconsin-Colleges website, http:/www/washington.uwc.edu/campus/arts, accessed May 15, 2016.

University of Wisconsin-Waukesha

[1] Ellen D. Langill and Jean Penn Loerke, eds., From Farmland to Freeways, A History of Waukesha County, Wisconsin (Waukesha, WI: Waukesha County Historical Society, 1984), 324, and University of Wisconsin-Waukesha website, last accessed March 31, 2017.

[2] What Is the UW System, University of Wisconsin System website, last accessed March 31, 2017.

[3] Karen Herzog, “Merger

University School of Milwaukee

[1] H. Russell Zimmermann, River Hills: As It Is and As It Once Was (River Hills, WI: River Hills Foundation, 2003), 188.

[2] The German and English Academy; Its History and Present Condition (Milwaukee: Sentinel Printing Company, 1871), 3.

[3] H.H. Anderson, “Peter Engelmann: German-American Pioneer and Scholar,” Milwaukee History 14,

Up North

[1] Conversation with David L. Spiegelberg, Regional Tourism Specialist, Wisconsin Department of Tourism, January 10, 2017.

[2] 27 Things People from Milwaukee Have To Explain To Out-Of-Towners, Motovoto, last accessed March 28, 2018.

[3] Aaron Shapiro, “Up North on Vacation: Tourism and Resorts in Wisconsin’s North Woods, 1900-1945,”Wisconsin History Magazine 89, no. 4 (Summer 2006): 2-13, last

Urban Ecology Center

[1] “Mission Statement,” Urban Ecology Center, accessed January 8, 2015.

[2] “History,” Urban Ecology Center, accessed January 8, 2015.

[3] Peggy Schulz, “Rise of the Urban Ecology Center,” Urban Milwaukee, January 9, 2013, accessed January 23, 2015.

[4] Schulz, “Rise of the Urban Ecology Center.”

[5] Schulz, “Rise of the Urban Ecology Center.”

[6] “

Urban Renewal

[1] Scott Gordon, “‘Pretty Soon Runs Out’ Film Captures Failures, Frustrations of Milwaukee Urban Renewal: Displaced Milwaukeeans Struggle in 1968 Documentary,” Wisconsin Public Radio, May 12, 2016, https://www.wpr.org/pretty-soon-runs-out-film-captures-failures-frustrations-milwaukee-urban-renewal, Accessed September 20, 2017.

[2] John Gurda, “Three Decades Later, Midtown Urban Renewal Battle Still Resonates,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, November 30, 2013, accessed October 20, 2017.

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US Bank Center

[1] Milwaukee Historic Preservation Committee, Permanent Historic Designation Study Report: First National Bank/First Wisconsin National Bank Building, 733-743 N. Water Street (Milwaukee: City of Milwaukee, June 2007), accessed December 9, 2013.

[2] “Unreal Scene Now Means First Wisconsin Center Later,” The Milwaukee Sentinel, August 28, 1971, accessed February 12, 2014, http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1368&

UW-Milwaukee Panther Arena

[1] “Timeline of Historical Milestones.” Wisconsin Center District, About Us, History, http://wcd.org/media/mediafile_attachments/02/92-facilitiestimeline.pdf, last accessed November 11, 2012.

[2] “People,” Time, October 17, 1977.

[3] “WCD Facilities Have a 100-Year History of Events.” Wisconsin Center District, About Us, History, last accessed June 8, 2016.

[4] “U.S. Cellular Arena.” Milwaukee