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[1] Bobby Tanzilo, “Museum Spotlights African-American History, Culture,” OnMilwaukee.com, February 17, 2005, last accessed August 3, 2017.
[2] Alison Rose Jefferson, “Review: Wisconsin Black Historical Society Museum and Milwaukee’s Bronzeville Cultural Entertainment District,” Public Historian 34, no. 4 (2012): 95.
[3] Jay Joslyn, “Exhibit Set on Black Workers: Museum to Renovate Old Savoy Theater,” The Milwaukee
[1] Mary Carole McCauley, “Century-old Conservatory Sings Tune of Survival,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, November 1, 1998, p. 1.
[2] Wisconsin Conservatory of Music, “Celebrating 100 Years of Music,” 100th Anniversary Commemorative Book, 1899-1999 (n.p.). The two institutions had originally merged from 1901-1904, but split amid contentious relations. The new institution, established in 1968, was
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[2] Wisconsin Energy Corporation, “WEC: History,” Wisconsin Energy Corporation, http://www.wisconsinenergy.com/aboutus/history.htm, accessed October 4, 2013. Information now available at WEC Energy
[1] This entry was original posted on the Encyclopedia of Milwaukee website on February 20, 2017. An updated version was posted on March 1, 2019.
[2] Raelene Freitag, “The Peril and Promise of Nineteenth Century Child Protection: The Wisconsin Humane Society, 1879-1920” (Ph.D. diss., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 1997), 43.
[1] Mark Braun, “A Brief History of Wisconsin Lutheran College,” CHARIS Journal 5 (Christmas 2006): 32, last accessed August 3, 2017.
[2] James P. Schaefer, “A New Christian College: It’s Off the Ground!” The Northwestern Lutheran (December 1972): 423. See also Daniel E. Krause, “Wisconsin Lutheran College: The History of Its Origin” (Senior Church History, course
[1] Frank Abiel Flower, History of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Chicago: Western Historical Co., 1881), 740-47; Milwaukee Daily Sentinel, November 6, 1861 and November 21, 1861; Howard Louis Conard, ed., History of Milwaukee County (Chicago: American Biographical Publishing Co., c. 1895), 265-66; John H. Gregory, History of Milwaukee (Chicago: The S.J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1931), 1036,
[1] “Wisconsin Visual Artists: WVA History,” accessed February 20, 2018. http://wisconsinvisualartists.com/public/archives.php, now available at https://www.wisconsinvisualartists.org/about/history/, last accessed January 2, 2019; “Wisconsin Visual Artists,” accessed February 20, 2018, http://wisconsinvisualartists.com/index.php.
[2] “Richard Lorenz (1858-1915),” MOWA: Museum of Wisconsin Art website, last modified June 2, 2010; “Richard Lorenz,”
[1] “America’s Founding Documents, The Constitution: Amendments 11-27,” National Archives website, accessed December 28, 2017.
[2] Genevieve G. McBride, On Wisconsin Women: Working for Their Rights from Settlement to Suffrage (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1994), 46. In 1882, the organization became the Wisconsin Woman’s Suffrage Association. See Theodora Winton Youmans, “How Wisconsin Women
[1] J.C. Croly and General Federation of Women’s Clubs, The History of the Woman’s Club Movement in America (New York, NY: H. G. Allen &, 1898). See also Karen J. Blair, “Women’s Clubs: Women and Volunteer Power, 1868-1926 and beyond,” National Women’s History Museum website (March 17, 2014, originally published in
[1] Workforce, Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edition (2014), last accessed April 1, 2019.
[2] Bayrd Still, Milwaukee: The History of a City (Madison, WI: The State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1948), 3-5, 8; John Gurda, The Making of Milwaukee (Milwaukee: Milwaukee County Historical Society, 1999), 41-42; Margaret Walsh, The Manufacturing Frontier: Pioneer Industry
[1] The Federal Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration, The WPA Guide to WI: The Federal Writers Project Guide to 1930s Wisconsin (St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society, 1941), 143.
[2] “Charles King, 1844-1933,” Autry National Center of the American West Library and Archives, accessed February 10, 2015.
[1] City of Milwaukee, “Milwaukee Neighborhoods,” May 2000, http://milwaukee.gov/ImageLibrary/Public/ map4.pdf, last accessed November 16, 2015, now available at http://www.ci.mil.wi.us/ImageLibrary/Public/map4.pdf, last accessed November 19, 2018.
[2] Historic Milwaukee, Inc., Yankee Hill: New Perspectives on an Old Neighborhood (Milwaukee: Historic Milwaukee, Inc., 2001), 1, 7.