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      • It turns out that the nickname “badger” comes from our rich lead mining past. Ho-Chunk and other First Nations peoples had mined for lead in the southwest region of Wisconsin for hundreds if not thousands of years.
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  2. It turns out that the nickname “badger” comes from our rich lead mining past. Ho-Chunk and other First Nations peoples had mined for lead in the southwest region of Wisconsin for hundreds if not thousands of years.

  3. Mar 14, 2018 · Learn how Wisconsin got its nickname as the Badger State from the mining history and the state animal. Discover the story behind the University of Wisconsin's mascot Bucky Badger and the state flag.

    • Freelance Writer
    • The Nickname Isn't About The Animal, But Lead Mining
    • Badger's Legacy Cemented in State Seal and on Campus
    • Real Badgers Do Call Wisconsin Home — But You May Never See One
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    Indigenous tribes like the Ho-Chunk mined for materials like lead in Wisconsin for more than 1,000 years, particularly in the southwest region of the state near the Mississippi River. It was used for things like body paint and weights for fishing nets, said Kurt Griesemer, a primary education coordinator at the Wisconsin Historical Society. Soon, c...

    The animal became "cemented in Wisconsin's lore" in 1851, Griesemer said. University of Wisconsin Chancellor John Lathrop created a state seal that was so hated that no record of it exists. It was then that Gov. Nelson Dewey and Chief Justice E.G. Ryan redesigned it to feature badgers — of both the four-legged and miner variety. This design stuck. ...

    Badgers are "mysterious" creatures, said David Sample, an ecologist at Wisconsin's Department of Natural Resources. "They are hard to know a lot about," he said. Emily Latch, a professor of biological sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and a badger researcher, said beyond being elusive, badgers are just plain mean. There aren't any b...

    Wisconsin got its nickname from the lead miners who lived in underground dens like badgers in the 1800s. Badgers are also the state animal, but they are elusive and hard to study.

  4. The badger is featured on Wisconsin's coat of arms, state seal, and state flag, and is also the official state animal. The nickname began in the 1800s; during their search for lead ore ( galena ), miners dug hillside tunnels and sometimes lived in them, which reminded people of the burrowing badger.

  5. Feb 15, 2023 · (WQOW) - February 15 is National Wisconsin Day, an occasion to celebrate all things Badger State. But where did that Badger State nickname come from? The badger is Wisconsin's official...

  6. HOW WISCONSIN GOT ITS BADGER STATE NICKNAME. The American badger, Taxidea taxus, is a secretive mammal roughly the size of a skunk. It burrows into the ground to make its den and digs out mice and ground squirrels for its dinner.

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