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  1. FIPS code. 55-84250. Website. waukesha-wi .gov. Waukesha ( / ˈwɔːkɪʃɔː / WAW-ki-shaw) is the county seat of Waukesha County, Wisconsin, United States, along the Fox River. Its population was 71,158 at the 2020 census, making it the seventh-most populous city in Wisconsin. It is part of the Milwaukee metropolitan area.

  2. Waukesha County: 133: Waukesha: 1846: Milwaukee County: Waugooshance, a Pottawatomi word meaning "little foxes" 412,591: 549.57 sq mi (1,423 km 2) Waupaca County: 135: Waupaca: 1851: Brown and Winnebago Counties: wau-pa-ka-ho-nak, a Menominee word meaning "white sand bottom" or "brave young hero" 51,388: 747.71 sq mi (1,937 km 2) Waushara ...

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  4. Waukesha County was carved out of Milwaukee County in 1846. It is now bordered on the east by Milwaukee County, to the south by Racine County and Walworth County, to the west by Jefferson County, and to the north by Dodge County and Washington County. Within Waukesha County’s 549.6 square miles there are eleven towns, nineteen villages, and ...

    • Jack Mccordick
    • Jack Mccordick
    • Waukesha. WAW-ki-shaw. Waukesha is a county, city and a town. The city is Milwaukee's most populous suburb. Fun Fact: Famous guitarist Les Paul was born in Waukesha, and was buried in the city's Prairie Home Cemetery after his death in 2009.
    • Chetek. SHU-tek. Chetek, a city in northwestern Wisconsin, is in a region known as "Indianhead Country." Fun Fact: Until 1872, the city was known by various spellings — Sheetak, Shetak, Shetuk, Chetack — which were all different variations on the Ojibwe word for "pelican."
    • Gillett. JILL-it. No, it's not pronounced like the razor brand. This small city is around 40 miles north of Green Bay. Fun Fact: Gillett, which claims to be the "ATV Capital of the World," boasts miles of ATV trails and ATV-friendly roads.
    • Iola. Eye-OH-luh. The town sits on the edge of Iola Lake in central Wisconsin. Fun Fact: Iola is known for various celebrations of its Norwegian heritage. Don't believe that?
  5. Describe ways that a community/city/state can recognize “famous” individuals. ex. Road names, parks, monuments, holidays. Use biographies as a tool for understanding larger historic events: Pioneer Era | Springs Era | Women’s History & Suffrage Movement | Comedy & Entertainment | Contemporary History

  6. May 25, 2020 · UW-Madison Professors Help Explain Linguistic Roots Of State's Names. By Tim Peterson. May 25, 2020. Listen. Royalbroil (CC BY-SA 2.5) The combination of letters “w-a-u” appears pretty frequently in the names of places around Wisconsin. Think of the cities of Wauwatosa or Milwaukee.

  7. The area that became Waukesha County was originally included within Milwaukee County. What is now the city of Waukesha was identified in the late 1830s as Prairie Village; the settlement soon was renamed Prairieville. The surrounding Town of Prairieville was created in 1842, with the first town meeting held on April 5.

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