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  2. Milwaukee, Wisconsin 's history, which includes over 160 years of immigration (of Germans, Irish, French, Yankees, Poles, Blacks and Hispanics), politics (including a strong Socialist movement), and industry (including machines, cheese, and beer), has given it a distinctive heritage.

  3. The City of Milwaukee arose from a collection of scattered settlements on a site familiar to the Native American tribes in what is now eastern Wisconsin. Local historians attribute the name to a word derived from the Potawatomi Tribe. The Potawatomis pronounced it Mahn-ah-wauk, meaning council grounds.

  4. Three separate villages were started: Juneau's, east of the Milwaukee River and north of the Menomonee; Byron Kilbourn's across from Juneau's, on the west bank of the Milwaukee; and Walker's Point, across the Menomonee from the other two. In 1846 they incorporated into a single city.

  5. Milwaukee was an industrial city ripe for change, as evidenced by the bloody strikes of 1886. Milwaukee was a very German city and in this country Germans were generally supporters of liberal causes. Victor Berger, a Socialist with a national reputation, led the Socialist movement in the city.

  6. 4 days ago · The area was opened to settlement after agreements with the Native Americans in the 1830s.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. www.milwaukeepbs.org › the-making-of-milwaukee › historyMilwaukee's History

    Milwaukee became a big city, with big-city problems to prove it. Political corruption was among the worst. Under Mayor David Rose (“All the Time Rosy”), the city became a center of officially sanctioned vice. That ended in 1910, when Milwaukee became the only major city in America to turn its government over to Socialists.

  8. Historical Essay. The Origin of Milwaukee. Mahn-a-waukke. Milwaukee takes its name from the river, which had been the site of an Indian village since Wisconsin was first known to Europeans. The area was known to have been an Indian council place, believed to have been rising ground in the vicinity of modern Wisconsin Ave. and Fifth St.

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