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The Third Avenue Historic District in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin is a historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [1] [2]It is a mixed business and residential district including the 1872 John Masse Hardware-Tin Shop, the Queen Anne Wegener Business Block built in the 1880s and 1890s, the 1906 Neoclassical Merchant's Exchange Bank, and the 1935 Art ...
Built in 1881, this is the only remaining residence in Sturgeon Bay that is clad in Frear stone, an early concrete cladding system licensed from Chicago but manufactured locally by Giles Kirtland. The style is Italianate, with window hoods of Frear stone and decorative cross-bracing in the gable ends. [84] [85] 63: Sturgeon Bay Bridge: Sturgeon ...
St. Croix County of 1840 and today. St. Croix County was created on August 3, 1840, [5] by the legislature of the Wisconsin Territory. It was named after the river on its western border. [6] Sources vary on the name's origin. The St. Croix River may have been named after an explorer named St. Croix who drowned at the river's mouth in the late ...
Located in far northwestern Wisconsin, the district comprises most of St. Croix County along with parts of western Dunn County and northeast Pierce County. It includes the cities of New Richmond and Glenwood City , and the villages of Baldwin , Deer Park , Elmwood , Hammond , Knapp , Roberts , Somerset , Spring Valley , Star Prairie , Wilson ...
Hudson is a city in and the county seat of St. Croix County, Wisconsin, United States. As of the 2020 census , its population was 14,755. [ 2 ] It is part of the Minneapolis–St. Paul metropolitan area.
St. Croix County: 109: Hudson: 1840: Crawford County, and unorganized territory: An early French explorer named St. Croix, about whom little is known 96,763: 722.33 sq mi (1,871 km 2) Taylor County: 119: Medford: 1875: Clark, Lincoln, Marathon and Chippewa Counties: William Robert Taylor (1820–1909), Governor of Wisconsin 1874–76 20,058: ...
A Potawatomi village on the eastern shore (now the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal) was known as Onegahning, which means "to carry a canoe back and forth". [4]According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 35.2 square miles (91.1 km 2), of which, 19.3 square miles (50.0 km 2) of it is land and 15.9 square miles (41.1 km 2) of it (45.08%) is water.
Sturgeon Bay is a city in and the county seat of Door County, Wisconsin, United States. [3] The population was 9,646 at the 2020 census . Located at the bay of Sturgeon Bay for which it is named, it is the most-populous city on the Door Peninsula , a popular Upper Midwest vacation destination.