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Wittenberg is a town in Shawano County, Wisconsin, United States. Wittenberg was founded by Reverend E.J. Homme in 1879. [1] He also established a home for the aged and an orphanage. As of the 2000 census, the town had a total population of 894. The Village of Wittenberg is located within the town.
The D. Wittenberg Residence at W64 N707 Washington Ave is a two-story Italianate house built in 1864. Wittenberg was a German immigrant and the president of Cedarburg Woolen Mill. [2] [12] The Hendschel and Jochem Building at W62 N575-579 Washington Ave is a two-story building constructed of rough cut stone about 1865.
Wittenberg is located at (44.823795, -89.167328 [ 12 ] According to the United States Census Bureau , the village has a total area of 1.79 square miles (4.64 km 2 ), all of it land.
Forest Home Cemetery is home to 28 Milwaukee mayors, seven Wisconsin governors, noted industrialists and over 110,000 burials. [8] The Newhall House Monument is a mass grave for 64 people of the Newhall House fire of 1883, in which 71 individuals (43 unidentified) died.
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Mound Cemetery (Racine, Wisconsin) Mount Olivet Cemetery (Janesville, Wisconsin) Mount Olivet Cemetery (Milwaukee) N. Northwoods National Cemetery; O.
Following the Battle of Island Number Ten, about 1400 Confederate soldiers who surrendered there, many from the 1st Regiment Alabama Infantry, were taken at the end of April, 1862, to the Union training field Camp Randall in Madison, Wisconsin, which was found to be unsuitable, [3] resulting in the deaths of 140 prisoners before the remaining survivors were sent to Camp Douglas (Chicago) at ...
Parishioner Joseph Bemish built St. Joseph's Chapel in the church cemetery in 1896. On the cornerstone was written "St. Joseph's Kapelle 1896." St. Joseph chapel was commissioned by Rev. John Metzler (pastor at Sacred Heart church for six years) in memory of their former pastor, Rev. Joseph Boehm, who died on August 23, 1893.