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Wisconsin Dells: Shingle-style summer home complete with turret, on a hill outside Wisconsin Dells, designed by Eschweiler and built in 1899 for Upham, a Milwaukee lawyer. In 1938 the Uphams donated the property to Wisconsin Easter Seals, which now uses it as Camp Wawbeek, for children with disabilities. 54: Jacob Weber House: Jacob Weber House
January 4, 2012. ( #11001015) 626 Water St. 43°16′26″N 89°43′13″W. / 43.273783°N 89.720169°W / 43.273783; -89.720169 ( Otto Sr. and Lisette Hahn House) Sauk City. Red brick house built between 1850 and 1857. Hahn, an immigrant harness -maker bought the house in 1866 and built a workshop next to it. After his wife Lisette ...
H. H. Bennett. Studio portrait of H.H. Bennett. [1] [2] Henry Hamilton Bennett (January 15, 1843 – January 1, 1908) was an American photographer famous for his pictures of the Dells of the Wisconsin River and surrounding region taken between 1865 and 1908. The popularity of his photographs helped turn the city of Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin ...
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Wisconsin Dells is a city in Wisconsin, straddling four counties: Adams, Columbia, Juneau, and Sauk. A popular Midwestern tourist destination, the city forms an area known as " The Dells " with the nearby village of Lake Delton. The Dells is home to several water parks and tourist attractions. [7]
The Ho-Chunk often nonviolently resisted removal by staying home, or simply returning home, rather than engaging in uprisings. The Winnebago ceded lands in Wisconsin in 1829, 1832 and 1837; further removal attempts occurred in Wisconsin in 1840, 1846, 1850, and 1873–4. Winnebago 1846 Reservation, Nicollet's 1843 map.
The Dells of the Wisconsin River, also called the Wisconsin Dells (from Old English “ dæle ”, modern English “dale”), meaning “valley”, is [1] a 5-mile (8-km) gorge on the Wisconsin River in south-central Wisconsin, USA. It is noted for its scenery, in particular for its Cambrian sandstone rock formations and tributary canyons. [2]