| Kenosha, Wisconsin | |||
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| — City — | |||
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| Coordinates: 42°34′56″N 87°50′44″W / 42.58222°N 87.84556°WCoordinates: 42°34′56″N 87°50′44″W / 42.58222°N 87.84556°W | |||
| Country | United States | ||
| State | Wisconsin | ||
| County | Kenosha | ||
| Incorporation | 1850 | ||
| Government | |||
| - Type | Municipality | ||
| - Mayor | Keith G. Bosman | ||
| Area | |||
| - Total | 24.0 sq mi (62.1 km2) | ||
| - Land | 23.8 sq mi (61.7 km2) | ||
| - Water | 0.2 sq mi (0.4 km2) | ||
| Elevation | 604 ft (184 m) | ||
| Population (2008) | |||
| - Total | 96,950 | ||
| - Density | 3,795.1/sq mi/sq mi (2,399.5/km2) | ||
| Time zone | CST (UTC-6) | ||
| - Summer (DST) | CDT (UTC-5) | ||
| ZIP Code | 53140, 53141, 53142, 53143, 53144, | ||
| Area code(s) | 262 | ||
| FIPS code | 55-39225[1] | ||
| GNIS feature ID | 1567416[2] | ||
| Website | www.kenosha.org | ||
Kenosha (pronounced /kəˈnoʊʃə/) is a city in and the county seat of Kenosha County, United States. With an estimated 2008 population of 96,950,[3] Kenosha is the fourth-largest city in Wisconsin. It is also the fourth-largest city on the west shore of Lake Michigan, after Chicago, Milwaukee, and Green Bay. The city lies on the southwestern shore of Lake Michigan, 32 miles (51 km) south of Milwaukee. Kenosha is part of the U.S. Census Bureau's Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL-IN-WI Metropolitan Statistical Area,[4] however, the cities of Milwaukee and Chicago both share economic influence on the city.
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Kenosha is located in the Southeastern corner of Wisconsin at 42°34′56″N 87°50′44″W / 42.58222°N 87.84556°W (42.582220, -87.845624).[5]. Kenosha's eastern boundary is Lake Michigan. It is bordered by the Town of Somers to the north, Bristol to the west and the village of Pleasant Prairie to the south. Kenosha's passenger-train station is the last stop on Chicago's Metra North Line and is conveniently located almost halfway between Milwaukee and Chicago.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 24.0 square miles (62.1 km²), of which, 23.8 square miles (61.7 km²) of it is land and 0.2 square miles (0.4 km²) of it (0.63%) is water.
Kenosha's population grew by 117 percent between 1940 and 2000. As of the census[1] of 2000, there were 90,352 people, 34,411 households, and 22,539 families residing in the city.
The population density was 3,795.1 people per square mile (1,465.1/km²). There were 36,004 housing units at an average density of 1,512.3/sq mi (583.8/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 83.64% White, 7.68% African American, 0.44% Native American, 0.99% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 4.83% from other races and 2.38% from two or more races. 9.96% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. 25.5% were of German, 11.5% Italian, 7.1% Irish and 6.6% Polish ancestry according to Census 2000.
There were 34,411 households out of which 34.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them: 47.1% were married couples living together, 13.9% had a female householder with no husband present and 34.5% were non-families. 28.4% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.3% had someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.54 and the average family size was 3.13.
In the city the population included 27.2% under the age of 18, 10.1% from 18 to 24, 31.5% from 25 to 44, 19.0% from 45 to 64, and 12.2% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 34 years. For every 100 females there were 96.7 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 93.2 males.
On October 10, 2008, the Wisconsin Department of Administration reported that Kenosha's population had grown by 6.2 percent since the 2000 census, and Kenosha County's population grew by 8.4 percent, a gain of 12,517 within that same period.[6]
The state of Wisconsin passed legislation in 1999 that mandated each municipality to produce a comprehensive plan. Kenosha, however, has been creating comprehensive plans since 1925. The most recent Kenosha plan projects:
— A population of 124,097 in 2035, a 37 percent increase from 2000.
— An increase in industrial land by 268 percent, from 673 acres to 1,804 acres, from 2000 to 2035.
— An additional 11,586 housing units by 2035.
— 14,830 jobs, up 34 percent from 2000.
The greater Kenosha area has attracted archeological interest since the discovery of pre-Clovis culture settlements in the late 20th century. These prehistoric settlements date approximately to the era of the Wisconsin glaciation.[7] Paleo Indians first settled in the area at least 13,500 years ago.[8]
The Potawatomi originally named the area gnozhé ("place of the pike").
The early name by the Ojibwa Indians is reported as Masu-kinoja. This describes the place of spawning trout as "Trout (Pike) come all at same time". There were thousands of fish entering the rivers from Lake Michigan. Harvesting these fish provided food for the coming months. There is also a town of Masu-kegan in Michigan.
The first white settlers were part of the Western Emigration Company. They arrived in the early 1830s from Hannibal and Troy, New York, led by John Bullen, Jr., who sought to purchase enough land for a town. Thwarted in Milwaukee and Racine, the group arrived at Pike Creek on 6 June 1835, building log and later frame homes. The first school and churches followed by 1835, with platting completed in 1836.[9] As more settlers arrived and the first post office was established, the community was first known as Pike in 1836. In the ensuing years the area became an important Great Lakes shipping port, and the village was once again renamed, this time to Southport. (This is still the name of a southeast-side neighborhood, park, and elementary school, as well as several businesses).
In 1850, another change brought the growing city (and later Kenosha County) its current title, an Anglicized version of the early name gnozhé.[10] Kenoshans often refer affectionately to their city as "K-Town" and "Keno" (the latter often adopted over the decades on various local businesses and on Kenosha's historic 1949 Keno Family Outdoor Theatre, Wisconsin's oldest drive-in theatre).[11]
Between 1902 and 1988 Kenosha produced millions of automobiles and trucks[12] under such well-remembered marques as Jeffery, Rambler, Nash, Hudson, LaFayette, and American Motors Corporation (AMC). A prototype steam car was built in Kenosha by the Sullivan-Becker engineering firm in 1900. Two years later the Thomas B. Jeffery Company, builders of the Sterling bicycle, began production of the Rambler runabout. In 1902 Rambler and Oldsmobile were the first cars to employ mass-production techniques. The 1902 Rambler was also the first automobile to incorporate a steering wheel, rather than use the then-common tiller-controlled steering. In 1916 Jeffery was purchased by auto executive Charles W. Nash and became Nash Motors. In May 1954, Nash acquired Detroit-based Hudson and the new firm was named American Motors Corporation. A 47-acre west side park and an elementary school are named after Nash.[13]
In partnership with French automaker Renault, AMC manufactured several models in Kenosha in the early 1980s, including the Alliance, which won the 1983 “Car of The Year” award from Motor Trend magazine. Two decades earlier, AMC's 1963 Rambler Classic had also received the award. In 1987 Renault sold its controlling interest in AMC to Chrysler Corporation, who had already contracted with AMC for the production of its M-body mid-sized cars at the Kenosha plant. Chrysler continues to build some of its engines in the original AMC facility today. The AMC Lakefront plant (1960–88), a smaller facility, was demolished in 1990 (a chimney-demolition ceremony that June drew 10,000 spectators) and was redeveloped into upscale HarborPark[14], with its rambling lakeside condominiums, large recreational marina, water park and promenades, artworks, sculptures, fountains (including the 2007 Christopher Columbus fountain), the Kenosha Public Museum, which opened in 2000, and the Civil War Museum, which opened in 2008.
From the turn of the century through the 1930s many Italian, Irish, Polish and German immigrants, many of them skilled craftsmen, made their way to the city and contributed to the city's construction, culture, architecture, music and literature.
Kenosha has 21 locations and three districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places[15] including the Library Park, Third Avenue, and the Civic Center historic districts. The city has a Kenosha Landmarks Commission, and among the many local city-designated landmarks are the 1929 YMCA at 711 59th Place, the Manor House at 6536 Third Avenue, the John McCaffary House at 5732 13th Court, the St. Matthew Episcopal Church at 5900 Seventh Avenue, the Washington Park Clubhouse at 2205 Washington Road, and the Justin Weed House at 3509 Washington Road.
In June 1993, the city installed reproductions of the historic Sheridan LeGrande street lights that were specially designed for Kenosha by Westinghouse Electric in 1928; these can be seen on Sixth Avenue between 54th and 59th Streets. A classic two-mile downtown electric streetcar system was opened on June 17, 2000.
Kenosha has a mayor, who is the chief executive, and a city administrator, who is the chief operating officer. The mayor is elected every four years. The city's Common Council consists of 17 aldermen from Kenosha's 17 districts (each district having two wards), elected for two-year terms in even-numbered years.
The mayor of Kenosha for four terms beginning in April 1992 was John Martin Antaramian, the longest-serving mayor in the city's history.[16] In late 2006, Antaramian was awarded the Robert B. Bell, Sr. Best Public Partner Award for his advocacy towards quality real estate development.[17] He was a member of the Mayors Against Illegal Guns Coalition,[18] a bi-partisan group with a stated goal of "making the public safer by getting illegal guns off the streets." The Coalition is co-chaired by Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Mayor Antaramian announced during 2007 that he would not seek reelection in 2008. Former alderman and local businessman Keith Bosman was elected mayor for a four-year term with a landslide victory in the April 2008 spring elections.
Years ago a busy center of manufacturing, Kenosha is today often thought of as a "bedroom community" within the Chicago-Milwaukee megalopolis, often attracting new residents from Illinois, which leads to Kenosha's frequent appellation as Chicago's northernmost suburb. With several area transportation options, many residents commute to their places of employment. According to county statistics, 49% of Kenosha's workforce commutes outside of Kenosha County to their positions. Many travel northward towards Milwaukee or south into the Chicago area.[19] Kenosha does have some of its own employment, and is not a "typical" suburb; in fact, many locals consider neighboring communities Pleasant Prairie and Somers to be suburbs of Kenosha.
A June 2009 study by the Milken Institute ("North America's High-Tech Economy: The Geography of Knowledge-Based Industries") reported that Kenosha placed in the national top-50 high-tech economies.[20] The Public Policy Forum reported that Kenosha's personal-income levels have been sharply rising; the latest local gain stands at $30.3 million, in contrast to a personal-income drop of $434 million within other adjoining southeastern-Wisconsin communities (except for neighboring Walworth County, which had a $3.3 million gain in the latest statistics.)[citation needed]
Today, Kenosha's employment demographics are mainly white-collar. The city's largest employer is the multi-level educational system (this includes Kenosha Public Schools as well as UW-Parkside), and Kenosha's largest private employer is Abbott Laboratories in Abbott Park, Illinois which has recently purchased 400 acres (1.6 km2) within Kenosha County at Highways C at Interstate 94.[21]
Kenosha is the home city of three colleges: (UW–Parkside, Gateway Technical College, and Carthage College) and several branch campuses. Since 1992 it has hosted the Michael E. DeBakey Heart Institute of the Kenosha Hospital & Medical Center, established in tribute to DeBakey’s pioneering efforts in cardiovascular surgery. Kenosha is also a busy retail and commercial center with a number of light industrial and distribution companies, nearly all located in business parks outside the city. Recently Abbott Laboratories, Kenosha's largest private employer, began to land-bank property near the southwest edge of the city, which may be the site of a new major campus of the large pharmaceutical firm.[22]
In decades past Kenosha also hosted a number of manufacturing firms, among them American Brass (later Outokumpu Copper/Outokumpu American Brass Company), Simmons Bedding Company, the Samuel Lowe publishing firm, Kenosha Full Fashioned Mills, Solar Lamp Company, Jockey International (originally "Cooper's Union Suit Company" until the 'Jockey' brief was developed in 1934), Snap-On, the MacWhyte Wire Rope Company, Dynamatic, Frost Company, and G. LeBlanc. Most of these facilities have long since been cleared and the real-estate converted into parklands, high-end residential developments, commercial shopping districts, a school campus, or held in land-banking.[citation needed]
A study released in January, 2010 by the Dickman Company, Inc. of Milwaukee found that corporate vacancies within available Kenosha-area business spaces had decreased during 2009, making Greater Kenosha the only southeastern Wisconsin community with such an improvement.[citation needed]
Tourism has a significant and growing impact on Kenosha's economy. According to the Kenosha Convention and Visitors Bureau, 2006 Kenosha-area tourism expenditures reached a record $222.5 million, which translated into approximately 5,220 full-time-job equivalents. During 2007, the Kenosha-area revenue from tourism rose to a record $224.6 million (or a 5,267 full-time-job equivalency) despite a 1.4% statewide tourism slowdown. Kenosha's tourism activity and revenue is now within the top 20% of all of Wisconsin's 72 counties. Surveys show that most visitors to Kenosha shop at nearby Pleasant Prairie's Prime Outlets strip mall, which contains factory outlets for a diverse mix of retailers, and stay at local hotels and motels, while the city's extensive Lake Michigan beaches and HarborPark facilities attract 36% of all tourists, and 34.1% use the municipal streetcar line.[citation needed]
Kenosha-area tourism saw growth in 2008 despite the national economic downturn, bringing in in a record $225.2 million, an increase of $600,000 over 2007 and a 147% increase since 1994. This placed Greater Kenosha in 14th place for tourism among Wisconsin's 72 counties in 2008.
The main 2008 tourism-related event was the opening of Kenosha's $15 million Civil War Museum in June. Other attractions include the Longaberger Basket Fest and the opening of a holiday-season Jelly Belly retail outlet.
2009 brought a number of new events to Kenosha, including the inaugural Wisconsin Marathon, which saw nearly 2,000 runners at the Lake Michigan shoreline on May 2. The second annual "A Salute to Freedom" from June 12 to June 14 celebrated the completion of the Civil War Museum, and the TREK Women’s Triathlon Series made its debut on July 12 at Prairie Springs Park.
The number of households in Kenosha County increased by nearly 80% from 1990 to 2005,[23] indicating the community is rapidly expanding to accommodate new businesses and employees in the Kenosha area.
Number of households:
2005 housing statistics:
In March 2008, the Public Policy Forum reported that Kenosha's real-estate valuations rose by 7.6%, most likely as a result of heavy migration by Chicago professionals who have resettled in Kenosha.[citation needed]
Kenosha has been served by rail service to and from Chicago since May 19, 1855,[24] when the predecessors to the Chicago and North Western Railway, the Milwaukee and Chicago Railway Company (originally the Illinois Parallel Railroad) and the original Lake Shore Railroad (later the Green Bay, Milwaukee and Chicago Railway) were officially joined with great ceremony just south of today's 52nd Street. Passenger service began on May 28, 1866 and continues to the present day.
Kenosha has the only Metra station in Wisconsin, with nine inbound and nine outbound trains each weekday. Not all Union Pacific/North Line trains terminate and originate in Kenosha; most terminate at Waukegan, Illinois to the south.[25] Plans are underway to extend Regional Transportation Authority passenger service northwards from the Kenosha Metra Station through Racine County and into Milwaukee via the proposed KRM Line.[26]
Since June 2000, a two-mile streetcar route has served the downtown area and HarborPark, connecting the Metra station with downtown and several area parks. Kenosha is one of the smallest cities in America with any type of streetcar system today.[27] In December 2005 the city council authorized a study on the expansion of streetcar service in order to connect the city's downtown with the uptown business districts flanking 63rd Street and 22nd Avenue.
In addition to a streetcar loop, Kenosha has a bus transit network that includes eight routes. It was the first city to color-code transit routes (with the Blue, Green, Red and Orange Lines) and the first city to use electric trolley buses in full transit service, both occurring on February 14, 1932.[28]
Kenosha is served by Interstate 94 between Chicago and Milwaukee, and by Amtrak's Hiawatha Line service (via the Sturtevant station in Racine County) between Chicago and Milwaukee, which runs seven times daily.
In Kenosha County, numbered streets run east-west and numbered avenues north-south, with street numbering commencing with First Street on Kenosha County's northern border (County Trunk Highway KR) rather than at the city's center. ('Roads' are diagonal thoroughfares, 'Courts' are short north-south avenues, and 'Places' are short east-west streets.) The downtown area is between 50th and 60th Streets. Avenue numbers increase as one heads west from the lake front. This numbering system continues through all of Kenosha County, ending at 408th Avenue to the west at the Kenosha-Walworth County line, while north-south roads end at the Illinois state line at 128th Street. (Edmonton, Alberta has a similar numbering system.)
Kenosha is home to the University of Wisconsin-Parkside with over 5,000 students, Carthage College with over 2,000 students, and Gateway Technical College. Concordia University Wisconsin, Cardinal Stritch University, National-Louis University and Marquette University all maintain Kenosha branch campuses. In 2009, Herzing University opened its new Kenosha campus.
The Kenosha Unified School District operates 24 public elementary schools, six middle schools, seven charter schools, and six major high schools:[29] Mary D. Bradford High School, George Nelson Tremper High School, Indian Trail Academy, Lakeview Tech Academy, Reuther Central High School and Harborside Academy, the latter a research school that uses the Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound model; it was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.[30] 80% of Kenosha's fourth-graders score 'proficient' and 'advanced' gradings on reading tests, according to National Assessment of Educational Progress tests.[31] According to the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction, Kenosha's 2008 public-school graduation rate of 84.1% was ahead of the national average.[32]
Kenosha also has a number of parochial schools and independent academies, including St. Joseph's High School,Holy Rosary School, Friedens Lutheran School, Armitage Academy, Christ Lutheran Academy, Kenosha Montessori School, Westosha Central High School, Shoreland Lutheran High School, the Brompton Academy, the Dimensions of Learning Academy, the Christian Life School, and the LakeView Advanced Technology Center. A number of professional schools are located within the city.
The Kenosha Public Library, which is part of the Kenosha County Library System, operates in four locations throughout the city. Daniel H. Burnham designed the 1900 Beaux-Arts architectured Gilbert M. Simmons Library, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[33]
The primary newspaper of Kenosha County is the Kenosha News, a broadsheet with circulation around 23,000 copies. Internet news source DailyKenoshan, is also well read in the area.
Kenosha is within the Chicago and Milwaukee broadcast market and is considered as part the Milwaukee television market by A.C. Nielsen. Arbitron classifies Kenosha within the Chicago market, although Kenosha area residents rely primarily on Milwaukee media for local news, weather, traffic, etc. Five major radio stations broadcast from Kenosha: full-service talk/oldies WLIP (1050 AM, CBS), Gateway Technical College's WGTD (91.1 FM), a member station of the Wisconsin Public Radio News & Classical Music Network along with locally based jazz, classical music and talk-radio programming, rock WIIL (95.1 FM), and WWDV (96.9 FM), which simulcasts Chicago-based WDRV (97.1 FM). WIPZ (88.5 FM) serves the UW–Parkside area, and the Kenosha Convention and Visitors Bureau operates WPUR937 (1180 AM), a low-power tourist information station.
WPXE (Channel 55), owned by ION Television, is Kenosha's only locally licensed television station. Its analog transmitter is based in northern Racine County, while the digital tower is in Milwaukee's tower farm site on the north side and the station's studios are just south of suburban Glendale, so it serves the entire Milwaukee television market.
Time Warner Cable is Kenosha's licensed cable provider and provides access to all Milwaukee and some Chicago, IL stations. Public access television airs over channel 14 on that system.
Kenosha's three downtown museums, the Kenosha Public Museum, the Civil War Museum and the Dinosaur Discovery Museum, are Smithsonian Institution affiliates.
Completed in 2001, the Kenosha Public Museum is located on the Lake Michigan shoreline. Its main exhibit is a prehistoric Woolly Mammoth skeleton uncovered in western Kenosha in 1992. The bones revealed new clues about ancient American history; cut-marks on the bones indicated that the animals were butchered by humans using stone tools. Carbon dating indicated their age to be 12,500 radiocarbon years years old or 14,500 calendar years old, one thousand radiocarbon years earlier than the previously-accepted presence of humans in the Americas. The museum also displays other Ice Age and fine-art exhibits.[34]
The Kenosha History Center is in the 1917 City water treatment plant on Simmons Island next to the 1866 Kenosha Southport Light station, and showcases the history of Kenosha from the Indians and the first settlements to the present day. The Kenosha North Pier Light is also nearby.
Kenosha's 59,000-square-foot (5,500 m2) Civil War Museum opened on June 13, 2008. The main exhibit, "The Fiery Trial", opened September 15, 2008. It is a 15,000-square foot exhibit that offers an interactive experience of the role of six Midwestern states before, during and after the American Civil War.[35]
The Dinosaur Discovery Museum, designated a federal repository, opened in August, 2006 in the historic Old Post Office adjoining the 56th Street streetcar line at Tenth Avenue, and includes an on-site paleontology laboratory operated through the Carthage College Institute of Paleontology.[36]
The Kenosha Transit Carhouse at 724 54th Street, which houses Kenosha's historic fleet of PCC streetcars, is occasionally open for guided tours.
A Maritime Museum is being developed in the restored 1866 Southport Light and Lighthouse Keeper's cottage on Simmons Island. A Children's Museum is also planned for the upper two floors of the Orpheum Building on Sixth Avenue at 59th Street, currently occupied by the Heim's Downtown Toy Store and Scoop's Ice Cream. No formal timetable has been provided.
Summer band performances have existed in Kenosha for over 80 years[citation needed], traditionally put on by the Kenosha American Legion Band (renamed the Kenosha Concert Band in 1963 and now the Kenosha Pops Concert Band.) Since 1988 the concerts have been at Kenosha's Sesquicentennial Bandshell in Pennoyer Park each Wednesday from mid-June to early August.
The Kenosha Lakeshore Youth Philharmonic offers an intensive orchestral experience to middle school and high school musicians.
Southeast Wisconsin Performing Arts (SEWPA) sponsors the Opera à la Carte evening concert series featuring middle school, high school and college singers.
The Kenosha Symphony Orchestra presents concerts in the acoustically-correct Reuther Central Auditorium (listed on the National Register of Historic Places) at Walter Reuther Central High School in downtown Kenosha. Film composer and orchestrator Lucien Cailliet "The Ten Commandments" (1956) was the KSO conductor until 1960.
Since 2002, the outdoor Peanut Butter and Jam Concert Series[37] has been held every Wednesday in August at Veterans Memorial Park.
Lincoln Park Live! concerts began in 2005 on the Lincoln Park lawns near the Warren Taylor Memorial Gardens.
A number of outdoor jazz events are offered throughout the summer months, most often at Veterans Memorial Park and the historic Kemper Center.
The CYO (Catholic Youth Organization) Emerald Knights Band of Kenosha, which includes students from all schools and backgrounds, was formed on Thursday, March 23, 1939 and since 2008 has sponsored the Great Lakes Band Championships, an offshoot of the former Kenosha Music Round-Up, with its origins in the early years of World War II. By the end of summer 2008, the Emerald Knights had competed with countless talented bands all over the midwest through the Mid-America Competing Band Directors Association (MACBDA).
The Electric Hellfire Club , an industrial metal band, originated in Kenosha in the early 1990s.
Korey Cooper, the backup vocalist and rhythm guitarist for the rock band Skillet, is originally from Kenosha, Wisconsin
Kenosha is ringed by an emerald necklace of recreational city and county parks, and has eight miles (29 km) of Lake Michigan shoreline frontage, nearly all of which is public. The city has 74 municipal parks, totaling 781.52 acres (3.1627 km2).[38]
Kenosha's Washington Park includes the oldest operating velodrome in the United States (1927) at Washington Bowl. The Kenosha Velodrome Association sponsors American Track Cycling sanctioned races as well as training sessions at the "bowl" throughout the summer. Races are held on Tuesday evenings beginning in mid-May and continuing through August. Free seating is available on the inside of the track, and on important race days concessions are available.
Petrifying Springs Park flanks the Pike River and was developed in the 1930s on the northwestern edge of the city, and is named for its artesian mineral water. Over ten miles of trails wind through the wooded park, which also features an 18-hole golf course.
Hawthorn Hollow Nature Sanctuary and Arboretum has three historic buildings and several trails for hiking.
Library Park is home to a statue of Abraham Lincoln by Charles Henry Niehaus as well as a statue called Winged Victory by Daniel Burnham.[39]
Kenosha has been a Tree City USA since 1982.
Kenosha has a number of golf courses.[40] Petrifying Springs Golf Course was named the "No. 1 Sporty Course in Wisconsin".[41] The Washington Park Golf Course was dedicated on February 18, 1922, and its 1937 English-cottage clubhouse is a city landmark.[42] Most recently there have been new private courses such as Strawberry Creek, designed by Rick Jacobson.
Kenosha is home to the Food Folks and Spokes criterium racing event, a part of the International Cycling Classic known as "SuperWeek" in which cyclists from all over the world compete in various types of cycling events.
On June 7, 1990 a Chicago Tribune feature article ("The Kenosha Connection") marveled at the large number of Kenoshans in the arts and sciences.[43].
Kenosha has received high rankings in several "Best-of" national surveys of American communities in recent year.
Kenosha's four sister cities are:
Kenosha has been the setting or filming location for a number of magazine ads and television commercials, and several motion pictures including The Betsy, The Last Great Ride, Fever Lake, Time-Men, The Smokers, For Keeps, RKO 281, The Paint Job, and in a lighthouse scene in Scary Movie 3.
Dudley. Kathryn Marie. The End of the Line: New Lives in Postindustrial America.
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Redirecting to Kenosha, Wisconsin
Kenosha is Wisconsin's fourth largest city and is located in the state's southeast region. Many of its residents commute to jobs elsewhere, leading to its appellation as "Chicago's northernmost suburb."
From Chicago' Ogilvie Transportation Center, you can take Metra's Union Pacific North line into Kenosha. Regular fair for one adult is roughly $6.50. [1]
Kenosha was founded by successive waves of English, German, Scandanavian, Irish, Italian and Eastern European immigrants. Thus, its culinary insitutions are quite diverse. While the city has the usual chain restaurants, including Applebees, Chili's, Red Robin, Culvers, it also has a number of very good local restaurants. Kenosha also has a large number of bars, many serve food far above the usual bar-pizza food.
Kenoshans also love breakfast, and that is reflected in a number of unique breakfast places. Most famous is Frank's Diner [2] 508 - 58th Street. Located in an historic 1920's "diner car" it has been featured on the Food Network's "Diners, Drive Ins and Dives." This has become a very popular place so waits can be long, especially on the weekends. However, all of the food is home made, so the wait is worth it. Expect big portions at reasonable prices.
Another popular breakfast option is The Coffee Pot, 4914 7th Avenue. Like Frank's this is only open for breakfast and lunch and you may have to wait during the weekend.
While Frank's and The Coffee Pot are the most unique breakfast spots, there are a number of other very good (and very popular) spots, including Marina Gardens, 5001 7th Avenue and Home Run 7839 Sheridan Road. Both are open for dinner. Kenosha has a smoking ordinance which prohibits smoking in restaurants (unless they have a completely segregated smoking room with separate ventilation). Both of these restaurants have these rooms.
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