Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Wisco Week...and Weekend

Scarlett returns to the land of her birth, and I am going in tow! Here's a little about Mequon, Wisconsin that I'm sure we both didn't know.

Mequon (MEK-wan) is a city in Ozaukee County. It had a population of 21,823 at the 2000 census, and as of three years ago, an estimated population of 23,820. In July 2005, listed Mequon 19th among its 100 Best Small Cities in the United States, ranked jointly with Thiensville, a village completely surrounded by Mequon.

The area was originally inhabited by the Potawatomi and Menominee Indians. European trappers, explorers and traders used the Milwaukee River through the middle of what is now Mequon as a means of transportation. The name "Mequon" is thought to have come from the Native-American word "Emikwaan" or "Miguan," meaning ladle. This refers to how the Milwaukee River curves like a ladle in the Mequon area. The spelling was undoubtedly influenced by the French in the area at the time.

Between 1834 and 1836, Brink and Follett surveyed the land to create the town of Mequon. Around this time, settlers came from New York and England, soon followed by German and Irish immigrants. In 1839, a group of immigrants from Saxony settled near the Milwaukee River. In the same year, twenty families from Pomerania founded Freistadt (German Free place) in the western part of the Town of Mequon. The first Lutheran church in Wisconsin was built by these families in 1840.

John Henry Thien, a wealthy immigrant from Saxony, traveled north from Milwaukee and settled along the Milwaukee River, where his family built a dam and grist mill. This area, one square mile in the middle of Mequon township, was later incorporated as the village of Thiensville in 1910. The Town of Mequon was incorporated as a city in 1957.

Thanks, Wikipedia! I'll be back on Monday, but through the magic of interweb, there will still be posts through the week as usual, and still the daily damage with DMFG at Velvet Glove - Iron Fist.

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