Pere Marquette Park
Downtown Milwaukee park at 950 N. Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. From the 1981 Landmarks Commission/Department of City Development report… Father Jacques Marquette, one of the earliest French missionaries in Wisconsin, was born in Laon, France in 1637 and educated at the Jesuit College in Reams. He came to Quebec in 1666 and founded the mission of St Mary of the Sault (Saulte Saints Marie, Michigan) in 1668 and the mission of St. Ignatius (St. Ignatius, Michigan) in 1670 In 1672 Louis Jollier, who was born in Quebec in 1645 and attended the Jesuit college there, was commissioned by the government of New France to explore the Mississippi River, and Father Marquette was assigned to go with him. The expedition left Green Bay in May of 1675 and Crossed the State via the Fox and Wisconsin Rivers. The explorers followed the Mississippi south to the Arkansas River and returned to Green Bay by way of the Illinois River and Lake Michigan. There is no evidence that they stopped near Milwaukee on that trip. Marquette had promised the Kaskaskia Indians of Illinois that he would return and Set up a mission for them. In spite of poor heath, he and two companions started out the next year, crossing the peninsula that separated Green Bay from Lake Michigan on October 26, 1674 and proceeding down the Shore of the lake His diary notes that on November 20 they camped at the foot of a bluff, (In a study made some years ago, Father Hamilton of Marquette University pointed out that the first bluffs would be near Port Washington ) The diary entry for November 25 states the: left that site and set up evening camp up a river, which was entered with inconsiderable trouble ” where there were sand bars and ”the surf broke continually.” The distance from Port Washington and the physical descriptions in the liar: point to the present Milwaukee River as the site for this camp. Further diary notes describe the camp as being below ”some cabins” and ”on the prairies” above the river valley, and indicate the Indians ”were maskoutens.” This leads us to Conclude that the river bank Site was Mascoutin village near the present Fifth Street and Wisconsin Avenues.
Aug 23rd, 2012 by Jeramey JanneneHenry Maier Festival Park
Aug 15th, 2012 by Jeramey JanneneRed Arrow Park
Jul 26th, 2012 by Jeramey JanneneCathedral Square Park
From Guides to Historic Milwaukee: Juneautown Walking Tour by Mary Ellen Pagel and Virginia Palmer (1965)… Learning that his rival Byron Kilbourn intended to build a courthouse on this side of the river, Solomon Juneau hurriedly put a builder to work on one in Juneautown. Their small wooden courthouse was replaced in 1869 by a huge red sandstone building, but it, too, eventually proved too small. The gray, classical Milwaukee County Courthouse, which may be seen to the west, succeeded it in 1929. Courthouse Square, renamed Cathedral Park, now contains gardens and a statue of an immigrant mother, erected by William George Bruce in memory of his own and all immigrant mothers.
Jul 18th, 2012 by Jeramey JanneneErie Street Plaza
Public plaza along the Milwaukee River. Located near Henry Maier Festival Park.
Jul 18th, 2012 by Dave ReidHolt Playfield
Jul 17th, 2012 by Jeramey JanneneEnderis Playfield
A Milwaukee Recreation playfield. Commonly called Enderis Park, the name of the neighborhood. Located at 2938 N. 72nd St.
Jul 17th, 2012 by Jeramey Jannene