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The college used the center to welcome the UW-W football team when it won the 2010 Division III national championship. [2] The center hosted the 2010 Division III Volleyball championship for universities in the University of Wisconsin System. [3]
There are five community parks in Whitewater: Cravath Lakefront Park, Moraine View Park, Starin Park, Trippe Lake Park, and Whitewater Creek Nature Area. Effigy Mounds Preserve is an archeological park. [20] An aquatic and fitness center is located in Whitewater. [21]
Williams Center or The Williams Center may refer to: The Williams Center (theater), a performing arts center and cinema complex in Rutherford, New Jersey; Williams Center, Ohio, an unincorporated community in Center Township, Ohio; Williams Center (sports facility), a sports facility at the University of Wisconsin–Whitewater
The University of Wisconsin–Whitewater (UW–Whitewater or UWW) is a public university in Whitewater, Wisconsin, United States. It is part of the University of Wisconsin System . As of Fall 2024, the university offers 47 undergraduate majors and 13 graduate programs and enrolls approximately 11,000 students. [ 3 ]
Get the Whitewater, WI local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
Cravath Lake was created in the mid-1850s at the intersection point of Whitewater Creek and Spring Brook to power a gristmill that was built upon the creek. It is named after Prosper Cravath, one of Whitewater's first settlers. Over time the lake's use for industry gave way to recreation, and it currently hosts Cravath Lakefront Park and ...
Whitewater Lake, located in Walworth County, is an extension of the Kettle Moraine's Southern Unit and is part of the southernmost edge of its territory.This 625 acre lake [4] is located in the country side near Whitewater, Wisconsin, and has several public access points for boat launching and fishing. [4]
Primarily used for American football, it is the home field of the University of Wisconsin–Whitewater "Warhawks". Opened in 1970 as Warhawks Stadium , the facility originally held 11,000 people. It was renamed Perkins Stadium on September 14, 1996, in honor of former football coach Forrest Perkins .