Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sussex is a village in Waukesha County, Wisconsin, United States, about 19 miles (31 km) northwest of Milwaukee and 9 miles (14 km) north of Waukesha. The village is 7.24 square miles (19 km 2 ) at an elevation of 930 feet.
The Library stayed in the City Hall until 1906, when it moved into a new Carnegie library building that included a library school on the second floor until 1938 when the school became part of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and moved to the University. In 1965, the Central Library moved to its current location at 201 West Mifflin Street.
The Wisconsin Valley Library Service (WVLS) is a library system made up of 25 public libraries and hundreds of non-public libraries across seven counties in north-central Wisconsin. These include the counties of Clark , Forest , Langlade , Lincoln , Marathon , Oneida , and Taylor . [ 1 ]
Winding Rivers Library System (WRLS) is the public library system involving 7 counties in Wisconsin: Buffalo, Jackson, Juneau, La Crosse, Monroe, Trempealeau, and Vernon Counties. The La Crosse Public Library is the resource library for WRLS and the administrative offices are in West Salem, Wisconsin .
The city agreed, and the library opened to the public on May 30, 1900. [5] [6] As the city's first public library building, Gilbert M. Simmons Memorial Library greatly increased the volumes of literature available to the citizens of Kenosha. By the mid-1910s, the library had 124,368 volumes and sought to expand with a branch library. [7]
The indoor arena, dubbed the YMCA Pickleball Center, will feature six courts at 11 Millpond Road in Lafayette, off Route 94 near Hampton Township. Sussex County YMCA's new pickleball center could ...
The Germantown Big Boy location closed in October, and the Sussex location is the only one in Wisconsin. The hours are 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
The Columbus Public Library is a Carnegie library in Columbus, Wisconsin. The library was built in 1912 after the Columbus Women's Civic Club convinced the Carnegie Foundation to sponsor a building for the community's library program. Claude and Starck, a Madison architectural firm known for designing libraries, planned the Prairie School building.