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St. Martini Evangelical Lutheran Church is a historic church built in 1887 to serve the growing German immigrant population in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The brick church building was designed by German-born architect Herman Paul Schnetzky in a Gothic Revival style. [1] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987. [2] [1] [3]
Founded in 1959, membership is open to anyone with an interest in translation and interpretation as a profession or as a scholarly pursuit. [2] Members include translators, interpreters, educators, project managers, web and software developers, language services companies, hospitals, universities, and government agencies.
In April 2012, Translators without Borders opened its first Healthcare Translation Center in Nairobi, Kenya. New translators in the centre are trained to work in Kiswahili, as well as a number of the other 42 languages spoken in Kenya. Since the Center was first launched in 2012, basic translation training has been provided to over 250 people.
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church in 2023. Trinity's congregation was founded by German immigrants from Pomerania who began to arrive in Milwaukee in the late 1830s, looking for freedom to practice their traditional Lutheranism without the interference of the Prussian state.
Angela Peterson is a photojournalist at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, where she has worked since July, 2003. She can be reached at angela.peterson@jrn.com. About this project
The Milwaukee Chapter meets the first Thursday of each month at the Irish Cultural and Heritage Center, 2133 West Wisconsin Avenue. Milwaukee Saint Patrick's Day activities throughout the year include: Gaelic Mass at St. Patrick's Parish, 7th and Washington on Parade Day; Parade at Noon, Wisconsin Avenue. Post Parade party, 1 p.m. at the ICHC.
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St. Stanislaus Roman Catholic Oratory (Polish: Kościół Świętego Stanisława) is a Roman Catholic parish in the historic Mitchell Street District of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It was designed by Polish nobleman Leonard Kowalski , one of Milwaukee's early Polish residents, who took the name Leonard Schmidtner and spoke German.