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Sussex is served by the Hamilton School District, which operates a preschool, four elementary schools, an intermediate school (5th and 6th grade), a middle school (7th and 8th), and a high school in the Sussex area. [14] Sussex is home to the Pauline Haass Public Library, a member library of the Bridges Library System. The Sussex-Lisbon Area ...
This list of museums in Wisconsin encompasses museums defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.
It serves all of and Butler, most of Lannon and Sussex, parts of Lisbon and Menomonee Falls, and a small part of Pewaukee. [ 1 ] Established as a K-12 school district in 1961, Hamilton serves a 36-square-mile (93 km 2 ) area of suburban and rural communities about 15 miles (24 km) north and west of downtown Milwaukee .
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 ]
By 1972, the Wausau Public Library had a collection of 247,255 books and the Marathon County Library had 132,669. [21] The county had inadequate facilities and the majority of Wausau Library patrons were not residents of the city. [ 21 ]
A New Jersey family is suing DraftKings after a father of two gambled away more than $1 million of his family’s money across four years. The man, known by his username Mdallo1990, allegedly lost ...
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 ...
Madison Public Library was created by city ordinance in November 1874 under the persuasion of Mayor Silas Pinney. [3] It opened on May 31, 1875 as the "Madison Free Library" in two rooms of City Hall. It would keep that name until it was renamed the Madison Public Library effective on January 1, 1959.