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The Gee's Slough Group of Indian Mounds, located along the Lemonweir River just outside of New Lisbon, Wisconsin, is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places. [1] The New Lisbon area was a winter gathering place for the Woodland Culture Indians who are considered the ancestors to the Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) tribe. [citation needed]
The 2020 census population of New Lisbon included 210 incarcerated people at the New Lisbon Correctional Institution. [12] According to the American Community Survey estimates for 2016-2020, the median income for a household in the city was $41,283, and the median income for a family was $54,028. Male full-time workers had a median income of ...
July 17, 2003 (Main St., roughly bounded by W. Court, E. Jefferson and the odd numbered 200 blk of S. Main St. Viroqua: Viroqua's old commercial business district, including the 1882 Italianate Casson-Purdy Block, [36] the 1899 Queen Anne-styled Fortney Hotel, [37] the 1899 Michel Brewing Co. Building, [38] the 1901 Italianate Dahl/Beat drugstore/grocery, [39] the 1908 Neoclassical First ...
As participants become immersed in the craft, Baird also leads a discussion in how the turtle’s shell reveals the lunar calendar and what the colors used in painting represent. Registration can ...
Henry founded a brewery and served as a local politician, eventually becoming Mayor of New Lisbon. The house remained in the Bierbauer family until 1947. During the 1950s and 1960s, it was used as a nursing home. Beginning in 2011, it underwent an extensive restoration.
Heidi, who only has three flippers, was saved from a ghost net in the Maldives and is now settling in at the National Marine Aquarium.
One woman was moving as slow as a tortoise when she was caught red-handed trying to smuggle 29 protected turtles across a Vermont lake into Canada by kayak.
The Milwaukee Road's new flagship streamliner Hiawatha, which began running in 1935, made a stop in New Lisbon to permit connections with local trains heading north to Minocqua. This service competed directly with the Chicago and Northwestern Railway's own new streamliner, the 400, which stopped in Adams. Demand was such that on several June ...