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The neighborhoods of Milwaukee include a number of areas in southeastern Wisconsin within the state's largest city at nearly 600,000 residents. Two residents of the same neighborhood may describe different neighborhood boundaries, [ 1 ] which could be based on ZIP codes, ethnic groupings, or simply personal opinion.
According to "190 Milwaukee Neighborhoods," a project by Urban Anthropology, Inc., or UrbAn, these are the neighborhoods' boundaries: Tippecanoe is bordered at the north and south by E. Morgan Ave ...
The Beulah Brinton Community Center was named in Brinton's honor and built in the neighborhood in 1978, according to Milwaukee Recreation. The center offers programs for youth, adults and seniors.
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The Upper East Side is an affluent residential neighborhood on the East Side of Milwaukee. The neighborhood is bounded by peaceful green spaces like the Frederick Law Olmsted–designed Riverside Park, with its Urban Ecology Center and public artworks, and Lake Park, with the Newberry Boulevard Historic District linking the two.
Nancy White, left, of Milwaukee, and Mary Joy Hubbs, of Muskego, walk along the Hank Aaron State Trail near the Urban Ecology Center in the Menomonee Valley in 2017.
Bay View is a neighborhood in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, North America on the shores of Lake Michigan, south of the downtown area and north of the City of St. Francis. Bay View existed as an independent village for eight years, from 1879 to 1887.
The area that is now Milwaukee is located on traditional, ancestral and contemporary Indigenous homelands. The land was forcefully ceded by the Potawatomi peoples to the U.S. government in the 1830s.