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The old commercial downtown, including the 1855 Italianate-styled Wisconsin House Hotel, the 1857 Federal Style Nosen building, the 1891 Queen Anne Bink saloon, the 1907 Richardsonian Romanesque Zimmerman saloon, the 1909 Neoclassical First National Bank, the 1930 Art Deco Schumacher Monument Co., the 1942 Art Moderne Schanen building, and the ...
The Milwaukee Falls Lime Company is the former owner of a limestone quarry and lime kilns located in Grafton, Wisconsin. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2012. [1] The quarry and kilns are now Lime Kiln Park, which also features a pavilion, playground, walking paths, sledding hill, horseshoe pits, and disc golf course.
Lion's Den Gorge Nature Preserve is a 73-acre public park located in Ozaukee County, Wisconsin, running adjacent to Lake Michigan for 0.7 miles near the village of Grafton and city of Port Washington.
Morrisville Thanksgiving garbage, recycling schedule. Trash and recycling pickup service normally scheduled for Thursday, Nov. 24, will be moved to Friday, Nov. 25. Friday service will be moved to ...
Grafton is located at (43.317904, −87.954113 According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 5.10 square miles (13.21 km 2), of which 5.06 square miles (13.11 km 2) is land and 0.04 square miles (0.10 km 2) is water. [25]
The pub has been described as "one of Wisconsin's most acclaimed brew pubs." [1] The pub features live music weekly and was recognized as the Best Music Venue by the Wisconsin Area Music Industry in 1999. [2] The Milwaukee Ale House opened up a second location in Grafton, Wisconsin on May 14, 2008, also located on the Milwaukee River. [3]
The Grafton Flour Mill is a former grist mill on the Milwaukee River in Grafton, Wisconsin, United States. The original section was built in 1846 by a group of Yankee farmers as a flour mill and produced flour for many years through a succession of owners. In 1884, the mill caught fire and had to be partially rebuilt.
At that time, due to a city renumbering project, the address of the house was 1533 North Fourth Street, Milwaukee. HABS documents state that the house was then owned by Louise Binzel. [4] Through the Works Progress Administration or WPA, the house was restored and moved in 1938 to Estabrook Park in Shorewood, Wisconsin, north of Milwaukee. [5]