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Koshkonong Settlement (Norwegian: Kaskeland) [1] [2] [3] was a pioneer settlement located in Wisconsin's eastern Dane and western Jefferson counties. It took its name from Koshkonong Lake, and particularly from Koshkonong Creek. [4] The first Norwegians located in the settlement in the spring and summer of 1840. [4]
The Albert and Mary Shekey House is a historic house at W7526 Koshkonong Mounds Road in the town of Koshkonong, Wisconsin. [1] The house was built in 1885 for Mary Shekey, the daughter of two of Jefferson County's first settlers, and her husband Albert, an engineer for the Chicago & North Western Railway.
Koshkonong is a town in Jefferson County, Wisconsin, United States.The population was 3,763 at the 2020 census. The town entirely surrounds the city of Fort Atkinson.The unincorporated communities of Koshkonong Mounds and Vinnie Ha Ha are located in the town.
Neighborhood of large, stylish old houses, including the ca 1860 Federal-style Harte house, [130] the 1876 Second Empire Mulberger [131] and Jesse Stone [132] houses, the 1890 Queen Anne Parks house, [133] the 1903 American Foursquare Kusel house, [134] the 1910 Craftsman Hafemeister house, [135] the 1878/1915 Georgian Revival Racek-Parks house ...
At Lake Koshkonong, the settlements there exhibit no evidence of complex fortifications. [23] However, there is evidence of interpersonal violence from marks on the human remains at Lake Koshkonong. At the Crescent Bay Hunt Club site, a site in the Lake Koshkonong locality, 36% of the skeletons buried there show evidence of perimortem injuries ...
Exactly one year ago, a small town was left shocked after a neighbourhood became a crime scene. Police arrived at a house in Costessey on the outskirts of Norwich to find the bodies of four people ...
Koshkonong Mounds is an unincorporated community located in the town of Koshkonong, Jefferson County, Wisconsin, United States. [1] It was named for the prehistoric earthwork mounds built by an early indigenous people in the area.
In Kosovo, a state-owned energy company plans to destroy a village to make way for expanded coal mining as the government and the World Bank plan for a proposed coal-burning power plant. The government has already forced roughly 1,000 residents from their homes. Many former residents claim officials violated World Bank policy requiring borrowers to restore their living conditions at equal or ...