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Hotels in Madison, Wisconsin (12 P) Hotels in Milwaukee (1 C, 4 P) R. Resorts in Wisconsin (4 P) S. Skyscraper hotels in Wisconsin (1 C) Pages in category "Hotels in ...
The Hotel Northland is a historic hotel located on North Adams Street in downtown Green Bay, Wisconsin. It is listed on the Wisconsin State Register of Historic Places. [ 2 ] The Hotel Northland opened on March 21, 1924 as the largest hotel in Wisconsin. [ 3 ]
Potawatomi Carter Casino Hotel: Carter: Forest: Wisconsin: Land-based: Owned by the Forest County Potawatomi Community; formerly Potawatomi Northern Lights Bingo and Casino St. Croix Casino Danbury: Danbury: Burnett: Wisconsin: Land-based: Owned by the St. Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin: St. Croix Casino Hertel: Webster: Burnett: Wisconsin ...
The Cardinal Hotel is a railroad hotel built in 1908. It is one-half mile east of the capitol in Madison, Wisconsin . Starting in 1974, under the ownership of Ricardo Gonzalez , the hotel's bar became a hub of Madison's gay and Cuban communities.
Hotel Loraine, also known as The Loraine, is a ten-story hi-rise built as a hotel in 1924 a block southwest of the capitol in Madison, Wisconsin. It was the city's leading hotel from the time of construction to 1968. In 2002 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. [2] Walter Schroeder was a Milwaukee businessman who inherited ...
The Astor Hotel was one like this, built in 1916 and expanded in 1925. Very similar, the Knickerbocker was built just up Juneau Avenue in 1929. [2] The Knickerbocker Hotel was designed by architects Rossman & Wierdsma of Milwaukee in late Neo-Classical Revival style, somewhat simplified as fashion shifted toward Art Deco and more modern styles ...
The Pfister Hotel is a luxury hotel in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. The Pfister Hotel is a member of Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Owned by Guido Pfister and his son, Charles F. Pfister, it was opened in 1893 at a cost of over $1 million ($33.9 million in 2023).
Before logging, the area that would become Hayward was a forest of pine and hardwoods cut by rivers and lakes. [9] In later years Ojibwe people dominated the area along with much of northern Wisconsin, [10] until the 1837 Treaty of St. Peters, when they ceded it to the U.S. [11]