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Wisconsin : a history / Richard Nelson Current.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Current, Richard Nelson.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Wisconsin--History.
- Wisconsin.
- History.
- Physical Description:
- x, 226 pages : maps ; 21 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Urbana : University of Illinois Press, 2001.
- Summary:
- A haven for summer tourists and winter sport enthusiasts, Wisconsin is famed for its physical beauty and its prodigious production of cheese and dairy products. Richard Nelson Current's compact history reveals the colorful past of America's Dairyland, from early explorers and gangsters to sports heroes and cheeseheads.
- Both the Ringling Brothers' "World's Greatest Shows" and Barnum & Bailey's "Greatest Show on Earth" originated in Wisconsin, along with the typewriter, Johnson's Wax, and the first automatic assembly line (for manufacturing automobile frames). Wisconsin inventors contributed to the mechanization of American farms by developing harvesters, reapers, cultivators, threshers, and other machinery. Sen. Robert M. ("Fighting Bob") La Follette brought progressive reform to the state; a few decades later another Wisconsin native, Joseph McCarthy, revealed his agenda as a U.S. senator.
- The Gideons, who place Bibles in hotel room nightstands, got their start in Wisconsin, and the state's factories produced most of the 107 steam shovels that dug the Panama Canal. Even before American Motors in Kenosha became Wisconsin's largest employer, Wisconsinites were responsible for such carrelated developments as the first four-wheel-drive vehicle and an early tirepatching kit.
- To football fans, the capital of Wisconsin is Green Bay, where in 1919 Earl Louis Lambeau organized the Packers. Even during the team's fifteen-year losing streak, Green Bay consisted, as one reporter observed, of "nearly 50,000 wild-eyed maniacs [who] know more about football than any other 50,000 people on the face of the earth."
- Fast-paced and entertaining, Current's history chronicles how Wisconsin's homegrown ideas, from the "Wisconsin Idea" of efficient state government to skitows and speedometers, made their way into the broader marketplace of American culture.
- Contents:
- 1 Wonderful Wisconsin 3
- 2 A German State? 34
- 3 America's Dairyland 67
- 4 The Arm and Hammer 95
- 5 Circuses and Such 132
- 6 The Wisconsin Idea 174
- Wisconsin, after the Last Ice Age 11.
- Notes:
- Originally published: New York : Norton, c1977.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 0252070186
- OCLC:
- 46866256
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