Named for a Menominee chief, you might know this lumber mill city for its B'gosh brand overalls and toddler clothing lines.
This pretty city on an isthmus is know for music and art, progressive politics, and fast growth. Architect Frank Lloyd Wright and artist Georgia O'Keeffe lived here; it's also the state capital.
This "fruity" Fox River rustbelt city has high levels of lead in its water. It is home to the minor league Wisconsin Timber Rattlers.
The state's largest, this port city was settled by Germans. Known known for breweries and as home of baseball's Brewers and basketball's Bucks, it struggles with the effects of redlining on poor Black neighborhoods.
Midway between Milwaukee and Chicago, this Lake Michigan city is a rustbelt survivor. In 2020 and in 2021, protests erupted over racially motivated incidents.
The city's French name means "clear water," an apt moniker as it sits on two rivers. Known as "horseradish capital of the world," it is home to four amateur baseball teams.
Wisconsin's fifth-largest city is a factory town and Milwaukee suburb where malted milk balls were invented and Little Golden Books were printed. A major stop on the Underground Railroad, its name sounds like residents are in a hurry.
At the southern tip of Lake Winnebago, its French name translates to "bottom of the lake."
Home to the NFL's Packers, this "colorful" city sits on a body of water that shares its name.
This city shares its name with a liberal arts college founded in 1846.
First known for its delicious water, this former spa town became a US Army nuclear warhead site during the Cold War.
This small Superior Lake city in the far north was founded by the French. Home to the Red Cliff Chippewa reservation, you might visit for the recreational opportunities of Apostle Islands National Lakeshore or Chequamegon National Forest.
Appleton
Beloit
Eau Claire
Fond du Lac
Green Bay
Kenosha
Madison
Milwaukee
Oshkosh
Racine
Washburn
Waukesha
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