Jones Island, Milwaukee
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jones Island is an industrialized peninsula in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It began as a marsh island between the Milwaukee and Kinnickinnic rivers, and now forms the city's inner harbor design.
[edit] History
Extensive filling and channelization of the area began in the mid 1800s when city co-founder Byron Kilbourn advocated a "straight cut" from the Milwaukee River near the Menomonee River conflence out to Lake Michigan. This channel was made in 1857 and is still in use today. Prior to that, the natural outlet for all three rivers was at the southern end where the Kinnickinnic now turns north to flow out of the straight cut. This area was later filled to provide railroad access.
It was initially settled by Kashubian and German immigrants in 1870, who made their living by fishing the bountiful Lake Michigan. Having never officially obtained a deed for the land, they were considered squatters by the City of Milwaukee and evicted in the 1940s to make way for a shipping port as part of an inner harbor design.
Shipping formed around the natural inner harbor created by the rivers, but designs were made for an outer harbor. Long piers built in and the exposed edge of Jones Island was used for a system of docking terminals. After years of false starts, changing designs, and petitioning the federal government for funding, an inner harbor design was finalized that also included improvements to the outer harbor and breakwaters.
Currently Jones Island is home to the Port of Milwaukee, the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District's primary wastewater treatment plant, and other municipal services. It also supports the Hoan Bridge, a long span bridge. The land is heavily industrialized and only contains a couple of mature trees.
[edit] External links
- Urban Anthropology Tour: The Kashubes of Jones Island
- The lure of linage
- Port of Milwaukee History
- Historic Map
- Maps and aerial photos
- Street map from Google Maps or Yahoo! Maps
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA
- Satellite image from Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth