- Menomonee River Valley, Milwaukee
The Menomonee Valley or Menomonee River Valley is a U-shaped land formation along the southern bend of the
Menomonee River inMilwaukee, Wisconsin . Because of its easy access toLake Michigan and other waterways, the neighborhood has historically been home to the city'sstockyard s, rendering plants, shipping, and other heavy industry. It is also a primary source of pollution for the river.Glacial meltwater formed the Menomonee Valley over 10,000 years ago when the Green Bay Lobe of the
Wisconsin Glaciation retreated and eroded a swath four miles long and half of a mile wide. Today, it is roughly bounded by the 6th Street Viaduct near the river confluence andMiller Park stadium to the west. The valley effectively cuts Milwaukee in half, limiting access to a handful ofviaduct s that span the chasm.With a historically predominant white south side and black near north side, the valley has been perceived as a social and racial divide during times of civil unrest. In the 1960s, Father
James Groppi organized protests against segregation in Milwaukee and led a number of fair housing marches across this symbolic divide. The 16th Street Viaduct has since been renamed in his honor. Although the racial composition of these neighborhoods has changed over the years, some tensions still exist.History
Early settlers
Abundant
wild rice once grew in the marshland of the confluence and along the shores of the river, which the Menomonee (also spelledMenominee ) Indians named for its "good seed." These wetlands provided them with the staples of life and allowed for access further inland. Archaeologist Charles Brown later identified five settlements along the valley rim. Another fourteen archaeological points of interest have since been marked within the valley based on historical accounts, but it is unlikely that anything would be found because of improvements. By the 19th century, displacedPotawatomi were the primary residents.Missionary
Jacques Marquette is the first European known to have explored the area, with otherFrench-Canadian fur traders arriving in the late 1600s. The first permanent trading post was established byJacques Vieau in 1795, while employed by theNorth West Company . Vieau built his cabin on top of a bluff overlooking the Menomonee Valley in what is now Mitchell Park. He was later joined bySolomon Juneau in 1818, who started one of three settlements that incorporated in to the City of Milwaukee.Development
Reshaping of the valley began with the railroads built by city co-founder
Byron Kilbourn to bring product from Wisconsin's farm interior to the port. By 1862 Milwaukee was the largest shipper ofwheat on the planet, and related industry developed. Grain elevators were built and, due to Milwaukee's dominant German immigrant population, breweries sprang up around the processing of barley and hops. A number of tanneries were constructed, of which thePfister & Vogel tannery grew to become the largest in America.In 1843 George Burnham and his brother Jonathan opened a brickyard near 16th Street. When a durable and distinct cream-colored brick come out of the clay beds, other brickyards sprang up to take advantage of this resource. Because many of the city's buildings were built using this material it earned the nickname "Cream City," and conversely the brick was called
Cream City brick . By 1881 the Burnham brickyard, which employed 200 men and peaked at 15 million bricks a year, was the largest in the world.Industrialization
Flour mills, packing plants, breweries, railways and tanneries further industrialized the valley. With the marshlands drained and the Kinnickinnic and
Milwaukee River s dredged, attention turned to the valley. In 1869 an initiative was undertaken to channelize the Menomonee River and build a series of ship canals, among which Holtons Canal, the South Menomonee Canal and Burnham Canal are still in use today.Unimaginable amounts of fill came down from the bluffs to raise the valley floor an average of 22 feet and lower the north rim by as much as 60 feet. The steep inclines of the valley walls were softened, and more rail lines were put in. By the turn of the 20th century, the once natural marshlands teeming with wild rice, and water fowl was all but forgotten.
The first viaduct was completed in 1878 along 6th Street. It was later replaced in 1908 and again in 2002 with a photogenic design-build cable-stayed span touting dual
bascule bridge s. Other crossings followed with the 16th Street Viaduct in 1895 (replaced in 1929), the 27th Street Viaduct in 1910, and the 35th Street Viaduct in 1933.By 1879 meat packing became the most important industry in the city, and the Menomonee Valley was a critical supply point for the likes of
John Plankinton ,Frederick Layton andPhilip Armour . Packing houses populated the valley floor near the Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad stockyard. A youngPatrick Cudahy worked his way up through the ranks and went on to become owner of what is now Patrick Cudahy, Inc. Cudahy moved his operations to what later became the Milwaukee suburb ofCudahy, Wisconsin in 1892.Along with the processing industries, bulk commodity storage and machining & manufacturing entered the scene. The valley was home to the
Milwaukee Road ,Falk Corporation ,Cutler-Hammer ,Harnischfeger ,Chain Belt Company , Nordberg and other industry giants.Heavy pollution and noxious odors became a problem as early as 1874 when a distillery was charged for producing "a nuisance simply stupendous in character." A Grand Jury was assembled in 1886 to tour the river and discover the origin of all the filth. One lecturer remarked that he "nearly stifled as the steamer came up the harbor this morning." The city also built an ill-conceived garbage crematory in 1890 that, along with the factories, locomotives and foundries, pumped clouds of acrid smoke which covered the valley in a thick layer of soot.
After
World War II the economics of the valley declined because of a shift from rail and ship transportation to the interstate highways. Milwaukee also became part of theRust Belt as recession set in, and the heavily industrialized Menomonee Valley was affected the most. By the late 1970s the Menomonee Valley was perceived by many to be an ugly blight in the heart of the city.Rejuvenation
During the administration of Mayor
Henry Maier the city purchased land for redevelopment. It paved roads to improve truck access and built a municipal garage along Canal Street, but these token gestures were not enough. It was not until a series of coordinated efforts started by MayorJohn Norquist in 1988 that the valley began to see new growth. A "Renew the Valley" initiative was formed to gentrify the Menomonee Valley and increase available green space.Anchors such as
Potowatami Bingo and Casino ,The Sigma Group [http://www.thesigmagroup.com] , and aMilwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District facility spurred development.Marquette University built an athletic field across the river just south of the main campus, and Emmpak Foods helped to beautify the area with a sculpture garden. A segment of theHank Aaron State Trail was also paved along the Menomonee River to return public access to the waterway.The abandoned 140-acre
Milwaukee Road yards are currently being made in to a business park with an innovative storm water runoff buffer using native plants. The $20 millionbrownfield project has been called the city's "largest environmental clean up in history." [http://www.mkedcd.org/news/2004/MRVcleanup.html] Two of the landmark smoke stacks will remain standing in "Chimney Park" to memorialize what were once the largest rail yards in the nation.Harley-Davidson also broke ground on the $75 million 130,000 square-footHarley-Davidson Museum at 6th & Canal Streets onJune 1 2006 . It is expected to open in 2008 and will house the company's vast collection of historic motorcycles and corporate archives, along with a restaurant, café and meeting space [http://milwaukee.bizjournals.com/milwaukee/stories/2006/05/29/daily31.html] .ources
*PDFlink| [http://www.renewthevalley.org/files/pdf/GurdaValleyHistory.pdf "The Menomonee Valley: A Historical Overview" by John Gurda] |95.8 KiB
ee also
*
2006 Falk Corporation explosion External links
* [http://www.renewthevalley.org/ Menomonee Valley Partners, Inc]
* [http://epic.cuir.uwm.edu/mvbi/ Menomonee Valley Benchmarking Initiative]
* [http://collections.lib.uwm.edu/cgi-bin/queryresults.exe?CISOROOT=%2Fmkenh&CISOFIELD1=neighb&CISOBOX1=Menomonee+River+Valley--Milwaukee UWM photo collection]
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