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Monday March 14, 2011.

Based on photo sampling calculations more than 1,680 people had gathered by 12:15pm in Spaight's Plaza for a UWM United rally. People voiced support for social justice issues threatened by Governor Walker's Agenda of stark cuts to public education and the middle class. Signs voiced support for a Recall Election of Republican State Senators, including Alberta Darling. Other sign holders and speakers voiced support for Solidarity of Workers, Teachers, Graduate Students, and Students at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and candidates in an upcoming election on April 5th for Milwaukee County Supervisor, and for Wisconsin State Supreme Court. The Internet also made a brief, in person, humorous appearance.

On the Great Circus Train, at Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

 

July 3,1999

Canon Rebel

Canon 28-80mm lens

Fujifilm 200

F-35 Lightning II aircraft assigned to the 115th Fighter Wing, Truax Field, Madison, Wisconsin take their first flight to Truax Field April 25, 2023. These are the first F-35s to be assigned to the fighter wing since beginning the aircraft conversion from the F-16 Fighting Falcon in 2020. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Cameron Lewis)

just wandering aimlessly, enjoying the fine spring day

4th of July in small town Wisconsin

IPhone snap. Second day of our 2015 #roadtrip . First time in #wisconsin and in #madisonwi - a beautiful #statecapitol. Unlike yesterday's evening storm great weather all day today.

Customer parking sign for the City Haul Lounge, 835 Washington Avenue, Racine Wisconsin. This is a helluva great name for a bar.

from the Radisson Hotel in LaCrosses, Wisconsin

Birch trees in the University of Wisconsin-Madison Arboretum in October

Spc. Justin Meagher, a Soldier with the 724th Engineer Battalion, operates a chain saw to cut up large debris at Saxon Harbor, Wisconsin Aug. 9 as part of flood recovery operations. Maj. Gen. Don Dunbar, Wisconsin's adjutant general, called more than 75 Wisconsin National Guard members to state active duty to assist townships in northwest Wisconsin affected by major flooding and damaging winds. (Wisconsin National Guard photo by Spc. Kati Stacy)

Looking north in Henry Greene Prairie in the University of Wisconsin-Madison Arboretum on an October afternoon

Southwest approach to the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison aglow from the late afternoon October sun

just one of my typical overly dramatic arrivals

Wisconsin Veterans Home, Waupaca. Photo from Pen and Camera, 1890, Louis Eckstein, Milwaukee. Wisconsin Central promotion. Some sources say these are H H Bennett photos.

Wisconsin in autumn

 

Hand held capture of this shot was more of an accident than planned photography. I tried to catch the lift off four other times but got nothing but smoke.

This Cowboy stands near Knuckleheads Family Entertainment Center in Lake Delton Wisconsin,

309 Luddington St. Columbus Wisconsin

SOO 6049 heads west with a tank train over the Wisconsin River in Wisconsin Dells, WI.

 

October 8, 2006.

nrhp # 05001195-

️ Wisconsin Concrete Park — Price County’s Folk‑Art Landmark

The Wisconsin Concrete Park is an outdoor sculpture environment in Phillips, WI, created by self‑taught artist Fred Smith beginning in 1948. It contains more than 200 life‑size and larger‑than‑life concrete-and-glass figures depicting local history, legends, and American heroes.

 

🎨 Origins & Artist: Fred Smith (1886–1976)

• Smith was a Price County native, a lumberjack, tavern owner, farmer, and dance‑hall musician.

• At age 63, in 1948, he began building the sculptures that would become the Wisconsin Concrete Park.

• He used wooden frames wrapped in mink wire, covered them with hand‑mixed cement, and decorated them with broken glass, bottles, and found objects—often donated by visitors.

• His subjects ranged from local acquaintances to mythic and historical figures such as Ben Hur, Abraham & Mary Lincoln, Sacajawea, and Paul Bunyan.

Smith’s work is considered one of America’s most unique folk‑art environments, a Northwoods counterpart to places like the Dickeyville Grotto or the John Michael Kohler Arts Center’s preserved environments.

 

🗿 The Sculpture Environment

• Over 200 concrete figures, many arranged in elaborate tableaux.

• Themes include:

• Logging and Northwoods life

• American history and frontier mythology

• Local characters and personal stories

• Horses, wagons, animals, and heroic scenes

• The use of colored glass gives the sculptures a jewel‑like quality in sunlight.

The park is recognized as one of the Seven Man‑Made Wonders of Northwest Wisconsin.

 

️ Preservation & Ownership

• After Smith’s death in 1976, the Kohler Foundation purchased the site to ensure its preservation.

• It was later gifted to Price County, which maintains it today through the Forestry & Parks and Tourism departments, with support from the Friends of Fred Smith, Inc.

• Restoration is ongoing due to the fragility of concrete folk art in Wisconsin’s climate.

 

️ Visiting the Park

Location: N8236 State Highway 13, Phillips, WI 54555

Features & Amenities

• Open 24/7, best viewed in daylight.

• Picnic area, parking, restrooms, trails, and information area.

• Historic Smith home on site, with a seasonal Countryside Artists Gifts & Gallery.

• Educational/programming building available for reservation.

• Pet‑friendly (leashed; pets not allowed inside buildings).

 

from Copilot

from our ride last week

one of the few pics that turned out pretty decent, uh huh.

Wisconsin is farmland upon farmland upon...and I love days like these.

we had really great weather after the first day, partly cloudy days with temps in the 70's but man it got cool when the sun went down.....brr.

...

as I sit here and look out my window and see a calm, gorgeously sunny day about to wind down I realize how greatly this contrasts to what is going on down south..

thoughts and prayers to the lives affected by hurricane Katrina.

~

A dam broke this past June which caused Lake Delton to drain into the Wisconsin River. Here is a shot of people walking where the lake used to be.

This shot was taken in October.

At least 3 homes were washed away.

May 14, 2019 - Wisconsin State Capitol Building seen from the rooftop terrace of the Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center. Madison, Wisconsin.

An evening visit to the Curtis Prairie at the University of Wisconsin Arobretum

On May 14th, 2016, 509 students were eligible to participate in the Spring Commencement ceremonies. The Spring Commencement included the awarding of bachelor's and master's degrees to UW-Parkside students. Thelma A. Sias was the Commencement speaker, along with speeches from the Chancellor's Award Recipient, Tyler Farrell, and Regent Eve Hall. Congratulations to each individual that graduated today! We are proud of you all!

 

©UW-Parkside/Alyssa Nepper

a warm November day, but I guarantee by next weekend the leaves of that tree will be gone

 

Steam tractors and steam locomotives at the Rock River Thresheree, Edgerton, Wisc.

Image from the bishop's Visitation to St. Thomas Church, Neenah-Menasha, Wisconsin on sunday, April 21, 2013.

Found this wooden Wisconsin Central caboose at a place called Pine Crest~Manitowoc, WI.

  

Canon EOS 2000

Canon 28-80mm lens

Fujifilm 400X

Dakota, Minnesota & Eastern unit 6052 leads Canadian Pacific train #280 approaching Ixonia, Wisconsin on April 19, 2014.

ThedaCare Regional Medical Center

Neenah, Wisconsin

October 2015

Photo by Asher Heimermann/Incident Response

Ho-nee-um Pond in Madison, Wisconsin in the late-afternoon on a winter day

Pix from the 2012 Wisconsin Fatbike Championships at Alpine Valley Resort.

 

www.fat-bike.com

Built in 1906-1917, this Beaux Arts-style Capitol Building was designed by George B. Post to house the state house of representatives, state senate, and offices for the Wisconsin State Government. The fourth state capitol to house the state government since the state’s establishment in 1848, the building is the third building to sit on the present site, and replaced the previous state capitol, built in 1857-1869 and expanded in 1882, which burned down in February of 1904. The capitol houses both the Wisconsin State Assembly and the Wisconsin State Senate, as well as the Wisconsin Supreme Court and the Office of the Governor of Wisconsin. The first capitol of Wisconsin upon the formation of Wisconsin Territory in 1836 was in the village of Belmont, Wisconsin, with the legislature meeting in a hastily constructed wood-frame building, before deciding to designate the future site of Madison as the state capitol, and holding further sessions of the legislature in the much better-developed Mississippi River port town of Burlington (now in Iowa) until a capitol building could be completed in Madison. Upon Burlington becoming part of the new Iowa Territory, the state legislature moved to a log and stone building on the present site of the state capitol, a relatively humble Greek Revival-style building constructed in 1837, which looked much like older capitol buildings in the eastern United States, with doric columns and a rusticated fieldstone exterior. It was most similar to the Old State House in North Carolina, built only four years prior, and the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Illinois, built in the same year, though these two similar buildings were built almost entirely of stone blocks rather than fieldstone. The small second capitol building was the first state capitol of Wisconsin upon its ascension to statehood in 1848, but had become inadequate for the growing population and government by the 1850s. The original building was demolished and replaced with a larger, Classical Revival-style structure with Romanesque Revival elements constructed in stages between 1857 and 1869, which featured a dome inspired by the United Capitol Building, semi-circular porticoes with corinthian columns, and two short side wings with octagonal towers at the corners, which were modified and extended in 1882 with new wings that increased the Classical Revival aspects of the building and helped to downplay the Romanesque Revival elements that originally were very prominent on the structure. This building was oriented with the semi-circular original porticoes aligned with State Street and King Street, with the wings being oriented towards both sections of Hamilton Street, though the building appeared rather small within the large parklike expanse of Capitol Square. By the turn of the 20th Century, the old Capitol had become inadequate for the growing needs of Wisconsin, which had become wealthy, industrialized, and heavily populated by that point, so study of a replacement capitol building began in 1903. In February 1904, the old State Capitol burned to the ground when a gas jet ignited a newly varnished ceiling inside the building, which spread quickly despite the building featuring a then-advanced sprinkler system, as the reservoir of the nearby University of Wisconsin was empty, which allowed the fire to spread out of control. The north wing of the building, built in 1882, was the only portion that survived, with many relics, records, and important historical items being lost in the fire, though the state law library was saved thanks to efforts by University of Wisconsin students. The fire also happened just after the state legislature had voted to cancel the fire insurance policy on the building, thinking it was a costly and unnecessary folly.

 

The present building was built on the site of the previous building, with the construction process focusing on completing each wing one at a time to provide space to the state government with as much fiscal efficiency as possible due to financial limitations. Due to this, the north wing was built last to allow the remaining portion of the previous capitol to serve as space for the state government during the construction period, with the central rotunda and dome also being built after the other three wings had been completed, as they serve a more symbolic and less utilitarian purpose than the rest of the building. The building stands 284 feet (86 meters) tall to the top of the statue on the dome, which was sculpted in 1920 by Daniel Chester French, and is a personification of the state of Wisconsin, with the outstretched arm of the statue representing the state motto, “Forward”. The exterior of the building is clad in Bethel white granite, sourced from Vermont, with an additional 42 types of stone from a total of eight states and six countries being utilized on the interior of the building. The dome is the largest in the world to be entirely clad in granite, and is the tallest building in Madison, with a state law passed in 1990 stipulating that any building within a one-mile radius of the capitol is limited in height to the base of the columns of the dome, which stand at 187 feet, which preserves the visibility of the building from the surrounding landscape. The building has a greek cross footprint with four five-story wings that are aligned with the compass directions and radial streets following the compass directions that slice through the surrounding street grid, which is at a 45-degree angle to compass directions, instead roughly paralleling the shorelines of nearby Lake Mendota and Lake Monona, with Downtown Madison sitting on an isthmus between the two lakes. This places the building at a unique 45-degree angle orientation relative to the edges of Capitol Square and most buildings on adjacent streets. The building was one of the last works of the prolific architect George B. Post, whom died before the building was completed. The building underwent a major renovation in the 1970s that added modern features to the interior and covered up many original features, with later projects between 1988 and 2002 restoring the building while updating the building’s systems and functions for the modern needs of the state government.

 

The exterior of the building’s wings feature porticoes on the ends with corinthian columns, arched windows on the third floor, rusticated bases with entrance doors and decorative keystones, decorative reliefs featuring festoons over the windows on the porticoes, cornices with modillions and dentils, and pediments with sculptural reliefs, which were created by several sculptors, and have different symbolism embodied by their design. On the east wing, which is home to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, the sculpture known as Law, created by Karl Bitter, is located on the portico pediment, on the west wing, which houses the chamber of the Wisconsin Assembly, is a sculpture known as Agriculture, also created by Karl Bitter, on the north wing, which is home to a hearing chamber, is the sculpture known as Virtues and Traits of Character, created by Adolph Alexander Weinman, and on the south wing, which houses the chamber of the Wisconsin Senate, is a sculpture known as Wisdom and Learning of the World, created by Attilio Piccirilli. The sides of the wings feature simpler cornices with dentils, pilasters and recessed window openings with arched openings at the ground floor, windows with decorative pedimented headers on the second floor, arched windows on the third floor, two small two-over-two windows on the fourth floor, and a recessed fifth floor features small paired windows, hidden behind a balustrade that runs around the entirety of the building minus the ends of the wings, concealing a low-slope roof at the setbacks on the sides of the wings and above the corner porticoes. The upper roofs of the wings are low-slope with front gabled portions in the middle punctured by skylights, with the roof being almost entirely enclosed by a parapet. At the center of the building in the inside corners of the greek cross are semi-circular portions of the facade with semi-circular two-story ionic porticos with large terraces and grand staircases featuring decorative copper lampposts, decorative stone balustrades, concealed entrances to the ground floor underneath the terraces, and three doorways on the upper level, with drums surrounded by buttresses featuring small windows and domed roofs above the balustrade on the fifth floor. In the center of the building is the rotunda, which is topped with a large dome that rises from a tall base that terminates in a balustrade, with a low-slope roof at the base of the drum of the dome, which features a level with small windows at the base, with projected pavilions at the corners above the semi-circular porticoes below, which were originally to support four smaller domes, but ended up supporting sculptures by Karl Bitter, symbolizing strength, faith, prosperity, and abundance and knowledge. The drum of the dome is surrounded by a corinthian colonnade with corinthian pilasters on the exterior wall of the dome behind the colonnade, arched windows, and recessed decorative panels at the top of the colonnade below the architrave. Above the architrave is a cornice with modillions and dentils, above which is another balustrade, accessed via doors from the interior space above the inner dome of the rotunda, and ringed by six-over-six windows, pilasters, and a cornice with egg and dart motif at the top. Above this last cornice is the dome, which is ribbed, with the ribs terminating in voluted upside down brackets at the base, and clad in granite, terminating at the top at a balustrade around the base of the lantern. The cylindrical landern features corinthian columns, arched windows, festoons, with a concavely sloped roof featuring rubs terminating in volutes, above which is the base of the Wisconsin statue, which is coated in gold leaf.

 

The interior of the building is richly decorated with Beaux Arts detailing, utilizing plaster, a diverse array of stone and woodwork, engaged columns and pilasters, murals, vaulted ceilings, decorative balustrades, grand staircases, and modern oak furniture. The interior dome features a mural by Edwin Howland Blashfield, known as Resources of Wisconsin, which sits in the middle of the dome’s coffered ceiling, above the upper balcony at the base of the drum. The rotunda features green and white marble corinthian columns with gold leaf on the capitals, vaulted alcoves on the sides with coffered ceilings, a stone floor, and features marble from Tennessee, Missouri, Vermont, Georgia, New York, and Maryland, granite from Wisconsin and Minnesota, limestone from Minnesota and Illinois, marble from France, Italy, Greece, Algeria and Germany, and syenite from Norway. A large circular opening in the floor of the center of the rotunda allows light into the lower level of the building, and is supported by a ring of square columns underneath. The light fixtures in the space are a combination of lampposts and sconces. The pendentives below the drum of the dome in the rotunda are decorated with glass mosaics by artist Kenyon Cox. The interior’s decoration denotes hierarchy of space, with the level of detail varying throughout the building’s interior from simple offices and service areas to the grand public spaces, such as the rotunda and government meeting chambers. The two-story senate chamber is circular with marble cladding, corinthian columns, and pilasters on the walls, a decorative ceiling with a central shallow domed decorative glass skylight, and coffers with rosettes, with murals above the main podium, and balconies inside the alcoves behind the columns for spectators and observers. The two-story assembly chamber features a similar shallow domed decorative glass skylight on the ceiling, but is square in shape with decorative pendentives and arches on the perimeter of the space opening into alcoves with vaulted ceilings, with wood paneling and a large mural behind the main podium, and balconies in the upper level of the alcoves. The supreme court chamber is square with a square decorative glass skylight in the room’s coffered ceiling, white marble pilasters, paneling, and murals on the walls, and arched niches housing candelabra-type lamppost light fixtures. The north wing hearing chamber features a massive cove ceiling with decorative trim and murals, with a large square decorative glass skylight in the middle, and walls lined with ionic pilasters and stone panels. The Governor’s Conference Room, located in the east wing, features a heavily decorated ceiling with multiple coffers housing murals, decorative stained woodwork, a fireplace with a decorative marble surround flanked by two corinthian columns, and gold leaf on some of the trim. The interior of the building is even more richly detailed than the exterior.

 

The building, which has been fully modernized and restored to some semblance of its original appearance, remains the seat of the government of Wisconsin, presently the 25th largest by land area and 20th largest by population in the United States. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, owing to its historical and architectural significance, and was listed as a National Historic Landmark in 2001. The building visually dominates the isthmus that makes up Downtown Madison, and sits in the city’s central square, one of the most visually impressive and stunning sitings of any capitol building in the United States.

on one of the many bridges crossing the Milwaukee River

Maj. Gen. Paul Knapp, Wisconsin’s adjutant general, and Maj. Gen. Mark Goina, chief of the Papua New Guinea Defence Force, sign a National Guard State Partnership agreement between the Wisconsin National Guard and the Papua New Guinea Defence Force Dec. 2 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. The Wisconsin National Guard conducted a senior leader National Guard State Partnership Exchange visit to Papua New Guinea Nov. 30 to Dec. 6. (Wisconsin National Guard photo by Maj. Brian Faltinson)

Wisconsin Central SD45 #6596 leads northbound coal train towards Green Bay. I shot this from the S. Broadway St. bridge. August, 1998.

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