Photocopied newspaper articles, now recycled.
Old neighborhoods of youth exist on on map of memory. (Milwaukee Sentinel, 8/8/1985). Includes photos of
Borchert Field,
North 3rd Street.
Champagne tastes are reshaping the city that beer built. (Chicago
Tribune, 7/26/1986)
Can Packard Plaza persist? Loss of 3 big stores worries some merchants in Cudahy. (Milwaukee Journal, undated)
Revival on 3rd St. (Milwaukee Journal, 8/27/1986)
- New life brewing. Schlitz Park is renewing interest in an old area.
- A suburban oasis in Inner City.
Experiment in integration. Some say real estate industry threatens the outcome. (Milwaukee Journal, 9/29/1986) Sherman Park neighborhood.
Blocking out the blight. Weary group keeps fighting to save city neighborhood. (Milwaukee
Journal, 10/26/1986) 11th & Keefe Block Club.
They try to straddle centuries. (Milwaukee
Journal, 11/26/1986) 800 block of North Cass Street.
Brady Street area now draws affluent. (Milwaukee
Journal, 11/26/1986)
Park West dream remains only that. (Milwaukee
Journal, 12/7/1986
) A new neighborhood of condos, duplexes, and single-family homes to be built in 3 phases.
Negotiations cloud Park East's future. Many parties have vested interests. (Milwaukee
Journal, undated)
A ribbon of gold in the west.
Blue Mound boom shapes Brookfield. (Milwaukee Journal, 1/21/1987)
Brookfield, Wis. Builder Caters To Transferees. (The New York Times, undated)
Wakesha's economy booms. Its growth makes it Wisconsin's hot spot. (Milwaukee
Journal, 6/21/1987)
Jobs result from business boom. (Milwaukee
Journal, 6/21/1987)
Building boom good news for many. (Milwaukee
Sentinel, 9/7/1987)
The Segregated Suburbs. (Milwaukee Journal, 12/17/1987)
- 20 years after housing marches, suburbs remain almost as white.
- Few suburbs hire minorities.
- Integration pioneer faced obstacles.
Rocky start at lakefront. A new beach and an island are shaped from boulders. (Milwaukee
Journal, 5/25/1988) Construction of
17-acre island park next to Summerfest grounds.
Faded glory: Eagles Club once was social center for area. (Milwaukee
Journal, 5/26/1988)
Old South Side braces for change. In a neighborhood known for stability, officials prepare for time of transition. (Milwaukee Sentinel, 1989?)
South Milwaukee to unveil plans. (Milwaukee Journal, 3/15/1989). Downtown revitalization plans.
City's new skyscrapers fit in while lifting our sights and our hopes. (Milwaukee
Journal, 3/23/1989)
New buildings salute City Hall, other neighbors. (Milwaukee
Journal, undated.) Milwaukee Center and 100 East Building.
My Most Memorable Neighborhood. A small slice of heaven on our Southwest Side. (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 4/28/1989)
Sign of allegiance. In a changing Milwaukee neighborhood, residents post notice: "We're not selling out". (Chicago
Tribune, 7/3/1989)
Milwaukee shocked, moves to stem violence. Violent crimes totaled 1,020 through July 1, compared to 565 for the first six months of 1988. (Chicago
Tribune, July 1989)
Names can mean a lot for a city. (Milwaukee
Journal, 7/19/1989) Neighborhoods.
A Pool of Space for Subleasing. (
The New York Times, 2/18/1990). Office development in downtown Milwaukee.
Washington Highlands. (Milwaukee
Journal, 3/22/1990)
National Register of Historic Places neighborhood.
North Avenue Local: A Journey Close to Home
. (Milwaukee
Journal)
- For 17 miles, the thread in all our stories. (8/5/1990)
- Free spirits still roam the East Side Stretch. The successors to the '60s hippies are upholding the traditional laid-back lifestyle. (8/6/1990)
- Rock solid through an age of decline. (8/7/1990)
Up Close: Grand Avenue. (Milwaukee
Journal, 8/25/1990)
No Rust Belt. As Economy Falters, Old Industrial City of Milwaukee Shines. Instead of Wooing High Tech, It Modernized Factories, Rose with Export Boom. Great Lakes Region is Strong. (
The Wall Street Journal, 11/29/1990)
Crisis Center: Turmoil grips Milwaukee's inner city. (
Isthmus, 1/11-17/1991)
How Milwaukee Boomed But Left Its Blacks Behind. (
The New York Times, 5/19/1991)
In Milwaukee, the Raven Finds Its Victims. (publication unknown, 2/28/1992)
Downtown Retail: The Shops of Grand Avenue (Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel, 3/14/2004)
- Grand, but different. New tenants and a new dedication to serving its residential neighbors are bringing fresh hope to the city's downtown mall.
- But Wisconsin Ave. faces big challenges.
Related posts:
A New York City (primarily Manhattan) bibliography. (8/15/2013)
The outer boroughs. (8/22/2013)