词条 | List of counties in Wisconsin | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
Image:Wisconsin-counties-map.gif|thumb|right|380px|Wisconsin counties (clickable map) poly 217 103 253 146 263 93 216 150 218 178 232 176 243 155 280 75 266 147 266 180 241 186 210 188 208 101 242 91 253 92 239 105 230 152 229 161 228 167 265 188 284 69 221 91 232 104 252 129 255 165 259 173 Bayfield poly 290 133 300 145 299 178 290 210 309 199 298 140 311 127 306 137 307 161 314 168 316 191 321 192 340 211 338 222 291 221 280 151 282 194 299 198 301 123 288 134 287 154 285 161 291 169 294 178 279 209 303 120 315 144 313 150 Ashland poly 327 135 332 170 362 214 384 197 357 144 324 173 341 141 346 143 Iron poly 129 113 183 115 179 161 149 175 128 183 179 181 193 172 125 158 125 175 126 184 135 171 146 169 196 108 195 141 132 137 123 147 134 144 150 179 119 124 179 185 185 162 182 109 190 106 155 131 138 135 170 135 177 125 128 123 132 133 118 154 120 190 173 188 188 188 193 151 Douglas poly 147 204 188 250 157 274 148 274 183 277 191 269 192 213 195 205 148 248 148 263 156 260 164 256 158 269 181 201 191 204 Washburn poly 406 187 482 216 481 239 437 236 398 231 490 211 407 196 405 223 414 216 424 215 433 209 491 233 496 221 403 182 398 211 398 234 Vilas poly 126 219 84 251 51 274 74 242 69 238 120 253 133 268 103 258 90 257 118 206 132 202 135 224 132 240 135 256 119 239 71 272 66 240 Burnett poly 213 213 256 220 271 264 229 275 212 279 299 277 299 254 295 240 295 234 259 208 220 207 215 241 228 251 245 230 250 251 244 262 216 269 216 277 230 219 239 228 205 223 207 265 256 258 255 267 253 230 Sawyer poly 318 239 366 246 305 316 328 322 363 325 370 296 372 274 372 260 372 244 316 272 314 292 311 302 324 284 311 254 376 323 Price poly 70 288 101 295 107 337 78 345 62 343 110 347 113 286 104 275 78 320 67 335 74 343 87 331 94 332 104 330 117 335 121 349 56 347 124 285 65 295 66 307 76 304 Polk poly 734 364 698 434 676 434 700 443 695 428 687 425 718 411 704 441 672 444 671 429 760 328 758 326 Door poly 565 240 592 263 590 245 602 240 607 247 548 264 568 271 550 253 550 230 561 230 581 235 589 237 Florence poly 388 312 401 327 389 308 408 313 449 336 445 368 413 371 386 367 444 312 408 326 394 346 385 349 389 357 422 309 429 310 403 322 387 329 390 336 445 320 446 322 410 337 Lincoln poly 134 293 144 313 140 355 168 348 191 347 191 319 190 299 194 294 Barron poly 214 294 214 302 285 309 246 332 215 335 239 296 279 295 293 317 286 327 261 335 244 340 244 322 256 321 208 314 209 326 231 296 254 315 254 319 Rusk poly 398 251 470 282 464 308 491 306 482 257 391 293 437 292 437 255 457 252 394 273 395 281 454 290 461 299 495 256 496 274 450 255 Oneida poly 507 234 525 240 526 307 509 293 544 287 562 318 552 322 526 317 511 305 568 284 568 301 510 274 534 262 543 284 554 282 508 286 532 239 534 255 535 262 503 294 Forest poly 287 341 324 367 284 372 369 343 369 363 349 365 349 382 318 384 294 384 279 381 278 347 329 345 343 346 349 345 326 351 345 337 353 340 Taylor poly 590 286 631 330 628 383 664 386 653 343 586 318 601 352 615 356 621 371 630 301 632 281 643 300 638 315 583 295 612 281 622 299 Marinette poly 464 333 488 366 524 361 541 346 536 336 493 328 493 386 482 331 465 359 470 328 535 367 539 369 526 371 524 371 504 369 502 384 465 363 473 323 490 329 Langlade poly 261 752 309 740 305 775 309 808 320 787 321 746 322 716 268 777 289 786 299 802 299 771 Grant poly 336 779 341 805 391 804 391 782 335 817 394 818 397 804 397 782 Lafayette poly 409 773 454 776 409 781 443 803 422 820 408 812 453 815 457 785 413 804 428 807 446 779 Green poly 471 776 499 792 474 819 522 818 534 800 533 781 467 795 472 802 499 775 516 782 483 803 Rock poly 548 781 561 792 553 816 588 818 591 794 589 781 546 792 546 778 546 800 558 776 580 776 586 782 553 801 Walworth poly 338 719 360 736 344 760 389 759 397 729 394 718 340 742 341 755 361 719 388 720 373 720 365 720 344 728 379 726 Iowa poly 607 813 622 805 642 801 622 801 652 801 653 816 619 817 603 816 621 801 Kenosha poly 608 773 618 773 604 787 639 788 656 783 656 774 604 771 603 793 603 776 599 775 602 792 Racine poly 416 704 450 729 418 751 412 750 478 747 495 725 495 707 495 701 416 720 418 734 421 739 433 733 449 696 498 743 490 751 471 723 433 739 451 719 Dane poly 516 720 519 723 560 722 559 748 519 753 513 757 568 757 523 744 514 744 Jefferson poly 590 658 597 675 583 693 605 699 616 686 616 664 617 654 Washington poly 521 643 521 658 521 692 576 649 567 687 556 646 551 694 549 655 561 645 572 641 533 697 533 654 543 659 543 651 537 663 Dodge poly 371 640 410 643 365 689 386 690 397 684 412 668 421 658 369 654 362 662 371 674 380 667 421 646 423 655 369 648 Sauk poly 575 716 573 718 575 750 600 749 618 718 613 746 608 716 614 752 604 719 Waukesha poly 632 717 634 742 632 758 650 758 644 719 Milwaukee poly 637 655 636 696 647 655 630 700 632 653 647 653 649 655 651 661 643 667 Ozaukee poly 447 641 448 675 496 677 495 646 Columbia poly 258 679 249 710 253 685 277 692 282 708 271 719 254 726 298 671 256 699 270 674 Crawford poly 309 654 308 695 350 688 350 658 Richland poly 519 386 539 388 550 404 556 392 561 405 552 413 546 387 559 387 520 399 544 408 556 414 561 388 Menominee poly 493 407 503 433 527 435 573 435 582 451 569 457 537 425 502 435 498 422 519 417 Shawano poly 381 406 404 415 442 435 424 448 366 444 356 415 375 381 424 385 448 399 455 418 449 435 Marathon poly 199 366 204 395 239 404 262 387 263 374 259 360 243 353 210 356 192 382 200 400 209 408 220 410 239 410 256 412 262 398 231 394 Chippewa poly 136 375 137 399 140 428 158 444 171 432 176 410 164 385 164 373 151 363 133 366 Dunn poly 126 483 120 479 117 476 126 475 129 465 131 458 131 454 142 452 154 452 168 453 127 450 131 467 127 488 118 486 112 484 111 479 113 477 148 451 Pepin poly 149 473 149 497 161 516 174 528 191 518 186 500 187 491 188 480 175 471 Buffalo poly 63 428 71 445 86 458 100 458 109 442 114 426 95 420 67 423 Pierce poly 352 536 369 539 375 555 377 575 383 597 381 614 368 619 359 619 352 615 Juneau poly 444 537 446 555 460 564 489 566 508 561 510 544 510 536 Waushara poly 430 480 435 503 447 507 457 507 467 502 472 497 472 483 472 470 460 464 429 467 Portage poly 496 585 509 589 516 602 512 615 503 621 495 621 483 614 513 585 Green Lake poly 594 536 589 555 596 562 604 564 611 565 616 565 619 557 619 551 620 541 Calumet poly 444 581 440 601 450 616 461 614 470 604 476 595 477 582 477 578 Marquette poly 673 460 685 465 683 490 671 503 662 495 662 467 Kewaunee poly 621 595 644 599 658 621 646 632 632 635 619 633 Sheboygan poly 658 524 664 537 657 561 636 570 624 558 639 532 673 523 Manitowoc poly 244 624 238 645 259 658 272 660 286 654 295 633 302 622 Vernon poly 564 476 589 494 580 505 568 509 551 506 546 485 578 476 594 478 601 488 602 495 593 504 571 513 569 495 578 497 Outagamie poly 492 460 515 467 519 484 521 501 516 516 506 517 493 517 485 517 483 466 Waupaca poly 213 472 234 486 232 509 232 528 223 540 215 544 205 544 194 539 Trempealeau poly 83 367 105 374 109 390 97 403 82 414 68 408 60 400 52 388 59 371 70 362 107 365 115 374 115 386 115 405 108 410 St. Croix poly 203 426 223 426 243 434 249 444 249 454 236 460 219 456 201 450 190 441 186 429 Eau Claire poly 544 600 541 618 557 624 584 634 599 634 609 615 610 601 596 589 572 589 550 596 Fond du Lac poly 257 495 255 513 259 528 277 526 297 526 311 521 311 511 309 505 303 500 290 499 270 493 256 487 253 482 247 485 247 502 248 534 252 539 262 539 273 535 298 533 313 533 325 527 327 516 286 513 265 511 261 519 261 523 279 520 Jackson poly 285 404 282 429 283 453 293 475 308 476 321 476 338 469 341 455 341 434 340 418 331 403 Clark poly 240 570 231 581 231 597 240 600 255 600 261 598 266 593 268 576 266 566 256 563 238 561 231 567 226 575 La Crosse poly 303 550 282 566 281 587 292 598 306 600 324 599 329 592 330 581 329 568 324 558 318 553 308 553 294 559 336 606 338 588 338 578 335 556 328 548 316 545 302 545 290 545 283 547 278 558 276 573 276 590 296 604 321 605 313 560 294 584 304 592 324 575 292 568 286 583 278 603 316 609 333 609 338 554 Monroe poly 565 353 581 353 581 361 582 370 582 385 582 399 582 406 586 411 595 410 601 410 601 397 601 389 601 384 604 387 604 405 608 420 610 429 615 441 622 441 631 432 634 426 638 411 Oconto poly 410 538 422 546 423 562 424 571 424 587 424 592 422 601 417 607 408 608 404 608 394 596 392 591 393 575 395 556 396 546 421 538 426 558 427 570 431 588 431 607 431 617 427 623 423 623 420 623 414 622 415 581 419 575 420 575 421 591 Adams poly 361 465 374 464 386 466 396 470 396 479 398 492 400 508 393 515 384 515 370 515 362 514 359 513 353 512 351 488 352 473 353 468 394 461 404 503 404 517 396 518 390 506 388 490 388 481 388 476 390 474 393 473 395 499 398 504 Wood poly 619 481 618 500 618 511 630 510 640 505 647 497 648 489 648 481 614 475 614 495 614 510 622 517 633 517 627 504 622 503 Brown poly 540 541 528 565 543 583 567 577 570 563 562 545 539 540 528 556 547 568 549 560 541 555 555 558 532 537 577 539 Winnebago desc bottom-left The U.S. state of Wisconsin is divided into 72 counties. The land that eventually became Wisconsin was transferred from British to American control with the 1783 signing of the Treaty of Paris.[1] It was an unorganized part of the Northwest Territory until 1802 when all of the land from St. Louis north to the Canadian border was organized as St. Clair County.[1] When Illinois was admitted to the union in 1818, Wisconsin became part of the Territory of Michigan and divided into two counties: Brown County in the northeast along Lake Michigan and Crawford County in the southwest along the Mississippi River.[1] Iowa County was formed in 1829 from the Crawford County land south of the Wisconsin River.[1] Brown County's southern portion was used to form Milwaukee County in 1834.[1] The state of Wisconsin was created from Wisconsin Territory on May 29, 1848, with 28 counties. Counties in Wisconsin are governed by county boards, headed by a chairperson. Counties with a population of 500,000 or more must also have a county executive. Smaller counties may have either a county executive or a county administrator.[2] As of 2011, 13 counties had elected county executives: Brown, Chippewa, Dane, Fond du Lac, Kenosha, Manitowoc, Milwaukee, Outagamie, Portage, Racine, Sawyer, Waukesha, and Winnebago. 23 had an appointed county administrator, 34 had an appointed administrative coordinator, and 2 had neither an executive nor an administrator. Waukesha County had both an executive and an administrator.[3], Each county has a county seat, often a populous or centrally located community, where the county's governmental offices are located. Some of the services provided by the county include: law enforcement, circuit courts, social services, vital records and deed registration, road maintenance, and snow removal. County officials include sheriffs, district attorneys, clerks, treasurers, coroners, surveyors, registers of deeds, and clerks of circuit court; these officers are elected for four-year terms. In most counties, elected coroners have been replaced by appointed medical examiners. State law permits counties to appoint a registered land surveyor in place of electing a surveyor. The most populous county in the state is Milwaukee County at 947,735 people at the 2010 census.[8] Its population is bolstered by the city of Milwaukee's 594,833 people.[8] The county with the least population is Menominee County with 4,232 residents; the Menominee Indian Reservation is co-extensive with the county.[8] Pepin County is the smallest in area, with {{convert|231.98|sqmi|km2}}; Marathon is the largest, having {{convert|1544.91|sqmi|km2}}.[8] The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) code, which is used by the United States government to uniquely identify states and counties, is provided with each entry.[4] Wisconsin's code is 55, which when combined with any county code would be written as 55XXX. The FIPS code for each county links to census data for that county.[5] List of counties{{Countytabletop| region_width = | fips_ref = [5] | region_seat_title = County seat | region_seat_width = 100px | region_seat_ref = [6] | data2_title = Established | data2_width = | data2_ref = [7] | data3_title = Formed from | data3_width = | data3_ref = [8] | data4_title = Etymology | data4_width = | data4_ref = [8] | data4_unsortable = yes | population_ref = [9][6] | area_ref = [9] }}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=001|Name=Adams|Seat=Friendship|Data2=1848|Data3=Portage County|Data4=John Quincy Adams (1767-1848), President of the United States (1825-29)|Population=20875|Area=645.65|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=003|Name=Ashland|Seat=Ashland|Data2=1860|Data3=La Pointe County|Data4=Ashland, Henry Clay's estate in Kentucky |Population=16157|Area=1045.04|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=005|Name=Barron|Seat=Barron|Data2=1859|Data3=Polk County|Data4=Henry D. Barron, state senator and circuit court judge. |Population=45870|Area=862.71|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=007|Name=Bayfield|Seat=Washburn|Data2=1845|Data3=St. Croix County|Data4=Henry Bayfield, Royal naval officer and first to survey Great Lakes area |Population=15014|Area=1477.86|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=009|Name=Brown|Seat=Green Bay|Data2=1818|Data3=unorganized territory|Data4= Major General Jacob Brown (1775-1828), commanding general of the United States Army during the War of 1812|Population=248007|Area=529.71|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=011|Name=Buffalo|Seat=Alma|Data2=1853|Data3=Trempealeau County|Data4=The Buffalo River, which flows through the county.|Population=13587|Area=671.64|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=013|Name=Burnett|Seat=Siren|Data2=1856|Data3=Polk County|Data4=Thomas P. Burnett, state legislator|Population=15457|Area=821.85|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=015|Name=Calumet|Seat=Chilton|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown County, Wisconsin|Data4=The French word for a Menominee Ceremonial pipe.|Population=48971|Area=318.24|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=017|Name=Chippewa|Seat=Chippewa Falls|Data2=1845|Data3=Crawford County|Data4= Chippewa Indians|Population=62415|Area=1008.37|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=019|Name=Clark|Seat=Neillsville|Data2=1853|Data3=Crawford County|Data4=George Rogers Clark (1752-1812), Revolutionary War general |Population=34690|Area=1209.82|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=021|Name=Columbia|Seat=Portage|Data2=1846|Data3=Portage County|Data4=Christopher Columbus (1451-1506), navigator and explorer|Population=56833|Area=765.53|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=023|Name=Crawford|Seat=Prairie du Chien|Data2=1818|Data3=unorganized territory|Data4=William Harris Crawford (1772-1834), United States Senator from Georgia (1807-13) and Secretary of the Treasury 1816-25|Population=16644|Area=570.66|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=025|Name=Dane|Seat=Madison|Data2=1836|Data3=Crawford, Iowa, and Milwaukee Countes|Data4=Nathan Dane (1752-1835), delegate to the First Continental Congress (1785-88)|Population=488073|Area=1197.24|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=027|Name=Dodge|Seat=Juneau|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown and Milwaukee Counties|Data4=Henry Dodge (1782-1867), Territorial Governor of Wisconsin (1845-48)|Population=88759|Area=875.63|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=029|Name=Door|Seat=Sturgeon Bay|Data2=1851|Data3=Brown County|Data4=A dangerous water passage near Door Peninsula known as Porte des Morts or "door of the dead" in French|Population=27785|Area=481.98|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=031|Name=Douglas|Seat=Superior|Data2=1854|Data3=La Pointe County |Data4=Stephen Douglas (1813-61), United States Senator 1847-61|Population=44159|Area=1304.14|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=033|Name=Dunn|Seat=Menomonie|Data2=1854|Data3=Chippewa County|Data4=Charles Dunn, state senator and chief justice of Wisconsin Territory|Population=43857|Area=850.11|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=035|Name=Eau Claire|Seat=Eau Claire|Data2=1856|Data3=Chippewa County|Data4=City of Eau Claire French for "clear water"|Population=98736|Area=637.98|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=037|Name=Florence|Noseat=Florence|Data2=1881|Data3=Marinette and Oconto Counties|Data4=Florence Julst, the first white woman to settle in the area|Population=4423|Area=488.20|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=039|Name=Fond du Lac|Seat=Fond du Lac|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown County|Data4=French for "foot of the lake"|Population=101633|Area=719.55|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=041|Name=Forest|Seat=Crandon|Data2=1885|Data3=Langlade and Oconto Counties|Data4=Forest which covered the area when it was settled|Population=9304|Area=1014.07|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=043|Name=Grant|Seat=Lancaster|Data2=1837|Data3=Iowa County|Data4=Probably a trader named Grant who made contact with area natives in 1810 but about whom little else is known |Population=51208|Area=1146.85|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=045|Name=Green|Seat=Monroe|Data2=1837|Data3=Iowa County and unorganized territory|Data4=Nathanael Greene (1742-86), quartermaster general during the American Revolutionary War|Population=36842|Area=583.96|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=047|Name=Green Lake|Seat=Green Lake|Data2=1858|Data3=Marquette County|Data4=Green Lake located within the county|Population=19051|Area=349.44|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=049|Name=Iowa|Seat=Dodgeville|Data2=1829|Data3=Crawford County|Data4=Iowa tribe of Indians|Population=23687|Area=762.58|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=051|Name=Iron|Seat=Hurley|Data2=1893|Data3=Ashland and Oneida Counties|Data4=Local iron deposits|Population=5916|Area=758.17|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=053|Name=Jackson|Seat=Black River Falls|Data2=1853|Data3=La Crosse County|Data4=Andrew Jackson (1767-1845), President of the United States 1829–37|Population=20449|Area=987.72|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=055|Name=Jefferson|Seat=Jefferson|Data2=1836|Data3=Milwaukee County|Data4=Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), President of the United States (1801-09)|Population=83686|Area=556.47|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=057|Name=Juneau|Seat=Mauston|Data2=1856|Data3=Adams County|Data4=Solomon Juneau (1793-1856), founder of what would become Milwaukee|Population=26664|Area=766.93|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=059|Name=Kenosha|Seat=Kenosha|Data2=1850|Data3=Racine County|Data4=Indian word meaning "place of the pike"|Population=166426|Area=271.99|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=061|Name=Kewaunee|Seat=Kewaunee|Data2=1852|Data3=Door County|Data4=Either a Potawatomi word meaning "river of the lost" or an Ojibwe word meaning "prairie hen" "wild duck" or "to go around"|Population=20574|Area=342.52|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=063|Name=La Crosse|Seat=La Crosse|Data2=1851|Data3=Crawford County|Data4=Indian game of lacrosse|Population=114638|Area=451.69|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=065|Name=Lafayette|Seat=Darlington|Data2=1846|Data3=Iowa County|Data4=Gilbert du Motier marquis de La Fayette (1757-1834), a French general in the American Revolutionary War|Population=16836|Area=633.59|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=067|Name=Langlade|Seat=Antigo|Data2=1879|Data3=Oconto County|Data4=Charles de Langlade (1729 – c.1800), American Revolutionary War veteran and United States Indian Agent in Green Bay| Population=19977|Area=870.64|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=069|Name=Lincoln|Seat=Merrill|Data2=1874|Data3=Marathon County|Data4=Abraham Lincoln (1809-65), President of the United States 1861-65| Population=28743|Area=878.97|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=071|Name=Manitowoc|Seat=Manitowoc|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown County|Data4=Munedoo-owk, an Ojibwe word meaning "the place of the good spirit"|Population=81442|Area=589.08|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=073|Name=Marathon|Seat=Wausau|Data2=1850|Data3=Portage County|Data4=Marathon, Greece|Population=134063|Area=1544.98|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=075|Name=Marinette|Seat=Marinette|Data2=1879|Data3=Oconto County|Data4=Marie Antoinette Chevalier, Indian wife of an early fur trapper |Population=41749|Area=1399.35|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=077|Name=Marquette|Seat=Montello|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown County|Data4=Father Pere Jacques Marquette (1637-75), missionary and explorer|Population=15404|Area=455.60|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=078|Name=Menominee|Seat=Keshena|Data2=1959|Data3=Menominee Indian Reservation, Shawano, and Oconto Counties |Data4=Menominee Indians|Population=4232|Area=357.61|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=079|Name=Milwaukee|Seat=Milwaukee|Data2=1834|Data3=Brown County|Data4=Mahnawaukee-Seepe, an Indian word meaning "gathering place by the river"|Population=947735|Area=241.40|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=081|Name=Monroe|Seat=Sparta|Data2=1854|Data3=La Crosse County|Data4=James Monroe (1758-1831), President of the United States (1817-25)|Population=44673|Area=900.78|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=083|Name=Oconto|Seat=Oconto|Data2=1851|Data3=Brown County|Data4=An Indian settlement and the Oconto River, whose name means "plentiful with fish"|Population=37660|Area=997.99|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=085|Name=Oneida|Seat=Rhinelander|Data2=1885|Data3=Lincoln County|Data4=Oneida Indians|Population=35998|Area=1112.97|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=087|Name=Outagamie|Seat=Appleton|Data2=1851|Data3=Brown County|Data4=Outagamie Indians|Population=176695|Area=637.52|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=089|Name=Ozaukee|Seat=Port Washington|Data2=1853|Data3=Washington County|Data4=The Ojibwe word for the Sauk nation|Population=86395|Area=233.08|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=091|Name=Pepin|Seat=Durand|Data2=1858|Data3=Dunn County|Data4=Pierre and Jean Pepin du Chardonnets, explorers|Population=7469|Area=231.98|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=093|Name=Pierce|Seat=Ellsworth|Data2=1853|Data3=Saint Croix County|Data4=Franklin Pierce (1804-69), President of the United States (1853-57)|Population=41019|Area=573.75|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=095|Name=Polk|Seat=Balsam Lake|Data2=1853|Data3=Saint Croix County|Data4=James Polk (1795-1849), President of the United States (1845-49)| Population=44205|Area=913.96|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=097|Name=Portage|Seat=Stevens Point|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown, Crawford, Iowa, and Milwaukee Counties|Data4=Passage between the Fox and Wisconsin Rivers |Population=70019|Area=800.68|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=099|Name=Price|Seat=Phillips|Data2=1879|Data3=Chippewa and Lincoln Counties|Data4=William T. Price (1824-86), United States Congressman (1883-86)|Population=14159|Area=1254.38|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=101|Name=Racine|Seat=Racine|Data2=1836|Data3=Milwaukee County|Data4=Racine, the French word for "root", after the Root River, which flows through the county| Population=195408|Area=332.5|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=103|Name=Richland|Seat=Richland Center|Data2=1842|Data3=Iowa County|Data4=The rich soil of the area|Population=18021|Area=586.15|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=105|Name=Rock|Seat=Janesville|Data2=1836|Data3=Milwaukee County|Data4=Rock River, which flows through the county|Population=160331|Area=718.14|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=107|Name=Rusk|Seat=Ladysmith|Data2=1901|Data3=Chippewa County|Data4=Jeremiah McLain Rusk (1830-93), Governor of Wisconsin 1882-89|Population=14755|Area=913.59|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=111|Name=Sauk|Seat=Baraboo|Data2=1840|Data3=Crawford, Dane and Portage Counties|Data4=Sauk Indians|Population=61976|Area=830.9|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=113|Name=Sawyer|Seat=Hayward|Data2=1883|Data3=Ashland and Chippewa Counties, Wisconsin|Data4=Philetus Sawyer (1816-1900), United States Representative (1865-75) and Senator (1881-93) from Wisconsin|Population=16557|Area=1257.31|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=115|Name=Shawano|Seat=Shawano|Data2=1853|Data3=Oconto County|Data4=An Ojibwe word meaning "southern"|Population=41949|Area=893.06|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=117|Name=Sheboygan|Seat=Sheboygan|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown County|Data4=Shawb-wa-way-kun, an Indian word meaning "great noise underground"|Population=115507|Area=511.27|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=109|Name=St. Croix|Seat=Hudson|Data2=1840|Data3=Crawford County, and unorganized territory|Data4=An early French explorer named St. Croix, about whom little is known |Population=84345|Area=722.33|Map=Map of Wisconsin highlighting Saint Croix County.svg|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=119|Name=Taylor|Seat=Medford|Data2=1875|Data3=Clark, Lincoln, Marathon and Chippewa Counties|Data4=William Robert Taylor (1820-1909), Governor of Wisconsin 1874-76|Population=20689|Area=974.88|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=121|Name=Trempealeau|Seat=Whitehall|Data2=1854|Data3=Crawford and La Crosse Counties|Data4=Trempealeau Mountain (from the French for "mountain with its foot in the water"), a bluff located in a bend of the Trempealeau River,[10] which flows through the county |Population=28816|Area=732.97|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=123|Name=Vernon|Seat=Viroqua|Data2=1851|Data3=Richland and Crawford Counties|Data4=Mount Vernon, home of George Washington|Population=29773|Area=791.58|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=125|Name=Vilas|Seat=Eagle River|Data2=1893|Data3=Oneida County|Data4=William Vilas (1840-1908), officer in the Civil War United States Postmaster General (1885-88) United States Secretary of the Interior (1888-89) and Senator from Wisconsin (1891-97)|Population=21430|Area=856.60|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=127|Name=Walworth|Seat=Elkhorn|Data2=1836|Data3=Milwaukee County|Data4=Reuben Hyde Walworth (1788-1867), jurist from New York|Population=102228|Area=555.13|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=129|Name=Washburn|Seat=Shell Lake|Data2=1883|Data3=Burnett County|Data4=Cadwallader Washburn (1818-82), Governor of Wisconsin (1872–74) and Representative from Wisconsin (1867–71)|Population=15911|Area=797.11|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=131|Name=Washington|Seat=West Bend|Data2=1836|Data3=Brown and Milwaukee Counties|Data4=George Washington (1732-99), American Revolutionary War leader (1775–83) and first President of the United States (1789–97)| Population=131887|Area=430.70|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=133|Name=Waukesha|Seat=Waukesha|Data2=1846|Data3=Milwaukee County|Data4=Waugooshance, a Pottawatomi word meaning "little foxes"|Population=389891|Area=549.57|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=135|Name=Waupaca|Seat=Waupaca|Data2=1851|Data3=Brown and Winnebago Counties|Data4=wau-pa-ka-ho-nak, a Menominee word meaning "white sand bottom" or "brave young hero"|Population=52410|Area=747.71|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=137|Name=Waushara|Seat=Wautoma|Data2=1851|Data3=Marquette County|Data4=An Indian word meaning "good earth"|Population=24496|Area=626.15|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=139|Name=Winnebago|Seat=Oshkosh|Data2=1840|Data3=Brown, Calumet, and Fond du Lac Counties|Data4=Winnebago Indians|Population=166994|Area=434.49|Size=100px}}{{Countyrow |N=55|Num=141|Name=Wood|Seat=Wisconsin Rapids|Data2=1856|Data3=Portage County|Data4=Joseph Wood (1809-90), state legislator (1856-58)|Population=74749|Area=793.12|Size=100px}} |} Renamed and proposed countiesFive counties in Wisconsin have been renamed and two have been proposed.
See also
References1. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite book|last=Curtiss-Wedge|first=Franklyn|title=History of Buffalo and Pepin Counties, Wisconsin, Volume 1|year=1919|publisher=Higginson Book Company|pages=3–4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SNYqAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA4&dq=wisconsin+counties+lake+michigan&hl=en&sa=X&ei=8FQ1UZLjPMea2AWQz4GQAw&ved=0CFcQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=wisconsin%20counties%20lake%20michigan&f=false}} 2. ^Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. [https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/misc/lrb/blue_book/2011_2012 State of Wisconsin 2011-2012 Blue Book]. Madison: Joint Committee on Legislative Organization, 2011, p. 736. 3. ^Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. [https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/misc/lrb/blue_book/2011_2012 State of Wisconsin 2011-2012 Blue Book]. Madison: Joint Committee on Legislative Organization, 2011, p. 732. 4. ^{{cite web|url= http://www.itl.nist.gov/fipspubs/fip6-4.htm|title= FIPS Publish 6-4|publisher= National Institute of Standards and Technology|accessdate= 2008-02-11}} 5. ^1 {{cite web |url=http://www.epa.gov/enviro/html/codes/wi.html |title=EPA County FIPS Code Listing |accessdate=2008-02-11 |work=US Environmental Protection Agency }} 6. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://www.naco.org/Counties/Pages/FindACounty.aspx |title=NACo - Find a county|publisher=National Association of Counties|accessdate=2008-02-11}} 7. ^Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. [https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/misc/lrb/blue_book/2011_2012 State of Wisconsin 2011-2012 Blue Book]. Madison: Joint Committee on Legislative Organization, 2011, p. 731. 8. ^1 2 {{cite book |title= Proceedings of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin at its Fifty-Seventh Annual Meeting|last= Carver |first= Jonathon |authorlink= |year= 1910|publisher= Democrat Printing Company |edition= 1st|location= Madison WI|pages=}} (WV County Founding Dates and Etymology). Other editions available at {{ISBN|1130567257}} and [https://books.google.com/books?id=nbQTAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA184&dq='Organization,+Boundaries+and+Names+of+Wisconsin+Counties&hl=en&sa=X&ei=eTQ2UZ-MHIWFkAXcyYCgDQ&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q='Organization%2C%20Boundaries%20and%20Names%20of%20Wisconsin%20Counties&f=false Google Books] 9. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite web|url=http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/55000.html|title=Wisconsin QuickFacts|work=U.S. Census Bureau|accessdate=2013-03-04|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130303055517/http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/55000.html|archivedate=2013-03-03|df=}} (2010 Census) 10. ^{{cite book | author=Elkins, Winston | title=Trempealeau and the Mississippi River Dam | location=Trempealeau County, WI | publisher=Trempealeau County Historical Society | year=1985 | id = }} 11. ^{{cite web |url=https://mapgeeks.org/maps-of-wisconsin/ |title=Interactive Map of Wisconsin County Formation History |accessdate=2014-09-15 |work=mapgeeks.org}} 12. ^{{cite book |title= History of Vernon County, Wisconsin|last= |first= |authorlink1= |year= 1884|publisher= Union Publishing|location= Viroqua, WI|page= 132}} (Bad Ax County). Other editions available: {{ISBN|1178120341}} and [https://books.google.com/books?id=-0EVAAAAYAAJ Google Books] 13. ^1 {{cite news | url=http://journaltimes.com/news/new-county-only-solution-to-poor-service-some-say/article_76708d68-ba6f-5e0d-8862-4a836bee3f63.html |title=New county only solution to poor service, some say |date=September 28, 1997 |accessdate= 2017-01-09 | newspaper=The Journal Times}} 14. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/dictionary/index.asp?action=view&term_id=2253&keyword=barron |title=Dictionary of Wisconsin History |accessdate=2013-02-27 |work=Wisconsin Historical Society}} 15. ^{{Cite book|title = The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States|last = Gannett|first = Henry|publisher = Govt. Print. Off.|year = 1905|isbn = |location = |pages = 135|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=9V1IAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA135#v=onepage&q&f=false}} 16. ^Rusk County Museum {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131022021623/http://ruskcountymuseum.webs.com/gatescountycourthouse.htm |date=2013-10-22 }} 17. ^Wisconsin Historical Society-La Pointe County, Wisconsin (obsolete) 18. ^'History of Langlade County, Wisconsin from U.S. Government Survey to Present Time, With Biographical Sketches,' Robert Dessueran, Bernier Bros Publishing Co., Antigo, Wisconsin: 1922, History of Langlade County, Chapter V: Organization of Langlade County, pg. 12 External links
3 : Lists of counties of the United States by state|Wisconsin counties|Wisconsin geography-related lists |
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