|
|
 |
East
Troy Electric Railroad |
| |
2002 N. Church Street, East Troy, WI. (262) 642-3263
Historic streetcars, rapid transit cars, and interurbans make a ten-mile
round trip between East Troy and The Elegant Farmer- Wisconsin's Largest
Farm Market at Highways J and ES near Mukwonago. Regular service begins
the Saturday of Memorial Day Weekend and continues through the end of October
on every weekend. Weekday service operates from mid-June through mid-August.
Special events include Trolleyfest Weekend in early spring, Model Railroad
weekend, and Fall Fun Days, the fall colors riding season, that connects
with The Elegant Farmer's "Cheap Fun" Fall Weekends, with hayrides, pumpkin
picking, and many other activities. The Elegant Farmer also features the
best apple pies "you ever hung a lip on".
The East Troy Electric Railroad also features award-winning dinner train
service, using the railroad's Art Deco diner twins, Ravenswood and Beverly
Shores.
For more information, visit their web
site. |
Lake Geneva Historical Walking Tour |
| |
Historical walking tour booklet available for a minimal fee. Outlines
significant features of Lake Geneva. Available at the Chamber of
Commerce office. |
Lyons Town Hall |
| |
Downtown Lyons, WI. restored historical building built in 1877. |
Rustic Roads |
| |
A rustic road has natural features along its borders such as rugged
terrain, native vegetation, native wildlife, or include open areas
with agricultural vistas which singly or in combination, uniquely
set this road apart from other roads. |
Yerkes
Observatory |
| |
373 W. Geneva St., Williams Bay. (262) 245-5555
Yerkes Observatory offers free public tours every Saturday throughout the
year at fifteen minutes past ten, eleven, and noon. You may wish to attend
the free brief Quester Museum program at ten, eleven, and noon, immediately
before the tour.
During the 10:15, 11:15, and 12:15 tour, the tour guide provides a brief
talk on the history of Yerkes, astronomical research, and our amazing universe.
He will also take visitors into the 90-foot dome, one of the largest of
its kind ever built. Here, visitors look at the famed 40-inch refractor,
the world's biggest lens-type telescope, and its impressive 73-foot diameter
elevator floor. Note that the dome interior is unheated, and during late
fall and winter temperatures inside are as chilly as out doors. Please
dress appropriately.
Before or after the tour, visitors may look at a time line display on the
main floor that covers Yerkes Observatory's early history and is adorned
with dozens of photographs from the 1890s. Other hall displays concentrate
on comets, galaxies, nebulae, and the death of stars. A gift shop offers
authentic meteorites, VCR tapes, color postcards, T-shirts, sweatshirts,
scientific kits, books, guides to the stars and planets, and many other
science and astronomy-related items.
For more information, visit their web
site. |
Lake Geneva Museum |
| |
818 Geneva Street, Lake Geneva. (262) 248-6060
Local history. Open May through October:
Spring & Fall, - Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Holidays.
Summers, - Thursday thru Monday.
1:00 to 5:00 p.m. |
Old
World Wisconsin |
| |
Hwy. 67, 12 miles north of Elkhorn. (262) 594-6300
Any day of the spring, summer, and fall - only thirty-five miles from Milwaukee
- expect to find yourself immersed in historical scenes of farm and village
life re-created by real-life characters out of the past. Farmers still
ply fields with antique farm implements lugged by teams of oxen and horses.
Women and children work side-by-side on chores that change with the season
- from planting gardens in the spring to stocking larders in the fall.
Farmsteads and settlements representing German, Finnish, Norwegian, Danish,
Polish, Yankee, and African-American pioneers dot nearly 600 acres of
rolling, wooded hills as unspoiled as the land that greeted the first
settlers. And an 1870s crossroads village tells the story of small-town
life in America's Heartland. Come discover a place where history truly
lives and breathes. Come home to Old World Wisconsin.
Open daily May 1 through October 31. Admission - $11.00 for adults.
For more information and to find out about special events, visit their web
site. |
Webster House |
| |
Elkhorn. (262) 723-4248 or (262) 723-5788.
Local history. Open May 1 - September 30, daily Thursday through Sunday,
1 to 5 p.m.
Nestled on a quiet street in the city of Elkhorn, Wisconsin, the Webster
House Museum is a well maintained white clapboard house. The composer Joseph
P. Webster once owned the home. Both the structure and its famous owner
played an important part of the history of Elkhorn. According to museum
records, the Greek-revival style cottage was constructed in 1836 and was
originally located in Elkhorn's public square, now known as courthouse
square. The building served as the federal land grant office, selling land
to Walworth County pioneers before Wisconsin became a state in 1848. The
building originally measured 18 by 22 feet and was only one story. The
land office was abandoned in 1840 and later moved to its present site at
the corner of Rockwell and Washington Streets by LeGrand Rockwell, one
of Elkhorn's first settlers. |
|