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Crivitz, Wisconsin

Crivitz
Village
Nickname(s): Ellis Junction (Railroad name until 1883)
Motto: Crivitz, a great place to live, work, and play
Crivitz is located in Wisconsin
Crivitz
Crivitz
Location of Crivitz, Wisconsin
Coordinates: 45°14′2″N 88°0′25″W / 45.23389°N 88.00694°W / 45.23389; -88.00694Coordinates: 45°14′2″N 88°0′25″W / 45.23389°N 88.00694°W / 45.23389; -88.00694
Country United States
State Wisconsin
County Marinette
Town of Crivitz September 10, 1883
Village of Crivitz 1974
Government
 • Type Village President and Board of Trustees (6)
 • Village President John Deschane
 • Village Clerk Marilynn Padgett
Area
 • Total 1.64 sq mi (4.25 km2)
 • Land 1.59 sq mi (4.12 km2)
 • Water 0.05 sq mi (0.13 km2)
Elevation 679 ft (207 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 984
 • Estimate (2012) 974
 • Density 618.9/sq mi (239.0/km2)
Demonym(s) Wolverines (local sports team)
Time zone Central (CST) (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
United States Zip Code 54114-xxxx
Area code(s) 715 & 534
FIPS code 55-17725
GNIS feature ID 1563535
Airport Crivitz Municipal Airport
Highways
  • US 141 (north-south)
  • County W (east-west)
  • County A (northwest)
Website villageofcrivitz.com

Crivitz is a village in Marinette County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 984 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Marinette, WI–MI Micropolitan Statistical Area.

Crivitz was surveyed and plotted in the summer of 1883. This work was filed with the Register of Deeds in Marinette County on 10 September 1883 by German immigrant Frederick John Bartels, who named the settlement after his home town of Crivitz, Germany.

The demographic character of the Crivitz area was shaped significantly after a typhoid epidemic in 1894, which shut down the sawmills. Hieronymus Zech (1849–1932), a mill operator from Chilton, took over operation of the inactive mills and promoted land sales to Polish immigrants, many of whom relocated from Milwaukee and Chicago. Zech built stores, houses, schools, and roads for the Polish colony. As a result, the local population today is predominantly Polish-American.

Crivitz was a town until 1913, when it was incorporated as the Village of Crivitz. The village hall, originally located at 600 Main Avenue, was later relocated at 800 Main Avenue. The downtown developed along Main Avenue in the 600 to 900 blocks from 1913 to 1924. In 1924 a devastating fire destroyed 22 buildings along the south side of Main Avenue. In 1927, the village was disincorporated and became the Town of Crivitz. The fire, disincorporation, and the start of the Great Depression in 1929 sealed the fate of Crivitz for many years.

A ski hill called Winterset was developed in Crivitz in 1961.

In 1974 Crivitz was once again incorporated as the Village of Crivitz, with the Village Hall at 800 Henriette Avenue. This was quickly followed by improvements in the water-sewer system, electrical system, and highway-transportation system. The village currently operates under its 1974 incorporation with a Village President (executive), a Board of Trustees (legislative), and a Municipal Judge (judicial). Village operations are carried out by the Public Works Department, Water-Sewer Department, Police Department, Fire Department, and Parks Department. In the 1980s the village business district moved to U.S. Highway 141 on the eastern edge of the village. Along with the inclusion of Dyer Business Park, in 2005, which runs along Highway 141. There has been no addition development in the downtown area of the village. The residential area has continued to expand both north and south between the railroad tracks and the Peshtigo River.


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