*** Welcome to piglix ***

Jefferson, Wisconsin

Jefferson, Wisconsin
City
Downtown Jefferson
Downtown Jefferson
Nickname(s): The Gemütlichkeit City
Coordinates: 43°0′11″N 88°48′28″W / 43.00306°N 88.80778°W / 43.00306; -88.80778Coordinates: 43°0′11″N 88°48′28″W / 43.00306°N 88.80778°W / 43.00306; -88.80778
Country United States
State Wisconsin
County Jefferson
Government
 • Type Mayor - Council
 • Mayor Dale Oppermann
Area
 • Total 5.93 sq mi (15.36 km2)
 • Land 5.72 sq mi (14.81 km2)
 • Water 0.21 sq mi (0.54 km2)
Elevation 801 ft (244 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 7,973
 • Estimate (2012) 7,976
 • Density 1,393.9/sq mi (538.2/km2)
Time zone Central (CST) (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
Zip Code 53549
Area code(s) 920
FIPS code 55-37900
GNIS feature ID 1567111
Website www.jeffersonwis.com

Jefferson is a city in Jefferson County, Wisconsin, United States, and is its county seat. It is at the confluence of the Rock and Crawfish rivers. The population was 7,973 at the 2010 census. The city is partially bordered by the Town of Jefferson.

Jefferson's location was selected to make use of the water power and transportation opportunities offered by the Rock River. It was the furthest point a steamboat could navigate the Rock in 1839. Later bridges built downstream prevented such navigation.

Jefferson's founders were settlers from New England, particularly Connecticut, rural Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine, as well some from upstate New York born to parents who had migrated there from New England shortly after the American Revolution. These people were "Yankees" descended from the English Puritans who settled New England in the 1600s. They were part of a wave of New England farmers who headed west into what was then the wilds of the Northwest Territory during the early 1800s. Most arrived as a result of the completion of the Erie Canal as well as the end of the Black Hawk War.

When they arrived in what is now Jefferson there was nothing but dense virgin forest and wild prairie, the New Englanders built farms, roads, and government buildings and established post routes. They brought many of their Yankee New England values, such as a passion for education, establishing many schools as well as staunch support for abolitionism. They were mostly members of the Congregationalist Church though some were Episcopalian. Due to the second Great Awakening some had converted to Methodism and others had become Baptists before moving to what is now Jefferson. Jefferson, like much of Wisconsin, would be culturally very continuous with early New England culture for most of its early history.


...
Wikipedia

...