"Water Works: An Aquatic History of Milwaukee" is a production of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Department of History and the Milwaukee County Historical Society. In its first season, the show explored the the effects of the 1918 influenza pande
Milwaukee, WI, USA
Though we can tell a history of Milwaukee's environmental movement, the effort to clean up and preserve our waters is also a story of the present. In this episode of Water Works, our season's finale, historian Jonathon Stuever tells the story of Milwaukee's river keepers. Water Works is a production of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Department of History and the Milwaukee County Historical Society. For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
As we've seen, the history of Milwaukee's relationship with water has been in many ways defined by the damage Milwaukeeans have done to its rivers, lakes, and streams. In this episode of Water Works, we begin to focus on Milwaukee's concerted efforts to clean up the messes it has made by charting the history of our environmental movement.Water Works is a production of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Department of History and the Milwaukee County Historical Society. For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
Milwaukee is widely known for its ample public beach space. But the lakefront was not always this accessible. In this episode of Water Works, produce Marisa Camacho explores how Milwaukee's abundance of blue spaces is in many ways a legacy of the Socialist Party's rise in the early 1900s. Water Works is a production of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Department of History and the Milwaukee County Historical Society. For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
Do you know where the water you drink comes from? And do you know where it goes when it flows down the drain? Well, on this episode of Water Works we not only explain how Milwaukee's water infrastructure works, we also explain how it came to be. For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
The Lady Elgin often has an outsized presence in Milwaukee's maritime history. The boat's fateful voyage in 1860 took place in the midst of several local and national conflicts, while the ship's wreckage remains a destination for divers to this day. On this episode of Water Works we parse fact from fiction in the sinking of the Lady Elgin, and ask what shipwrecks can tell us about Milwaukee history more broadly. For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
Milwaukee is a city born of conflict. Though, it might not be the conflict you'd expect. The city's charter took shape over a fight over bridges, and the result of this fight is still visible on any map of Milwaukee today. Today's show is produced by public history student Oscar Harding. For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
Last episode on Water Works, we looked at the ways Milwaukee's first peoples articulated their deep admiration for the waters of the area through the effigy mounds they constructed in the time before European contact. This episode, we explore how Wisconsin's native communities sought to conserve and preserve their relationship with water in the era after white settlers began forcibly removing them from their land. The episode was produced by University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee public history student Elizabeth Loomer.For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out milwaukeehistory.net/podcast.
The first peoples who called the land we call Milwaukee home recognized the centrality of water to the region. Beyond relying on the rivers and lakes to survive, the area's Indigenous communities also revered water. In this episode of Water Works, public historian David Zeh documents how effigy mounds built throughout Milwaukee and Wisconsin reveal a deep connection been life and the water that sustains it. For more information about the show, including photographs and documents from the era, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
A preview of the new season of a podcast from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Department of History and the Milwaukee County Historical Society. Last season looked at the 1918-1919 Influenza outbreak in Milwaukee, and asked what that history could teach us about navigating the coronavirus pandemic today. This season we look at Milwaukee's unique relationship with the waters that surround. The season takes its inspiration from the Milwaukee County Historical Society's new exhibit, "Milwaukee: Where the Waters Meet," which is on display until April 23, 2022.
By the end of the epidemic, the United States had lost 0.6% of the population to the Spanish Flu, with around 675,000 deaths. Yet Milwaukee suffered a relatively low death rate. In 1918, Milwaukee was the thirteenth largest city in the US and one of the nation's most densely populated cities. Perhaps Milwaukee's response can account for some of this discrepancy; per capita, the city outspent 9 of the 12 most populous cities, including New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, on health and sanitation. In this episode, we explore the global impact of the epidemic and the personal experience of Wisconsinites whose families lived through it. For more information about the show, including images and documents from 1918, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
Milwaukee's success at handling the influenza pandemic did not mean the going was easy. For the city's bars and restaurants, shut down orders and consumer fear made business difficult. On this week's episode of The Healthiest City, we explore how Milwaukee's entertainment and retail establishments navigated the influenza pandemic, and consider what this tells us about how to navigate the coronavirus pandemic today.For more information, including photographs and documents from the era, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
While pandemics can seem to disrupt every facet of our daily lives, they are, at their core, medical crises. This week on The Healthiest City we talk about how doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals face these challenges. We open by talking with an ICU nurse in Milwaukee who worked in the unit that treated the first wave of coronavirus patients back in March, 2020. Then, we explore how doctors and nurses in the past dealt with the flu. Health Commissioner George Ruhland makes another experience, expanding Milwaukee's medical facilities to deal with the sick. But we also discuss what it was like to have the 1918, what treatments doctors could offer, and how nurses felt about their work.For more information, including photographs and documents from the era, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
When a disease folks then called the "Spanish Flu" was first detected in Milwaukee, the city's public health officials faced a choice not unlike the one we've debated for most of this last year: whether to close the community's schools. This episode of The Healthiest City follows the story of George Ruhland, who was Milwaukee Public Health Commissioner at the time of the influenza pandemic. It also features a current Milwaukee public school teacher to learn about how virtual learning over this last year. For more information about the show, including images and documents from 1918, check out https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
As the 1918 influenza pandemic tore its way across the globe, the damage it caused went hand-in-hand with the ongoing combat of World War I. The massive mobilization of troops from around the world provided the perfect conditions for the disease to spread. And with the need to keep sending troops to the trenches, and to keep morale up on the home front, efforts to slow the spread were hampered. In episode three of The Healthiest City podcast, Christina Grev and Katie Bischof discuss how, in the midst of war, the flu made its way into Milwaukee. Ports up and down America's coasts had become hotspots, sending and receiving floating petri dishes filled with sailors to and from Europe. When the pandemic hit the Great Lakes Naval Station in Illinois that September, sailors going on leave almost immediately introduced the disease to Milwaukee for the first time. For more information, visit https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
In episode two of The Healthiest City podcast, hosts Bailey Green and Roman Lulloff explore how the rise of the Socialist Party in Milwaukee helped build up the city's public health programs in the years before the 1918 flu pandemic struck. Emil Seidel was elected as the city's first Socialist mayor in 1910, and the party captured a majority in the Common Council the same year. The Socialists kept their campaign promises when it came to public health, building new isolation hospitals and neighborhood clinics for children. They also built a sewer system and pressed for sanitation inspections to be conducted across the city. While Republicans and Democrats alike opposed these reforms, they were popular with the public, and they managed to continue after the Socialists' short-lived control of city government was over. As you will hear, these changes were essential when Milwaukee and the rest of the world faced the “Spanish flu” just a few years later.For more information, visit milwaukeehistory.net/podcast.
In the years after its effective response to the 1918 “Spanish flu” pandemic, Milwaukee became known as “the healthiest city.” But that reputation, and the public health preparedness that made it possible, wasn't built up overnight: Milwaukee learned how to respond to a dangerous epidemic the hard way. In episode one of The Healthiest City podcast, Maddy Tabor and Olivia Hoff explore how Milwaukee's public health policies were affected by the smallpox outbreak of 1894. German and Polish immigrants on Milwaukee's South Side feared government control and saw the city's isolation of children as a threat. Walter Kempster, the city's public health commissioner, failed to soothe their concerns. Instead of communicating with these communities on their own terms and in their own languages, Kempster reacted to their resistance with force, provoking widespread outrage that only made matters worse. Judy Leavitt, a historian of medicine and the author of The Healthiest City, joins our hosts to discuss how Milwaukee learned lasting lessons from this devastating failure. For more information, including photographs and documents from the era, visit https://milwaukeehistory.net/podcast/.
In the winter of 1918, the city of Milwaukee faced a crisis almost exactly like our own. A highly contagious and deadly virus found its way to the city. This disease was the great influenza pandemic of 1918 and 1919; and like the coronavirus pandemic today it completely upended life in our city. What might we learn about our own moment by looking to the past? What can the history of Milwaukee's other pandemic teach us about navigating our own crisis? From the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Department of History and the Milwaukee County Historical Society comes a new podcast about our city and its pandemics. And it's called The Healthiest City. The Healthiest City is a production of UWM's Department of History, in partnership with the Milwaukee County Historical Society. It is produced by Chris Cantwell and the students in his "History and New Media." The music in this trailer is "Summit" by the Blue Dot Sessions.