Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Neighborhood_Lake Mendota

Statue



Mendota-Dane


Armory


Isthmus

 Dane County Lakes
http://www.wisconsinslakes.com/dane_county_lakes.html

Lake Mendota

Trip Advisor_Lake Mendota
http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60859-d109925-Reviews-Lake_Mendota-Madison_Wisconsin.html

Limnology
http://limnology.wisc.edu/lake_information/mendota/mendota.html

Soil Science
http://www.soils.wisc.edu/uwex_agwx/weather/webcam

Fishing Reports
http://www.lake-link.com/fishreports/viewposts.cfm?Thread_ID=4406

Video: Fishing Bluegills
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_BfBLV63WWU

Video: Another Fishing Report from Lake Mendota
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kY1ww684MXw

Photos: Ice Fishing and WI State Capitol
http://www.flickr.com/photos/metroblossom/5539839943/lightbox/#/photos/metroblossom/5498950006/lightbox/

Neighborhood_Shorewood Hills

People
http://www.shorewood-hills.org/contacts.htm



Shorewood Hills (Wikipedia)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shorewood_Hills,_Wisconsin



Homepage
http://www.shorewood-hills.org/


Emergency Medical Service
http://www.shorewood-hills.org/departments/ems/home.htm


Fire Department

Neighborhood_Picnic Point

Picnic Point 1
Lakeshore Preserve
http://lakeshorepreserve.wisc.edu/visit/picnicpoint.htm


Picnic Point 2
Picnic Point and Its History
Christansen Survey 2001

By Robert Genn


Robert's Online Gallery

Geography_Maps of the Area


A Map of the Complex



Complex and Campus


Harvey Street Apartments


Metro Madison


Bike Madison (Interactive Maps)

Restaurants near Madison (Google Map)
Local restaurants from Google

Grocery Shopping near Madison (Google Map)
Local grocery shopping places from Google

Public Libraries (Library Main Page)
Madison public library branches

History_Construction of Eagle Heights (1960-)

  • The University Apartments

Map

University Apartments = University Houses + Eagle Heights Apartments + Harvey Street Apartments

  • A) The University Houses
Before/This image is issued by the Wisconsin Historical Society.



University Houses Now

There are 31 two-story buildings containing 52 one-bedroom, 90 two-bedroom and 8 three-bedroom apartments. The layout of the two-and three-bedroom apartments is in the style of a townhouse, with bedrooms and bath on the second floor, and kitchen, dining and living areas on the first floor. One-bedroom apartments are located on either the first or second floor. Each apartment has one bathroom. 

All of the apartments are unfurnished and have outdoor entrances. Apartment interiors are light and airy with comfortable-sized rooms. The exteriors are brick and stone with white trim. Buildings are not equipped with elevators.

  • B) Eagle Heights Apartments
Before/This image is issued by the Wisconsin Historical Society.

Eagle Height Apartments Now


The Eagle Heights complex is comprised of:
  • 284 unfurnished one-bedroom apartments
  • 716 unfurnished two-bedroom apartments
  • 44 unfurnished three-bedroom apartments
Most of the apartment buildings are two stories, with a few three-story facilities. Some buildings are designated "smoke free," meaning that smoking is not allowed anywhere in the building. If an apartment building is not designated "smoke free," then smoking is allowed in the apartments (but not in common areas such as hallways and the laundry room). Depending on the design of the building, apartments open onto a common hallway or directly to the outside. Buildings are not equipped with elevators, but residents may request ground floor apartments. A number of apartments are equipped to meet special housing accommodations. 



  • C) Harvey Street Apartments

    HS Apt. 1

    HS Apt. 2


    There are seven two-story buildings, with a total of 47 apartments. The entire complex is smoke free (no smoking). All two-bedroom apartments are on the second floor, and all one-bedroom apartments are on the first floor. 

    Apartments range from 418 square feet to 505 square feet. Each apartment has one bathroom, and a small kitchen that is open to the living room.
     

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

History_The Tent Colony and Black Hawk Cabin (1912-1960)


Beginning about 1912, and extending through the end of the 1950's, the university operated a "Tent Colony", sometimes called "Camp Gallistella" (after its overseer, A. F. Gallistel), on 25.2 acres of the wooded area below Eagle Heights, on land that was between Lake Mendota Drive and the lake. Students were able to live inexpensively here during the summer months. Gallistel himself in a house near the east end of the colony.


Another university-related facility in this area was the cottage operated by the Women's Athletic Association, which was built near the west end of the university property. The association was granted a ninety-nine year lease by the Regents and raised $3,500 to build the cottage, which was completed by February 1, 1924. It was used for a number of years as a destination for hikers from the campus, but by the late 1930's, with the coming of automobile, it was no longer serving a useful function, since the students now preferred to go farther afield for amusement. Because it could not be adequately protected from vandalism at such a remote location, the cabin was turned over to the Memorial Union, which changed its name to Black Hawk Lodge. The Union extensively remodeled the cottage, installing electricity, telephone, and a kitchen, and a graduate couple was contracted to live there as chaperones. Black Hawk Lodge was promoted as a "drop-in" shelter for students hiking, skiiing, biking, and canoeing, but fell into disuse after World War II. The land on which the lodge stood later fell into private ownership and the cabin was demolished sometime in the 1960's.

From the time of the Raymer purchase in 1911, until the late 1930's, the university controlled an extensive shoreline of over about 3500 feet that ran from the Gallistel house west to the corporate limits of the Village of Shorewood Hills. However, the university ownership of all this land was not to last, since some of it was traded as part of the acquisition of Picnic Point.








Reprinted from Historic Madison: A Journal of the Four Lake Region, Volume XII: 1995. Copyright: Historic Madison, Inc.






History_The George Raymer Farm and Drives (1887-)











The Eagle Heights area and nearby lakeshore frontage was acquired in 1887 by George Raymer, publisher of the Madison Deomcrat newspaper and a prominent citizen. Raymer lived in a large house on Langdon Street at approximately the location of the present University of Wisconsin Memorial Union, but also ran a substantial farm at Eagle Heights. Raymer was a member of the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin and served two years as its president.

Early in his ownership of the property, Raymer developed a system of dirt roads, including one leading up to the high point of Eagle Heights (sometimes called the "Eagle's Nest"). The north/south road that Raymer built from University Bay Drive along the east side of his property was the first part of what the Madison Park and Pleasure Drive Association would later call "Lake Mendota Drive". Although Raymer's roads were private, he willingly opened them to the public. Thus, for many years, the commanding location of Eagle Heights could be reached by carriages, and later also by automobiles. The remnants of some of the roads winding up to the promontory are still visible.

Reprinted from Historic Madison: A Journal of the Four Lake Region, Volume XII: 1995. Copyright: Historic Madison, Inc.