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Over two seasons, the Wisconsin Stories series has spotlighted intriguing people and tales from the state's past. Each Wisconsin Stories episode has its own Web site, archived here.

More Than a Game
Surprising sports stories from Wisconsin's history are featured. Spotlighted are a Sheboygan pro basketball team that became a charter member of the NBA, the University of Wisconsin-Madison boxing program that was a national power until tragedy struck; baseball on the Bad River Indian Reservation near Ashland; and girls' basketball, highly popular in the 1920s until it was banned.
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Our Towns
Wisconsin has a long history of "intentional" communities, planned for various reasons. See the stories of the Swiss enclave of New Glarus, lumber town Drummond, the federally designed Greendale and Lake Ivanhoe, started as a resort area for African Americans.
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River & Road
This look at life on and along the Mississippi River touches on the steamboat era, river pearls that were a boom business and the locks and dams that changed the face of the river. Parts of the Gesell Photo Collection are used throughout the show, and they show work and play on the river in the late 1800s.
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Camp Co-op
When Wisconsinites couldn't get what they needed, they'd roll up their sleeves and do it for themselves, forming cooperative businesses. From farm supply stores to the utilities that electrified the countryside, co-ops have played a big part in Wisconsin's history. And viewers might be surprised how many products today are made by co-ops.
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The Power of Water
Water has the power to heal, to sustain life and to enliven lands and communities. How we use water has shaped our history.
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School Days
From one-room schoolhouses to the University of Wisconsin System, Wisconsinites have long pushed for educational opportunities that were open to all, some of which became nationally honored.
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Passing Through
Itinerants once moved through the state on regular circuits, entertaining, playing sports, working, teaching and preaching. Meet as interesting a set of characters as any who ever traveled the state.
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Let's Go Bowl!
Wisconsin loves to bowl, and has done it well. Stories include Wisconsinites who brought fame to the game, a Madison woman who was the first female to bowl 300 and African-American bowling leagues.
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Car Show
Wisconsin significantly contributed to the nation's car culture with classic race cars, some of the first auto production plants and one of the first roads dedicated to the automobile.
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Big Ideas
Wisconsin has percolated many ideas that later became models for national action in government and other progressive programs.
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Making History
Meet hosts Tracy Will and Debbie Kmetz. Stories include the 1940 state cornhusking championships, an 1878 experiment with steam-driven carriages; how hops made Wisconsin famous; country music star Pee Wee King.
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The H.H. Bennett Studio
The story of Bennett, the photographer who helped make the Wisconsin Dells an international tourist destination, and how the State Historical Society of Wisconsin turned his studio into a historic site and museum.
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Coping With Cold
Learn about the record storms, the deepest snows and the coldest temperatures in state history in "News From the Past," a historical newscast.
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Civil War at Home
Experience the role that Wisconsin and its people played in the War Between the States.
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Ports of Call
A journey through Wisconsin's a rich maritime history: from wooden ships to the mammoth roll-out of WWII war ships.
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We're Rockin'
An eclectic mix of "rocky" stories, from an ancient Native American stone-working site to a sculptor profile, from the House on the Rock and The Rock in the House in Fountain City to rock music pioneer Les Paul.
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In the Mail
Tales of creative mail delivery, the ways a small post office makes a community, how the parcel post opened rural Wisconsin to catalog goods, and what happened when a package of limburger cheese mailed from Monroe to an Iowa town resulted in a taste "trial" that made national news.
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Native Journeys
A look at aspects of Native American culture in Wisconsin, featuring a "Rosetta Stone"manuscript of the Ojibwe, the story of the Sandy Lake tragedy of 1850 and the history and evolution of the sport of lacrosse.
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Frozen Asset
Intrepid Wisconsinites harvested it, used it to freeze and cool food, to make the state's beer famous, to keep homes cool, to play on, and to make money.
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Really Big Stuff
How Wisconsin built a reputation for making huge, one-of-a-kind industrial machinery. Includes journeys to Allis Chalmers in West Allis, which made giant equipment like the turbines for the Hoover Dam, and Bucyrus International in South Milwaukee, home to massive steamshovels and mining draglines.
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Archives: Sesquicentennial Minutes | Sesquicentennial Wisconsin Stories | Ojibwe History | Ojibwe Music | When Wisconsin Was New France | Wisconsin Stories | Old World Stories | Portage Memories | Hometown Stories: Janesville | Wisconsin Korean War Stories | Wisconsin WWII Stories
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