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In Travel & Visitors Guide Blogs
Oberwise book captures a familiar but different Milwaukee
 
By Bobby Tanzilo RSS Feed
Managing Editor

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What is a blog?  For us it is a short blurb that we write when the mood strikes us.  It can be first person, funny or informative. In short, a blog is whatever we want it to be. Published Dec. 13, 2007 at 12:58 p.m.
Tags: lyle oberwise, milwaukee at mid-century, mchs, milwaukee county historical society, fruit boat, metropolitan block fire, usinger's

Although I didn't grow up in Milwaukee, I visited here numerous times as a kid and my grandparents took us to lots of places like the Domes, Usinger's, the Circus Parade and to the lakefront to see the fireworks.

Add to that that I moved here before a lot of historic Milwaukee fell to the wrecking ball and I've got a pretty good Milwaukee memory. So, when a friend lent me a copy of "Milwaukee at Mid-Century," a hardcover book collecting some of the many, many photographs Lyle Oberwise took of the city, I saw a lot of familiar, disappeared places.

The ones that struck me most were three of the Metropolitan Block fire of December 20, 1975. That's because despite being 9 years old at the time, I remember that fire and I remember the pictures in the afternoon paper.

I remember being captivated by the color newspaper photos because they so vividly captured the flames and the smoke and the red fire engines. Growing up in New York, none of the papers at the time had color photos, so that was unusual.

Also, I had no sense of geography when it came to Milwaukee but I could see that the fire was next door to Usinger's a place I knew. And if I recall correctly, we went to Usinger's the day after the fire, which likely solidified the memory.

What's also interesting to me about these photos taken, mostly, from the 1940s to the 1960s (Oberwise shot from the 1930s until the 1980s and the photos are now in the collection of the Milwaukee County Historical Society, which published this book), show that while a lot of Milwaukee has disappeared in the past 25 years (remember the Fruit Boat?!), in some of the pictures, it looks as if almost nothing has changed.

See, for example the photo of The Pfister on page 108 (and ignore the fact that Chapman's had been demolished to make way for 411 E. Wisconsin Ave.

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