{"id":225503,"date":"2023-05-11T16:00:05","date_gmt":"2023-05-11T15:00:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.factstoryhub.com\/?p=225503"},"modified":"2025-02-17T13:56:49","modified_gmt":"2025-02-17T13:56:49","slug":"wisconsin-facts","status":"publish","type":[],"link":"https:\/\/www.factstoryhub.com\/wisconsin-facts\/","title":{"rendered":"15 Surprising Facts About Wisconsin"},"content":{"rendered":"

Popularly nicknamed the “Badger State” but also known as “America’s Dairyland” and the “Cheese State,” Wisconsin was the 30th state to join the United States of America on May 29, 1848.\n

It has a population of 5,822,434 people (as of 2019), making it the 20th most populous state.\n

Wisconsin is bordered by the states of Minnesota, Michigan, Iowa, and Illinois.\n

With a total of 65,498 square miles (169,640 square kilometers) of land and water, it is the 23rd largest state.\n

The capital of Wisconsin is Madison, which lies in the central region of the state’s south.\n

Anyway, that’s enough fast facts about the Badger State for now; we’re here to learn the more surprising facts!\n

People have been living in Wisconsin for at least 12,000 years!\n

\"Paleo-Indians\n

According to most modern theories, the first people to live in the area now known as Wisconsin were the Paleo-Indians, who were also believed to be the first inhabitants of North America.\n

They are said to have come from the far east of modern-day Russia, traveling across a land bridge where the Bering Strait lies today through into what is now Alaska some 15,000 years ago.\n

Over the next few thousand years, they spread across the continent, hunting large animals such as mammoths, giant beavers, and mastodons. Then, as these animals went extinct, the Paleo-Indians settled down.\n

By around 1,000 BC, these early settlers began to develop forms of agriculture, and their culture and societies grew exponentially.\n

Wisconsin’s early people built tens of thousands of raised mounds in the shape of animals.\n

\"An\n

From around 350 to 1300 AD, the people that lived in Wisconsin began to construct great earthen mounds all over the region, more so than anywhere else in North America.\n

They were unlike those found elsewhere, as instead of constructing mounds to bury their dead, they were built in the shape of various animals.\n

Some of the more common shapes the mounds were made into include lynxes, water spirits, panthers, bison, and birds.\n

While some of the mounds did also house the dead, they are believed to have, for the most part, simply been constructed for religious purposes.\n

In the Wisconsin region, there were somewhere between 15,000 to 20,000 of these mounds constructed, of which around 4,000 remain today.\n

There were at least three main Native American tribes living in Wisconsin when Europeans first arrived.\n

\"A\n

Many cultures rose and fell before the first European explorers set foot in modern-day Wisconsin.\n

Early European settlement had poor documentation of Native American tribes, leading to some being incorrectly classified or lost due to the introduction of European diseases.\n

There are just three that we know of:\n