Talk:Fox Valley (Illinois): Difference between revisions
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This article isnt really true. Maybe the region in this article is true geographically, but anyone who lives in Wisconsin or nothern Illinois does not consider this area the Fox Valley. The Fox Valley is considered to be a smaller area located about 100 miles north of Milwaukee. I currently live in Milwaukee and used to live in Appleton, WI area. The Appleton area is considered to be the Fox Valley, not the Milwaukee-Chicago area. |
This article isnt really true. Maybe the region in this article is true geographically, but anyone who lives in Wisconsin or nothern Illinois does not consider this area the Fox Valley. The Fox Valley is considered to be a smaller area located about 100 miles north of Milwaukee. I currently live in Milwaukee and used to live in Appleton, WI area. The Appleton area is considered to be the Fox Valley, not the Milwaukee-Chicago area. |
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The Fox River is one of the only rivers in the US which flows north. In the Fox Valley the river is very important and was used for trade by the French in the colonial days. Currently there are paper mills (which is a major industry in the area) located on the river. The Fox River does travel through much of the state, but the area on the north-west coast of Lake Winnebago (which the river flows into and out of) is what is considered to be the Fox Valley. The river continues to flow North and empties into Green Bay. Cities that are considered to be part of the Fox Valley include: Appleton, Neenah, Menasha, Grand Chute, Kimberly, Kaukana, Oshkosh, and Little Chute. |
The Fox River is one of the only rivers in the US which flows north. In the Fox Valley the river is very important and was used for trade by the French in the colonial days. Currently there are paper mills (which is a major industry in the area) located on the river. The Fox River does travel through much of the state, but the area on the north-west coast of Lake Winnebago (which the river flows into and out of) is what is considered to be the Fox Valley. The river continues to flow North and empties into Green Bay. Cities that are considered to be part of the Fox Valley include: Appleton, Neenah, Menasha, Grand Chute, Kimberly, Kaukana, Oshkosh, and Little Chute. <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:129.89.41.93|129.89.41.93]] ([[User talk:129.89.41.93|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/129.89.41.93|contribs]]) </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> |
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:I think that you are referring to the [[Fox River (Wisconsin)]]. This article is about the [[Fox River (Illinois)]], and in fact should be merged with that article. — [[User:Goethean|goethean]] [[User_talk:Goethean|ॐ]] 15:11, 23 May 2006 (UTC) |
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We very much consider ourselves being in the Fox River valley (Algonquin Illinois) but we are talking about a region versus a body of water. I think they need to be seperated.[[User:FalknersLegend|FalknersLegend]] 20:29, 8 March 2007 (UTC) FalknersLegend |
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:Hmm. I meant to close that merge request on the fact that there's no consensus of any sort. See [[Talk:Fox River (Illinois)]]. —[[User:Lpangelrob|<span style="font-variant: small-caps">Rob</span>]] <span style="font-size:x-small">(</span>[[User_talk:Lpangelrob|<span style='color:#006600; font-size:x-small;'>talk</span>]]<span style="font-size:x-small">)</span> 20:49, 8 March 2007 (UTC) |
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:I think the IP way above got a little carried away, and overshadowed his main point. The "Fox Valley", which this article is about, refers to an area entirely in Illinois, containing the far western suburbs of Chicago. However, this article also includes areas of Wisconsin (Waukesha, Brookfield, etc.) that would very probably not consider themselves part of the Fox Valley - because to them, the Fox Valley is up by Appleton. Basically, it looks like [[Fox River (Wisconsin)]] and [[Fox River (Illinois River tributary)]] have this all ironed out, but there're still some problems in this article. This site http://www.foxvalleyillinois.com/ gives a good idea of the locations which are considered part of the Fox Valley in Illinois, but unfortunately I don't think visitors bureaus are considered good references for an encyclopedia. [[Special:Contributions/69.95.240.66|69.95.240.66]] ([[User talk:69.95.240.66|talk]]) 16:00, 7 July 2008 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 12:06, 14 February 2024
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Untitled
[edit]This article isnt really true. Maybe the region in this article is true geographically, but anyone who lives in Wisconsin or nothern Illinois does not consider this area the Fox Valley. The Fox Valley is considered to be a smaller area located about 100 miles north of Milwaukee. I currently live in Milwaukee and used to live in Appleton, WI area. The Appleton area is considered to be the Fox Valley, not the Milwaukee-Chicago area.
The Fox River is one of the only rivers in the US which flows north. In the Fox Valley the river is very important and was used for trade by the French in the colonial days. Currently there are paper mills (which is a major industry in the area) located on the river. The Fox River does travel through much of the state, but the area on the north-west coast of Lake Winnebago (which the river flows into and out of) is what is considered to be the Fox Valley. The river continues to flow North and empties into Green Bay. Cities that are considered to be part of the Fox Valley include: Appleton, Neenah, Menasha, Grand Chute, Kimberly, Kaukana, Oshkosh, and Little Chute. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.89.41.93 (talk • contribs)
- I think that you are referring to the Fox River (Wisconsin). This article is about the Fox River (Illinois), and in fact should be merged with that article. — goethean ॐ 15:11, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
We very much consider ourselves being in the Fox River valley (Algonquin Illinois) but we are talking about a region versus a body of water. I think they need to be seperated.FalknersLegend 20:29, 8 March 2007 (UTC) FalknersLegend
- Hmm. I meant to close that merge request on the fact that there's no consensus of any sort. See Talk:Fox River (Illinois). —Rob (talk) 20:49, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
- I think the IP way above got a little carried away, and overshadowed his main point. The "Fox Valley", which this article is about, refers to an area entirely in Illinois, containing the far western suburbs of Chicago. However, this article also includes areas of Wisconsin (Waukesha, Brookfield, etc.) that would very probably not consider themselves part of the Fox Valley - because to them, the Fox Valley is up by Appleton. Basically, it looks like Fox River (Wisconsin) and Fox River (Illinois River tributary) have this all ironed out, but there're still some problems in this article. This site http://www.foxvalleyillinois.com/ gives a good idea of the locations which are considered part of the Fox Valley in Illinois, but unfortunately I don't think visitors bureaus are considered good references for an encyclopedia. 69.95.240.66 (talk) 16:00, 7 July 2008 (UTC)