Martin Drive, Milwaukee
Geography
The Martin Drive neighborhood is located on Milwaukee's west side. The neighborhood is located north and west of Miller Brewing Company. It includes Harley-Davidson and the Highland Avenue Viaduct. The neighborhood was built up in the 1920s and is home to several old apartment buildings. The neighborhood has retained its density and is still one of the safest neighborhoods in the city.[1] Martin Drive is bordered by Martin Drive in the south, 35th Street in the east, Vliet Street in the north, and US 41 in the west. Milwaukee's Washington Park is located just north of the neighborhood.
History
Naming
Morgan Martin, a Green Bay Lawyer and speculator, bought half of Solomon Juneau's Juneautown property for $500 in 1833. In 1835 they co-founded their new village, with Martin responsible for the legal and promotional aspects while Juneau took care of local issues. Martin, born in Martinsburg, New York in 1805 (his father founded the town), was a Wisconsin congressman, assemblyman, and state senator, as well as Oneida Indian Agent in Green Bay. He died in 1887.
A street in the village was named for Martin, but during the 1920s renaming program it was changed to State Street. To appease those who complained that Martin deserved a place on the city's map, this street, one block south of Juneau Avenue, was renamed Martin Drive in 1926.[2]
Development
The building era for Martin Drive began in about the late 1910s. Original plats of the area allowed commercial building on what is now State Street, with two brewers located in that general area adjacent to the Martin Drive Neighborhood. They were the Gettleman brewery and Plank Road Brewery. Much of the early development begins with platting of Highland Avenue.
During the 1920s to 1950s, city boundaries at the time ended at 27th Street. The Town of Wauwatosa ran from what is now 27th Street to 124th Street. Ads began to run in the daily papers or on posted bills. An example of three ads from the period marketing property around Washington Park are pictured below. The plotting of lots were completed and many houses were constructed during the period of 1920-1929. The Sanborn fire maps were created and fire insurance risks were calculated for this region. Most homes were of frame construction. The subdivision developments of the Martin Drive Neighborhood were the Park Front, Highland, Schmoldts, and Menomonee plats.
Park Front: This development includes land north of Juneau on 46th Street in the 1200 to 1300 blocks, as well as on 45th Street from the 1100 block to Vliet Street. The homes in this development were primarily frame and were a mix of duplex and single family construction. Few brick home were found in this development.
Highland Heights: The homes and lots south of Juneau on 46th, 45th,44th and 43rd Streets are in the Highland Heights subdivision plat, including 46th Street to State Street. Many of the homes on 46th and 45th Streets in this development were duplexes of frame construction.
Schmoldt's: The 1200 and 1300 block of 43rd Street are in the Schmoldt's development plat. This includes some of the Vliet Street properties adjoining these streets.
Menomonee: The 1300 block on 42nd Street, including the west side of Highland Boulevard are part of the Menomonee subdivision. Many of the units on Highland Ave are larger Victorian style brick faced homes. You will also find multi-unit buildings of concrete and brick. [3]
After several decades of stagnant growth the neighborhood is now seeing redevelopment with a few new businesses and building renovations. As such, the neighborhood supports many small and upstart businesses such as Eat Cake, Birdie's Cafe, Milwaukee Nut Company, a law office and State Street Animal Hospital among others. Martin Drive has several private and public schools nearby. Grocery stores, hardware stores and pharmacies are within close proximity to the Martin Drive Neighborhood. The neighborhood has a strong and dedicated volunteer-led neighborhood association, the Martin Drive Neighborhood Association. [4]
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Tree-lined Boulevard divides up two-way traffic
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Holiday bows are added to the trees each winter
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Birdie's Cafe at Highland Boulevard and Martin Drive
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Business along Vliet Street
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Advertisement for homes in area, circa 1920
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Advertisement for homes in area, circa 1920
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Advertisement for homes in area, circa 1920
References
- ^ Crime Statistics for the city of Milwaukee http://www.ci.mil.wi.us/CrimeMaps115300.htm
- ^ Baehr, Carl. Milwaukee Streets: The Stories Behind their Names.
- ^ [Dave Johnson, "History of Martin Drive Neighborhood" http://martindrive.org/Frame%20History%20welcome.htm]
- ^ Martin Drive Neighborhood Association
See also
External links
- Template:PDFlink
- My Milwaukee Home - indicates the neighborhood for any Milwaukee street address
- GIS shapefiles (ESRI and KML) for Milwaukee neighborhoods and other City of Milwaukee geodata
- Milwaukee Department of City Development Neighborhood Posters
- Neighborhood Groups in Milwaukee
- Milwaukee Neighborhoods: Photos and Maps 1885-1992 - Digital collection from the UWM Libraries.