Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin Location of Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin Location of Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin Pleasant Prairie is a village in Kenosha County, Wisconsin situated between Milwaukee and Chicago.

The neighborhoods of Carol Beach, Dexter's Corner, Ranney, and Tobin are positioned inside the village.

The Pleasant Prairie region was the center of Indian activeness in pre-pioneer Wisconsin. Some of the earliest traces of Indian life in Wisconsin have been found along State Highway 32 and State Highway 165, Barnes Creek, and in the Carol Beach area. These early Indian campsites were positioned along what was once the shoreline of Lake Michigan.

Pleasant Prairie also saw pioneers arrive in Wisconsin on the Jambeau Trail (now known as Green Bay Road).

In addition, a several natural historic sites such as the Chiwaukee Prairie and the Kenosha Sand Dunes lie undisturbed in Pleasant Prairie.

Pleasant Prairie had its beginnings as a political entity in April 1842 when the first town meeting was held and the first election of town officials took place.

The early town officials met in the Williams Congregational Church positioned at 93rd Street and Green Bay Road.

Later the old church became the town hall. Pleasant Prairie originally was a town almost 42 square miles (110 km2) in size.

The town of Pleasant Prairie was slowly reduced in size as Kenosha grew.

The initial unincorporated improve of Pleasant Prairie was positioned at 104th Avenue and Bain Station Road.

At the dawn of the 20th century, Pleasant Prairie was the site of a 190-acre Du - Pont blasting powder plant.

Today, the site is the locale of residentiary homes and the Pleasant Prairie Ball Park, which is used for softball and soccer.

Other settlements in Pleasant Prairie include the neighborhoods of Carol Beach, Ranney, Tobin, State Line, and Erly.

As a village, Pleasant Prairie constantly struggled to maintain its identification and ability to furnish for the orderly evolution of the community.

In 1961, the village hall moved from the former Williams Congregational Church site to rented office space in a small commercial center positioned on 22nd Avenue and 91st Street.

In 1984, the town and the town/city of Kenosha agreed upon a plan for the orderly evolution and fixed boundaries for the town in exchange for an acknowledged right of property owners in various locations along the village/city border to be took in into the town/city of Kenosha.

A momentous provision of this agreement gave Kenosha the ability to annex lands north of State Highway 50 from Green Bay Road to I-94, where the Southport Plaza shopping center, White - Caps subdivision, River Crossing subdivision and the Aurora Hospital are located.

In exchange, Pleasant Prairie was granted the ability to protect the rest of its region from annexations and to purchase sewage and water from Kenosha.

In 1989, the town of Pleasant Prairie was incorporated as a village by a popular vote of more than 3,000 people in favor and 300 against.

In 1997, eight years after the incorporation of the town into a village, the Municipal Building was updated and increased in size to accommodate village operations. Pleasant Prairie is positioned at 42 32 20 N 87 52 13 W (42.538820, -87.870229). According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the village has a total region of 33.64 square miles (87.13 km2), of which, 33.33 square miles (86.32 km2) of it is territory and 0.31 square miles (0.80 km2) is water. Carol Beach is a residentiary neighborhood positioned in Pleasant Prairie. It is generally bordered by Lake Michigan to the east, the Wisconsin-Illinois border to the south, Sheridan Road (Wisconsin State Highway 32) to the west, and 80th Street to the north.

It is the locale of the Chiwaukee Prairie State Natural Area preserve.

The region is one of the most momentous wetland areas in the United States and was largely protected through a compromise territory use agreement between the Town of Pleasant Prairie, Kenosha County, the State of Wisconsin, and the Army Corps of Engineers.

Today many of the areas that can be advanced have been, and the state of Wisconsin and the Nature conservancy continue to buy remaining properties for prairie territory preservation.

In 1992 the Town of Pleasant Prairie, in which Carol Beach is located, became a village.

Dexter's Corner is a residentiary and agricultural improve inside the village of Pleasant Prairie.

Ranney (also known as Rogers Siding) is a ghost town in Pleasant Prairie.

The last home in Ranney, the former KD Line yardmaster's home, was completed in 2003, and the region is now devoid of all traces of improve except for closing railroad activeness on the KD Line and the Canadian Pacific.

Tobin is an region along 116th Street in Pleasant Prairie. The improve is titled for early settler Patrick Tobin.

As of the census of 2010, there were 19,719 citizens , 7,272 homeholds, and 5,372 families living in the village.

There were 7,272 homeholds of which 35.8% had kids under the age of 18 residing with them, 62.0% were married couples residing together, 7.9% had a female homeholder with no husband present, 4.0% had a male homeholder with no wife present, and 26.1% were non-families.

25.5% of inhabitants were under the age of 18; 6.8% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 24.3% were from 25 to 44; 30.6% were from 45 to 64; and 12.8% were 65 years of age or older.

As of the census of 2000, there were 16,136 citizens , 5,819 homeholds, and 4,393 families living in the village.

In the village, the populace was spread out with 27.2% under the age of 18, 6.6% from 18 to 24, 31.3% from 25 to 44, 24.2% from 45 to 64, and 10.6% who were 65 years of age or older.

The Pleasant Prairie Power Plant is positioned in Pleasant Prairie.

Based on property value, Pleasant Prairie rates as the fifth biggest manufacturing municipality in the state of Wisconsin, exceeded only by Milwaukee, Green Bay, Madison, and Menomonee Falls. Pleasant Prairie is part of the Kenosha Unified School District. Dexter, farmer and Wisconsin State Assemblyman, was born in the town of Pleasant Prairie; Dexter served as Pleasant Prairie Town Board chairman. Village of Pleasant Prairie website Municipalities and communities of Kenosha County, Wisconsin, United States

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Villages in Kenosha County, Wisconsin - Villages in Wisconsin