The Pleasant
Prairie area was highly active with Native American activity in pre-pioneer Wisconsin.
The remnants of Native American culture abound in Pleasant Prairie. Some of the
earliest traces of Native American life in Wisconsin were found along STH 32 and
STH 165 and in the Carol Beach area. These early Indian campsites, along
what was once the shoreline of Lake Michigan, represent some of the
highest quality archeological sites in the United States. In addition, several natural historic
sites such as the Chiwaukee Prairie and the Kenosha Sand Dunes lie
undisturbed in Pleasant Prairie and provide Wisconsin residents with an
opportunity to see what Wisconsin looked like before the arrival of our
earliest settlers.
Pleasant Prairie originally was a township that
was nearly 42 square miles in size. Over the years, the city of Kenosha
began to annex lands south of 60th Street and west from Lake Michigan,
and the Town of Pleasant Prairie slowly reduced in size over the next
150 years as the City of Kenosha grew. There were nine separate
settlement areas in the township that in some cases became the starting
point for significant growth in the future, and some no longer exist at
all.
The most colorful area was the old village area of Pleasant
Prairie located at 104th Avenue and Bain Station Road. The Pleasant Prairie Powder Plant was located in this area which
exploded after the turn of the century and rocked buildings and
shattered windows miles away. Today it is the location of many
residential homes and the Pleasant Prairie Ball Park where many children
play recreational softball and soccer.
Another old settlement
area is the Bain Station and Ranney areas. Its location was along Bain
Station Road between the current Canadian Pacific and Union Pacific
railroads. These settlement areas were not as residential as they were
rail stops for the Chicago Northwestern, the Kenosha-Harvard line, and
the CSMP&P Chicago-Milwaukee main line. The Ranney site ended as a
stop prior to 1862 and Bain Station site was named for the Bain Wagon
Works and was listed as a stop well after 1800s. It is now the end of
the line for trains coming out of Kenosha. The current site is
immediately north of the Pleasant Prairie Power Plant and south of the
power plant landfill.
Another more recent settlement area is the
Carol Beach area that is along Lake Michigan from the Kenosha city
limits to the state line. A subdivision of Carol Beach is the Chiwaukee
area which was plotted in the 1920s. The rest of Carol Beach was
subdivided and began plotting in 1947. The area is one of the most
significant wetland areas in the United States and was largely protected
through a compromise land use agreement between the Town of Pleasant
Prairie, Kenosha County, the State of Wisconsin, and the Army Corp of
Engineers. Today many of the areas that can be developed have been, and
the state of Wisconsin and the Nature conservancy continue to buy
remaining properties for prairie land preservation.
Other areas of
the old township such as Tobin, Truesdell, Erly, and State Line have
been incorporated within the Village of 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 township
officials took place. The early township officials met in the Williams'
Congregational Church located at 93rd Street and Green Bay Road, which
now is a religious bookstore. Later the old church became the official
Town Hall and served the quiet agricultural community until urban growth
finally necessitated more modern quarters in 1961. In that year, the
Town rented office space in a small commercial center located on 22nd
Avenue and 91st Street. That office space currently is a hair styling
salon. In 1967 the Town government moved into a newly constructed
municipal building on Springbrook Road and 39th Avenue that provided
office, an auditorium, Fire Department apparatus room, and sleeping
quarters. Finally, 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.
As a Town, Pleasant
Prairie constantly struggled to maintain its identity and ability to
provide for the orderly development of the community. In 1984, the town
and the City of Kenosha agreed upon a plan for orderly development and
fixed boundaries for the Town in exchange for the acknowledged right of
property owners in various locations along the Town/City border to annex
into the City of Kenosha. The most significant area of this agreement
was giving the City of Kenosha the ability to annex lands north of STH
50 from Green Bay Road to I-94, where the current Southport Plaza
shopping center, White Caps subdivision, River Crossing subdivision
among others, and the Aurora Hospital are located. In exchange the Town
received the ability to protect the rest of the Town from annexations
and the ability to purchase sewer and water from the City of Kenosha. In
1989, the agreement was advanced and the Town of Pleasant Prairie was
incorporated as a Village by a referendum of more than 3,000 citizens in
favor and 300 against. The new boundaries were fixed and the Village,
with Wispark Corporation, began the development of LakeView Corporate
Park, a large, modern, and beautifully landscaped center of employment
for more than 8,000 people. Based on property value, Pleasant Prairie
ranks as the fifth largest manufacturing municipality in the State of
Wisconsin, exceeded only by Milwaukee, Green Bay, Madison, and Menomonee
Falls.