Background
· 2025
· gliihc
The Gerald L. Ignace Indian Health Center, on Mitchell Street near downtown Milwaukee, serves an estimated 18,239 American Indian and Alaska Native residents — roughly a third of Wisconsin's AI/AN population. Construction on the All Nations Wellness Center, which expanded behavioral health services and added occupational and speech therapy through a Marquette University partnership, finished in 2025 with significant support from the Shared Community Investment Fund. The center's COVID-era struggles, especially around cancer screening drop-offs, give the recent expansion particular weight.
Background
· 2024
· wiea
Founded in 1985 to carry on the work of the former Great Lakes Intertribal Council Education sub-committee, the Wisconsin Indian Education Association (WIEA) is the statewide body advocating for Indigenous students and educators across Wisconsin's public school system. WIEA serves on advisory bodies to the State Superintendent and the Department of Public Instruction, and its annual conferences (2024: 'Fostering Teamwork & Collaboration'; 2025: 'Honoring Our Languages') gather Native and non-Native educators around Act 31 implementation, language revitalization, and recruitment of Indigenous teachers. Membership crosses urban-reservation lines and is one of the few statewide infrastructures connecting Milwaukee, Madison, and reservation classrooms.
Background
· 2023
· encyclopedia-of-milwaukee
For decades, Indian Summer Festival anchored each September at Henry Maier Festival Park as one of the largest celebrations of Native culture in the Midwest. The festival is documented in the Encyclopedia of Milwaukee as a defining urban Native cultural event. In the most recent festival park calendars, however, Indian Summer is conspicuously absent — and an Incredible India Festival has taken a weekend that culturally adjacent organizers used to share with Indian Summer. The disappearance is worth a third edition's notice: it signals either a planned hiatus, an organizational rupture, or both, and it leaves a hole in the city's public-facing Native cultural calendar.
Background
· 2022
· milwaukee-neighborhood-news-service
Between 2010 and 2020, the number of people in Brown County reporting they were all or partly Indigenous grew by more than 3,200, or 143 percent. The change reflects both real growth in the Green Bay-area urban Native community and Census methodology that 'got closer' to multiracial Indigenous identification. Milwaukee County's AI/AN-and-other-Pacific Islander count was 0.6 percent of the population — about 3,585 city residents — though community members continue to argue the real number is meaningfully higher. The 2020 numbers are the baseline for any conversation about urban Indian Wisconsin going forward.
Background
· 2022
· milwaukee-public-schools
Milwaukee Public Schools operates a First Nations Studies program at the district level, providing curriculum and student support across MPS's hundred-plus schools. The program partners with the Electa Quinney Institute at UW-Milwaukee and Indian Community School in Franklin. For Native families whose children attend regular MPS schools rather than ICS, the First Nations Studies program is the connective tissue: pulling out Native students for cultural programming, supporting Wisconsin Act 31 implementation building-by-building, and keeping urban Indian families and reservation-rooted families in conversation through the school year.
Background
· 2021
· uw-madison-msc
Wunk Sheek, the UW-Madison Indigenous student organization founded in 1968, is one of the oldest Native student groups in the country. Its annual On Wisconsin Spring Powwow draws hundreds of students and Madison-area community members for traditional foods, dancing, music, and vendors. The Indigenous Student Center, established under the American Indian Studies Program in 2009 and transferred to the Multicultural Student Center in 2021, hosts Wunk Sheek and five other Indigenous student organizations. Together they form the Madison-side counterpart to Milwaukee's institutional Native infrastructure — a campus-anchored urban Native presence the chapter doesn't name in its 2013 version.
Background
· 2021
· wuwm
On August 14, 1971, Milwaukee AIM activists Herb Powless (Oneida) and Jerome Starr (Ojibwe) occupied the abandoned McKinley Coast Guard Station on Milwaukee's lakefront, citing the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie's provision that abandoned federal property reverts to original inhabitants. The takeover led to the city and BIA handing over the building for use as the original Indian Community School. WUWM, Shepherd Express, and TMJ4 all marked the 50th anniversary in August 2021. The story is the founding myth of urban Indian Milwaukee and a reminder that 'land back' has Wisconsin precedent.
Background
· 2021
· history-com
Public Law 959, signed in August 1956, pushed thousands of reservation-rooted Native people to Milwaukee, Chicago, Minneapolis, and other Midwestern cities under federal vocational training and job-placement programs. The relocation program ran through the 1970s and is the proximate cause of Milwaukee's urban Native population growth, the founding of the Indian Council of the Elderly, and ultimately the AIM takeover that birthed the Indian Community School. The federal Indian Boarding School Initiative under Secretary Deb Haaland (2021-) has named relocation as a kindred coercive policy in its forthcoming report; urban Indian families today carry both legacies in the same generations.
Background
· 2020
· forest-county-potawatomi-foundation
The Forest County Potawatomi Foundation, established in 1999 and funded by Potawatomi Casino Hotel revenue, has contributed over $30 million to charitable organizations in Forest, Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Washington, and Waukesha counties. Grant categories run from arts and culture to elder care to Native American interests to veterans services to youth development. For urban Indian Milwaukee, the foundation is the single most consistent funding source — the financial backbone behind the Indian Community School move to Franklin, behind grants to Indigenous nonprofits, and behind the broader Native-cultural infrastructure most cities don't have.
Background
· 2018
· uw-milwaukee-eqi
Named for Electa Quinney, the first public schoolteacher in Wisconsin and a Stockbridge-Munsee citizen, the Electa Quinney Institute at UW-Milwaukee is a teacher training and Indigenous education research center. Its work partners directly with Indian Community School, Milwaukee Public Schools, and tribal-level education programs across the state. The institute closes a gap the 2013 chapter could not have known would matter so much: how to prepare teachers — Native and non-Native — to serve the urban Native classrooms that Wisconsin's relocation history created.
Background
· 2015
· indian-community-school
The Indian Community School, born from the 1971 AIM takeover of the abandoned McKinley Coast Guard Station on Milwaukee's lakefront, moved in 2007 to a $35 million, 178-acre campus in Franklin, about thirteen miles from downtown. The Forest County Potawatomi's twenty-year lease and the gaming revenue that followed funded the move and helped sustain the school. ICS serves about 364 Native students K-8, and every kindergartner commits to daily language instruction in Oneida, Menominee, or Ojibwe — a quiet but radical bet on the next generation.