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Discover Wisconsin: Ten things you didn't know about Kenosha
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While filming in Kenosha last summer, our crew discovered this city is all about unexpected fun. But that's not all we learned. The locals taught us a few things about "K-Town," too.

1. It hasn't always been "Kenosha." The Potawotomi first named the area "gnozhé," which means "place of the pike." By 1836, more settlers had arrived and dubbed the town "Pike Creek." But as the area became a significant Great Lakes shipping port, the village was renamed again in 1837 to "Southport." Southport continued to grow and in 1850, the town's citizens adopted an anglicized version of its original name, "Kinoje," hence "Kenosha." Today, Kenoshans are known to refer lovingly to their hometown as "K-Town" and "Keno."

2. Kenosha is the world headquarters for companies like Jockey International Inc. (founded in 1876) and Snap-on Incorporated (founded in 1920).

3. Kenosha is home to a number of famous faces, including actors Mark Ruffalo, Orson Welles, Al Molinaro, Daniel J. Travanti and Don Ameche; athletes Nick Van Exel and Alan Ameche; inventors Thomas B. Jeffery and Christopher Latham Sholes; Chef Tony Mantuano; and Miss America 2012 Laura Kaeppeler.

4. You'll find Wisconsin's only Metra station in Kenosha, with nine inbound and nine outbound trains running Monday through Friday.

5. The museum scene in Kenosha is pretty fascinating. For one, the Dinosaur Discovery Museum holds the largest set of meat-eating dinosaur skeletons in the U.S. Then there's the Kenosha Public Museum, which has the largest collection of Woolly Mammoth bones ever discovered. Right next door to the Kenosha Public Museum is the Civil War Museum, which is the second largest Civil War museum in the nation and one of only three venues featuring a 360-degree film experience in the U.S.

6. There are 21 locations and four districts in Kenosha listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

7. Despite Kenosha's small town feel, the community happens to be the fourth-largest city in Wisconsin, behind Milwaukee, Madison and Green Bay. It's also the fourth-largest city on the western shore of Lake Michigan, following Chicago, Milwaukee and Green Bay.

8. Kenosha is one of the smallest cities in the U.S. with any type of functioning streetcar system. A two-mile streetcar line has served HarborPark and downtown Kenosha since 2000.

9. The legendary Franks Diner also calls Kenosha home. Perhaps you've heard of Frank's - it's known just as much for being the oldest continuously operating lunch car diner in the U.S. as it is for its sassy service and "Garbage Plate" meal.

10. The Washington Park Velodrome has hosted bicycle races since 1927, making it the oldest operating velodrome in the U.S.



- AJ Marz is a producer and cinematographer for Discover Wisconsin and an avid outdoorsman.