Danh sách quận của Wisconsin
Giao diện
Danh sách này liệt kê 72 quận của tiểu bang Wisconsin, Hoa Kỳ. Tiểu bang Wisconsin được thành lập từ vùng lãnh thổ Wisconsin ngày 29 tháng 5 năm 1848, với 28 quận.
Danh sách các quận
[sửa | sửa mã nguồn]Quận |
Mã FIPS [1] |
Quận lỵ [2] |
Thành lập [2] |
Thành lập từ [3] |
Từ nguyên [3] |
Dân số [2][4] |
Diện tích [2][4] |
Bản đồ
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adams County | 001 | Friendship | 1848 | Quận Portage | John Quincy Adams (1767-1848), President of the United States 1825-1829 | 20.875 | ( 1.678 km2) |
648 sq mi
|
Ashland County | 003 | Ashland | 1860 | unorganized territory | Ashland, Henry Clay's estate in Kentucky | 16.157 | ( 2.704 km2) |
1.044 sq mi
|
Barron County | 005 | Barron | 1859 | Dallas and Polk Counties | Henry D. Barron, state senator and circuit court judge. | 45.870 | ( 2.235 km2) |
863 sq mi
|
Bayfield County | 007 | Washburn | 1845 | Quận Ashland | Henry Bayfield, Royal naval officer and first to survey the Great Lakes area | 15.014 | ( 3.823 km2) |
1.476 sq mi
|
Brown County | 009 | Green Bay | 1818 | unorganized territory | Major General Jacob Brown (1775-1828), a commanding general of the United States Army during the War of 1812 | 248.007 | ( 1.370 km2) |
529 sq mi
|
Buffalo County | 011 | Alma | 1853 | Quận Trempealeau | The Buffalo River, which flows through the county. | 13.587 | ( 1.772 km2) |
684 sq mi
|
Burnett County | 013 | Siren | 1856 | Quận Polk | Thomas P. Burnett, state legislator | 15.457 | ( 2.129 km2) |
822 sq mi
|
Calumet County | 015 | Chilton | 1836 | unorganized territory | The French word for a Menominee peace pipe. | 48.971 | ( 829 km2) |
320 sq mi
|
Chippewa County | 017 | Chippewa Falls | 1845 | Quận Crawford | The Ojibwe nation of Native Americans (historically referred to as Chippewa) | 62.415 | ( 2.616 km2) |
1.010 sq mi
|
Clark County | 019 | Neillsville | 1853 | Quận Crawford | George Rogers Clark (1752-1812), Revolutionary War general | 34.690 | ( 3.149 km2) |
1.216 sq mi
|
Columbia County | 021 | Portage | 1846 | Quận Portage | Christopher Columbus (1451-1506), navigator and explorer | 56.833 | ( 2.005 km2) |
774 sq mi
|
Crawford County | 023 | Prairie du Chien | 1818 | unorganized territory | William Harris Crawford (1772-1834), United States Senator from Georgia 1807-1813 and Secretary of the Treasury 1816-1825 | 16.644 | ( 1.484 km2) |
573 sq mi
|
Dane County | 025 | Madison | 1836 | unorganized territory | Nathan Dane (1752-1835), delegate to the First Continental Congress 1785-1788 | 488.073 | ( 3.113 km2) |
1.202 sq mi
|
Dodge County | 027 | Juneau | 1836 | unorganized territory | Henry Dodge (1782-1867), Territorial Governor of Wisconsin 1848-1857 | 88.759 | ( 2.284 km2) |
882 sq mi
|
Door County | 029 | Sturgeon Bay | 1851 | Brown County | A dangerous water passage near Door Peninsula known as porte des morts, or "door of the dead" in Tiếng Pháp | 27.785 | ( 1.251 km2) |
483 sq mi
|
Douglas County | 031 | Superior | 1854 | unorganized territory | Stephen Douglas (1813-1861), United States Senator 1847-1861 | 44.159 | ( 3.390 km2) |
1.309 sq mi
|
Dunn County | 033 | Menomonie | 1854 | Chippewa County | Charles Dunn, state senator và chief justice of Wisconsin Territory | 43.857 | ( 2.207 km2) |
852 sq mi
|
Eau Claire County | 035 | Eau Claire | 1856 | Chippewa County | City of Eau Claire, itself French for "clear water" | 98.736 | ( 1.652 km2) |
638 sq mi
|
Florence County | 037 | Florence (CDP) | 1882 | Marinette and Oconto Counties | Florence Julst, the first white woman to settle in the area | 4.423 | ( 1.264 km2) |
488 sq mi
|
Fond du Lac County | 039 | Fond du Lac | 1836 | unorganized territory | French for "foot of the lake" | 101.633 | ( 1.873 km2) |
723 sq mi
|
Forest County | 041 | Crandon | 1885 | Langlade and Oconto Counties | Forest which covered the area when it was settled | 9.304 | ( 2.626 km2) |
1.014 sq mi
|
Grant County | 043 | Lancaster | 1836 | unorganized territory | Probably a trader named Grant, who made contact with area natives in 1810, but about whom little else is known | 51.208 | ( 2.973 km2) |
1.148 sq mi
|
Green County | 045 | Monroe | 1836 | unorganized territory | Nathanael Greene (1742-1786), quartermaster general during the American Revolutionary War | 36.842 | ( 1.513 km2) |
584 sq mi
|
Green Lake County | 047 | Green Lake | 1858 | Marquette District | Green Lake, located within the county | 19.051 | ( 917 km2) |
354 sq mi
|
Iowa County | 049 | Dodgeville | 1829 | unorganized territory | Iowa tribe of Native Americans | 23.687 | ( 1.976 km2) |
763 sq mi
|
Iron County | 051 | Hurley | 1893 | Ashland and Oneida Counties | Local iron deposits | 5.916 | ( 1.961 km2) |
757 sq mi
|
Jackson County | 053 | Black River Falls | 1853 | La Crosse County | Andrew Jackson (1767-1845), President of the United States 1829–1837 | 20.449 | ( 2.556 km2) |
987 sq mi
|
Jefferson County | 055 | Jefferson | 1836 | Milwaukee County | Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), President of the United States (1801-1809) | 83.686 | ( 1.443 km2) |
557 sq mi
|
Juneau County | 057 | Mauston | 1856 | Quận Adams | Solomon Juneau (1793-1856), founder of what would become Milwaukee | 26.664 | ( 1.989 km2) |
768 sq mi
|
Kenosha County | 059 | Kenosha | 1850 | Quận Racine | A Native American word meaning "place of the pike" | 166.426 | ( 707 km2) |
273 sq mi
|
Kewaunee County | 061 | Kewaunee | 1852 | Quận Manitowoc | Either a Potawatomi word meaning "river of the lost" or an Ojibwe word meaning "prairie hen", "wild duck" or "to go around" | 20.574 | ( 888 km2) |
343 sq mi
|
La Crosse County | 063 | La Crosse | 1851 | unorganized territory | The Native American game of lacrosse | 114.638 | ( 1.173 km2) |
453 sq mi
|
Lafayette County | 065 | Darlington | 1846 | Quận Iowa | Gilbert du Motier, marquis de La Fayette (1757-1834), a French general in the American Revolutionary War | 16.836 | ( 1.642 km2) |
634 sq mi
|
Langlade County | 067 | Antigo | 1879 | unorganized territory | Charles de Langlade (1729 – c.1800), American Revolutionary War veteran and United States Indian Agent in Green Bay | 19.977 | ( 2.261 km2) |
873 sq mi
|
Lincoln County | 069 | Merrill | 1874 | Marathon County | Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), President of the United States 1861-1865 | 28.743 | ( 2.287 km2) |
883 sq mi
|
Manitowoc County | 071 | Manitowoc | 1836 | unorganized territory | Munedoo-owk, a Ojibwe word meaning "the place of the good spirit" | 81.442 | ( 1.533 km2) |
592 sq mi
|
Marathon County | 073 | Wausau | 1850 | Portage County | Marathon, Greece | 134.063 | ( 4.002 km2) |
1.545 sq mi
|
Marinette County | 075 | Marinette | 1879 | Oconto County | Marie Antoinette Chevalier, Native American wife of early an fur trapper | 41.749 | ( 3.631 km2) |
1.402 sq mi
|
Marquette County | 077 | Montello | 1836 | Marquette District | Father Pere Jacques Marquette, missionary and explorer | 15.404 | ( 1.181 km2) |
456 sq mi
|
Menominee County | 078 | Keshena | 1961 | Menominee Indian Reservation,Shawano, and Oconto Counties | Menominee nation of Native Americans | 4.232 | ( 927 km2) |
358 sq mi
|
Milwaukee County | 079 | Milwaukee | 1835 | unorganized territory | Mahnawaukee-Seepe, a Native American word meaning "gathering place by the river" | 947.735 | ( 627 km2) |
242 sq mi
|
Monroe County | 081 | Sparta | 1854 | La Crosse County | James Monroe (1758-1831), President of the United States 1817-1825 | 44.673 | ( 2.334 km2) |
901 sq mi
|
Oconto County | 083 | Oconto | 1851 | unorganized territory | A Native American settlement and the Oconto River, whose name means "plentiful with fish" | 37.660 | ( 2.585 km2) |
998 sq mi
|
Oneida County | 085 | Rhinelander | 1885 | Lincoln County | Oneida nation of Native Americans | 35.998 | ( 2.914 km2) |
1.125 sq mi
|
Outagamie County | 087 | Appleton | 1851 | Brown County | Outagamie nation of Native Americans | 176.695 | ( 1.658 km2) |
640 sq mi
|
Ozaukee County | 089 | Port Washington | 1853 | Milwaukee County | The Ojibwe word for the Sauk nation | 86.395 | ( 601 km2) |
232 sq mi
|
Pepin County | 091 | Durand | 1858 | Dunn County | Pierre and Jean Pepin du Chardonnets, explorers | 7.469 | ( 601 km2) |
232 sq mi
|
Pierce County | 093 | Ellsworth | 1853 | Saint Croix County | Franklin Pierce (1804-1869), President of the United States 1853-1857 | 41.019 | ( 1.492 km2) |
576 sq mi
|
Polk County | 095 | Balsam Lake | 1853 | Saint Croix County | James Polk (1795-1849), President of the United States (1845-1849) | 44.205 | ( 2.375 km2) |
917 sq mi
|
Portage County | 097 | Stevens Point | 1836 | unorganized territory | Passage between the Fox and Wisconsin Rivers | 70.019 | ( 2.088 km2) |
806 sq mi
|
Price County | 099 | Phillips | 1879 | Chippewa and Lincoln Counties | William T. Price, president of the Wisconsin Senate | 14.159 | ( 3.245 km2) |
1.253 sq mi
|
Racine County | 101 | Racine | 1836 | unorganized territory | Racine, the French word for "root", after the Root River, which flows through the county | 195.408 | ( 862 km2) |
333 sq mi
|
Richland County | 103 | Richland Center | 1842 | Iowa County | The rich soil of the area | 18.021 | ( 1.518 km2) |
586 sq mi
|
Rock County | 105 | Janesville | 1836 | unorganized territory | Rock River, which flows through the county | 160.331 | ( 1.865 km2) |
720 sq mi
|
Rusk County | 107 | Ladysmith | 1901 | Chippewa County | Jeremiah McLain Rusk (1830-1893), Governor of Wisconsin 1882-1889 | 14.755 | ( 2.365 km2) |
913 sq mi
|
Sauk County | 111 | Baraboo | 1840 | unorganized territory | Sauk nation of Native Americans | 61.976 | ( 2.170 km2) |
838 sq mi
|
Sawyer County | 113 | Hayward | 1883 | Oconto County | Philetus Sawyer (1816-1900), United States Representative (1865-1875) and Senator (1881-1893) from Wisconsin | 16.557 | ( 3.253 km2) |
1.256 sq mi
|
Shawano County | 115 | Shawano | 1853 | Oconto County | A Ojibwe word meaning "southern" | 41.949 | ( 2.313 km2) |
893 sq mi
|
Sheboygan County | 117 | Sheboygan | 1836 | unorganized territory | Shawb-wa-way-kun, a Native American word meaning "great noise underground" | 115.507 | ( 1.331 km2) |
514 sq mi
|
Saint Croix County | 109 | Hudson | 1840 | unorganized territory | An early French explorer named St. Croix, about whom little is known | 84.345 | ( 1.870 km2) |
722 sq mi
|
Taylor County | 119 | Medford | 1875 | Clark, Lincoln, Marathon and Chippewa Counties | William Robert Taylor (1820-1909), Governor of Wisconsin 1874-1876 | 20.689 | ( 2.525 km2) |
975 sq mi
|
Trempealeau County | 121 | Whitehall | 1854 | Crawford and La Crosse Counties | Trempealeau Mountain (from the French for "mountain with its foot in the water"), a bluff located in a bend of the Trempealeau River,[5] which flows through the county[3] | 28.816 | ( 1.901 km2) |
734 sq mi
|
Vernon County | 123 | Viroqua | 1851 | Richland and Crawford Counties | Mount Vernon, home of George Washington | 29.773 | ( 2.059 km2) |
795 sq mi
|
Vilas County | 125 | Eagle River | 1893 | Oneida County | William Vilas (1840-1908), officer in the Civil War, United States Postmaster General (1885-1888), United States Secretary of the Interior (1888-1889), and Senator from Wisconsin (1891-1897) | 21.430 | ( 2.264 km2) |
874 sq mi
|
Walworth County | 127 | Elkhorn | 1836 | unorganized territory | Reuben Hyde Walworth (1788-1867), jurist from New York | 102.228 | ( 1.437 km2) |
555 sq mi
|
Washburn County | 129 | Shell Lake | 1883 | Burnett County | Cadwallader Washburn (1818-1882), Governor of Wisconsin 1872–1874 and Representative from Wisconsin 1867–1871 | 15.911 | ( 2.098 km2) |
810 sq mi
|
Washington County | 131 | West Bend | 1836 | unorganized territory | George Washington (1732-1799), American Revolutionary War leader (1775–1783), and first President of the United States (1789–1797) | 131.887 | ( 1.116 km2) |
431 sq mi
|
Waukesha County | 133 | Waukesha | 1846 | Milwaukee County | Waugooshance, a Pottawatomi word meaning "little foxes" | 389.891 | ( 1.440 km2) |
556 sq mi
|
Waupaca County | 135 | Waupaca | 1851 | Brown and Winnebago Counties | wau-pa-ka-ho-nak, a Menominee word meaning "white sand bottom" or "brave young hero" | 52.410 | ( 1.945 km2) |
751 sq mi
|
Waushara County | 137 | Wautoma | 1851 | Marquette County | A Native American word meaning "good earth" | 24.496 | ( 1.621 km2) |
626 sq mi
|
Winnebago County | 139 | Oshkosh | 1840 | unorganized territory | Winnebago nation of Native Americans | 166.994 | ( 1.137 km2) |
439 sq mi
|
Wood County | 141 | Wisconsin Rapids | 1856 | Portage County | Joseph Wood (1809-1890), state legislator (1856-1858) | 74.749 | ( 2.054 km2) |
793 sq mi
Tham khảo
[sửa | sửa mã nguồn]- ^ “EPA County FIPS Code Listing”. US Environmental Protection Agency. Truy cập ngày 11 tháng 2 năm 2008.
- ^ a b c d “NACo - Find a county”. National Association of Counties. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 24 tháng 10 năm 2007. Truy cập ngày 11 tháng 2 năm 2008.
- ^ a b c “WCA: County Directory”. Wisconsin Counties Association. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 11 tháng 2 năm 2008. Truy cập ngày 11 tháng 2 năm 2008.
- ^ a b “Wisconsin QuickFacts”. U.S. Census Bureau. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 2 tháng 9 năm 2012. Truy cập ngày 11 tháng 2 năm 2008. (2000 Census)
- ^ Elkins, Winston (1985). Trempealeau and the Mississippi River Dam. Trempealeau County, WI: Trempealeau County Historical Society.