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Milwaukee County
(Hales Corners)
Evangelical Emanuel Cemetery
Tombstone Photos


These photos were generously taken and contributed to these pages by Larry & Linda Kopet!   Please take a moment to thank them for this terrific resource!  Use your back browser button to return to this page. Please note that these generous contributions do not necessarily depict all tombstone photographs for a given cemetery.


Ackermann, August and Julia
Ackermann, Ervent and Louise
Ackermann, Lorraine
Albrecht, Harvey and Gladys
Almli, Kenneth and Dorothy
Altendorf, Joseph
Anderson, Andrew
Anderson, Gyda
Anderson, Mark S.
Antoneau, John and Marie
Basse, Alexander
Basse, Alvin G.
Basse, Christina
Basse, Lillian S.
Baumgaertner, John and Friedericka
Beckner, Daniel
Beckner, Debra
Beckner, Howard M. and Elaine
Bergles, Roy E. and Shirley M.
Biedermann, Lena
Bleibaum, Alfred C. and Emma A.
Bleibaum, William and Ada
Bley, Christ and Ottilie
Bliesemer, Bertha
Bohm, Charles
Bohn, Herman and Johanna
Bohn, Herman J.
Boldt, Friedrich
Boldt, George J. and Elizabeth
Boldt, Helen
Boldt, Henry A. and Emma W.
Boldt, William
Bosch, Ora N.
Brach, Frederick
Brach, Gustav A.
Brach, Othelia B.
Braun, Willie
Breitbach, Michael L. and Virginia W.
Brown, Jean
Bruemmer, Peter
Bruemmer, Sophia
Burns, Roberta L. (Robbi)
Buse, Alvina
Buse, Amelia M.
Buse, Henry W. F. and Robert E.
Buse, James W.
Buse, Robert J. and Edna A.
Buse, Walter A. (Pete) and Elizabeth (Betty)
Buss, Alma
Buss, Florence
Buss, John and Mary
Butt, Friederich
Butt, Henrietta
Campbell, Andrew R. and Pauline L.
Ciesielczyk, Hubert A. and Ruth L.
Cobb, Alma
Cobb, Elsa B.
Cobb, Frank W.
Cobb, Irvin
Cobb, Louise Neussel
Conrad, Adam
Conrad, Arthur A. and Eunice H.
Conrad, Dora
Conrad, Dorothea
Conrad, Jacob and Emma
Conrad, Jacob
Conrad, Ralph C.
Conrad, Sophia
Daemmrich, Alfred and Eunice
Daemmrich, Maurice C. and Bernadine B.
Davis, Donald A. and Calla S.
Dickmann, Clarence E. and Doris C.
Dozier, Charles P. and Kathryn
Dramburg, Dr. Walter F. and Emma W.
Dramburg, Felix and family
Dramburg, Robert E. and Mildred E.
Drefahl, Anna
Drefahl, Fred C.
Drefahl, Herbert H. and Clara Louise
Duchossois, Louis D. and Sylvia H.
Dufenhorst, Barbara
Dufenhorst, Ella Duve
Dufenhorst, Frank
Dufenhorst, Mary
Eagerton, Rosie
Eastberg, Norman J. and Elvira C.
Eckel, Celia
Eckel, Jacob E.
Edson, Curlita
Eisenhut, Joseph P. and Hazel M.
Eisenhut, Joseph P.
Eisner, Francis
Eisner, Harold
Emanuel Church UCC Cemetery Sign
Erdmann, Frank
Faehrmann, Fred J. and Bertha M.
Felle, Anita
Fitze, Maurice E. and Pearl
Freede, Carl W.
Freede, Frank
Freede, Jacob E. and Ada M.
Freede, Milton
Freede, not clear
Freede, unclear
Freede, William
Gagliano, Jeanette
Guhr, Ernst C. and Josephine F.
Guhr, Herbert E. and Florence Barnes
Guhr, Robert C. and Elaine J.
Gutknecht, Fred A. and Ruth M.
Gutknecht, Robert Allen
Haefner, Fred R.
Haefner, John
Hahs, John
Hahs, Louisa
Hahs, Margaret
Hahs, unclear
Hammel, Roy R. and Lillian
Hartline, Martha Pohl
Hartline, William
Hartman, Emil
Hartman, Johanna
Hartman, Martin
Hartman, Wm. (infant)
Hartmann, Arthur and Dorothy
Hartmann, Della
Hartmann, Fred and Mary
Hartmann, Hulda
Hartung, Ida
Hartung, J. Andrew
Hartung, Katharina W.
Hauenstein, Ella M.
Hauenstein, William
Haueter, Marie
Heinrich, Walter W. and Augusta E.
Heise, William E. Jr. and Shirley
Herfurth, Charles R. and Louise M. Baum
Herfurth, Elsie L.
Herfurth, Herbert H.
Herfurth, Kay Frances
Herzfeld, Emma
Herzfeld, Raymond and Elva
Herzfeld, William
Hess, Alice
Hess, Kym A.
Hess, Myron F.
Hess, Richard W.
Hirsch, Carl A. and unclear
Hirsch, not clear
Hirsch, unclear
Hoffmann, Anton
Hoffmann, Frank and Bertha
Hoffmann, Magdalena
Holden, Julius and Julia L.
Holtz, Anna
Holtz, Frank and Elizabeth
Holtz, Frank and Florence
Holtz, Leonard F.
Holtz, Louis and Hattie
Holtz, Louis
Holtz, Mayme
Holtz, Norman and Hattie
Holtz, Roman O. and Ida
Holz, Edwin and Norma
Hommel, John and Louise
Hommel, John
Hommel, Louise
Horn, Arnold
Horn, Pauline
Horn, Selma
Hubrich, Elfrieda
Hubrich, Walter P.
Imme, LeRoy R. and Mildred M.
Johnson, Alan E. and Violet
Jung, Jacob
Jung, Katharine
Jung, Lina
Jung, Phillip
Jungbluth, June E.
Jungbluth, William and Marguerite
Kaiser, Richard
Kasch, John Jr.
Kasch, John L. and Beatrice E.
Kelsey, Charles
Kelsey, Ida
Kerler, Addie S.
Kerler, Clotilda
Kerler, Edward and Louis
Kerler, Herman A.
Kerler, Louis
Kerler, Louise D.
Kerler, Regina
Kerler, Wilhelmine
Kerler, William and August
Kihslinger, Susanne Emma
Knaack, Moritz
Koerber, Dorothea
Koerber, Fred and Bertha
Koerber, Frederick G. and Elvira A.
Koerber, Friedrich
Kostka, George A. and Shirlie R.
Krause, Fred
Krause, Frederich and Dorathea
Krause, Herman J. and Anna
Krause, John and family
Krause, Margaret
Kroening, Henry F.
Kroening, Henry
Kroening, Herbert
Kroening, Louis H. and Pearl I.
Kroening, Marie P.
Kroening, William F.
Kumm, Albert
Kumm, Caroline
Kurtze, Anna
Kurtze, Carl
Kurtze, Edw.
Kurtze, Edward C.
Kurtze, Father
Kurtze, Lloyd E. and Elmyra J.
Kurtze, Maud M.
Kurtze, Mother
Kurtze, Robert and Doris
Kurtze, Sylvia
Kurtze, unclear female
Kurtze, Walter
Kurtze,Fred
Latzel, Martin R.
Laudon, Wilhelm and Annanette
Liebenthal, Christian Frederick and Johanna Louisa
Liebenthal, Edward J. and Martha
Liebenthal, Esther
Liebenthal, Irene
Link, Edw. J. and family
Link, Edward and Louisa
Lisota, Ella Buss
Luecht, Walter and Gertrude
Maurice, George Jeffry and Ruth Louise
McConahy, Corinne
Melchior, Noramanda
Milkentin, female infants
Mixon, Jacob Jeffory
Mixon, June L.
Molkentin, George L.
Molkentin, Laura
Molkentin, Senta E.
Molkentin, Theodore
Muehl, Ada and Fredericka
Muehl, Adeline
Muehl, Arnold C.
Muehl, David K.
Muehl, Delbert
Muehl, Ella
Muehl, Jake and Clara
Muehl, James and A. Wisniewski
Muehl, John
Muehl, Otto
Muehl, Ralph and Helen
Mulder, Fred R. and Carol J.
Mulder, Mary Florence
Natzke, William G. and family
Neil, Chester R. and Audre M.
Ness, Arvid
Neussel, Jacob L.
Neussel, Otto L.
Oberhofer, Gustave and Mabel
Olsen, Alan R.
Olsen, Mabel I.
Olsen, Ole B.
Pahl, August
Paul, Mildred S.
Pellman, Alvin and Della
Pellmann, Carl L. and Juhanna Ludwig
Peske, Clifford O. and June M.
Petermann, Lillie
Peterson, Edward C. and Minna
Peterson, Milton and Margaret
Plutschack, Adolph C.
Plutschack, August and Barbara
Plutschack, Ella
Plutschack, Henry E.
Plutschak, Gilbert F.
Plutschak, William M. and Anna A.
Pohl, Raymond
Poroli, Irene H.
Poroli, Louis S.
Prestin, Henry
Prestin, Marie
Prestin, Sophia
Pries, Herman W. and Helen C.
Priewe, unclear
Prochnow, Friedericka Weske
Radtke, Leonard A.
Radtke, Mila L. Koch
Reise, Kevin L. and Lillian C.
Reuter, John and Lorain E.
Reuter, Linda J.
Richter, John V. and Clara
Rick, Charles W.
Rieck, Clara Ida
Roder, Charles
Roder, Conrad
Roder, John
Roder, Kunigunda
Ruehle, Anna M.
Ruehle, August and family
Ruehle, Fred and Emma
Ruehle, Irvin F. and Hildegarde M.
Ruehle, Irvin F.
Rumpel, Herman Henry
Rychlewski, Arline
Sanders, Elmer and Ruth
Sanders, Gustav and Ada
Schacht, Howard and Myrtle
Schlamp, George and Margaret
Schlamp, Jacob and Madeline
Schmidt, Bertha
Schmidt, Charles
Schmidt, Ella
Schmidt, Elmer and family
Schmidt, John Jr.
Schmidt, John
Schmidt, Lydia
Schmidt, Margaret Linder
Schmidt, Mary
Schmidt, Mathilda
Schmidt, Minnie
Schmidt, Peter
Schmidt, Valentine
Schmidt, Willard T. and Doris A.
Schniderwind, Henry
Schrank, Frank
Schubring, John and Emma
Schuele, Christian
Schuele, Dora
Schuele, Julia
Schuette - Conrad families
Schuler, Fred
Schuler, Heinrich
Schuler, Henry
Schuler, Irma S.
Schuler, Margaret
Schuler, Ray
Schuler, Roy Charles
Schuler, Sidonia
Schultz, Richard J. and Pearl E.
Seiser, August
Seiser, John A. ande Henriette J. Engel
Seiser, Minnie
Senft, Harold W.
Senft, Marie J.
Sharping, Anna Marie (Nana)
Sharping, Elizabeth
Sharping, Emma
Sharping, Harold Wm.
Sharping, Rudolph
Sieben, Sherman Walter (Wally)
Sobczak, Eugene G. and Margaret D.
Spetz, Frieda Jung
Stangel, Martha
Stangel, Martin
Stangel, Minna
Stellmann, A.
Stellmann, August
Stellmann, Dora F.
Stellmann, Fredericka
Stellmann, John and Louisa
Stellmann, Mavin
Stevens, Phyllis J.
Strandt, Robert D. and Janet L.
Strohm, Roy and Lillian
Struck, Donald R.
Sweeney, Evelyn Guhr
Teffer, Alexander W. and Estella
Tenzer, August and Cetonie
Tess, Friederich
Tess, Mathilda
Uecker, David and Johanna
Verburgt, James P.
Verburgt, Violet C.
VerHagen, Edna G. Boldt
VerHagen, Frank (Dinny)
VerHagen, Frank
Vernier, Lynda Jeanne
Wenzel, Thomas E.
Westveer, twin infants
Wiesend, Aloysius and Olga Kelm
Wilber, Ken and Winny
Wilhelm, Adam E. and family
Wilson, Eliese Stoft
Wolf, Albert J. Sr.
Wolf, Katherine Adeline
Wolf, Marjorie
Wolfgram, Arthur A. and Alice I.
Wollman, Charles and Rosette
Wollman, Clara Annie
Wollman, Francis M.
Wollman, Frank and Mary J.
Wollmer, Darrell and Helen Wuhrman
Wollmer, Earl and family
Wollmer, Edward and Emma Guhr
Wollmer, Jerome E.
Wollmer, Violet
Wurster, Alvina
Wurster, John
Zechinato, Emelia
Zechinato, Frederick
Zechinato, unclear female
Zimmermann, Henry W. and family
Zimmermann, Thomas F.
Zuehr, Charles
Zuehr, Cornelia H.
Zuehr, Elizabeth
Zuehr, Frank W.
Zuehr, Friedericke
Zuehr, George
Zuehr, Louis

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WISCONSIN MUNICIPALITIES: Cities Towns, and Villages, often referred to as 'municipalities' in Wisconsin law, are the governmental units that relate most directly to citizens' everyday lives.

TOWNS, like counties, were created by the state to provide basic municipal services. Rooted in New England and New York tradition, town government came to Wisconsin with the settlers, but Wisconsin towns were not like their Eastern counterparts that reflected the existing patterns of local settlement. In Wisconsin, towns are geographical subdivisions of counties. Towns originally served (and for the most part they continue to serve) rural areas. Towns govern those areas of Wisconsin not included in the corporate boundaries of cities and villages.

The difference between "township" and "town" often confuses the public. In Wisconsin, "township' refers to the surveyor's township which was laid out to identify land parcels within a county. Theoretically. a township is a square tract of land, measuring six miles on a side for a total of 36 square miles in the unit. Each township is divided into 36 sections. "Town", as the word is used in Wisconsin, denotes a specific unit of government. It's boundaries may coincide with the surveyor's township or it may look quite different. A Town may include one, parts of or several townships.

CITIES and VILLAGES, often referred to as "incorportated areas", govern territory where population is more concentrated. In general, minimum population for incorporation as a village is 150 residents for an isolated village and 2,500 for a metropolitan village located in a more densely settled area. For cities, the minimums are 1,000 and 5,000 respectively. As cities and villages are incorporated, they are carved out of the town territory and become independent units no longer subject to the town's control. The remainder of the town may take on a 'Swiss cheese" configuration as its area is reduced.

[Information above taken from "State of Wisconsin Blue Book 1997-1998"]

WIGenWeb
ProjectCopyright Notice: These generous contributions do not necessarily depict all tombstone photographs for a given cemetery. The source for many of the cemetery names and placenames on these pages come from Cemetery Locations in Wisconsin, 3rd edition, compiled by Linda M. Herrick and Wendy K. Uncapher. The book is published by Origins at 4327 Milton Ave. Janesville, WI 53546. All files on this site are copyrighted by their creator and/or contributor. They may be linked to but may not be reproduced on another site without specific permission from Tina Vickery [mailto:tsvickery@gmail.com] and/or their contributor. Although public information is not in and of itself copyrightable, the format in which they are presented, the notes and comments, etc., are. It is however, quite permissable to print or save the files to a personal computer for personal use ONLY.

This page was last updated 20 November 2012