Danh sách quận của Wisconsin
(Đổi hướng từ Danh sách các quận của Wisconsin)
![Wisconsin counties](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/25/Wisconsin-counties-map.gif/300px-Wisconsin-counties-map.gif)
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.