Even though the Whitefish Bay Pabst Resort closed in 1914, the lakeshore land it occupied was redeveloped into seventeen lakefront residential lots, including the National Register of Historic Places-listed Herman Uihlein Mansion, constructed between 19 for one of the sons of the president of the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company. As the population grew, real estate developers constructed new residential subdivisions. In the early 20th century, the village developed as a streetcar suburb, with the population growing from 512 in 1900 to 9651 in 1940. At the time, it was the first village in Milwaukee County. The town did not acquiesce to the residents' demands, and in 1892, the local residents responded by incorporating as the Village of Whitefish Bay and forming a school district independent of the Town of Milwaukee. In the early 1890s, the area's residents lobbied the Town of Milwaukee for a local school the nearest school was seven miles from Whitefish Bay. Some leisure seekers travelled to the park from Milwaukee via steam boats that docked at Whitefish Bay's lakeshore others took the Milwaukee & Whitefish Bay Railroad, a steam-powered tram that began running to Whitefish Bay in 1886 and was replaced by the electric streetcars of the Milwaukee Electric Railway and Light Company in 1898. At its height, the park hosted as many as 15,000 visitors each weekend, and was once visited by President Theodore Roosevelt. He later added a Ferris wheel and a carousel, as well. In 1889, Pabst Brewing Company-owner Frederick Pabst purchased land in the Whitefish Bay area which he developed into the Whitefish Bay Pabst Resort, which included a hotel, restaurant, beer garden, and bandshell. Many of the early settlers were German immigrants. The land was organized as part of the Town of Milwaukee in 1835, and for much of the 19th century, the community's main economic activities were farming and fishing. The area came under the control of the United States Federal Government in 1832 when the Menominee surrendered their claims to the land by signing the Treaty of Washington. In the early 19th century when the first white settlers arrived, the Whitefish Bay area was controlled by Native Americans, including the Menominee, Potawatomi, and Sauk people. The population was 14,954 at the 2020 census. Whitefish Bay is a village in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, United States.
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