Fort Atkinson Water Tower Explained

Fort Atkinson Water Tower
Location:S. High and Fourth Sts., Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin
Coordinates:42.9258°N -88.8328°W
Built:1901
Builder:E. Kuhnert Co.
Added:November 15, 2005
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:05001298

The Fort Atkinson Water Tower is an unused water tower that was built in 1901 in Ft. Atkinson, Wisconsin. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 15, 2005.[1]

It is a 112feet-tall structure: a 78feet cream brick masonry base supports a 33feet steel tank. It has diameter just over 25feet at the base.[2]

The tower was deemed historically significant in its NRHP nomination in part as "a fine example of the type of water tower construction popular in Wisconsin during this period. It is distinctive in its overall height and its intact original steel tank. The tower also has fine brick construction making it a masonry landmark in Fort Atkinson." Also it is significant for representing the creation of a municipal water system, whose development "was fraught with considerable political debate. For almost 10 years, the issue of a municipal water works was debated and strongly opposed by a vocal minority. When the water works was finally built, it was both a political and historical event. That it happened in 1901, the beginning of a new century, was symbolic in that it was part of the overall growth and development of utilities that dramatically changed the way people in thecommunity lived in the twentieth century. The water tower is the largest and most prominent symbol of the development of the Fort Atkinson water works, a symbol of the history of this important public service."[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fort Atkinson Water Tower. Wisconsin Historical Society. 2017-11-03.
  2. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=05001298}} National Register of Historic Places Registration: Fort Atkinson Water Tower ]. National Park Service. Carol Lohry Cartwright . May 18, 2005 . April 6, 2017 . With .