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The Witch’s House, Milwaukee WI

Early in the morning, the mists rising from Lake Michigan creep over its shorelines and extend their
tendrils into the nearby yards and neighborhoods, giving a feeling as esoteric and eldritch as any New
England setting from an H.P. Lovecraft story. If one takes a curving road along the lake shore in Fox
Point, Wisconsin, one’s headlights trickle over the foliage until the most pagan of sites emerges from the
gloom. Concrete totems lurk behind a chain link fence topped with barbed wire. As many generations of
Milwaukee-area residents know, this seemingly calm, semi-secluded area is the Witch’s House. A guide, if
present, will insist with as much vehemence as a raised whisper can allow that everyone roll up the
windows and lock the car doors and will exhort the driver not to stop.

Some whisper that a woman lived in the home with her husband and young son. One day, the husband and
son took the family boat out onto the Great Lake and capsized just offshore. Her family drowned within
sight of the woman, and she was powerless to help them. The woman thought that the spirits of the water
would come to take her to join her husband and son, so she began to make warding statues to keep the
water spirits at bay. Another story claimed that she killed her husband and child herself and hid them
among the statues.

The real story of the Milwaukee Witch’s House is more benign. Artist Mary Nohl, born in 1914 and a
graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago, inherited the family land and cottage in the 1960s. She began to
create an art environment, crafting sculptures in such media as concrete, tree branches, sand, and other
items that washed ashore on her property. Given her influences and preferred subject matter of whimsical
and mythic figures and the fact that she remained single fueled the spooky rumors that drove young spectre
seekers to her neighborhood late at night. By all accounts, Ms. Nohl did not mind the underground
attention she received, as she didn’t prosecute trespassers and once remarked, as a group of young people
viewed her work from outside the fence, that they had good taste.

Although Mary Nohl died in 2001, the house remains an art environment to this day. Mary Nohl donated
the land and millions of dollars to the Kohler Foundation, and the foundation would like to open the house
as a museum so visitors can enjoy the works of Mary Nohl without the mystery and foreboding. However,
other residents of the Fox Point neighborhood are taking steps to prevent the land from becoming a
museum, undoubtedly tired of decades of nocturnal visitors of the teenaged sort.

For at least a short time, restless wayfarers can drive by the site at the witching hour with unwitting
companions and continue to embellish the tale of the Witch’s House and to view the works in the
traditional method, with all of with the mystery and foreboding young imaginations can ferment.

Other reading:
Kohler Foundation description of the Mary Nohl Site:
http://www.kohlerfoundation.org/new_NohlSite.html

Wisconsin Trust for Historic Preservation, 10 Most Endangered Properties list including Nohl House
http://www.wthp.org/10_most.htm

Wisconsin National Register of Historic Places Entry for Mary Nohl Art Environment
http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/hp/register/viewSummary.asp?refnum=05001109

Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel columnist Jim Stingl column “Pilgrimage to 'witch's house' was a rite of
passage”
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=11655

Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel news item “Artist's legacy lingers: Some residents fight preservation of
woman's quirky lakefront home”
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=304368

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