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If you could step back in time years, you might be surprised to find that River Street - as Edison Street was then called - was lined with taverns, music halls, hotels and, believe it or not, brothels. It's perhaps no surprise that Water Street has provided a long stretch of taverns for thirsty Milwaukeeans for more than a century. In fact, there were times in the past where there were even more bars on the strip than there are now. But what about tiny, parallel Edison Street, which, these days, runs about two blocks and can boast but a few drinking and eating establishments, along with some homes and parking lots?
If you could step back in time years, you might be surprised to find that River Street β as Edison was then called β was lined with taverns, music halls, hotels and, yes, brothels. There was even a small guidebook to Brew City brothels published in the early years of the 20th century. Back then, the street went as far south as Wells or Oneida as it was then named. That was the case until the Milwaukee Center was built in the s, although the construction of the Performing Arts Center interrupted Edison's continuity in the s.
In fact, River Street was a wild den of good times and good old iniquity during the reign of Mayor David "All the time Rosy" Rose, known for his freewheeling approach to such unbridled fun, even when it was occurring right outside the windows of City Hall.
Rose was reelected mayor in despite β or maybe because of β his explicit policy of supporting a "wide open city" and opposing any limits on the River Street revelers. Prostitutes were not new to Milwaukee, according to historian John Gurda, who wrote in his book, "The Making of Milwaukee," that they "had been plying their trade in Milwaukee since the frontier period, and the east bank of the river, in the morning shadow of the new City Hall, had brothels catering to a variety of tastes and clienteles.
Miss Kitty Williams' renowned house β which wasn't on River Street, but a block east on State Street where Red Arrow Park is now β even had rooms decorated in international themes for the, perhaps, more cosmopolitan customer.