Third time is a charm! Join the Friends for their May 15, 2022, Annual Meeting in Ozaukee County, a center of German and Luxembourg immigration in the 1850s and 1860s. For more details including registration information, click here.
Author: Admin
Join the Friends!
Opportunity to support the Max Kade Institute Library & Archives.
Great news!
The Friends of the Max Kade Institute have been approved for a $250 matching grant from Thrivent Financial Foundation to be spent on the acquisition for and preservation of items in the Max Kade Institute Library & Archives. With your donation today we can raise a combined $500 to support the MKI’s unique collections!
To donate online click HERE.
Be a Member of the Friends of the Max Kade Institute!
Are you interested in German-American culture, heritage, and immigration research?Help support the many activities of the Max Kade Institute for German-American Studies by becoming a new member or renewing your membership HERE.
Members receive the Friends Newsletter three times a year, which contains information about Max Kade Institute activities and current research in German-American studies. You will also enjoy reduced fees at MKI workshops and will be the first to learn about the Institute’s events, programs, special lectures, and social events. The Friends of the Max Kade Institute is a 501(c)(3) organization, and contributions are tax-deductible.
A membership in the Friends of the Max Kade Institute makes a special holiday gift!
Annual Meeting on May 5, 2019, at Old World Wisconsin

Join us for the 2019 Annual Meeting, and step back into the nineteenth century at Old World Wisconsin in Eagle, WI. OWW is an open air museum with more than 60 historic structures brought here from around the state, including three German immigrant farms from the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s. We will enjoy a private, guided tram tour of all the grounds, followed by a walking tour of the German sites. Afterwards we will move to the Clausing Barn for our annual meeting and the dinner. The Clausing Barn is an octagonal two-story structure that was built by German barn builder Ernst Clausing in 1897 in Mequon, Ozaukee County. Tying our day together will be a lecture by Johannes Strohschänk, Professor of German at UW-Eau Claire, on “Old Wine in New Bottles or Is Heimat Portable?”
For more information click HERE.