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====Scandinavian heritage==== [[File:Washington Island Stavkirke chancel.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Chancel]] and [[altarpiece]] inside the stave church on Washington Island]] Scandinavian heritage-related attractions include [[The Clearing Folk School]], two [[stave church]]es,<ref>The [[Björklunden]] stave church is called Boynton Chapel and it is just south of Baileys Harbor. The [[Washington Island Stavkirke]] is part of and adjacent to Trinity Lutheran Church on Washington Island.</ref> structures in Rock Island State Park furnished with [[Runes|rune]]-inscribed furniture,<ref>[http://www.portalwisconsin.org/archives/rock_island.cfm Whisked Away to Rock Island] by Benson Gardner, ''Portal Wisconsin'', 2010; the page links to a panoramic tour of the boathouse</ref> and [[Al Johnson's Swedish Restaurant]], which features goats on its grassy roof. In Ephraim, the [[Ephraim Village Hall|Village Hall]], the [[Ephraim Moravian Church|Moravian]] and [[Bethany Lutheran Church, Ephraim|Lutheran]] churches, and the [[Peter Peterson House]] are listed in the National Register of Historic Places, as is the [[L. A. Larson & Co. Store]] building in Sturgeon Bay. Although [[fish boil]]s have been attributed to Scandinavian tradition,<ref>[https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/08/18/432683662/in-the-upper-midwest-summertime-means-fish-boils In The Upper Midwest, Summertime Means Fish Boils] by Amanda Vinicky, ''The Salt'', section on ''npr.org'', August 18, 2015; also see Joy Marquardt. "[https://www.wausaudailyherald.com/story/travel/2016/08/31/fish-boils-serve-up-food-fun/89647818/ Fish boils serve up food, fun]". ''Wausau Daily Herald'', August 31, 2016.</ref> several ethnicities present on the peninsula have traditions of boiling fish. The method common in the county is similar to that of Native Americans.<ref>[https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/MCR/article/download/18000/19275 Sagamité and Booya: French Influence in Defining Great Lakes Culinary Heritage] by Janet C. Gilmore in ''Material History Review 60'' (Fall 2004) and [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=inu.30000107432035&view=1up&seq=117 "Pretty Hungry For Fish": Fish Foodways Among Commercial Fishing People of the Western Shore of Lake Michigan's Green Bay] by Janet C. Gilmore, in ''Midwestern folklore. v.28–29'' 2002–2003, p. 46 (page 158 of the pdf)</ref>{{efn|For a description of Belgian [[acculturation]] towards Native Americans, see [https://rc.library.uta.edu/uta-ir/bitstream/handle/10106/11844/Tinkler_uta_2502M_12187.pdf The Walloon Immigrants Of Northeast Wisconsin An Examination Of Ethnic Retention] by Jacqueline Tinkler, MA Thesis, [[University of Texas at Arlington|UT-Arlington]], May 2013, pp. 26–27 (pp. 33–34 of the pdf)}}
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