The heart and soul of America is a combination of farmers working fields
to feed the nation and manufacturing titans constructing buildings,
streets, and cars. Oak Creek, Wisconsin, has lived up to its City of
Balance moniker through the decades by meshing agriculture with industry
to produce a bustling municipality while still maintaining a small city
attitude. It is a unique place where pro-union liberals teamed with
anti-establishment conservatives to save their city from being annexed
and wiped off the map in 1955. The tax base built by the Wisconsin
Electric power plant and General Motors' AC Spark Plug provided
necessary funds to develop neighborhoods, upgrade schools, and offer
first-rate civic services for the residents. Contributions from
apple-growing families to skilled trade workers enabled the southernmost
suburb of Milwaukee to evolve from a largely rural town to the fastest
growing city in the state.