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The Wisconsin 9/11 Memorial & Education Center is a non-profit memorial and park dedicated to those killed in the attacks of September 11, 2001. It is located in Kewaskum.

History
The memorial was signed into law in 1996 by Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson. It is funded completely by tax deductible donations and no tax money was used for its construction. On October 3, 2003, the Wisconsin Legislature designated the week in which October 8 falls as Fire Prevention week. The Saturday of that week is designated the Wisconsin State Firefighters Memorial Day; the week also commemorates the Peshtigo Fire and Great Chicago Fire from 1871.

Location
It is located in Kewaskum on US Highway 45 and Wisconsin Highway 28 just north of West Bend, Wisconsin, next to the Kewaskum Municipal Building Annex. The memorial was originally set to be built in front of the Kewaskum Fire Department, but the location was relocated due to concerns over safety.

Memorial
The centerpiece of the park is a statue of three life-sized firefighters engaged in a rescue situation. One firefighter is dragging a disabled firefighter with another nearby ready to help. A memorial Final Alarm and Roll Call Ceremony is held each October to honor fallen firefighters in Wisconsin. There are benches for reflection and the American flag flies over the park. A tower with a firefighter's bell commemorates the bell that firefighters historically used to signal an alarm and a fire call. The memorial has a smaller bronze statue that it brings to funerals for firefighters who died in the line of duty.

Fundraising
Governor Jim Doyle signed a bill that allows Wisconsin income tax filers to donate money to help fund the memorial. The group has held an annual motorcycle bike ride since 2004 to raise money for a planned visitor's center and to raise money to maintain the center.