MCAT Test Centers in Wisconsin

According to AAMC (the MCAT test maker), there are 9 MCAT test centers in Wisconsin. Most testing centers are located inside a college or university. You can select a testing location that is nearest to you. Please note that you are able to choose a test center when registering for the MCAT.

MCAT Test Centers in Wisconsin

Prometric Test Center
1525 Park Place
(Suite 400)
Ashwaubenon, WI 54304

Milwaukee – Brookfield
19435 WEST CAPITOL DRIVE
SUITE L04
BROOKFIELD, WI 53045

Milwaukee – Brookfield
19435 WEST CAPITOL DRIVE
SUITE L04
BROOKFIELD, WI 53045

Eau Claire – Keith Street
1903 Keith Street
Suite 4 (1st Floor)
Eau Claire, WI 54701

ETS – UNIV. OF WI/LA CROSSE
308 N 16th Street
Room 2106 Centennial Hall
LACROSSE, WI 54601

La Crosse – South 7th Street
210 South 7th Street
Suite 4 (2nd Floor)
La Crosse, WI 54601

Madison – Thierer Road, East
1721 Thierer Rd, East
Pointe Plaza – 1st Floor
Madison, WI 53704

ETS – UNIV. OF WI/OSHKOSH
801 ELMWOOD AVE
POLK LIBRARY, ROOM 3
OSHKOSH, WI 54901

Wausau – Corporate Drive
1 Corporate Drive
Suite 102
Wausau, WI 54401

Medical College Admission Test in Wisconsin

Early History of Wisconsin

The first European to enter the lands of Wisconsin was the Frenchman Jean Nicolet in 1634. On the instructions of the governor of the colony of New France, Samuel de Champlain (who himself was an eminent explorer of the northeastern regions of the modern United States, in particular Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine), Jean Nicolet was looking for a waterway through the North American continent to the Pacific Ocean. Nicolet passed through Lake Huron, Lake Superior and Michigan in a canoe, landing on the shores of Wisconsin in the area of ​​​​the modern city of Green Bay.

In 1673, the expedition of Jacques Marquette and Louis Jollier passed through Wisconsin. In search of the great Mississippi River, the existence of which the French had learned from the Indians, Marquette and Jollier climbed the Fox River from Lake Michigan, dragged boats to the Wisconsin River, and then descended it to its confluence with the Mississippi.

The first European settlement, a small trading post (and today it is the third largest city in the state – Green Bay), was founded in Wisconsin in 1634 by Jean Nicolet. In 1671, a Jesuit mission appeared here, and in 1717 a fort was built.

In 1685, a trading post was established at the strategic confluence of the Wisconsin and Mississippi Rivers (today Prairie du Chien). In the following decades, French interests in Wisconsin were limited to trade, primarily buying furs from the Indians.