Search Oak Creek Phone Directory
Oak Creek Phone Directory searches work best when you start with the city portal and then move to Milwaukee County if the file is not held by the city. The city keeps public records through various departments, and Oak Creek is in Milwaukee County, so a request can move from city hall to county court or county property records fast. Start with the local portal, confirm the office, and use county or state tools only if the file belongs somewhere else. That keeps the search local and avoids a long route when the request is really just looking for the right desk.
Oak Creek Phone Directory Overview
Oak Creek Phone Directory Basics
The city portal at oakcreekwi.org is the best starting point for Oak Creek city records. It gives you the city side of the search without forcing guesses, which matters when you know the city but not the office. Start there for public records, then follow the department trail that matches the file. That keeps the search simple and keeps you from bouncing between offices that do not hold the record.
Oak Creek is in Milwaukee County, so county records are part of the local picture from the start. That matters for court files, deed records, and any request that needs a deeper paper trail than city hall can provide. A phone directory page should help the user see that split without making the path feel crowded. City first, county next, state last is the clean sequence here.
When the city details are thin, the page should still be useful. The portal tells you where to begin. The county tools tell you where to go when the file moves beyond city hall. That is enough to keep the search moving in the right direction.
For Oak Creek, the county stop is not a guess. It is the natural follow-up when the record belongs with Milwaukee County instead of a city desk.
Oak Creek City Records
Oak Creek city records are kept through various city departments, so the city portal is the best starting point. If you need a city file, begin there and ask which department owns the record. That question is narrow enough to help staff route you without making guesses. It keeps the request tied to the office instead of to a broad topic.
That approach works well for city files such as local notices, permits, agendas, correspondence, or other municipal records. The research does not name a long list of local office pages, so the portal is the honest first click. It is also the safest one because it keeps the request tied to the office that actually holds the file.
Oak Creek Phone Directory and Milwaukee County
Milwaukee County is the follow-up path for Oak Creek users who need a deeper record. The county portal at county.milwaukee.gov is the county doorway, and the Clerk of Circuit Court at county.milwaukee.gov/EN/Clerk-of-Circuit-Court is the office for case files. The Register of Deeds at county.milwaukee.gov/EN/Register-of-Deeds is the office tied to property records and certified copies. Both offices sit at 901 N. 9th Street in Milwaukee, which makes the county route easy to identify once the file leaves city hall.
The Clerk of Circuit Court accepts public access searches through terminals and handles in-person, mail, and email requests for case files. The office is in Room 104 at the courthouse, and WCCA at wcca.wicourts.gov gives the summary check before you contact the clerk. That split matters because WCCA tells you what exists, while the clerk gives you the copy path.
The Register of Deeds is in Room 103 and handles property records, recorded documents, and certified birth, death, and marriage copies. The office phone number is (414) 278-4021, and the research shows weekday hours from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. It also notes that the county keeps property records back to 1835 and offers online real estate access through the county record system. For Oak Creek users, that is the right desk when an address turns into a recorded document search.
If the request becomes a property matter, the county land records page at county.milwaukee.gov/EN/Register-of-Deeds/Real-Estate-Records is the practical follow-up. If the request becomes a court file, the clerk page is the better match. That keeps the search specific and avoids sending a simple Oak Creek question through the wrong office.
- City portal for Oak Creek department contacts
- County portal for county routing
- Register of Deeds for property and vital copies
- Land records for recorded document searches
- WCCA for basic case checks
Oak Creek Phone Directory Images
The Milwaukee County portal at county.milwaukee.gov is a useful county-level start when the Oak Creek search moves beyond city hall. The image below shows that county doorway.

Use it when Oak Creek city records need a county follow-up or when you want to reach the offices that hold the deeper file.
The Register of Deeds page is the better visual cue when the search turns to property. The image below points to that record path.

That image fits an Oak Creek request that starts with an address and ends with a county document trail.
For a court check, WCCA is the next useful tool. The image below shows the statewide case lookup system.

That helps confirm a case before you ask for a copy or contact the local office.
Oak Creek Phone Directory and State Links
Wisconsin public records law gives the access frame for Oak Creek requests. Wis. Stat. § 19.31 sets the policy for broad access. Wis. Stat. § 19.35 explains the right to inspect and copy. Wis. Stat. § 19.36 explains limits and redactions that can apply to part of a file. Those rules matter when an Oak Creek request turns into a county release or a partial copy.
The Wisconsin Vital Records office at dhs.wisconsin.gov/vitalrecords/index.htm is the state backup when an Oak Creek request needs a broader certified copy path. Milwaukee County still handles the local copy route, but the state page is useful when the county office sends you there or when you need statewide guidance. City first, county next, state last keeps the route clear.
Oak Creek Request Tips
Oak Creek searches move faster when the request is narrow. Start with the city portal, then move to Milwaukee County if the file is not at city hall. If you need a court file, use WCCA first and the clerk second. If you need a property file, use the county portal and the record request path. That order keeps the search clean and practical.
When you call or write, have the best detail ready. A name, an address, a parcel number, or a case number can cut the search down fast. If the city portal does not give you the answer, move to the county tools before you widen the request. That is the cleanest way to search Oak Creek public records without guessing.
For Milwaukee County records, ask whether the file belongs with the Clerk of Circuit Court or the Register of Deeds. That one question can save time and send the request to the right window on the first try.
Note: Oak Creek users should treat the city portal as the first stop and Milwaukee County as the next stop when the record needs a deeper file or a certified copy.