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Encyclopedia Dubuque

www.encyclopediadubuque.org

"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




DUBUQUE BREWING AND MALTING COMPANY

From Encyclopedia Dubuque
Revision as of 02:55, 3 October 2010 by Randylyon (talk | contribs)
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Invitation to the grand opening of the Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Reverse side of the invitation. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company
Dubuque Brewing and Malting circa 1909
Founders. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding

DUBUQUE BREWING AND MALTING COMPANY. Once the Midwest's premier beer-brewing facility. Increased demand for beer prompted four local BREWERIES to consolidate in 1892. Joining together to form the Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company were the DUBUQUE BREWING COMPANY, NORTHERN BREWING COMPANY, IOWA BREWERY, and the Western Brewing Company.

Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company railroad car
Brewing room. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding.

The resulting company at 30th and Jackson STREETS covered ten acres with modern buildings and machinery costing $500,000. The annual production capacity was 300,000 barrels of beer. Water was supplied from an artesian well on the premises and cooling was done by ICE machines.

Early deliveries depended upon teams of horses. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Employees of the Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company advertising Vimalt tonic about 1912. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding

Designed by Louis Lehle, a respected Chicago brewery architect, the building was one of Dubuque's outstanding examples of ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE. The plant, then considered the most modern of its type in the country, was estimated to have 224,500 square feet of floor space. Delivery vehicles that drove thirty miles before the batteries needing replacing were used.

Token

In 1916 PROHIBITION closed the brewery. Legends persist that Alphonse CAPONE used the facilities and shipped out its illegal beer in milk cans.

Corn Belt Packing Company, a local meat packing firm, opened for business in the former brewery on October 15, 1919. Fred Kretschmer succeeded A.B. McCue as president and was generally given credit for making the company profitable. The beginning of the Great Depression, however, closed the plant.

Photo courtesy: Bob Reding

In 1934 the brewery was purchased by Joseph Marko and M.L. Blumenthal who spent an estimated $100,000 remodeling the plant which was never reopened. Beginning in 1940 the company, which the two investors had renamed the Julien Dubuque Brewing Company, was used by the DUBUQUE PACKING COMPANY as a ham storage warehouse. The H & W Motor Express Company used the location as a home office and terminal.

In the fall of 2008 the city considered including the building in a new urban renewal district. The concept developed because the DUBUQUE STAMPING AND MANUFACTURING, INC. was planning a multi-million dollar expansion project. The city could create tax incentives that would make it less expensive for a developer to expand, or restore a building here.

Advertising light for Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding

In 1977 the home of the former Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company was placed on the NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES. After protests by the two corporate owners, the Division of Historic Preservation of the Iowa State Historical Department removed the buildings from the Iowa register.

Metal sign. Photo courtesy: Potosi Brewing Company
Antique bottle openers. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Early delivery method. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Harnesses used by the delivery teams. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company barrel room. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Bottles used by the brewery. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Dubuque Brewing and Malting Company machinery. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Photo courtesy: Jim Massey
Ink blotter. Photo courtesy: Jim Massey
Photo courtesy: Jim Massey
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Letterhead circa 1940.
Newspaper. Photo courtesy: Jim Massey
Etched glasses
Upon the death of an employee, the company gave the family this certificate into which a photograph could be added.
Match safe. Photo courtesy: Jim Massey
Bottom of a bottle marked for the company
Letterhead. Photo courtesy: Jim Massey
Photo courtesy: Jim Massey
Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
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Keg Token-front
Keg Token-reverse
Token advertising $1.00 refund for 1/4 keg return.
Leather memo book
Ceramic porcelain bottle stopper-- This stopper once was held by a Lightning wire assembly on top of a blob top or crown top bottle which was typical for beer bottles made from the late 1880s through the invention of the crown cap and the crown top style of bottle. Beer bottles with ceramic stoppers like this were meant to be filled, a paper label applied to the unembossed side, possibly a neck label would also be applied, and the stopper set in place. The bottle was placed into a wooden case for delivery to a home or tavern.

(Photo Courtesy: http://www.dubuquepostcards.com)