Lion Brewery New York

Lion Brewing was a New York City-based brewery established in 1857; it closed in 1944.[1] In 1895, it was the sixth-largest brewery in the United States.[2]

Lion Beer Can 1936

Background

Shortly after immigrating to the United States, Swiss-German August Schmid and Emanuel Bernheimer founded the Costanz Brewery at East 4th Street near Avenue B in 1850.[2] The brewery produced a lagered beer, a favorite among German immigrants. By 1852, they built a second Costanz Brewery at Four Corners in Staten Island, home to a large German community. Five years later, Bernheimer became the partner of another German immigrant, James Speyers and founded the Lion Brewery in 1857 in Manhattan Valley.

A group of Catholic Bavarians helped build the Lion Brewery. When it was built, they held masses in the Brewery on Sunday mornings.

History

At its peak, the Lion Brewery occupied about six square city blocks, from Central Park West to Amsterdam Avenue and from 107th to 109th Street.[3][4] At the time Manhattan's Upper West Side was an open area with inexpensive land housing, many public institutions and an insane asylum. There were about five to ten thousand living in shanties after being displaced by the creation of Central Park in 1859. Consequently, with the brewery and surrounding areas, the Upper West Side failed to increase its real estate value until the early twentieth century. In 1862, a $1 tax on each barrel of beer hurt small brewers but not Lion. The anti-saloon movement in the late 19th and early 20th century encouraged Lion to clean up its own saloons.

"LION BREWERY" with bottling house and garage map in 1916 Manhattan

Lion Brewery got caught up in a wave of mergers and closings among some of the smaller New York Brewers in the early 1940s which continued until 1941, when the business closed. The brewery (including the canning facilities) was auctioned off on August 26, 1943. The plant was demolished in 1944 and more than 3,000 tons of steel were taken from the original brewery structure and recycled for the war effort.

After the Brewery was knocked down the lot was paved over with cinders. On Sundays, after the war, returning World War II Veterans formed a Softball League and played almost every Sunday afternoon. Home plate was located near 107th street and Columbus Avenue. Today, apartment houses occupy the Lion brewery's former location.

Around 1860, the brewery published a pamphlet titled "Observations on Brewing and Beer: With an Analysis and Scientific Testimony Relative to the Lager Beer of the Speyers' Lion Brewery." The pamphlet had a short history of the different kinds of beer, and an analysis showing that their lager beer was pure. The pamphlet also included some great line drawings of the brewery complex.


See also

The end of the next to last paragraph of your piece about the Lion Brewery indicates its area is now covered with apartment houses (Today, apartment houses occupy the Lion brewery's former location.)

This is not entirely true. Booker T Washington Junior High School is located between 108th and 107th streets on the Columbus Avenue end of the property. I knew some kids who went to the school, remember when it was being built, played handball in its yard, and messed up my left wrist when I fell chasing a grounder in a softball game on its hardtop almost 60 years ago. I also remember, somewhat more vaguely, the Caterpillar Ride of the annual carnival that used to set up on the grounds before the school was built. Sorry, no recollection of the brewery itself.

This is not a big deal but, a lot of kids went to Booker T over the years and might like to see it mentioned. If you look at a Maps application, you can verify this.

Your sentence could read: Today, blocks of apartment houses, small businesses, and Booker T Washington Junior High School occupy the Lion brewery's former location.

References

  1. "Lion Brewery". Rusty Cans. Archived from the original on 18 May 2007. Retrieved 22 May 2012.
  2. Mittelman, A. (2008). Brewing Battles: A History of American Beer. Algora Pub. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-87586-572-0. Retrieved July 16, 2017.
  3. Salwen, P. (1989). Upper West Side Story: A History and Guide. Abbeville Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-89659-894-2. Retrieved July 16, 2017.
  4. The New York Supplement. National reporter system. West Publishing Company. 1902. p. 138. Retrieved July 16, 2017.
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