A WALK THROUGH OBERMANN
BREWERY
by ERIK PETERSON
Beer Barons of Milwaukee

A significant piece of Milwaukee’s brewing history
is sitting on the corner of 5th & Cherry, only a couple
of blocks from the Brewery Credit Union. It’s for
sale. It could be a brewery once again. Or maybe a brewing
museum. Local developers and nationally-known brewery historians
have been looking at it for some time now.
With the removal of the Park East Freeway, many dilapidated,
turn of the century industrial buildings are becoming hot
properties. Obermann Brewery opened in 1854, and was Milwaukee’s
largest brewery for 20 years. I stopped by the Brewery Credit
Union to tell loan officer Steven Koski that I was researching
the boarded-up property down the street from him. According
to Steve, there was a fire at Obermann around the turn of
the century. New investors were brought in, and thus the
name was changed to Falk, Jung, and Borchart Brewing Co.
Not long after that, Falk went on to pursue other interests
(Falk Industries), as young Jung, a former brewing apprentice
from Pabst Brewery bought out Falk and Borchart. The name
was changed to Jung Brewery, and business prospered until
sometime after its officially closing at prohibition. However,
the building has survived demolition over the years by functioning
as one of the city’s many generic scrap yards. Cans,
metals, and pretty much anything picked up in the alleys
was brought in to sell. In fact, the basement and sub-basement
were still packed full of this valueless debris until last
year.
The City of Milwaukee has owned the building since 2001,
purchased through tax remediation. One of the first tasks
was to hire a salvage/cleaning company to empty out the
lower levels. There is a freight elevator, which was installed
about 75 years ago. It would take brewery workers and supplies
into the basement and sub-basement. On the main level, the
floor is an original wood-plank design. When the elevator
is lowered into the basement, its top creates a false-floor
on the main level, effectively hiding the elevator and the
lower levels from view. There is a pull rope to start or
stop the elevator. According to one Dept. of City Development
(DCD) employee, the basement contains vaulted tunnels made
of cream city brick. The tunnel on the south end of the
basement appears to lead under the street, toward the Hein
Electric building.
As the first city employees ventured into the basement,
their flashlight view from the elevator was one of piles
of debris, some of it decades old. Broken furniture, wooden
barrels, broken industrial machines, wooden carts with cast
iron wheels, bags and boxes full of trash, piles of tin
and aluminum cans with pull-tab tops were almost touching
the ceiling…and shopping carts from more than a few
local grocery chains. Within a few months, the building
had been cleaned out, the windows and doors had been secured,
a temporary lighting system had been wired in, and the electrical
fuses had been restored, at least partially…
The first potential buyers were shown the building in 2002.
On one early showing, an employee from DCD was giving a
tour to a local developer, when the elevator quit working.
After a brief walk around the lower levels, they had returned
to the elevator, and found it non-responsive. They looked
around the elevator car to see that there was no trap door
on the ceiling. They looked around the lower levels to find
that there were no staircases going up. There were workers
on the main level, but they were using saws, air compressors,
hammer drills, and other power tools, so getting their attention
was hopeless. The city employee had his cellular phone with
him, and was able to find a spot in the basement where he
could get a signal strong enough to make a call. He didn’t
have the numbers of any of the workers above them, so he
dialed 911.
“We’re stuck in the basement of the Obermann
Brewery building on 5th & Cherry.”
The fire department arrived, and came in through a door
that had been left unlocked by the construction workers
on the main level. They used axes to make a hole in the
floor, then lowered a 20-foot aluminum ladder down to free
the men trapped below. A fuse had blown. The City bought
some spare fuses, and a ladder of their own to keep in the
hole, for future escapes.
They are still looking for a buyer. Obermann’s entryway
on Cherry Street is just simple wood steps. Once inside,
the first floor appears to have been remodeled in the 60’s
or early 70’s, based on the interior design. There
is one restroom and a few offices. The 2nd floor is open,
with a staircase, drop ceiling, and fluorescent lights.
Taking the elevator up, the roof is flat, with a rubber
membrane cover, and a few leaks. The roof level seems to
be about 2500 square feet, with spectacular views in all
directions: Brewers Hill, downtown, the Bradley center,
and nearby historic churches.
Nearby was Stout Bros. Public House, one of Milwaukee’s
newer brewpubs. Unfortunately, Stout Bros. closed its doors
around the 1st of September. Painted on the wall above the
bar at Stout Bros. were the logos of many of Milwaukee’s
original breweries, including Obermann.
Obermann building facts: 11,000 sq.ft. Cream City brick
construction & exterior. Missing cornices. Some bricked-up
windows. Shipping docks. 3 floors. 2 basement levels. Flat
roof.
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